Park named for longtime volunteer kpcnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kpcnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
To the editor:
On Earth Day 13 volunteers collected trash along the Auburn/Waterloo Trail under the leadership of Rotarian Norman Yoder to prepare the trail for mowing.
Later in the season Bill Brandon and the city plan to re-seed the area where new drain tile was placed last year to improve drainage.
Also, the Auburn Parks Department and County Highway Department have continued mowing the grass along the trail. Eric Ditmars has applied weed killer for many years as well.
Paul Miller and Ken Metzger work to maintain the park with help from Clint Stephenâs beautiful flowers. Our community can be proud of this trail which will soon be expanded into Waterloo.
Four Solon Schools staff members test positive for COVID-19 since Friday Ed Wittenberg, cleveland.com
SOLON, Ohio – It’s been a difficult week for the Solon City School District in its battle against the coronavirus pandemic.
Superintendent Fred Bolden told the Solon Board of Education Monday (Jan. 25) that since Friday afternoon (Jan. 22), four district staff members have tested positive for COVID-19.
“Those staff members resulted in five other staff members getting quarantined and 37 students needing to be quarantined,” he said. “So it can happen that quickly.”
Last week was “a great week” for the district, Bolden said.
“We were in a declining trend in terms of the number of cases that we had,” he said.
Three local counties boost rating to orange
INDIANAPOLIS â A week after seeing COVID-19 ratings worsen to their worst point ever, Indiana showed marked improvement last week, with many counties getting better ratings than the week before.
That included northeast Indiana, where Noble, DeKalb and LaGrange counties all improved from red to orange. Steuben County stayed in red, but just barely, as it showed improvement from a week ago, too, just not enough to change colors.
Overall, Indiana saw a widespread and rapid improvement from where it was a week earlier, although all but one county remained in orange and red, the two color codes representing the highest spread of COVID-19.