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Local News

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Trail project will proceed

Flag City Recycling: Buying Scrap Metal at Top Prices!
By JIM MAURER

Staff Writer

The Hancock Park District Commissioners unanimously decided Friday to move ahead with the Blanchard River Greenway Trail extension which will connect downtown with Riverside Park.

The board's action came during a special meeting at the Lodge at Riverbend. The session was called during Tuesday's regular board meeting to get additional information on the project and its cost.

The revised estimate for the half-mile, 10-foot-wide paved trail is $2.17 million, with $1.73 million coming from the state Department of Transportation.

The park district has earmarked $100,000 for the project, money which was set aside in recent years, and will borrow $150,000. The funds will be repaid over 3-5 years with park levy funds.

Bids will be opened later this year. If they are over the $2.17 million estimate, the park district would cover any cost increase.

But Tim Brugeman, park district director, said state transportation personnel will contact him when bids are opened, whether they are below or above the estimate. The park commissioners will then have a final chance to turn down the project.

About $132,000 has already been spent, said Brugeman. The Findlay-Hancock County Community Foundation paid for preliminary drawings prior to 2005. The park district has paid about $107,000 for preparation, planning and drawings since then.

Board Chairman Bill Miller said because of the money already spent and with the support of the community, evident in the recent passage of the 0.8-mill replacement levy, it would be hard to "back out now."

"I vote for us to move ahead," he said. "We have support from the city and the county."

Brugeman said a previous study determined the trail work will not increase flooding in the area. It actually may decrease, he said, since the river banks will be "pulled back" with retaining walls and the paved trail.

Dick Kozlowski, chairman of Blanchard River Watershed Partnership, and Mick Gould, with Hancock Handlebars Bicycle Club, both voiced support for the trail.

Kozlowski said from a recreational aspect, the trail is of "prime importance for people in the community." It also will reduce erosion along the river bank, he said.

Gould said the trail will be good for the city and a feature that will bring people to the city. It is another piece of the trail which may be extended in the future.

Contact Staff Writer Jim Maurer at:

(419) 427-8420

Send an e-mail to Jim Maurer

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Neighbors react

Residents in Findlay's Dold subdivision say they are worried following an alleged abduction attempt Tuesday.

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    News Briefs Abduction attempt reported Tuesday
    The Hancock County Sheriff's Office is investigating an alleged abduction attempt in a western Findlay subdivision.

    A sheriff's deputy said he was called to Dold Drive, near Liberty-Benton High School, just before 5 p.m. Tuesday after a girl reported a suspicious man had followed her and eventually chased her.

    The girl was able to get away without being harmed.

    Details are still preliminary, but officials said the man was described as being about 6 feet tall with an average build. He looked to be in his 60s and had red hair, deputies said.

    Deputies searching the area found no one matching that description.


    Man sentenced for two felonies
    A Findlay man was sentenced to nearly five years in prison for two felony convictions.

    Brett M. Ardelean, 21, trespassed at 1112 Crystal Ave. in Findlay, when the resident was present, to commit a theft on Dec. 9.

    Ardelean also admitted concealing a .40-caliber handgun in the city on Oct. 22.

    The burglary charge is a second-degree felony, and the carrying a concealed weapon charge is a fourth-degree felony.

    Hancock County Common Pleas Judge Joseph Niemeyer sentenced Ardelean on Monday to serve four years in prison for the burglary conviction and 11 months for the weapon violation.

    The gun was forfeited to the Findlay Police Department, Prosecutor Mark Miller said.


    Continental man arrested for holdup
    OTTAWA -- A Continental man has been arrested for an armed robbery at an Ottawa tobacco shop.

    Maurice Harsh II, 24, was charged with aggravated robbery, a first-degree felony, for allegedly using a handgun to rob Cut Rate Tobacco, 820 N. Locust St., on Friday.

    A robbery that same day in Defiance may have been committed by the same individual, Assistant Putnam County Prosecutor Todd Schroeder said.

    Harsh is being held on $100,000 bond and requested a court-appointed attorney, Schroeder said.

    Police said the robber in Ottawa escaped with an undetermined amount of money and tobacco items valued at $134.

    Surveillance cameras videotaped the holdup.


    Ottawa man gets 5-year sentence
    OTTAWA -- An Ottawa man was sentenced to five years in prison for stabbing a Columbus Grove resident in the abdomen.

    Joshua A. Morman, 41, was convicted of felonious assault, a second-degree felony, for stabbing Shawn Ward on Nov. 3 in Columbus Grove.

    Ward did not suffer life-threatening injuries, according to police.

    Morman appeared in Putnam County Common Pleas Court and said he mistakenly believed Ward possessed a knife at the time.

    Putnam County Common Pleas Judge Randall Basinger disputed this claim, and cited five other instances of charges being filed against Morman for threats or violence.

    Morman was credited with 194 days served in jail.


    Lima Ave. crash injures motorist
    A rural Findlay resident was hurt in a two-vehicle crash on Lima Avenue at 4:46 p.m. Monday.

    James Kelley, 24, was taken to Blanchard Valley Hospital, which released no information on his condition Tuesday.

    According to the Findlay Police Department, Kelley was driving an Eagle Talon on Byal Avenue when he failed to stop at a stop sign and collided with a vehicle traveling on Lima Avenue.

    Police said Kelley's car hit the side of a trailer being pulled by a Chevy truck driven by Kyle Heitmeyer, 27, of Findlay.

    Kelley was cited for failing to yield from a stop sign and having a suspended license.

    The Findlay Fire Department assisted at the scene.


    Hydrant flushing
    The Findlay Water Distribution Department will be flushing hydrants today from the Blanchard River south to West Hobart Avenue, from South Main Street west to the corporation limit, from West Edgar Avenue south to the corporation limit, and from South Main Street west to Western Avenue.


    'Fun with Fossils' topic of program
    Rikki Youngpeter, a Hancock Park District program assistant, will present a program on "Fun with Fossils" at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Discovery Center in Oakwoods Nature Preserve.

    The program is for children 6 to 9 years old with an adult.

    Registration, with a $3 per child fee, is due by Wednesday at the park district office, 1424 E. Main Cross St.

    For more information, call the park district, 419-425-7275.


    Program planned on lily family
    An open house featuring a program on members of the lily family will be held from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at the Discovery Center in Oakwoods Nature Preserve.

    For more information, call the Hancock Park District office at 419-425-7275.


    Program planned on homeschooling
    "So You Think You Know the Library," a program specifically designed for homeschooling parents, will be held from 6:30-7:30 p.m. May 22 in the Findlay-Hancock County Public Library's Lindamood Room.

    Home-school parents are invited to take an in-depth look at the library's resources.

    Registration is not required.