Ohio
Buckeyes Mourn Loss of Former Captain Amy Graeff
Upon her analysis, Amy’s mates, household and former teammates rallied collectively and began Amy’s Military to supply each monetary and emotional assist for Amy as she battled the illness. A kind of members was former teammate Emily Francis Kaplan.
“Amy was essentially the most selfless, decided and type individual I’ve ever recognized on or off the pitch,” Francis Kaplan mentioned. “Not solely was she the epitome of what it means to be an excellent teammate, however I used to be lucky sufficient to see her grow to be an unimaginable mom and spouse and can ceaselessly name her my buddy. Amy made a optimistic impression on everybody she met, and she is going to all the time maintain a particular place within the hearts of our Buckeye household.”
Cassie Dickerson performed alongside Amy in 2008 and she or he too felt Amy’s affect.
“Amy was the epitome of a Buckeye,” mentioned Dickerson. “Probably the most gritty, selfless, caring one that gave her all in all the things she did. She was simply as witty as she was form, with the uncanny capacity to carry you sternly accountable in essentially the most supportive manner attainable. Nobody out labored Amy Graeff. She had a lot tenacity and fireplace. If solely all of us liked the sport and others the way in which she did. A real captain, teammate and buddy. We had been all higher gamers to have laced up alongside her and all higher ladies to have recognized her.”
Funeral providers can be held on Friday, Could 13, at 11:00 a.m. on the Church of the Resurrection (6300 E Dublin-Granville Street, New Albany, Ohio 43054.) A celebration of life will comply with mass with lunch offered. OBITUARY
To learn extra about Amy’s battle and journey during the last two and a half years, CLICK HERE to go to her CaringBridge web page.
Ohio
Local animal charity holds purse fundraising event
BOARDMAN, Ohio (WKBN) — One local organization is looking to help fund its new facility after holding a purse raffle earlier today.
Animal Charity of Ohio held its first-ever Purses and Paws raffle event at its new location on Southern Boulevard in Boardman.
There were purse raffles for almost 30 designer bags, including Kate Spade, Michael Kors and Juicy Couture.
There were also chances to win basket raffles and Animal Charity merchandise you could buy.
Jane MacMurchy with Animal Charity of Ohio says the goal is to raise $1,000.
“We still have one million dollars worth of work left, but we’re hoping with every single event like this that we hold is going to continue to chip away at it,” Jane MacMurchy with the Animal Charity of Ohio said.
The grand opening for Animal Charity of Ohio’s new facility is scheduled for June 24.
Ohio
Bullock: Ohio HB 6 took away consumer electric savings, but HB 79 can help bring them back
Consumers have been paying extra on their monthly electric bills since Ohio House Bill 6 was enacted — not only due to subsidies for 80-year old, uncompetitive power plants it mandated, but also because it ended utility work on energy efficiency that lowers Ohio power consumption and lowers costs along with it. To date, Ohioans have lost an estimated $890 million in savings.
But as early as this month, the Ohio General Assembly could vote to change that and take the first steps toward energy saving since HB 6 was enacted. A new bipartisan proposal, Ohio House Bill 79, could prompt utilities to resume efforts to help customers save through insulation, efficient appliances, less expensive energy, and lower grid maintenance costs.
New rules in HB 79 improve quality controls to ensure utilities’ work results in verifiable bill savings, and they eliminate past gimmicks such as sending light bulb “kits” to customers who did not request them.In practice, this means utilities could offer discounts and rebates to encourage residential and small business customers to invest in insulation, air conditioning and furnaces tune-ups, and efficient lighting, refrigerators, water heaters, and heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems.
This matters because the least expensive unit of power is the one we don’t use. For every $1 invested in energy waste reduction, consumers will save $1.30 to $1.90. HB 79 would lower energy inflation. If Ohio does nothing, energy inflation will cost everyone more. Power prices rise as power demand rises, unless we deploy energy efficiency to delink them.
Notably, HB 79 allows consumers to opt out. Customers who do will still save money thanks to lower energy prices (due to lowered demand) and lower peak demand (e.g. on hot summer days), which drives a significant portion of electricity costs.
HB 79 also would increase grid reliability. Ohio will need more power in coming years thanks to data centers, the Intel chip manufacturing facility in Lick County, and increasing electric vehicle use. If Ohio energy efficiency work had continued after HB 6, Ohioans could have used 5.4 million megawatt hours (MWh) less electricity in 2023 —about the same as the annual power output of the coal-fired Kyger Creek Power Plant along the Ohio River in Cheshire, Gallilia County (owned by Ohio Valley Electric Corporation).
The market alone is not enough, and utility-run programs can increase savings by getting more consumers to participate, lowering usage statewide that lowers costs for everyone. Critics claim that markets work and people make energy efficiency choices without utility involvement, but all evidence shows that utility discounts and rebates together with the market often produce the best results for consumers utilizing energy efficiency.
In a time of rising costs, the Ohio General Assembly can help Ohioans cut their energy use and monthly bills by passing HB 79. Will they?
Tom Bullock is executive director of the Citizens Utility Board of Ohio, a nonprofit, nonpartisan consumer advocacy organization works to reduce residential and small business utility customers.
Ohio
Ohio to purge 150,000 voters before November election
CINCINNATI (WXIX) – Over 150,000 voters could be purged from the rolls before November’s election as part of an initiative from the Ohio Secretary of State.
Around 18,000 voters in Hamilton County have been mailed notices.
Hamilton County Board of Elections Director Sherry Poland said inactive voters are purged annually. She said some voters should have been purged in the past, but haven’t.
“Voters who we believe might have moved out of Hamilton County or the State of Ohio will be removed from the voter roll,” Poland said.
Purged voters receive notices ahead of time. Most of the names are taken from the national change of address list. She said voters who haven’t interacted with the Bureau of Motor Vehicles or signed a petition in the last four years are assumed to have moved out of the area unless they confirmed with the board they’re still here.
Voters concerned they may have been purged can check their status with the board of elections. She said voters can call or go online to the Hamilton County Board of Elections website. The board submits its purged voter lists on July 22, but voters can still re-register until Oct. 7.
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