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From staff reports
The Bexley Community Improvement Corporation (CIC), the city of Bexley’s nonprofit development entity, and The Community Builders (TCB) announced Dec. 21 plans to create mixed-use housing developments with new housing opportunities in Bexley.
The proposed residential and commercial development is anticipated to include three-story buildings at 420 N. Cassady Ave. and 2300 E. Livingston Ave. The two new buildings will add 43 residential apartments, ranging in size from one to three bedrooms. Anticipated rents will accommodate households with a wide range of incomes, with programs to help residents achieve individual and community success goals, Mayor Ben Kessler said.
Did a Yellow Springs police officer use the term “angry mob” to describe Black Lives Matter rally attendees? And should a fellow police officer be disciplined for telling a community member that they did?
Those were among the questions that a Columbus law firm recently looked into for the Village of Yellow Springs.
At issue was whether YSPD Officer Dave Meister violated Village policy and state law by allegedly telling a citizen that a fellow officer, Paige Burge, referred to some attendees of the weekly Black Lives Matter rallies as an “angry mob.”
On Saturday, Sept. 12, Burge was on duty and nearby when a small group of rally goers went across the street from Mills Lawn to ask a man to stop mowing the lawn of the Presbyterian Church. Meister, who was not present at the rally, reportedly claimed he later heard Burge use that phrase, or possibly just the word “mob,” to describe the group, at YSPD headquarters.