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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)

$1.50 RETAIL THURSDAY, 06.16.16IIBUCYRUS, OHIOIIBUCYRUSTELEGRAPHFORUM.COMII Telegraph-Forum CAMPS VS. AAU Column: Are sports camps more valuable than AAU? Sports 8A www.ncstatecollege.edu collegecredittowardadegree.You’dbe surprisedathowmuchyourexperienceis worthatNCStateCollege.Call419-755-4700to getstarted.Online,evening,andcohortclasses areavailable.FallsemesterbeginsAug.22nd. TRUMP MAKING OP SQUIRM Nation, 3A BUCYRUS The board of trustees for the Crawford County Council on Aging decided Wednesday that it would welcome assistance with the transit needs of the county. Cassie Herschler, executive director of the organization, explained to the board that county commissioners are hoping to allocate countywide public transit duties to Seneca County Agency Transportation (SCAT). Doing so would allow more federal grant money to help the residents of the county.

Such a move would help the Council on Aging focus its efforts primarily on the transit needs of the elderly and disabled in Crawford County. Several of the board members sure what Herschler meant by so she explained that the Council on Aging has been filling two roles over the past several years: one as a means of transportation for the elderly and disabled, the other as a transit service for all residents of the county. Herschler said funding exists for both needs, but that the Council on Aging is not eligible to receive both of those grants at once. By allowing SCAT to provide public transit in Crawford County and receive federal grant money for that service, commissioners would make the Council on Aging eligible to receive funding to specifically transport the elderly and disabled, which is a grant the organization has never received. PUBLIC TRANSIT CHANGE MOVES FORWARD ZACH Cassie Herschler, executive director of the Crawford County Council on Aging, listens to questions Wednesday regarding the organization's countywide transit service.

Plan allows SCAT to assist in county transportation ZACH TUGGLE REPORTER ORLANDO, Fla. Police offered stress counseling and debriefing ednesday to the SWAT team and other officers who witnessed the nightclub carnage, and the FBI tried to reconstruct the movements and figure out if his wife played a role in the plot. Along procession of memorials and unerals for the 49 killed in shooting rampage began taking shape, with mourners scheduled to pay their re- pects at a visitation for a victim remembered as a friendly salesman and makeup artist. The FBI said it is still gathering evi- dence at the Pulse and analyzing cell- hone location data to piece together Omar activities leading up to he massacre, while also interviewing eople who had any dealings with him. It urged anyone with any information a bout the gunman to contact the bureau.

We need your help in developing the most complete picture of what he did and hy he did FBI agent Ron Hopper aid. Members of the SWAT team under- ent a stress-management debriefing Wednesday, as hundreds of others involved in the response to the shooting ave done, police Chief John Mina said. Additional counseling is being made available. are some of the bravest, toughest men I Mina said. one can prepare you for what those offi- ers encountered that night.

They stood toe-to-toe and went face-to-face with a mass murderer, and extremely roud of Akey topic for investigators is how JOE SENTINEL VIA AP Carl Ricketts, chaplain at Florida Hospital in Orlando, leads a prayer with doctors, nurses and first-responders in the emergency room at the hospital. FBI TRACKS CLUES A FTER MASSACRE Officials trying determine how much ife knew MIKE SCHNEIDER ASSOCIATED PRESS "No one can prepare you for what those officers encountered that night. They stood toe-to-toe and went face-to-face with a mass murderer, and extremely proud of that." JOHN MINA ORLANDO POLICE CHIEF WASHINGTON Premiums for opular low-cost medical plans under the federal health care law are exp ected to go up an average of 11per- cent next year, said a study that reinforced reports of sharp increases around the country in election season. or consumers, the impact will depend on whether they et government subsidies for their premiums, as well as on their own willingness to switch plans to eep the increases ore manageable, said the analysis released Wednesday by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. The full picture on 2017 premiums will emerge later this summer as the presidential election heads into the ome stretch.

The health next sign-up season starts a week before Election Day. Democrat Hillary Clint on wants to build on President Barack health overhaul, which has reduced the uninsured rate to a istorically low 9percent. Republican Donald Trump wants to repeal it. The Kaiser study looked at 14 metro areas for which complete data on insurer premium requests are al- eady available. It found that premiums for a level of insurance called the lowest-cost silver will go up in 1 2 of the areas, while decreasing in two.

The changes range from a de- rease of 14percent in Providence, hode Island, to an increase of 26per- cent in Portland, Oregon. ANDREW Anew study says premiums for popular ow-cost medical plans under the federal health care law are expected to go up an average of 11percent next year. Obamacare premiums xpected to be pricier Popular low-cost plans likely to rise 11percent RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR ASSOCIATED PRESS Online Kaiser Family oundation study: tinyurl.com/ mpwjyf.

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Pages Available:
460,504
Years Available:
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