Flatcats, selling a wide array of candle holders, trinket boxes and other home decor embellished with cat silhouettes, opened a few months ago at the Palmer Park Mall. The business features the original handpainted works of Forks Township artist Shirley Shaffer.
Wake Forest is undergoing a technological renaissance that is spurring on next-generation connectivity and entrepreneurial opportunity. As the community welcomes the presence of TING Internet and begins to construct its own progressive, fiber-optic loop, the town’s fiber infrastructure is about to become a lot more robust and much more accessible.
Wake Forest is set on developing an infrastructure that is conducive to local innovation and enhanced quality of life for its entrepreneurs and residents. The Town boasts an in-the-works. more than 25-mile Town-operated fiber network, several hundreds of miles of private fiber laid by CenturyLink, AT&T and Spectrum, and the emergence of TING fiber.
Resurfacing on North River Road in Trumbull Co beginning Tuesday wfmj.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wfmj.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
bcoupland@tribtoday.com
HUBBARD The replacement of a bridge that was built during Franklin Roosevelt’s presidency was dedicated Monday after the work was done last summer and fall.
Representatives of Hubbard city, Eastgate Regional Council of Governments and the Trumbull County Engineer’s Office took part in the ribbon cutting and dedication at the new bridge.
Mayor Ben Kyle said the nearly $1 million bridge work was an Ohio Department of Transportation project through the county engineer’s office with no cost to the city.
Construction costs were covered 80 percent from surface transportation block grant funding through Eastgate Regional Council of Governments and ODOT provided 20 percent.
HUBBARD The replacement of a bridge that was built during Franklin Roosevelt’s presidency was dedicated Monday after the work was done last summer and fall.
Representatives of Hubbard city, Eastgate Regional Council of Governments and the Trumbull County Engineer’s Office took part in the ribbon cutting and dedication at the new bridge.
Mayor Ben Kyle said the nearly $1 million bridge work was an Ohio Department of Transportation project through the county engineer’s office with no cost to the city.
Construction costs were covered 80 percent from surface transportation block grant funding through Eastgate Regional Council of Governments and ODOT provided 20 percent.