Kenton Recorder 10/29/20

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KENTON RECORDER

Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Kenton County

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YO U ’ L L B E Delighted

He had insurance. But medical bills swamped NKY man. Laura Ungar Kaiser Health News

Matthew Fentress was just 25 when he passed out while stuffi ng cannolis as a cook for a senior living community six years ago. Doctors diagnosed him with viral cardiomyopathy, a heart disease that developed after a bout of the fl u. Three years later, the Taylor Mill, Kentucky man’s condition had worsened, and doctors placed him in a medically induced coma and inserted a pacemaker and defi brillator. Despite having insurance, he couldn’t pay what he owed the hospital. So Baptist Health Louisville sued him and he wound up declaring bankruptcy in his 20s. “The curse of being sick in America is a lifetime of debt, which means you live a less-than-opportune life,” said Fentress, who still works for the senior facility, providing an essential service throughout the coronavirus pandemic. “The biggest crime you can commit in America is being sick.” Financial fears reignited this year when his cardiologist suggested he undergo an ablation procedure to restore a normal heart rhythm. He said hospital offi cials assured him he wouldn’t be on the hook for more than $7,000, a huge stretch on his $30,000 annual salary. But if the procedure could curb the frequent extra heartbeats that fi lled him with anxiety, he fi gured the price was worth it. He had the outpatient procedure in late January and it went well. Afterward, “I didn’t have the fear I’m gonna drop dead every minute,” he said. “I felt a lot better.” Then the bill came. Patient: Fentress is a 31-year-old cook at Atria Senior Living. Through his job, he has UnitedHealthcare insurance with an out-of-pocket maximum of $7,900 – close to the maximum allowed by law.

Jo Jorgensen, Libertarian Party's nominee for president of the United States, speaks at a campaign stop in Covington, Ky., on Sunday, Oct. 25. PHOTOS BY ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER

In NKY, Libertarian presidential candidate Jo Jorgensen draws former Trump supporters Scott Wartman Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

COVINGTON, Ky. — It’s been 167 years since someone who wasn’t a Republican or Democrat occupied the White House as president. Jo Jorgensen isn’t likely to be the next Millard Fillmore, a member of the Whig Party who served as president from 1850-1853. But Jorgensen does appear on the ballots of all 50 states as the Libertarian candidate for president. Her long odds didn’t deter the 100 or so people who gathered Sunday afternoon beneath the clocktower of Goebel Park in this Northern Kentucky city across the Ohio River from Cincinnati to cheer on their choice for the next president. Many in the crowd told The Enquirer they voted for President Donald Trump in 2016 but won’t this year. That included three Northern Kentucky residents who carried their rifl es to the rally. Their rifl es pointed to the ground, they stood 20 feet away from the Libertarian candidate. “I voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 election and to say I’m unimpressed is a slight understatement,” said Jake Swartz, one of the three who brought his rifl e. The 28-year-old Walton resident and his two friends felt Trump has not defended the 2nd Amendment. Swartz singled out as particularly egregious the ban on bump stocks in the wake of the Las Vegas shooting in 2017 that left 60 people dead. When asked why they brought guns to the rally, all three shrugged and said it’s their right. With Kentucky COVID-19 cases soaring, the outdoor rally featured yellow circles drawn in the grass for

Jo Jorgensen appears on the ballots of all 50 states as the Libertarian candidate for president.

“I voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 election and to say I’m unimpressed is a slight understatement.” Jake Swartz

Northern Kentucky resident

groups to distance. Jorgensen told The Enquirer disenchanted Trump voters have added energy to the Libertarian campaign. “In 2016, Trump ran as an outsider, and I understand why people voted for him,” Jorgensen said. “He said I’m a businessman, I’m not a politician and I will cut spending, and by the way, I’m going to bring the troops home. He got elected and he’s done none of that.” So who is Jorgensen? She wasn’t on

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the presidential debate stages and doesn’t poll much above three percentage points in most presidential polls. Perhaps one of the biggest headlines she made was when she was bitten by a bat in August. In fact, for the second question from the Q&A portion of Sunday’s rally, someone asked her what her favorite bat was. She said it’s the vampire bat. But for many, it wasn’t about bats and guns. Several in the crowd wanted to see drugs, such as marijuana, legalized across the country. And many want fewer nonviolent criminals locked up. Jim Lee and Connie Keller traveled one-and-a-half hours from Pike County to Covington to support Jorgensen. They’re married though they never made it offi cial, they said, because they “didn’t want to get the state involved.” See JORGENSEN, Page 2A

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See INSURANCE, Page 4A

The $10,092 that Matthew Fentress owed Baptist Health Louisville for a cardiac ablation procedure and various related doctor visits in 2019 and 2020 was more than a third of what his insurer paid for his care. MEG VOGEL/FOR KAISER HEALTH NEWS

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KENTON RECORDER

Jorgensen

Chris Abney, a Dayton resident, asks Jo Jorgensen a question during a campaign stop in Covington.

Continued from Page 1A

On Sunday at Goebel Park, they sat in lawnchairs, Keller with a big thermos of coff ee to keep warm. Their sweatshirts were covered with buttons saying “Socialism Sucks” “Legalize It” and “Don’t Spy on Me.” They used to vote Republican, but they’ve been Libertarians for years. The less government, the better, they said. “They’re the only ones talking about doing stuff for the people, ending the ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives), ending the War on Drugs, ending qualifi ed immunity, stopping no-knock raids,” Lee said of Jorgenson and her running mate, Spike Cohen. Jorgensen, a psychology professor at Clemson University in South Carolina, used her speech to tout her party’s principles of limited government. Jorgensen opposes the Aff ordable Care Act and believes the free market and competition will drive health care costs down. Same with COVID-19. She opposes mask mandates and the government shutdown of businesses. She puts her trust in the free market to address the issue, including by reducing “red tape” for medical treatment. She wants to slash the funding or eliminate the IRS, Food and Drug Administration and Drug Enforcement Agency. She’s for decriminalizing all drugs to reduce jail population. Third-party candidates struggle to get any votes. You need 270 electoral votes to win the presidency. No third-party candidate has received more than one electoral vote since George Wallace in 1968, who ran on a segregationist platform. He received 46 electoral votes by winning fi ve southern states. But the Libertarian Party, founded in 1971, had its strongest presidential showing in 2016 when candidate Gary Johnson received 3% of the popular vote, about 4 million nationwide. If Jorgensen does well in certain states, Libertarian Party candidates could have an easier time getting on the ballot depending on the state’s laws regarding ballot access. Jorgensen hopes to get two percent of the vote in Ken-

ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER

tucky, three percent in Ohio and fi ve percent in Minnesota, which are the thresholds in those states for better ballot access. “I’m concentrating on those states, because if I can get to fi ve percent, that means we don’t have to spend tens of thousands of dollars on one state and we can use that money for advertising and outreach,” Jorgensen said. Her running mate, Spike Cohen, on Oct. 28 will return to Cincinnati to kick off a tour of Waffl e Houses up through Cleveland.

Safe, Healthy, Happy.

Whether Jorgensen stands a chance or not didn’t matter to Phyllis Martin. Martin, 52, used to vote Republican, but when Trump was nominated in 2016, she couldn’t vote for him. So she voted for the Libertarian candidate. She plans on doing the same this year. “I have for a long time been a person who only votes for a person I can believe in,” Martin said. “Sometimes the Republican candidate, I thought, ‘well not really, I will vote for them anyway.’ But over the last four years, I have to vote for who I believe in even if they don’t win.”

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KENTON RECORDER

Insurance Continued from Page 1A

Total bill: Fentress owed a balance of $10,092.13 for cardiology, echocardiography and family medicine visits on various dates in 2019 and 2020. UnitedHealthcare had paid $28,920.52 total, including $27,561.37 for the care he received on the day of his procedure. Service provider: Baptist Health Louisville, part of the nonprofi t system Baptist Health. Medical service: Fentress underwent cardiac ablation this year on Jan. 23. The outpatient procedure involved inserting catheters into an artery in his groin that were threaded into his heart. He also had related cardiology services, testing and visits to a primary care doctor and a cardiologist before and after the procedure.

How did this happen? Fentress said he always made sure to take jobs with health insurance, “so I thought I’d be all right.” But like nearly half of privately insured Americans under age 65, he has a high-deductible health plan, a type of insurance that experts say often leaves patients in the lurch. When he uses health providers within his insurer’s network, his annual deductible is $1,500 plus coinsurance. His out-of-pocket maximum is $7,900, more than a quarter of his annual salary. Fentress owed around $5,000 after his 2017 hospitalization and set up a monthly payment plan but said he was sent to collections after missing a $150 payment. He declared bankruptcy after the same hospital sued him. He faced another bill about a year later, when a panic attack sent him to the emergency room, he said. That time, he received fi nancial aid from the hospital. When he got the bill for his ablation this spring, he fi gured he wouldn’t qualify for fi nancial aid a second time. So instead of applying, he tried to set up a payment plan. But hospital representatives said he’d have to pay $500 a month, he said, which was far beyond his means and made him fear another spiral into bankruptcy. This precarious situation makes him “functionally uninsured,” said author Dave Chase, who defi nes this as having an insurance deductible greater than

Matthew Fentress, of Taylor Mill, Kentucky, works as a cook in a senior living community. He was diagnosed with viral cardiomyopathy after he passed out at work six years ago. As his condition worsened, his medical bills increased. Fentress says he always made sure to take jobs with health insurance, “so I thought I’d be all right.” MEG VOGEL FOR KAISER HEALTH NEWS

your savings. “It’s a lot more frequent than a lot of people realize,” said Chase, founder of Health Rosetta, a fi rm that advises large employers on health costs. “We’re the undisputed leaders in medical bankruptcy. It’s a sad state of aff airs.” Jennifer Schultz, an economics professor and co-director of the Health Care Management program at the University of Minnesota-Duluth, said Fentress faces a diffi cult fi nancial road ahead. “Once you declare bankruptcy, your credit rating is destroyed,” she said. “It will be hard for a young person to come back from that.” A recent survey by the Commonwealth Fund found that just over a quarter of adults 19 to 64 who reported medical bill problems or debt were unable to pay for basic necessities like rent or food sometime in the past two years. Three percent had declared bankruptcy. In the fi rst half of 2020, the survey found, 43% of U.S. adults ages 19 to 64 were inadequately insured. About half of them were underinsured, with deductibles accounting for 5% or more of their household income, or out-of-pocket health costs, excluding premiums, claiming 10% or more of household income over the past year. In Fentress’ case, the $10,092 he owed the hospital was more than a third of what his insurer paid for his care. The majority of his debt – $8,271.56 – was co-

insurance, about 20% of the bill, which he must pay after meeting his deductible. Because the bill covered services spanning two years, he owed more than his annual out-of-pocket maximum. If all his care had been provided during 2019, he would have owed much less and the insurer would have been responsible for more of the bill. Dr. Kunal Gurav, an Atlanta cardiologist who wrote about medical costs for the American College of Cardiology, said ablation usually costs about $25,000$30,000, a range also confi rmed by other experts. The insurer’s payment for Fentress’ care that January day – around $27,600 – falls into the typical cost range, Gurav said. Fentress is being asked to pay $9,296, meaning the hospital would get more than $36,000 for the care. Schultz, a state representative from Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, said nonprofi t hospitals could potentially waive or reduce costs for needy patients. “They defi nitely have a moral responsibility to provide a community benefi t,” she said.

Resolution of Fentress’ case Charles Colvin, Baptist Health’s vice president for revenue strategy, said hospital offi cials quoted Fentress an estimat-

ed price for the ablation that was within a few dollars of the fi nal amount, although his bill included other services such as tests and offi ce visits on various dates. Colvin said there appeared to be some charges that UnitedHealthcare didn’t process correctly, which could lower his bill slightly. Maria Gordon Shydlo, communications director for UnitedHealthcare, said Fentress is responsible for 100% of health costs up to his annual, in-network deductible, then pays a percentage of health costs in “coinsurance” until he reaches his out-of-pocket maximum. So he will owe around $7,900 on his bill, she said, and any new in-network care will be fully covered for the rest of the year. A hospital representative suggested Fentress apply for fi nancial assistance. She followed up by sending him a form, but it went to the wrong address because Fentress was in the process of moving. In September, he said he was fi nally going to fi ll out the form and was optimistic he’d qualify. Then Karen Fritz, a retired college professor in Las Vegas, saw part of his story on CBS This Morning, which partners with KHN and National Public Radio on the crowdsourced Bill of the Month investigation. Fritz found the story online, and then she called the hospital to donate $5,000 toward Fentress’ bill. “I’ve been a young person in college with medical bills. I just really felt convicted to help him out, to help him get beyond his fi nancial struggles. I had no hesitation; I felt led by the Holy Spirit to do that,” said Fritz, 64, who taught business and marketing at various schools. “When you help other people, it gives you joy.” As Fentress tries to move past his latest bill, he’s now worried about something else: racking up new bills if he contracts COVID-19 down the road as an essential worker with existing health problems and the same high-deductible insurance. “I don’t have hope for a fi nancially stable future,” he said. “It shouldn’t be such a struggle.” Kaiser Health News is a nonprofi t news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation), which is not affi liated with Kaiser Permanente. This story was part of Bill of the Month, a monthly, crowdsourced investigation by KHN and NPR that dissects and explains medical bills.

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KENTON RECORDER

BY THE WAY, NKY

What’s going on in NKY: a new road, a K-9 unit cemetery, and water line extensions More water lines and broadband in Boone County

Julia Fair Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

This is an installment of reporter Julia Fair’s series “By the way, NKY.” Here, you’ll fi nd what’s going on in Northern Kentucky. Don’t worry, we won’t remind you how many days there are until Election Day in this article. Instead, we’ll tell you about road construction, how some good dogs will have a place to be remembered forever, and how broadband and waterlines will be expanded in Boone County. In this series, By the way, NKY – we focus on some of the good news happening in the region and to fi ll you in on what’s going on in your neighborhoods. If there’s something you think should be included, email reporter Julia Fair at jfair@enquirer.com By the way, here’s what’s going on in Northern Kentucky:

A place for K9 units to be buried Next year, the dogs that serve Northern Kentucky police departments could have a special burial site at the Highland Pet Cemetery in Fort Mitchell. Heather Jansen, president of the Highland Cemetery, has a trust with her brother and sister that is used to fund various projects for local organizations. Jansen plans to use part of the trust to create a memorial for police canines that would be available to local police departments, according to a letter she sent to Villa Hills Police Chief Bryan Allen that was shared with The Enquirer. “It has been brought to my attention that there is a niche that has been overlooked when honoring those who have passed: the canines who have died either during service on the police force or after their service has been completed,” Jansen wrote in her letter. “The expan-

Nixa Police Department officer Ronald Hilburn works with dog Jack at a Vohne Liche Kennels training facility near Grissom Air Force Base on Sept. 23. After obedience training, Jack is rewarded with his tennis ball. MYKAL MCELDOWNEY/INDYSTAR

sion of the pet cemetery at Highland Cemetery provides the perfect space and opportunity to recognize this overlooked service to the community.” The monument will include a place for plaques to recognize the dogs’ names and years of service. Jansen will also set aside funds for the offi cers to bury their dog with a marker. Her goal is to have the monument ready by Spring 2021.

Amsterdam Road Corridor unveiled On October 6, the redesigned and rebuilt Amsterdam Road Corridor was unveiled.

Residents in Covington and Park Hills will mostly benefi t from the $60 million project. Construction began in 2019. The aim is to reduce landslides and fl ooding problems in the area, according to a press release. Residents will see a new road, sidewalks, sewers, stormwater improvements and landscaping. The new Amsterdam Road Regional Detention Basin is part of the Clean H2040 plan spearheaded by Sanitation District No. 1, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the state. Clean H2O40 is SD1’s eff ort to increase the “capacity to better manage the fl ow of wastewater and stormwater in Northern Kentucky.”

In 2019, the Boone County Fiscal Court commissioners set a goal of expanding waterlines and broadband services into the rural western and southern areas of the county. In September, it approved a funding plan to extend those services. The new utility development fund will be funded by new revenue from personal property taxes and real estate tax rates. That’s estimated at $620,000, according to Chris Courtney, Communications & Community Aff airs Manager for the Offi ce of the Boone County JudgeExecutive. County offi cials will use those funds to pay for the broadband and water line extensions. The Fiscal Court will determine the cost of the expansion after it receives fi nal bids and details for the project. About 1,700 households will benefi t from the water line expansion. The county will partner with the Boone County Water District. When county offi cials choose a company for the broadband expansion, it will know how many households it will serve, according to a press release. Boone County didn’t raise taxes to pay for the expansions. That’s because its tax base and property values have increased, which gives it more funds to work with. The Fiscal Court lowered the personal property tax rate from 12.5 cents to 11 cents and the real property tax rate from 10.2 cents to 10.1 cents, according to meeting minutes. Total assessments of county property grew by almost $1 billion over the last 12 months, said Judge-Executive Gary Moore in the meeting minutes. See NKY, Page 7A

Official Election Notice

AVOID CROWDS. BE SAFE. VOTE EARLY. IT’S THE SAME AS VOTING ON NOVEMBER 3. Due to the coronavirus, many Kentucky counties have had to reduce the number of polling places. And record voter turnout is expected this year. That’s why the Kentucky State Board of Elections is urging all Kentuckians to vote early, in advance of November 3. When you vote early, it helps polling places avoid crowds and provide for social distancing. For more information, or to find your early voting location, go to GoVoteKY.com or call your County Clerk directly.

You don’t need an excuse or an appointment. Vote Oct. 13 — Nov. 3, including Saturdays.

The Kentucky State Board of Elections WHEN YOU VOTE, KENTUCKY WINS!


KENTON RECORDER

Covington man abused child for 5 years, prosecutor says Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

A Covington man pleaded guilty Oct. 8 in Kenton County court after offi cials said he abused a child over the course of fi ve years. Keith Edward West, 43, pleaded guilty to three counts of sodomy and two counts of sexual abuse, according to a release from the Kenton County Commonwealth’s Attorney Offi ce. All of the charges are related to the same child, who was under 12 years old at the time of the abuse. “We’d prefer to put child molesters in prison forever but this spares a young child from testifying about the worst days of the child’s life in a courtroom full of strangers,” Commonwealth’s Attorney Rob Sanders said in the release. The plea deal includes a 20-year prison sentence recommendation, according to the release. According to Kentucky law, fi rst-degree sodomy off enders involving victims under 12 can face 20 to 50 years, and up to life in prison.

NKY Continued from Page 6A

COVID-19 Resources for NKY residents Need a COVID-19 test? Here are some helpful links to resources in Northern Kentucky. h Find a free COVID-19 test on the state’s COVID-19 website. h Find Northern Kentucky COVID-19 data on the health department website. That’s it for this installment of By the way, NKY. Let us know if there’s something you think we should include in the next. In the meantime, here are some other ways to keep up with your community:

West will be required to serve a minimum of 17 years in prison and complete sex off ender treatment before being eligible for parole, according to the release. He will be registered for life as a sexual off ender. The release states the child victim disclosed the abuse to a counselor about a year after it stopped. Fort Mitchell Police launched an investigation and, during an interview, West admitted to multiple acts of sodomy between 2014 and 2019. The victim was less than 12 years old during the abuse, the release states. The off enses usually occurred while West watched the victim while the child’s mother was at work. Offi cials said the child’s mother cut ties with West in 2019 due to his drug use. Sanders said cases like this require prosecutors to “balance the child victim’s mental health with the benefi ts of lengthier sentences.” Formal sentencing will occur next month. The release states West is scheduled for fi nal sentencing on Nov. 24.

h Keep an eye on your local government with us and subscribe to the free daily newsletter that gets sent directly to your inbox every morning. h Download the NKY news app and sign up for alerts to be the fi rst to know about news in your neighborhood Julia is the Northern Kentucky government reporter through the Report For America program. Anonymous donors pledged to cover the local donor portion of her grant-funded position with The Enquirer. If you want to support Julia’s work, email her editor Carl Weiser at cweiser@cincinna.gannett.com to fi nd out how you can help fund her work. Do you know something she should know? Send her a note at jfair@enquirer.com and follow her on twitter at @JFair_Reports.

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Meet The Enquirer’s 2020 Women of the Year Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

This year’s group of Enquirer Women of the Year honorees includes women who have had their hands in major organizations across the city, working behind the scenes to make Cincinnati a better place for everyone. The women will be honored during a virtual event in November. This is the 52nd Women of the Year awards. Introduced by The Enquirer in 1968, the program annually recognizes 10 area women who have supported philanthropic eff orts and who have improved civic life through their investment of time, energy and their belief in helping others. More than 500 women have been honored over the years. Here are the 2020 Enquirer Women of the Year: Delores Hargrove Young, of Evendale, embodies the spirit of Cincinnati, said those who work with her. Young, vice chairwoman for d.e. Foxx & Associates, Inc., has worked for nearly every big-name organization in the area, including the American Red Cross and Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Young also co-chaired the 2015 MLB All-Star Game community organizing committee. “Alongside these organization Delores is committed to inspiring and developing young female leaders, increasing supplier diversity, and improving the economic stability of Cincinnati,” her nomination said. Dr. Shelley Jeff erson Hamler, of Amberly, has “dedicated her entire life to educating, motivating, inspiring and empowering young people,” according to her nomination. Throughout her career, Hamler worked at school systems throughout Greater Cincinnati, mentoring and teaching students. She is President of the Cincinnati Chapter of The Links. The Links Leadership Academy for African American girls is a mentorship program for young women that makes a long-term commitment to the success of its mentees. Evelyn Laux, of Covington, is a “champion for children,” her colleagues said. A long-time employee of the United Way, Laux converted Cincinnati’s referral line to one of the nation’s fi rst accredited 211 call centers. She also led the

The Cincinnati Enquirer's 36th annual Women of the Year luncheon in 2004. ENQUIRER FILE PHOTO

expansion of the United Way to cover Northern Kentucky, Clermont, Brown and parts of Butler County. In retirement, Laux has volunteered for CASA for Kids in Northern Kentucky, working with children under the age of 18 as a court-appointed special advocate who has logged more than 2,000 hours since 2009. Helen O’Neal, of Anderson Township, is a long-time community volunteer who is co-founder and ambassador of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. O’Neal has also served on boards of the Cincinnati Art Museum and Contemporary Arts Center. Colleagues say everything O’Neal does is with the “love and support for those who are underrepresented.” Heather Russell, of Loveland, runs Change Court, a specialized docket in Hamilton County Municipal Court and a restorative program that allows women who have been sex traffi cked to get help and reclaim their lives. Those backing her nomination said not everyone can look back and see the diff erence they’ve made in the lives of others, but “Judge Russell is one that can.” Her

nomination said Russell “has touched and restored the lives of women who may have been considered untouchable and beyond restoration.” Dr. Samina Sohail, of West Chester, is a leader who “brings diverse cultures together” as a member of the Islamic Center of Greater Cincinnati. Her colleagues said Sohail has taken it upon herself to promote real conversations and civil and racial justice in her community. She does this, in part, through a program called Candid Community Conversations and through bringing people into the center. Sohail has been a tour guide for ICGC for 10 years, taking countless visitors on tours, breaking down Islamophobia and building bridges in the community. Shawnteé Stallworth Schramm, of Westwood, is a neighborhood advocate who has been on the forefront of her community’s revitalization, her nomination said. Schramm has been a board member with the Westwood Civic Association for seven years, leading neighborhood cleanups and working with law enforcement and other community leaders to reduce crime throughout her

neighborhood. In opening Muse Cafe and Wine Bar, Schramm fi lled a need in the community and created an environment to draw others in. Her application said that in starting her own business in her community, Schramm showed a “willingness to invest in her community before it was popular.” Stephanie “Stevie” Swain, of Kennedy Heights, is a leader with a “servant heart big enough to share with others,” according to her nomination. Swain is the founder and president of the Cincinnati Collaborative Women’s Network that awakens and fuels the passion of aspiring women entrepreneurs, her nomination said. She is also a member of the Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky African American Chamber of Commerce, works with Talbert House and teaches fi nancial literacy to Macy’s Employees as a way to help community members invest in and improve their futures. Teresa Tanner, of Hyde Park, does not measure success by numbers but rather the diff erence one can make in people’s lives, her nomination said. Tanner’s young daughter was diagnosed with leukemia in 1994 and recovered. Later, Tanner went on to chair a $50 million campaign at Cincinnati’s Ronald McDonald House to make the facility the largest of its kind in the world. She is also a board member of ArtsWave and the Freestore Foodbank. In the wake of the 2018 Fifth Third Center shooting, Tanner oversaw the lobby reopening and has served on the Cincinnati Strong Victims Fund in an eff ort to help her co-workers heal. Michele Young, of Indian Hill, is an attorney for whom “no problem is too small or great to undertake,” her nomination said – from freeing a woman who was wrongly imprisoned to volunteering at the Kyle Plush Answer the Call Foundation after the death of her son’s friend. Many describe Young as an “angel” who has worked for inclusion in the community, opening doors for minorities like managing the fi rst campaign for Hamilton County Coroner Lakshmi Sammarco and co-chairing the re-election campaign for Judge Nadine Allen. “She clearly thinks of others’ interests before her own,” her nomination said.

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SPORTS Cooper junior named Kentucky Mr. Golf James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Ryle senior Bradyn Lyons looks to stiff-arm Simon Kenton junior Matt Link as Ryle and Simon Kenton played a football game Oct. 23 at Simon Kenton High School, Independence, Ky. The teams were tied 7-7 in the second quarter when the game was suspended by inclement weather. PHOTOS BY JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER

Ryle rolls past Simon Kenton James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Ryle football team has learned how to handle tough situations. Facing what head coach Mike Engler called “the longest halftime in history,” the Raiders handled the tough challenge of rival Simon Kenton Saturday morning. Ryle rolled past SK 42-15 in the Class 6A, District 6 closer for both teams. Ryle, 4-3 overall, swept the district with a 3-0 record and will have the top seed in the district playoff s beginning Nov. 13. SK, 3-4 overall, fi nished 1-2 in district play. Ryle easily won day two of the contest after the game was suspended Friday night because of inclement weather. The teams were tied 7-7 early in the second quarter when play resumed Saturday morning. After a shaky fi rst drive in the restart, Ryle scored two touchdowns before halftime and salted the same way with three scores in the fourth period. “They’ve got a good football team,” Engler said of the Pioneers. “We got the momentum and our kids took advantage of that. Fortunately, when you have the longest halftime in history, you have a chance to go back and look at things. You have a chance to see a little bit more of how they’re playing you because we have the luxury of watching fi lm. We developed a slightly diff erent game plan and it paid off .” Ryle ran behind senior quarterback Bradyn Lyons and a deep group of emerging targets. Lyons threw two touchdown passes to Jackson McGinnis in the second quarter, and another to Jameson Smith early in the fourth quarter to give Ryle a 29-15 lead. Senor Mathias Cusick put the game away with a breakaway 62-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter, and junior Gabe Savage scored the last TD. Although the Raiders controlled the action on Saturday, they kept the Pioneers in contention until late. Ryle had a touchdown in the fi nal seconds of the fi rst half called back by a penalty, a fourthdown pass in the endzone just miss, and two missed fi eld goals by Franklin Rogers, who was struggling with a leg injury. Mistakes brought the Raiders down

Ryle sophomore Drew Dickerson throws a block on Simon Kenton junior Joe Vormbrock as Ryle and Simon Kenton played Oct. 23 at Simon Kenton High.

earlier in the year, but Engler said they have done a much better job of bouncing back since district play has begun. “We came out sluggish today but our kids, like they’ve done all year, they’re starting to grow up and become a pretty good football team,” Engler said. “The little things are not causing them to drop their heads any more. They overcome it and move on.” Demonstrating that was Lyons, who struggled early in the season but has led the Raiders to 37 points per game in the three district contests, throwing for more than 200 yards each time. “Bradyn started off a little slow today,” Engler said. “After the fi rst series, he started heating up and making plays, and that’s what he does. He doesn’t dwell on what happened. He goes and takes care of business the next play. And that’s what a quarterback has to do. He makes a mistake, then he makes four or fi ve good plays in a row.” The game became a defensive struggle in the third quarter, with six straight possessions ending in punts before Ryle sophomore Lukas Colemire set up the Raiders with an interception. Ryle drove 55 yards for Lyons’ TD pass to Smith. Ryle put constant pressure on SK sophomore QB Chase Crone in the second half. Gabe Savage, Trey Fleek and Wilson Pendleton had sacks and Fleek had a

fumble recovery to clinch it. Savage, who averages over 13 tackles per game, moves the needle for the Ryle defense. “I think Gabe Savage is the best linebacker in the state of Kentucky,” Engler said. “Our whole defense played well. Our secondary played well for being young. Gabe is just destructive. He causes a lot of havoc, and we were fortunate to get a lot of pressure on (Crone).” The teams went back and forth in the fi rst half Friday night before lightning intervened. They traded long interception returns early in the game. Sophomore Kaden Gardner picked off Crone deep in Ryle territory and returned it to the SK 12. On the ensuing series, SK’s Brennon Miller intercepted a Lyons pass deep in his own endzone and returned it 100 yards to the Ryle 9. Crone ran it in from there, and SK drew fi rst blood at 7-0. Displaying the Raiders’ recent resilience, they answered right away with a 66-yard drive, keyed by a 25-yard pass from Lyons to senior Greyson Barber. Colemire scored from a yard out, and Rogers’ PAT tied it. SK then drove 75 yards to the Ryle 5, but a botched snap and fumble recovery by Ryle sophomore Luke Lown ended the threat.

Rylan Wotherspoon, a junior at Cooper High School, has been named Mr. Golf, and Trinity Beth, a seventhgrader at Marshall County High School, has been named Ms. Golf for 2020, as the Kentucky Golf Coaches Association and Golf House Kentucky have released this year’s AllState First Team and Second Team. Wotherspoon earned 1,075 points on the season for a 30-point edge on last year’s Mr. Golf, Jay Nimmo. Wotherspoon’s season was highlighted by a victory at the KGCA AllState Championship at University Club of Kentucky in September. Wotherspoon was also the runner-up in the KHSAA State Championship at Bowling Green Country Clubafter being defeated by Nimmo in a suddendeath playoff . He won the Seventh Region championship, and also won seven invitational tournaments during the regular season. Wotherspoon has already announced his commitment to the University of Cincinnati and will play college golf for the Bearcats following his high school graduation. Several other Northern Kentucky golfers were honored. The All-State Golf First and Second Teams are chosen by points earned in high school invitationals, KGCA All-State Championships, Regionals, and the KHSAA State Championships. Invitationals submit their results to the All-State points committee comprised of Directors from Golf House Kentucky, the Kentucky Golf Coaches Association, plus boys and girls high school coaches. The complete listing of boys and girls teams, with schools and fi nal points, is as follows: See GOLF, Page 2B

Rylan Wotherspoon, a junior at Cooper High School, has been named Mr. Golf for 2020 by the Kentucky Golf Coaches Association. JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER

Former Highlands football coach Bill Herrmann dies at 85 James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Highlands High School community is mourning the loss of former coach Bill Herrmann. Wilbur “Bill” Herrmann, 85, coached four diff erent sports at Highlands from 1959-83. He was head football coach from 1976-83, winning three Class 3A state championships in 1977, 1981 and 1982. He was also a part of two other state football championships as an assistant. Herrmann was 81-18 as a head coach,

including a perfect 15-0 during the 1982 championship season. His 25-year coaching career also included basketball, track and baseball. Herrmann served as Herrmann the varsity baseball coach for four seasons and guided the Bluebirds to a regional championship in 1965, advancing to the state semifi nals and beating top-ranked Madison Central 8-2 in the opening round. This was the fi rst Highlands squad to win a game in the

baseball state tournament. After retirement, Herrmann continued to live in Fort Thomas with his wife, Virginia. He was a teacher at Highlands and spent his entire 30-plus year career there. Honored as a Kentucky Colonel, he was inducted into the Highlands High School Athletic Hall of Fame and the Northern Kentucky Sports Hall of Fame. Herrmann was a long-time member of Christ Church UCC, where he taught an adult Sunday school class, served as the former church council president and

sang in the choir. Herrmann was a member of Fort Thomas city council for one term, a member of Kentucky Education Association, National Education Association and Campbell County Retired Teachers Association. Memorials may go to the Christ Church UCC, 15 S. Fort Thomas Ave. Fort Thomas, Kentucky 41075, or Hospice of the Bluegrass Care Navigators, 1733 Harrodsburg Road, Lexington, Kentucky 40504. Online condolences can be given at www.dmefuneral.com.


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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

COVID-19 quarantines sideline students from school, sports Terry DeMio Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Mason High School honor student Ellie Horvath was banned from in-person classes for days and missed a big invitational cross-country meet, her senior year experiences thwarted by COVID-19. Ellie was not sick. She was among 532 Mason City Schools students who spent time quarantined between the start of school on Aug. 24 through the end of September. Twenty-six staff members also had to forgo classroom-based work. All of this in the fi rst six weeks of school. “This is just boiling up,” said Jonathan Cooper, superintendent of the district of more than 10,000 students. The impact of the novel coronavirus on students stretches beyond the eff ects on those who test positive for its illness. It hits students who were near the sick kids and might have been exposed. “We have 177 students who are currently sitting in a quarantine at home with no symptoms because of seven who tested positive,” Cooper pointed out early in October. The number fl uctuates, but students are always missing during the pandemic. Quarantine is a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention method to protect others from catching COVID-19, infectious disease experts say. It happens when local health offi cials do contact tracing, tracking those who’ve been near the COVID-19-positive person. They identify people who may have been exposed to droplets carrying COVID-19. In students’ cases, their parents and schools are notifi ed, and the kids sit out for up to 14 days. The tracers are following hundreds of cases that have cropped up in at least 103 schools and districts across the Cincinnati region. More than 350 students and more than 120 staff ers at those schools have tested positive for COVID-19, according to an Enquirer tally of district and state reports. While health and school offi cials are not required in Ohio to make public the numbers of quarantined students, some school districts, including Mason, are doing just that. “It is a huge problem,” Cooper said. Parents, students and school offi cials in the Cincinnati region are upset about lost time in academics, sports and just plain school-related experiences for kids who end up quarantined. In Ohio, Gov. Mike DeWine fi elds frequent reporters’ questions about what can be done to prevent young athletes from being sidelined this way. On Oct. 6, he announced that he’d authorized a study focused on school students who are quarantined. “We have heard anecdotally that most quarantined students are not getting sick,” DeWine said, “but I believe that it is important to have data and evidence before considering a change to the recommended guidance.” It is not an Ohio-only problem. Donna McKinley of Verona, in Boone County, was unhappy that her daughter’s Walton-Verona High School volleyball team was sidelined by quarantines that the Northern Kentucky Health Department ordered. Her daughter, Abby, is a senior and hopes to play volleyball in college. The Walton-Verona girls were notifi ed that they had to quarantine six days after a Sept. 18 game in Gallatin County, after a Gallatin player tested positive for COVID-19, McKinley said. Abby’s team stayed home eight days before they were

Golf Continued from Page 1B

Boys 1st Team Rylan Wotherspoon (2022), Cooper High School (1075 points) Jay Nimmo (2021), Marshall County High School (1045 points) Justin Gabbard (2021), Highlands High School (840 points) Allan Lockwood (2021), Central Hardin High School (780 points) Clay Pendergrass (2023), Madison Central High School (755 points) Warren Thomis (2024), Madison Central High School (725 points) Jackson Finney (2022), St. Xavier High School (720 points) Jackson Hill (2022) Madisonville North Hopkins High School (675 points) Luke Coyle (2023), Taylor County

Walton-Verona volleyball player Abby McKinley, a senior, (wearing white kneepads) blocks at a game Oct. 8 with Newport Central Catholic. She and her team had to be quarantined in September after a student from another school was diagnosed with COVID-19 and missed several games, her mother said. Abby did not contract the coronavirus. PROVIDED

“We have 177 students who are currently sitting in a quarantine at home with no symptoms because of seven who tested positive.” Jonathan Cooper Superintendent

permitted to hit the court again on Oct. 2. The team missed at least a half-dozen key games, McKinley said. “The most important games we missed due to quarantine were (part of) the All A State Volleyball Tournament. We had made it past the fi rst round and were on to the next round and it came to an abrupt halt, never to be made up,” she said. “My heart breaks for all of the girls because this is time they will never recover.” School offi cials in the region report that they give quarantined kids packets of classwork, stepped-up connections with their teachers and, in some cases, access to classrooms via Zoom. “Our staff has done a great job of keeping students engaged while they are quarantined. They are making sure students are getting assignments and keeping the lines of communication open should questions or concerns arise,” said Gina Gentry-Fletcher, spokeswoman for Fairfi eld City Schools. Still, some students and school leaders said the time away from the school building is not ideal. Ellie said it was stressful because school is simply harder from a distance. “I love in-person learning.” Oak Hills Local School District spokeswoman Krista Ramsey said students who are quarantined immediately move to remote learning. Teachers work with students to help them stay on track.

High School (645 points) Tyler Mitts (2021), Grant County County High School (645 points)

Girls 1st Team Trinity Beth (2026), Marshall County High School (930 points) Casey Powell (2021), Paul Laurence Dunbar High School (805 points) Savannah Howell (2022), Marshall County High School (800 points) Macey Brown (2022), Apollo High School (755 points) Grace Clark (2021), Shelby County High School (750 points) Faith Martin (2021), South Warren High School (735 points) Abbie Lee (2021), Glasgow High School (725 points) Isabella Wiley (2023), Shelby County High School (720 points) Macie Brown (2023), Bullitt East High School (720 points)

Oak Hills had to cancel a Greater Miami Conference matchup with Lakota West because of a positive COVID-19 test. “It’s hard on our students. It’s hard on our families. It’s hard on our staff ,” Ramsey said. “But it’s the right thing to do.” “We absolutely do it for our students’ health and our staff ’s health,” she said. “It’s how we keep our doors open.” “We know that we have that impact on our community,” said Tracey Carson, a spokeswoman for Mason City Schools. But the eff ect on kids can be overwhelming, Carson said. Even the idea of getting a notice from a health department has triggered anxiety among some students, she said. “One student, a senior, said, ‘When I hear the phone ringing in my class, I feel my heartbeat go faster. I don’t want to be called down next,’ “ Carson said. Cooper has been in touch with the governor’s offi ce about the impact of quarantines. Meanwhile, administrators are trying to fi nd ways to help kids stay involved. Mason City Schools adopted a new option this month for student-athletes, band members and other student competitors who have cherished events on the calendar. “We are letting them voluntarily decide to do a two-week quarantine” in advance of an event, Carson said. It is a way to prevent the possibility of COVID-19 exposure and, therefore, quarantines that would keep them sidelined. “We know it’s not a great solution,” she said. Ellie said she’s not sure whether she’d take such an option, but she knows other students who have. While it is unknown how many students across Ohio and Kentucky have experienced the health-department ordered quarantines, it is clear that the impact is widespread. Here’s a sampling of recent school quarantine totals for several districts that post them:

h Kenton County School District’s dashboard totaled 139 quarantines as of Oct. 12. The number was 172 on Oct. 8. The district has more than 14,000 students. h Lakota Local Schools had 274 students and 16 staff ers quarantined as of Oct. 9; the district has more than 15,000 students. h Sycamore Community Schools posted “total close contacts” year-todate as 160 on Oct. 2. h Deer Park City Schools counted 26 quarantines as of Sept. 28. h North College Hill’s COVID Report showed 18 students had experienced quarantine, but fi ve of the quarantines occurred before school started. h Princeton City School District’s dashboard counted 40 “currently” in quarantine on Oct. 8, but did not off er cumulative quarantine cases for the year. Elic A. Senter, manager for education policy and practice at the National Education Association, said schools must have a “strong remote learning plan” and a backup plan for students who are in quarantine in order for kids to be successful. “Having a set schedule… is important to ensuring stability and routine for students,” Senter said. “Regular communication with the student’s teachers will also help navigate the workloads of the student.” Ellie’s quarantine prevented her from participating in Mason’s 46th Annual Cross Country Invitational and Senior Night – a special evening where each senior is celebrated with their parents. “It was really kind of devastating,” she said. She credits “super supportive” teachers during a diffi cult time learning away from school while she was quarantined. Ellie made it through the period without getting sick or hurting her grades. But an unsettling feeling has stayed with her: “I am afraid that it’s going to happen again.”

Abigail Sutherland (2022), Sacred Heart Academy (720 points)

School (535 points)

Boys 2nd Team Charlie Reber (2023), Bowling Green High School (635 points) Gehrig Sexton (2022), Wayne County High School (625 points) Logan Liles (2022), Lewis County High School (605 points) Luke Muller (2021), Highlands High School (600 points) Logan McCormick (2022), Montgomery County High School (585 points) Grey Goff (2023), Lexington Christian Academy (580 points) Ryan Butler (2021), St. Henry District High School (580 points) Cam Roberts (2025), Pikeville High School (560 points) Kannon Tucker (2021), Somerset High School (545 points) C.J. Corum (2021), Clay County High

Girls 2nd Team Madison Borders (2023), Thomas Nelson High School (715 points) Elizabeth Eberle (2023), Madison Central High School (690 points) McKenna Stahl (2021), South Warren High School (670 Points) Mary Browder Howell (2021), Murray County High School (645 points) Megan Hertter (2022), Marshall County High School (615 points) Maddi Hudson (2023), Grant County High School (605 Points) Mary Keene Marrs (2022), Lexington Christian Academy (595 Points) Christy Ann Carter (2024), Lexington Christian Academy (595 Points) Nina McMurtrey (2022), Glasgow High School (590 Points) Grace Walker (2021), Christian Academy of Louisville (540 Points)


KENTON RECORDER

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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3B

Variations show ‘just how iconic caramel popcorn is with Halloween’ Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist

You’ve heard me say before that it doesn’t take much to please me. Today, I received another “gift without ribbons.” Friends Ray and Roger Davis brought a dump truck load of horse manure for my gardens. Black gold is what I call it! We’ll spread the manure out evenly, and let it continue to age until spring. Seeing those mounds of black gold takes the sting out of having to bush hog what remained of the veggies and fl owers. This is the time of year, too – Halloween – for fun, uncomplicated fare, like caramel popcorn. Looking at the

Cracker Jack-style caramel corn. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR THE ENQUIRER

“Black Gold” manure in garden.

variations I’ve shared with you through the years makes me realize just how iconic caramel popcorn is with Halloween. And while you have the oven on for caramel popcorn, try spicy Chex mix – both use the same temperature and time.

Cracker Jack-style caramel corn The flavor is as close as I can get to the real Cracker Jacks.

Over medium heat in large saucepan, bring to a boil everything but vanilla and soda. Boil 5 minutes.

Want to small batch this? Divide recipe in half.

Add vanilla and baking soda and stir vigorously.

Ingredients

Mixture will foam up, form a mass and turn light in color.

16-18 cups plain popped popcorn

Buffalo Ranch Chex Mix Fairly addictive!

2-3 cups peanuts (not dry roasted) or mixed nuts (I like lightly salted nuts)

good)

Coating

1 oz. packet dry ranch dressing mix

Ingredients 3 cups each: rice, corn and wheat Chex type cereal 2 cups favorite cheese crackers 2 cups tiny pretzel twists

2 sticks butter

Instructions Preheat oven to 200. Mix cereals, crackers, pretzels, Bugles and nuts together. Melt butter, wings sauce and Worcestershire over low heat. Then whisk in celery seed and ranch dressing mix.

2 cups Bugles 1 ⁄ 2 to 2 cups nuts 1

1 ⁄ 2 sticks butter, melted (12 tablespoons) 1

Buffalo hot wings sauce to taste - I used 1⁄ 3 cup 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon celery seed (optional but

Pour onto sprayed baking sheets or large roasting pan and bake 1 hour, stirring every 15 minutes. Cool and store, covered, at room temperature.

2 cups light or dark brown sugar or combo

Immediately pour over popcorn mixture, stirring well to coat. Pour in single layers onto sprayed sheets. Bake 1 hour, stirring every 15 minutes to distribute coating. Let cool for coating to harden.

⁄ 2 cup light corn syrup

Store, covered, at room temperature.

1

⁄ 4 teaspoon salt

TIPS:

1 tablespoon real vanilla extract

Watch for unpopped kernels in bowl

1

⁄ 2 teaspoon baking soda

1

Pour over cereal mixture and mix well.

aside.

Instructions Preheat oven to 200. To avoid sticking, use vegetable spray to coat large bowl, cookie sheets and spoon. Put popcorn and nuts in bowl. Set

I put popped corn in big bowl before measuring. I scoop up popcorn in my hands, leaving unpopped kernels in bottom. Dark brown vs light brown sugar Dark brown sugar contains more molasses, is darker in color and has a stronger, more caramel-like flavor.

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4B

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

Cincinnati craft show schedule for 2020 Happy shopping!

Luann Gibbs Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

In a lot of ways, the year 2020 has seemed to drag on forever, so it may come as a surprise that the holidays are already upon us. With COVID-19 cases surging again, plans will surely be constantly altered. We suggest checking event websites/ social media or calling before attending for any safety protocols or cancellation notices. But here's the planned schedule of craft shows in the Greater Cincinnati area this holiday shopping season so far. If you'd like to get your craft show or holiday pop-up shop listed in our calendar, send the information to calendar@cincinnati.com with "Craft Show" in the subject line. You can also submit your events online at cincinnati.com/things-to-do/events.

Oct. 30 Fall Frolic Frontier Art Show, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, Sharonville Convention Center, 11355 Chester Road. $10, free ages 12-under. sharonvilleconventioncenter.com

Nov. 6 Keepsake Christmas Craft Show, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday, Edgewood Senior Center, 550 Freedom Park Drive, Edgewood. Boutique style, one-stop shopping craft show with 35 juried crafters. Runs Nov. 6-8. Free. Reserve your date at eventbrite.com. Friday is SOLD OUT. See CRAFT SHOWS, Page 5B

Tis the season for holiday craft shows. THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL/KRIS CRAIG

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 107 Quailwood Court: Winfred and George Stump to Amanda and Jared Phillips; $240,000 1749 Poplar Ridge Road: Ronald Franzen to Paige Rust and Elijah Meyer; $160,000 19 Trapp Court: Audie Smith and Elaine Nicolletta -Smith to Mary Kruse; $100,000 629 Talus Way: Megan and Derrick Shea to Lisa and Steven Ketron; $395,000 7854 Wild Orchid Court: The Drees Company to Melissa and Tyler Smith; $380,000

Bellevue 344 Ward Ave.: Hope Carver to Heidi Frondorf; $220,000 808 Rossford Run: Cheryl Eresman to Larry Reynolds; $123,000

Burlington 2287 Teal Briar Lane, unit 206: Mary Legner to Kim and Stephen Romer; $110,500 2673 Swaps Court: Haley and George Gripshover to Gabriella and Nathaniel Haynes; $190,000 3936 Country Mill Ridge, unit 22-305: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Sharon Appelman; $155,000 4212 Coutnry Mill Ridge, unit 18-102: Shawna and Paul Vickers to Steven Guajardo; $160,000 6490 Elsinor Court: Nicole and James Coyle III to Tina and Jason Duke; $245,500 6506 Westgate Lane: Carlene Brungs to Laden Holdings, LLC; $258,500 7377 Ironwood Way: Lindsey Faulkner and Tyler Jones to Alia Woods; $185,000

Cold Spring 274 Ridgepointe Drive: Patricia and Douglas Miller to Samantha and James Davis; $450,000 341 Ivy Ridge Drive: Robin and Scott Goodell to Thomas Gillman; $148,000 524 Dry Creek Road: Joy Baker and Alan Paynter to Jil Cordonnier; $108,000

Covington 116 E. 42nd St.: Karen and Byron Clemens to Patricia Nader; $155,000 1323 Alberta St.: Judy Boggs to Christina Kante; $145,000 2104 Siena Ave., unit 4-302: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Jacob Roeding; $183,500 215 W. 15th St.: Falizegray, LLC to Helen Remley; $125,000 2193 Piazza Ridge, unit 10-201: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Mimi

and Ronald Ellinghausen Jr.; $296,500 224 18th St.: Brian Marksberry to Bonnie Gunkel; $127,000 3153 Rosina Ave.: William Stone to Robert Gunkel; $140,000 405 Delmar Place: Shirley Phillips to Megan Brown; $125,500 53 W. Crittenden Ave.: Ashley Cox to Michael Garrett; $322,000

Crestview Hills 333 Crown Point Circle: Crowne Pointe Development, LLC to Mary Caposela and Leslie Kyle; $187,500

Crittenden 15196 Carlisle Road: Shawna and Tyler Caldwell to Heather Helmbrecht-Vines; $188,000

Dayton 317 5th Ave.: Lori Hiltenbeitel to Kathryn Zigler and Cody Kurzniczci; $161,000 606 McKinney Ave.: Allen Stambaugh Jr. to Lillian Ventures, LLC; $165,000 871 Lincoln Road: Kristen Schimmelman and John Parrott to Emily Erdman and Austin McDaniel; $210,000

Edgewood 1217 Chickadee Court: Roberta Bagby to Rhonda Knochelmann and Charles Seifert; $200,000 3142 Royal Windsor Drive: Sarah and Jesse Jett to Katherine Hahnel and Richard Dietz; $275,000 3255 Kruer Court: The Estate of Dianne Lynn Bagby to Kelsey Darpel; $220,000

Elsmere 11 Cranberry Court: Hanna and Donald McGuire II to Michael Willard; $178,000

Erlanger 324 Swan Circle: Rachel Whismann to Mary Ann Wilberding; $170,000 3703 Sigma Drive: Dexter Morgan to Clifford Yeager; $176,500 3955 Ashmont Drive: Shannon Bray to Rachael and Samuel Kincart; $376,000 4003 Baywood Circle, unit 102-B: Megan Smith to Kathleen and William Finke; $170,000 402 James Ave.: Peggy and Brian Casey to Laura Kendall; $189,000 5 Rosebud Ave.: ACI Properties, LLC to David Karsner; $118,000 752 Peach Tree Lane: Phyllis Spalding to Oretta Graves; $145,000 874 Borderlands Drive, unit 131-A: Leslee and Robert Luttrell to James Bertram; $195,000

Florence 10236 Crossbow Court, unit 7: Charlotte Taylor and Rick Lutz to Rachel Homer; $102,000 1076 MacIntosh Lane: Ashley and Matthew Butt to Roberta and Jerome Powell; $227,500 13 Tattersall Lane: Jennifer and Rick Appelman to Betty and William Kunkel; $231,000 15 Dortha Ave.: Lydia and Craig Watkins to Jenna Dutiel and Cory Ollberding; $143,000 1865 Knollmont Drive: Mary and David Texter to Bradley Bray; $293,000 1941 Sunning Dale Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Jackye and Michael Marksbury; $268,000 53 Utz Drive: Allyson and Jacob Crawford to Bobbie Bitter; $169,500 7436 Haverstdale Lane: Helen and James Tanous to Angela and Michael Stewart; $325,000 88 Surrey Court: Carol and Nathan Setters to David Meyers; $205,000

Fort Mitchell 212 Fort Mitchell Ave.: Darlene and Mark Bossert to Donna Tepe; $700,000 284A Madison Pike: Lisa and Robert Alfani to Stephen McCollum; $220,000

Fort Thomas 1006 Nob Hill Drive: Jay Powers to Nathan Garbig; $170,000 131 Capri Drive: Nicholas Ellington to Tamara Lorenzen and Anthony Arzen Jr.; $535,000 20 Winding Way: Michael Przbylski to Amanda Haas; $220,000 265 Sergeant Ave.: Richard White to Kathleen and Dennis Neal; $210,000 34 Pentland Place: Tina and Romey Reynolds Jr. to Kimberly and Joseph Bailey IV; $492,000 4010 Nob Hill Drive: Deborah Bordicks to Peggy and David Schweitzer; $169,500 58 Lockwood Place: Stephanie and Michael Watson to Alaina and Paul Pratt; $440,000 831 S. Fort Thomas Ave.: 831 Alexandrea, LLC to Emily and Barry Mersmann; $375,000

Fort Wright 451 Fort Henry Drive: Joyce Matracia to Christine and Gary Pecorello; $280,000 909 Treeline Drive: Timothy Hart to Andrew Gregg; $296,000

Hebron 1554 Caledonia Court: The Drees Company to Marianne and Neal Grady; $501,500

2536 Broadleaf Court: Olivia and Cady Pugh to Emily Ralenkotter and Albert Kiser; $316,000 2872 Lauren Meadows Drive: Ashley and Joseph Harwood to Jordan and Jonathan McClure; $385,000

Highland Heights 2311 Wilson Road: Sarah and William Cookson to Jasmyn Noble; $202,000 98 Bon Jan Lane: Michelle Caquette to Elsy Valdez and Daniel Dempsey II; $176,000

Independence 10586 Williamswoods Drive: Rhonda and Gary Dolle to Jody and John Schott; $250,000 1886 Autumn Maple Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Angela and Austin Reiring; $269,500 2021 Aristocrat Boulevard: Beverly and Thomas Rowe to Kathryn and Lee Holden; $299,000 2288 Harris Pike: Paula and Ray Saner to Jesse Holbrook; $310,000 2773 Bentwood Drive: Laura and Neil Fedders to Tracy and Christopher Howder; $415,000 2808 Sycamore Creek Drive: Karima and Frank Kendall to Meghann and Chase Mueller; $355,000 3035 Alderbrook Drive: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Hannah and Blake Burkhardt; $290,000 33 Walnut Hall Drive: Kelli Kohake to Christy Baldwin; $190,000 4333 Cobblewood Court: Andrew Klei to James Cornelius; $95,000 4956 Pritchard Lane: Natalie and Gary Hafer II to Ronald Buckingham; $210,000 5151 Noble Court: Kimberly and David Keener to Joanna and Robert Claypoole; $235,000 545 Hogreffe Road: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Chelsea and Warren Armstrong; $281,000 6380 Stonemill Drive: Jennifer Suttles to Lauren Rodriguez and Ronald Joseph; $305,000 639 Tupelo Drive: Adam Beach to Jose Diaz; $186,000 802 Windmill Drive: Sarah and Benjamin Petracco to Danielle and Matthew Grubbs; $299,000 9668 Cloveridge Drive: Meghann and Chase Mueller to Angela Couch and Kent Moreles; $270,000 9873 Flagstone Drive: Christopher Fryia to Christopher Chinn; $205,000

Lakeside Park 86 Carran Drive: Itiger Investments, LLC to Lisa

and Michael Armbruster; $217,500

Ludlow 247 Deverill St.: Jean and Michael Chamberlain to Alexandra Spyridon and Cory Pavlinac; $93,000 456 Pinnacle Way, unit 6-202: Margaret and Robert Hobbs to Sherry Bodner; $262,500 628 Rivers Breeze Drive, unit 26-202: Lyndsey Broerman to Ryan Hoskins; $237,500

Melbourne 7582 Mary Ingles Highway: Kurtis Stanton to Melissa and Robert Rutherford III; $258,000

Newport 2106 New Linden Road: Kevin Quatman to Katie Spencer and Andrew Rice; $162,000 525 E. 2nd St.: Sherry and Steven Rosenacker to Amanda Field and Elizabeth Hargett; $350,000

Petersburg 6450 Stone Creek Lane: Charlotte Ruder to Matthew Montgomery; $295,000

Taylor Mill 3186 McCowen Drive: Mimi and Ronald Ellinghausen Jr. to Rachel and Adam McCoy; $260,000 3214 Huntersridge Lane: Carynne and Gregory Trammell to Carmella Trosten and Filomea Trosten; $300,000 737 Morning Glory Drive: Susan and James Quackenbush to David Samad; $270,000

Union 10045 Braxton Drive: Amanda and Nicholas Brown to Sudharani Sriram and Sriram Srinivasan; $246,000 10786 Saunders Lane: ECG Residential, LLC to Lynette and Edward Hol-

land; $137,500 1701 Saint Jovite: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Brooke and Michael Justice II; $357,500 6633 Glencree Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Doreen Gordon; $272,500 8486 Saint Louis Boulevard: Tanya and Joseph Fussinger to Caryanne and Gregory Trammell; $415,000

Villa Hills 1057 Carpenters Trace: Leah and Michael Jones to Elizabeth and Paul Ruh; $510,000 965 Riverwatch Drive: Signa and Mark Morgan to Michelle and Thomas Jennings; $389,500

Walton 11491 Wynfair Court: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Brittany Stone and Justin Spitzer; $284,000 16 Boone Lake Road: Brian Mennis to Brenda and Phillip Tackett; $60,000 182 Zinfandel Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Julia and Nicolas Oramas; $262,000 273 University Drive: Emily and Anthony Lemay to Matthew Scott Jr.; $300,000 361 Foxhunt Drive: Trent Carrier to Raymond Osterhage; $349,000 474 Mustang Drive: Connie and Vernon Harrison to Sean Johnson; $260,000 508 DeMoisey Court: The Drees Company to Torie and Joseph Neiheisel; $329,000 524 Savannah Drive: Jona Kessans and Michael Mayor to Stephanie and Benjamin Seta; $338,000

Wilder 109 Elm St.: Amanda and Robert Young to Hunter Parnell; $138,000

PUZZLE ANSWERS Y A L L

O S S O

I M A Y

N O R A

I A D R O F L H E I D I

S E N S E I

S T A R T A N E W

H O T D E S K

I N S

D N D N A E Y

S L E E P S

N S O O H S T N S E A R O E G O V E R A X G A T H E L W E A R S A R S T S N A R E A J U L B O D E I B E A

L I A R C R O C

M U F F I N A L P H A S

P I T T O S P G I U O N N

A U D E G F E S E O F P I S T H E U K E S N O M N D I E Y N U R O F L O W R A P N I D E I L L T L E P H E E D O O T O N S S E E S

T I C K

S E E N I T

D I D O

D I T O O M S T T E V A V A R I N E A D S S S C S H E P E N A L E

T O A S E L B O A D O R C U T G H T E A T E E P I C M R T E E U E D H Y M E E O O E L E N E T S T S S L A P H I R A I E N C R O K T L E S D R

T W E E S K I P F A Y Z E S T Y


KENTON RECORDER

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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5B

Craft Shows Continued from Page 4B

Curious Concoctions Holiday PopUp, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday-Sunday, Brentwood Plaza, 8449 Winton Road, Finneytown. Shop handmade bath and body products. Runs Nov, 6-8. Free. curiousconcoctions.net.

Nov. 7 Kindervelt Krafts, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Seton High School, 3901 Glenway Ave., West Price Hill. Hand-crafted items, baked goods, raffl es and games. Free admission. kindervelt.org. Loveland Craft Show, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m., Loveland High School, 1 Tiger Trail. Over 200 vendors. Raffl es, lunch and fun. $2 admission, $1 with non-perishable food donation. 513-476-5187; lovelandathleticboosters.com. Winter Craft Show, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Entertrainment Junction, 7379 Squire Court, West Chester Township. Shop more than 50 vendors. Free admission. Winterwald Christmas Market, noon-8 p.m. Saturday, noon-5 p.m. Sunday, Germania Society of Cincinnati, 3529 W. Kemper Road, Colerain Township. Experience traditional German shopping in outdoor wooded biergarten. Runs Nov. 7-8. Advance tickets required, $5 per person. germaniasociety.com.

Nov. 14 Holiday Market, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., The Redmoor, 3187 Linwood Ave., Mount Lookout. Shop local vendors and get a head start on holiday shopping while listening to live music. theredmoor.com.

Nov. 15 Cincinnati Winter Avant-Garde Art & Craft Show, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Oasis Golf Club and Conference Center, 902 Loveland-Miamiville Road, Loveland. $3, free ages under 12. avantgardeshows.com.

Nov. 27 Makeup Sale, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FridaySunday, Radisson Hotel, 668 W. 5th St., Covington. Blow-out makeup sale featuring popular brands. Runs Nov. 27-29.

The Crafty Supermarket will go virtual for 2020. In May 2019, a Supermarket attendee picks out a gift designed by Jason Driscoll, better known as Kill Taupe. RYAN TERHUNE/THE ENQUIRER

Free admission and parking. bit.ly/ MakeupFinalSale-cincinnati-2020.

Don’t forget to vote!

Nov. 28 Virtual Crafty Supermarket. Shop via Facebook and Instagram with specials and giveaways throughout the day. craftysupermarket.com.

Dec. 5 Holiday Market, 10 a.m. SaturdaySunday, Findlay Market, 1801 Race St., Over-the-Rhine. Shop local with wide selection of food and gift items as well as family-friendly activities and entertainment by local choirs and musicians. Runs Dec. 5-6. Free. Holiday Market, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., The Redmoor, 3187 Linwood Ave., Mount Lookout. Shop local vendors and get a head start on holiday shopping while listening to live music. theredmoor.com. Market Bleu, 6-10 p.m., Contemporary Arts Center, 44 E. Sixth St., Downtown. Shop artwork and unique pieces from artisans and artists. Free. marketbleu.com.

Dec. 12

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The City Flea, 4-9 p.m., Washington Park, 1230 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine. Curated urban fl ea market. thecityfl ea.com .

Kentucky

Dec. 13 Ludlow Sneaker Market, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Ludlow Theatre, 322 Elm St., Ludlow. Unique twist on the markets of yesteryear, with vendors specializing in sneakers. eventbrite.com.

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

KENTON RECORDER

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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B

No. 1025 TITLE BASIN’

1

BY MIRIAM ESTRIN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Miriam Estrin is a native of St. Louis, now living in London. She works for Google as a policy manager dealing with international laws and regulations on access to information. After graduating from Yale Law School, she spent four years at the U.S. State Department. Miriam started constructing crosswords a year ago after reading The Times’s online series ‘‘How to Make a Crossword Puzzle.’’ This is her second puzzle for the paper and her first Sunday. — W.S.

50 Scan that excites hydrogen atoms, for 1 Dinosaur in the Mario short games 51 Can’t keep one’s 6 Titular film character mouth shut? opposite Harold 54 Alternative to de 11 Something offered in Gaulle tribute 55 Debussy’s ‘‘____ 16 ____ Martin DB5 d’Étoiles’’ (‘‘Bondmobile’’) 57 Prepare to go next 17 Knock-down-drag-out 59 ‘‘You’re making me fights blush!’’ 21 Nudge 61 Lived (with) 22 Barack, Michelle, 63 Marcel Proust’s Hillary and Bill took kitchen mystery? them, for short 70 Trouble 23 Yann Martel’s baking 71 I memoir? 72 ‘‘That’s ____!’’ (director’s cry) 24 Have heart eyes for 73 Halloween vis-à-vis 25 Member of Britain’s Nov. 1 upper house 74 ‘‘Yeesh!’’ 26 Tone-____ 27 Shunned, with ‘‘out’’ 76 One of six parked on the moon 29 ‘‘Don’t get ____!’’ 78 Nasty, in a way 30 F. Scott Fitzgerald’s 79 Author Ferrante chivalric tale? 81 Neutral paint color 36 Just like that 82 Break 38 Zaps, as leftovers 85 Societal problem 39 Brainstorms 86 ‘‘When They See Us’’ 42 Messes (with) director DuVernay 43 Follower of ‘‘Je 89 Big e-commerce site m’appelle’’ 90 Antoine de SaintExupéry’s pet story? 44 What a figure skate has that a hockey 95 Guarantees skate lacks 97 [Doh!] 45 ‘‘____ you seeing 100 Semibiographical this?’’ source for ‘‘Citizen Kane’’ 46 Voltaire’s sweet novel? 101 Small trunks Online subscriptions: Today’s 105 Certain red wine puzzle and more 107 Trap than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords 109 Had a friendly ($39.95 a year). relationship (with) AC R O S S

RELEASE DATE: 11/1/2020

11 What Mrs. Potts and Chip serve in ‘‘Beauty and the Beast’’ 12 Brit’s term of affection 13 ‘‘Finally!’’ 14 Resolve, with ‘‘out’’ 15 Precious, to a Brit 17 Goes undercover? 18 Heated accusation 19 Sound effect during a bomb defusing, perhaps 20 ‘‘I watched that episode already’’ 26 Critical time 28 Queen who made Carthage prosper 31 Pittsburgh-to-Buffalo dir. 32 Fair forecast 33 Beat in a boxing match, in a way 34 Corral 35 Command for a right turn, in mushing DOWN 36 ‘‘It’s possible’’ 1 ‘‘____ ready for this?’’ (opening of a pump- 37 ‘‘You’ve Got Mail’’ director Ephron up jam 40 Neutral paint color by 2 Unlimited) 2 Part of an Italian veal 41 Sound like a broken record dish name 46 Shoe with holes 3 Go back to Square 1 4 Share a workspace, in 47 Top dogs modern lingo 48 Subject of Rick Steves’s travel 5 Helpful connections guides 6 Breakfast order 49 God, in Guadalajara 7 Long period 52 Bullet alternatives: 8 What a weather Abbr. balloon might be 53 Utter mistaken for 54 Como ningún ____ 9 Letters on the ‘‘3’’ (unique, in Spanish) button 10 Catches a glimpse of 56 Pledge-drive gift

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87 By way of 88 Director’s cry 91 Is employed 92 Movie with the line ‘‘I feel the need … the need for speed’’ 93 Dials 94 Some concert tour merchandise 95 Martial arts master 96 Sushi condiment 98 Traitor in the Revolutionary War 99 Warehouse employee

100 ‘‘S.N.L.’’ cast member Gardner 102 Lover of Orion, in myth 103 8-Down pilots, in brief 104 Forest grazer 106 Full of spice 108 Where Zeno taught 110 Children’s poet Silverstein 113 ____ beam 114 Place for a shvitz

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8B

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

COMMUNITY NEWS Local NKY Med Spa ribbon cutting Local NKY Chamber members and city offi cials from Crescent Springs KY recently gathered to celebrate dermalounge Med Spa’s Ribbon Cutting Ceremony at their location at 723 Buttermilk Pike. This was a prelude to their 1 Year Anniversary Celebration that was scheduled for Oct. 24. Julea Remke, Journey Marketing

Let’s take a walk We have had some beautiful fall days. Does it inspire you to get outside more and take a walk? It may seem intuitive, but it is true that walking is one of the best things you can do for your health. Walking can have a huge impact on your health by reducing your risk of disease and other poor health conditions. Here’s even better news about walking — it is free. You can walk anywhere, and no equipment is required to reduce your risk of diabetes and cancer, lower blood

pressure and cholesterol, enhance sleep, and keep you mentally sharp. Even a quick one-minute stroll pays off . Despite all the positives of walking, you might still have concerns about injuries. Do not let fear keep you on the sidelines. Walking could be the best way for you to improve your health. Here is how you can learn proper walking technique to make your workout more enjoyable while helping to prevent injuries. Stand tall - Eyes up, and look ahead not at the ground. Keep your chin parallel to the ground. Shoulders back, down, and relaxed. Focus on keeping your shoulders away from your ears to reduce upper-body tension. Arm and shoulder swing - Swing your arms freely with a slight bend in your elbows. Keep your arms moving forward and backward. Do not bring them across your body or let them go higher than your chest. Core - Gently tighten your stomach muscles. Keep your back straight, not arched forward or backward. Stride - Walk smoothly, rolling your foot from heel

to toe. Do not reach your legs too far out in front of you. Focus on quicker rather than longer strides. Kathy Byrnes, Kenton County Cooperative Extension Service See COMMUNITY NEWS, Page 10B

More than 1,300 Kentuckians died from drug overdoses in 2019. Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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KENTON RECORDER

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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10B

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 8B

Kentucky Girl Scouts featuring NASA engineer Stephanie Johnston at STEM event Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road (GSKWR) announces its GEMS (Girls in Engineering, Math & Science) 2020 keynote speaker, NASA Engineer, Stephanie Johnston. As an Engineer at Johnson Space Center, Stephanie started out training astronauts how to spacewalk in microgravity and is now working on spacesuits for the next manned lunar mission. GSKWR’s GEMS event is an opportunity for girls to participate in workshops facilitated by local women in STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts & Math) related fi elds. Due to COVID-19, GEMS 2020 will be held virtually on Saturday, Nov. 14. All girls in grades fourth through 12th are invited to discover, explore, and create with various STEAM activities at GEMS 2020. Participants do not have to be registered Girl Scouts to register for the event. “GSKWR strongly believes that girls are natural-born scientists with the curiosity and dedication to make new discoveries and change the world. We are committed to long-term STEM programming and look forward to hosting our GEMS event year after year,” said Susan Douglas, CEO, GSKWR. Registration for the virtual GEMS 2020 event ends on Nov. 1. To access additional event details and register, please visit: https://www.gskentucky.org/en/events-repository/2020/ girls_in_engineering.html. The event is generously sponsored by companies who believe in women and STEM careers, including Bank of Lexington, UK HealthCare, and Kentucky American Water. To learn more about how Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road is creating experiential and leadership opportunities for growth, please visit www.gskentucky.org. Amy Greene, Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road

NKU School of the Arts hosts community conversations Northern Kentucky University’s School of the Arts (SOTA) launches a

You’re kind of a

BIG DEAL Official NASA executive portrait of EVA Flight Control Team personnel Stephanie Johnston. ROBERT MARKOWITZ/PROVIDED

Summit Series, a new virtual roundtable. Led by SOTA’s Michael Hatton and Daryl Harris, the series hosts guest professionals in the arts to prompt conversation and the exchange of ideas. The fi rst topic kicked off on Oct. 7 with Experiencing Race in the Arts: Battles and Biases. Harris and Hatton talked with Gee Horton, a visual artist and Mercantile Library’s fi rst African American Artist-in-Residence, Jaime Morales-Matos, a music director of Central Ohio Symphony, and Darnell Pierre Benjamin, a dancer, director, choreographer, educator with Pones and the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company. “We need to provide our students with opportunities to respond to the events, movements, especially the Black Lives Matter Movement, and subsequent climate around the heightened racial tensions this summer,” said Harris. The fi nal session of the Summit Series is on Nov. 18 at 7 p.m. The fi nal topic focuses on Equity and Allyship: LGBTQ+ in the Arts.

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 10B

Along with a student panel, Ronnie Gladden breaks down his diversity leadership work and research. Dr. Gladden coined the term, transgracial theory, which embodies the intersection of the transgender and transracial phenomena. Dan Davidson, aka Sparkle Leigh, will join Dr. Gladden. He recently was quoted in Cincinnati Magazine as saying, “Remember to breathe. Maybe that’s enough, that little reminder to keep grounded and keep going. When I wasn’t able to be that, Sparkle was.” Community members are invited to join SOTA’s Summit Series. To learn more and to register, visit the NKU Theatre + Dance Facebook page. For more information, visit nku.edu. Rick Endres, Northern Kentucky University

Scouts visit Kentucky Down Under 22 Scouts and seven leaders from Troop 1 and Troop 1001 chartered by Florence Christian Church recently participated in a weekend campout and visit to KY Down Under Adventure Zoo near Cave City, KY. The Troop visited the Australian themed animal park and toured KY Caverns, located at the park. Troop 1/1001 meets every Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Florence Christian Church. Timothy Iott, Troops 1 and 1001 Scouts BSA

Scouts and leaders from Troop 1 and Troop 1001 chartered by Florence Christian Church participated in a weekend campout and visit to KY Down Under Adventure Zoo near Cave City, KY. PROVIDED

Keepsake Christmas Craft Show: A holiday tradition NKY’s oldest craft show will be held on Nov. 6-8 at the Edgewood Senior Center off Thomas More Pkwy. The 37th annual Keepsake Christmas Craft Show off ers unique “boutique style” shopping, with a one-stop checkout. A wide variety of homemade crafts and candies from juried crafters of the Greater Cincinnati/NKY area are displayed throughout the Edgewood Center, along with a Bake Sale and a Raffl e to benefi t a local charity. This popular show began in 1983 at a home in Villa HIlls, eventually moving to the Drawbridge Inn, and again to the Edgewood Senior Center when the Drawbridge Inn closed. Many of the area’s top crafters have shown their

Keepsake Christmas 2019. PROVIDED

wares at Keepsake Christmas. Admission to the show at 550 Freedom Park Drive in Edgewood, KY is free, along with plenty of parking. Hours are

Nov. 6 (10 a.m. to 8 p.m.), Nov. 7 (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.) and Nov. 8 (11 a.m. to 3p.m.). More info https://www.facebook.com/KeepsakeChristmasCraft-

Show Reminder: Masks, please. Jane Terrell, Keepsake Christmas Craft Guild

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Classifieds

All classified ads are subject to the applicable rate card, copies of which are available from our Advertising Dept. All ads are subject to approval before publication. The Enquirer reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject, classify or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported in the first day of publication. The Enquirer shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.

Now Hiring full time positions with full benefits after ten weeks. Positions hiring for:

MOVE-IN SPECIAL

Entry level punch press operator

• $500 gift card with a 12-month lease • $1,000 gift card with an 18-month lease • $1,500 gift card with a 24-month lease

*no experience necessary

Punch press set up

*mechanically inclined a plus

General labor/painting tags.

Careers

Cad Cam laser operator must be proficient and experienced.

Jobs

new beginnings...

Mechanic/maintenance.

Family owned and operated since 1902

Must sign a new lease by November 1, 2020

Community

Announce

announcements, novena... Special Notices-Clas

Apply in person at 721 York St., Newport, KY 41072 or online @ https://www.surveymonkey. com/r/nbtapplication CE-GCI0516670-02

NEWLY RENOVATED APARTMENT HOMES • Brand new contemporary design • Brushed nickel fixtures and accents throughout • Designer “Wolf Classic” cabinetry • Gourmet kitchen with marbled countertops and tile backsplash • Plank Flooring in living room, kitchen, hallway and bathrooms • Plush, luxurious carpeting • Stainless Steel Appliances • Reservoir style sink basin • Private patios or balconies • High-Speed Internet

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

Equipment

Farm

home grown...

Assorted

Stuff

COMMUNITY AMENITIES

all kinds of things...

• Clubhouse with Community Room • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Business Center • On-Site Management and Maintenance

For more information: (859) 689-4444 Or visit our website at: www.burgundyhillsapartments.com

Adopt Me

Automotive

Pets

Rides

find a new friend...

best deal for you...

CE-GCI0439004-01

Real Estate

Homes

starting fresh...

Special Notices-Clas

Special Notices-Clas

Musical Instruction û†û

Jim Graves Heirs Good ‘Ol Farm Auction

û†û

Saturday, October 31, 2020 First item sells at 9:55am 2123 Graves Road Hebron, KY 41048 IH Tractor, JD Farm Equip, other farm equip, hand tools, Household furniture, collectibles, crocks, VERY SMALL AD but we expect 5-6 hay wagons full plus equipment & furniture. Look at our website for full ad and pictures: www.johnsonsells4you.com Terms on Personal Property: Cash, Check w/ ID, Credit Cards with 5% Conv. Fee Portable Restroom & Limited Food available; Owner: Jim Graves Heirs

Johnson Auctioneers, LLC

Roger & Susan Johnson, CAI, AARE, BAS, CES

(812) 576-0157 or (513) 403-6734

Licensed in Indiana, Kentucky & Ohio; Lic # OH 2002000266 / IN AU10400023 / KY RP2880 CE-GCI0519874-03

Garage Sales to advertise, visit: classifieds.cincinnati.com or call: 855.288.3511

Business & Service Directory to advertise, email: ServiceDirectory@enquirer.com or call: 855.288.3511

Masonry

COHORN

CONCRETE LLC

Specializing in new and old replacement of driveways, patios, sidewalks, steps, retaining walls, decorative concrete work, basement and foundation leaks & driveway additions. We also offer Bobcat, Backhoe, Loader, and Dumptruck Work, regarding yards & lot cleaning. • Free Estimates • Fully Insured • Over 20 Years Experience Currently Offering A+ Rating with Better 10% DISCOUNT Business Bureau

Tree Service • Stump Grinding Property Maintenance Delivery of Goods and Aggregate Mobile Welding Service Fu lly Bush Hog Mowing Insured

859-393-1138 859-359-0554

righthandmann78@gmail.com

Office

Garage Sales

Right Hand Mann, LLC

Fax

cohornconcrete@aol.com www.cohornconcrete.com

Wyatt Mann (Owner/Operator) 859.444.7368

NKyHomeRepair.com Put it up for sale. Finding a job shouldn’t feel like one. The smartest way to hire.

Get started at: jobs.usatoday.com

VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com

Kitchen, Bath & Basement Remodeling, Decks, Tile, Custom Showers, Walk-in Tubs

25 years exp. Insured.

859-331-0527

Celebrate it. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com


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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

I, Gabrielle Summe, Kenton County Clerk, do hereby certify that the below Races are to be voted for at a General Election to be held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020 DUE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, ALL REGULAR POLLING LOCATIONS WILL NOT BE OPEN ON ELECTION DAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2020. Go to http://bit.ly/kentonvote to see your polling locations or for a map of locations- https://bit.ly/3639DHJ There will be a Supercenter on November 3, 2020 at the Kenton County Government Center at 1840 Simon Kenton Way, Covington. Free parking will be available for the NKY Convention Center at the KENTON COUNTY GARAGE, 220 MADISON AVE, COVINGTON. The Kenton County Garage is available by compliments of the Kenton County Fiscal Court) Attest Gabrielle Summe Kenton County Clerk KENTON COUNTY ELECTION DAY PHONE INQUIRIES 859-392-1620 POLLS OPEN 6:00AM TO 6:00PM All Voters Must Show an Id at the Voting Location CODE B101 A125 A101 A102 A103 A104 A105 A106 A107 A108 A109 A110 A111 A112 A113 A114 A115 A116 A117 A118 A119 A120 A121 A122 A123 A124 A131 A135 B122 C101 C102 C138 C130 C131 B105 B142 B106 B139 B107 B108 B109 B110 B111 B112 C103 C104 C105 C106 C139 C107 C108 C109 C110 C111 C112 C113 C114 C115 C141 B125 B135 B138 C140 C116 C117 C118 C119 C121 C122 C124 C125 B115 B116 B117 B116 B131 B132 B133 B134 B136 B137 B140 C127 C128 A126 A128 B119 B120 B121 B141 A132 A133 B123 A136 A137 A138 A130 C133 C134 C135 C136 C137 B129 B130

PRECINCT BRACHT BROMLEY COVINGTON #01 COVINGTON #03 COVINGTON #07 COVINGTON #10 COVINGTON #11 COVINGTON #12 COVINGTON #13 COVINGTON #15 COVINGTON #19 COVINGTON #20 COVINGTON #21 COVINGTON #23 COVINGTON #24 COVINGTON #25 COVINGTON #26 COVINGTON #27 COVINGTON #30 COVINGTON #31 COVINGTON #33 COVINGTON #34 COVINGTON #36 COVINGTON #39 COVINGTON #41 COVINGTON #42 COVINGTON #43 COVINGTON #44 COVINGTON #45 CRESCENT SPRINGS #1 CRESCENT SPRINGS #2 CRESCENT SPRINGS #3 CRESTVIEW HILLS #1 CRESTVIEW HILLS #2 DECOURSEY DECOURSEY #1.5 EDGEWOOD #1 EDGEWOOD #1.5 EDGEWOOD #2 EDGEWOOD #3 EDGEWOOD #4 EDGEWOOD #5 EDGEWOOD #6 EDGEWOOD #7 ELSMERE #1 ELSMERE #2 ELSMERE #3 ELSMERE #4 ELSMERE #5 ERLANGER #01 ERLANGER #02 ERLANGER #03 ERLANGER #04 ERLANGER #05 ERLANGER #06 ERLANGER #07 ERLANGER #08 ERLANGER #09 ERLANGER #10 ERLANGER #11 ERLANGER #12 ERLANGER #13 FT MITCHELL #1 FT MITCHELL #2 FT MITCHELL #3 FT MITCHELL #4 FT MITCHELL #5 FT MITCHELL #7 FT WRIGHT #1 FT WRIGHT #2 FT WRIGHT #3 INDEPENDENCE #01 INDEPENDENCE #02 INDEPENDENCE #03 INDEPENDENCE #04 INDEPENDENCE #05 INDEPENDENCE #06 INDEPENDENCE #07 INDEPENDENCE #08 INDEPENDENCE #09 INDEPENDENCE #10 INDEPENDENCE #11 LAKESIDE #1 LAKESIDE #2 LUDLOW #1 LUDLOW #2 MORNINGVIEW NICHOLSON #1 NICHOLSON #2 NICHOLSON #3 PARK HILLS #1 PARK HILLS #2 PINER TAYLOR MILL #1 TAYLOR MILL #2 TAYLOR MILL #3 TAYLOR MILL #4 VILLA HILLS #1 VILLA HILLS #2 VILLA HILLS #3 VILLA HILLS #4 VILLA HILLS #5 VISALIA WHITES TOWER

IF YOU NORMALLY VOTE HERE ON NOV. 3RD YOU WILL VOTE HERE PINER BAPTIST CHURCH PINER BAPTIST CHURCH IMMANUEL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST LUDLOW SENIOR CENTER KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- COVINGTON BRANCH NKY CONVENTION CENTER KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- COVINGTON BRANCH NKY CONVENTION CENTER MOTHER OF GOD CHURCH UNDERCROFT (ENT RUSSELL ST) NKY CONVENTION CENTER ST JOHN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH NKY CONVENTION CENTER ST JOHN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH NKY CONVENTION CENTER J G CARLISLE SCHOOL (GYM ENT OFF BANKLICK ST) NKY CONVENTION CENTER J G CARLISLE SCHOOL (GYM ENT OFF BANKLICK ST) NKY CONVENTION CENTER SOUTH SIDE BAPTIST CHURCH GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) 9TH DISTRICT SCHOOL CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH LATONIA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH LATONIA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH THE CARNEGIE/EVA FARRIS EDUCATIONAL CENTER NKY CONVENTION CENTER THE CARNEGIE/EVA FARRIS EDUCATIONAL CENTER NKY CONVENTION CENTER 6TH DISTRICT SCHOOL (18TH ST ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) HOLMES HIGH FIELD HOUSE (MAIN ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) 6TH DISTRICT SCHOOL (18TH ST ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) HOLMES HIGH FIELD HOUSE (MAIN ENT) GLENN O SWING ELEMENTARY (GYM ENT) CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH TAYLOR MILL ELEM / VOTE IN GYM TAYLOR MILL ELEM (GYM) TAYLOR MILL ELEM / VOTE IN GYM TAYLOR MILL ELEM (GYM) OAKRIDGE BAPTIST CHURCH TAYLOR MILL ELEM (GYM) CRESCENT SPRINGS CITY BUILDING CRESCENT SPRINGS CITY BUILDING CLUBHOUSE EMERALD SPRINGS CONDO’S CRESCENT SPRINGS CITY BUILDING CRESCENT SPRINGS CITY BUILDING CRESCENT SPRINGS CITY BUILDING CRESTVIEW HILLS ADMIN BLDG CRESTVIEW HILLS ADMIN BLDG CRESTVIEW HILLS ADMIN BLDG CRESTVIEW HILLS ADMIN BLDG RYLAND HEIGHTS COMMUNITY CENTER RYLAND HEIGHTS COMvMUNITY CENTER RYLAND HEIGHTS COMMUNITY CENTER RYLAND HEIGHTS COMMUNITY CENTER JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY EDGEWOOD SENIOR CENTER JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY EDGEWOOD SENIOR CENTER JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY HINSDALE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY ST. PIUS JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY ST. PIUS JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY JA CAYWOOD ELEMENTARY ST HENRY’S GRADE SCHOOL (BENEDICTINE HALL) ELSMERE SENIOR CENTER (LOWER LEVEL) ELSMERE SENIOR CENTER (LOWER LEVEL) ELSMERE SENIOR CENTER (LOWER LEVEL) ST HENRY’S GRADE SCHOOL (BENEDICTINE HALL) ELSMERE SENIOR CENTER (LOWER LEVEL) ELSMERE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ELSMERE SENIOR CENTER (LOWER LEVEL) ELSMERE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ELSMERE SENIOR CENTER (LOWER LEVEL) SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM ERLANGER BAPTIST CHURCH SCHEBEN GYM BAPTIST VILLAGE SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM SCHEBEN GYM KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- ERL. BRANCH SCHEBEN GYM ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH ST BARBARA’S CHURCH FT MITCHELL CITY BUILDING LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH FT MITCHELL CITY BUILDING LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH FT MITCHELL CITY BUILDING LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH FT WRIGHT CIVIC CLUB FT WRIGHT CIVIC CLUB FT WRIGHT CIVIC CLUB FT WRIGHT CIVIC CLUB LOOKOUT HEIGHTS CIVIC CLUB FT WRIGHT CIVIC CLUB SUMMIT VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SUMMIT VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL INDEPENDENCE SENIOR CENTER SUMMIT VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL KENTON COUNTY GARAGE BEECHGROVE SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL SUMMIT VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SUMMIT VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL INDEPENDENCE SENIOR CENTER SUMMIT VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LAKESIDE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LUDLOW SENIOR CENTER LUDLOW SENIOR CENTER LUDLOW SENIOR CENTER LUDLOW SENIOR CENTER KENTON FIRE DEPT KENTON BAPTIST CHURCH (LOWER LEVEL) KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- IND. BRANCH KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- IND. BRANCH KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- IND. BRANCH KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY- IND. BRANCH BEECHGROVE SCHOOL BEECHGROVE SCHOOL GARDENS OF PARK HILLS GARDENS OF PARK HILLS GARDENS OF PARK HILLS GARDENS OF PARK HILLS PINER BAPTIST CHURCH PINER BAPTIST CHURCH SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL ST ANTHONY’S CHURCH UNDERCROFT SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) RIVER RIDGE ELEM SCHOOL (GYM ENT) KENTON FIRE DEPT KENTON BAPTIST CHURCH (LOWER LEVEL) KENTON COUNTY EXTENSION TWENHOFEL MIDDLE SCHOOL

POLLING ADDRESS 15044 MADISON PK 808 ELM ST 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 501 W. 19TH STREET 501 W. 19TH STREET 501 W. 19TH STREET 501 W. 19TH STREET 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 1 W RIVERCENTER BLVD 501 W. 19TH STREET 501 W. 19TH STREET 501 W. 19TH STREET 501 W. 19TH STREET 3711 TIBBATTS (W SOUTHERN AVE ENT) 5907 TAYLOR MILL RD 5907 TAYLOR MILL RD 5907 TAYLOR MILL RD 739 BUTTERMILK PK 739 BUTTERMILK PK 739 BUTTERMILK PK 50 CRESTVIEW MALL RD 50 CRESTVIEW MALL RD 10145 DECOURSEY PK 10145 DECOURSEY PK 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 3300 TURKEYFOOT RD 179 DELL AVE 179 DELL AVE 179 DELL AVE 179 DELL AVE 179 DELL AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 450 BARTLETT AVE 4042 TURKEYFOOT RD 4042 TURKEYFOOT RD 4042 TURKEYFOOT RD 4042 TURKEYFOOT RD 195 BUTTERMILK PK 195 BUTTERMILK PK 195 BUTTERMILK PK 195 BUTTERMILK PK 195 BUTTERMILK PK 195 BUTTERMILK PK 115 KENNEDY RD 115 KENNEDY RD 115 KENNEDY RD 5002 MADISON PK 5002 MADISON PK 1029 BRISTOW RD 1029 BRISTOW RD 1029 BRISTOW RD 11800 TAYLOR MILL RD 11800 TAYLOR MILL RD 1029 BRISTOW RD 5002 MADISON PK 5002 MADISON PK 11800 TAYLOR MILL RD 195 BUTTERMILK PK 195 BUTTERMILK PK 808 ELM ST 808 ELM ST 14071 DECOURSEY PK 1992 WALTON NICHOLSON PK 1992 WALTON NICHOLSON PK 1029 BRISTOW RD 1622 DIXIE HWY 1622 DIXIE HWY 15044 MADISON PK 5400 OLD TAYLOR MILL RD 5400 OLD TAYLOR MILL RD 5400 OLD TAYLOR MILL RD 5400 OLD TAYLOR MILL RD 2772 AMSTERDAM RD 2772 AMSTERDAM RD 2772 AMSTERDAM RD 2772 AMSTERDAM RD 2772 AMSTERDAM RD 14071 DECOURSEY PK 11800 TAYLOR MILL RD

PURSUANT TO KRS 424.290, “MATTERS REQUIRED TO BE PUBLISHED,” THE FOLLOWING RACES AND QUESTIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE VOTING MACHINES AND PAPER BALLOTS IN THE PRECINCTS LISTED IN KENTON COUNTY FOR THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 3, 2020.

BRACHT, MORNINGVIEW, NICHOLSON #1, #2, & #3, PINER, AND WHITES TOWER

CRESCENT SPRINGS #1, #2, & #3, CRESTVIEW HILLS #2, EDGEWOOD #1, #2, #3, #5, #6, & #7, ERLANGER #11 & #12, FT. MITCHELL #1, #3, #5, & #7, FT. WRIGHT #1, #2, & #3, LAKESIDE PARK #2, PARK HILLS #1, VILLA HILLS #1, #2, #3, #4, & #5

ALL PRECINCTS

COVINGTON #43, #44, & #45, DECOURSEY, DECOURSEY #1.5, EDGEWOOD #4, ERLANGER #13, INDEPENDENCE #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10, & #11, TAYLOR MILL #1, #2, & #3, AND VISALIA

COVINGTON #45, DECOURSEY, DECOURSEY #1.5, INDEPENDENCE #6, #7, #10 & #11, MORNINGVIEW, NICHOLSON #2 & #3, PINER, VISALIA, WHITES TOWER; PART OF BRACHT, INDEPENDENCE #2 AND NICHOLSON #1 LUDLOW #1 & #2

EDGEWOOD #2, ELSMERE #5, ERLANGER #10, #11, #12 &13, INDEPENDENCE #1, #3, #4, #5, #8 & #9; PART OF ELSMERE #3, ERLANGER #1, AND INDEPENDENCE #2

PART OF BRACHT AND NICHOLSON #1

BROMLEY, CRESCENT SPRINGS #1, #3 & #3.5, CRESTVIEW HILLS #1 & #2, VILLA HILLS #1, #2, #3, #4 & #5, AND PART OF ERLANGER #8

BROMLEY

BRACHT, COVINGTON #45, DECOURSEY #1.5, INDEPENDENCE #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10, & #11, MORNINGVIEW, NICHOLSON #1, #2, & #3, PINER, TAYLOR MILL #1, #2, & #3, VISALIA AND WHITES TOWER

BROMLEY, COVINGTON #1, #3, #7, #10, #11, #12, #13, #15, #19, #20, #21, #23, #24, #25, #26, #27, #30, #31, #33, #34, #36, #39, #41, #42, #43, & #44, CRESCENT SPRINGS #1, #2, #3, & #3.5, CRESTVIEW HILLS #1 & #2, DECOURSEY, EDGEWOOD #1, #1.5, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, & #7, ELSMERE #1, #2, #3, #4, & #5, ERLANGER #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10, #11, #12 & #13, FT. MITCHELL #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, & #7, FT. WRIGHT #1, #2, #3, & #4.5, LAKESIDE PARK #1 & #2, LUDLOW #1 & #2, PARK HILLS #1 & #2, TAYLOR MILL #4, AND VILLA HILLS #1, #2, #3, #4, & #5

BROMLEY, COVINGTON #1, #3, #7, #10, #11, #12, #13, #15, #19, #20, #21, #23, #24, #25, #26, #27, #30, #31, #33, #34, #36, #39, #41, & #42, FT. WRIGHT #4.5, LUDLOW #1 & #2, PARK HILLS #2, AND TAYLOR MILL #4

CRESCENT SPRINGS #3.5, CRESTVIEW HILLS #1, EDGEWOOD #1.5, ELSMERE #1, #2, #3, #4, & #5, ERLANGER #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, & #10, FT. MITCHELL #2 & #4, AND LAKESIDE PARK #1

ALL PRECINCTS

FT. MITCHELL #2, #3, #4; PART OF FT. MITCHELL #1, #5, & #7, FT. WRIGHT #1, AND LAKESIDE PARK #1

COVINGTON #1, #3, #7, #11, #12, #13, #15, #19, #20, #24, #26, #27, #30, #31, #33, #34, #36, #39, #41, & #42; PART OF COVINGTON #10, #21, #23, & #25

EDGEWOOD #1.5, ELSMERE #1, #2, & #4, ERLANGER #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #9; PART OF EDGEWOOD #1, ELSMERE #3, AND ERLANGER #1 & #8

COVINGTON #1, #3, #7, #10, #11, #12, #13, #15, #19, #20, #21, #24, #25, #26, #27, #30, #31, #33, #34, #36, #39, #41, #42, #43, & #44; PART OF COVINGTON #23 & #45, AND TAYLOR MILL #4

CRESCENT SPRINGS #3, PART OF CRESCENT SPRINGS #1 & #2

(CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE)

PART OF DECOURSEY

LUDLOW #1 & #2 CRESTVIEW HILLS #1 & #2 PART OF BRACHT AND NICHOLSON #1

FT. MITCHELL #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, & #7

PARK HILLS #1 & #2

EDGEWOOD #1, #1.5, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, & #7

FT. WRIGHT #1, #2, #4.5 AND PART OF FT. WRIGHT #3

PART OF DECOURSEY AND WHITES TOWER

ELSMERE #1, #2, #3 #4, & #5

INDEPENDENCE #1, #3, #4, #5, #7. #8, #10; PART OF INDEPENDENCE #2, #6, #9, & #11, NICHOLSON #3 AND WHITES TOWER

DECOURSEY 1.5, TAYLOR MILL #1, #2, #3; PART OF TAYLOR MILL #4 AND DECOURSEY

PART OF COVINGTON #23

ALL PRECINCTS

VILLA HILLS #1, #2, #4, & #5 AND PART OF #3

ERLANGER #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10, #11, #12, AND PART OF ERLANGER #13

LAKESIDE PARK #1 & #2

ALL PRECINCTS (CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE)

CE-GCI0503958-01

14B


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