Cuyahoga Valley Republicans in Brecksville acknowledges it plugged Jan. 6 bus trip to Washington D.C. Bob Sandrick, cleveland.com
BRECKSVILLE, Ohio – The Brecksville-based Cuyahoga Valley Republicans club has acknowledged that it plugged a Jan. 6 bus trip to Washington, D.C. on its website, although adding that it didn’t sponsor or organize the trip.
The admission appeared Jan. 28 on the Cuyahoga Valley Republicans website, two days after a Jan. 26 cleveland.com article showed that the club had promoted a “DC Protest Bus Trip.” The article questioned whether the club itself had planned the Jan. 6 trip to Washington, where some Donald Trump supporters became violent and broke into the Capitol building.
Brecksville City Council votes unanimously to place Sherwin-Williams rezoning on May 4 ballot
Updated Feb 06, 2021;
Posted Feb 06, 2021
Brecksville voters will decide in May whether to rezone land in Valor Acres for The Sherwin-Williams Co. (Bob Sandrick, special to cleveland.com)
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BRECKSVILLE, Ohio City Council voted unanimously Feb. 2 to place a rezoning for The Sherwin-Williams Co. which plans to build a research-and-development center in the proposed Valor Acres mixed-use development at Brecksville and Miller roads on the May 4 ballot.
Part of the Sherwin-Williams site is zoned residential. The company needs voters to change the property into a district that allows offices and research laboratories.
Brecksville drafts revision of laws regulating signs, including political signs
Updated Feb 02, 2021;
Posted Feb 02, 2021
Sergio DiGeronimo, Brecksville s assistant law director, helped prepare a revision of the city s sign code. This photo was taken from a livestream of a City Council meeting. (Bob Sandrick, special to cleveland.com)
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BRECKSVILLE, Ohio A proposed revision of the city’s sign laws would define a flag as a sign and therefore subject to regulation if it were held down or fastened at more than one edge.
Also, residents posting temporary signs including those that promote political candidates could have no more than 32 square feet of signs on any one property, and signs would have to stand at least 72 inches apart.
Brecksville-based Republican club denies it planned ‘protest trip’ to Washington D.C. Jan. 6 Bob Sandrick, cleveland.com
BRECKSVILLE, Ohio – A local political club called Cuyahoga Valley Republicans and Brecksville city officials are denying a claim that the club, on Jan. 6, sent a busload of Donald Trump supporters to Washington, D.C., where violence erupted at the Capitol building.
The claim was made by A Better Brecksville, a political group with a strong Facebook presence, although at least one group member said it was more than a claim. Whatever it was, the group is standing by it.
“The people on the Better Brecksville Facebook page were merely reporting what the Cuyahoga Valley Republicans had already posted in their website,” Gretchen Corp Jones, a Better Brecksville member and former Brecksville City Council candidate, said in an email to cleveland.com.
Political firestorm erupts after Brecksville councilwoman, planning commissioner sign letter supporting Trump’s election fraud claims Bob Sandrick, cleveland.com
BRECKSVILLE, Ohio A Brecksville councilwoman and a member of the city’s Planning Commission believe that former President Donald Trump’s claim of massive voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election is true and their expression of that belief has fueled a political firestorm in the city.
Kim Veras and Dominic Sciria speaking as recording secretary and president, respectively, of the Cuyahoga Valley Republicans club voiced support for Trump in a Dec. 31 letter to U.S. Reps. David Joyce and Anthony Gonzalez and U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, all of whom represent the Brecksville area in Congress.