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Lake board to hear consultant on gun policy By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublications.com
Western Basin
An algal bloom in the western basin of Lake Erie in 2011, the largest ever recorded in the lake. Source: Michigan Sea Grant
TOLEDO OREGON
The struggle to save Lake Erie By Kelly J. Kaczala Press News Editor kkaczala@presspublications.com On August 2, at approximately 2:30 a.m., Toledo issued a tap water ban to communities that consume city water after high levels of a toxin created by blue green algae was detected in samples taken from the Collins Park water treatment plant on the East Side. Samples from the plant, which draws its water from the western basin of Lake Erie, the 12th largest freshwater lake in the world, showed that microcystin, produced by blooms of cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, was detected at 3 parts per billion (ppb), exceeding the 1 ppb safety threshold established by the World Health Organization. The toxin, at high levels, can cause abnormal liver function in humans and animals. The ban created havoc in Northwest Ohio. Stores open 24 hours reported shortages of bottled water just two hours after Toledo issued the ban. Residents unaware of the do-not-drink advisory during the night awakened that morning to find the commodity many take for granted in very short supply. Not only were customers
Saving Lake Erie A special 3 week report from The Press told to stop drinking the water, but those with compromised immune systems were warned not to bathe or wash the dishes with it. Restaurants were closed, unless they used bottled water for cooking, washing dishes, and food preparation. The calculated loss in profits is still unknown at press time. Like a script from a Doomsday movie, many motorists fanned out as far north as Hillsdale, Michigan and south to Columbus, Ohio to find the liquid gold. Local message boards lit up, with posters
anxiously announcing the location of the most recent discovery of bottled water. The national media reported on the turmoil, the first time in U.S. history so many people – over 500,000 – were without tap water. The event warranted a visit from Ohio Governor John Kasich, who declared a state of emergency for Northwest Ohio. On Aug. 2, a satellite photo from NASA showed a highly concentrated algal bloom had developed near the direct intake of Toledo’s water treatment plant on Lake Erie’s shallow western basin, causing microcystin to be detected in the water supply. Nearby communities whose tap water is provided by Oregon opened up their spigots to help their distressed neighbors. Though concerns were still widespread, fear became more manageable after Toledo started organizing water supply stations at various locations where residents could receive free bottled water. Retail stores like Walmart diverted their delivery trucks from other cities and states to the Greater Toledo area to transport thousands of cases of water. Area fire stations offered to fill Continued on page 2
A safety consultant from Buckeye Firearms Association has been invited to a Jan. 24 workshop of the Lake school board to explain the association’s Faculty/ Administrator Training & Emergency Response (FASTER) program. The program offers training for school personnel in the event of an actual shooter on school property. Tim Krugh, school board president, said that although some Lake district employees have permits to carry concealed weapons the board currently doesn’t authorize anyone to bring weapons on school property. The board will make no decisions at the workshop, he said. “We’re just looking for ways we can minimize the chance of a tragic shooting, with an eye on prevention,” Krugh said. “We want to look at all viable options and see what the program has to offer.” Mark Hummer, chief of the Lake Township Police Department, and Steve Poiry, the department’s school resource officer, have been invited to the workshop, according to Krugh, who said any decision to loosen the board’s policy would be done in collaboration with the police department. “We’re blessed to have an outstanding police department here and we’ve had great cooperation and support from chief Hummer and the resource officer as well as the township trustees,” Krugh said. The Buckeye Firearms Association website describes the FASTER program as an “…intensive 3-day class where you will learn many of the same skills and tactics used by law enforcement. Your instructors will include professional law enforcement personnel with extensive knowledge of active shooter situations.” Participants are required to have concealed handgun licenses issued by the state in which they work before undergoing the training. Chief Hummer on Thursday confirmed he’d been invited to the workshop and was Continued on page 3
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JANUARY 12, 2015
Algal blooms have plagued Lake Erie for decades By Kelly J. Kaczala Press News Editor
kkaczala@presspublications.com To many who have studied the lake for years, the drama that unfolded in Toledo was not surprising. Algal blooms have been plaguing the western basin of
Successful cleanup Algal blooms were noticed in the lake in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. The pollution was so bad that the lake was considered “dead.” Algae was fed mostly by phosphorus discharged from “point source” pollution, such as municipal wastewater treatment plants, industrial waste and commercial laundry detergent. “Point source” pollution is more manageable to control because it can be traced back to a fixed point or specific source. Two-thirds of that phosphorus load came from poor sewage treatment, according to Dr. Jeff Reutter, Ohio State University’s director of Ohio Sea
A special 3 week report from The Press toring stations at rivers and streams in the Maumee Bay watershed for analysis three times per day, she said.
In August 2013, visitors to Maumee Bay State Park were stunned to see waves that looked like thick pea soup. (Press file photo by Ken Grosjean) Grant and Stone Laboratory. A concerted effort of eight states in the U.S. and a province in Canada affected by the blooms was successful in cutting back on point sources of pollution. The passage in 1972 of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement and the Clean Water Act resulted in the reduction of phosphorus into the lake by 60 percent, which vastly improved water quality. The legislation reduced industrial waste, set goals to resurrect the country’s waterways, and earmarked billions of dollars for cities to construct and upgrade sewage treatment plants. “The Clean Water Act was the reason Lake Erie was brought back from the brink, essentially,” said Tim Davis, a harmful algae specialist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Great Lakes Research Lab in Ann Arbor, Michigan. But in the 1990s, the blooms reappeared, and have become larger and more commonplace. This time, the main culprit fueling the toxin shifted to “non-point” sources of pollution, such as over-fertilized farm fields. “Today, two-thirds of the phosphorus load is coming from agricultural runoff,” said Reutter. Dissolved phosphorus, which is soluable in water, supports rapid algal growth. Particulate phosphorus, which binds to sediment like clay, settles to the bottom of lakes and streams where it may no longer be available to the algae. Levels of dissolved phosphorus have been increasing since the mid 1990s. “It makes your corn and soybeans grow better. But it’s also one of the big problems. It controls algal growth,” said Reutter. Dissolved phosphorus was also high when wastewater treatment plant discharges contributed to algal blooms decades ago. But point sources of pollution are not the
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Today, twothirds of the phosphorus load is coming from agricultural runoff.
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Lake Erie for decades. The murky, green tinted water that looks like thick pea soup has been studied by scientists, environmentalists, college professors, the Ohio EPA, the U.S. EPA, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, and others interested in the water quality of the lake. “The 2014 Toledo event was no surprise,” Dr. George Bullerjahn, of Bowling Green State University, said of the three day tap water ban last August. “We saw it happen last year, although on a smaller scale. We’ve seen these blooms for so long. The fact that there was a crisis, that there was a panic, actually was a surprise to me. I thought we would know that this was going to happen. We saw it happen last year in Carroll Township.” The township, located on the lake shore between Toledo and Sandusky, shut down its water treatment plant and issued a tap water ban to its residents after microcystin was found near the plant’s intake on Lake Erie. It was the first public water plant ever in the Great Lakes to shut down its drinking water to protect residents from the toxin. For some, the incident should have been a wakeup call for what was to come in Toledo. “It should have been, but it was not,” said Sandy Bihn, Lake Erie Waterkeeper. Bihn, whose home on Bay Shore Road in Oregon overlooks the lake, has been sounding the alarm about the algae for years. “The legislators didn’t even know about it. All Ohio EPA did was create an emergency response plan, but didn’t go after microcystin treatment and testing.” Phosphorus, the same nutrient that makes vegetables grow, feeds the algal blooms, which have been getting bigger and more frequent over the years. So how does it get into the lake? Primary sources include fertilizer (commercial and manure) runoff from farm fields, untreated discharge from sewer treatment plants, industrial waste, broken septic systems, combined sewer overflows, and residual sediment already in the lake.
Saving Lake Erie
main problem today because the control systems from the 1970s are still effective. “When you look at point sources, they have not been increasing,” said Dr. Laura Johnson, a research scientist with Heidelberg University’s National Center for Water Quality Research in Tiffin, Ohio. “If anything, they’ve been decreasing because we have increased regulating our point sources. When we talk about it coming from agriculture and land runoff, what we would expect to see is that the amount of phosphorus in the water would increase anytime it rained. If it rains and it’s going over the land, then it gets delivered to the river. And that’s exactly what we see. That’s why we feel very confident saying that it’s an agricultural source.” The Center, which has been tracking phosphorus loads into the lake for 40 years, collects water samples from several moni-
Nitrogen Phosphorus isn’t the only villain feeding the beast. Nitrogen is also a problem, according to Davis. “Phosphorus is the main driver of these blooms. But we’re finding it’s not the only driver,” said Davis. “As we move toward best management practices to decrease the amount of phosphorus going into Lake Erie, we also need to be conscious of the fact that different forms of nitrogen can also influence these blooms.” Efforts today to reduce sediments in the lake present their own challenges. Researchers decades ago found it easier to regulate pollution from fixed points, like sewage treatment plants. It is much more difficult today to cut back non-point sources, such as agricultural pollution, which is spread out over thousands of miles. “Back then, we were dealing with about 20 sewage treatment plants,” said Reutter. “Today, when you look at the number of farms between Monroe, Michigan and Sandusky, Ohio, there are over 7 million acres of agricultural land. You have 4.2 million acres in the Maumee watershed. You’re dealing with over 15,000 farmers in three states. And that’s a big, big challenge.” Complicating the problem this time around is the increased number of invasive zebra and quagga mussels, which hitched rides on overseas ships entering the lake in the 1990s. The organisms eat algae, but spit out the toxic microcystin, leaving it more concentrated in the lake, according to Davis. Clearly, there is more to deal with today to restore the lake. But it can be done. “We were the `dead lake’ of the 60s and 70s. That was our image. We went from being the poster child for pollution problems in this country to the `walleye capital of the world,’ a huge benefit to society and the economy. We are the best example of ecosystem recovery,” said Reutter. And that was accomplished by cutting back the phosphorus load from 20,000 metric tons to 11,000 metric tons. “I thought that was not going to be possible – that it was too big of a reduction. But we did it,” he said. The walleye harvest in Ohio in 1976, he noted, went from 112,000 in Lake Erie to over 5 million in the 1980s. Charter fishing businesses went from 34 in 1975 to over 1,200 in the 1980s. Coastal businesses grew from 207 to over 425 today.
The struggle to save Lake Erie: Can we win the fight? Continued from front page up empty containers with water. The Ohio National Guard delivered 33,000 gallons of potable water, as well as 15,000 gallons in bladders (collapsible containers). By the third day, Monday, Aug. 4, residents eagerly awaited the most recent results of water samples tested by Toledo, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in hopes of getting the ban lifted. By noon, the city announced that the presence of microcystin had dropped below the 1 ppb threshold.
Common People, Uncommon Challenges 50 stories of inspiration
The water was safe to drink again. Due to the algal bloom season, the city stepped up monitoring of its water. On Aug. 16, tests again showed elevated levels of the toxin, but not enough to issue a ban. Besides raising concerns about the availability of clean water for public consumption, the incident also highlighted the impact harmful algae blooms have on the local economy. Besides generating $1.4 billion annually on just fish and recreation alone, the lake is an important economic development resource. “One of our biggest resources is that we have a lot of fresh water,” said Sandy
Bihn, executive director of the Lake Erie Waterkeeper organization. The availability of clean water in the lake, she noted, is one of the reasons Oregon was able to attract the Oregon Clean Energy project, a gas-fired electric generating plant currently under construction. The $800 million investment will employ 450 construction jobs during its three year construction phase, 25 fulltime permanent workers once it becomes operational, and have a total annual payroll of about $3.2 million. The city’s agreement with Clean Energy for the plant’s use of the raw water intake system will generate about $1 million per year, which will help
Read about the heroes living in the homes next to you. In these 50 short stories, Press columnist John Szozda tells the stories of common people who have met uncommon challenges with vision, courage, passion and determination. These men and women include the Genoa grandmother who helped
by John Szozda
keep the city’s water and sewer rates lower. “The quality of that fresh water becomes a question mark,” she said. “We need to have that as part of our toolkit for economic development.” In the weeks that followed the tap water advisory, local, state and federal officials held meetings, introduced legislation, and awarded grants to study how to avoid another crisis. The Press staff in the next three weeks will take an in-depth look at the challenges that lay ahead and what is being done to restore health to Lake Erie.
solve her daughter’s murder, the Polish-American boy who survived gruesome medical experiments during WWII and the woman, once a victim of fear, who fought back against crime and founded CrimeStoppers. The
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THE PRESS JANUARY 12, 2015
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Maumee River empties most of phosphorus into bay By Kelly J. Kaczala Press News Editor kkaczala@presspublications.com The Maumee River is the largest Great Lakes watershed, draining all or part of several Ohio, Michigan and Indiana counties as it meanders 137 miles through an agricultural region before emptying into Maumee Bay and the warm, shallow western basin of Lake Erie. Two-thirds of the Maumee River’s watershed is farmland, dominated by corn and soybean fields. Agricultural practices along the river have been the primary source of the growth of algal blooms in the lake, according to researchers. The river supplies just 3 percent of the lake’s water, but half of its phosphorus. “It’s important to understand where our water in Lake Erie comes from,” said Dr. Jeff Reutter, Ohio State University’s director of Ohio Sea Grant and Stone Laboratory. The upper Great Lakes, he said, supplies the vast majority of water – 80 percent – to Lake Erie via the Detroit River, while 10 percent is from rain on the lake itself, and 10 percent from the tributaries around the lake. The Maumee River, as the largest tributary to the Great Lakes, drains 4.2 million acres of agricultural land, according to Reutter. “And that should tell you what the water in that river frequently looks like – often it’s pretty brown as it flows into the lake.” The river dumps 3,800 metric tons of phosphorus into the lake annually. By comparison, Cleveland’s Cuyahoga River, which was so badly polluted in the 1970s that it caught fire, drops 452 metric tons of phosphorus per year into the lake, he said. There are also less forests around the lake to filter nutrients that cause algal blooms. “The other lakes are primarily dominated by forest ecosystems. Lake Erie is dominated by an agricultural and an urban system,” said Reutter. “We’re going to get more sediment if we have that watershed - we’re going to get more nutrients, more pesticides.” Climate change Climate change, or global warming, also has had an impact on the development of harmful algal blooms. “It’s often overlooked,” said Tim Davis, harmful algae specialist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab in
Saving Lake Erie A special 3 week report from The Press
Dr. Jeff Reutter, Director of Ohio Sea Grant and Stone Laboratory at Ohio State University, said “The level of dissolved phosphorus increases following heavy rainfall.” (Press photo by Ken Grosjean) Ann Arbor, Michigan. “An increase in water temperature may favor some strains of cyanobacteria, or the blue green algae that can produce toxins. Warmer temperatures also lead to lower water viscosity, which influence the blooms.” Frequent heavy spring rains flush more of the sediments and nutrients off farm fields and into ditches and streams that drain into Lake Erie, feeding the algae. “It is anticipated we’ll experience more storms in the Great Lakes region,” said Davis. “Storms can lead to more runoff. More runoff can lead to more nutrient input. Higher nutrient concentrations are also likely to cause toxic strains of microcystis to dominate the community.” “That’s why climate change is so important,” said Reutter. “If we get more severe storms, we get more nutrients coming in.” Large storm events that are increasing in frequency and severity, according to studies, can also overwhelm facilities in some communities that treat storm water and sewage in the same system. The result of combined sewer overflows is that nutri-
ents from the sewage go into the lake where the cyanobacteria can flourish. The amount of phosphorus that comes into the lake from all the combined sewer overflows, according to Reutter, is estimated between 2 percent and 8 percent. “This is incredibly important to grasp. The majority of the phosphorus load comes in during storm events. To solve this, we need to address the load that’s coming in during the storms,” said Reutter. The level of dissolved phosphorus increases following heavy rainfall. When there is a drought, the level drops, he said. He noted that 2012, a drought year, showed “almost no algal bloom” in the lake. In 2011, tests showed a “giant load” of phosphorus in the river following heavy spring rains, which developed into the worst algal bloom ever recorded in Lake Erie. “The bottom line is there’s a much greater frequency over the last 50 years of severe storms. Somewhere between a 37 percent and 53 percent increase in those rain events produce more than 3 inches of rain in a 24 hour period. When you have 1
inch of rain in a 24 hour period, that storm doesn’t cause a problem because that water can soak into the ground. Those gentle rains are not the problem – it’s these gullywashers we seem to get more frequently,” said Reutter. Little can be done to affect climate change in the short term. But the amount of phosphorus flowing into the river and lake can be cut back to choke off the development of algal blooms. Lake Erie, as the southernmost, shallowest, and warmest of the Great Lakes, provides a rich environment for the algae to thrive. But it also responds the quickest when the phosphorus level is reduced. Erie, which produces more fish annually than the other Great Lakes combined, has a maximum depth of 210 feet. The average depth of the western basin, where Toledo’s water system intake is located and where the harmful algal blooms formed in August, is just 24 feet deep. In the western basin, the blooms go away quickly when the phosphorus load is reduced because the flush out rate is fast, said Reutter. The retention time or “flush out rate” is the length of time it takes for water in the lake to be completely replaced by mostly new water. “Almost all the water – over 90 percent – comes into this little, very, very shallow basin, so it can’t stay there that long. This is where all the phosphorus goes in. It gets flushed out of there very quickly,” he said. In Lake Erie, the flush out rate is 2.7 years. In the western basin, it’s even shorter. “Retention time in this little tiny basin where the harmful algal blooms occurred is 20-50 days,” he said By comparison, the maximum depth of Lake Superior, the largest of the Great Lakes, is over 1,300 feet. By volume, it is 25 times larger than Lake Erie. Its retention time is over 100 years. “So we’re lucky. If we caused this same problem on Lake Superior, it would take over 100 years to fix it. But if we reduce the load to the western basin, it goes away right away,” he said.
Despite conservation practices, phosphorus still a problem By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublications.com
Saving Lake Erie A special 3 week report from The Press
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...the phosphorus content of eroded soil from farm fields can be high even when excessive amounts of fertilizer or manure are no longer being applied.
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For a chemical element discovered in the 17th century, phosphorus can still be puzzling for researchers tracking it from farm fields to tributaries of Lake Erie where it plays an integral role in the formation of harmful algal blooms. For years – well before the algal bloom of 2011, described by some as the largest in the lake in decades - growers in Northwest Ohio have been adopting conservation measures to reduce run-off from farm fields. Farm Service Agency offices in six local counties report enrollments are up during the past decade in a voluntary program that pays growers to convert cropland into filter strips along ditches and streams. Consider: • In Fulton County, filter strip acreage has grown steadily, from 56 acres on 15 farms in 2004 to 559 acres last year on 158 farms. • Lucas County, west of the Maumee River, has also recorded an increase from 15 acres in 2004 to 59 acres last year on 24 farms, • In Wood County, filter strips covered nearly 3,000 acres on 679 farms last year, compared to 256 acres on 75 farms in 2004. • In Sandusky County, filter strips covered nearly 750 acres on 191 farms last year, compared to 60 acres on 15 farms in 2004. • In Ottawa County, filter strips covered 551 acres on 119 farms last year, compared to 5 acres on 3 farms in 2004. • In Erie County, filter strips covered 115 acres on 30 farms last year, compared to 16 acres on 3 farms in 2004. Those figures don’t include acreage enrolled in other Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) practices such as riparian buffers, wetland restoration, field windbreaks or establishment of
native grasses. Ottawa County landowners, for example, had 1,159 acres enrolled in 2014 in the wetland restoration program. Less than four acres were enrolled 10 years ago. “Farmers know there is a problem with the Great Lakes,” John Gaynor, executive director of the Fulton-Western Lucas County FSA office, said. Brandi Koehler, conservation program chief for the Ohio FSA State office in Columbus, says 46,346 acres have been enrolled in the CREP for the western Lake Erie watershed area of Ohio and a portion of the Rocky River watershed. The goal is 67,000 acres. Of course, those numbers reflect only a small area of the Maumee River watershed, which drains about 6,608 square miles, including 4,862 in Ohio, 1,283 in Indiana and 463 in Michigan.
“By virtue of its location, its high discharges, and its high loads and concentrations of total and dissolved phosphorus, we believe that the Maumee River watershed is the primary driver of algal blooms in the Western Basin of Lake Erie,” a 2012 report by the Ohio Lake Erie Phosphorus Task Force says. Still, phosphorus fertilizer sales in Ohio are trending down and the 100,000 or so tons sold in Ohio in 2011 was the lowest amount since 1975, according to data compiled by the American Association of Plant Food Control Officials, and sales have been below the running historic average since 2001. And what was considered a few decades ago to be optimal plant nutrition meant applying more phosphorus to fields than crops removed from the soil. In recent years, application rates have also dropped and are now closer to balancing what was removed. Even the amount of farmland in Northwest Ohio has been drifting lower. The 2012 Census of Agriculture by the National Agricultural Statistics Service shows a loss of farmland in Ottawa, Wood, and Erie counties from 2007 levels. Farm acreage remained about the same in Lucas and Sandusky counties while slightly increasing in Fulton County. Yet the rainy spring of 2010 appears to have set the stage for a major bloom in the lake. From April through June of that year, Heidelberg University researchers measured a total of 237 metric tons of dissolved phosphorus moving past their monitoring station on the Maumee River near Waterville – the largest amount for the April-June period the university has recorded since it began monitoring in 1975. During that period, the station also recorded 688 metric tons of particulate phosphorus and 377,000 metric tons of sus-
pended sediment – the 10th and 15th highest levels respectively in 33 years. The ratio of particulate phosphorus, which is attached to sediment, to dissolved phosphorus, which is in the water solution, is noteworthy because the dissolved form is immediately available to support algal growth – about 3.5 times more “bioavailable” than particulate phosphorus, researchers calculate. In 2011, Lake Erie, spurred by heavy spring rains, experienced an algal bloom of record setting magnitude. It began in the warm, shallow western basin in mid July. By early September, the bloom was covering almost 2,000 square miles - at least 2.4 times greater than the previous largest bloom in 2008. Legacy phosphorus Then there is “legacy phosphorus.” When excessive amounts of fertilizer or manure are applied to a field it may take years or decades for phosphorus levels to return to background levels once the over-application is stopped. Phosphorus remains in the soil profile in fields, along their edges and drainage ways and in streambeds. Moreover, the movement of the sediment and bound phosphorus from fields to streams and rivers can take many years. “Eroded soil particles leaving a farm field can be deposited where run-off slows or ponding occurs before reaching a stream or river,” a 2011 U.S. Department of Agriculture assessment of conservation practices on cultivated fields notes. “Once the sediment has entered streams, some of the soil particles settle out and can remain in the streambed or settle on the floodplain Continued on page 4
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THE PRESS JANUARY 12, 2015
Oregon farmer caught between two different worlds By J. Patrick Eaken Press Staff Writer news@presspublications.com
Saving Lake Erie A special 3 week report from The Press Myers’ family has been doing no-till for a long time, starting in 1890 with Myers’ great-grandfather. “No-till does a better job holding back run-off than conventional tillage,” Myers said of the practice of planting crops without plowing by inserting seeds into small holes through the stubble of a previous crop. “The problem with some of the studies is they’re saying that no-till is the problem but in Ohio, for example, only about six percent of the corn acreage is planted with no-till. About 30 percent of the soybean crops are no-till,” Myers added. Myers believes that if farmers have to cut back on phosphorus in fertilizers, it can be accomplished without affecting yields. “We may just have to come up with different methods for fertilizing the crop as opposed to the way we have been doing it,” he said.
Oregon farmer Bill Myers is also vice president of the Lake Erie Waterkeeper Association. (Press photo by Ken Grosjean) Road salts — which are applied throughout Northwest Ohio — should be examined, too. “Chlorides that we use in road salt contribute to the problem. There is a study from 1969 that says at that time 23 percent of the problem was chloride from road salt. There are a lot of components out there besides agriculture. For whatever reason, it’s just been convenient to blame it on agriculture,” he said. Gypsum, no-till Myers has made an effort as a farmer to cut back on the phosphorus that may be draining from his fields by applying gypsum as a soil additive. Gypsum was the best performer in a 2006 Agricultural Research Service study examining the ability of soil additives to curb runoff of phosphorus from farm fields into the nation’s waters. The researchers treated the soil annually for three years. They found that applying 5,000 pounds of gypsum per acre was most effective in reducing soil-test values for phosphorus. According to the study, reductions in dissolved reactive phosphorus seemed to be dependent on continual ap-
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...let’s face it, we have the largest footprint into the watershed with the amount of land use that we control.
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Former Oregon City Councilman Bill Myers wears two hats — he farms 2,000 acres on fields located three-quarters of a mile from the Lake Erie shoreline. He is also vice president of the Lake Erie Waterkeeper Association and president of the Lucas County Farm Bureau. As a result, Myers has firm beliefs about protecting the environment and an interest in making sure the agricultural industry is considered if new policies are adopted. Myers attended the Lake Erie Improvement Association forum last December to hear experts discuss invasive algal blooms. Scientists from universities across the Great Lakes recommended implementing new policies that would lead to a 40 percent reduction of algae-feeding phosphorus into the lake. Researchers say most of the phosphorus is coming from fertilizer and manure runoff from farm fields. Improved tiling and water drainage systems move fertilizer and legacy phosphorus through the watershed faster. “There’s always room for improvement, no matter what we do,” Myers said. “In making the changes, we need to make sure that we don’t possibly make it worse by…reacting. That’s agriculture’s biggest battle.” While Myers called the forum “very informative,” he believes there is more to be considered. “Actually, total fertilizer has gone down in 20 years, not up. So we must have two guys out there who are doing it really bad or something is wrong in their assumption,” Myers said. “If you look at it logically, you should see the fertilizer in the watershed increasing three, four fold. We’re not seeing that.” In the 1960s and 1970s water treatment plants and industry were blamed for pushing phosphorus into the lake that led to algal blooms. Since then, new technologies have led to more pollution-free plants. But Myers debates that, too. “I think wastewater plants play a much larger role than what everybody wants to talk about, but since it costs so much public money to fix, nobody wants to talk about it.” In addition, urban sprawl and overdevelopment in the 1990s may have increased the phosphorus load that drains into the lake. “Everybody forgets about that equation,” he said.
plications of gypsum. Northwest Ohio farmers are using other progressive measures to reduce run-off, Myers said. Last March, in his presentation at the Ninth Annual Lake Erie Conference at Lourdes University, Myers said the intense scrutiny by some researchers on no-till planting and its links to algal blooms may be misplaced.
Kill the algae Myers believes farmers should not take personally what scientists say or what they hear in the media. The end result of any changes in regulation or legislation could be in the form of economic incentives and technologies that are better for everyone, including farmers. “We certainly take ownership of a percentage of what is going on, because let’s face it, we have the largest footprint into the watershed with the amount of land use that we control. So, it’s impossible to say we have nothing to do with this. That would be stupid. I don’t take it personally. The only way somebody would take it personally would be if the environment was harmed maliciously. I don’t know where that guy is. It is expensive to throw away the environment. And I have a hard time buying into the idea that someone is actually trying to pollute to watershed,” said Myers. “There is more to this puzzle based on historical things that have changed within the environment that is affecting everything differently. We now have a larger concentration of animals, we have a different way of farming, and we have practices that need to be looked at — like taking care of manure and fertilizer on frozen ground.” (— Press news editor Larry Limpf contributed)
Despite conservation practices, phosphorus still a problem Continued from front page when the water is high and slow moving. “These sediments can remain in play for years until a storm creates enough surface water run-off to re-suspend the previously eroded soil, or until the stream flow cuts into stream banks made up of deposits of previously eroded soil. Consequently, the phosphorus content of eroded soil from farm fields can be high even when excessive amounts of fertilizer or manure are no
longer being applied.” Ultimately, the land itself will provide more answers to how much fertilizer needs to be applied, says Steve Davis, a resource conservationist with the USDA. Agriculture will need better soil testing methods, he said. In the meantime, more growers should consider using phosphorus within guidelines established by universities in Ohio, Michigan and Indiana for the tri-state area. Recently, the 4R Nutrient Stewardship
Certification Program that was launched about a year ago announced the first three fertilizer providers to be certified: The Andersons, Inc., Fremont facility; Legacy Farmers Cooperative, Custar, O., facility, and Morral Companies, LLC, Caledonia, O. facility. The voluntary program is an effort by the agriculture industry to reduce the use of applied nutrients. The program attempts to certify individuals and entities in the Western
Lake Erie Basin that sell or apply fertilizers do so in accordance with 4R Nutrient Stewardship principles – using the right source of nutrients at the right rate and right time in the right place. Applicants must go through an audit and demonstrate they follow 4R principles. “All the tools in the current conservation toolbox, and new ones yet to be discovered, will need to be widely employed to remedy the problem,” says Davis.
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SUBURBAN EDITION
THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
The Press serves 23 towns and surrounding townships in Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky and Wood Counties
P.O. Box 169
419-836-2221
1550 Woodville Rd.
•
www.presspublications.com
Millbury, OH 43447
(419) 836-2221
•
Vol. 43, No. 19
Fax: (419) 836-1319
www.presspublications.com
Gun policy Continued from front page planning to attend. “We’re willing to work with our school board to ensure the safety of the students, faculty and staff,” he said. He said the resource officer is in school buildings five days a week during regular school hours although he may be pulled off campus in the event of an emergency elsewhere. “It’s his primary assignment,” the chief said. The position is funded by the township. Krugh said the workshop will start at 10 a.m. and be held in the high school. It is open to the public. Richard Welling, a township trustee, said he may recommend pulling the resource officer from the schools if the Lake board allows staff and faculty to carry concealed weapons. “In an active shooting situation it could be harder to know who’s the shooter and who are the armed teachers and staff.” He described Poiry as an exceptional officer with years of experience. “Additional training is one thing but you can’t beat actual experience during an emergency situation,” Welling said.
Sledding fun
Dog license locations
Koren Stevens, left, heads down the sledding hill at Ravine Park while her sister Kendra gets ready to take the plunge with some help from their grandparents, Roger and Pamela Cowell. The two got the day off from Garfield Elementary after school was canceled because of the snow. (Press photos by Ken Grosjean)
Genoa schools
Board interviewing sup’t candidates By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublications.com The Genoa school board is spending much of its time this month interviewing candidates for the superintendent’s position. Board members met Wednesday and have scheduled meetings for Jan. 12, 19 and 21 for interviews, which are being held in executive session. The current superintendent, Dennis Mock, has announced his intention to retire July 31. The board also hosted a community forum Dec. 1 to gather public input on the search for a new superintendent. The board will hold its organizational meeting Jan. 14 at 5 p.m. and then meet in regular session at 6 p.m. when it will turn its attention to the district’s financial con-
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dition and discuss placing another property tax levy on the ballot. Last month, the board took the preliminary steps for going back to the ballot, approving resolutions of necessity for the renewal of a 5-mill, 5-year operating issue and a new emergency levy that will generate an additional $1.025 million a year if passed. Bill Nye, district treasurer, said the board will consider resolutions for actually placing the issues on the May ballot during its Jan. 14 meeting. Last year, district voters twice rejected requests for additional tax revenue. A 4.99mill, 5-year levy was defeated in May and an emergency issue that would have generated $800,000 annually was defeated in November. Nye said with the loss of the emergency issue, the district has lost a year of collecting tax revenue since collections
Millbury Fireman·s Association
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commence in the year following a levy’s passage. “Due to the fact we lost a year’s worth of collections, the amount has increased to $1.025 million. Instead of collecting it in 2015 we won’t be collecting it until 2016 if it passes,” he said. The delay, he said, puts the district in a tighter financial situation. A five-year forecast of the district’ finances projects it will end the fiscal year on June 30, 2015 with a balance of about $1.3 million. Nye said he projects the balance will drop to about $500,000 by June 2016 and become a deficit of about $500,000 by June 2017 if the district doesn’t receive additional revenues or cut spending. He said the district receives about half of its operating revenue from the state. The 5-mill operating levy was first approved by voters in 1990 and is set to expire at the end of 2015.
Throughout the month of January, Wood County Dog Shelter staff members will be selling dog licenses at satellite locations throughout the County. Ohio law requires dog owners to purchase a dog license by Jan. 31. The price is $14 for a one-year license or $42 for a three-year license. In addition, a permanent dog license is available for $140. Purchases made at one of the satellite locations or the Wood County Dog Shelter can be paid by cash or check. For more information, call the Wood County Dog Shelter at 419-354-9242. Satellite dog license sale locations include: • Jan. 13 – Perrysburg City Office Building (atrium), 1-4 p.m.; • Jan. 14 – Village of Haskins Town Hall, 1-4 p.m.; • Jan. 20 – City of Northwood City Council Chambers, 1-4 p.m. • Jan. 21 – Village of Pemberville Town Hall, 1-4 p.m. • Jan. 28 – City of Rossford Municipal Building, 1-4 p.m. Licenses may also be purchased at the Wood County Auditor’s Office, located on the second floor of the County Office Building in Bowling Green or online at www.co.wood.oh.us/auditor. A convenience fee will be charged for credit card purchases.
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
Bystander and part-time cop help nab robbery suspect A bystander and alert part-time village officer played crucial roles in the arrest of a man accused of robbing stores in two Ottawa County communities, Steve Weirich, Oak Harbor police chief said. Trevor Boss, 31, is currently in the Ottawa County Detention Facility, facing an aggravated burglary charge for the Dec. 27 robbery of the Mickey Mart on Perry Street in Port Clinton. He also admitted to a Dec. 21 robbery at the Dollar General store on Locust Street in Oak Harbor, according to the Port Clinton Police Department. Boss reportedly brandished a gun in the Port Clinton robbery but did not use one in the robbery at the store in the village. Authorities found a gun believed to be the weapon used in the second robbery. Boss made an initial appearance in Ottawa County Municipal Court following his New Year’s Eve arrest in Toledo. He is scheduled to appear again at 8:30 a.m. on Jan. 12. The investigation involved the Oak Harbor police, Port Clinton police, Ottawa
“
Boss...stopped at the Shell station for a tall boy (beer) and was heading back to Toledo.
“
By Cynthia L. Jacoby Special to The Press news@presspublications.com
County Drug Task Force and the U.S. Marshal’s Office in Toledo. The cases are expected to go before an Ottawa County grand jury soon, chief Weirich said. The chief credits a break in the cases to a village resident and a part-time officer Jim Forsythe, who was in the right place at the right time. “Everything just came together,” the chief said. The night of the Dollar General rob-
bery, a witness driving along Mill Street saw a man park a silver S-10 pickup in the parking lot between the rear of Spangler Motors and Croghan Colonial properties along the Portage River bank. The village resident thought it was suspicious that the man got out of the vehicle, walked to the corner of Locust Street, crossed and headed toward Dollar General, Weirich said. So the bystander pulled his vehicle into the Spangler used car lot across the street and waited, the chief said. Soon after, he saw the man run back to the vehicle, get in and head west. The witness followed. In the confusing moments afterward, the witness hailed down Forsythe, the officer on the call, told him what he saw and gave him descriptions of both the man and pickup. Police believe the suspect headed along State Route 105 and evaded cops by turning down a rural road. Nearly a week later, when the Port Clinton store was robbed Forsythe was on duty again, working part-time for the Carroll Township Police Department. As he sat in a cruiser along State Route 2, listening to the police radio traffic regarding the
newest robbery, the officer saw a silver S-10 pickup with two people inside pass by, the chief recounted. He pulled the vehicle over for a routine traffic stop, identified both people inside, one of whom was Boss, then asked where they were coming from, Weirich said. “Boss said he had been visiting his mother at The Fountains in Port Clinton, stopped at the Shell station for a tall boy (beer) and was heading back to Toledo,” the chief continued. Those details proved crucial in tracking Boss’ movements, he said. Law enforcement officials examined videotapes from surrounding gas stations and saw Boss at the checkout on one the tapes. They compared his description on that tape to the one at Mickey Mart and used a photo for witness identification, the chief added. Boss’s address is listed as a West Water Street apartment in Oak Harbor. However, Weirich said he is originally from Port Clinton, had moved to Oak Harbor and more recently had been living in Toledo. He only recently returned to Oak Harbor where he’s been occasionally staying at friends’ homes.
Village to contract with sheriff for dispatching service By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublications.com Walbridge Village Council heard the first reading Wednesday of an ordinance authorizing Mayor Ed Kolanko to enter into an agreement with the Wood County Sheriff’s Department for emergency dispatching service. The village currently contracts for the service with Lake Township, which has also provided service for the City of Rossford until the city recently opted to contract with the sheriff’s department. Mayor Kolanko on Thursday said the expected annual cost for a village agreement with the sheriff’s department is about $37,665. There will be one-time, set-up costs associated with the transition, the mayor said. Currently, the village is paying about $48,492 annually for the service with the township. “The village values the relationship with Lake Township and appreciates the dispatching service they have provided over the years,” the mayor said. “The Walbridge Police Department will also see enhancements to technology leading to greater safety for village residents. We trust in the services offered by Sheriff (Mark) Wasylyshyn and feel this will be a good move for the Village of Walbridge.” Under the present arrangement, Lake Township contracts with a private company, LifeStar, that provides staffing at the township’s dispatching center on Lemoyne Road. That contract is set to expire in March. Costs are apportioned between the township, Rossford and Walbridge based on call volume. Rossford officials decided late last year to contract with the sheriff’s department. The city will pay the county $65,210 to cover yearly personnel costs and $40,000 for a set-up fee and $7,000 for software costs. Mark Hummer, Lake Township police chief and administrator, said he expects the township trustees to also consider contracting with the sheriff’s department following the departure of Walbridge and Rossford because it isn’t economically feasible to dispatch just for the unincorporated areas of the township. He’s questioned figures compiled by the sheriff’s office for providing the 24-hour service for the township and Walbridge and Rossford and contends there could be a shortfall between the sheriff’s price quotes and what actual costs will be. Hardware questions also linger over the county’s dispatching capabilities regarding calls to the Lake Township Fire Department. The department covers the villages of Millbury and Walbridge as well as the unincorporated areas of the township but fire chief Bruce Moritz has told the township trustees the sheriff’s dispatching signal isn’t strong enough to reach firefighters’ personal pagers. Consequently, the department would need signal repeaters to receive calls from the sheriff’s department in Bowling Green,
House fire in Lake Township
A house in the 2700 block of Southpointe, Lake Township, was destroyed by fire that started just after midnight Thursday, January 8. Five family members were treated at an area hospital. (Press photo by Ken Grosjean)
Northern Manufacturing moving to industrial park By Cynthia L. Jacoby Special to The Press news@presspublications.com Within weeks, the Village of Oak Harbor will be losing its single largest industrial manufacturer. Northern Manufacturing is moving its North Locust Street plant to the Lakewinds Industrial Park to take advantage of a new tax abatement zone being created by Ottawa County, Mayor Bill Eberle told village council at its first regular meeting of the year. Company owner Quintin Smith recently informed the mayor of the move, he said. Northern Manufacturing is a sheet metal fabrication company specializing in stainless steel fabrication. Its operations span three facilities, with 85,000 feet dedicated solely to stainless steel fabrication, according to the company website. The company provides advanced engineering and welding, including 3-D models and 3-D laser cutting. The news is a crushing blow to the village which is already struggling financially. Village leaders are diligently thumbing through departmental assessment to create a 2015 budget that stays in the black while combating a number of critical problems such as a faulty sewer overflow system. Councilwoman Sue Rahm asked if there was anything the village could do to convince company officials to stay, such as creating its own zone. It’s too late to stop Northern Manufacturing’s move, the mayor replied, but the village is looking into the creation of a similar Community Reinvestment Area that lured the company out of the village corporation limits. The mayor explained that Northern Manufacturing is land locked in the village and unable to expand. The plant will join its sister operation at Lakewinds where owners have plans to increase capacity in coming years. The laser equipment and all the other
machinery will be moved to the new site. “They will maintain the building and have limited staffing. Basically, they are taking advantage of expanding the facility they already have,” Eberle said. “Basically it will be a warehouse for them.” Company officials have promised to keep up maintenance on the building north of the railroad tracks, Eberle said, adding “The last thing we want is for the building to go into disrepair.” As a goodwill gesture to the village, Smith offered to pay the administrative costs involved in setting up its own tax abatement zone, the mayor added. The abatements can apply to both commercial and residential projects. Salem Township trustees were scheduled to vote on the tax zone request Monday night because it affects the township tax base, Eberle said. To prepare for the financial hit, Councilman Jon Fickert asked that tax administrator Kim Mehlow investigate the exact number of job losses and the tax revenue loss implications. Some of the company jobs include office staff, supervisors, mechanical engineers, machine operators and welders. “This couldn’t have come at a worse time,” Fickert lamented. Mike Shadoan of the Oak Harbor
Development Group wondered if Northern owners would consider donating the property to the village or the county for a recreational center. It couldn’t hurt to ask, the mayor replied. Rahm thought it was a bad idea. “I would like to see another business going in there – more than a rec center,” she said. And if Shadoan was intent on pursuing a site for a recreational center, Rahm suggested he turn his own business into one. Northern’s history dates back to 1898 when the C. Nelson Company was founded. The name changed to Northern Manufacturing in 1951 and in 1975 came under the ownership of James D. Smith. In 1990, Northern developed a quality measurement tool called the VersaGage, according to the website. It was developed internally as Northern was looking for innovated quality solutions to obtain the Ford Q1 certification. Northern Manufacturing applied for and received patents on the VersaGage and brought it to the market in 1992. In 1996, C. Nelson spun off from the main business, was purchased by Kelley Smith, son of James Smith. In 2001, Smith’s other son, Quintin, bought the company.
Computer classes offered in Elmore Several computer classes, made possible by Guiding Ohio Online, will be offered at the Harris-Elmore Public Library during January. Registration is required; attendees should bring their own devices. Classes include: • Wednesday, Jan. 14; 9 a.m. – Basic computer skills; 10 a.m. – Introduction to Facebook; 11 a.m. – Introduction to Linked In. • Saturday, Jan 17: 9 a.m. - Beginning Excel Part II: Creating a Budget; 10 a.m. – Creating a Resume using Word; 11 a.m.
– Creating Presentation: Introduction to PowerPoint. • Friday, Jan. 23: 9 a.m. - Beginning Excel Part III-creating charts • Friday, Jan. 30: 2 p.m. – Introduction to iPads; 3 p.m. – Introduction to Kindle devices; 4 p.m. – Introduction to Nook & other e-readers. There will also be a drop-in session on Friday, January 23 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The library is located at 328 Toledo St. For more information, call 419-862-2482.
THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
7
Two ’68 Genoa grads coached, supported Urban Meyer By J. Patrick Eaken Press Sports Editor sports@presspublications.com Ohio State’s rise to the national championship game Monday night is no surprise to two 1968 Genoa High School graduates, Rick Briggle and John Harbal, who got to know the Buckeyes’ coach, Urban Meyer. Rick Briggle, who went on to be assistant principal and athletic director at GHS from 2006-09, coached Meyer in a high school all-star baseball game. Briggle had a long storied coaching career at high schools throughout Northwest Ohio, including coaching baseball at Port Clinton, and Meyer was just one prodigy with a bright future that he ran into, but Briggle never would have guessed it at the time. In 1982, Briggle was baseball coach at Central Catholic, and he was asked for a second time to coach the Black Team in the All-Ohio Series which featured senior baseball stars from the four regions of the state. Two notables were supposed to be on Briggle’s team — Meyer and Bernie Kosar, but the future University of Miami and Cleveland Browns quarterback dropped out. “Bernie Kosar did not play as he reported to the University of Miami, of all things, to chase a quarterback spot with the Hurricanes...a poor choice, right? As for Coach Meyer, my memory seems blurred as to his successes that weekend. I am sure he hit .450, six home runs, and stole 15 bases,� Briggle commented, sarcastically. “Little did I know that weekend who I had on that roster of 18 year-olds...it has taken 40 years or so for one of us to ‘make it.’� Harbal is not only Briggle’s classmate and teammate at Genoa — the two celebrate the same birthday. Harbal was a member of the Bowling Green State University board of trustees when Meyer was hired as football coach there. A former president of the board, Harbal’s nine-year term ended in May, 2010. During Meyer’s years at BGSU, Harbal got to know him well, describing the coach as “intense� and “driven.� “The model he used at Bowling Green is the model that he carried on to Utah, to Florida, and then to Ohio State,� Harbal
Urban Meyer. (Press file photo by Harold Hamilton/HEHphotos.smugmug.com) said. “By model, I mean that he found out early on at Bowling Green who the kids were who were really committed. And those who weren’t, they found something else to do for extracurricular activities because football wasn’t going to be part of it. So, he weeded out those who weren’t producers and built from there. You watch it very closely, and that’s exactly what he’s done at his next three destinations.� Harbal said the decision to hire Meyer was made by then-athletic director Paul Crebs, who interviewed the candidate alongside former BGSU assistant coach Scott Seeliger. Meyer almost wasn’t hired. “Ironically, Urban was the last person that they were going to chat with, and they had dinner with him,� Harbal said. “They had pretty much made up their mind who they were going to hire and this was more of a courtesy interview
because Earle Bruce and Lou Holtz highly recommended that they talk to Urban. Out of that dinner, he just won them over and that was our new football coach at the time.� When Meyer moved with his family into their new home on the west side of BG, no one knew at the time what the future held. He was just another first-year coach. “What a small world...little did you know that you would be ‘rubbing shoulders’ with a future hall of famer in Coach Meyer,� Briggle said. “I am sure he may have dreamed of his success. Coaches at that level — it is the ‘drive’ that makes them pursue excellence. Without it, there’s little chance for success. Now, all may dream it, but that’s no guarantee for such mercurial rise to the very top of the profession.� Harbal, whose daughter baby-sat Meyer’s children when the coach’s family lived in BG, had one last brush with Meyer just before he took the Ohio State position. “I host a football golf outing at CIC
(Catawba Island Club) every summer for the (BGSU) football program, and we bring back former football coaches. Three summers ago, the summer Urban was not coaching, he came back to be honored and he did just a terrific job,� Harbal said. “He stayed four days at our house and we had just a great time. He was inbetween jobs and not knowing what he was going to be doing coaching-wise. He wasn’t doing the ESPN stint anymore. Ohio State was his dream job, and of course at the time, everything was just coming up with the tattoo-stuff (OSU’s Jim Tressel coaching controversy) and Luke Fickel was the interim coach, and the rest is history.� At Genoa, Harbal was an all-league wide receiver and multi-year letter winner for legendary Comets Coach Jim Firestone back when the Comets competed in the Northern Lakes League. During Harbal and Briggle’s four years, Genoa’s 1964-67 football teams went a combined 27-10-3. Although he was also a forward on the Genoa basketball team and an all-league first baseman for the baseball team, Harbal said, “Football was my favorite, and I came away with a lot of memories from my time of playing on Bergman Field.� He cited playing with quarterback Dan Matthews, and linebackers Jeff Rice and John Lewis, who were co-captains his senior year in 1967, and playing alongside his brother Tim at defensive back among his fondest moments. After high school, Harbal went to BGSU and graduated in 1972 with a degree in marketing and a specialization in selling and sales management. He also began serving BGSU with stints on the College of Business Alumni Advisory Board, the President’s Club and the Falcon Club. In 2001, he was appointed by the governor to BGSU’s board of trustees. In addition, Harbal has given back to his hometown, having served on the Genoa Area School Board during the 1990s. He was instrumental in ridding the district of the now-defunct Camper Elementary School and purchasing 58 acres near the high school, so one day the district could realize its ambitious dream of building a brand-new, state-of-the-art elementary school upon that land. (— sportswriter Jeffrey D. Norwalk contributed)
Obituary Larry G. Helle, Sr.
Woodmore
Genoa
• Shirts • Hats • Sweats • Nylon Jackets • Bags • Scarfs • Mittens • Pants • Shorts • Socks
Varsity Jackets 329 RICE STREET (across from Post Office)
ELMORE 419-862-5303 Tues., Thurs., Fri. 10-5, Closed Wed., Sat. 9-Noon
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8
THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
Your Voice on the Street: By Stephanie Szozda
The Press Poll
What is your New Year's resolution?
What do you think is the main source of phosphorus that feeds invasive algae in Lake Erie? Faulty septic systems Outdated water treatment plants Farm fertilizers Dredging Scott Janney Genoa "My New Year's resolution would be to live healthier and have more fun!"
Lora Stevenson Fostoria "Save money and spend less."
Trudy Schroeder Oregon "To get all my bad habits in line."
Steven Pate Genoa "To have God more in my life."
Casey Lawrence Woodville "I guess to dust off the treadmill. That's pretty much it."
To cast your ballot, go to www.presspublications.com
Last Week's Results Would you be afraid to see Sony Pictures' "The Interview?" 70% No 30% Yes
Mayor betting on the way ‘Oregon’ is pronounced Behind the
Scenes
by J. Patrick Eaken
“
I said, ‘You guys say ‘Or-gon’ — you kind of leave off the ‘e’, drop a syllable...’
“
Oregon Mayor Mike Seferian could not resist the opportunity to get his city national recognition. Last week, he was on ESPN’s Sports Center, answering questions from Cardale Jones during a two-minute phone interview. Since, he has been talking to journalists from around the country. If you haven’t heard, Oregon is changing its name to “Oregon, Ohio Buckeyes on the Bay, City of Duck Hunters” for one day, Monday, January 12 — when the Ohio State University Buckeyes and the University of Oregon Ducks football teams play for an NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division 1-A) national championship. It makes sense. The original fur trading post of Oregon, located at what is now the intersection of Oregon Road and Miami Street, was originally named after the territory that became the state of Oregon, but they are not one and the same. The nephew of Washington Irving coined the name for this portion of the Black Swamp, and it stuck. Many of East Toledo’s streets bare western state’s names for the same reason, and Oregon later became Oregon Township, and then the City of Oregon. So when Oregon natives Matt Squibb and Mark Rabbitt started an online petition to have the city’s name changed for the day of the national championship game, Seferian felt compelled to take action. “I think they were just messing around at first. I don’t think either of them are avid
Buckeye fans, and I think one of them is a Michigan fan,” Seferian said. “I saw it and a couple people told me about it, so by Wednesday I was getting a lot of ringtones about it, and Thursday I said, ‘I’m going to do something here, I’m getting so much feedback, or I’m going to have to absorb a lot of it.’” Squibb, who now resides in Sylvania, wrote the petition, and it quickly had 2,000 signatures, increasing by the day. Oregon’s Clay High School also shares the same colors as Oregon University, so Squibb asked
for those to be changed for a day, too. “Call it Buckeye Town, Ohio City, Brutusville, whatever, you get the point,” Squibb’s petition says, continuing... “Let’s not leave anything to chance here! Change the name and support the Buckeyes! “I am not a huge Buckeye fan, but I feel this game is important to a lot of people I know and many of those people are superstitious, so let’s make this happen, people! “If you have any questions please contact my spokesman Mark Rabbitt (he is probably home right now or riding his bike) “I want a press conference; I want to see Oregon, Ohio on ESPN or at least ESPN2, or FOX Sports Ohio. Thanks for making this happen, people!” Squibb’s request was answered, and the petition has had its share of press — local and national. Since the proclamation changing the city’s name and also designating January 5-12 as “The Ohio State Buckeye Week in the City of Oregon, Ohio” was signed by Seferian, the mayor spent 20 minutes interviewed by a New York Times reporter, and that’s just the beginning. “I’m probably not done, because ESPN has called back three times,” Seferian said. The city’s proclamation points out that Oregon Township adopted its name in 1838, 21 years before Oregon received statehood in 1859. Seferian did not hesitate to mention that fact to national media. That led to a bet. The pronunciation of
the city and state are different, with different syllables accented, so Seferian made a bet with an Oregon state broadcasting personality. “Oddly enough, if the Buckeyes win, he’s got to pronounce Oregon (our way) for a week,” Seferian said. “I said, ‘You guys say ‘Or-gon’ — you kind of leave off the ‘e’, drop a syllable,’ and he goes, ‘Yeah, we’re saving our energy. We don’t waste all the energy when we say it.’ They were fun.” The proclamation also draws attention to the Lake Erie shoreline’s attraction to avid duck-hunters and the fact that the University of Oregon’s nickname is “Ducks.” You can even find the proclamation link on ESPN’s website. “The City of Oregon has been petitioned by residents of the City to make it clear that we are not associated with Oregon University Ducks Football,” and picks up, “The City of Oregon is a devoted sports town with divided loyalties in college football, which include Michigan Wolverines, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, The Ohio State Buckeyes, and University of Toledo. The City of Oregon is also known to have a very dedicated group of outdoorsmen, who for generations have made hunting an important part of their lives.” Seferian was a Press football soothsayer until his last re-election campaign, so we’re giving him a chance to be a soothsayer again. Mayor Seferian’s prediction — Ohio State 41, Oregon 38.
Drifting aimlessly — or not — is a matter of choice Imagine being in a boat on the ocean with no rudder, no motor, and no sails. You would be at the mercy of the currents and wind. You would have no control over where you went. You would be drifting aimlessly. Now consider an example with a fully functional boat without any navigation charts or equipment. Although the boat can be steered, there is no ability for a sailor to pick a destination or plot the best course to get there. This boat will also be traveling without any objective. Even a functional boat with a complete set of charts and navigation equipment that is not used will fare no better than the previous two examples. In order to reach an intended destination, you must have working equipment, and materials, along with the skill and willingness to use them. Too many people drift aimlessly through life. The reasons range from not having the right equipment, or lacking the ability or desire to use it. Either way the result is the same; people waiting for things to happen instead of doing what it takes to make them happen. You are your boat. You are functioning properly when you are aware of your thoughts and proactively maintain a positive, can do, attitude. It’s your attitude which controls the direction you are headed. It also impacts the situations and people you attract. You determine the thoughts which program your brain. Positive, or negative, your mind follows whatever directions you provide. If you believe you can do something, you are right. Conversely, if you don’t think you can do something, you are also right. It is your choice. You are not functioning properly if
Dare to Live
by Bryan Golden you blame other people or circumstances for your situation. This is the equivalent of letting go of the steering wheel because of the false premise that there is nothing you can do. Goals are your navigation charts. They identify where you want to go. You can choose any goals you want. The only requirement is for your goals to be your own rather than imposed by someone else. Additionally, a timeframe for achieving your goals is necessary. A deadline provides the incentive to reach your goal. Without one, since there is no rush, you
Letters
may never reach your goal at all. You will be operating under the false premise that time is infinite. Your plan for reaching your goals is the course you must take to arrive at your desired destination. Your plan should be as detailed as possible with as many steps as necessary. Without this plan, you will drift. Self-monitoring is the technique you use to stay on course. This serves the same purpose as navigational instruments on a boat. If you start moving away from your objective, self-monitoring enables you to get back on track. In order to effectively utilize selfmonitoring, you must always be aware of where you are headed. If you begin to drift off course, you want to identify the cause, along with the corrective action required to get you back on your intended path. Caring about your life and where you are headed is imperative. Those who don’t
Letters should be about 350 words. Deadline Wed. Noon. Send to news@presspublications.com
Generosity appreciated To the editor: The Elmore Unit of the Salvation Army wishes to thank the Elmore Kiwanis, the Key Club of Woodmore High School and any other individual volunteers for faithfully standing by our kettles. A grand total of $8,638.49 was collected from Elmore and Woodville. The money collected in Elmore and Woodville was spent in our local communities. Last year, we assisted people with heating, rent, utilities, fuel and other emergency needs. This past year, we disbursed
$2,113.55 back to people in need. We were given a budget of $4,000 and at year end, the unused balance is returned to the Toledo office of the Salvation Army to help serve the area’s needy. A special thanks to all who donated money and bought gifts for the Angel Trees in Woodville and Elmore. Also, to Sharon Arndt and her elves who wrapped and disbursed these gifts. Our Angel Trees served 31 families. Again, a big thanks to all who donated to the kettles. Janice Netcher Treasurer, Salvation Army
care one way or another about their direction are prone to drifting. They haven’t taken the time to fully understand themselves. They cannot accurately identify exactly what they want out of life. Time goes by too fast to waste it drifting aimlessly. You are capable of attaining your goals. It is well worth the effort required. Arriving at your desired destination is far more rewarding than waiting to see where you wind up. Be proactive in your life by staying focused on where you want to go.
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The Press
JANUARY 12, 2015
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Opinion
Quotes of the year
Water crisis was the talk in one of the most boring cities Let’s give the people who made the pages of The Press in 2014 the last word. “I understand the section of the law and wording of the charge against me-- and the severity. I am not an idiot. But I am not going to spend the next two years in court saying I didn’t do it. No, I did it and I admitted it. I’ll take my punishment. I’ll take what’s coming to me.” Bob Bratton, former Genoa’s police chief, pleading guilty to theft charges for using money from the Furtherance of Justice Funds while sheriff of Ottawa County. “The SEC is a powerhouse, and being from Ohio I looked down at these schools from the South. Now that I’m here, I’m already drinking the SEC Kool-Aid. It did not take long.” Simone Eli, Genoa native and sports anchor in Mobile, Alabama, talking about the football programs at Auburn, Alabama and other SEC schools. “If they are living at the poverty level, a quality park is so very important to the growth of our children. I grew up in East Toledo, I knew how valuable it was to me and how many pleasant and wonderful memories I have from having a park and playground that was safe and beautiful and allowed me to use my imagination. Parks used to be one of our most valuable resources that gave our children the OK to be a kid and to have fun and to use their imagination, and to grow and just be comfortable.” Mary Wilson, East Toledo resident, about maintaining parks. “Basketball courts are almost non-existent and there are some real opportunities to provide recreation for people. Birmingham Park has a concrete slab, but there are no basketball hoops. You know, in order to disturb a neighbor from that basketball court, you’d probably have to set off a bomb because it’s literally hundreds of yards away from the nearest house.” Mike Craig, councilman from East Toledo. “I always believed that in sports or life, if you perform the task in front of you to the best of your ability, you may not always win but you will never lose.” Joe Moore, 1970 Cardinal Stritch graduate, commenting after his induction into the University of Findlay Athletic Hall of Fame for his baseball achievements. “It has been sitting there vacant for over two years. It had a bad roof that was leaking from summer to winter. A lot of those things that could have been saved got ruined. Other things were already stolen before we got in there. We did save some things - awnings from the food court and some of the lights. Everything that was worth a lot of value that would have been easy for people to steal has already been stolen.” Dayne Bihn of Paschal Bihn, hired to raze the Woodville Mall. “You need to be able to remain coachable. No matter what position you ascend to, you never learn it all. We’re students and teachers at the same time. There’s always
Page Two
by John Szozda more to learn.” Dr. Lonnie Rivera, superintendent of Oregon City Schools, on one of the things he learned through sports. “The only thing equal between us all is we all have 24 hours in a day. What you do with your 24 hours will separate you from the next person.” Dr. Romules Durant, superintendent of Toledo Public Schools, on one of the things he learned through sports. “I am going to propose our right to recover that property for $3.8 million and I’m going to notify Dashing Pacific one year in advance that I’m going to put the property back in the market and make it very clear to them, that a port-a-potty and picnic bench is not substantial development.” D. Michael Collins, Toledo mayor, talking to the members of the East Toledo Club about the Marina District.
know the saying, `A nice place to visit but I wouldn’t want to live there?’ We are exactly the opposite of that. Most people do not pick the City of Oregon as a nice place to visit or to take a vacation. The reason a lot of people chose to live here is because it is a great place to live, it’s not overtaken by terrible traffic. It is simply a great place to raise your family. In the attempt to develop, we have to be careful not to destroy the reason people moved here in the first place.” Mike Seferian, Oregon mayor, commenting on a national poll naming Oregon one of the nation’s most boring cities. “Detroit’s plant is five percent of the total phosphorus in Lake Erie – so it’s a large single source - but we were able to get a reduction of 100,000 pounds of phosphorus – 50 tons – just simply from getting a permit change at not too much extra cost to the plant. So if we could do that with all our wastewater plants, simply because wastewater is the foundation of the nutrients coming into the system, then run-off from the land can be reduced. Every pound taken out of the system from whatever the source – which would include septic systems, especially near shore, lawn fertilizers, anywhere it’s at - is helpful to get a healthy Lake Erie again.” Sandy Bihn, Lake Erie Waterkeeper.
“I am constantly telling audiences that we live in the most arable place on earth here on the banks of Lake Erie — the most prolific of all the Great Lakes. And, I challenged the U.S. Geological Survey one time to tell me where outside here there is this much fresh water and this much arable land. The truth is, there is no other place.” Marcy Kaptur, U.S. Representative.
“I show people that (water bottle of algae from around the intake) and it’s like they don’t understand or they don’t care – but they did care for three days when they needed water.” Len Syrek, board member of the Lake Erie Waterkeepers, commenting to passengers on an eco tour of the Maumee River.
“You should not feel sorry for us. By doing so, you take away our pride and honor… That’s what we do. It’s our calling. The soldier goes to war because that’s his job…And, that includes the possibility of being sacrificed on the altar of freedom.” Lt. Commander Vidal Valentin, commanding officer of Navy Operational Support Center Toledo, addressing area veterans at the East Toledo Club’s 81st Flag Raising Ceremony at Christ Dunberger Post in Oregon.
“I promised myself I’d take care of my son no matter what….I want my son more than anything in the world. I want to see him, talk to him, watch him walk and push him in a stroller. All the things normal parents do. I’ve been neglected of that. I can’t quit. I wouldn’t be able to sleep. I couldn’t handle my conscience knowing I gave up on my son.” Vance Allred, reflecting on his threeyear fight 20 years ago to stop the adoption of his newborn son. The two reunited this past summer.
“Live life in wonder of things around you. Remember the little seed in the Styrofoam cup: The roots go down and the plant goes up and nobody really knows how or why, but we are all like that. Live a balanced life--learn some, eat some, and drink some, and draw some and paint some and dance and play and work every day some… Remember that you are only one pixel in the picture on the football field. Without everyone around you, there is no picture… you are merely a spot standing on an empty field…and without you, that big picture would be incomplete. Your music and your movement affect the entire band.” Jon Waters, former director of the OSU marching band and a Woodmore graduate, giving the commencement speech at the Woodmore graduation. “I took that as a compliment to say we are one of the 10 most boring cities because we don’t want to fool ourselves. You
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“Houses that were built 100 years ago had porches in front. People would communicate with each other, wave and say good morning. But, if you look at the way we build houses today, we have a patio on the back of the house and fence all the way around so we can’t see anybody. Or, we go into a dark family room with the television. That’s not social. That’s not healthy.” Fr. Tim Ferris, pastor of St. Boniface and Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic churches, on the need for a mother’s social club to network about parenting and marriage. “We’re on the Great Lakes, the largest source of fresh water on the planet. I mean, it is part of what we think of ourselves as a successful community. So, when we screw up our water, it’s a big deal. It’s something that we can’t afford to get wrong. Not just for the drama of that weekend, but for the way that we connect with our community
and meet our service needs for a long time to come.” Mike Beazley, Oregon city administrator. “We all want to be charitable. But there’s help for those folks. They don’t need to be on street corners begging for food and money. They make more money panhandling, I think.” “Our local cadre of people appealing for handouts on area freeways and roads is expanding and they seem to be becoming more aggressive with their solicitations. Increased competition may be the cause.” Bob Anderson, Northwood city administrator, contemplating a law to restrict panhandling. “I did 30 years in the Jeep plant. It was like walking into the United Nations. I spent time with Latinos, African-Americans, Lebanese people, Turkish people, Asian folk, young folk, old folk, black folk, brown folk, and they all came from somewhere other than here.” Pete Gerken, Lucas County Commissioner and a member of the Welcome Toledo-Lucas County Initiative, which aims to attract immigrants to our area. “I had hoped then…that the area would be receptive, would give me a chance to be its mirror, to give it a voice, to let me record its triumphs, to applaud its good citizens and call to account its cheaters, to measure its progress, print its letters, be its marketplace, share its concerns, lick its wounds, help transmit its values from father and mother to son and daughter.” Harold K. Douthit, the publisher who founded The Press in 1972. Douthit passed away in October at age 87. “All the stuff from Vietnam has kicked in. All of a sudden my security is gone. I’m responsible for this guy and left him behind. I can’t give up on him. I really can’t. He has allowed me to sleep at night, and relax in my own house. With PTSD, I’m always vigilant. At least with Bear there, I knew he would bark.” Mike Novitski, a disabled veteran who lives in Helena, commenting about how the loss of his dog, Bear, has affected him. Bear went missing near Gibsonburg. “Most of the time, the entity haunting a house was already there when the current owners moved in. Even a fortune telling pendulum can open a doorway that lets them in, and generally when you open that door, it won’t be a friendly ghost, it will be something demonic, and they can be very hard to get rid of.” Al Luna, founder of Paranormal Spirit Encounter Investigations, a Perrysburg based Ghostbuster firm. “Many weaknesses are actually just self-imposed limitations. When you tell your mind there is something you can’t do, it believes you, creates a weakness, and impacts your behavior accordingly.” Bryan Golden, Press columnist. Comment by email to zoz@presspublications.com
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
Health Published second week of month.
Crazy Critter Lady
There’s “No Better Medicine” than caring for animals By Tammy Walro Press Features Editor twalro@presspublications.com Kelly Meister-Yetter, also known as the “Crazy Critter Lady” has published her second book, “No Better Medicine – How Caring for Critters Helped Heal the Wounds of the Past.” The new book picks up where her first book, “Crazy Critter Lady” leaves off. Both contain “crittersweet” tales of the Walbridge woman’s mission of rescuing and caring for animals of all kinds – a passion which she says has benefited her as much as the creatures she takes under her wing. A victim of childhood sexual abuse, Kelly spent years mired in a life of darkness and chaos. Therapy and time helped some; she also found healing in caring for animals and the unconditional love they offered in return. When considering a title for the new book, Kelly easily settled on “No Better Medicine,” however, she grappled with the subtitle she had chosen. “While caring for critters has, indeed, helped my recovery enormously, there is no cure for having been molested,” she writes in the book’s preface. “There is no cure for the inevitable depression that ensues. There is no cure for the post-traumatic stress disorder that tears our lives apart.” She confides she still has nightmares; still struggles issues with trust, control and anger. “For those of you who have also suf-
Kelly Meister-Yetter with her best bud, “Bit,” who is featured in a chapter of her new book, “No Better Medicine – How Caring for Critters Helped Heal the Wounds of the Past.” (Photo by Dudley Yetter) fered at the hands of a sick, twisted pervert, the news isn’t entirely bad,” she writes. “There is a measure of healing to
be had. It takes work, it takes time and it takes a good therapist to help you, but it is possible to rise above the mire of self-loath-
ing, alcoholism, drug addiction and other problems that arise because of the past. “Healing may be found in religion, or the arts, or a career,” she writes. “For me, it was helping animals. And as my healing continues, so does my commitment to critters.” “No Better Medicine” includes 266 pages filled with heartwarming tales sure to make readers laugh and cry, too. One chapter tells the story of Kelly’s attempts to avoid being thrown by her new equine buddy, Bit – a horse who is afraid of his own shadow. Readers will also learn how Junebug came to be Kelly’s favorite cat, among other stories. In addition to writing her book, taking photos, blogging and juggling all her critter responsibilities, Kelly also acquired a husband, Duddy, whom she describes as an otherwise perfect man who has come to grips with the realization that he is often at the bottom of the pecking order. She credits Duddy’s enduring love and patience for helping her wrestle her ongoing issues into submission. “I have the love of my life, four cats, eight ducks and a barn full of ornery horses cheering me on,” she writes. “How cool is that?” “No Better Medicine” and Kelly’s first book are available in digital and soft-cover versions on amazon.com and at barnesdandnoble.com. Follow Kelly at www.crazycritterlady.com.
The connection between financial and physical health As the New Year gets underway, you may be taking inventory of your life. You may be asking yourself questions about where you’re headed, what’s most important to you, and how you got to where you are. It’s as if something is hard-wired into all of us that makes this a perfect time of year to recalibrate and choose who we want to be. Good for you. There are few things more satisfying than having a clear picture of the life you’d like to be living and knowing the steps to getting there. Yet, that process can be daunting for many. So daunting that you may have turned to resolutions-setting and joking that it just won’t stick. Can I make a suggestion? Forget the past. As far as your future goes, the past doesn’t matter. It’s done. In light of this decision you’ve just made to look ahead and not backward, consider this – your physical health, financial health, spiritual health, relational health, and the very direction of your life are all very inter-related. If you want improvement in just one area, fine. What I’m about to share with you will work in that area. If you want to improve in every area, the same advice applies.
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You’re worth it, so go do it for yourself.
“
By Adam Cufr
That’s right, the very same process for improving in one area of your life, works in every area of your life. What’s the secret to improvement? The key to improving in any and every area of your life is simply to adopt a successful process and stick with it. What’s most fascinating about this approach is that it works every time, and improving your life in one area will result in improvements in other areas as well. Here’s an example – you want to improve your financial health but you’ve struggled through many attempts to affect real change in this area. Why not try
to establish a successful routine for your physical health first? By scheduling yourself at the gym every morning and getting there uninterruptedly each and every time your routine calls for it, you will not only improve your physical health, but you will have planted the seeds that you can accomplish anything in your life through simple commitment to a routine. That 23rd day at the local YMCA will reveal to you, while on the treadmill, that you have changed. You have not only changed physically, but you’re a stronger person internally. As a result, you resolve to research a successful routine for your finances. Your commitment to any single successful process becomes the proof your mind needs that you can establish a successful process in any area of your life that you choose. Because better physical fitness results in greater energy, lower levels of stress, and increased confidence, you will likely aspire to increase your earning power in your career. And why not? You now know that you’re simply a successful routine away from anything you wish to accomplish. You may be wondering where to find the resources needed to establish your suc-
cessful routines. Here’s my challenge to you – go to the gym and ask someone who looks fit what his or her routine is. Ask a friend who has money under control what he or she has done to get to that point. Here’s a little secret you must know – if you show up regularly at the gym at 5 a.m., everyone there respects you whether or not your physical condition makes you feel worthy of his or her respect. After all, everyone starts somewhere. Just get started. So there it is. Develop a single successful routine and your life will explode with opportunities to grow in every area. You can establish a routine of savings, debt reduction and investing when you choose to. You can transform your body and your mind with a new fitness routine starting tomorrow. You’re worth it, so go do it for yourself. Adam Cufr, RICP, a Northwood native, is the owner of Fourth Dimension Financial Group, LLC in Perrysburg. He is a retirement planner, a monthly columnist for Retirement Advisor Magazine, and the author of “Off the Record – Secrets to Building a Successful Retirement and a Lasting Legacy.” Learn more at www. OffTheRecordRetirement.com.
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We couldn’t be more proud to be a new member of a classy community like Oregon, which has changed its name this week. We stand with you to cheer when Ohio State become NATIONAL CHAMPIONS.
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JANUARY 12, 2015
Health
Walk-in flu clinics being offered Due to a drastic increase in flu reports, the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department will offer walk-in flu clinics in January. The clinics will be held at the Health Department, 635 N. Erie St. from 4 to 6 p.m. Monday, Jan. 12; Wednesday, Jan. 14; Thursday, Jan. 22; Monday, Jan. 26 and Wednesday, Jan. 28. The cost of the vaccine is $30. Medicaid, Medicare, and many health insurances can be billed directly. According to Health Department reports, in just the last two months, there have been 261 confirmed hospitalized flu cases and two presumptive flu deaths in Lucas County. For additional information, visit www. lucascountyhealth.com and the department’s Facebook page at www.facebook. com/tlchd.
Parkinson’s management Lutheran Home at Toledo will host a free Parkinson’s Disease Management Program Wednesday, Jan. 14 from 2 to 3 p.m. in the Labuhn Center on the Lutheran Home campus, 131 N. Wheeling St. The program will provide information on how and when symptoms might appear; exercises that may improve symptoms; and various therapy options, including LSVT BIG and LOUD therapies. Screening assessments for BIG and LOUD therapies will also be available. For more information or to make reservations, call Karie Sutton at 419-724-2638. Lutheran Home at Toledo, a ministry of Lutheran Homes Society, provides assisted living, skilled nursing care, respite care and inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation services.
Potassium Iodine Distribution The Toledo-Lucas County Health Department is making available Potassium Iodine (KI) tablets available for individuals living within the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Plant 10-mile Emergency Planning Zone of Jerusalem Township. KI tablets are used to protect the thyroid gland in the event of an off-site release of radioactive iodine from the nuclear power plant. The health department recommends individuals of all ages take the tablets in the event of an emergency. Tablets should be taken only when directed and are not a protection against all types of radioactive materials. They should be kept in a dry location at temperatures of 59 to 86 degrees F to extend the shelf life. KI tablets will be available Wednesday, Jan. 14 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Jerusalem Township Hall, 2501 Jerusalem Rd., Curtice. Proof of residency will be required.
Cross training benefits Your body is capable of performing many movements in a wide variety of ways. So why do the exact same exercises month after month? According to Mercy Sports Medicine Program, by performing the same workouts you are neglecting to exercise other muscle groups and could be putting yourself at risk to develop overuse injuries or muscular im-
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$ balances. Cross training can help to prevent this from happening. When you cross train, you participate in other sports or activities. Cross training will help you to develop muscle groups you typically do not use which can help you to become a better athlete. It also gives your over used muscles a break helping to prevent injury and also mixes things up so your workouts will be more exciting.
TOPS Rossford TOPS Chapter 1904, Rossford, meets Thursday evenings in Room C at the Rossford Rec Center, 400 Dixie Highway. TOPS Club, Inc., which has been helping people to Take Off Pounds Sensibly since 1948, is open to men, women and teens (with parental permission). For more information, email SassyQueenDeb@roadrunner.com and put “TOPS� in the subject line.
Support & sharing The Rev. Robert Bibbee, chaplain with Southern Care Hospice, will lead the “Journey Through Life� support and sharing group event, which will be held Thursday, Jan. 15 at 1 p.m. at Otterbein Portage Valley, 20311 Pemberville Rd., Pemberville. The hour-long, small-group meeting offers an opportunity for sharing for those who have experienced loss in their lives. Rev. Bibbee will offer encouragement, along with ideas for beating the winter blues when the region’s lack of sunshine can be a contributor to sadness. RSVP to 419-833-8917.
Free yoga classes The East Toledo Senior Activities Center offers free yoga classes led by instructor Richard Ward Mondays from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. The center is located at 1001 White St., in the Navarre Park Shelterhouse. For more information, call 419-691-2254.
Faith United Methodist Church, 3415 Starr Ave., Oregon, is presenting “40 Days to a Healthier You,� a free program designed to effect change in faith, nutrition, and relationships. The sermon series begin Sunday, Jan. 18 and includes a Sunday Sermon Series and small-group meetings and speakers Monday nights at 7 p.m. For more information, visit oregonfaith.org or email pastorbob@bex.net.
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
Clay grad added to bolster Ohio State football team By J. Patrick Eaken Press Sports Editor sports@presspublications.com Six-foot-6, 300 pound John Glesser, a 2011 Clay graduate, was sitting in class at Ohio State University on a September afternoon when his cell phone rang. It was the Ohio State football coaching staff, and they wanted him on the team. The only problem was Glesser was a senior in his fourth year of studies at OSU, set to graduate in May with a degree in chemistry. The coaches’ response? Basically, it was, “No problem. We need you.� It was one week after Ohio State lost to Virginia Tech, 35-21, and injuries were forcing the Buckeyes’ hand. Glesser had tried to walk on as a freshman, but did not make the team, and now four years later they were calling him. “I was in class so I couldn’t return the call until later,� Glesser explained. “I was listening to the voice mail, and I was like, ‘What?’ He was like, ‘Yeah, we want you to come in and try out if you’re still interested in maybe playing again, and I was like, ‘Sure, why not?’ “I had gotten the call on a Monday, did a physical on Tuesday, and then Wednesday I was out there practicing. So, it was all very quick. They gave me a couple days where we just did conditioning stuff and they were trying to get me back in shape, but I ended up that week doing a full practice.� Glesser will be on the sidelines when No. 4 Ohio State (13-1) takes on No. 2 Oregon (13-1) in the NCAA FBS national championship game in Dallas Monday. His parents, Rita and Philip, received four tickets and will be attending the game, too. “We never dreamt it is going to go this big,� Rita said. At Clay, John Glesser was a two-year starter at offensive tackle and nose guard, listed at 6-5, 312 his senior year under Coach Mike Donnelly. He was an Alan Miller Jewelers All-Press second team se-
he’s a great motivator and when he speaks before or after practices, everyone listens and it’s kind of awesome to see.� Plus, Glesser did not know any players before this. As a student, he never missed a home game, but as a student-athlete he’s developed relationships with the other players, despite being on the practice squad. “They treat us pretty well. We are all like family. It was pretty intimidating at first because you see these guys on TV, and now it’s like, ‘Hey Cardale, what’s up? Hey, Taylor,’� Glesser said.
Ohio State lineman John Glesser (67) at Ohio Stadium surrounded by friends Abby Crisp to the left and Adam Griffith at right. (Photo courtesy Rita and Philip Glesser) lection on offense. When Dresser joined the Ohio State team this fall, he will be the first to admit the first thing they did was whip him into shape. Now, his weight has fallen below 300 pounds. “I was ‘a shape,’ (before joining the team)� Glesser joked. “I had been lifting a little bit, but not in as good a shape as I wish I had been. My job is mostly to follow the scout team around, and whenever they need a break, I jump in for three, four, five or six plays, and then I come back in and move to a different position and do the same thing.� Even though he is with the practice squad and has not seen one down during a game, he has dressed and been on the sideline for every game since Virginia Tech,
which means the Buckeyes have not lost since he joined the team. He was pictured in the Sugar Bowl (national semifinal) media guide, and the game resulted in a 4235 OSU victory over No. 1 Alabama. Has the ride been exciting? “That’s an understatement,� Glesser said. “It’s been an experience. I came in my senior year not expecting to do this.� He says between classes and practice, it is like working two full-time jobs — something other players were used to, but he was not. At one of those jobs, he gets to be under the tutelage of Ohio State coach Urban Meyer, which he says is an experience in itself. “I see him walking around a lot. He doesn’t spend a whole lot of time with any individual position,� Glesser said. “But,
Confidence builds Glesser says there is a belief on the team that Ohio State can take down Oregon in the national championship Monday. “There is just a lot of confidence and everyone seems to get really excited. I missed that Virginia Tech loss so I don’t know quite how that week played out, but every week since I’ve been there everyone has been getting more energy, more excited, more empowered.� Glesser’s role in practice is to represent Oregon and its fast paced, unconventional offense. For that reason, he knows more about Oregon’s offense than Ohio State’s game plan. “There is always a game plan,� Glesser said. “I don’t know very much about it because I run what Oregon runs so I know what Oregon is going to do. I’m not sure what our plan is at this point.� If he wants to continue using his eligibility, he could apply to grad school at OSU or elsewhere. Rita said one OSU parent told her if scholarship money came with grad school, why not? “The coaches, they talked to these guys after the regular season was over, but John is in his fourth year and he’s planning to graduate. He’s not sure it can get any better than what it has gotten this year,� Rita said. John added, “I thought about it. At this point, I just want to graduate and get my degree and be happy.�
Vegas trip brought Kreglow no luck, just skill
Gibsonburg senior point guard Jordan Kreglow scores an easy transition layup in the Golden Bears’ 63-35 rout over visiting Otsego. (Photo by Jeff Holcomb)
Gibsonburg senior point guard Jordan Kreglow has started out like gangbusters this season, but five months ago he went to school, figuratively. Kreglow and Lake senior point guard Connor Bowen were both chosen to compete for an Ohio all-star team at the Adidas Super 64 Tournament July 23-27 in Las Vegas. “It was pretty awesome,� said Kreglow, who had never been to Vegas. “It was a once-in-a lifetime experience and there’s nothing really like it. It was my first time (out West). I was a little nervous.� Kreglow is off to a fast start for coach Brent Liskai’s Golden Bears, who were 7-0 and 5-0 in the Toledo Area Athletic Conference heading into Thursday’s game against Maumee Valley Country Day. Kreglow, a three-year starter, was averaging 25.1 points, 4.4 assists and 3.4 rebounds a game for the Golden Bears. “He’s just taking what teams have been giving him,� Liskai said. “We’ve had a couple of games with foul trouble, where the shots come to him. He had 36 points against Woodmore and was 11-of-21 from
the field and 9-of-10 from the line. He’s come a long way. Jordan has worked hard over the years and he’s mentally tough. He’s handled whatever people have thrown at him, and the team does a good job getting him open.� Some teams don’t necessarily want their point guard to have to score 25 points a game, but Liskai stressed that Kreglow is only taking 14-15 shots a game. The Bears are averaging around 70 points a game and are allowing just 42 a game. “Jordan has good floor vision and he’s an outstanding ball handler,� Liskai said. “He got a lot stronger in the offseason, which has helped him.� That’s one thing Kreglow learned about himself at the Las Vegas tournament, which was played at local high schools. It was time to hit the weight room. His 17-andunder Ohio team went 5-0 and reached the tournament semifinals before losing to a team from Los Angeles. “It was a pretty close game,� Kreglow said. “I guess I did all right. I did all right defensively. I had a little different role. Everybody out there was huge, so I was defending. It was tough. I knew I had to get stronger, obviously, and get quicker. It showed me what I had to work on in the offseason.�
Kreglow has played travel basketball in the spring, for the Fremont-area Ohio Ballistics. He said that team won five of the seven tournaments they competed in last season. He also attended the Huggins Eastern Ohio Basketball Camp, near New Philadelphia, Ohio. “That’s where we (Gibsonburg) go to summer camp,� Liskai said. “They take a team out to Vegas. There are kids from all over the state on the team, including Connor Bowen (Lake) and a kid from Tiffin Columbian. Jordan has played travel ball through the years, and this was a nice honor. They only take the top 10 players, and I think they (Kreglow and Bowen) formed a pretty nice friendship. They’re both goofy kids.� Gibsonburg and Lake do not play each other during the regular season, but they did face each other in a preseason scrimmage. “It was pretty competitive,� said Kreglow, who added that he and Bowen were rivals in middle school. “I’d say it was about even.� The two local point guards spent a lot of time together in Las Vegas. “We walked around the (Vegas) strip together,� Kreglow said. “We kind of did everything together. It was an awesome experience.�
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
15
The Press Box Luke Rightnowar closes on Hammye’s scoring record By J. Patrick Eaken Press Sports Editor sports@presspublications.com First-year Genoa boys basketball coach Zach Alt is a 2004 Genoa graduate, so he is well aware of the kind of player Ron Hammye was. The 6-foot-10 Hammye, who became Genoa’s career scoring leader with 1,085 points, led Genoa to the Class AA state final four in 1973-74. Genoa senior guard Luke Rightnowar had a chance to top that mark in Tuesday's Northern Buckeye Conference contest at Elmwood. Rightnowar, now at 1,074 points, reached the 1,000 point mark in Genoa’s 100-35 non-league victory over Lakota and needed just 11 more points against visiting Eastwood to break Hammye’s record (1,085). Luke, the son of Genoa baseball coach and former Toledo Christian coach Ron Rightnowar, transferred to Genoa prior to his sophomore year. He’s in his third year as a starter and is a team captain along with seniors Noah Goodrich and Amos Kauder. At Genoa, Hammye played for Coach Dave Hitchen. Hitchen was instrumental in developing the Genoa program during his nine year stint. During that time, the Comets were 118-59, won four SLL championships and were regional qualifiers twice. Before he came on board, the Comets posted only one winning season in ten years. The Comets used their up-tempo style to post an 18-0 record before losing in the regional finals in 1972-73. The next season, Genoa, led by Hammye and fellow starters 6-7 Mike Diekman, 6-7 Harlan Niehaus, 6-2 Jeff Shaneck, and 6-2 Jim Feckley, went on a 20-game winning streak before losing in
BOYS BASKETBALL Team (League) Overall Gibsonburg (5-0, TAAC) Lake (3-0, NBC) Eastwood (1-2, NBC) Cardinal Stritch (4-1, TAAC) Woodmore (2-1, NBC) Waite (1-2, TCL) Genoa (1-2, NBC) Oak Harbor (1-3, SBC) Northwood (0-5, TAAC) Clay (0-4, TRAC)
7 7 6 6 5 6 4 1 0 0
Clay (4-1, TRAC) Genoa (5-0, NBC) Lake (3-2, NBC) Cardinal Stritch (3-2, TAAC) Woodmore (2-3, NBC) Oak Harbor (2-3, SBC) Northwood (3-2, TAAC) Eastwood (0-5, NBC) Gibsonburg (2-4, TAAC) Waite (0-5, TCL)
9 1 9 2 7 5 4 4 5 5 5 6 3 5 2 7 2 8 0 10
GIRLS BASKETBALL
(Records updated to January 8)
the state finals, 72-45, to Columbus Bishop Hartley. As a player at BGSU, Hammye started all four years for the Falcons from 1974-78 and led the team to the second round of the National Commissioner’s Invitational Tournament as a freshman. Hammye played professionally in Europe after leaving BGSU and did attempt to play in the NBA. He was a part of the Wayne State University basketball coaching staff for 19 years, including 13 as head coach. He finished his WSU head coaching stint with 212 wins and 154 losses from 1988-2001 for a .579 winning percentage, and has been inducted into the WSU Athletic Hall of Fame.
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Ron Hammye (35) looks to score during his Bowling Green playing days. (Photo courtesy BGSU SID)
‘J.D.’ continues Olympic dream
letes chosen for a new funding platform called Pursuit, which allows world class athletes to raise money to support their dreams. To keep his momentum going, he needs to raise awareness of his campaign and drive traffic to the webpage. Visit www.pursu.it/pursuit/campaigns. Bergman commented, "If many give a little, it will be a lot. I would appreciate your consideration of a donation."
Since graduating from Oak Harbor High School in 2003, J.D. Bergman has been pursuing his dream to be an Olympic champion and the best wrestler in the world. Bergman says the road has been rigorous but he has seen success, including 10 national titles. This winter, he defeated two Russians in world competition and brought the Gold back from Rio de Janeiro in another worldwide event. He adds that the plan is to make that a habit. Bergman is headed to Colorado in January, Cuba in February, and Belarus in March to start his next round of winter tours. Bergman is one of five U.S. ath-
Sports announcements MTUA is hosting a certified OHSAA class for individuals interested in umpiring girls’ high school fast pitch softball games. Contact Bob Perrine at 419-351-1960 or condobob43606@yahoo.com.
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Genoa senior guard Luke Rightnowar. (Press photo by Harold Hamilton/ HEHphotos.smugmug.com)
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16
THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
Jared Rettig second Flyer to reach 1,000 milestone By Mark Griffin Press Contributing Writer sports@presspublications.com A lot of athletes make what they do look easy, but make no mistake, a lot of hard work goes on behind the scenes. Lake’s versatile senior forward, Jared Rettig, not only was an All-Northern Buckeye Conference and second-team AllOhio quarterback in the fall, he’s a huge cog in the offensive and defensive machine that is Flyer basketball. “His first love is football, so he spends a whole lot more time with that,” Lake basketball coach Ryan Bowen said. “If he dedicated himself to basketball more, he’d be phenomenal. Jared picks up a basketball once in the summer, when we go to camp, and won’t touch a ball until November. He doesn’t work on it during the offseason, but during the season he works his butt off.” Rettig, a four-year starter, is averaging 16 points, seven rebounds and three assists a game as Lake has jumped out to a 7-0 record (3-0 NBC). He scored 23 points in a 20-point win over Eastwood (6-2) on Dec. 18, and led the Flyers to the Lake Holiday Tournament title on Dec. 26-27. “Jared is a smart kid,” Eastwood coach Matt Routson said. “He’s physical, competitive and multi-dimensional. He can shoot the three or drive to the basket, and he rebounds well. He’s a challenge for us to defend.” Rettig reached a career milestone on Jan. 2, at home against Genoa, when he scored the 1,000th point of his career. Senior teammate Connor Bowen reached that mark earlier this season, and Bowen also became Lake’s all-time leading scorer in the win over the Comets. Rettig, who needed three points to reach 1,000 entering the game, surpassed that total on a layup just a couple minutes into the game. He finished with 16 points,
ing hard every day, getting my shots off in practice and doing what I need to do. Everything worked out.” Rettig, who has known the Bowen family since he was a young child, said he and Connor knew before the season started how many points they both needed to break the school scoring record and surpass 1,000 career points. Rettig needed 102 points entering the season to get to 1,000. “We kind of saw that Genoa was seven games in, and we kind of talked about it,” Rettig said. “Port Clinton came around, before the Genoa game, and we said, ‘Hey, let’s try to save it and try to get close to it, and we’ll break it against Genoa.’ It worked out well for the both of us.” When Rettig reached his milestone, the Flyers stopped the game and the team came onto the court to celebrate with him. Rettig gave the game ball to his mother, Tricia. “Jared has a high (basketball) IQ and is a good athlete,” coach Bowen said. “He can put it in off the bounce, or shoot the three. He’s a physical player and he understands what I want, and I know what I can get out of him every night. His understanding of the game makes him easy to coach.” Ironically, Connor Bowen’s basket — a jumper in the second quarter — to break the school career scoring mark came off an
assist from Rettig. “That was actually kind of cool,” Rettig said. “I passed the ball to him and was thinking, ‘you better make that.’ He made it, and it was pretty cool.” Bowen scored 19 points that night to run his career total to 1,122. He broke the previous record of 1,112 held by Mike Smith, a 1987 Lake grad. “I think it means more to me than it does to him,” coach Bowen said. “I know it means a lot to Connor and Jared because they knew going into the season, stat-wise, they could both get that milestone in the same night if they both got their averages. It meant a lot to both of them that they could share that night together. They’re only the second and third players to ever (score 1,000 points) in Lake history, and to do it in the same time frame is pretty neat.” Rettig, who will play quarterback at the University of Findlay next fall, said he came close to giving up basketball prior to his junior year. “Ever since I was a little boy I thought ‘football, football, football,’ ” said Rettig, who has a 3.7 GPA. Last year I considered not playing basketball so I could focus on football. Once I committed (to Findlay), I just knew I wanted to enjoy my senior year with my buddies.”
Lake senior guard Jared Rettig scores his 1,000th career point. (Photo courtesy of Innovations Portrait Studio/ InnovationsVisualImpact.com) running his career total to 1,012. “Getting 1,000 points is more of a team thing,” Rettig said. “Without my team, I never would have got that. I’ve been work-
The Press
Church Worship Guide
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nspirational essage of the Work. We all know that work can sometimes be mindnumbingly boring, difficult to the point of frustration, and stifling to the soul. But, it can also be exciting, provide a sense of accomplishment, and allow us to serve God by serving our fellow man. So, how do we ensure that we have more of the latter and less of the former? There is considerable evidence that what makes workers happy is a sense of agency, the sense that they are effective at what they are doing and that it is worthwhile work. What this really boils down to is doing something that you are good at. So, if you're in a job or career that you don't feel particularly suited to, you're probably not feeling great
Elliston ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Every Weds: Awana (2-18 yrs) 5:15-7:30pm Sun. 9am Breakfast & Communion 9:30 am Christian Ed. for all ages. 10:30 am Worship. Handicap Acces. Nursery 18045 W. William St. 419-862-3166 www.ellistonzion.com
Genoa Trinity United Methodist
eek: Be Happy at Work
about your work. In that case, you should probably either retrain for a different job or work on the skills that will make you more effective in your current job. God has given all of us specific talents, and if we can incorporate those into our work we are bound to be happier and more effective. But, even if you aren't particularly good at what you do or happy where you work, do your best to put on a happy face each day at work. Sometimes happiness at work, like happiness in life, is just a choice that we make. Work hard and cheerfully at whatever you do, as though you were working for the Lord rather than for people. Colossians 3:23
Williston
Ramp & Elevator
Pastor Cherl Matla
www.genoatrinity.com
EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH Williston, Ohio
Route 579-center of Williston Shawn O’Brien, Pastor 419-836-5514 www.StJohnWilliston.org
Sunday School 8:30am Sunday Worship 9:45 am Contemporary Service Saturday 5:00 pm Handicapped accessible-Nursery Available
See you in church!
Walbridge
1930 Bradner Rd./Corner of Woodville & Bradner Rds. 419-836-8986 Sunday School 9:00 am. Sunday worship:10:00 am Wed. 7:30 p.m. Pastor Robert Noble Every 2nd Sun. 10:00 am Praise Service
Elmore Trinity Lutheran Church Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod 412 Fremont St. 419-862-3461 Stephen Lutz, Pastor
Worship 8 am - 10:45 am Sunday School - 9:30 am
Zion Lutheran Church Sunday worship - 8am & 10:30am Wednesday worship - 7:30pm
Sunday School for all ages 9:15am Pastor Mark Wentz
Woodville Solomon Lutheran Church and School
305 W. Main St. 419-849-3600 Recovery Worship Thurs. 6:30-7:30pm
Sunday Worship: 8am & 10:30am Sunday School for all ages Pastor Kristina Ahlman
School Open Enrollment-Nursery thru 6th grade
Herb Frey
Northwood
Lake Twp. 26535 Pemberville Rd.837-5023 Between 795 & Genoa Rd. (163) Just east of 280 Sunday Worship 10:15 am Sunday School 9:00 am
Here’s to another year of fun!!
Happy 85th Birthday
Calvary Lutheran Ch.
Main at 4th, Genoa
Sunday School 9:15 am Worship 10:30 am
Happy Birthday Katie
See you in church!
We love you to the Moon & Back! Love, Mom, Dad, Andy and the furry gang
Love, your family
Congratulations to Carrie Gnepper Upon Her Recent Graduation and Engagement! Carrie Gnepper graduated in December 2014 from Arizona State University with a Master’s Degree in Education. She graduated from Bowling Green State University in 2008 with a Bachelor of Arts in Education and from Genoa High School in 2004. Carrie has accepted a position with the Creighton School District in Phoenix, Arizona, as an elementary special education resource teacher. The engagement and upcoming marriage of Carrie Elizabeth Gnepper and Michael Duane Sankey are being announced by their parents, Mr. & Mrs. Roy Gnepper of Williston, Ohio and Mr. & Mrs. Bret Hurst of Warren, Ohio. Miss Gnepper teaches elementary special education. Mr. Sankey is a supervisor at Sapa Aluminum. The couple will be married on June 13, 2015, in Phoenix, Arizona, where they reside. Celebrations in Ohio will follow later in June.
the Perfect Holiday Gifts
We’ve Moved to Genoa! Kaylor has been offering a variety of services since 1989, plumbing, electrical, heating & cooling, as well as generators, well pumps, sewer tap hookups, remodels and room additions.
THE PRESS JANUARY 12, 2015
Want to Beat the Winter Doldrums?
Pool Leagues have started Monday nights at The Hourglass.
Come to historic Genoa to enjoy a fine selection of restaurants and shops, and experience the joy of our town!
Food Available Katie’s Kitchen
Come & support your favorite team!
Open pool available other weeknights
Breakfast served Mon.-Sat. 6am -11am Join Us Every Friday for Music and Karaoke with Dawg
21700 W. St. Rt. 51
Genoa 419-855-6112 or 419-862-2681 kaylorpwh@gmail.com
Genoa Area Chamber of Commerce
Food available from 6pm
Hourglass Inn 618 Main St. Genoa 419-855-9851
RELIABLE, ENERGY EFFICENT, CLEAN AIR FOR THE HOME
All-You-Can-Eat Pancakes, Sausage, Scrambled Eggs, Biscuits & Gravy and Applesauce
Sun. Jan. 25th
8:00am-1:00pm Adults $7.00 Kids $4.00 Genoa American Legion Post #324 302 West St., Genoa
For details call 419-855-7049 If you are interested in renting the Legion Hall please call Tom Chalfin at 419-460-3265
• Floor Coverings • Window Treatments • Home Furnishings • Accessories
IRA? Don’t wait to contribute.
• Eye exams/contact lenses • Diabetic evaluation & ocular disease treatments • LASIK & cataract comanagement
Larry Dean, AAMS®
Featuring Designer Frames:
Financial Advisor 22051 W State Rte 51 Genoa, OH 43430 419-855-0096
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NEdWies La tique Bou
“Home Decor that’s Divine”
Dr. Dennis Laub & Dr. William Kegerize Optometrists
626 Main Street, Genoa, OH 419-855-3640
644 & 647 Main Street 419-855-7221 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9 am-5 pm; Wed. 9 am-8 pm; Sat. 9 am-2 pm
22051 W State Rte 51 Genoa, OH 43430 419-855-0096
~ Additional Locations ~ Oak Harbor 419-898-1918
GENOA CUSTOM INTERIORS
Woodville 419-849-3811
Most insurances accepted. Call today! genoafamilyeyecare.com
Member SIPC
Hate Winter Cleaning?
Attention veterans Your service may be worth more than you think. You could be eligible for health, education, home loan, or financial assistance.
Leave it to us!
501 Main St., Genoa 419-855-6212 ~ 419-764-8540
Jenny Caughorn Personal Lines Specialist
Auto - Home - Business - Farm - Life Group and Individual Health - Annuities Medicare Supplement - Long Term Care
Genoa
419-855-4170
1 Hour Massage Special $45.00 Exp. 1/31/15
Kim or Brian JM Beauté 419 - 707 - 5800 1515 Main Street Genoa
All Makes & Models Import & Domestic ® Steering & Suspension ®Wheel Alignments ®Charging & Starting Systems ®Chemical & Fluid Maintenance ®Heating & Air Conditioning ®Brake & A.B.S. Systems ®Engine & Transmissions Repair ®Drivability ®Tire Service ®Custom Exhaust
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Water Damage Restoration Structural Drying & Dehumidification Content and Structure Healing
CORNERSTONE Cleaning & Restoration LLC
Phone: (419)898-2089 www.co.ottawa.oh.us/veterans
IICRC Certified Firm~Over 26 years experience
Joshua Goldsby ASE Certified Master Technician
Owner/Operator
Make sure your business stands out in the crowd!
Join this page for only $36.00 a month you will get a 2.38” by 4” ad and reach over 16,000 homes in 20 communities including Genoa, Elmore, Woodville, Gibsonburg and Walbridge
Call Leeanne at The Press at (419) 836-2221 Ex. 25
Brian J Greggila Financial Advisor
INSTITUTE of INSPECTION CLEANING and RESTORATION
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Stop by for a visit to find out how our family can care for your loved ones. • Specializing in Rehab to Home Services • Skilled Nursing Care • Physical, Speech, and Occupational Therapy • Outpatient Therapy • Respite Care • Assisted Living • Long-Term Care
Senior Living Alternatives for Every Stage of Life “Compassionately committed to excellence in customer service!”
300 Cherry Street • 419-855-7755 www.trilogyhs.com
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
Bulletin Board
Woodville is a Charming Village Steeped in History Firmly Grounded in the Present and Moving Toward an Exciting Future
Come Home to Woodville!
Elmore
Friends of Elmore Library Membership Meeting, Jan. 15, 7 p.m. at the library. All current members, as well as those interested in joining, are encouraged to attend. Elmore Historical Society Meeting Jan. 18, 3 p.m. in the Historical Society Barn. The Adult Ardan Academy of Irish Dancers will perform following the meeting. All are welcome to attend free of charge. The society meets the third Sun. of the month at 3 p.m. For info, contact Jen Fording at 419-509-1918 or elmorehistoricalsociety@gmail. com. Card Playing the 1st and 3rd Thurs. of the month at 7 p.m. at Elmore Retirement Village, 633 State St. Elmore Book Discussion Group meets the fourth Thurs. of the month at 11 a.m. at the Elmore Library. Call 419-862-2482 for info. Elmore Senior Center-Elmore Golden Oldies, Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church, 19225 Witty Rd. Lunch served Tues. & Thurs. at noon. Reservations required by 10 a.m. the day before. Blood pressure & blood sugar checks the fourth Tues. of the month; bingo the 4th Tues. of the month after lunch. Reservations: 419-862-3874. Elmore Conservation Club Trap Shooting every Wed. from 6-9 p.m. Saturday shoots will resume in May. Questions: 419-392-1112.
Genoa
Genoa Branch Library activities include: Preschool Storytime Tues. at 11 a.m.; Lego Club (ages 6 and up) the last Tues. of each month from 4-5 p.m.; Adult Craft Class Mon. from 6:30-7:30 p.m.; Adult Book Discussion Groups third Tues. at 7 p.m. (evening group) and 3rd Thurs. at 9:30 a.m. (morning group). For info, call 419-855-3380. Waggin’ Tutors Therapy Dogs visit the Genoa Branch Library, 602 West St. the 3rd Wed. of the month from 4-5 p.m. Children may practice their oral reading skills by reading aloud to the dogs. Sponsored by the Friends of the Genoa Library. Moms are Be YOU-tiful in Christ Christian Mom’s Group meets every 1st and 3rd Mon. of each month through May in the Our Lady of Lourdes Hall, 204 Main St., Genoa. Free childcare available. For info, contact Patty Greenhill at 419862-0128 or pattijsd@yahoo.com. Sponsored by Christian Moms Group of St. Boniface and Our Lady of Lourdes. Genoa Senior Center 514 Main St., serves lunch Mon., Wed. & Fri., 11:30 a.m. (call 419-855-4491 for reservations). Card playing Mon. & Wed. at 12:30 p.m.; blood sugar checks offered the 2nd Wed. of the month; bingo Mon. at 9:30 a.m.
Gibsonburg
Willow Tree 20% OFF All In-Stock Through 1/31/15
Pills ‘n’ Packages 100 E. Main St. • Woodville 419-849-2781
Bookworms Book Club meets the last Thurs. of the month at 1:30 p.m. at the Gibsonburg Branch of Birchard Library. The Bookworms will meet for light refreshments and good discussion about a book that members chose at the prior meeting. For info or to reserve a copy of the book, call 419-6372173. Active Seniors invited to Meet & Eat at Gibsonburg Senior Center, 100 Meadow Lane. Lunches every weekday, educational and social programs, health assessments and more. Transportation and home-delivered meals available. 419-637-7947.
Luckey
Luckey Library Story Time for ages 3-7 every Wed. at 6:30 p.m. Includes stories, finger plays, music & crafts. Lego Club (K-5th grade) Mondays 4:30-5:30 p.m. Men’s Shoot-the-Bull gatherings Mondays at 9:30 a.m. Coffee provided. No registration required for any of the programs. Home delivery of library materials to home-bound Luckey residents is available by calling the library during regular hours at 419-833-6040. Food Pantry open to the public the last Wed. of the month, 1-3 p.m. & the last Thurs. of the month 6-8 p.m., Main St. & Krotzer Ave. Contact local church offices for info.
Oak Harbor
Peace by Piece Quilters Guild Meeting Jan. 12, 7 p.m., United Methodist Church, 360 E. Ottawa St. (back entrance). Ottawa County PERI Meeting Jan. 12, 11:30 a.m.. Riverview Health Care Campus. Speaker Joe Logan of the Ohio Farmers Union will discuss Water Quality issues. Ottawa Co. Board of Developmental Disabilities Monthly Board Meeting Jan. 26, 5 p.m. at the board office, 235 N. Toussaint South Rd. Meetings are open to the public. For info, call 419-898-0400. Bingo Sunday evenings at 6 p.m., St. Boniface Parish, 215 N. Church St. Doors open at 4:30 p.m. Early birds at 5:30 p.m.
Pemberville
Pemberville Area Senior Center at Bethlehem Lutheran Church provides programs & activities for adults 60 & over. Open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. M-F. Lunch served at noon. Community Food Pantry at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, 220 Cedar St. open M-Th, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. (excluding holidays). Open to Eastwood School District residents. ID & proof of residency required. Info available at Pemberville churches.
Perrysburg PRIZM “No Mic Night” author support group meets the 3rd Thurs. evening of the month from 7-9 p.m. at Way Public Library, 101 E. Indiana Ave. January’s facilitator will be Harley King, published author and trainer for HCR ManorCare. For info, email prizm@bex.net, visit www.MyPrizm.com or call 419-931-8732.
lients New C ays Alw me! Welco
Jo Jo’s Nite Club Woodville
Fish Fry
Glen A. Davis D.D.S. Family Dentistry
Sat, Jan. 31st 5:00pm-gone
New Patients Welcome
Daily Lunch Specials 11:00 til Gone
Sunday Coney Dog Special & Bucket of Beer Monday 45¢ Wings 5:00pm-Gone Taco Tuesday - All Day Thirsty Thursday - Drink Specials 5-9 & Caveman Food Specials 5:30-Gone
109 N. Elm St. Woodville (419) 849-3771
115 E. Main St. Woodville
Hours: Tues. 11:00-7:00 Wed./Thurs. 9:00-5:00 Fri. 9:00-2;00 Member A.D.A./O.D.A.
Co Conveniently Call Now Call Now For Located For YourIn Your Holiday Downtown Holiday Appointment! Woodville... Appointment! Shop While You Wait!
~Trust Your Pet Needs to Me~
Judy’s Pet Grooming, LLC Vet Recommended I’ve Served Your Pets For Over 38 Years
Main St. • Woodville Call Judy 419-849-3994
Large Selection of Amish Pies
Homemade Daily Specials! Lunch & Dinner $6.95 Mon. Meatloaf or Creamed Chicken over Biscuits Tues. Mushroom ServingSteak or Goulash Wed. Spaghetti Sauce Hand-dipped Toft’sw/Meat Ice Cream or Veal Dinner Thurs. BBQ Ribs or Ham with Mac & Cheese Fri. AYCE Fish ($9.95) or Taco Salad Sat. Liver & Onions or Fish & Shrimp Sun. Baked Chicken or Perch
GRANNY'S KITCHEN
1105 Main St. Woodville Mon. - Sat. 7am-8pm • Sun. 7am-3pm 419-849-2203
DEBIT CARDS
THE PRESS JANUARY 12, 2015
The Woodville Historical Museum
Keep Your New Years’ Resolution! Get Fit with...
We are looking for old photos of Woodville.
Tae Kwon Do H20 Tae Kwon Do Tumbling & Cheer Dance
Original Photos can be copied & returned if preferred. For more info contact Mike O’ Connor 419-849-2349
Call Now to Enroll
OPEN Wed. & Fri. 2:00-4:00
Taylor‘s Tae Kwon Do
Last Day 12/19 Reopen 3/4
Tumbling & Dance 200 S. Elm Street Woodville, Ohio 419-704-4407 www.taylorstnt.com
The Museum can open by Special Request. Contact the library for number.
FREE Admission
107 E. Main St., Woodville
Still Enrolling for 3 Years Old-6th Grade
Village Barbershop
• Small Classes • Individual Attention • Strong Academics • Art and Music • State Licensed Teachers • Affordable Tuition • Youth Athletics
January Bargains of the Month!
Walk-Ins Welcome
Home-School Parents
We offer Phys Ed, Music, Art, Technology and Spanish classes for K-6th grade.
119 W. Main Woodville 419-849-2320
Call for more info and a tour
Solomon LUTHERAN SCHOOL
Tues., Wed. - 8:30 - 5:30 Thurs. 8:30 - 7:00 Fri. 8:30 - 4:00 Sat. 7:00 - 2:00 Closed Sun. & Mon.
305 West Main Street | Woodville, OH www.solomon-lutheran-school.com 419-849-3600
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We team with companies like Grange, with outstanding claims service, to make things easier when there's an auto accident or damage to your home or business.
Woodville 419-849-2000
Free shipping to our store on your truevalue.com orders
Sale ends 1/31/15
850 Water Street Woodville 419-849-3561 Mon.-Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5
JANUARY
BARGAINS of the month
Find the right tools and supplies for your projects and expert, local advice.
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THE PRESS, JANUARY 12, 2015
Real Estate
Real Estate
The Press Newspaper reserves the right to reject any advertising material we deem unacceptable. Please check your ad upon first insertion for accuracy. The newspaper will assume responsibility for the first publication only. Compensation will be in the form of ad space or credit, not to exceed original cost of the ad. NO REFUNDS.
419-836-2221 or 1-800-300-6158 419-836-2221 www.presspublications.com or 1-800-300-6158 www.presspublications.com
Waterville Historical duplex for sale. Spacious 2-3 bedrooms, appliances, storage, separate yards, additional storage available in barn. 419-261-3949
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*** PUBLISHER'S NOTICE *** All real estate or rental advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act. As amended, prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of dwellings, and in other housing related transactions, based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status (including children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under the age of 18), and handicap (disability). To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free telephone number 1-800-669-9777, for the hearing impaired is TTY 1-800-927-9275. *Equal Housing Opportunity*
TERRY FLORO 270-9667 855-8466 terryfloro.com
I am pleased to present: 5807 WILLACKER, OREGON 405 FINDLAY, WOODVILLE 1650 GLENROSS, OREGON 902 WILSON, GENOA 2439 CR 198, FREMONT 101 LAVINE, WOODVILLE 403 WOODPOINTE, WOODV 6294 FREMONT PIKE, PBRG. 514 CLINTON, ELMORE 613 RICE, ELMORE 20739 DENO, ELMORE 98 S. NISSEN, ELMORE 1320 BRADNER, NORTHW 836 WATER, WOODVILLE 737 ASPEN, ELMORE 20520 W SR 105, ELMORE
$47,500 $68,000 $74,900 $78,900 $89,900 $95,900 $95,000 $94,000 $125,000 $139,300 $145,000 $170,000 $179,900
$209,000 $249,900 $386,000
SOLD: 24953 W YOUNG, MILLBURY SOLD: 22503 W.SR. 579, CURTICE SOLD: 138 BLACKMAN, BRADNER SOLD: 1130 OWEN, NORTHWOOD SOLD: 634 RICE, ELMORE SOLD: 916 WEST, GENOA SOLD: 7767 BROWN, CURTICE SOLD: 1593 N. THYRE, GENOA SOLD: 18574 W SR 105, ELMORE SOLD: 230 ROOD, NORTHWOOD PENDING: 410 WILBUR, GENOA PENDING: 1421 NISSEN, GENOA PENDING: 331 TOLEDO, ELMORE PENDING: 23215 W. SR 51, GENOA
Country Home on 5.1 acres, 3000 square ft,-5 bedrooms, 2 bath, open foyer, formal dining rm, gas fireplace, 2 car garage, remodeled, 1980 S. Harris Salem Rd, Oak Harbor 419355-7260 $195,000. NORTHWOOD/LAKE TOWNSHIP BY OWNER Brick & Vinyl 3-4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath Ranch, 1872 sq. ft., full basement ready to finish, updated, stainless, new kitchen, newer roof, new 14x20 shed with loft, lot size 170 x 170. 2-1/2 car attached garage. School Bus at the door. 1602 Red Bud Drive Indian Trail Estates near Walbridge/Bradner Road Originally $175,000 Reduced to $169,000. BY APPOINTMENT. 419-350-8281 or 419-691-6212 OREGON- Bayberry Creek Condo, by owner, approx. 1473 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 2½ baths, 1 car garage, C/A, natural gas heat. Includes all kitchen appliances. No water bills, use of clubhouse with exercise room/swimming pool in summer. $110,000 419-836-7951
New Price!
By Owner, 805 Water St., Woodville, Ohio. 3-bedroom, 2.5 bath ranch on river, fullyfinished basement, move-in ready, .89 acre, in-ground pool, central air, $164,900. 419-260-8619 Real Estate for Sale Year Round Cottage on Lake Erie! 11571 Dyke Rd. Curtice, Ohio 43412 12603 LaFountaine Curtice, Ohio 43412 3-bed, attached garage 1217 Mott St. Toledo, Ohio 43605 3-bed, 2-bath 315 Stange Rd. Elmore, Ohio 43416 3-bed w/2 car garage 289 Main St. Helena, Ohio 43435 4-bed, barn & 1.24 acres
Featured Property!
5911 Plympton, Oregon Just listed! 3 bed ranch on huge lot, all appliances stay, super clean, lots of new!
Excellent Properties! 49 Pineview, Oregon $249,900 1443 Eastland, Oregon $149,900 8946 Canada Goose, Oak H $126,900 22615 Cedar, Curtice $94,900 145 Country Walk, Walbrd $76,900 1005 W. Main, Woodville $120,000 0 Plumey, Northwood $15,000 67 Drake, Oregon $33,800 830 Main, Bono $36,000 PENDING! PENDING! 1110 Merry Dell, Oregon
SOLD, SOLD, SOLD 804 Elk Ridge, Northwood 117 Water, Woodville 1972 WPointe, Northwood 1005 Miller, Northwood 711 N. Main, Woodville 575 Pemberville, Woodville 1130 Stadium, Oregon 2853 Iroquois, Oregon 1549 Thyre, Genoa 1506 Forester, Oregon 3780 Ryan Place, Northwood 1259 Stadium, Oregon 2662-117th, Toledo
All real estate or rental advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act. As amended, prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of dwellings, and in other housing related transactions, based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status (including children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under the age of 18), and handicap (disability). To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free telephone number 1-800-669-9777, for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. *Equal Housing Opportunity* 1 Bdrm Upper $525/mo. + Deposit Part-Furnished Includes Utilities Non-Smoking/No Pets Credit Application Required Williston Rd./Northwood 419-666-3993
1 & 2 Bedrooms starting at $395./mo., + utilities 2 Bedroom Townhouse W/D hook ups, $550/mo. MOUNTAINBROOK 1 Bedroom all utilities included
Visit us on our website at:
www.oregonarms.net Call 419-972-7291 419-277-2545
East side, 2 bedroom upper, $425/mo., No Pets, Nevada/Dover area, Clean! 419-836-9870 or 419276-2840.
EAST TOLEDO 2-Bedroom Upper duplex driveway/garage, W/D hookup, $425./mo. + utilities. 1.5 Bedroom Ranch Twinplex $395/mo + Utilities Other 2 bedrooms available 419-698-9058 East Toledo 3-bedroom, LR, DR, basement & garage, $625/month plus utilities. 419-697-0611 or 419-344-8711 East Toledo, Berry Street- 3 Bed, 1 Bath, Basement, 2.5 Car Garage, Fenced Yard, $625/mo. +Utilities, Deposit $250. Ryan: 419-344-7620 Free Cable, Cordoba Apts. 1 bedroom, close to Owens College and Crossroads Shopping center, 419-381-0600 or 419-873-1647 Genoa-in town, 2br, 1ba, 1 car garage, frig./stove, no pets/smoking, $800/month plus utilities and deposit. 419-559-7698
1 cozy house. 1 bed + small bed or nursery near Raymer School in East Toledo. Central Air, Stove & Refrigerator included and W/D hookup. Large 2 car w/ remote. Privacy fenced backyard. No smoke or pets. $550 + $600 Deposit. 419-509-6883
Quality at low prices!
CLEAN! 2 Bedroom Mobile Home! $500/mo. + Deposit Non-Smoking/No Pets Credit Application Required Deluxe Park/Walbridge 419-666-3993
EAST TOLEDO 2-bedroom lower, $400/month 3-bedroom upper, $425/month 2-bedroom, upper $425/month plus deposit and utilities, appliances, no pets 419-691-3074
*** PUBLISHER'S NOTICE ***
APARTMENTS IN OREGON Owner Operated 24/7 Maintenance
East Toledo (Oswald Street) 2/3 BR upper non-smoking unit. Includes appliances, water and trash services. Excellent references and proof of employment required. No pets or smoking. $400/mo., $300 deposit, plus utilities. 419-898-1382 or 419261-9724.
3 Bedroom Ranch Out building, 1 acre, Oregon Schools For Sale/Rent, 1566 Coy Rd. 419-691-3049
CLASSIFIED DEPT. CLOSED FRIDAYS Deadline: Thursdays at 1:00 p.m.
East Side- 2 or 3 bedroom house, $550/mo. 419-932-0503
Nice Selection! 2 & 3 Bedroom Singles & Doubles Sites Also Available! Lot Rent $200-$220/month Call Walnut Hills/Deluxe Parks 419-666-3993 Bank Financing Available!
Commercial For Rent Commercial Property Office Space For Rent Share House/Apartment
Curtice, nice 2-bedroom on deadend street. $650. Call 330-690-5376
Quiet 5 acre country lot for sale in Clay Twp., Genoa Schools, 419-4828303.
Homes for Sale Investment Property For Rent Auctions Lots and Acreage
LEMOYNE-Extra Large 1 bedroom upper, washer/dryer hookup, appliances, garage, $485/mo. +1st/last deposit, No pets. 419-836-7604 after 6pm. New Year - New Home! 3 bedroom ranch with basement, downtown Elmore. Close to park, fenced yard, on street parking. $675 includes stove and refrigerator, washer and dryer available. Security deposit and 12 month lease required. 419.898.2053
Walbridge, 2-bedroom, 121 Main, no pets/smoking, $600/month + deposit and utilities. 419-837-5155
COPPER COVE APTS.
Spacious 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. (Next to I-280, close to shopping & restaurants)
$99 Move In Special! Call for new tenant rate 1105 S. Wheeling 419-693-6682
OREGON- 2251 Wilkes Rd., 2 bedroom apartment with washer/dryer hookups, $500/mo +deposit. 419392-1121 OREGON- 4 bedroom home, 2 bath, $1250/mo. water included, 1 car detached garage. Call 419-6939391 Oregon/Harbor View- 237 East Harbor View Dr., 1 Bedroom, $450/mo. +deposit, No Pets, 419-691-3468 Pemberville, 2-bedroom upper, large living room, appliances, available January 15, $460 plus electric/gas. 419-287-4824
Bob McIntosh “Pick the Best�
419-260-9350 Em: Bob@callbobmcintosh.info Website: Bobmcintoshsells.com Over One Thousand closed transactions “Put my people pleasing experience to work for you�
Thousands of Homes . . . One Address 419-691-2800 www.danberry.com
Starting At
* 1 Bed $400 * 2 Bed $500
• Oregon Schools • No Deposit • No Gas Bill • Small Pets OK! • Storage Units On Site
419-693-9391 Mon.-Fri. 9am-6pm, Sat. 11am-4pm 2750 Pickle Rd., Oregon Visa & MasterCard Accepted
Estate of Nora L. Wilkins Wilkins Real Estate Auction Real Estate Minimum Bid: $12,000 Saturday...January 31, 2015...10 am Auction Site: 210 S. Luther Street, Risingsun, OH OPEN HOUSE Sat. Jan. 17... 10:30 am - NOON Sun. Jan. 18...1 - 3 pm Ranch Style Home, 3-Bedroom, Full bath, 1+ Car attached garage Has potential for a rental or a first time home buyer, great location, large back yard, great neighborhood, walking distance to Stores, Schools & Churches. Montgomery Twp., Wood County, School dist.: Lakota Schools $2,500 down, day of auction, TERMS ON REAL ESTATE: non- refundable with balance due at closing and upon delivery of guaranteed certificate of title and deed in approx. 30 days. Taxes pro-rated at closing. Property will be sold “as-is� condition. For full pictures of this property go to Auctionzip.com-Auctioneer ID#1911 Attorney-W. Alex Smith/Mahaffey & Associates, Sylvania, Ohio Estate of Nora L. Wilkins/Probate #2014 1411 Executor Wayland Wilkins, Dayton, Ohio
Oregon – 2033 Blandin, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, all appliances, W/D, shed, $600/mo., + 1 month deposit, + all utilities, 419-343-3421 Oregon 3 bedroom, 2 bath house, large lot. No Smoking/Pets, $850./mo., 1st month, last month and security deposit. Available now. 419-349-8127
Piccadilly East Apartments
WALBRIDGE, Blair Dr., 2 bed apt. living room, dining room, laundry room , walk-in closets, efficient gas heat & hot water, fresh paint throughout, $550/mo. 419-409-1014 Woodville, Ohio- 2 bedroom apt., upper, just painted, appliances, quiet neighborhood, laundry facility, $419/mo. +Deposit Also looking for Asst. Manager on site. 419-669-0274
419-638-6591 VLBrubaker@aol.com
Looking to sell your home? We’ll bring the buyer to you A study by The National Association of Realtors shows that most households move within 10 miles of their current location. The Press delivers more of these prime buyers to you than any other media. We deliver The Suburban Press and the Metro Press to more than 32,000 homes in 23 communities in Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky and Wood Counties including: Curtice, East Toledo, Elmore, Genoa, Gibsonburg, Lake Township, Luckey, Millbury, Northwood, Oak Harbor, Oregon, Walbridge and Woodville. If you live in one of these communities, make sure you get maximum exposure with those most likely to buy.
Lots & Land
418 Beachview Reno Beach 10-Lots $6,000. SR 579 East side of Railroad Williston, Ohio 43468 11.75 acres $57,000. Ohio Real Estate Auctions LLC
Ken Belkofer 419-277-3635
Mary Ann Coleman
419-343-5348
LD
2.88 acres 10050 Corduroy Curtice, Oh $32,000.
2508H - PRICE REDUCED. Perfect 10 Move in. Oregon Schools, lots of updates. IL#56944. Dawn Betz-Peiffer 419-346-7411. 611W - NEW LISTING. Nice 3 bed, 1 level Living. Updated windows and roof. $27,900. IL#55704. Ken Steingraber 419-346-7755. 3405D - NEW LISTING - Ottawa Hills. 3405 Darlington. 3 poss 4 bed Brick Home. $189,900. IL#55634. Dawn Betz-Peiffer 419-346-7411. 466NW - NEW LISTING - Charming 3 Bedroom. Immediate Possession. IL#55324. Lana Rife 419-344-9512. 2122C - PRICE REDUCED. Twinplex 2 Bed - 3 Bed Garage Off Street Parking. $550/m Rent. $29,900. IL#55254. Tom Smith 419-343-8553. INFOLINE 419-539-1020 24 HOURS A DAY! If there is a property you are interested in, call and enter the 5 digit Infoline number (IL) above.
SO
457 Clubhouse Reno Beach 5-Lots $5,000.
Call 419-836-2221
PRESS The
Since 1972
Metro Suburban Maumee Bay
P.O. Box 169 • 1550 Woodville, Millbury, OH 43447
www.presspublications.com
THE PRESS, JANUARY 12, 2015
Real Estate
Real Estate
The Press Newspaper reserves the right to reject any advertising material we deem unacceptable. Please check your ad upon first insertion for accuracy. The newspaper will assume responsibility for the first publication only. Compensation will be in the form of ad space or credit, not to exceed original cost of the ad. NO REFUNDS.
Call me, I’m selling the Suburbs!
Yorktown Village 1 & 2 Bedroom Townhouses & Apartments Join Oregon’s Finest Community ★Laundry ★Swimming Pool ★Spacious Floor Plans ★Private Patios ★ 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance
419-693-9443
Tanglewood Landings Apartments
$134,900 $119,900 $95,900 $31,500 $29,900
- 326 Krotzer, Luckey, 3 bed, 2 baths, large garage. - 403 Erie, Woodville, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. - 405 Woodpointe, Woodville, 2 bedroom condo. - 6760 CR 165, Woodville, 2 acres building site - 17690 & 17710 Ravine, Elmore, building lots
Roy Whitehead
419-376-1233
Call me for a personal tour of any of these special properties!
– UNIT AVAILABLE – TAKING APPLICATIONS For People 62 years of age or older – OR – Handicapped/Disabled regardless of age. Our Apartments are one story and one bedroom
Call 419-849-3730 or our TTY/TTD@ 1-800-750-0750
• • • • • •
Swimming Pool Basketball/Tennis Courts Playground 24 hour emergency maintenance Laundry facilities Ask about our new tenant specials Featuring
1 bedroom $405 2 bedroom $495 2 & 3 bedroom Townhomes starting at $599
2300 Navarre Ave. #150, Oregon Ohio 43616
Start your search for a new home at www.nwohomes.com 2065 Blanche Dr., Oregon (Front view)
Your New Home For 2014 Ask about our specials •Oregon Schools • Pool • Intercom entry • Washer/Dryer hookups • Cat Friendly
Featuring 1 bedroom apt. $425 2 bedroom apt. $495 2 bed. Townhouse $625
Large all brick Ranch Cottage on Maumee Bay. Completely remodeled, 2 bed, 1 bath, living rm, dining rm, lg. Kitchen & laundry rm., Gas Fireplace, 2.5 car detached garage, and 5 adjoining lots. $200,000. 419-855-7559
Newlove Realty Welcomes D’Ann Gregory D’Ann is a lifelong resident of Northwood. She has been a licensed realtor for 10 years. D’Ann is ready to help you with all of your real estate needs in Lucas & Wood Counties. REALTY, INC.
EASTWYCK APTS. 3148 Corduroy Rd. Oregon, Ohio 419-691-2944
Turn Key Office Space For Rent, East Toledo – second floor, 3,000sq. ft., furnished, including phone system, $450/mo., + utilities, 419-691-1512
Retail/Office or Salon for Lease 1,050 Sq. Ft. in Walbridge $500/mo. + deposit & utilities. Call 419-392-8968
Mike's Hauling We buy junk cars, trucks and vans Scrap metal hauled free. 419-666-1443
Drivers: **New Year - New Opportunities** Looking for: Better Pay? Better Home-time? Better Equipment? Better Compensation????? CDL-A 1yr. exp. 877-704-3773 Hair stylist needed for Woodville Salon. Booth rental $25/day up to $100/wk. Lots of extras included! Please call 419-849-2009 for more info. HOUSE CLEANING Busy house cleaning service looking for energetic team members who like to clean. No evenings, weekends, holidays. Call 419-873-7000. (8am-4pm)
We are looking for 2nd shift forklift positions. Must be able to work up to 10-12 hour shifts Starting Pay Rate is $10.00 per hour. Will need at least one year experience. Come in and apply anytime from Mon-Fri from 9am-3pm. Bring 2 forms of ID MANPOWER - 316 W. DUSSEL DR. MAUMEE, OH Call with any questions 419-893-4413 OREGON Assembly Jobs JOB FAIR We are recruiting for immediate entry level assembly jobs. Great Opportunity to work longer term consistently at 40 hours plus overtime. Pay Rate is $8.00 per hour. 1st Shift 4 am-12:30 pm 2nd Shift noon-8:30 pm and 3rd Shift 8 pm-4:30 am
Bob Bruning will be your host.
An elegant condo featuring 3 BR, 3 full baths, granite countertops, 2 granite fireplaces, 17 x 27 great room, full finished basement and 2 car garage.
OPEN SUNDAY Jan. 18, 2:30–4:00 130 Bierley Ave. Pemberville Bob Bruning will be your host.
$153,000 - This warm and cozy 3 BR, 2 bath home features Oak cabinets in kitchen & laundry, wood pellet stove in FR, new vanity w/granite top in master bath, 3 car garage, 2 porches, wood deck, large .75 acre lot adjacent to Oberhouse Park and Portage River.
222 E. Front St., Pemberville
John Zeisler
Move worry-free with Johnny Z. — 25+ Years Experience —
This 1700sf full brick 4 possible 5 bedroom 1 ½ bath ranch with living and family rooms, attached garage, sun room, secluded fenced in back yard and more could be the one.
NEW PRICE 18021 W SR 579, Martin. Oh Asking $94,900 4 bedroom, 2 bath 1,872 SF home sitting on almost an acre of land with a 1120 SF heated attached garage and tons of attic storage. Where else can you buy so much home for so little money?
1508 Superior St, Genoa Asking $124,900 Great find here! Clean and well cared for 3 bedrooms, 1 ½ bath ranch with updates and a deluxe 2 ½ car garage with workshop, heat, air and more. See this solid buy soon before you’re too late.
TOW TRUCK DRIVER Must have experience, flatbed and wrecker. Apply at: RAU'S TOWING 2160 Oakdale Ave., Oregon, OH.
Turnpike Service Plazas are hiring for:
The Press is looking for a independent contractor to deliver a driving route in Oak Harbor, Ohio. If interested, contact Jordan at 419-836-2221 Ext. 32.
TRAINCO
Truck Driving Schools Day - Eve - Weekend Class Job Placement
Perrysburg 419-837-5730 Norwalk 419-499-2222 Mobility Coordinator Fremont Manages and implements the locally coordinated public transit-human service transportation plans; researches and develops transportation and assists in the research and development of grants for continued funding of program. Requirements, job description, pay rate & application online at wsos.org/employment. Apply by 1/25/15. EOE
CORNERSTONE CLEANING & RESTORATION LLC Hiring Dependable People with Reliable Transportation
TRAVELER’S EXPRESS
Hiring for All Shifts and Shift Managers Part time Positions Available • Up to $9.00 per hour to start
• Meal Discounts • Flexible Hours Applicants will be considered for all concepts
Apply @ Hardees.com/jobs
Blue Heron Plaza
Wyandot Plaza
419-855-3478 419-855-7239
Great People, Great Pay, Great Miles Great Benefits, Great Home time These are all reasons we were named “Best Fleet to Drive For� a 5th straight year Why wait 2 or 3 years to earn the top pay You deserve today Start @ 48 CPM, all miles And Quarterly bonuses Call or Email for more information 419-725-7167 www.mcstrucks.com
STNA’S
SCHEDULER / MEDICAL SUPPLIES Nursing Department
Skilled Trades Electric motor repair shop looking for experienced motor winders, mechanics, machinists and field service personnel. To apply, visit www.whelco.com
419-836-8942
SALES OPPORTUNITY NABF College World Series media publications/sponsorship. Commission only. Call 419-936-3887, leave name and phone number.
419-351-3100 NEW LISTING 923 Miller Rd, Northwood Asking $124,900
Residential Specialist Triad Residential Solutions is seeking caring and creative people to work with individuals with developmental disabilities in their private homes or community. Day, evening, and weekend shifts may be required. Responsible for home and personal care, community activities. Must be 18yrs, have valid driver's license, car insurance, HS diploma/GED. Competitive wages and benefits available. Apply at 1605 Holland Rd. Suite A-4 Maumee, Ohio 43537 or call 419-482-0711.
MANPOWER - 316 W. DUSSEL DR. MAUMEE, OH Call with any questions 419-893-4413
444 W. College, Pemberville
Lutheran Home at Toledo, a ministry of Lutheran Home Society has current openings for all shifts for STNA’s. We are looking for compassionate individuals committed to providing a high level of quality care to our residents. Experience in long term care is preferred. A current STNA license is required along with a clean BCI check and pre-employment physical. LHAT offers an excellent wage and benefit package for eligible positions. Qualified applicants can complete applications at: Lutheran Home at Toledo 131 N. Wheeling Toledo, OH 43605 EOE
Come in and apply anytime from Mon-Fri from 9am-3pm. Bring 2 forms of ID
OPEN SUNDAY Jan. 18, 1:00–2:30
email: jzeisler@remax.net
TOP CASH PAID for Junk or Repairable Vehicles. Towing Available. 419-260-7879.
Drug and Bkg checks will be conducted. HS Diploma or GED is required.
Call Bob Bruning at 419-287-4484 “Make your first Big Move!�
NORTH TOLEDO & OREGON FORKLIFT JOBS JOB FAIR
Call D’Ann at 419-460-6803
419-698-1717 3101 Navarre Ave., Oregon
Cleaners Needed at Turnpike Plaza in Genoa, Part-time shifts including weekends. $8.10 per/hr. must have clean background and reliable transportation. Call 419-261-6094 M-F between 8-5.
Tim McCrory 419-343-7798
“This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer�
A Place To Call Home
419-836-2221 or 1-800-300-6158 419-836-2221 www.presspublications.com or 1-800-300-6158 www.presspublications.com
105 inBrookside WoodvilleDr. Woodville, Ohio
21
Lutheran Home at Toledo has an immediate need for a full-time experienced Scheduler for the Nursing Department. Responsibilities include creating and maintain both Nursing and STNA schedules, creating daily staffing sheets, handling all changes to the schedule. In addition this position handles ordering and overseeing medical supplies. Requirements include: High School education, proficiency in Microsoft office products, strong communication and organizational skills and a strong work ethic. A clean background check and pre-employment physical is required. Please submit resume with salary requirements to rcoutts@lhsoh.org or apply at: Lutheran Home at Toledo 131 N. Wheeling Toledo, OH EOE
STNAs Full-time and Part-time Orchard Villa, a Legacy Health Services Facility, is seeking reliable, caring STNAs for full and part-time for all shifts. Current Ohio STNA required. Prior experience working in a skilled and/or long-term health care environment a plus. Orchard Villa offers competitive pay/benefits. Must provide references. Applications accepted at the facility Monday through Friday 8am-4:30pm. 2841 Munding Drive, Oregon, OH 43616 (419) 697-4100.
ADMISSIONS COORDINATOR Orchard Villa, a Legacy Health Services Facility, is seeking a part time Admissions Coordinator to work in the evening. Prior experience working in a skilled and/or long-term health care environment a plus. Orchard Villa offers competitive pay/benefits. Must provide references. Applications accepted at the facility Monday through Friday 8am-4:30pm. 2841 Munding Drive, Oregon, OH 43616 (419) 697-4100.
I provide child care in my Millbury home, I have references, non-smoking, free meals, CPR Certified, lots of TLC. 419-836-7672.
A Mechanic looks at vehicles, pays accordingly, anything w/wheels 419-870-0163 We buy most anything from your garage! 419-870-0163
ST. JUDE NOVENA May the sacred Heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world now and forever. Sacred Heart of Jesus pray for us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, helper of the hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer 9 times a day; by the 8th day, your prayer will be answered. It has never been known to fail. Publication must be promised. Thank you St. Jude. CAH
HANDYMAN Electrical Service Upgrades, Plumbing, Woodwork, Painting, Member of BBB Call 567-277-5333 (local) Hardwood Flooring, Refinishing, Installation, and Repair Work. 19-yrs experience. Call Kyle 419-343-3719 RAY'S HANDYMAN SERVICES Carpentry, Drywall Repairs, Painting, Siding, Electrical Problems, Help for the Do-It-Yourselfer. Small Jobs Welcome, 35+ Years Experience 419-836-4574/419-304-0583
22
THE PRESS, JANUARY 12, 2015
Ottawa Hills Memorial Park, 8 adjoining lots, prime location, $850.00 each. 419-691-6904 Restlawn Memorial 4 adjoining lots, Last Supper Garden. $850. each, 419-666-3571
BAY AREA CONCRETE New or Replace Concrete Driveways, Sidewalks, Pole Barns, Porches, Stamped & Color Concrete Brick & Block work etc. Veterans & Senior Citizens' Discounts Free Estimates, Licensed & Insured "No job to big, no job to small"
Mike Halka 419-350-8662 Oregon, OH. "Serving all of N.W. Ohio"
KNIERIEM PAINTING & WALLPAPERING EXTERIOR-INTERIOR Painting & wall papering; Interior wood refinishing; man lifts; airless spray; power wash & blasting; silicone seal; refinishing aluminum siding; residential; church, farm. EXPERIENCED FREE ESTIMATES *SENIOR & WINTER RATES* 419-697-1230 NORTHWOOD
Jake's Drywall We service Northwest Ohio. No job is too big or too small. 27 years experience. Fully insured. Free estimates. 419-360-3522
MIKE'S PROFESSIONAL SNOW REMOVAL Residential ~ Commercial “Best Prices in town� Become a seasonal customer and receive 25% OFF! Call 419-350-6780
ESTATE SALE - OREGON 544 Lawson January 23 & 24 (9 am-4 pm) Ridgewood Grandfather Clock. Wood breakfast table, 4 chairs. Sofas, end tables, lamps, dishes, Christmas decorations, washer, dryer, refrigerator, chairs, sewing machine and table, toys, hand tools, small air hockey table, counter-top tv, household items and some odd stuff.
TV Armour with 30� TV included. Solid Oak, one piece, 45�W x73�H x 28�D. Bought from Vehn & Son Furniture. Can hold 40� TV. Great Condition. $275. for total package. Call 356-1500. Two Retro Lamps from early 1960's, White with a gold base and gold designs, $20 each, Call 419836-9754.
Young black but fully grown cat lost in the Williston area. 419-8367196
Cadillac Head Gasket Repair Is your Northstar engine losing coolant? Have it tested free at TMZ Automotive. 419-837-9700.
9 Assorted Grout Trowels, Plaster & Cement Stirrer, $30, 419-260-8174 Adult Tricycle, Good Condition, $85.00. 419-322-5933 Aluminum wheelchair ramp with handrails. 24' length with adjustable sections. 5' square landing platform. New $3600. Asking $2500 or best offer. Phone 419-343-3711. Cutting Torch Outfit, 2 Tanks, Both Full, Hose, Torch, + Cart. $275.00 419-322-5933 Horizon Fitness Elliptical model SXE 7.7, $200. Like New. 419-3566638 Invacare Pronto Surestep M51 Electric Wheel Chair, Serial # 03F145138, Model # M51SCTRSTR, Excellent Condition, $375.00 419-322-5933 Lift Recliner Chair, $500. 419-6936284 Meilink Safe Inside Dimen. 171/2�H, 13�W, 15�D. Heavy Duty, $175.00 419-322-5933
1994 Ford Econoline handicap van, everything in E/C, 124k, $3,500. 419-466-2554 Need a Winter Project or some family bonding time? 1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee LMT for Sale. Her engine needs a lot of expertise and love. Call 419-356-7963 if you can give her what she needs. $1,000 (OBO)
Do you enjoy people and need some extra CASH... 9G JCXG QRGPKPIU HQT
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Sharper Image Razor Xtreme push/kick scooter-$40. 419-8369754 Snow Thrower, 21�, Craftsman, Like New, Electric Starter, $300.00 419-661-5973 Toledo Scale Model 4030, Serial 7794, Cap 5KG, $100. 419-322-5933
Part-Time Positions, Competive Wages & %HQHÂżWV Candidates should apply online at :
Toro 22� Snow Thrower, Electric Start, Forward & Rev., Tecumseh, 8HP, Like New, Used Once. $450.00 419-862-2891 Trade Pool Table for auto, appliances, electronics, furniture, or whatever. 419-419-9921.
www.mypetrojob.com - hiring code 101 or call 1-888-673-8765 Petro 26416 Baker Rd., Perrysburg 419-837-9772 Ext.31709 TA 3483 Libbey Rd., Perrysburg 419-837-5017 EOE
GARMIN nuvi 40 GPS with suction cup mount and 4.3� color LCD touchscreen display. Even tells speed limits! 010-00990-08, NEVER USED! STILL IN ORIGINAL, UNOPENED PACKAGE, Walmart.com lists a refurbished one for $87.44, Bestbuy.com lists a new one for $114.95, I am asking $75, 419-266-2292. Mag, 17� Flat Square Tube Monitor (15.9�VS) Still in Box, Never used. $30.00. 419-836-9754
9G CTG *KTKPI (TKGPFN[ (CEGU
Adorable English Mastiffs Puppies for sale, 2 Males, 7 Females, Some Brindle and Fawn. Vetted. 419-9024859
1999 CMC Street Cruiser, under 16,000 miles, runs good, pretty, must sell! $7500 OBO. 419-287-4152 Cycleman We repair Chinese Pocket Bikes and Scooters, and Mopeds, many parts available, also repair motorcycles, Call Wed. - Sat. (11-5pm) 419-244-2525.
Buckles
LEMOYNE 24211 Lemoyne Rd. at Truman Jan. 24 & 25 9am to 4pm Five rooms of Furniture! H.H. Linens, China, glass, dĂŠcor, Womens XL & 2X Clothes, Art, Craft & Ceramic Supplies, Paints, Frames & More.
Bus Trip to NYC, the Big Apple! May 21st– 27th, leaves from Rossford. See it all! $75.00 deposit due now! Let's Travel Too for all your travel needs. $759./pp 419-265-3358 or 419-509-6008
2 Pair Cross Country Skis, $15.00. 419-691-3799
Oak Harbor Conservation Club
18th Annual Gun Show/Swap Meet Sunday, January 18, 2015 975 South Gordon Rd. Oak Harbor Chili Lunch Available $3 admission Table reservations: 419-862-2335
Frigidaire Laundry Unit, heavy duty, $350. GE refrigerator $250. All white, very good condition. 419-691-5266
Looking to save on heating bill this winter? Meet adorable Buckles! He is a handsome one year old boy who loves to snuggle! He came into the Lucas County Canine Care & Control as a stray and he along with 20+ other lovable canines are all looking to share their love with a new family. Come meet them today at 410 S Erie St Toledo, 419-213-2800, open Mon-Fri 117, Sat & Sun 11-7. If you are missing a dog please come and walk through the kennels. Impounded as well as adoptable dogs can be viewed on PetHarbor.com. Stay up to date with all the exciting happenings and events at LCCC&C on F a c e B o o k , Tw i t t e r a n d lucascountydogs.com. Share the love and adopt a shelter dog today!
Burkin Self Storage • Camper Storage Inside & Outside
• Inside Auto Storage • Personal Storage
• 1500 watts • 3 year warranty • Makes 2x more heat than other infrared heaters
1500
• Memory Technology: • Easy to operate After power outage, • Safety grill heater comes back • LONG LIFE on automatically heating elements
St. Rt. 51, South of Elmore 419-862-2127
Public Notice: Allen Township has filed the Annual Financial Report with the State Auditor for fiscal year ending December 31, 2014. The report is available for public inspection by calling 419-836-4204 for an appointment or by attending one of the regularly scheduled Board of Trustees meetings held the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:00 p.m. All meetings are at the office of the trustees, 21030 W. Toledo St., Williston, Ohio. Sonia Eischen, Fiscal Officer Allen Township Trustees
$50 OFF
$247 Regular Price - $ 50 With this Coupon
$197 NOW ONLY
Mon-Fri 8am-6pm • Sat 8am-5pm • Sun 10am-4pm 5120 Navarre Ave. Oregon, OH 419-693-0601
www.gladieuxhomecenter.com
THE PRESS, JANUARY 12, 2015
— Public Notice —
www.presspublications.com PUBLIC NOTICE The complete Financial Reports for 2014 for the Village of Walbridge are available to any interested parties during regular business hours in the office of the Fiscal Officer Patricia Crawford. Village of Walbridge, 111 N. Main St., Walbridge, Ohio 43465
— PUBLIC NOTICE — TO THE RESIDENTS OF JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP The Reno Beach/Howard Farms Conservancy District will hold their regular business meetings on the second Monday of every other month. Starting, January 12, 2015. The meeting will be held at 7P.M. in the Township Hall at: 9501 Jerusalem Road, Curtice, Ohio 43412. My contact information is Joyce Schmitz, Phone # 419-8362225.
Luther Home of Mercy which is a private nonprofit corporation intends to submit a Proposal for a capital grant under the provision of 49 USC Section 5310 of the Federal Transit Act to provide transportation service for the elderly and disabled within Ottawa County. The grant proposal will request 1 light transit vehicle. It is projected that 6 persons with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities who use wheelchairs will use the service 5 days per week for various activities, including transportation to day programming, community events and recreation activities. Luther Home of Mercy invites comments and proposals from all interested public, private and paratransit operators including taxi operators, for the provision of transportation service to the elderly and disabled within our service area. Operators who are interested in offering proposals to provide service should contact Megan O’Brien, Mission Advancement Coordinator at Luther Home of Mercy PO Box 187 Williston, OH 43468 to obtain full details of the type of transportation service that is needed prior to preparing a proposal. Comments or proposals must be submitted within 30 days to the agency at the above address with a copy to the Ohio Department of Transportation, Office of Transit, 1980 West Broad Street, Mail Stop 3110, Columbus, Ohio 43223; Attention: Administrator.
THE PRESS EXPERTS Appliance Repair
Concrete
In Home Service
KELLER CONCRETE INC.
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Operated By Mark Wells
Insured & Bonded — FREE ESTIMATES — BOBCAT SERVICES AVAILABLE
419-836-FIXX (3499)
419-697-9398
Automotive
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WINTER SPECIAL
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21270 SR 579 Williston
836-7461
SCHNEIDER SONS’ ELECTRIC CORP. Whole House Generators
Home Improvement
Freddy’s Home Improvement
419-276-0608 Electrical, Paneling, Concrete, Roofing, Drywall, Kitchens, Bathrooms, Floors, Decks, Tile, Porch, Additions, Dormers Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured New & Old Homewiring Specialists
MUSSER’S HOME AND PROPERTY MAINTENANCE
1556 Oak St/At Oakdale Toledo, OH 43605
Lawn Care & Snowplowing
(419) 691-8284 Family Owned & Operated Since 1942
• Home Repair Specialists • Commercial & Residential MANY DISCOUNTS & OTHER SERVICES • FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES
419-304-8666
Excavating
Painting
Cleaning
BELKOFER EXCAVATING DAY SPRING Systems • Sewer Taps CLEANING L.L.C. • Septic • Snow Removal • Lawn Care • Standard Cleaning • Deep Cleaning • Residential or Commercial
Daily, Weekly, Bi-weekly & Monthly * Reasonable Prices
$35 OFF
FIRST CLEANING With this ad
Member of the BBB Free on site Estimates
Call Carol at
419-367-9467 Carpet Cleaning
CORNERSTONE
Cleaning & Restoration LLC Over 26 years experience Carpeting & Upholstery Cleaning Emergency Water Removal General House Cleaning — Certified By I.I.C.R.C. —
419-836-8942 Concrete
A.A. COLLINS CONSTRUCTION & RENTAL PROPERTIES Basement Waterproofing Concrete • Roofing Interior • Exterior Lawncare • Stone & Dirt Hauling Bobcat Service • Espaniol
Rob 419-322-5891
BAY AREA CONCRETE
New or Replace Concrete Driveways, Sidewalks, Pole Barns, Porches, Stamped & Color Concrete Brick & Block work etc.
Veterans & Senior Citizens’ Discounts Free Estimates, Licensed & Insured
Mike Halka
419-350-8662 Oregon, OH
Backhoe/Bobcat/Dozer Work Stone and Dirt Hauling See Us on Facebook
419-836-8663 419-392-1488
ACE ROOFING
Terry 419-708-6027 Josh 419-704-7443
“We go with the flow”
$50.00 Drain Cleaning Specials Drain Problems?? Call Nate 419-205-5469
Hauling
B & G HAULING •Stone & Dirt Hauling •Bobcat Service •Demolition & Hauling •Concrete Removal •Clean Ups/Clean Outs
Driveway Stone and Spreading We accept all Major Credit Cards
419-340-0857 419-862-8031 Hauling If it’s heavy ... and you want it hauled in or out ...
Gray Plumbing 25 Years Experience **** 24 HR. SERVICE **** D.O.T. Certified. Insured/Bonded All Major Credit Cards Accepted — Senior Discount — LICENSED MASTER PLUMBER
Jim Gray
419-691-7958
INSURED/ Lifetime Warranty A+ BBB rated contractor. We have a clean record. Call BBB at 419-531-3116. Check on all contractors. RECENTLY CHOSEN TO INSTALL ROOFS FOR OWENS CORNING PRESIDENT & COMMUNICATIONS DIVISION PRESIDENT BECAUSE OF OUR EXCELLENT REPUTATION
419-836-1946 419-470-7699
419-693-8736 Licensed Master Plumber Roy Bomyea
Remodeling
Call Us! •Dirt •Stone •Debris •Cars •Equipment •Trucks
BOBCAT SERVICES We can work directly with your Insurance Company 21270 SR 579 Williston
836-7461
Est. of Richard Hayward, Wood Co. Probate #20131478, Morgan Hayward - Adm. Visit the Web for Listing, photos, terms & conditions
TODD SCHLING-419-269-9371 Office: 419-547-7777
www.bakerbonnigson.com
Storage
MAUMEE BAY SELF STORAGE 7640 Jerusalem Road (Rt 2) (419)836-4000
GL HENNINGSEN WATER SYSTEMS
Your Ad Could Be Here! Call The Press to be an Expert! 419-836-2221
Well Pumps Sewage Pumps Sump Pumps
419-836-9650/419-466-6432
Don’t Call An Amateur, Call An Expert!
ACEROOF.net
AMAZON ROOFING Fully Licensed & Insured
419-691-2524
BLUE LINE ROOFING Celebrating our 51st year in business • Licensed & Insured Since 1964 • Outstanding Reputation • Repairs: Big or Small • Complete Tearoffs • Re-roofing • Flat Roofs • Gutters • Siding • Emergency Repairs • Financing Available • Insurance A+ Work Rated
• Free Estimates •
419-242-4222 www.BlueLineRoofers.com
OREGON PLUMBING No Jobs Too Small Insured - Bonded
OPEN HOUSE-Wed., Jan. 7 – 6-8 pm & Sun., Jan. 11 – 1-3 pm REAL ESTATE: Commercial Building being 30 x 60 x 12 w/2 Bay Doors - Door One is 10' x 10', Door Two is 8' x 10'. Wood County Parcels #U71612-2801 14001000, #U71-612-280114002000 & #U71-612-280114003000.
Water Pumps
Plumbing
A1-Affordable Drain Cleaning
LOCATION: 301 Main St., Luckey, OH. Watch for signs! SELLING ORDER: Real Estate will sell 1st followed by Autos, then remainder of listing.
Roofs/Gutters Siding/Windows
www.AmazonRoof.com
Your Ad Could Be Here!
COMMERCIAL BUILDING, AUTOS, TOOLS & RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT
Multi-sized Units - Outside storage Security fence - 7 day access “We make every effort to accommodate YOU.”
S andwisch Painting •Interior •Exterior •Residential - Commercial
Sat., Jan. 24, 2015 - 10:37 am 301 MAIN ST., LUCKEY, OH
- FREE ESTIMATES Senior Discounts Veteran Discounts
PREFERRED CONTRACTOR Lawn Service
PUBLIC AUCTION
If You’re an Expert and want to get involved... CALL 836-2221. Deadline: 11 a.m. Thursday
Roofing
COLLINS ROOFING •Repairs •Small Jobs •Big Jobs•Seamless Gutters •Free Estimates
419-322-5891
Musser
Snow Removal
Additions - Decks - Bathrooms Exteriors - Windows - Kitchens Licensed - Insured - Bonded In Business for over 30 years — Free Estimates — BBB Senior Discounts PRO
MIKE’S PROFESSIONAL SNOW REMOVAL
Your Services Change, Your Prices Change, Why Does Your Yellow Page Ad Stay The Same? An ad should be flexible... Like your business. Not chiseled in stone like a stagnant yellow page ad. So if you’re choosing between The Press Expert Section and the yellow pages, consider this... cell phones, caller i.d., internet directories, search 1 With engines and competing phone books there is less reason to go to a phone book with your ad in it. On the other hand, you have The Press in your hands just like your potential customers living or working in 33,892 homes and businesses in your market area. For less than $21 a week, you can reach them in The Press Expert Section. can frequently change the size and copy of your ad 2 You in The Press to advertise seasonal offers, special prices, new products & new services. lively issue of The Press is full of news, informa3 Each tion and features from 20 towns and their surrounding areas in Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky and Wood Counties. More than 475 businesses and individuals use The Press each week to sell goods and services. For more information, call the classified department.
419-836-2221
Restoration & Remodeling, Inc
419-691-0131 O PRProfessional Remodelers Organization
www.musserremodeling.com E-mail: remoc1@bex.net No job too small or too big
Residential - Commercial “Best Prices in town” Become a seasonal customer and receive 25% OFF!
Call 419-350-6780
23
PRESS The
Since 1972
Metro Suburban Maumee Bay
P.O. Box 169 • 1550 Woodville, Millbury, OH 43447 (419) 836-2221 Fax 836-1319 E-Mail classifieds@presspublications.com
THE PRESS
JANUARY 12, 2015
IT’S A
24
Birthday
REGISTE TO WIN AR 50 ⬙ HDT V !
SALE
% OFF
25! n r u t s l r i g e Th
*
CHECK US OUT ON FACEBOOK
*Excludes Pandora, Astron and prior sales and layaways. In-stock merchandise only. 15 months interest free for qualified accounts.
Celebrate With Us! OUR BIRTHDAY SALE STARTS JANUARY 15TH
Monday – Wednesday, Friday 10am – 6pm Thursday 10am – 8pm | Saturday 10am – 5pm
3239 Navarre Ave. Oregon, Ohio 43616 P: 419.693.4311
www.alanmillerjewelers.com
Spend $395 or more and receive a $50 gift certificate to either Ciao! Ristorante or The Real Seafood Co.
Babies born in 2014 Emily Grace Kinkaid
Danielle Christine Hartman
September 27th Curtice, OH Parents: Timothy & Nan Kinkaid Grandparents: Tim & Cheryl Kinkaid
June 8th Aurora, OH Parents: Andrew & Megan Hartman Grandparents: Dennis & Cindy Hartman; Tom & Shelley Cingcade
Mia Tilton
Ava Barbara Shafer
January 10th
Millbury, OH
Parents: Brad & Lisa Tilton Grandparents: David & Teresa Besgrove; Ron & Joyce Tilton
April 20th
Oregon, OH
Parents: Ryan & Stephanie Shafer Grandparents: Gene & Rose Yedica; Eric Shafer & Pat Shafer
Ross William Abbott III
November 10th
Genoa, OH
Parents: Ross and Kelly Abbott Grandparents: The late Ross & Donna Abbott; Robert & Phyllis Brown; and Grandma Mo
Callen Bryan Szozda
December 9th Perrysburg, OH Parents: Jordan & Kaitlin Szozda Grandparents: Rebecca & John Szozda; Linda MacRitchie & Jerry McKibben; Kevin MacRitchie
Carmen Cathryn Lozdoski
September 7th Warren, MI Parents: Carly & Brandon Lozdoski Grandparents: Terry & Carrie Sievert
Congratulations To All!