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Murray Ridge bus involved in crash

Monday, October 4th, 2010

CARLISLE TWP. — Eight adult program workers for the Murray Ridge Center were being taken to area emergency rooms after the school bus they were riding in was involved in an accident this afternoon, according to Amber L. Fisher, the center’s superintendent.

No one is believed to be seriously injured but everyone was taken to an emergency room for evaluation, she said.

The bus collided with a Ford Taurus at 3:27 p.m. at Oberlin-Elyria and Butternut Ridge Road, according to the Ohio Highway Patrol.

The patrol is investigating and a dispatcher had no additional details.

Fisher said the Murray Ridge workers were returning from a work detail at Oberlin College.

View photos at SmugMug

Dump truck takes out poles, power, closes road

Monday, September 27th, 2010

CARLISLE TWP. — Power was out on and around Middle Avenue and the road was closed just north of the railroad tracks in Carlisle Township this afternoon.

A Blue Star Metal Recycling dump truck snagged power lines, snapping one utility pole at the base and severing another near its top and tangling a large amount of wires. A third pole ripped sideways. Two of the poles are electrical poles and one is a telephone pole.

First responders also cleaned up a hydraulic fluid leak.

Ohio Edison and Windstream were called to the scene.

Some neighbors getting fed up over EHS dust-up

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

ELYRIA — There is a cloud of dust getting kicked up around the new Elyria High School and it’s not from residents overjoyed with the proj­ect.

Those living closest to the $74 million project have put up with heavy machinery, loud con­struction and debris for more than two years, but it’s the dust coming off the old school as it is being torn down that has many saying enough is enough.

“We get huge clouds of dust from across the street,” said Shannon Swabb of West Avenue. “We finished our porch last weekend. It dried Sunday. Monday it was caked with dust.”

At times the dust in the air and the debris on the road are so bad residents say they cannot enjoy their homes and yards.

Alicia Rosenthal, who has lived on Fifth Street since 1974, said she has watched her rose bushes die this summer and had to put up with double the pool maintenance just to keep the pH in her in-ground pool balanced.

“I have a lovely, clean home, but this is starting to take a toll on our cars and everything,” she said.

Earlier this month, residents took their concerns to the Ohio Environ­mental Protection Agency.

As a result, agency representa­tives visited the construction site to investigate concerns about air qual­ity and look into debris possibly going into storm drains near the construction site.

Mike Settles, spokesman for the Ohio EPA, said it will be a number of days before he knows if the con­cerns warrant intervention.

“We want to make sure the roads remain clean and the company is using a watering truck to keep the dust down,” Settles said.

Amy Higgins, district spokes­woman, said school officials are aware of residents’ concerns.

According to Higgins, Regency Construction, the project manager, addresses every concern as it comes up, often going beyond their duty.

Recently, tree limbs were knocked down around the project during a storm and construction crews did the cleanup, Higgins said. In addition, the Ohio EPA inspec­tor wanted additional safeguards around storm drains to keep debris out and Higgins said Regency immediately put additional fencing in place.

“We are not negating the residents’ concerns,” she said. “We are addressing them as they come up and will continue to do that until the project comes to completion. We hope residents keep in mind that the site is an active construction site and there is a lot of debris being removed daily. A portion of a building is being demolished. Once debris is removed and the site is cleared, those issues will become less of an issue.”

Matt Swabb, Shannon’s husband, said he can’t believe Regency and the district believe they are doing everything that can be done.

“It is an enormous amount of dirt they are leaving behind in the streets, and the dust is just incredible,” he said. “I just need to know if they truly approve of how everything is running because I can’t believe they do. They need to start doing the neighborly thing, the right thing. Essentially, they should answer the question of is the mess they leave around daily for the neighborhood to deal with is acceptable.”

Former Elyria City Councilman Kevin Krischer said he is disappointed in the way the school board is responding to residents. It’s frustrating, he said.

“The school board says they can’t do anything because they don’t have ownership, but that project is being done with taxpayer dollars and Regency is a for-profit company that doesn’t care about how our money is being spent,” he said.

Krischer said his frustrations turned to anger recently when we watched the city send a street sweeper down Fifth Street, where his home is located, only to see the street dirty again.

“The city just swept the street two weeks ago, and there is dirt and stone all over the streets,” he said. “It’s ridiculous.”

Contact Lisa Roberson at 329-7121 or lroberson@chroniclet.com.

State poll: EC No. 1 in Division IV

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010
Members of the Elyria Catholic football team celebrate their overtime victory over Bishop Hartley on Friday night. The big win moved the Panthers to the top of the Division IV state poll.

Members of the Elyria Catholic football team celebrate their overtime victory over Bishop Hartley on Friday night. The big win moved the Panthers to the top of the Division IV state poll. (CT photo by David Richard.)

A thrilling victory over Bishop Hartley on Friday night brought Elyria Catholic more than just another win.

On the strength of their 34-28 overtime decision, the Panthers are the new No. 1 Division IV team in Ohio.

EC, unbeaten at 4-0, is atop the Division IV poll with 230 points, four points in front of second-ranked Ottawa-Glan­dorf, who received 15 first-place votes to the Pan­thers’ six. “This is a really neat thing for our team. I can’t lie about that,” said Elyria Catholic coach Ben Malbasa. “Obviously, this is just a poll, but it’s always nice to be well thought of.”

“This No. 1 ranking feels really great,” said EC’s prolific senior quarterback Danny Reaser, who set a school record with 508 passing yards, while throwing for six touchdowns in the Panthers’ victory over Elyria High on Sept. 9. “It shows how our hard work has paid off. We need to keep at the pace we’ve been going and hope to maintain that top ranking.

“Our game against Bishop

Hartley was a tough one. We hope the rest of the season will see some more exciting games.” The ranking is the highest for

Elyria Catholic under Malbasa, who is in his fourth year as head coach.

“I told our players (Monday) that we need to get better every week,” Malbasa said. “We want to achieve that and our goal of a long season (in the playoffs).” Elyria Catholic was not the only team in the area ranked in the state poll.

In Division II, Avon (4-0) is ranked fifth, while Westlake (4-0) is 18th.

EC will put its top ranking on the line Saturday against

St. Thomas Aquinas (2-2) in its last game before opening the

North Coast League schedule.

The Panthers beat Aquinas 28-7 last year.

“This week’s game against

St. Thomas Aquinas should be another good one,” Malbasa said.

“We’ve played each other the last few years. They are young but well-coached. It’ll be a good way to get ready for North

Coast League games.”

“St. Thomas Aquinas is a very good team that we can’t underestimate,” Reaser said. “They are very disciplined and can’t be taken lightly.