Police activity reported Feb. 1-26:
Feb. 26, 5:50 a.m. Traffic crash with no injury reported in the 6000 block of Tod Avenue.
11:33 a.m. Disturbance reported in the 6000 block of Tod Avenue.
Feb. 25, 7:49 a.m. Criminal damaging reported in the 7000 block of Tod Avenue.
Feb. 24, 6:01 p.m. Criminal damaging reported in the 1000 block of Salt Springs Road.
3:03 p.m. Theft reported in the 3000 block of Mae Drive.
Feb. 23, 8:26 p.m. Telephone harassment reported in the 4000 block of Palmyra Road.
Feb. 20, 3:45 a.m. Traffic crash with injury reported in the 1000 block of Hallock-Young Road.
Feb. 19, 6:31 p.m. Traffic crash with no injury reported in the 3000 block of South Leavitt Road.
Staff report
Warren was one of 11 northeast Ohio communities to be awarded $183 million in financing from Ohio EPA to do wastewater and drinking water infrastructure projects.
Warren’s wastewater division has been authorized to use $44.9 million in loans for Phase 1 of an improvement project at the city’s pump stations and wastewater treatment plant, according to the city’s Wastewater Division director.
The city has not received money, but the authorization to pay for the projects, according to Ed Haller, director of the city’s Water Pollution Control division.
Phase 1 of the plant and pump station capital improvement plan is designed to refurbish both the South Leavitt and Main Avenue pump stations, install a new septage receiving station and refurbish the plant screen building, refurbish the balance of the primary settling tanks and clarifiers, as well as updating the process monitoring and electrical systems.
news@tribtoday.com
Warren was one of 11 northeast Ohio communities to be awarded $183 million in financing from Ohio EPA to do wastewater and drinking water infrastructure projects.
Warren’s wastewater division has been authorized to use $44.9 million in loans for Phase 1 of an improvement project at the city’s pump stations and wastewater treatment plant, according to the city’s Wastewater Division director.
The city has not received money but the authorization to pay for the projects, according to Ed Haller, director of the city’s Water Pollution Control division.
Phase 1 of the plant and pump station capital improvement plan is designed to refurbish both the South Leavitt and Main Avenue pump stations, install a new septic receiving station and refurbish the plant screen building and refurbish the balance of the primary settling tanks and clarifiers, as well as updating the process monitoring and electrical systems.
Three people were hospitalized in separate traffic accidents on Trumbull County roads Friday.
A man on a motorized bike was hospitalized with head injuries after eyewitnesses said his brakes locked up on North River Road in Howland about 1:30 p.m. The man was taken to the hospital by ambulance and no condition update was available, reports stay.
Meanwhile, a one-car accident Friday morning on Kibler Toot Road SW led to another two-vehicle crash as those vehicles were attempting to pass the scene of the first crash, reports state.
The first accident occurred about 7:30 a.m. as a northbound car missed a curve striking a pole near South Leavitt Road. The report states two other vehicles trying to pass the accident scene struck each other head-on.