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Lorain County Community Guide - June 8, 2023

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Thursday, June 8, 2023

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Volume 10, Issue 23

‘In our world, you can call it a drought right now’ Lack of rain has farmers, experts worried

OWEN MACMILLAN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

An unseasonably dry end of spring has Lorain County farmers worried about their crops and weather experts warning a drought could be possible this summer. The National Weather Service Cleveland announced June 1 that northern Ohio has been placed in the “abnormally dry” category by the NWS drought monitor. “We are getting into a situation where we have not been getting enough rain over the last couple of weeks,” NWS meteorologist Rick Garuckas said. “It takes into account the soil moisture that is available for crops to grow on, and that soil moisture is starting to become a little bit lower than normal. It means we aren’t in a drought yet, but we are heading in that direction.” The last measurable rain that northern Ohio received was on May 20, nearly two weeks ago. Though the region is not yet in a drought according to the NWS classification, it may as well be to some local farmers. “It is especially dry right now,” Pittsfield resident and farmer Mark McConnell said. “Normally our biggest problem is getting the soil dry enough to plant, and right now there’s pretty much no moisture in the upper layers of the soil where we plant the seeds. So this, well in our world, you can call it a drought right now.” McConnell, who is also a member of the Pittsfield Township Board of Trustees, operates Hickory Grove Farms with his two brothers. The McConnells plant primarily corn and soybeans in the spring. McConnell said the dry conditions have him worried the soybeans, which are planted later than the corn, won’t take root properly.

BRUCE BISHOP | The Community Guide

A farmer working the field off Jones Road in Wellington Township Wednesday kicks up a cloud of dust as local farmers prepare for the new growing season. “Very very seldom do we have conditions where the soil is so dry that it won’t germinate the crop, but that is the case right now,” he said. “Maybe one in 10, maybe a little more, seasons are this dry. This is extremely dry for our area this time

of year.” Corn and soybeans are two of the most commonly planted crops in the late spring and early summer in the region. Thomas Becker, an agriculture and natural resources educator with the Ohio State

University Lorain County Extension, said that the issue for most farmers in Lorain County this time of year is usually too much moisture, rather than not enough. Typically Lorain County receives about DROUGHT PAGE A4

Second Harvest: Increased hardship for most clients

Officials hear proposed timeline for new Lorain County Jail

STAFF REPORT

DAVE O’BRIEN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

Second Harvest Food Bank of North Central Ohio has seen a 50 percent increase in the need for emergency food assistance this year, in comparison to the same period in 2019, the agency reported. In a news release, Second Harvest said it wanted to know what was driving the need and who was most affected. It then partnered with the Ohio Association of Foodbanks to survey emergency food distribution clients to help guide efforts to serve the community, according to the news release. “Data is essential for everything we do,” Second Harvest President and CEO Julie Chase-Morefield said. “We don’t want to think we know what needs to be done. We want numbers, facts and community feedback to support our efforts. That is why this study is so important.” The findings from this study showed real-life implications were detrimental to many families. The majority of Ohio food bank clients had to choose between buying food or paying for essential household expenses like housing, medicine and utilities. Second Harvest and other regional food banks across the state are advocating in Columbus and Washington, D.C., to increase hunger relief efforts in the Ohio biennial budget and the federal farm bill. “Our shelves are empty, and food is much harder to

The Lorain County Board of Commissioners heard a proposed timeline for a new Lorain County Jail courtesy of two consulting firms it hired over the past two years. Further discussion surrounding the plan is expected Friday after all three commissioners are briefed and the proposed timeline gets some editing, county officials said Tuesday. County Administrator Jeff Armbruster told the board on Tuesday that Hills Corrections Consulting, which commissioners hired on May 19, provided documents on a proposed new timeline for hiring architects, engineers and construction managers. The board hired Hills to

HARDSHIP PAGE A2

study the jail two years ago, in June 2021, but its report was shelved, Commissioner David Moore said May 19. Commissioners Michelle Hung and Matt Lundy hired CGL Companies of Miami in August 2022 to do an assessment of the jail for just under $90,000. Armbruster said both Hills and CGL agree that a whole new jail is the “best choice” for Lorain County, and Hills gave the county a timeline on the process going forward. Armbruster said he has already spoken with commissioners Moore and Jeff Riddell and is meeting with Hung on Thursday. He said it could take two to four years to get the project out to bid “and find funding for it” in the meantime. He said the county could possibly have “a much

nicer place to have our employees work, as well as unfortunately those people that are incarcerated, they will have a much better place to stay than what they have right now.” The existing jail, built in 1977, is a 24-hour, sevenday-per-week facility with aging utilities including heating and cooling units and plumbing problems. Its most recent addition was in 1998 when more than 200 inmate beds were added. Still unknown is how the county would pay for a new jail with an estimated cost in the tens of millions: As low as $50 million to $60 million, by very early estimates last year, or as high as $178 million, according to comments Moore made to the AvonAvon Lake Republican Club in April. Hung and Lundy voted

in December to set aside $20 million for the future renovation or replacement of the jail. Moore voted against the measure, saying he wanted to have more conversations about it and predicting that there would be a vote in early 2023 to rescind the savings plan. According to a timeline Armbruster provided at the meeting, the following is a proposed timeline for the next steps in replacing the jail: ● June 16: Architect/ engineer and construction manager requests for qualifications, or RFQs, finalized and issued. ● July 17: Response to RFQs due back to the county. ● July 28: County Selection Committee recommends and Board of Commissioners selects an JAIL PAGE A2

INSIDE THIS WEEK Amherst

LMHA residents plant flowers ● A3

Oberlin

Former resident pens poetry book ● A5

Class of 2023

See more coverage, photos ● B1-5

OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS A5 • CROSSWORD A6 • SUDOKU A6 • KID SCOOP B6


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