On the Record - July 30-Aug 1, 2021 - GREAT BEND TRIBUNE gbtribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gbtribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
It’s been nearly four years since neighbors of a proposed limestone quarry north of Yellow Springs banded together to fight the mining effort.
They formed a group, Citizens Against Mining, or CAM, based in Mad River Township, to challenge the company, Enon Sand and Gravel, in a multi-pronged battle.
Along the way, there have been both setbacks and victories, but so far mining has yet to get underway on the 420-acre property.
And in December 2020, the citizens group celebrated another win a private lawsuit settled in favor of five neighbors of the mine who successfully argued that mining could damage their property values and private wells.
New GEMI Analysis Software improves and simplifies protective power system design
Free downloadable program draws on extensive research to properly evaluate effective ground-fault current paths and EMI in electrical raceway systems
News provided by
Share this article
Share this article
GLENVIEW, Ill., Feb. 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/ For 25 years, electrical contractors have relied on the free grounding and electromagnetic interference (GEMI) software designed by the Steel Tube Institute to analyze effective ground-fault current paths and electromagnetic interference (EMI) in power systems. Now, the GEMI Analysis Software has been completely overhauled to offer improved detail and a more intuitive and customizable user experience.
When Patrick McGrath was seeking election in 2004 for the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, he d stubbornly insist on walking the entire route during parades.
Despite sore knees, due to sports injuries, he wanted to shake hands and connect with people, said Columbus attorney Bill Creedon, a campaign volunteer at the time. We d have him to convince him to keep up with the parade, Creedon recalled. He also insisted on sending personal thank-you cards to every campaign donor.
McGrath, a Dublin resident, died Wednesday evening of complications from COVID-19 for which he had been hospitalized for several weeks. He was 78.
McGrath s connection to community extended to other areas of his life.