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Swanton Project Add-Ons Deemed Worth the Cost by Village Council

The Swanton Village Council agreed to have enhanced add-ons to three current projects which will all result in an additional combined cost of just over $400,000.  Each enhancement was deemed necessary and would serve to save the Village money in the long run.

For the Membrane Project for the Water and Sewer plant it was decided to upgrade the plant’s Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) system that gathers and analyzes real time data.  It allows operations and management to be monitored and automated through the system.  The upgrade would allow for more efficient treatment and streamline reporting and the chemical feed modifications would allow for more precise chemical feeding.  The increased cost for this upgrade will be $152,435.

Regarding Project 8 & 9 Sewer Separation, it was discovered after the original estimate that a large portion of the road surface on West Garfield that is higher slopes toward the right-of-way and needed to be corrected to have positive drainage to the roadway.  The original cut of six inches needed to lower the roadway will now be 18 inches which will cost an additional $252,000.

The upgrade for the Phase 2 Meter Update Project involves switching from an AMR (Automatic Meter Reading) system which allows for readings to be acquired by driving by residences to an AMI (Advanced Metering Infrastructure) system will allow for readings to be transmitted electronically through a communication device.  The Village will choose the reading date and the readings will then be uploaded to the current billing system.  The AMI system would also have a Customer Engagement Portal where customers could monitor their usage in real time.  This upgrade will add $90,000 to the project along with an annual maintenance fee of $9,950 but will also result in an annual labor savings of $17,000.

In New Business, upon the request of Mona Dyke, President of the Swanton Historical Society (SHS), the Council agreed to have Councilman Dave Pilliod represent the Village on the SHS’s committee related to the proposed railroad park project.  Mr. Pilliod will act as the Village’s liaison to the committee and keep the Council informed of the project’s progress.

The next Council meeting will be held on February 22, 2021 at a time and location yet to be determined.

Archbold Beats Swanton to Set Up Title Match with Wauseon

The Archbold Blue Streaks took a 44-29 lead into the fourth quarter and had to weather a 14-point scoring explosion by Swanton’s Josh Vance that dropped the margin to four before finally defeating the visiting Bulldogs 60-51. 

After a close first quarter which ended with Swanton holding a slim one-point advantage at 13-12, Archbold took control of the game in the next two quarters, outscoring the Bulldogs 15-8 and 17-8, led by DJ Newman’s 15 points, all from the field. 

Swanton went to the long ball to get back into the game and hit five three-pointers, four from Vance and one by Hayden Callicotte and pulled within four points, 53-49 with 1:30 remaining in the contest.

With time running down, the Bulldogs were forced into fouling with the intention of getting the ball back, hopefully after a missed free throw.  However, the Streaks went to the line 13 times in last frame and made nine of those attempts to end the Swanton comeback.  Essentially, the game was decided at the foul line where Archbold went 17 of 23 and the Bulldogs shot just five of seven.

The Archbold win puts their overall record at 16-4, but more importantly, keeps their league record unblemished at 6-0 and sets up a winner-take-all matchup next week for the NWOAL title in Wauseon against the Indians who are also 6-0.

Newman led the Blue Streaks in scoring with 20 points.  Alex Roth had 10 points and Noah Gomez, Ashton Kammeyer and Trey Theobald (pictured) each had eight.

For Swanton, Vance scored a game-high 23 points.  Hayden Callicotte added 11 and Cole Mitchey had 10.  The loss places the Bulldog record at 3-3 in the league and 11-9 on the season.

Swanton , Wauseon Girls Bowlers Qualify for District, Delta Sends Two Individuals

The Swanton Lady Bulldogs and Wauseon Lady Indians placed second and third, respectively, in the girls’ OHSAA Division II Sectional Bowling Tournament on Friday held at River City Bowl-A-Way in Napoleon and advanced to the District Tournament next week in Lima.  Both schools finished behind team Sectional Champion Napoleon Lady Wildcats who totaled 3875 pins to Swanton’s 3792 and Wauseon’s 3660.

Hannah Patch rolled a career-high 623 series with games of 235, 246 and 142 to pace the Bulldogs which will be competing in the Districts for the second time in the past three years.  Backing up Hannah with big performances were Amy Lawson with a 587 series, Ivy Serres with 546, and Gabe Sieja with 516.

Wauseon’s Dannielle Carr (pictured) led all bowlers with a 646 series, throwing games of 268, 209 and 169, to win the individual Sectional Tournament Championship.  Danielle was supported by Quinlynn Rohda’s 618 series and a 557 from Rachel Carr and a 495 from Jayde Ramos.

Qualifying as individuals are Maddy Johnston who bowled games of 169, 204 and 212 for a 585 series and Ciarra Flickinger with games of 139, 222 and 213 for a 574 total.  Both girls come from the Delta Lady Panthers program.

Lady Blue Streaks Hang On for Road Win at Swanton

After allowing the Swanton Lady Bulldogs to whittle an early 18-point deficit down to just two in the fourth quarter, the Archbold Lady Blue Streaks sank eight free throws in eight attempts, six by Addison Moyer (pictured), to pull out a 47-40 NWOAL victory on the road Thursday night.

The Blue Streaks started quickly as Moyer laced one from behind the arc and added a two-pointer for a 5-0 lead.  The hot start continued as Archbold raced out to a 20-8 first quarter advantage while the Bulldogs struggle to keep pace.  Eventually, the Streak advantage grew to 18 points, 33-15, before Swanton was able to score the final six points of the half to bring the margin back to 12.

But what was developing to be an easy win in the first half against a talented Swanton squad, changed dramatically in the third quarter as the Lady Bulldogs, led by identical twin sisters Aricka and Averie Lutz, slowly chipped away at the big Blue Streak lead.  Swanton outscored Archbold 13-4 in the third quarter and only trailed by three points entering the final frame.

The Streak lead hovered between the three- and five-point mark for much of the quarter until the Bulldogs were able to trim it to two points with just over two minutes remaining in the game.  With the small lead and possession of the ball, Archbold Coach Brian Ziegler put his offense into stall mode, forcing Swanton to commit fouls in hopes of getting the ball back after missed free throws.  The Bulldog strategy was sound but the Blue Streak shooters, Moyer and Kylie Sauder were not accommodating as they did not miss a single of their eight shots from the line to seal the win.

Moyer led Archbold with 18 points, Harley Phillips scored 14 and Sauder added eight.  Overall, the Streaks hit 10 of 13 foul shots.  The Lutz twins combined to score 35 of Swanton’s 40 points with Arika taking game-high honors with 20 and Averie netting 15.

Delta Village Council Questioned on Mayor’s Sudden Resignation

At the February 1, 2021 Delta Village Council meeting, Delta resident and former Superintendent of Pike-Delta-York Schools, Jay LeFevre, addressed Council members regarding the recent resignation of Mayor Bob Gilbert.  Mr. LeFevre questioned the lack of information and reasons given to the public from Village officials that prompted the sudden and unexpected resignation of Mayor Gilbert who had just finished the first year of a four-year term. “Is there some formal documentation anywhere? As far as people know we have two mayors or what?” asked Mr. Lefevre. 

“The Mayor submitted his resignation.  There is a document where he resigned as Mayor.  According to the Charter, the Vice-Mayor takes over,” responded Village Solicitor Kevin Heban.

Mr. LeFevre asked if Mayor Gilbert’s resignation was mentioned in meeting minutes.  Councilwoman Lynn Frank checked the previous meeting minutes and said it was not.  “How then would anyone know in the public that the Mayor had resigned if there is no Village action or no minutes documenting that the Mayor resigned?” questioned Mr. LeFevre.  Mr. Heban said the Mayor’s resignation was mentioned at the last meeting prior to the swearing in of Vice-Mayor Frank Wilton as the new Mayor.  A replay of the on-line audio recording of the previous meeting did not make mention of the resignation.

“If someone was looking up the actions of the Council or what’s actually happening, how would they really know?  I don’t know if you have an answer.  I just wanted to put that out there.  As a person of the community, it seems rather puzzling that there’s not really any formal action,” said Mr. LeFevre.  “I don’t believe the minutes reflect the Mayor resigned.  I’m just kind of puzzled by that.  Maybe someone can follow up with me.”  Mr. Lefevre also questioned the Council’s vision for the Village of Delta and the overall transparency of its actions. 

“Obviously, there’s been some turmoil.  Obviously, it’s been discussed in executive session and I get all of that, but I’m very concerned about where we are going,” he said.  “I’d love to see the Village Council’s vision and I’d appreciate a reflection on the past year.  Because when a mayor resigns or is asked to resign, what ever unfolded, it’s a pretty big deal.  I struggle with what appears to be a complete lack of transparency.  I’m told we’re trying to be transparent and I see things on the website, certain examples of transparency, but it’s a very tough topic to have nothing at all said.  It would be great to hear some kind of example of why we have lost our Mayor and where we’re heading.  I respect your work.  I respect the position all of you are in.  It’s challenging work.  I would be grateful to see what the vision of the Council is in the near future.”

Mayor Wilton thanked Mr. LeFevre for his comments and asked if there was anyone else that wished to address Council.  There was no response and the meeting continued without further discussion on the issue raised by Mr. LeFevre.

Swanton Lady Bulldogs Bring Home NWOAL Tournament Championship

Trailing the Bryan Lady Golden Bears by 83 pins after the three-game team match round of the NWOAL Tournament, the Swanton Lady Bulldogs rallied during the five-game Baker series to win the tournament 3155-3114. The Bulldogs bowled well in the team matches to start the Baker Games round in second place behind defending league and state champion Bryan. After tying the Bears in the first Baker game, Swanton began to chip away at the Bryan lead, beating the Bears 190-148 and 146-130 in games two and three to reduce the deficit to 25 pins. In the fourth Baker game, the Bulldogs took control, outscoring Bryan 180-117 and sealed the tournament title with a 153-150 win in the final Baker game.

Overall, Swanton topped second place Bryan by 41 pins, third place Liberty Center by 182 pins, fourth place Patrick Henry by 266 pins, fifth place Wauseon by 269 pins, sixth place Evergreen by 358 pins and seventh place Delta by 454 pins. Ivy Serres paced the Lady Bulldogs with a 543 series, Amy Lawson rolled a 489 series, Hannah Patch followed with a 468 series, Sarah Kohlhofer and Gabe Sieja combine for a 431 series and Haylee Didion had a 387 series.

Immediately after the bowling was complete, post-season awards were handed out. Named to the All-NWOAL First Team was Amy Lawson who garnered the honor for the third consecutive year. Ivy Serres was named to the All-NWOAL Second Team and Hannah Patch, Gabe Sieja and Haylee Didion received All-NWOAL Honorable Mention recognition.

“One of the most fun group of girls I’ve had on the team,” remarked long-time Swanton Head Coach Nick Staler. “Too bad they are all seniors,” he added. Coach Staler also thanked his assistant coach and daughter, Ashtin Staler who works mainly with the girls’ team. “Thanks for everything she does with these girls,” he said. “Now its on to Sectionals.”

Blistering Swanton Start Takes Down Delta in Boys Basketball

The Swanton Bulldogs scored the first 19 points of the game and led 21-3 after the first quarter to cruise to 51-19 victory over the Delta Panthers at home in the Kevin J. McQuade Gymnasium Friday night. All five Bulldog starters scored in that opening frame and their defense forced numerous Panther turnovers that led to easy baskets during the run.

The large point spread allowed Swanton head coach Joel Visser to substitute early to keep his starters fresh and was still able to extend the lead, moving to 32-8 when the halftime buzzer sounded. Swanton slowed the tempo in the second half, outscoring Delta 11-6 and 8-3 in the third and fourth quarters, respectively. Coach Visser was able to empty his bench and give several of his JV players some valuable varsity experience.

Eight different Bulldog players put points on the score sheet but none were in double figures. Josh Vance, Andrew Thornton and Cole Mitchey tallied nine points each. Hayden Callicotte scored eight points and Trent Weiglel had five. Nolan Risner scored seven points for the Panthers and Chase Stickley added six.

The win takes Swanton record to 3-2 in the league and 10-8 overall. Delta falls to 0-5 in the NWOAL and 1-15 on the season.

Jordan Lumbrezer Signs With Siena Heights for Track and Field

Evergreen senior and multi-sport star, Jordan Lumbrezer, has signed a Letter of Intent with Siena Heights University (SHU) in Adrian, Michigan to join the Saints’ track and field program this coming fall. Jordan will be competing in shot put and discus while at SHU, two events she became interested in while in middle school. “I’ve been (throwing) for about five or six years,” said Jordan. “I really didn’t want to play track at the beginning but once I started it, I really loved it and just kept going with it.” She has also played basketball and soccer at Evergreen but it is her unquestionable talent in the throwing events that are taking her to the next level. “She’s put in a lot of effort. She deserves it,” said Jordan’s proud father, RJ Lumbrezer. “We’ve had a lot of fun watching her.”

Jordan is not the first in her family to play a sport at the next level or even to attend SHU while doing so. Her brother Landon played baseball for the Saints, graduating two years ago, so Jordan is very familiar with the university and their athletic programs. She plans to major in something associated with the medical field and athletics at SHU. “I thought about physical therapy, something with athletes and recovery wise,” said Jordan, explaining what areas of study she is interested in.

Jordan gets a lot of support from her large family, twin sister Riley and brothers Caleb, Walker and Landon as well as mother Tanya and father RJ. With the university just a 20-minute drive from her home they will still be able to easily support her in person. At SHU she will be mentored by first-year coach Emily Couture, a former thrower at the university.

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