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Lorain County Community Guide - May 4, 2023

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Volume 10, Issue 18

Voter turnout exceeds expectations DAVE O’BRIEN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

Voter turnout on May 2 exceeded expectations by a few percentage points. The Lorain County Board of Elections said 13.13 percent of eligible voters showed up at the polls for the primary. Director Paul Adams had predicted 11 percent and Deputy Director Jim Kramer predicted 10 percent on Monday. “I was very, very glad to see that, especially because of the weather,” Adams said, referencing Tuesday’s cold and gray rainy day.

Provisional ballots were still being counted by The Chronicle-Telegram’s deadline Tuesday. With 216,088 registered voters in Lorain County, 6,382 voted early, with the highest numbers in Lorain, Elyria and North Ridgeville. Being an off-year election, Adams said most voters participating those who generally follow local government closely and are civically engaged, making the process for them smoother. Lorain, Amherst and North Ridgeville all had slight changes to ward boundaries for this year’s election cycle. There were 342 absentee ballots still outstanding,

Adams said. He said if they come back in time, the board of elections will review them starting May 10, though they won’t be certified until May 18. The ballots must be received by Saturday, and any ballot errors corrected by that day as well. There were 216,088 registered voters in Lorain County eligible to vote. Of eligible voters, 6,382 voted early. The elections board will meet May 16 to consider ballot questions, and on May 18 to certify Tuesday’s election, independent candidate petitions, and to schedule a required audit.

BRUCE BISHOP | The Community Guide

Jim Jezewski, left, and Jason Parker, with the Lorain County Board of Elections set the equipment in place at Northwood Middle School ahead of Tuesday’s election. His team placed 14 machines at Northwood with a total of 70 machines spread over six locations.

Letters detail request for special prosecutor in county radio probe DAVE O’BRIEN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

Kendal’s Lawn Chair Drill Team performs at Oberlin Big Parade CARISSA WOYTACH THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

OBERLIN — The squeak of hinges and the stomp of feet echoed throughout Kendal at Oberlin on April 27. More than 22 residents, averaging about 80 years old, sang in unison, lifting lawn chairs above their heads or at their sides as Nina Love led the way. Kendal at Oberlin’s lawn chair drill team performed at the Big Parade April 29, a highlight for the parade attendees and participants alike. Don Parker, 89, has been involved with the drill team since he moved to Kendal in 2012. This year he will be in New Mexico during BIG PARADE PAGE A2

KRISTIN BAUER | The Community Guide

TOP: Janet Bolland, a resident at Kendal at Oberlin, smiles while sitting in her lawn chair in the middle of a routine during The Kendal’s Lawn Chair Drill Team rehearsal. Bolland has participated in Kendal’s Lawn Chair Drill Team since its inception nearly two decades ago. ABOVE: The Lawn Chair Drill Team rehearsed various songs and routines on Thursday afternoon, marching down the roads and parking lots of the complex, for their big performance at the annual “Big Parade” on April 29.

More details on the proposed appointment of a special prosecutor to help the Lorain County Sheriff’s Office investigate allegations of wrongdoing surrounding the ongoing drama around an $8 million emergency radio contract have been revealed in letters between county officials. In a letter to Sheriff Phil Stammitti dated Tuesday, April 25, and obtained by The Chronicle-Telegram, Prosecutor J.D. Tomlinson said the Ohio Attorney General’s Office had declined to provide the county with a special prosecutor. “Upon my inquiry, I was advised that the Special Prosecutor Division of the (attorney general’s) office is short-staffed and, for that reason, they are unable to answer this request,” Tomlinson wrote. He told Stammitti he was still working to find a special prosecutor to assist the sheriff’s office in their investigation. Stammitti announced an investigation April 24 into the “methods and processes which have taken place as it relates to Lorain County’s efforts to secure a new radio system for first responders.” The months-long controversy resulted from Lorain County commissioners Michelle Hung and Matt Lundy awarding a contract to Cleveland Communications Inc. in December for

$8 million in equipment and radios for Lorain County offices and grants to other first responders. Five cities and villages in Lorain County already use the radios, which are the preferred system of the Lorain County Fire Chiefs Association, Lorain County Deputies Association, Stammitti and other public officials. Commissioners Jeff Riddell and David Moore rescinded that contract in January, saying — without giving any evidence — that it was improperly and unethically and possibly illegal awarded in an unfair bid process. Cleveland Communications Inc. then sued the county for breach of contract in Common Pleas Court, and the deputies union filed a grievance with Stammitti. Months of back-andforth allegations and arguments have followed. Auditor of State Keith Faber’s office started investigating the matter and related items, issuing subpoenas in January and February 2022. That investigation continues, Faber spokesman Marc Kovac told the Chronicle on April 25. Further documents obtained by the Chronicle state that subpoenas were issued by the sheriff’s office on county officials on March 23 for emails written by the Board of Commissioners and some of its employees. Sheriff’s detective Lt. Robert Vansant also RADIOS PAGE A3

INSIDE THIS WEEK Election

More primary results ● A5

Oberlin

‘Plarn’ mats help homeless ● A4

Wellington

Greenwood gets new guardian ● A5

OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS A4 • CROSSWORD A7 • SUDOKU A7 • KID SCOOP A8


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