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Lorain County Community Guide - July 6, 2023

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Thursday, July 6, 2023

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Volume 10, Issue 27

7-district plan for county government proposed again DAVE O’BRIEN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

A group calling itself the Citizens for Equal Representation for Lorain County is making another push to reformat county government, eliminating the three-member, at-large Lorain County Board of Commissioners in favor of a seven-member county council. Group members Brian Hoagland and Homer Taft presented the group’s plan to the board at its meeting June 30. It is the group’s fourth attempt at changing Lorain County government since 2014. Hoagland said he has advocated “for many years” for district-based representation in county government, as opposed to the three commissioners elected at-large. On Friday, he and Taft asked commissioners to put the issue on the ballot for the November general election. Hoagland claimed word-of-mouth feedback he received was that Lorain County voters favor a change in the form of county government. Citizens for Equal Representation

proposed similar changes in 2014, 2015 and 2017. All three proposals failed to make it to the ballot. Instead of three at-large commissioners, the plan proposes seven elected county council members, one from each of seven districts representing about 45,000 residents. This “guarantees residents have someone from each of their districts” representing them on a county council, and “fosters communication” between county government and residents, Hoagland said. He said it is very expensive to campaign to more than 300,000 Lorain County residents as opposed to a district in which a candidate lives with only 45,000 residents. No other elected positions would be changed, eliminated or made into appointed positions, Hoagland said. Ohio law allows for the proposal to be put to voters on the ballot as long as two-thirds of the board of commissioners votes to do so. A self-described “semi-retired” attorney and former Libertarian candidate for Ohio state Senate in 2018, Taft said the proposal is governed by Ohio Revised Code section 302.03.

The seven members of a county council would each be paid $56,000 per year for what Hoagland and Taft said would be a “part-time” elected position. That’s $392,000 total for the seven-member council, more than the total salary of all three current county commissioners. Hoagland said the group wants a salary “that is attractive and provides for excellent candidates” but one that won’t burden the county with too much of an expense and a workload comparable to a city council member. The $56,000 figure was reached because it is approximately 60 percent of the salary of each of the current county commissioners. “The idea is to attract qualified people and to add to their regular pay as this is a part-time job,” Hoagland said. Citizens for Equal Representation said they were willing to present the board with experts including Dr. Mark Sailing, a senior fellow and research associate in the Maxine Goodman Levin School of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University, who helped the group design its proposal. DISTRICTS PAGE A3

Anger, jubilation over end to affirmative action OWEN MACMILLAN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

“We think this can really be transformational,” he said, comparing it to when the village opened Rec Park in the 1980s — bringing all of the sports teams together from other parks scattered throughout the area. “We think this is going to be a place where we can hold events,” he said. “People will be able to come down here and rest and relax — the whole Carpenter Street side is going to be primarily trees and benches. … We think it’s going to bring a lot to

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling Thursday sweeping aside affirmative action in higher education, institutions of higher learning across the country have decried the decision. Oberlin College and Conservatory President Carmen Twillie Ambar said the decision would not dissuade her institution from valuing diversity on campus. “(The) decision to end affirmative action in college admissions, announced this morning, has left me deeply saddened and concerned for the future of higher education,” Ambar said in a statement. “At the same time, it has steeled my resolve to defend Oberlin’s most cherished values: diversity, social engagement and academic excellence.” In her letter, Ambar relayed the story of Oberlin alumna Mary Jane Patterson, who was born to enslaved parents but became the first African American woman to earn a bachelor’s degree when she graduated from Oberlin College in 1862. “The education of Mary Jane Patterson—and the leadership role for which it prepared her — was no accident of history but a conscious choice,” Ambar said. She wrote that Oberlin as an institution valued diversity “in all its forms” as a tool for challenging students and providing a more full education. Continuing to cherish and achieve that campus diversity was something the Supreme Court ruling would make more difficult, Ambar said. “Affirmative action is a powerful tool for addressing stubborn, corrosive inequalities and for fostering a campus community that reflects the rich tapestry of our society,” she said. Ambar said that Oberlin would have to consider the implications that the ruling would have on the college’s efforts to create a diverse campus. “Students of varying backgrounds and experiences have been coming together on our campus for nearly 190 years, and the evidence is irrefutable: A diverse student body makes for a superior education for everyone,” she said.

PARK PAGE A4

ACTION PAGE A4

JEFF BARNES | The Community Guide

The groundbreaking ceremony for Wellington Union School Park was held on July 3. Pictured are (left) Carol Burke, Ed Weber, Keith Rowland, Mark Bughman, Gene Hartman, Mayor Hans Schneider, Jonathan Greever, Gary Feron, Ralph Wright, Susan Alspach, and Tim Simonson.

Wellington hosts groundbreaking for Union School Park project CARISSA WOYTACH THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

WELLINGTON — With the turn of a shovel, upgrades to Union School Park will soon be underway. Wellington hosted a groundbreaking ceremony July 3 to kick off a fundraising effort for the former McCormick Middle School site, which the city acquired in 2018. Mayor Hans Schneider said Phase I of the park upgrades, which includes two separate playgrounds

on the Dickson Street side of the lot, will be open by next year. The playgrounds are sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Wellington, with their opening coinciding with the club’s 100th anniversary. Phase I will cost an estimated $450,000, and the Kiwanis have raised nearly $25,000 for the project. The village also received a private donation of $125,000 last year and put up another $100,000 toward the project. Eventually, the park will include the two playgrounds — in honor of the

playgrounds at the former middle school — as well as a community Christmas tree, script Wellington sign, life-size statue of the Spirit of ‘76 trio and water feature. Archibald Willard, of Wellington, painted “The Spirit of ‘76’ for the country’s centennial celebrations in 1876. Schneider said there will be opportunities to sponsor various aspects of the park, including memorial benches, trees or bricks, the script Wellington sign, a walking path, and a retractable movie screen.

INSIDE THIS WEEK Amherst

Council recognizes businesses • A3

Oberlin

OCS recieves donations • A5

County

Resources for student loan borrowers • A4

OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS • CROSSWORD A7 • SUDOKU A7 • KID SCOOP A8


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