Northeast Suburban Life 08/12/20

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Northeast

SUBURBAN LIFE Your Community Press newspaper serving Blue Ash, Montgomery, Sycamore Township and other Northeast Cincinnati neighborhoods

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2020 | BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS | PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK

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Madeira train depot may house butcher, deli

CORONOVIRUS IN OHIO

Jeanne Houck Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Ta'Marsh Pope stands with her son, Jayden, 14, stand together on July 31, 2020, on their street in Kennedy Heights. Pope was hospitalized with Covid-19 before recovering, she is now a mask advocate with the Masks On campaign. ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER

Once a skeptic, Silverton woman now urges Blacks in Cincinnati to wear masks Anne Saker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Her fi ght with the new coronavirus took so much out of Ta’Marsh Pope of Silverton that she believed at times she might lose. But she didn’t, and as she heals, “I look at life differently now.” “It can happen to anybody,” said Pope, 47, even her – an energetic single mother of a teenager, Hamilton County employee and bartender for hire. That’s the message Pope delivers as part of a public-service campaign urging African Americans to wear masks in public to stop the viral infection. The campaign extends the Masks On push in the Cincinnati area that started in early July. The Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber and the Health Collaborative assembled an eff ort called the Regional COVID Communications Center to escalate and spread public health messages during the pandemic. The fi rst weeks of the Masks On campaign, designed by Procter & Gamble Co., were successful enough that Gov. Mike DeWine credited the billboards and PSA with bending Hamilton County’s infection rate in mid-July. Regina Carswell Russo, the center’s executive director, said the suggestion for the new ads came from Damon Jones, P&G’s chief communications offi cer. Jones and Russo talked about the Cincinnati region’s increase of coronavirus infections, especially among younger Black people who were otherwise healthy. “This was hitting us hard, and we felt that we had to speak to them,” Russo said. “We had the understanding that the best way was from the heart center, with real voices.” The ads

A butcher and deli business could be the next tenant of Madeira’s iconic former train station. The city has received eight proposals for the lease of the circa 1890 depot at 7701 Railroad Ave. and is still accepting pitches. Madeira City Manager Tom Moeller said city council has directed him to negotiate with a business that wants to operate a butcher store and deli at the depot. If an agreement can’t be reached, Moeller said, “we will continue evaluating the other proposals for one which makes the most sense for the community.” Madeira was developed along the railroad line between Cincinnati and Parkersburg, West Virginia. The former train station has hosted a number of restaurants over the years, but the last tenant left at the end of 2019, Moeller said. City records show that other proposals for the depot include restaurants and bakeries, including the North College Hill Bakery, a popular traditional German bakery that opened in 1933.

began July 23-25, what would have been the weekend of the annual Cincinnati Music Festival, and will run on social media through the end of August, she said. Russo recruited two people who endured the infection and the resulting illness COVID-19. Kenyatta Smith is a secondgeneration Cincinnati fi refi ghter, who in one ad says through a mask, “Trust me: You do not want this.” Pope had been chronicling her experience with the illness on social media. Pope said when Russo contacted her about the campaign she jumped at the chance. “If we can reach people out there, to get them to understand how serious this is from a person who’s actually experienced it, I said, let’s do it.” Pope is an eligibility technician with Hamilton County Job & Family Services helping residents navigate government assistance programs. As the coronavirus spread in the United States in the spring, Pope was a skeptic. “I was like, OK, is this really real? You keep hearing diff erent stories, oh, they say coronavirus is not real. I was sitting having mixed feelings about it.” Then numbers of illnesses and deaths rose in Ohio and the nation. By Father’s Day in June, Pope was sick, fi rst with a days-long headache that resisted treatment. At the end of that week, Pope’s boyfriend Nate Allen took her to a testing station in Bond Hill, where her temperature reading hit 104 degrees. Her test was positive. Her breathing was labored. Pain wracked her body. She sent her son Jayden to live with his father. “She was going through a lot, and I felt really bad,” said Jayden. “That’s my

Here’s an update on other development plans in Madeira:

See MASKS, Page 3A

COMMUNITY PRESS

Construction of the Swing Line Grill at the former B&B Mower Service site at 7710 to 7720 Railroad Ave. is stalled by the COVID-19 pandemic, Moeller said. The group behind Paxton’s Grill and Ramsey’s Trailside restaurants in Loveland wants to build a 3,947square-foot restaurant and small tavSee MADEIRA, Page 3A

A butcher and deli business could be the next tenant of Madeira’s iconic former train station. MARIKA LEE/ THE

Cincinnati Country Day drops Indian mascot name Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Country Day Board of Trustees voted to change the use of the Indian mascot at Cincinnati Country Day Schools Aug. 3, offi cials said. Cincinnati Country Day School Director of Communications Ralph Javens confi rmed the decision Aug. 4. The school's Indian mascot was adopted in the 1950s. In an email to district families and alumni sent Aug. 4, Board of Trustees President Joel Brant and Head of School Anthony Jaccaci said more than 300 community members shared their views regarding the Indians mascot through emails and a series of fi ve Zoom meetings. Ultimately the board voted to no longer use the Indian mascot. "An overwhelming majority voiced their desire to see the mascot changed (90% of those who spoke on the Zoom calls and nearly 80% of those who emailed

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the school with their opinions), and none spoke more loudly than the students themselves," the email reads. The email states signifi cant factors in the board's decision included a plea from the executive director of the Greater Cincinnati Native American Coalition, which urged Country Day to cease use of its Native American mascot; the importance of teaching respect for all people and preparing students for college and life; and a desire to maintain a "vibrant, inclusive, and diverse" learning environment where everyone feels they belong. "A strong body of evidence demonstrates use of Native American mascots reinforces stereotypes that marginalize all people of color," the email states. Offi cials said Country Day will "immediately" initiate a process to select a new mascot. The transition will take place during the 2020-2021 school year. This includes replacing uniforms, scoreboards and facility signage. The Cincinnati Country Day School athletic teams

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will no longer be referred to as the Indians in school communications and offi cial Ohio High School Athletic Association competitions, "eff ective immediately," according to the email. Until the district identifi es a new mascot, the team will compete under the name of Cincinnati Country Day School. "In participating in this debate, our alumni shared how proud they are of their alma mater and the athletic successes they enjoyed as students," the email reads. Cincinnati Country Day School's decision comes a week after Winton Woods City School District announced the retirement of their chieftain mascot and a month after the Forest Hills school board voted to remove the Anderson High School "Redskins" mascot in a four-to-one vote. Country Day said it encourages anyone with further thoughts in regards to the mascot to email mascot@countryday.net.

Vol. 57 No. 23 © 2020 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED $1.00

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