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Lorain County Community Guide - Jan. 5, 2023

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AMHERST NEWS-TIMES • OBERLIN NEWS-TRIBUNE • WELLINGTON ENTERPRISE Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023

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Volume 10, Issue 1

THE YEAR IN REVIEW Photos by Jason Hawk, Kristin Bauer, Bruce Bishop and Angelo Angel

Each year, we take a look back at the stories that will have a lasting impact on Lorain County, with a special focus on our readers in Amherst, Oberlin and Wellington. Here are some of the most important developments we covered in 2022:

Unity for Ukraine Courtesy of Kyle Dandrea

Kyle Deandrea and Aaron Gall pose with their new son Maddox, who is the 2023 New Year's baby of Lorain County.

Nurse has county's first baby of 2023 OWEN MACMILLAN THE CHRONICLE-TELEGRAM

LORAIN — Lorain County’s first baby of 2023 was born Sunday at Mercy Health Lorain Hospital, the son of an obstetric nurse who works every day in the very birthing center where he was delivered. Maddox Atticus Gall was born to mother Kyle Dandrea of Vermilion, who is an OB nurse at the Mercy Health Veard Family Birthing Center, and father Aaron Gall at 1:09 p.m. He weighed exactly six pounds. “He definitely wanted to make an impression,” Dandrea said. Dandrea said she had not given much thought to the potential of Maddox becoming the Lorain County New Year's Baby until after she realized he already was. “It does kind of make it feel even a little bit more special,” she said. “Not very many people get to go through this experience. And now he’ll know for the rest of his life he was the first baby of 2023.” Another experience most mothers don’t have is giving birth to their child in the place they work, and with FIRST BABY PAGE A2 Classifieds, legals, display advertising, and subscriptions Deadline: 1 p.m. each Monday Phone: 440-329-7000 Hours: 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday

Oberlin College students rally in support of the Ukrainian people in March on Wilder Bowl. Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops to invade neighboring Ukraine on Feb. 24, stirring anger among Ukrainian immigrants and their descendants here in Lorain County. “I know what they’re going to go through, and it gets very difficult,” said Mary Van Nortwick of Oberlin, watching television coverage of refugees trying to escape the conflict. Her family made an escape from their home country more than seven decades ago, when Soviets invaded. Van Nortwick’s parents, Michael and Luba Krywokulsky, herded their children from camp to camp in 1945, traveling through Austria and Germany and finally

LORAIN — President Joe Biden came to Lorain in February to announce a nearly $1 billion investment in the Great Lakes as part of Congress’ bipartisan infrastructure bill. Appearing alongside U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Toledo, and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan, he announced plans to remediate ecological areas of concern and bring back union jobs. The $1 billion was to accelerate the cleanup across 22 of the remaining 25 areas of concern in the region, remediating former industrial sites such as those along the Black River, while also funding repairs to bridges and highways across the state.

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UKRAINE PAGE A2

Biden visits The Shipyards

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crossing the Atlantic to find asylum in Canada. Those memories were once more razor sharp as Van Nortwick watched Russian attack Kyiv and Odesa at the start of the war. Since then, tens of thousands of deaths have been recorded on both sides, and an estimated 8 million Ukrainians have been left with homes, nearly all fleeing their country in the largest European refugee crisis since World War II. Already home to a large Ukrainian population, Northeast Ohio braced to welcome refugees.

President Joe Biden

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Painful inflation follows COVID What are “supply chain issues,” exactly? During the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the disease took a toll on the workforce. The problem started with stay-at-home orders across the nation, then continued when workers got sick and production dipped as a result. As companies struggled to keep goods rolling out of their warehouses to store shelves, they were hit by problems with overseas shipping and overland trucking. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine hasn’t helped. It broke major routes for exports of all kinds of goods, from oil and gas to gain, auto parts and plumbing supplies. As troubles mounted, demand for goods didn’t dip, but supply did. And when that happens, prices soar. To start 2022, the United States saw inflation rise at a rate not seen for 40 years. Compared to the previous January, consumer prices were up 7 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That margin grew as the year progressed, peaking at 9.1 percent in July. From $5 per gallon gas to hard-toswallow prices on chicken, eggs, milk and vegetables, everybody has felt the pinch. “There’s nothing that’s down.” said Ed Stewart, president of Stewart’s TV and Appliance in Elyria, during an interview in the summer. “A refrigerator preCOVID that would sell for $2,000 every day is now $3,000 or more,” he said. “Gone are the days of a $499 washing machine.” Local government budgets have also been hurt. Take Wellington, for INFLATION PAGE A2

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OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS A2 • BULLETIN BOARD A6 • PUZZLES A7 • KID SCOOP A8


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