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Local school staff recognized as finalists for state award
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Bon Appetit aims to reduce beef, cheese use
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JOSELYN KING Staff Writer
Photo provided
Warwood School teacher Josh Yost uses a 3D printer to print a key chain designed by a student.
WHEELING Today’s students no longer just take tests and check off answers to exam questions to prove their knowledge.
New maker spaces are being constructed at each building in Ohio County Schools as educators transition into a new age of education, and soon all students will have access to tools they need to create required projects to prove their learning experiences.
Cricut machines, 3D printers, microphones and Lego blocks have been ordered to stock the maker spaces where students will be able to do anything from printing T-shirts, to wood carving, to editing their own podcast.
JOSELYN KING Staff Writer
WHEELING The Ohio County Board of Education’s move to cut its allocations to the county library by a third isn’t sitting well with local historian Margaret Brennan of Wheeling.
Brennan addressed the board this week, thanking the board and the school system for efforts displayed during the pandemic. She then asked why the board chose to reduce the money it gives the library.
The board voted 3-2 on April 26 to reduce the amount of its library contribution from three cents per $100 of assessed county property value, to two cents. The reduction is projected to lower the next fiscal year’s funding to the library from approximately $884,547 to $589,698.
For the News-Register
Photo by Nora Edinger
A temporary closure sign near the front entrance to Patsyâs Pizza in Elm Grove reveals the businessâs search for workers continues. Itâs a problem common to many businesses around the Ohio Valley.
WHEELING The “now hiring” signs in front of nearly every eatery and store in the city are morphing into occasional “closed” signs. This included one outside the iconic Patsy’s Pizza that remained in place for the second half of April.
Just what is happening to work in the Ohio Valley?
Has a COVID-driven expansion of unemployment assistance and rounds of stimulus checks sunk at least temporarily the need for paychecks? Is it something else population decline, opioid addiction, poor health?
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