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Lorain County Community Guide - April 13, 2023

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EXPERIENCE. DILIGENCE. INTEGRITY.

440.522.5677

Thursday, April 13, 2023

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Volume 10, Issue 15

Oberlin to Commissioners: Distracted driving now a primary Reinstate radio contract DAVE O’BRIEN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

Oberlin City Council unanimously passed a resolution April 3 asking the Lorain County Board of Commissioners to reconsider its repeal of a contract with Cleveland Communications Inc. to provide public safety radios to first responders. The vote was 6-0 on the resolution that “encourages” Commissioners Michelle Hung, David Moore and Jeff Riddell to move forward with the L3 Harris radio system, and orders Clerk of Council Belinda Anderson to forward the resolution to the threemember board. Hung and former Commissioner Matt Lundy approved the nearly $8 million contract in two resolutions on Dec. 21, with support from the Lorain County Fire Chiefs Association, the Lorain County Deputies Associa-

tion and numerous public officials. Citing alleged irregularities with the bid process won by CCI and its L3 Harris system, Moore and Riddell voted 2-1 on Jan. 9 to rescind the resolutions over Hung’s objection. Oberlin Law Director Jon Clark and Fire Chief Robert Hanmer said the resolution would help first responders, including both firefighters and police, in Oberlin and elsewhere in the county. “The position of the fire chief, of the police chief, and other county leaders is that this is the preferable system,” Clark said. Hanmer, who advocated for the radio system in December and criticized the rescinding of the contract in January, said commissioners have put Oberlin behind in getting a new radio system up and running. Councilwoman Kristin Peterson said the Central Lorain County Joint

Ambulance District board passed a similar resolution asking commissioners to reinstate the contract. “It’s important we raise our voice in support of this,” Councilman Michael McFarlin said. Wellington Village Council passed a similar resolution on Feb. 20. Moore and Riddell have been roundly criticized for the move and also taken to court. Hung has remained in favor of the original contract. The deputies association immediately filed a health and safety grievance with Sheriff Phil Stammitti over the matter, and CCI sued the county for breach of contract in Common Pleas Court. A consulting firm, Mission Critical Partners, recommended CCI and its L3 Harris radios to the county after a yearlong study from 2018-2019. CCI’s bid was the only full bid received by the county. Motorola and the

state-backed MARCS did not enter a bid and Vasu Communciations of Avon entered only a partial bid. Riddell has called the bid process used to select CCI “unethical” and “potentially illegal.” Moore has criticized “the inappropriate way the bidding was handled” and, without going into specifics, said that the board was moving ahead to remedy that issue. Moore was not present at either an August 2022 meeting where Hung and Lundy voted to issue a “request for proposals” or RFP for bids for the radio system, nor the December meeting where the two commissioners voted to accept CCI’s proposal. The board voted this month to enter into a contract with a new consulting firm, MCM of State College, Pennsylvania, and spend not more than $90,000 on a radio propagation study assessing Lorain County’s radio system infrastructure needs.

traffic offense OWEN MACMILLAN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

Drivers across Ohio can now be pulled over solely for the act of using, holding or looking at their phone behind the wheel. Ohio Senate Bill 288 went into effect April 4, 90 days after it was signed by Gov. Mike DeWine. SB 288 was an omnibus criminal justice reform bill, but its widest-reaching provision was a clamping down on distracted driving in the state. Under the new law, distracted driving has been upgraded from a secondary to a primary traffic offense, meaning police can pull drivers over for a violation. “We know that people driving nowadays are on their phones a lot,” Elyria Police Chief William Pelko said. “Now, this law enables us, if we see you

on your phone texting, going through social media, manipulating your phone, we can go ahead and stop you based on that.” Previously, police could only pull over distracted drivers for a primary offense, like speeding, and add distracted driving as an additional charge. “I think there is a problem with distracted driving,” Pelko said. “I think it’s the cause of accidents, and whatever we can do to try and lessen and alleviate those accidents is a good thing.” For the next six months, police cannot issue primary offense citations for distracted driving, but will instead give drivers a warning and inform them they would have been charged for the offense. Officers can still make traffic stops for distracted driving during that DRIVING PAGE A3

Fire destroys Wellington duplex CARISSA WOYTACH THE COMMUNITY GUIDE

WELLINGTON – A house fire on Johns Street left two families displaced and several cats unaccounted for on April 11. Wellington, Camden, Oberlin and Rochester fire departments responded to the 100 block of Johns Street for a duplex on fire around 11:45 a.m., Wellington Fire Chief Mike Wetherbee said. Witnesses reported hearing an explosion before the fire, he said, but the cause of the blaze remains under investigation. No one was injured in either unit, but at least four pets between the two apartments were unaccounted for that afternoon. The fire also damaged a neighboring home, including busting out a secondstory window and sending debris onto the roof. Wetherbee said crews will have to check the structural integrity of the neighboring house as well. Christine Lorenz, who lived in the front of the duplex for the past decade, was working from home when suddenly her bedroom ceiling collapsed BRUCE BISHOP | The Community Guide while she was on a call with Firefighters from Rochester Township who responded as mutual aid to a house explosion and fire at a home on Johns Street FIRE PAGE A3 in Wellington on April 11.

INSIDE THIS WEEK Oberlin

Prospect School gets new name ● A4

Sports

Black River cinches win ● A6

Wellington

Rail crossing getting upgrade ● A5

OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS A5 • CROSSWORD A7 • SUDOKU A7 • KID SCOOP A8


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