Author Archives: Bill O'Connell

Delta Village Council Splits 3-3 on Proposed Marijuana Ban, Mayor Casts Deciding Vote

At tonight’s Delta Village Council meeting, Council members had to vote on the First Reading of Ordinance 22-09, Prohibiting the cultivation of marijuana; processing of medical marijuana; marijuana wholesalers; marijuana retailers; and “medical retail marijuana dispensaries” in the Village of Delta, Fulton County, Ohio.

Language in the ordinance referred to the legal right of the Village to prohibit marijuana-related activities despite medical marijuana being legal in the State of Ohio and stated, “The Council for the Village of Delta has reviewed the pros and cons of allowing these activities and finds it would be in the best interest of the Village of Delta and its inhabitants to prohibit such activities.”

This particular legislation came about after Delta resident Beth Thomas solicited Mayor Frank Wilton at the May 16th Council meeting to have it drafted by the Village Solicitor, Kevin Heban, and presented to Council after Delta residents voted 346-207 against allowing marijuana activities on an advisory ballot on May, 3, 2022. 

Prior to the vote on the ordinance, there was no discussion by Council.  When the vote was taken, Council members Lynne Frank, Mike Tanner and Art Thomas voted “Yes” to allow the ban to become law.  Council members Ashley Todd, Tony Dawson and Chad Johnson voted “No” to oppose the ban.  According to Delta’s Rules of Council, all tie votes are settled or decided by the Mayor.  Mayor Wilton then voted “Yes” and the First Reading passed. 

Two more readings with the same result will need to be passed followed by a 30-day waiting period before this ordinance can be enacted.  The next Council meeting, and the Second Reading, will take place on June 20, 2022, and a possible Third Reading will be July 11, 2022.

Swanton Holds First of Five Downtown Market Events

https://photos.app.goo.gl/fyhHS3bPE8tWLr5K7

Yesterday, the Swanton Chamber of Commerce held the first what will be five Downtown Markets this year on a closed-off Zeiter Way at the Main Street intersection. The events, which run from 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM, are scheduled on the first Saturday of the month with July 2nd, August 6th, September 3rd and October 1st still to come. There will be many local vendors and a food truck at each one. Attached above is a link to photos from the day.

Village of Swanton and SHS Team Up for Internship Opportunities

For many decades, internships in businesses or other organizations were almost exclusively given to college students looking to learn more about a chosen career and further their employment chances, possibly where they served that internship.  Recently, many high schools have gotten into the act, giving juniors and seniors an opportunity to see what may be involved in a particular career or industry or, more specifically, a job and what type of educational requirements may be needed.

Swanton Village Administrator Rosanna Hoelzle is a strong proponent of internship programs and has brought in Swanton High School (SHS) students in the past during her six-year tenure, including this year.  “I feel very strongly about public service.  I don’t think people understand public service so, I really try to engage as much as I can so people have an understanding,” said Ms. Hoelzle.  “Some of the struggles that we’ve seen is not necessarily that we have to agree on things but that people just don’t understand so they get frustrated and once they understand that kind of changes the tune.  I feel if we start with high school students to have an understanding of what your local government does, what public service is, the next generation will have a better understanding.”

This year Ms. Hoelzle and the Village welcomed Swanton HS senior and The Ohio State University (OSU) bound, Riley Bellner.  It could not have been a better match.  It allowed Ms. Hoelzle, with her experience and her passion for teaching civic engagement to mentor Riley, a very intelligent (Class of 2022 Valedictorian) and eager-to-learn student who will be enrolled in the John Glenn College of Public Affairs while at OSU on a full four-year academic scholarship.

Earlier in her high school career, Riley considered majoring in Veterinary Medicine in college.  But it was her mother, Heidi, who said to her one day, “Why do you want to be a Vet when I’ve never seen you light up, the way I see you light up the way you do when you talk about public service and justice and things like that?”  Apparently, mother knew best.

“Literally, at that moment, it clicked,” said Riley. “This is what I want to do.  I don’t want to be a Vet.  I want to do something for the people.  I want to make the world a better place, if that doesn’t sound too corny.  Since then, I’ve been on that track.”

Ms. Hoelzle also pointed out that she treated Riley, just like she treats all interns, as one of her staff.  She gears the assignments to their interests, which at times includes multitasking, but also expects the assignments to be completed.  “I think it’s important to treat them like it’s going to be when they get a ‘real’ job,” emphasized Ms. Hoelzle.  I’m not sugarcoating anything,” she said.

Riley was able to sit in on meetings discussing the Village’s sewer separation projects and the related road construction that came along with it.  “It’s been amazing,” said Riley describing her time with the Village.  “There have been so many things that I’ve gotten to do.  I sat in on a lot of meetings with the big sewer split.  I happen to live off Garfield, on Allen, right in the middle of it all.  So, it’s been really nice to get explanations to all the stuff I see when leaving my house and coming home every single day.  It’s even nice to be able to explain it to my mom or people around me because there’s so much frustration with the people because they don’t know or they don’t understand.  It’s a lot easier to go over the potholes and not get angry if you understand what is going on.”

Riley was able to spend some time in the field with the Village’s Code Enforcement Officer and had the opportunity to write a few “notices” for nuisance properties that were discovered.  “It was important for her to understand in terms of if you want a community to develop, you want to have a community that follows what the rules and regulations are,” explained Ms. Hoelzle. 

The most important lessons Riley may have learned from her time as a Village intern may have come from observing Ms. Hoelzle’s management style, her interpersonal relationship skills and her overall professionalism.  “She knows so much.  There have been so many other things I’ve learned from her other than just public service,” said Riley.  “Every task she gives she doesn’t just give it and say do it.  She explains thoroughly, why we do what we do and why this is happening and why this decision should be made.”

Academic opportunities made available through SHS have allowed Riley to earn enough college credits to walk on to the OSU campus as a sophomore.  She plans to attain a Bachelor of the Arts in Public Management Policy and Leadership with a specialization in Environmental Policy.  Her long-term goal is to one day be working for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which would be an ironic choice given it was an EPA mandate that was responsible for the sewer separation project that made her neighborhood streets virtually impassable for a short time.

In late August, Riley travels to Columbus to begin the next major chapter in her life.  In the meantime, she will be working a part-time summer job, getting her hands dirty in the interest of public service on the maintenance crew for, who else, the Village of Swanton.

Swanton Village Administrator Rosanna Hoelzle and SHS Intern Riley Bellner

Swanton Independence Day Fireworks Festival Moving Again

In late February of this year, the Village of Swanton announced the launch area of their annual fireworks display was being relocated from the grounds of Swanton High School to a field adjacent to the new Faith Lutheran Church on County Road H, on the west side of the Village.  The date was scheduled for July 2, 2022.  Parking, viewing areas and space for the food trucks would continue to be at the school. 

The reason given for the change was a new roof had just been placed on the high school and school officials were concerned about falling fireworks debris causing damage to the roof resulting in leaks.  Fireworks damage incurred over the years was one of the reasons the roof had to be replaced.

This week, however, it was determined the church property, which now includes gardens, does not have the required 350 feet of distance from the launch area which disqualifies the site from being used. The position of the Swanton Local School District on the issue did not change after a second request from the Village.

Village officials are now looking to place the launch site up on the hill at Memorial Park, in the area of Harding Fields, possibly on the softball diamond.  Food trucks and entertainment kiosks would be situated along the Park’s driveway, much like they are during the Swanton Corn Festival.  Village safety officials are working with representatives from the fireworks company on this proposed site.

Just My Opinion – The Second Amendment and the Right to Bear Arms

To begin, let me say that I believe in the Second Amendment, or at least what I believe is the spirit of the Second Amendment“A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”  People in our country should have a right to defend themselves, their family and their property from harm and do so with “arms”.

Unfortunately, the Second Amendment is one of the most vaguely worded and ambiguous legislative pieces of the United States Constitution and is so wide open to interpretation, anybody, especially politicians, can mold it to perfectly align it with their own value system, moral code and political agenda.  Along with the advancement of weapon technology since it was adopted in 1791, it goes a long way in explaining why we are where we are today, a nation divided between our Constitutional right to own a weapon, how powerful and lethal that weapon can be and what, if any, restrictions should apply. 

I am so tired of hearing the self-rationalized excuse for not regulating guns, “Guns don’t kill people.  People kill people.”  Of course, they do.  Every person “murdered” in the history of mankind was killed by another person.  Whether it be with bare hands, poison, knives, guns, hammers, cars or nuclear weapons, it does not matter.  Human beings are always responsible for murdering other human beings.  The question is “Why do we make it so damn easy?”

No matter how it is worded or defined or applied, the Second Amendment is not absolute.  Common sense limitations must be included for our own protection.  Even the First Amendment’s right of free speech, one of our most sacred rights, has its boundaries.  The law does not allow anyone to yell “fire” in a crowded venue or falsely and maliciously slander or libel a person’s character with impunity.

We first need to specifically define what “arms” are with respect to the Second Amendment.  To leave it so vague, it could be argued that it can include bazookas, grenade launchers, flame throwers, etc. as well as assault rifles.   You can see where I am going with this.  Where is the cut-off?

At the same time, we need to implement background checks across the board and a minimum waiting period for any gun purchase.  I do not understand the opposition to this.  Are background checks that much of an inconvenience to law abiding citizens that they would not want them to help protect their own families from those bent on killing for whatever reason?  Try getting a good job today without a background check.

Many opponents to this type of legislation argue we should focus on mental health issues instead.  I argue that we should do both.   We need to help people with psychological deficiencies, especially at an early age, but we also need to be aware of their possible mental health status when they want to buy a lethal weapon.

Should we allow individuals that have been radicalized through the internet or through an affiliation with an anti-American organization to stockpile an armory without any sort of investigation?

A lot of our political leaders in Congress, Republicans mostly, claim they cannot stop the mass shootings with legislation and it would be a waste of taxpayer money to try.  It is a feeble and irresponsible excuse perpetuated by the National Rifle Association (NRA) in order to validate and sustain their own existence.  They never offer a solution, only thoughts and prayers. These same people also claim that “gun control” means the government takes away all your guns. It is a scare tactic. One, that unfortunately, is very effective, but not at all true.

Sadly, this latest mass shooting, at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas will not be the last.  Two teachers and 19 young children were gunned down despite the thoughts and prayers that were disingenuously sent from Congress to grieving families and communities after Buffalo, El Paso, Pittsburgh, Aurora and Columbine in Colorado and Newtown, Connecticut and on and on and on.  Some of the bodies of the dead children in Uvalde were so mangled because of the “legally” purchased type of weapon and ammunition used that DNA testing had to be used for identification.

The NRA’s response to the Uvalde massacre was to go on with their annual meeting, ironically also in Texas, and have Republican King, Donald Trump, read off the list of the deceased, mispronouncing their names along the way while a gong sounded after each victim.  Trump finished his speech with a little dance, a little jig to show how much he cared.  He may as well have been dancing on the 21 graves that had yet to dug.

The majority of Americans believe and will support common sense gun legislation.  Most have grown sick and tired of what has become a uniquely American phenomena, an American epidemic of gun violence, too often punctuated by mass murders of our children, all facilitated by lax gun laws and apathetic self-serving law makers. 

Turning schools into fortresses and teachers into armed security guards will not work.  Think about the teachers you had in school.  How many of them would be capable of holding off an active shooter?  And it is not just schools we have to worry about.  It is shopping malls and grocery stores and movie theaters and festivals and any large public gathering.

More guns are not the answer.  Our elected officials need to find another way and if they cannot we need to find some that can.

Swanton Memorial Day Tribute – 5/30/22

https://photos.app.goo.gl/hDrvCECQV4m43gpn7

Swanton American Legion Murbach-Siefert Post #479 conducted the Memorial Day Tribute to all fallen service men and women who gave their lives in defense of the United States of America. The event began with a parade that started at the Church/Main Street intersection and proceeded down Main Street, turning into Memorial Park in front of the WWI Doughboy Statue. Legion commander Rick Maynhart gave the opening remarks and John Schmidt gave the opening and closing prayers. Air Force Master Sergeant Helen Wheeler was the keynote speaker. The Swanton High School Marching Bulldogs was on hand to play the National Anthem, the anthem for all branches of the military and concluded the ceremony by playing Taps.

Click on the link above to access the photos from today’s ceremony. Photos can be downloaded to your computer for no charge.

Tinora Edges Archbold in DIII District Pitching Classic

https://photos.app.goo.gl/WnTGvVpGrZTjVJcE7

Tinora catcher Nolan Schafer led off the fourth inning with a home run off Archbold ace DJ Newsom for the first run of the DIII District semi-final game at Defiance High School.  It was only the second hit of the game for the Rams.  They would not get another.  As it turned out, they would not need another as the lone run held up for a 1-0 Tinora victory.

Despite Newman’s brilliant performance on the mound, one run on two hits and 12 strikeouts in six complete game innings, the Blue Streaks were unable to push anyone across home plate against the Ram defense and pitcher Casey Wolfrum.  In throwing a complete game shutout, Wolfrum gave up three singles and a bloop two-out double in the seventh inning while striking out five and walking none.  Neither team committed an error.

The loss ends the season for the Streaks, last year’s DIII State Runners-up.  It was also the final high school athletic competition for Newman who is headed to Bowling Green State University to play baseball and for fellow seniors Zane Behnfeldt and Jaybe Burkle.

Click on the link above to access photos from the game. Photos are in the jpeg format to allow for editing and can be downloaded for no charge courtesy of the fultoncountymedia.com website.

Swanton’s Heckert Signs with Adrian College

John Heckert has decided to continue his education and his baseball career and will remain a Bulldog in those pursuits.  Yesterday, in front of family, friends and coaches, the soon to be former Swanton Bulldog signed a National Letter of Intent with Adrian College and the school’s Bulldog baseball program.

“I felt very comfortable there and not just because of baseball but I am looking forward to playing baseball there,” said John explaining his decision.  The close proximity, 30–40-minute drive, to Swanton also factored in the choice.  “It’s as far away from home as you make it,” he added.  “If something happens to where I need to come home or for a long weekend, but it’s far enough away where I can live my own life.”

While John has performed well on the diamond, his achievements in the classroom have been beyond impressive.  He has already earned college credits through the school’s relationship with Penta County’s satellite accounting program coordinated and administered by Ron Kauffman.  John recently returned from Dallas where he finished 17th in the nation in an accounting competition sponsored by the Business Professionals of America.

Playing baseball for Swanton has also added to John’s education.  “With our baseball program the past few years there have been a lot of ups and downs and one of the things I’ve definitely noticed is how awesome it is to be part of a team and battle through some of those lows.  When things get tough you just got to stick it out and keep going,” he said.  “It’s definitely one of those things I’m going to take away from high school sports and hopefully it will carry over into the next chapter of my life.”

In the Adrian College classrooms, John will be majoring in both Accounting and Criminal Justice with Forensic Accounting being one of the potential professions on his career list.

Pictured:  John with his father Eric, Mother Kathy and brother Ben

Supply Chain Issues Delay New Memorial Park Playground Equipment, Old Equipment Safety Inspection Results

The Village of Swanton ordered all new playground equipment, including a new and safer surface for it to be placed on in January of this year.  Originally, the plan for this $200,000 project was to have if completed before the annual Swanton Corn Festival, scheduled for August 13, 2022.

However, as Village Administrator Rosanna Hoelzle explained during Monday night’s Council meeting, supply chain issues, which are occurring globally, keep pushing the arrival date back.   There will also be some other work that will need done in the playground area which, in order to minimize the playground’s down time, is planned to do at the same time.  As of now, it appears the installation will take place in late August or early September.

Recently, the Village had the current playground equipment inspected for compliance to the guidelines established in the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) Handbook for Public Playground Safety.  Below are their findings”

Spiral Slide – The slide is non-compliant with current CPSC recommendations and should be removed and destroyed. Specific hazards exist.  Several large gaps exist between the slide bed and the vertical support post that have the potential to create an entanglement.  A small opening in the handrail at the transition platform creates a head entrapment.  Clearance distance between the slide bed and the vertical support creates a contact hazard.

Truck Climber – The climber can be updated to meet CPSC recommendations. Specific updates are:

The pole ends are of a diameter less than three inches. This small diameter creates an impalement hazard that is specifically dangerous to the eyes.  Three-inch disks should be affixed to the pole ends of the climber or the addition of a piece of material to cover the exposed ends.  The coating on the poles is showing signs of deterioration. The surface should be prepared and coated.

Seated Spring Rocker – The rocker can be updated to meet CPSC recommendations. The handholds and footholds are of a diameter that creates an impalement hazard that is specifically dangerous to the eyes. Three-inch disks should be affixed to the ends of the footholds to remove the hazard

Large Composite Play Structure – The structure is a commercially designed and constructed 5-12 composite play structure. It has various areas where the surface coating is deteriorating, but the overall condition is good for its age. My understanding is that the structure must be removed to make room for newer equipment. Carefully disassembled and removed, the structure could be made available to another municipality or school to be reinstalled as a playground. I would recommend that the future owner of the structure contact the manufacturer for proper installation and any updates that potentially could be included.

Large A-Frame Swing – The swing system is in good condition for its age. The safe zone of surfacing material is compliant with CPSC recommendations. The large zone is based on the fall height of the swing pivot location. I only mention this observation as many communities struggle to continually maintain large safety surface zones as the cost of surfacing material increases. Consideration should be made to replace the swing with a newer design that accommodates users of all ability levels and where the fall height is closer to the surface to limit the size of the recommended use zone.

Small Composite Play Structure – The structure is a commercially designed and constructed 5-12 composite play structure. It has various areas where the surface coating is deteriorating, but the overall condition is good for its age.  It is my understanding that a potential change of the play activities incorporated with the structure are under consideration. If the changes include a change in the intended user age range from a 5-12 to a 2-5, the fall height of the activities will need to be lowered. The vertical support posts are in excellent condition and should be able to be fitted with more age-appropriate activities. Contacting the manufacturer to inquire about changing the activities would be my recommendation.

Spiral Slide at Memorial Park

Carolina Vargas Awarded Swanton Lions Scholarship

The Swanton Lions Club awarded the second of two Joe D. Kahl Memorial Scholarships in the amount of $1,000 to Swanton senior Carolina Vargas. Carolina was chosen on the basis of her community service during her high school career and her high academic standing achieved in the past four years. She plans on attending Kent State University in Kent, Ohio and majoring in Zoology

The late Mr. Kahl was a long-time teacher and coach in the Swanton Local School District and a charter member of the Swanton Lions Club, founded in 2009. Carolyn Kahl, wife of Mr. Kahl, presented Carolina with the scholarship along with Lions Club President Jeff Patch.

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