Posts Tagged ‘west chester’

FriMay3

Ducklings saved after crossing turns deadly

Posted by rrichardson May 3rd, 2013, 1:58 pm Post a Comment

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

DucklingsEnquirer reporters Rachel Richardson and Sheila McLaughlin became surrogate moms for 10 ducklings Friday afternoon after a gold SUV plowed down the mother duck and an 11th duckling crossing Cox Road.

Richardson witnessed the tragedy near the entrance of Voice of America Park, stopped her car in the middle of the dangerous high-speed road and herded the remaining ducklings safely to a grassy area across the road.

“He was doing at least 50 mph. Plowing down ducks has to be crime – if not a legal one, an ethical one,” said Richardson, who works with animal rescue groups for cats and rabbits.

The 11th duckling was found under the mother with what appeared to be a broken neck. The mother duck flew off. Her leg was broken in half and was bent sideways.

McLaughlin and Richardson rounded up the 10 ducklings after raiding their editor Bill Cieslewicz’s office for a box and searching for the mother in a marshy thicket along the side of Cox Road.

The mother duck could not be found.

The surviving ducklings will be turned over to Animal Hospital on Mount Lookout Square, which recommended rescuing the ducklings because their mother could not be found. They will be transferred to a wildlife rehabilitator.

Reporter Rachel Richardson contributed

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Posted in: News |

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TueApr16

Ex-employee pleads guilty to stealing $23k from Mason employer

Posted by rrichardson April 16th, 2013, 2:44 pm Post a Comment
Marcie Denney

Marcie Denney. Photo/Warren County Jail

A West Chester woman has pleaded guilty to stealing more than $23,000 from her Mason employer.

Marcie “Allison” Denney, 37, pleaded guilty Friday to one count of theft, a fourth-degree felony, and four fifth-degree felony counts of forgery.   She originally faced one count of theft and nine counts of forgery.

Between August and November last year, Denney forged 25 company checks from her employer, JKrete, a Mason company specializing in traditional and decorative concrete installation, totaling more than $23,000.

Denney cashed company checks and wrote checks out to a friend, Christine Inman.  Inman, 30, of West Chester, has been charged with one count of receiving stolen property and one count of forgery, both fifth-degree felonies.

Company owner Bruce Mills said Denney first started at a temporary worker in January and was hired on in April as an office receptionist.  In that role, she handled incoming checks and outgoing bills.

Suspicions were first raised after Inman allegedly attempted to cash a company check and a cautious Fifth Third Bank teller called him to verify the signature, Mills said.  He froze the account and discovered other forged checks by Denney.  Mason Police arrested her at work the next day.

“She’s a serious con artist,” he said.  “She is very sneaky, conniving and manipulative, and she will do it again and again.”

(more…)

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Posted in: Crime, News |

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FriApr12

Crossroads finalizes purchase of Mason expansion site

Posted by rrichardson April 12th, 2013, 12:01 pm Post a Comment
Crossroads Mason

This planned development concept submitted to the city of Mason by Crossroads shows site and landscaping renovations to be done to the property at 990 Reading Road. The Oakley-based church plans to open its Mason branch in August 2014. Photo provided

Expansion of a Crossroads church in Mason can move forward now that the purchase of an industrial building was finalized last month.

Crossroads purchased the property at 990 Reading Road for about $1.4 million March 15, according to the Warren County auditor’s website.

The newest location of the interdenominational mega-church will serve its rapidly growing congregation in Butler and Warren counties.

The church expects to spend about $16 million renovating the 129,000-square-foot building and site formerly occupied by International paper, which owned the property but closed in 2008, said Chuck Moore, Crossroads’ director of multi-site.

Construction plans are not yet finalized, but Craig Dockery, the church’s communications director, said the church could break ground as soon as June with a possible fall 2014 opening.

Crossroads held its first public service in a rented room at Peoples Middle School in Oakley in 1996. Since then, the church moved into its current location on Madison Road in Oakley, expanded that building to 262,000 square feet and opened another facility in Florence in 2012. The congregation averages nearly 15,000 each weekend at the two locations.

The church, which bills itself as a “a church for people who don’t like church,” began conducting Sunday services four years ago at Mason Middle School. It now has about 1,200 members, said Moore. That number is expected to grow to 2,500 to 2,800 members with the opening of the new building.

(more…)

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Posted in: Business, Community, News |

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TueApr9

YMCA coach accused of ‘indecent liberties’ in N.C. hotel

Posted by rrichardson April 9th, 2013, 8:42 am Post a Comment

Janice Morse reports:

A YMCA assistant swimming coach faces an allegation of “taking indecent liberties” with a minor at a hotel while the Warren County-based team was in North Carolina for a national swim meet, authorities say.

Patrick Jeanneret, 30, who listed an address in West Chester Township, was arrested following an incident that was reported early Saturday in Greensboro, N.C., a police spokeswoman there said Monday.

Jeanneret, a part-time, paid assistant coach for about the past two years, “is no longer employed by us,” said Mike Carroll, president and CEO of the Countryside YMCA in Lebanon.

A notice was put in the mail to Jenneret on Monday informing him of that decision, Carroll said.

From Wednesday through Saturday, the Countryside Torpedoes swim team was participating in the 2013 YMCA Short Course National Championship in Greensboro. Jeanneret was one of nine assistant coaches who accompanied the team of about 200 boys and girls to the meet, along with the head coach and chaperones, Carroll said.

A girl was allegedly victimized early Saturday but details were undisclosed. The girl is a team member whose parents were both in Greensboro for the meet, Carroll said. Team members stay in a hotel together, separate from any parents who choose to attend, he said.

(more…)

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Posted in: Crime, News, Warren County |

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TueJan29

Deal expected to bring Crossroads to Mason

Posted by rrichardson January 29th, 2013, 4:49 pm Post a Comment
Crossroads Mason

This planned development concept submitted to the city of Mason by Crossroads shows site and landscaping renovations to be done to the property at 990 Reading Road. The Oakley-based church plans to open its Mason branch in August 2014. Photo provided

Crossroads is one step closer to opening a new church in Mason to serve its rapidly growing congregation in Butler and Warren counties.

The newest location of the interdenominational mega-church is scheduled to open in August 2014 at 990 Reading Road, said Chuck Moore, Crossroads’ director of multi-site.

On Monday night, Mason City Council unanimously approved rezoning the nearly 25-acre property at the corner of Reading Road and Tri-Way Drive, a largely industrial area. The zoning vote changed the property from industrial and road service use to business planned unit development to accommodate Crossroads’ planned development.

Moore said the church expects to spend about $16 million renovating the 129,000-square foot building and site formerly occupied by International Paper, which owns the property but closed in 2008.

Details of the purchase are still being finalized, said Craig Dockery, the church’s communications director. He expects to the purchase to be completed in the spring, with construction to follow.

“There was no one standing in line for that building,’’ said Mason Vice Mayor Victor Kidd. “It’s an excellent use of that property.”

Crossroads held its first public service in a rented room at Peoples Middle School in Oakley in 1996. Since then, the church moved into its current location on Madison Road in Oakley, expanded that building to 262,000 square feet and opened another facility in Florence in 2012. The congregation averages nearly 15,000 each weekend at the two locations.

The church began conducting Sunday services four years ago at Mason Middle School. It now has about 1,200 members, Moore said. That number is expected to grow to 2,500 to 2,800 members with the opening of the new building.

“We really responded to the people in Mason and West Chester who asked for a site,” Moore said. “People will move to Mason to be closer to church.”

Moore said Crossroads, which bills itself as “a church for people who don’t like church,” has flourished because it delivers a traditional Christian message in an unconventional format.

“We have a very creative way of experiencing God, learning about God and being in the community,” he said. “Our whole idea is literally having a beer with somebody on our back deck. That’s the way we want to talk about what’s it like to seek God, struggle in life and seek answers.”

Moore said he envisions the Mason branch to be more than just a place to come for Sunday worship. The church offers ministries for people from a variety of lifestyles and is “very proactive” in encouraging community involvement, he said.

“Part of what makes our calling a little different is that we tend to attract leaders who have lots of ideas and want to give back to the community,” said Moore. “We believe faith is action. We believe people have the opportunity to serve and all should serve.”

Mason city council members praised the church’s “stellar reputation” and noted the potential economic boon to the corridor, which is bordered by retail and residential communities to the west and south and manufacturing to the east.

“This is a good reminder that there are things much more important to a community than financial return,” said Kidd. “We admire the ability of Crossroads to do some amazing things. It’s phenomenal and we’re glad to be a part of it.”

 

ABOUT CROSSROADS

Crossroads ranked 21st on Outreach Magazine’s 2011 list of the nation’s largest churches and sixth on the magazine’s fastest-growing list in 2010. The church began services in Oakley in 1996 and opened its 262,000 square foot facility at 3500 Madison Road in Oakley in 2006. In August 2012, the church opened a Florence branch in the building formerly occupied by Old Time Pottery, off of Mall Road.

Crossroads’s new facility at 990 Reading Road in Mason is set to open in August 2014.

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Posted in: Community, Government, News |

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TueNov20

3rd time not a charm: Ex-employee caught stealing again

Posted by rrichardson November 20th, 2012, 8:25 am Post a Comment
Cathleen Schmid

Cathleen Schmid appears in court on Monday. The Enquirer/Kimball Perry

A woman convicted of stealing from her Mason employer has been convicted of the same crime — for the third time. 

Kimball Perry reports:

Marci Wheeler was suspicious.

She had noticed two different companies billing Dominion Liquid Technologies, the Fairfax company where she is controller, for the product that keeps the syrups and other liquids the company makes from foaming up.

That curiosity culminated Monday when former Dominion employee Cathleen Schmid was sent to prison for two years by Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge Jerome Metz Jr. for stealing $214,717 from the company. Dominion is the third employer from which Schmid was convicted of stealing, but Tuesday’s hearing marked the first time she’ll go to prison for it.

“I noticed two things that happened at the exact same time,” Wheeler said after Schmid, 47, of West Chester was sentenced. Schmid was the company’s purchasing and human relations manager and was making $65,000 annually.

In addition to seeing two different companies billing Dominion for the same product at the same time Wheeler noticed that a new vendor had billed the company $3,000 for four drums of cleaning products, which was an unusually high cost.

Wheeler’s sleuthing revealed the new vendor was fictitious, contrived by Schmid to help cover her theft from the small company that makes and bottles coffees and syrups.

Schmid blamed some unnamed malady for continuing to steal from her employers and asked for help instead of prison time.

“I know ‘I’m sorry’ is not nearly enough,” she told the judge.

“I understand that I need to be punished for what I did.

“I want to get some kind of theft treatment program. I don’t intentionally hurt people. I need to know why I do this.”

That brought a quick response from Assistant Prosecutor Bill Anderson.

“She is compelled to steal,” Anderson said. “(Dominion) employees were not able to receive raises and things of that nature” due to Schmid’s theft.

(more…)

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Posted in: Crime, News |

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ThuNov8

American Heritage Girls conference draws hundreds to Mason

Posted by rrichardson November 8th, 2012, 1:05 pm Post a Comment

American Heritage GirlsHundreds of adult leaders from across the nation have gathered in Mason for the fifth annual American Heritage Girls conference.

More than 300 people are expected to attend the Cincinnati-based organization’s national conference held through Saturday at Christ Church in Mason.

This year’s conference is the organization’s largest yet, said Jody Token, national public relations coordinator.

AHG has grown by an “unprecedented” 30-50 percent each year since its inception in 1995 and now boasts more than 20,000 members across 47 U.S. state and four countries, she said.

The AHG program was born in West Chester after co-founder Patty Garibay and 26 other Girl Scouts leaders left the organization when it added an asterisk after the word God in the Girl Scout Promise, establishing a “spiritual flexibility” for the word, Garibay told The Enquirer in 2007.

A statement from the Girl Scouts concerning the promise states, “The motivating force in Girl Scouts is a spiritual one, however the Girl Scout organization does not endorse or promote any particular philosophy or religious belief nor do we attempt to dictate the form or style of a member’s worship. Our movement is secular and founded on American democratic principles, one of which is freedom of religion.”

Garibay founded AHG as a “Christ-centered” alternative to Girl Scouts. It now partners with the Boy Scouts and allows girls to earn merit badges, like “Outdoor Skills” and “Our Flag.”

Conference presenters include Garibay and Beth Guckenberger, executive director of Back2Back Ministries, a Mason-based ministry supporting orphans and impoverished children in developing countries.

Information: www.ahgonline.org

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Posted in: Community, Community, Events, News |

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MonNov5

West Chester Romney rally featured in ad

Posted by rrichardson November 5th, 2012, 6:05 pm Post a Comment

Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney shared his vision for the county’s future with 30,000 people during a West Chester rally Friday night.

Now the rest of the country can see some of it. The rally is featured in a new Romney campaign television advertisement called, “Bigger, Better America.”

Watch it here.

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Posted in: Election, News |

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SatNov3

30K jam Romney rally in West Chester

Posted by rrichardson November 3rd, 2012, 8:15 am Post a Comment


Cindi Andrews, Paul Kostyu and Jane Prendergast report:

The presidential race returned to Ohio for the final push Friday as GOP challenger Mitt Romney held a massive rally in the Republican heartland north of Cincinnati and President Barack Obama cut a swath through central Ohio.

“The question of the election comes down to this: Do you want more of the same or do you want real change?” Romney said Friday night in West Chester Township. “I promise change, and I actually have a record of achieving it.”

Romney spoke to a crowd of 30,000, according to West Chester Fire Chief Tony Goller – making it the largest rally of the campaign, said Romney spokesman Chris Maloney.

Both candidates are trying to make up for campaign time lost to superstorm Sandy and deliver their final arguments to voters before Tuesday’s election.

Obama, in his first Ohio trip since Sandy struck the East Coast, said in Lima on Friday afternoon that the policies of previous Republican administrations didn’t work.

“Ohio, we’ve tried our ideas and they work,” he said. “We’ve tried the other folks’ ideas. They don’t work. The eight years before I took office, we tried their ideas. What did we get? We got falling incomes, record deficits … and an economic crisis that we’ve been cleaning up after ever since.”

With less than four days before Election Day, the race is too close to predict in several key states, including Ohio. The latest poll out Friday, by CNN/ORC International, shows Obama leading 50 percent to 47 percent in Ohio, well within the 3.5 percentage point margin of error.

Obama will make what’s almost certainly his last Cincinnati stop of the campaign at the University of Cincinnati’s Fifth Third Arena on Sunday evening, while Romney will be in Cleveland. And the candidates will campaign down to the wire in Ohio – both have announced events Monday in Columbus.

(more…)

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Posted in: Election, News |

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FriNov2

Live: Mitt Romney in West Chester

Posted by rrichardson November 2nd, 2012, 6:55 pm Post a Comment

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