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Ohio Department of Health says quarantine not necessary if new school guidelines are followed
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Alamogordo Public Schools Board tables PED compliance
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Hundreds at Atlanta charter school quarantine days after school year begins
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While there are a few things for local voters to decide in Tuesdayâs August Primary, the ballots will be lighter when compared to the busy 2020 election cycle.
Tuesdayâs ballots will consist of a local school district and a community college seeking an operating millage renewal, while Marion Public Schools is seeking a tax bonding proposal. A local township also is seeking an emergency services millage.
Lake County voters are asked to renew an operating millage for West Shore Community College.
According to information from the Lake County Clerkâs Office, the renewal will be for the amount of 0.7062 mills, $0.7062 on each $1,000 of taxable valuation, for a period of eight years beginning in 2022 and continuing through 2029. If passed, it will provide funds to the community college for operations and is estimated to generate nearly $2.4 million in 2022.
Image credit: David Leins/WDET
Dearborn voters must choose a new mayor to replace Jack O’Reilly, and whoever becomes the city’s new leader will face an old problem.
Dearborn voters must replace longtime Mayor Jack O’Reilly Jr., who has been largely missing from the public eye since last year before COVID-19 hit the state, citing undisclosed health issues. Residents head to the polls for a mayoral primary on Aug. 3. More than a half-dozen candidates are vying for the city’s top job.
But whoever becomes the city’s new leader will face an old problem.
During the past few weeks, many Dearborn residents on the east side and south end of the city have been emptying water and sewage from their basements because of heavy rains and flooding. Mayoral candidates made flooding a campaign issue by sending out flyers, posting Facebook videos, some even calling for independent investigations into what happened.