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Niles real estate company planning for industrial park at former General Electric plant
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Oldest house in Howland Township to be relocated
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WARREN A Liberty condominium group of 41 lot owners within the Kline’s Farm development has sued the community development group, its real estate agency and others, alleging violation of community rules.
Members of Kline’s Cove and its condominium association filed a lawsuit in late January in Trumbull County Common Pleas Court against Kline’s Farm Community Inc., Altobelli Real Estate, Home and Land Developers, Kline’s Farm Master Association and BrodMor Inc. property management group.
The owner of Altobelli Real Estate, however, said the lawsuit comes down to difficulties with one individual in the condo group.
A check of the Trumbull County Auditor’s Office website shows that single-dwelling properties in the development are valued in the $240,000 to $280,000 range. The condos at Kline’s Cove are rental properties, with leases going for $1,200 per month.
bcoupland@tribtoday.com
HOWLAND Township residents who are getting electric service from Niles have informed trustees they want to switch providers.
Trustee Vice Chairman James LaPolla said at Wednesday’s meeting he conducted an online survey of residents who have Niles electric service and asked them to submit their bills. Their electric bills were compared to bills from what other Howland residents get for electric service from Ohio Edison.
The survey garnered 73 responses. Bills on average were $140 per month for Niles electric usage during winter time at 11.28 cents per kilowatt hours with a fuel cost adjustment of 0.6 cents per kilowatt hour, and every household has a surcharge of $4.30.
rfox@tribtoday.com
WARREN Trumbull County commissioners are changing the way sanitary sewer projects are filtered through the county bureaucracy in an effort to make the process more transparent.
Commissioners said they do not want private developers meeting in closed-door sessions with county employees to pitch their ideas but want them to go through an official process.
Instead of meeting privately with county employees, the county commissioners decided all developers should present their plans first in an open meeting of the Trumbull County Planning Commission to first see if the development is in line with county plans and regulations.
The idea was presented to the planning commission Tuesday and accepted by director Julie Green, who said she would be happy to implement the process with the sanitary engineer’s office.
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