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LORAIN COUNTY
AMHERST NEWS-TIMES • OBERLIN NEWS-TRIBUNE • WELLINGTON ENTERPRISE Thursday, June 25, 2020
www.lcnewspapers.com
Volume 7, Issue 26
Schools anxiously planning for fall
Parents aren’t the only ones wondering how COVID-19 will affect return to classes JASON HAWK, LAINA YOST and CARISSA WOYTACH
Unless a miracle cure is found, COVID-19 will make it impossible for school to look normal this fall. Most Lorain County students will start classes again in August, which gives area superintendents about two months to figure out
how to safely open classrooms. “We’ve been strategizing for a while. It kind of depends on what the virus does this summer,” said Lorain County Health Commissioner David Covell. He has been advising schools on how to reduce the risk the virus poses to students and staff. But until the state releases rules for teaching while the pandemic continues — Gov. Mike DeWine
was expected to do Tuesday after press time — detailed plans for reopening can't be drafted. The state will provide a general framework for the fall, but Ohio's 611 local districts will still make most of the big decisions. “Each school is going to be different,” DeWine said in a news conference this week. Most Lorain County school districts have sent or will send surveys
New treasurer, principal among Wellington hires
out to parents about what school should look like this fall. Firelands Schools most recent results show about 65 percent want their kids to attend in-person. “They’re hoping it looks very normal,” said Superintendent Mike Von Gunten. "People feel very strongly, many people do, about whether we should be getting back to normal or whether we should take a more cautious approach.”
Wearing masks A survey sent to Wellington parents showed one big red flag: Parents are not interested in making kids wear masks. Superintendent Ed Weber said it’s not realistic to expect especially very young children to wear masks throughout the entire school day. But that presents a FALL CLASSES PAGE A3
400 ‘COME BACK KITS’
JASON HAWK EDITOR
WELLINGTON — Four major hires that will shape the school system's future, including a new treasurer, were made last week by the Wellington Board of Education. Mark Donnelly was chosen to handle the district's finances as it struggles with two aging buildings and state funding cuts due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Mark Donnelly Donnelly has worked for Chagrin Falls and Warren school districts, and was operations director at the Mid-Ohio Educational Service Center. He also served seven years as business services director for the Strongsville Schools. Since last September, the Medina resident has been executive director of the Bond Accountability Commission, an independent body set up Janet Kubasak to watchdog $1 billion in Cleveland school system construction projects. Wellington Superintendent Ed Weber said Donnelly's experience with construction and maintenance won him the job. SCHOOL HIRES PAGE A2
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Jason Hawk | Amherst News-Times
Main Street Amherst Director Teresa Gilles sits amid piles of boxes filled with hand sanitizer.
Gifts to boost small business morale
JASON HAWK EDITOR
AMHERST — Mountains of hand sanitizer bottles. Stacks of masks. Gloves galore. Teresa Gilles picked her way through the piles Wednesday at her down-
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or masks that makes all the difference." Gilles is the director of Main Street Amherst, a nonprofit that helps the city's business community. Wanting to help brickand-mortar retailers and restaurants rebound after months of restrictions, she devised "Come Back Kits."
At the end of June, about 400 businesses will get bags filled with paper towels, disinfectant, a gallon of sanitizer and protective gear. The goal is to help local owner-operators defray some of the unexpected
COME BACK PAGE A3
NEXUS asks again for lower taxes JASON HAWK EDITOR
NEXUS Gas Transmission has filed another property tax appeal, asking Lorain County to accept just $3.6 million from its new pipeline instead of the $9.5 million it once promised. The request has county Auditor Craig Snodgrass furious.
"They promised everybody the world," he said in a phone interview Wednesday. "... They sold everybody a bill of goods on how to get a foot in the door to each county, and now they've reneged." NEXUS has made three attempts since November to reduce the tax amount it is required to pay for the 21-mile stretch of pipeline that runs east and west through the county.
Now the total is down by 62 percent. Snodgrass called the appeals "a shell game" and "a bait and switch," and said the public should be outraged. The state tax commission is expected to rule on the appeal by the end of June. NEXUS PAGE A2
INSIDE THIS WEEK
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town office, sharing plans for putting the supplies in the hands of small business owners who are struggling to get through the COVID-19 pandemic. "Maybe by getting some extra masks, it helps just a little bit," she said. "Maybe it gives them that little extra hand by having gloves
Amherst
Oberlin
Special look
Dangerous sinkhole fix needed at cemetery • A6
Wetland to replace historic Morgan Street reservoir • B1
Oberlin and Wellington police chiefs write about unrest • B1
OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS A5 • CROSSWORD B4 • SUDOKU B4 • KID SCOOP B6