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Telegraph-Forum from Bucyrus, Ohio • Page A1
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Telegraph-Forum from Bucyrus, Ohio • Page A1

Publication:
Telegraph-Forumi
Location:
Bucyrus, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
A1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

jTgfJMHH WOULD OFF-BEAT GAME fMgm D'Angelo Russell's unconventional game MMjm tdd mToo works for him, Sports 7A -K' Ui LhbKU JNI Sports, 7A Telegraph-Forum WEDNESDAY, 03.18.15 II BUCYRUS, OHIO II A GANNETT COMPANY II BUCYRUSTELEGRAPHFORUM.COM The middle of everywhere EPA says landfill is not a problem Early 1900s site not on its list of dumps MARK CAU DILL TELEGRAPH-FORUM GALION Construction of a storm sewer project should not affect an old landfill, an Ohio Environmental Protection Agency spokeswoman said. Galion resident Howard Morrow filed a complaint with the EPA, saying he feared the proposed route of the project will pass through an old landfill. An EPA representative was on hand Tuesday at the Cobey Park site on the city's east side. "We are not closing the complaint investigation yet," EPA spokeswoman Dina Pierce said. "However, the inspector told me that visually, it doesn't appear that construction will impact any landfill area.

"Part of the project will go through an area along the street that is already a utility right-of-way. The section going through the park will follow a lane through the park back to a pond area. It appears that it will be on the opposite side of the road from the area that may be the old landfill." Galion Mayor Tom O'Leary, who could not be reached for comment late Tuesday afternoon, previously said the majority of the project would be in the public right-of-way. "We look forward to meeting with them (EPA officials)," he said Monday. "Any concerns will be satisfied." The location of the old landfill was a low-mounded area, but the location is not listed on the Ohio EPA's list of old dump sites, Pierce said.

See EPA, Page 3A JASON J. MOLYETTELEGRAPH-FORUM Crossroads industrial park, off Ohio 4 just north of U.S. 30, is the site of the future ODOT garage. County hopes to build on US 30 corridor's potential points east and west nearly 100 years ago, following a route from Mansfield that was first utilized by travelers on horseback as early as the 1820s. About 10 years ago, however, things changed when U.S.

30 was widened to a four-lane, limited-access highway from one end of the state to the other, making the corridor much more attractive to business interests. "It hasn't been capitalized on yet, and it's not as easy to get the benefit from as a big north-south corridor in Ohio, but Route 30 being border to border, with how quickly you get to 71 or 75, is important," said Dave William son, director of Crawford County Partnership for Education and Economic Development. As is the time it takes for people in Mansfield or Upper Sandusky to get to Bucyrus, for that matter. Those trips, however, aren't really being made. Apart from a Holiday Inn, a Knights Inn, a Bob Evans restaurant and one gas station, there isn't much to lure travelers off the U.S.

30 bypass and into Bucyrus. "I'm shocked that hasn't boomed up there. There's any number of See MIDDLE, Page 2A TODD HILL TELEGRAPH-FORUM The Crossroads Industrial Center, on the north side of Bucyrus, is aptly named. County seats, of course, have always been where major roads cross paths, and Bucyrus is no different. With Lake Erie a destination for generations Cedar Point opened way back in 1870 travelers from the north and south pass through the city on Ohio 4.

The Lincoln Highway began shuttling motorists through Bucyrus to 4-year-old ready for 'normal' life after transplant Fellow church member, Tim Hilterman, donating kidney LISA BERNHEIIW NEWS JOURNAL Brielle Trice, 4, shows Tim Hilterman the place his kidney will go after surgery this summer. Hilterman signed up to be a kidney donor and was a match for Cichon. The two attend the same church, Westwood Alliance. moved, tying her to a dialysis machine 12 hours a day, 365 days a year. She sleeps through most of it.

Alysia and Daniel Cichon became her legal guardians when she was 18 months old. For the past three years, they've diligently tended to Trice's medical needs, but in October they started advocating for a more permanent fix: a kidney donor. A fellow member of Westwood Alliance Church, Tim Hilterman, stepped up. The surgery will take place this summer. "Our whole life revolves around her dialysis," Alysia said.

"After six weeks See KIDNEY, Page 2A KAITLIN DURBIN TELEGRAPH-FORUM MANSFIELD Brielle Trice will taste food for the first time this summer. The 4-year-old is undergoing a kidney transplant that will free her from a dialysis machine and, with time, a feeding tube, the only form of nutrition she's known. With eating therapy, she'll learn to eat food with her hands and mouth, and get messy like most other children. It's a victory a long time in the making. Trice was diagnosed with a rare kidney cancer called Wilms tumor at 11 months.

Both her kidneys were re OBITUARIES 2A LOTTERY 2A LIGHTS SIRENS 3A NATIONWORLD 5A TV LISTINGS DEARABBY SPORTS COMICS 6A 6A 7A 9A Sunny, with a high near 44. West wind 6 to 10 mph. FORECAST, PAGE 2A 0 501 5 it KYLE RANDALL, MD UITA ORTHOPEI mw mm 1.

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Pages Available:
460,476
Years Available:
1871-2024