News Briefs Firefighters discover 20 marijuana plants in house
After fighting a house fire early Monday at 815 Howard St., firefighters found 20 marijuana plants in the residence.
"They ran across it and called us," said police Sgt. Justin Hendren with the Hancock County METRICH Drug Enforcement Unit.
Police seized all 20 plants, and Hendren said charges are pending.
High-powered growing lights, fans, and a box filled with dried marijuana were also found in the house, according to a police report.
Investigators said an electrical short started the fire before 3 a.m. Monday.
The blaze caused an estimated $12,000 in damage to the residence, owned by Amanda Crawford. No one was injured, according to the Findlay Fire Department.
Carey announces holiday closing
CAREY -- Carey offices, including administrative, income tax and utilities, electric, wastewater treatment plant, and public works, will be closed Monday in observance of Labor Day.
The curbside recycling program will be held Tuesday through Thursday, Sept. 7-9.
Findlay trooper named sergeant
Trooper Jacob L. Fletcher, assigned to the Findlay post of the State Highway Patrol, was promoted to sergeant Wednesday by Patrol Superintendent Col. David Dicken.
With the promotion, Fletcher will stay at the Findlay post and serve as an assistant post commander, according to the patrol.
Fletcher began his patrol career in 2002 after graduating from the 139th Academy class and has been assigned to the Findlay post since.
Owens announces holiday schedule
The Toledo and Findlay campuses of Owens Community College will be closed Saturday through Monday for the Labor Day holiday.
There will be no classes and the college offices will be closed.
Classes will resume and offices will open again on Tuesday.
Holiday changes ad deadlines
The Courier won't be published on Monday, in observance of the Labor Day holiday.
Because of the holiday, some advertising deadlines have been moved up this week:
Black and white display advertising for Tuesday's newspaper must be placed by noon Friday. Display advertising for Wednesday's newspaper must be placed by 2:30 p.m. Friday.
Color display advertising for the Thursday, Sept. 9 newspaper must be placed by Friday.
Classified advertising and City and Country advertising for Saturday's newspaper must be placed by 2 p.m. Friday. Classified ads for Tuesday's newspaper must be placed by 2:30 p.m. Friday.
Courier business and advertising offices will close at 3 p.m. Friday for the holiday.
18 Comments (2 pages)
Latest comments listed first.For $3M in public funds there has to be financial accountability.
Who knows, maybe the ex-mayor is earning a better living now that he is apart of a public bureaucracy the does not have to demonstrate any improvements.
Simply because an organization received grant money, does not mean they must open up ALL of their books. They must account for how that grant was spent, but that is all they need to account for."
If you are a business this may be true. But if you are a private non-profit, and the Flood Mitigation Partnership says they are on this Fact Sheet from their website, then the non-profit rules from the IRS apply and they do have to 'open their books' so to speak.
http://floodpartnership.org/media/Fast_Facts.pdf
Most of the charities in this town are private non-profits. They do not have to disclose details about who donated what but they do have to make their tax filings available to the public. Those tax filings cover all their income; grants and private gifts.
They don't have to allow people to read through their checkbook register but they do have to give out their tax filings.
And since Scott Malaney gets paid abot $700,000 a year to run the county's largest non-profit he surely knows that.
Why they are acting likes its a mystery that needs to be checked out by a lawyer is what puzzles me.
Simply because an organization received grant money, does not mean they must open up ALL of their books. They must account for how that grant was spent, but that is all they need to account for.
For example, there are numerous small businesses in our community that received small business grant money for the state or federal government. It is ridiculous to assume they must now turn over ALL of their books because they received some assistance.
Finally, anyone tying this story to any of the three tax proposals on Nov.'s ballot is way off base. There is NO connection between how the partnership spends its grant and how our County, City or Schools operate. They are completely separate entities and an attempt to bind the two is simply dishonest.
Did these companies need to do this? No, they chose to. I personally think they should be applauded for their efforts.
The 3 million in public money will have to be tranparent, they will need to show how it was spent. The 11 companies can spend their money however they see fit, their is a Board of Directors that oversee this. If they think Mr. Iriti should be paid 1.1 million dollars a year, that is their business. The Citizens have a right to know how the 3 million is spent.
The companies and Mr. Iriti are trying to help the region for the benefit of the Citizens and their own companies.
Why is it when people try to help there are always those who blindly attack it.