Thursday, Nov. 2, 2023
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Volume 10, Issue 43
State auditor, County sheriff: Radio contract OK DAVE OâBRIEN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
Two parallel investigations into allegations of criminal activity surrounding both the actions of the Lorain County Board of Commissioners and the process of obtaining new radios for the countyâs first responders concluded last week. Auditor of State Keith Faberâs office confirmed Wednesday that an investigation into possible conflicts of interest and unlawful interest in public contracts in Lorain County that started in August 2021 at the request of a sitting commissioner ended Oct. 10 with no criminal charges. âIn regard to our investigation, at this time no new evidence re-
lated to the investigation has been uncoveredâ in a series of lawsuits filed over the matter. âThis case has been reviewed by three legal attorneys for (the attorney generalâs Special Investigations Unit) with no evidence to confirm the allegations,â three investigators with Faberâs office wrote in a memo provided to The ChronicleTelegram on Oct. 25. The audit and investigation were then recommended to be closed âwithout further ⌠actionâ and any ethics matters uncovered referred to the Ohio Ethics Commission. Faberâs Special Investigations Unit found âthree possible instances of nepotismâ allegedly committed by Commissioner Michelle Hung. Those allegations were forwarded to the Ohio Ethics
Commission for review, according to the memo. Commissioner David Moore, a Republican, had requested Faberâs office investigate Hung, a fellow Republican, in a letter to the state auditor dated Aug. 23, 2021, according to the memo. Faberâs office officially opened a âpreliminary auditâ and investigation into the Board of Commissioners on Jan. 6, 2022, according to the memo. Also concluded was a sixmonth-long investigation by the Lorain County Sheriffâs Office into allegations that the countyâs $6.7 million contract with Cleveland Communications Inc. of Parma to provide first responder emergency radios to Lorain County sheriffâs deputies, firefighters and police was improperly rigged
in CCIâs favor or steered to the company. Sheriff Phil Stammitti released the results of the investigation, spanning more than 200 pages, to the media and on his website on Tuesday. âDespite an extensive investigation, no evidence was found that the bidding process was ârigged or steered,ââ sheriffâs Detective Lt. Robert Vansant wrote in his report. âWhile both Commissioners (Jeff) Riddell and (David) Moore made allegations as such, they declined the opportunity to provide information of how, or to direct the investigator where information would exist to establish it.â Vansantâs investigation came to pass after Stammitti announced in April that he was opening an investigation into allegations at the
request of Hung and the Lorain County Fire Chiefs Association just this year, and previous requests by Moore and the editorial board of The Chronicle. It notes that after a contract with CCI was approved by Hung and a former commissioner, Democrat Matt Lundy, in a vote in December 2022, commissioners Moore and Jeff Riddell voted to rescind it in January, making numerous, unsubstantiated claims that the bid process was illegal or improperly in CCIâs favor. Moore and Riddell have not produced any evidence of their allegations at the request of The Chronicle, the state auditor, or the Lorain County Sheriffâs Office. Their vote to rescind CCIâs contract was met with a lawsuit CONTRACT PAGE A3, A5
Health of the Black River, and its fish, continues to improve OWEN MACMILLAN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
The U.S. EPA and the state have agreed to remove a specification that the health of fish in the Black River is an area of significant concern. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced that while the Black River is still an Area of Concern (AOC) it would remove the riverâs Fish Tumors or Other Deformities Beneficial Use Impairment (BUI). The BUI designation identifies specific environmental issues present in a river or watershed. The Black River was initially diagnosed with nine BUIs in 1990, but, with this latest removal, it is down to four. âEssentially that means that the fish are looking healthier and more normal,â Don Romancak, Storm Water and Community Development coordinator for Lorain County, said. âWhich is always good to see, because you donât want to see a deformed fish on your dinner plate.â Romancak is also the chairman of the Black River AOC Advisory Committee, which oversees the area of concern running from Cascade Falls north to Lake Erie. It was on the recommendation of Romancak RIVER PAGE A2
Winter is coming on the Ohio Turnpike OWEN MACMILLAN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
AMHERST â The last thing most Lorain County residents want to think about before the end of October is snow-covered roads. But they are coming, and, on Oct. 25 the Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure Commission made sure its Amherst Maintenance Building crew and equipment are ready. âIf it snows tomorrow, weâll be ready and weâll be out there getting the road clear,â Amherst maintenance foreman Greg Brown said. Every year in October, commission officials travel to the eight Turnpike maintenance facilities to inspect the more than 100 snow and ice trucks that keep the Turnpike WINTER PAGE A2
STEVE MANHEIM | The Community Guide
MAIN: Matt Timms, chief mechanic for Eastern Division of Ohio Turnpike, inspects a snowplow truck, in preparation for the upcoming winter season. ABOVE: Ohio Turnpike workers inspect snowplow trucks at the Amherst Maintenance Building of the Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure on Oct. 25.
INSIDE THIS WEEK Amherst
Veterans Day plans â A3
Election
Oberlin
Issue 20 explained â A4
KELC earns award â A5
OBITUARIES A2 ⢠CLASSIFIEDS A5 ⢠CROSSWORD A7 ⢠SUDOKU A7 ⢠KID SCOOP A8