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Akron man charged with attempted murder of Cuyahoga Falls officer hurt in July chase

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A 46-year-old Akron man has been charged with attempted murder in a July 23 incident in which a Cuyahoga Falls police officer was injured after his car was deliberately rammed following a chase.

Cuyahoga Falls police said Donald R. Watson, 46, on Friday was charged with: attempted murder, a first degree felony; felonious assault of a law enforcement officer, a first degree felony; and fleeing /eluding, a third degree felony.

The information, posted on the Cuyahoga Falls Police Department’s Facebook page, also said police may request additional charges. Watson was taken to Summit County Jail.

Ted Davis, the officer injured after a vehicle intentionally rammed into his cruiser, was released Friday from Summa Akron City Hospital. Davis, an 11-year police veteran, will go through rehabilitation for his injuries but is on the road to recovery, according to police.

Davis had been hospitalized since July 23, when a vehicle hit three parked patrol cars, drove away and then intentionally rammed into Davis’ car.

Police said in late July that the driver also is suspected of setting fire to an unoccupied house in the 100 block of Cutler Parkway in Akron shortly after midnight on July 23. No one was home at the time of the fire.


Thieves targeting Stihl products in numerous Portage County barn, shed break-ins

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Someone apparently likes to steal Stihls.

Brimfield police said that close to 60 sheds and barns have been broken into over the past three months in Suffield and Randolph townships and also in Brimfield.

More than 100 Stihl power equipment products as well as other items have been stolen, according to a post on the Brimfield Police Facebook page. Stihl makes gasoline and electric chainsaws, blowers, trimmers and more.

Police posted pictures of two male suspects, one with a possible leg brace, and a work van taken via a video camera in a barn in Suffield Township. The photos were supplied by the Portage County sheriff’s office.

The photos show a Ford work van with two pipe holders on the left side and ladder rack on right side, police said. The van also has an add-on hitch on the back with an upward curved receiver and a possible stolen ladder tied down as well using rope from the barn.

The video shows that both males limp with their left leg, police said. The driver possibly has a brace on his left leg, the police said.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Portage County Sheriff’s Office at (330) 297-3890. Callers may remain anonymous.

Akron man pleads guilty to murder in bar shooting, is sentenced to 18 years to life in prison

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A 45-year-old Akron man was scheduled to go on trial Monday for a January shooting death at a West Akron bar, but instead pleaded guilty to murder.

Summit County Common Pleas Court Judge Scot Stevenson sentenced Willie S. Hicks IIIto 18 years to life in prison.

Hicks was arrested for shooting Lentheric Caldwell, 39, of Akron, with a shotgun at about 11 p.m. Jan. 7 at the Hi-De-Ho Lounge on Vernon Odom Bouelvard. The two men got into an argument inside the bar that continued outside. Caldwell went back inside, while Hicks stayed outside but returned about 10 minutes later, armed with a shotgun, and shot Caldwell, according to a press release from the Summit County Prosecutor’s Office.

Caldwell was taken to Cleveland Clinic Akron General Medical Center where he died. Several people witnessed the shooting, police said.

Hicks pleaded guilty Monday to murder with a firearm specification and having a weapon under disability. Prosecutors dropped other charges against him, including aggravated murder.

Hicks also pleaded guilty to an unrelated breaking-and-entering charge.

Stevenson sentenced Hicks to 15 years to life for the murder charge and another three years for the firearm specification, the maximum possible term. He also sentenced Hicks to 11 months for the breaking-and-entering charge and 12 months for a probation violation, with these terms to be served concurrent with his 18-year-to-life term.

Hicks was serving a year of probation for felonious assault in the stabbing of his son last year.

Several members of Caldwell’s family spoke at the sentencing, saying Caldwell was a special man and they were devastated by his loss.

Hicks apologized to the family before being sentenced. His attorneys, Jon Sinn and Scott Rilley, said he took full responsibility for the shooting.

Akron detectives investigating 3 robberies possibly committed by same suspects wearing a mask or bandana

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Akron detectives are investigating three robberies last week that they think were committed by the same suspects who wore masks or bandanas to obscure their faces.

The first robbery happened about 3:30 p.m. Friday at B&K Root Beer, 2184 Manchester Road. Employees said the robber entered the restaurant with a handgun and demanded money from the register. The suspect fled with an unreported amount of cash, heading westbound on West Wilbeth Road on foot, according to the Akron Police Department.

Police described the suspect as a black male, 5 foot 7 to 5 foot 10 inches, wearing a mesh Halloween mask over his face and dark clothing and gloves.

The second robbery was at about 9 p.m. Friday at the Dollar General at 994 Brown St. Employees said the robber entered the store with a handgun, jumped over the counter and demanded money. An employee opened the register but there was no money in it. Other employees ran to a back room and locked the door. The suspect fled without getting any money.

Police described the suspect as a black male, 5 foot 10 inches to 6 feet, 150 to 165 pounds, wearing a camouflage mask covering his face, a blue hooded sweatshirt and pants.

The third robbery occurred shortly after 10 p.m. Friday at Mama Rosas Restaurant, 1115 Brown St. Employees said the robber entered the restaurant with a handgun and demanded that employees open the safe. The suspect started counting down from 10 and threatened to shoot the employees if they didn’t open the safe. The suspect took a metal box containing case from the safe and cash from the register and fled out of the rear door.

Police described the robber as a black male, 6 foot 4 to 6 foot 6 inches, wearing a black bandana over his face, a dark colored hooded sweatshirt and gray pants.

Lt. Rick Edwards, the police department’s spokesman, said detectives think the same two to three people are working together and committing these robberies.

Anyone with information about the robberies is asked to call the Akron Police Department’s Detective Bureau at 330-375-2490.

Trump arrives at Akron-Canton Airport, heads to private fundraiser in Stark County

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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump arrived at Akron-Canton Airport in Green around 3 p.m. Monday in advance of his reported 5 p.m. appearance at a private fundraiser in Stark County.

A spokesperson from the Stark County Republican Party headquarters confirmed Trump is in Northeast Ohio for a fundraiser at the Brookside Country Club in Perry Township.

The spokesperson said the event is not being handled by the local campaign, but by the Republican National Party and Trump’s campaign people.

The Canton Repository reported that a flier sent to potential contributors said that the hosts of the event are Jane and Tim Timken.

Tim Timken is chairman, chief executive officer and president of TimkenSteel, headquartered in Canton and one of the region’s largest manufacturing employers. Timken family members have long been supporters of Republican political candidates.

Two Akron police officers on leave after separate traffic incidents

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Two veteran Akron police officers are on leave after separate traffic incidents.

One is accused of having a firearm in her vehicle while under the influence of alcohol.

The other was in a crash with his wife in which both were injured, her seriously. The crash remains under investigation and no charges have been filed.

In the first incident, Lt. Kris Beitzel, the department’s 2015 Officer of the Year, was pulled over by a trooper with the Ravenna post of the state Highway Patrol on July 10. She was charged with improperly handling a firearm in a motor vehicle, a fifth-degree felony, and two counts of operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a first-degree misdemeanor.

The felony charge is particularly serious because Beitzel faces the loss of her job if convicted and unable to carry a firearm.

Beitzel has pleaded not guilty in Portage County Common Pleas Court, where a trial is scheduled Nov. 22 before Judge Laurie Pittman. She is currently on unpaid administrative leave, said Lt. Rick Edwards, a police spokesman.

In the second incident, Sgt. Vince Yurick was driving his 2008 Ford Mustang GT in the 2100 block of Canterbury Circle in the Coventry Crossing housing development about 9 p.m. Sunday when he lost control and struck a tree. He and his wife were transported to Summa Akron City Hospital where he was listed in stable condition and she was in critical condition as of Monday evening, according to a press release from the police department.

Yurick, a 19-year veteran of the department currently assigned to the Intelligence Unit, is on administrative leave with pay during the investigation. He was promoted to sergeant in 2008.

Edwards declined to say whether alcohol was a factor in the crash.

Coventry Crossing, where the accident happened, is a popular residential development for police, firefighters and other government employees, earning it the nickname “Copland.”

Beitzel, promoted to lieutenant last December, was honored in June 2015 as the Philip G. Barnes “Officer of the Year” at the Optimist International luncheon. She was nominated by her peers, who noted how she led the charge to change the city of Akron’s animal cruelty ordinance. She also was named “Top Cop” in 2011 by the Summit County Prosecutor’s Office.

“Kris has been a dedicated public servant for over 21 years with the Akron Police Department,” said Brian Pierce, Beitzel’s attorney. “Kris has an unblemished record. We are actively addressing these allegations and working toward a resolution.”

Frank Williams, the Akron police union president, said Yurick’s colleagues are concerned about the well being of him and his wife.

“It’s just unfortunate that anyone was injured,” Williams said.

Williams said both Yurick and Beitzel are great officers in “unfortunate circumstances.”

“I am confident the investigations will show they are good officers and that situations happen,” Williams said.

The Akron police union contract has a progressive disciplinary system in which officers are disciplined more severely on repeat offenses and depending on the seriousness of the offense.

Stephanie Warsmith can be reached at 330-996-3705 or swarsmith@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow on Twitter: @swarsmithabj and on Facebook: www.facebook.com/swarsmith.

Get ready to jam in traffic -- ODOT to start massive Akron highway project Tuesday morning

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Car-mageddon officially begins Tuesday morning — just in time for rush hour.

The Ohio Department of Transportation will close several ramps and lanes starting at 6 a.m. at the Central Interchange — the confluence of state Route 8 and interstates 76 and 77 in Akron.

The closures are expected to remain in place into late November, affecting more than 100,000 highway motorists who will be forced onto detours or stuck in traffic jams.

The state agency had planned to start the much-anticipated highway project more than a week ago, but delayed it at the last minute, saying there wasn’t enough signage in place.

That problem has been taken care of so the closures are moving forward as quickly as possible, ODOT spokesman Justin Chesnic said Monday.

Here’s a rundown of the closures starting Tuesday:

• I-76 between Grant Street and Inman Street will be reduced to two lanes in each direction.

• The ramp from I-77 northbound to I-76 westbound will be closed.

• The ramp from Route 8 southbound to I-77 northbound/I-76 westbound will be closed.

Then on Wednesday, ODOT will close the ramp from I-76 eastbound to I-77 southbound for a bridge removal project.

The state agency will urge motorists to use Interstate 277/U.S. Route 224 as a detour.

The work is part of a $15.6 million project to remove three bridges on I-76/I-77 over Johnston Street.

The entire project is scheduled to be completed by late July 2017.

Rick Armon can be reached at 330-996-3569 or rarmon@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow him on Twitter at @armonrickABJ.

Organization from Massachusetts plans heroin candlelight vigil in Akron

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AKRON: Heroin is Killing My Town, a grassroots effort dedicated to fighting the heroin epidemic, will hold a call-to-action and candlelight vigil at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Lock 3.

Billy Pfaff, the founder of the Pinehurst, Mass.-based coalition, encourages attendees to wear purple and bring photographs of people they’ve lost to heroin during the vigil.

Pfaff’s goals are to open up more hospital beds for emergency detox, get Akron police to carry Narcan and increase the size of the drug unit and convince Ohio governor John Kasich to declare a state of emergency.

Pfaff started a petition to declare a state of emergency, hoping the city will be able to receive federal funding for the large amount of deaths in the state.

Eight hundred people on the event’s Facebook page said they would attend, while another 1,400 said they were interested.

“Ohio is deadly right now,” Pfaff said. “We need to work together, not work against each other.”

For more about the organization, visit https://www.facebook.com/heroiniskillingmytown/home.


Service details for late judge

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MASSILLON: The funeral service for retired federal Judge David Dudley Dowd Jr. will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 20 at Central Presbyterian Church in Massillon.

Judge Dowd, 87, died Thursday. He retired in 2014 after 32 years on the federal bench in Akron.

To honor the judge, his family has established a memorial fund at the University of Akron law school. Donations may be made online at uakron.edu/giving (designate to Dowd Memorial) or by mail to the University of Akron, Department of Development, Akron, OH 44325-2603.

Launch cable detaches from Cedar Point’s Top Thrill Dragster, two riders slightly injured

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The launch cable detached on Cedar Point’s Top Thrill Dragster just before closing time Sunday night, injuring two riders.

The park closed the ride Monday so crews could make the necessary repairs and look into what caused the cable to detach.

Cedar Point spokesman Tony Clark said two passengers on the coaster train — which resembles a drag racing car — were taken to the park’s medical center as a precaution. They were treated and released.

“As always, the safety of our guests and associates is our No. 1 priority,” Clark said.

He said the attraction is expected to reopen Tuesday.

The coaster launches from zero to 120 miles per hour in less than four seconds.

Riders are then whisked up and over a 420-foot-tall hill in less than 17 seconds.

Termed an “aggressive” thrill ride by Cedar Point, the Top Thrill Dragster built by Intamin opened to much fanfare in 2003.

When it opened it was the “tallest” and “fastest” roller coaster in the world, but the record was swiped when the Kingda Ka at Six Flags Great Adventure opened two years later in Jackson, N.J.

The first couple seasons were rough for the Dragster as it was often closed while the park and the manufacturer worked on issues with the ride’s hydraulic launch system.

Beacon Journal staff writer Craig Webb can be reached at cwebb@thebeaconjournal.com or 330-996-3547.

Area deaths — compiled Aug. 8

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MEDINA

Gerlak, Kathleen E., 73, of Medina. Died Saturday. Waite & Son.

Shade, Elmer J., 97, of Medina. Died Monday. Waite & Son.

PORTAGE

Atwood, Dreda M., 79, of Mantua. Died Saturday. Green.

Greenwood, Scherrie Lou, 70, of Ravenna. Died Saturday. Wood-Kortright-Borkoski.

James, Amanda D., 32, of Garrettsville. Died Friday. Green, Mantua.

Recznik, Delores J. “Dee,” 87, of Kent. Died Thursday. Bissler & Sons.

Strasshofer, Sylvia, 59, of Streetsboro. Died Friday. Bissler & Sons, Kent.

Williamson, Patricia A., 76, of Kent. Died Thursday. Bissler & Sons.

Zielinski, Daniel J., 21, of Sharlersville-Mantua. Died Thursday. Green.

STARK

Consolidani, Barbara, 92, of Massillon. Died Friday. Paquelet.

Gerardot, Terry A., 63, of North Canton. Died Thursday, Shriver, Canton.

Long, Florence C. (Fairweather), 93, of Jackson Township. Died Saturday. Paquelet, Massillon.

McElroy, Elizabeth W., 89, of Massillon. Died Friday. Paquelet.

OTHER

Dennis, Wayne L., 77, of New London, formerly of Spencer. Died Thursday. Parker & Son.

Hospice patient gets red-carpet treatment at private screening

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Jackson Twp.: Joan Tovissi has spent a lifetime admiring the performers on the movie screen.

Monday, she got to be the star.

Tovissi, who will turn 86 on Saturday, was the guest of honor at a private screening of Singin’ in the Rain at Cinemark Movies 10, thanks to Crossroads Hospice’s Gift of a Day program. It’s a little like Make-a-Wish, but for patients of the hospice service.

Cinemark employees and hospice workers literally rolled out the red carpet for Tovissi, who was joined by a cadre of family members and friends. The hosts served popcorn along with Coke and Sno-Caps, Tovissi’s favorites. They provided a birthday cake, and Cinemark employee Colleen Geabler crafted decorations to fit the movie’s theme. Singer Jason Copen donned a yellow slicker and serenaded the guest of honor with the movie’s theme song as she was wheeled into the theater.

Lorayne Scheetz, a registered nurse who until recently was Tovissi’s case manager, leaned in close to her friend as the group waited for the movie to begin.

“Were you surprised, or what?” Scheetz asked.

“Or what,” Tovissi replied brightly.

Tovissi has dementia and lives at Allay Senior Care in Canton, so she can’t get out much anymore. But movies and particularly musicals were always a favorite pastime, said her son, the Rev. Craig Tovissi.

So when a hospice representative asked how she’d like to celebrate her Gift of a Day, she replied that she’d like to go to a show — or ride in a hot air balloon.

“I told the lady at hospice, you can take her on a hot air balloon, but I’m not going,” Craig Tovissi said.

So a show it was.

Tovissi looked pleased and a little puzzled as a dozen or so relatives, a couple of friends from her card club and a handful of hospice employees greeted her with applause as her wheelchair was rolled up a red carpet into the Cinemark lobby.

Little Josie Dibell waited eagerly at the door, a green gift bag hidden behind her back. “I have a surprise for you,” she announced as her great-grandmother approached.

Josie stayed close to Tovissi as the crowd clustered around. The two exchanged quiet words, and at one point Tovissi reached out to gently tuck a strand of blond hair behind the child’s ear.

The affection among the family members was apparent. Granddaughter Cara Tovissi passed up a comfortable theater seat to settle herself on a step next to her grandmother’s wheelchair, where the two shared a bag of popcorn.

Craig Tovissi said creating a strong family life was a priority for his mother, who didn’t have that growing up. The child of alcoholics, her parents divorced when she was young, and her mother married a man who also drank.

“She made choices that she wasn’t going to live that lifestyle,” Craig Tovissi said.

Joan Tovissi and her late husband, Joe, lived in Magnolia, where they raised three boys — Craig, Scott and Mark, who died in a crane accident three years ago at the Timken Co.’s Faircrest Steel Plant. She didn’t get her driver’s license until she was in her 40s, because she was intimidated by the parallel parking that was required at the time, Craig Tovissi said.

“She was a great mom,” he said. “We had everything we needed but not everything we wanted.”

Monday, it was his mother’s turn to get something she wanted.

Everyone in the theater needed that.

Mary Beth Breckenridge can be reached at 330-996-3756 or mbrecken@thebeaconjournal.com. You can also become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/MBBreckABJ, follow her on Twitter @MBBreckABJ and read her blog at www.ohio.com/blogs/mary-beth.

Regional news briefs — Aug. 9

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AKRON

800 to attend heroin vigil

AKRON: Heroin Is Killing My Town, a grass-roots group dedicated to fighting the heroin epidemic, is holding a call to action and candlelight vigil at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Lock 3.

Billy Pfaff, the founder of the Pinehurst, Mass.-based coalition, encourages attendees to wear purple and bring photographs of people they’ve lost to heroin during the candlelight vigil at the park at 200 S. Main St.

Pfaff’s goals are to open up more hospital beds for emergency detox; get Akron police to carry Narcan, which treats opioid overdoses, and increase the size of the drug unit; and convince Ohio Gov. John Kasich to declare a state of emergency.

Pfaff started a petition to declare a state of emergency, hoping Akron will be able to receive federal funding for the high number of deaths in the state.

Eight hundred people on Facebook said they would attend. Find more info at https://www.facebook.com/heroiniskillingmytown/home.

Shooting, break-in reported

AKRON: Police are investigating a break-in and shooting at a home in the 600 block of East Buchtel Avenue that happened just before midnight Saturday.

A 20-year-old woman told police an unknown suspect entered a rear sliding glass door, shot her in the leg and fled. She was transported to Cleveland Clinic Akron General Hospital with injuries that were not life-threatening, according to the Police Department’s daily report. Police did not have a description of the suspect. Anyone with information is asked to call 330-375-2490.

SUMMIT COUNTY

Meeting explains adoption

CUYAHOGA FALLS: Summit County Children Services is sponsoring a free foster care and adoption information meeting at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Cuyahoga Falls Library, 2015 Third St.

The meeting will inform attendees about foster care and adoption, including what and how long the process is, what kind of support the agency provides and the costs involved with adopting. Agency staff will be available to share basic information about children coming into care.

For information, call 330-379-1990.

Sheriff’s personnel honored

AKRON: Summit County Council on Monday honored sheriff’s personnel who assisted with security at last month’s Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

Councilman John Schmidt, who presented a commendation to the workers, noted that there were no serious problems at the event.

“We’re just happy to have people come here to Northeast Ohio and spend money,” he said with a laugh.

About 30 sheriff’s personnel helped with the convention.

BATH TOWNSHIP

Revere eyes tax cut for firm

BATH TWP.: The Revere Board of Education will meet at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday in a special meeting to consider a proposed Tax Increment Financing agreement between National Interstate Insurance and Richfield Village.

The meeting will be in the board room at the Revere Administration Building, 3496 Everett Road.

Police: Mower driver drunk

MASSILLON: It is possible to be arrested for drunken driving with a lawn mower, Massillon police say.

Case in point: Massillon police arrested a man Friday night and charged him with drunken driving on a riding lawn mower.

The man, who was not identified, was arrested near Walnut Road and Duncan Street SW, east of the Tuscarawas River, after police received a complaint at 9:21 p.m. of a traffic hazard there.

Police said they found the man on a mower in the left turn lane of Walnut and Duncan. The man showed “numerous clues of impairment” and was arrested, they said. Tests showed his blood alcohol content was 0.294, over three times the legal limit, police said.

Police said this was the man’s sixth OVI arrest since 1991.

Ohio law says people are prohibited from operating any vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, Massillon police said.

Cuyahoga Falls beekeeper in middle of neighborhood dispute says someone tried to kill his hives

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CUYAHOGA FALLS: A 17th Street neighborhood feud over a beekeeper’s backyard hobby may have escalated this weekend, with someone attempting to destroy one of the hives.

Saturday morning, the Gallagher family noticed hundreds of dead honeybees at the bottom of one of their colonies that smelled of insect killer spray.

A police report was filed and tiny carcasses have been frozen so they can be tested for toxins by the Ohio Department of Agriculture, but the latest incident spotlights a debate that surfaced before City Council this summer when several of the Gallaghers’ neighbors complained.

The city’s zoning code only allows beekeeping on lots zoned rural residential or in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Planning Director Fred Guerra said. The Gallaghers live in a high-density residential neighborhood, where standard lots average less than a quarter of an acre.

Still, bee fans appear to have won over city officials, who are poised to pass legislation that would make “urban beekeeping” legal with the help of some neighbor-friendly guidelines. A Sept. 6 meeting has been scheduled so the public can hear the recommendations of Guerra’s staff and offer feedback.

But it appears someone didn’t want to wait.

“My dad is the nicest person ever,” daughter Julie Root said, and having his hives vandalized “breaks his heart.”

Beekeeper falls ill

The 17th Street beekeeeper, Bob Gallagher, was hospitalized after the incident on Saturday, complaining of dizziness. Root, a nurse, said it may just be a coincidence and she isn’t ready to link the two incidents together.

In his absence Monday, Root, her mother, Teresa Gallagher, and Mary Sobczak of the Summit County Beekeepers Association showed off her father’s hives and talked about his relatively new passion for beekeeping, which has been keeping friends and family in fresh honey for the past five years.

Teresa Gallagher said her husband’s interest started after they planted pumpkins for the grandchildren one year, only to have none of the plants bear fruit. They were told that no honeybees had pollinated the plants, which inspired them to read more about the mysterious mass die-off of honeybees across the country and its effect on crops.

Scientists have blamed “colony collapse disorder” on commercial pesticides, and a federal report in 2014 said the United States had lost more than half of the honeybee population — significant because honeybees pollinate about $15 billion worth of agricultural products every year.

In 2011, the retired Gallagher attended classes held by the Summit County Beekeepers Association and bought his first hive. The bees and their all-important queen were shipped from California and he learned how to care for them and collect their honey.

He later added two more colonies, each ranging from 20,000 bees to upwards of 100,000 during the peak part of the season.

Last year, Gallagher went out to tend his hives — made of stackable boxes — and found one of the stacks toppled to the ground. Some suspected a human hand had done the deed; family members said Gallagher didn’t want to believe the worst and argued it might have been unbalanced on wet ground.

Still, Gallagher moved the location of the hives from behind his garage to the side where he could keep a better eye on them.

Sobczak, a longtime Peninsula beekeeper, helped him move the boxes then. She was also on site as soon as he found the dead bees on Saturday.

“I leaned down there to take a video and I said, ‘Bob, it smells like Raid,’ ’’ Sobczak said.

Neighbors are split

Should city dwellers be allowed to keep bees?

Neighbors fall on both sides of the debate.

Next door to the Gallaghers, one family says the bees have been a pain.

Duane Wiegand said he’s been stung five times, once directly between the eyes. His wife also has been stung.

Wiegand said Gallagher informed him when he got his first hive and he wasn’t concerned.

“We said fine,” he said. “We’re not against bees.”

But Gallagher kept adding to his hives, he said, and now there are days “we have been chased out of our yard into the house.

“I have a bird feeder out back and a birdbath there, and there are times I can’t put water in the birdbath because there are too many bees and I’m afraid of getting stung again,” he said.

On the opposite side of the Gallaghers, Teresa Fullerton said the bees have never bothered her.

“We’re out here constantly and it’s never been an issue,” said Fullerton, whose deck is about 40 feet from the hives. On Monday, her driveway was spotted with a few dozen dead bees and a handful that were crawling, unable to fly.

She said having the bees next door has been a fun learning experience.

“Bob has really educated us on the whole honeybee situation,” she said. “It’s sad that people don’t understand how valuable they are to our overall health and well-being.”

Fullerton’s 6-year-old granddaughter, Bella Bird, talked excitedly about hanging out with Gallagher as he tended his hives.

“The bees never stung us. They come on our flowers and they make ’em grow,” Bella said. “The bees actually like us because we don’t kill them.”

Living next to the Fullertons, Kathy Velo is also in the pro-bee camp. She even leaves plates of water out to support them, a picture on her cellphone showing several honeybees enjoying one of her watering stations.

Councilman Russ Iona, whose City Council planning committee has been discussing the issue, said he’s allergic to bees, but he did his due diligence by visiting a beekeeping operation in preparation for next month’s hearing.

He said he didn’t find them to be a nuisance, and is in favor of finding a way for homeowners to keep a limited number of hives.

As it stands, the city’s planning department is recommending that standard city lots be allowed two hives, with some fencing and a water source to encourage the bees to stay close to home.

The legislation will be discussed at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 6, at City Council chambers in the Natatorium, 2345 Fourth St.

Paula Schleis can be reached at 330-996-3741 or pschleis@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/paulaschleis.

Rush-hour detours start at Akron’s central interchange

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Car-maggedon has arrived in Akron.

Maybe that should be No-maggedon, based on rush hour this morning even as traffic volumes build up.

As of 9 a.m. Tuesday, traffic was flowing fairly smoothly, based on cameras monitoring city roadways.

The Ohio Department of Transportation, or ODOT, has been reporting primarily temporary minor speed alerts and slowdowns here and there on the major highways in and around Akron even as car and truck traffic increases.

There was one traffic incident reported after 8 a.m. on state Route 8 near Perkins Street that slowed traffic. An ODOT camera showed a car off the side of the southbound lane of the Route 8 bridge, with backed-up traffic able to move around. The disabled vehicle temporarily closed the right lane. As of 8:45 a.m. the scene was clear and traffic was flowing smoothly.

Starting early this morning, several ramps and lanes were closed at the highly traveled central interchange — the confluence of state Route 8 and interstates 76 and 77 in Akron.

The closures will force about 100,000 motorists who regularly use the interchange to take detours. The closures should remain in place into late November.

ODOT originally planned to start the highway project more than a week ago. But work was delayed at the last minute, with ODOT saying there wasn’t enough signage in place.

Here’s a rundown of the closures:

• I-76 between Grant Street and Inman Street is reduced to two lanes in each direction.

• The ramp from I-77 northbound to I-76 westbound is closed.

• The ramp from Route 8 southbound to I-77 northbound/I-76 westbound is closed.

On Wednesday, ODOT will close the ramp from I-76 eastbound to I-77 southbound for a bridge removal project.

The state agency is urging motorists to use Interstate 277/U.S. Route 224 as a detour.

The work is part of a $15.6 million project to remove three bridges on I-76/I-77 over Johnston Street. The entire project is scheduled to be completed by late July 2017.


Historic Green schoolhouse gutted in arson as vandals strike park sites

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Arson gutted the historic one-room Lichtenwalter Schoolhouse at Boettler Park in Green early Tuesday morning, authorities said.

The Green Fire Department was called to the restored school at 4:51 a.m. and was on the site of the fully engulfed building three minutes later. Firefighters from Jackson Township and Greentown Fire Department aided the department in extinguishing the fire.

The State Fire Marshal ruled the fire an arson, the city said.

“We’re deeply saddened by the loss of historic property,” said Green city spokeswoman Valerie Wolford.

Other parts of Boettler Park and Ariss Park, 2520 Wise Road, were also found vandalized.

The Ohio Blue Ribbon Arson Committee is offering a reward of up to $5,000 for any tips leading to an arrest.

“We’re hoping someone has information and will come forward,” Wolford said.

There are security cameras at Boettler Park that likely will be reviewed by law enforcement, Wolford said.

Wolford said it is too soon to determine what will happen to the charred remains of the schoolhouse at 5300 Massillon Road.

The brick building, first known as the Shaffer Schoolhouse, was built in 1885. The one-room building with only one door and 10 windows hosted hundreds of students from Green and Jackson townships until it closed in 1912.

It was originally located on Robert Boettler’s property near what is now the Akron-Canton Airport, and it was moved to its current location in the 1960s.

In 2000, the building became Green’s first historical landmark, and the city began its restoration in 2001.

Since 2004, the schoolhouse has hosted Green Public Schools third-grade field trips to simulate what class was like in 1885.

Carol Baltrinic, a retired Green elementary teacher, has worked with the building nearly two decades. She was on the Historic Preservation Committee when the building was designated historical, and she was one of the teachers who wrote the school’s curriculum in 2004.

“What a shame,” Baltrinic said. “It really makes you feel sort of sick when you work with something for so long and in one day, it’s almost gone.”

Baltrinic said donated objects were on display in the building, like an old carpet beater and clothing from the 1800s, and they were kept in a vintage showcase.

Other damages include breaking and entering into restrooms and vandalism of Heritage Hill playground at Boettler Park, along with a vandalized concession stand at Ariss Park.

Greg Mazzagatti, the president of Green Youth Football who runs the concession stand, estimated the damages exceed $1,000. He said the vandals pried the metal window open, destroyed one of the hot dog warmers and stole all the candy and several cases of soft drinks.

“I was shocked,” Mazzagatti said. “We’ve never had these kind of problems in Green.”

Mazzagatti said the damage to the schoolhouse, though, was far worse.

Boettler Park was closed Tuesday and will reopen at 8 a.m. Wednesday. Mazzagatti said he hopes to have the concession stand open on Wednesday, but at the latest, it will be open Thursday.

Anyone with tips should call the Summit County Sheriff’s Department at 330-643-2181 or Green Fire investigations at 330-896-1811.

Summit County earns high credit ratings for upcoming bond issue

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Summit County has received high marks and a stable outlook from two credit rating agencies for an upcoming bond issue.

Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service last week affirmed their Aa1 and AA+ ratings, respectively, the county announced Tuesday.

The county anticipates issuing about $34 million in general obligation bonds this fall.

A portion will be used to repay outstanding bond at a lower interest rate. The bond issue also will pay to upgrade the regional emergency radio system, pay for elevator improvements and the county office building in downtown Akron and purchase, renovate and furnish a new early voting center for the Board of Elections.

“These ratings are excellent news and reflect positively on the county’s strong fiscal management and pro-active approach to budgeting,” interim County Executive Ilene Shapiro said in a prepared statement.

Ratings help investors analyze risks when buying bonds that pay for projects. Any drop could result in a higher interest rate.

Memorial set for husband of Lake Township woman hurt by thrown rock

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MASSILLON: A memorial service for the husband of a Lake Township woman severely injured when a 5-pound rock was thrown from a Pennsylvania overpass onto her car has been scheduled for Friday at a funeral home in Stark County.

Authorities say 55-year-old Randy Budd died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his Uniontown home Saturday.

His wife, Sharon Budd, underwent numerous surgeries for her injuries from two years ago. She remains impaired and needs help with daily tasks.

Four men were convicted and sentenced to prison in the case, which attracted national attention.

Pennlive.com reports the Union County prosecutor in Pennsylvania says the men bear responsibility for Randy Budd’s death.

Paquelet Funeral Home in Massillon is handling the service.

Ilene Shapiro likely a shoo-in for Democratic appointment as Summit County executive

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Ilene Shapiro likely will face no opposition Thursday when the Summit County Democratic Party gathers to appoint a new county executive.

Shapiro, the president of County Council, has been serving as interim county executive since Russ Pry died last week.

The party’s central committee is expected to appoint her to fill the remainder of his term this year and take his place on the November ballot.

Several Democrats said they are unaware of anyone who will challenge her for the appointment and a spot on the ballot.

“We haven’t been informed of anyone who is interested in it at this time,” Democratic Party Chair Jeff Fusco said.

The central committee will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at North High School, 985 Gorge Blvd., Akron, to make its selection.

Despite the lack of opposition, the party is encouraging members to attend the meeting.

By law, a majority is needed to nominate a candidate in the general election, meaning 144 members of the current 287 must vote.

If Shapiro, 69, of Akron, a former senior vice president of sales with FirstMerit Corp. and director of strategic alliances at the Summa Foundation, receives the nod, she would face Republican Bill Roemer in November for a four-year term.

Roemer, 59, of Richfield, a retired Ameritech sales director and certified public accountant, previously served a four-year term on County Council.

Assuming Shapiro wins the party nomination Thursday, the Democratic Party will gather again at North High at 7 p.m. Aug. 17 to select someone to replace her on the council and to run in the fall to complete the remaining two years of her at-large council term.

Several Democrats confirmed Tuesday that they are interested in seeking her council post, including:

• Current District 1 Councilman Nick Kostandaras, who lost a primary race earlier this year.

• Nolan James, director of admissions at the University of Akron School of Law who lost a primary this year against Councilman Tim Crawford.

• Former Ohio Ninth District Court of Appeals Judge Clair Dickinson, who previously served two stints on the council.

• Local attorney and Cuyahoga Falls Mayor’s Court magistrate Lisa Dean.

It’s unclear who’s interested on the Republican side.

Summit County Republican Party Executive Committee Chair Bryan Williams couldn’t be reached for comment.

The Democratic and Republican candidates will have a short window to campaign for the position.

Rick Armon can be reached at 330-996-3569 or rarmon@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow him on Twitter at @armonrickABJ.

Sentencing of Akron mom for scalding of daughter delayed until Aug. 23

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The sentencing of an Akron mom who previously pleaded guilty in the scalding of her 2½-year-old daughter was delayed Tuesday until later this month.

Walter Madison, Monique Smith’s defense attorney, requested the postponement to allow him time to get additional records from Summit County Juvenile Court.

“There is a presumption of incarceration that we are looking to rebut,” Madison said.

Summit County Common Pleas Court Judge Amy Corrigall Jones set the new sentencing for 1 p.m. Aug. 23.

Smith, 26, pleaded guilty May 25 to felonious assault and child endangering, both second-degree felonies. Prosecutors agreed to merge the two offenses, meaning she will only be sentenced on one. Both carry a potential penalty of two to eight years in prison.

Prosecutors say Smith’s daughter was treated July 11, 2015, for first- and second-degree burns to her buttocks and feet. She remained in the hospital for about a week.

Investigators determined the girl’s burns were consistent with being held down in scalding hot water, according to James Pollack, a spokesman for the Summit County Prosecutor’s Office.

Stephanie Warsmith can be reached at 330-996-3705 or swarsmith@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow on Twitter: @swarsmithabj and on Facebook: www.facebook.com/swarsmith.

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