AVON
Avon will lose $2.15 million in federal funding after state legislators changed how they would distribute federal COVID relief funds to include 1,305 townships in the windfall.
Avon is one of dozens of cities across Ohio affected by the change, which became law when Gov. Mike DeWine signed HB 168 on June 29.
In May before the cut was announced, Avon was projected to receive nearly $4.6 million of the $844 million allocated for Ohio, Finance Director Bill Logan said. Now, the city will receive around $2.45 million.
âWe were starting to plan out some different projects we could do with that money,â Logan said. âAnd now we donât have it, so weâre probably going to back off on some projects.â
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Months of economic turmoil, derailed food chains, health care challenges and social and emotional tension have upended how we work, eat, sleep and communicate with each other – in short, how we live.
Yet the nearly year-long coronavirus pandemic also has provided a societal reboot, a unique opportunity to examine systems large and small, and to ponder whether a complete return to normal is necessarily a good thing.
Hitting the reset button has allowed strategists, public officials, clergy and community leaders to consider fresh ways to think about life, and many are doing just that.
Opportunities in the home and out