Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

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Your Community Newspaper Since 1967 8389 Mayfield Rd. B-5, Chesterland, Ohio 44026 | P: 440.729.7667 | F: 440.729.8240 [email protected] | www.chesterlandnews.com PRSRT STD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE LOCAL PAID POSTAL CUSTOMER EDDM RETAIL Even on a blustery March day, with heaps of frozen snow along the driveways, Legacy Equestrian Center looks like a horse farm in Kentucky or Virginia. Six horse barns, miles of black painted fencing around huge pas- tures, an enormous indoor arena with an elegant lobby, three ponds and riding trails positioned around the 140-acre breeding and training facility make up the for- mer Eutrophia Farms. That was the name of the center before last October’s auction that pitted the Enger family and their two horses against four housing developers champing at the bit to plant 70 homes on the seven parcels. “They were just going to rip it down,” Dawn Donich said last week, sounding dismayed by the development plans. She and her husband, Jim Enger, had been searching for the right place to board her quarter horse and their daugh- ter’s Hanovarian hunter with one sticking point: they wanted their horses pastured daily and, when the weather heats up, put out during the cooler, fly-free nights, she said. At the time, they heard the Eutrophia facility was coming up for sale, they hadn’t found a sta- ble willing to do that, Enger said. Owner Elisabeth Alexander, 85, was retiring and selling the racing operation she had spent years building, he said. Everything came together for the purchase, including Enger’s desire to buy a place in 2013. “We’d been looking for something smaller,” he said, but when Eutrophia showed up for auction, they decided to give it a try. In the space of a day, it was their farm, valued by the Geauga County Auditor Frank Gliha at $2 million. When they took possession of the estate, they realized it was not just huge — it was empty. Workers, horse owners, hors- es and trainers had all aban- doned ship. “There was nothing here. They all kind of took off,” he said. Building the Business The family brought their two horses to the main barn in mid- December and started to cast about for more horses, horse owners, trainers and riders to fill the barns. By mid-March, there were three trainers lined up to bring their horses and students to Legacy. Magan Bash filled seven stalls with hunters and jumpers, Enger said. Scheduled to fill more stalls when they return from the Florida show circuit are Nancy Extraordinary Horse Farm Making Enormous Strides in Chester ANN WISHART/CN Dawn Donich and Jim Enger bought Legacy Equestrian Center at auction in October, bidding against four housing developers who had plans to build houses on the 142-acre farm. By Ann Wishart SUBMITTED This rendering of Legacy Equestrian Center in Chester Township shows only part of the facility, which was called Eutrophia Stables. A paper tacked up on a bul- letin board at the Kirtland Chronicle office in Chester Township has five words: Keep Calm and Carry On. The slogan, first displayed by the British government during World War II and which later became popular in the 2000s, also sums up the story of Kirtland Chronicle employee Kevin Potter, his wife, Jeni, and their daughter, Erin. Erin, who successfully sur- vived Acute Lymphoblastic Lymphoma after a seven-year battle and several remissions, kept calm and met the donor who saved her life, Frank Reynolds. Donor and recipient — along with 50 to 100 friends — met at the Little Mountain Brewing Company during a March 15 party. “It’s been really crazy,” Reynolds said, adding he stayed with the family that weekend. “I didn’t really understand the impact of all this had until I visited everyone and met with the family and nurses,” he said. “Their family was just amaz- ing.” Seven Years of Trials February was not a kind month to the Potter family. On the 27th day of that month in 2007, a diagnosis By Josh Echt Fairmount Center for the Arts is back on its feet and dancing after fiscal emergency. “If you see your neighbor tap dancing down the aisles at the grocery store, you could say it’s the fault of Fairmount Center for the Arts,” Executive Director Jessica Leary Allen told Russell Township Trustees at their March 18 meeting. The once struggling arts cen- ter has plenty of reasons to dance. It is growing stronger financially and growing its enrollment, Allen said. “Eighteen months ago, we were within a day or two of clos- ing our doors,” she said. “I am thrilled to say that we increased class enrollment 20 percent in the fall and 40 percent in the winter, and spring is looking to have about the same increases.” Along with increased enroll- ment, new classes were added and some popular ones were expanded. Allen said 54 classes were held at the center during the winter schedule. She cited the center’s Kinderdance, with tripled enroll- ment for a series of classes for children in age groups ranging from 2-5 years old, and adult tap dance as popular choices. “Every new class we open in adult tap dance fills up,” she said. Allen cred- ited the center’s board members, including Grant Cleveland and Toby and Melanie Maloney, for thousands of hours of work along with the center’s dedicated instructors, staff and the commu- nity for its support. “You’ve done a good job,” Trustee Gary Gabram said. Allen said the center is cur- rently signing up participants for its spring session that starts March 24. She also said plans are in the works for a 12-day community open house in June, to coincide with the center’s annual juried fine art show. Fairmount Center for the Arts Painting a Brighter Picture By Gwen Cooper See Horse Farm = Page 15 Allen “Eighteen months ago, we were within a day or two of closing our doors.” – Jessica Leary Allen See Fairmount = Page 4 See Survivor = Page 5 SUBMITTED Erin Potter and bone marrow donor Frank Reynolds met each other for the first time March 15. Cancer Survivor Grateful to Meet Bone Marrow Donor Welcome Spring (more or less) VOLUME 47 No. 45 Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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Chesterland News March 26th, 2014

Transcript of Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

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Your Community Newspaper Since 1967

8389 Mayfield Rd. B-5, Chesterland, Ohio 44026 | P: 440.729.7667 | F: [email protected] | www.chesterlandnews.com

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Even on a blustery March day,with heaps of frozen snow alongthe driveways, Legacy EquestrianCenter looks like a horse farm inKentucky or Virginia.Six horse barns, miles of black

painted fencing around huge pas-tures, an enormous indoor arenawith an elegant lobby, threeponds and riding trails positionedaround the 140-acre breeding andtraining facility make up the for-mer Eutrophia Farms.That was the name of the

center before last October’sauction that pitted the Engerfamily and their two horsesagainst four housing developerschamping at the bit to plant 70homes on the seven parcels.“They were just going to rip

it down,” Dawn Donich said lastweek, sounding dismayed by thedevelopment plans.She and her husband, Jim

Enger, had been searching forthe right place to board herquarter horse and their daugh-ter’s Hanovarian hunter withone sticking point: they wantedtheir horses pastured daily and,when the weather heats up, putout during the cooler, fly-freenights, she said.At the time, they heard the

Eutrophia facility was coming upfor sale, they hadn’t found a sta-ble willing to do that, Enger said. Owner Elisabeth Alexander,

85, was retiring and selling the

racing operation she had spentyears building, he said.Everything came together

for the purchase, includingEnger’s desire to buy a place in2013. “We’d been looking for

something smaller,” he said, butwhen Eutrophia showed up forauction, they decided to give it atry. In the space of a day, it wastheir farm, valued by the GeaugaCounty Auditor Frank Gliha at$2 million.When they took possession

of the estate, they realized itwas not just huge — it wasempty. Workers, horse owners, hors-

es and trainers had all aban-doned ship.“There was nothing here.

They all kind of took off,” hesaid.

Building the BusinessThe family brought their two

horses to the main barn in mid-December and started to castabout for more horses, horseowners, trainers and riders tofill the barns.By mid-March, there were

three trainers lined up to bringtheir horses and students toLegacy.Magan Bash filled seven

stalls with hunters and jumpers,Enger said. Scheduled to fill more stalls

when they return from theFlorida show circuit are Nancy

Extraordinary Horse Farm MakingEnormous Strides in Chester

ANN WISHART/CNDawn Donich and Jim Enger bought Legacy Equestrian Center at auction in October, bidding against four housingdevelopers who had plans to build houses on the 142-acre farm.

By Ann Wishart

SUBMITTEDThis rendering of Legacy Equestrian Center in Chester Township showsonly part of the facility, which was called Eutrophia Stables.

A paper tacked up on a bul-letin board at the KirtlandChronicle office in ChesterTownship has five words: KeepCalm and Carry On.The slogan, first displayed by

the British government duringWorld War II and which laterbecame popular in the 2000s, alsosums up the story of KirtlandChronicle employee KevinPotter, his wife, Jeni, and theirdaughter, Erin.Erin, who successfully sur-

vived Acute LymphoblasticLymphoma after a seven-yearbattle and several remissions,kept calm and met the donorwho saved her life, FrankReynolds. Donor and recipient — along

with 50 to 100 friends — met atthe Little Mountain BrewingCompany during a March 15party.“It’s been really crazy,”

Reynolds said, adding he stayedwith the family that weekend. “I didn’t really understand

the impact of all this had until Ivisited everyone and met withthe family and nurses,” he said.“Their family was just amaz-ing.”

Seven Years of TrialsFebruary was not a kind

month to the Potter family.On the 27th day of that

month in 2007, a diagnosis

By Josh Echt

Fairmount Center for theArts is back on its feet anddancing after fiscal emergency.“If you see your neighbor

tap dancing down the aisles atthe grocery store, you could sayit’s the fault of FairmountCenter for the Arts,” ExecutiveDirector Jessica Leary Allentold Russell Township Trusteesat their March 18 meeting.The once struggling arts cen-

ter has plenty of reasons todance. It is growing strongerfinancially and growing itsenrollment, Allen said.“Eighteen months ago, we

were within a day or two of clos-ing our doors,” she said. “I amthrilled to say that we increasedclass enrollment 20 percent inthe fall and 40 percent in thewinter, and spring is looking tohave about the same increases.”Along with increased enroll-

ment, new classes were addedand some popular ones wereexpanded. Allen said 54 classeswere held at the center duringthe winter schedule.She cited the center’s

Kinderdance, with tripled enroll-ment for a series of classes forchildren in age groups rangingfrom 2-5 years old, and adult tapdance as popular choices.

“ E v e r ynew class weopen in adulttap dance fillsup,” she said.Allen cred-

ited the center’sboard members,including GrantCleveland andToby and Melanie Maloney, forthousands of hours of work alongwith the center’s dedicatedinstructors, staff and the commu-nity for its support.“You’ve done a good job,”

Trustee Gary Gabram said.Allen said the center is cur-

rently signing up participants forits spring session that starts March24. She also said plans are in theworks for a 12-day communityopen house in June, to coincidewith the center’s annual juriedfine art show.

Fairmount Center for the ArtsPainting a Brighter Picture

By Gwen Cooper

See Horse Farm = Page 15

Allen

“Eighteen monthsago, we were withina day or two of closing our doors.” – Jessica Leary Allen

See Fairmount = Page 4

See Survivor = Page 5

SUBMITTEDErin Potter and bone marrowdonor Frank Reynolds met eachother for the first time March 15.

Cancer Survivor Grateful toMeet Bone Marrow Donor

Welcome Spring(more or less)

VOLUME 47 No. 45 Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Page 2: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Page 2 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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4th Generation

Chester Township trustees approvedthe 2014 permanent appropriations atlast Thursday’s trustees meeting.Fiscal Officer Craig Richter said the

township made three changes to theappropriations certificate, which must becertified by the Geauga County BudgetCommission before funds can be encum-bered and spent. The certificate coverspermanent appropriations, which spansApril 1 through December 31. Temporaryappropriations cover payroll and otherexpenses from Jan. 1 until the permanentappropriations are approved.General fund appropriations are also

down, with respective $806,876.29 fig-ures in 2014 and $1,158,549.21 in 2013.The 2014 revenue appropriation

amounts to $4,842,196, a 6.02-percentdecrease from the 2013 total of $5,152,197.23.However, expenses still remain high-

er than revenue, despite a 3.99-percentdecrease in expenditures last year. The2013 expenditure figure was$6,187,050.74, while the 2014 appropria-tion is projected at $5,940.459.50.Three changes to the final appropria-

tions involved two figure revisions and alarger fund transfer from the generalfund to the road department totalingapproximately $170,000.A change was made to the fire depart-

ment budget, ensuring carryover funds inthe fire department fund were not includ-ed as revenue in the spreadsheet. Thetownship also increased contingency fundallotments from $4,480 to $10,000.Richter said that the township’s

elected officials said they would doeverything in their power to “get towork” on cutting deficit spending.

Road Dept. Funding A Key IssuePrior to the board approving the

$170,000 fund transfer from the generalfund to the road department, RoadSuperintendent Rob Pealer passed outflyers to audience members and trustees,outlining a plan to tackle road condi-tions and repairs over the next severalyears.Pealer first thanked trustees and the

community for addressing the issue. Hesaid the road department is funded bymotor vehicle tax, gas tax, a GeneralFund inside mill sometimes backs con-tracted services and levies support theroad and bridge fund.The brutal winter was rough on

roads, and more salt than expected was

placed on roads, Pealer said.“And the freeze-thaw cycle is not

done,” Pealer said.He added repairs to the Gradall,

trucks, and older equipment, including a$15,000 backhoe repair, affected theroad department budget. But the bread-and-butter discussion

centered on road conditions. Of thetownship’s 75.585 miles of roads, about54.87 percent of them are Categories 3to 5, average to excellent shape.Category 1 is the worst, denoting 5.36percent of township roads. However, the township will not resur-

face any roads in 2014 due to absence offunding for that requirement. Rather, itwill implement repairs to varying degrees.“We must implement a maintenance

plan to reduce declining road status dueto lack of resources,” Pealer said, addingresurfacing the Category 1 and 2 roadswould total $4.4 million.His goal is to maintain the best roads,

repair the average ones and prevent theworst roads from deteriorating.In the budget, Pealer also included

budget items such as a hotbox — whichkeeps asphalt and cold mix for roadrepair at working temperatures — and apoly-fill machine, which is a de factochip-seal repair machine.Trustee Ken Radtke said he sug-

gested that a road levy be placed onthe ballot during trustees meetingsin December 2012 and May 2013.In other news, Geauga County Sheriff

Chester Trustees Approve 2014Permanent Appropriations

By Josh Echt

JOSH ECHT/GCMLDuring a break in last Thursday’s trusteesmeeting, Trustee Ward L. “Bud” Kinney playswith Geauga County Sheriff DanMcClelland’s dog, Midge.

See Chester = Page 14

Page 4: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

March 28: Food Pantry10 a.m. to noonThe Food Pantry at Chester Christian

Center A/G Church, 11815 ChillicotheRoad, Chester Township, is open to any-one in the community in need of food. Youdo not need to be a member of the church.Call 440-729-6203 for more information.

March 29: Antique Outboard Motor Show9 a.m. to 3 p.m.All are welcome to join at Orchard

Hills Park, 11414 Caves Road, ChesterTownship, for the third annual AntiqueOutboard Motor Show, hosted by theWestern Reserve chapter of the AntiqueMotor Club, Inc.Several makes and models in a variety

of horsepower will be displayed. Almostevery outboard motor will be pre-1960.There will be a parts display, parts manu-al display and advertisement pieces. If information on a motor is needed,

there will be someone available to help.No admission charge. Coffee, bever-

ages and pastries available. Call Bob Joynt, 440-729-2125, for

more information.

March 29: Ladies’ TeaLadies are invited to attend Ladies’

Tea at Word of Grace Church, 9021Mayfield Road, Chester Township. Doors open at 11 a.m. and lunch will

be served at 11:30 a.m.

Luncheon is $15 and includes unlim-ited organic, fair-trade, loose-leaf tea;salad; a homemade scone with lemoncurd and Devonshire cream; four fingersandwiches; and four desserts. There willbe a gift baskets to give away. Reservations only. Call 440-729-7006

for reservations or for more information.

April 3: BPOY Dinner6 p.m.A celebratory dinner for the Chester-

land Chamber of Commerce BusinessPerson of the Year, John Karlovec, owner ofthe Chesterland News, Geauga CountyMaple Leaf and Kirtland Chronicle, will beheld at Orchard Hill Party Center, 11414Caves Road, Chester Township. Guido’s Pizza Haven and Restaurant

will be catering the event offering lemonchicken, cavatelli, red and white pizza,beef tenderloin, eggplant roll-ups, greenbean almondine, salad, rolls and butter,beer and wine. Cost is $30 per chambermember and $35 for nonmembers. Eventis open to the public. Make reservation by mail, accompa-

nied by a check payable to the Chester-land Chamber of Commerce, 8228Mayfield Road, Suite 4B, Chesterland,OH 44026 or by calling Wendy or Luci atthe chamber office, 440-729-7297.

April 4: “Mission Possible”Dinner/Dance6:30-10 p.m.All are welcome to join for the 10th

anniversary “Mission Possible” dinnerand dance at Mayfield Church, 7747Mayfield Road, Chester Township.Event includes hors d’oeuvres, a full

dinner buffet with chicken and vegetarianoptions, anniversary cake for dessert, musicby DJ Joe Marino, a dance contest forthose so inclined and other fun activities.Dress is semi formal; jackets for men.Tickets are $35 single, $70 double and

$250 for a reserved table of eight.All proceeds benefit the ministries of

the Mayfield Church Missions Team.Call 440-729-4006 for more information.

Page 4 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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“We bring about 300 visitors to thecenter and to Russell each year,” shesaid. “Our goal is to increase that.”Marketing efforts have been stepped

up, including working the postal serviceand local newspapers to distribute thecatalog to 2,500 households. Allen alsocredits the center’s new online registra-tion, through its website along with anold-fashioned marketing tool — curbside

signs on the center’s front lawn announc-ing when class registration begins fornew sessions.“You have been providing a commu-

nity center for Russell,” Trustee JimMueller said. “For all the residents whoask us for a community center, I tellthem you are doing that. You’ve beenproviding education for our children.We’ve enjoyed having the opportunity tohelp make the center grow.”For more information, contact the

center at www.fairmountcenter.org or440-338-3171.

Fairmount from page 1

Page 5: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

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changed the lives of Erin, her parentsand her older sister, Annie.Doctors diagnosed the then 3-year-

old with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemiaat University Hospitals Rainbow Babies& Children’s Hospital in Cleveland.After two and a half years of chemo atRainbow, she had what was thought tobe her last dose of chemo in June 2009.Nineteen months passed. No cancer.

But then February 11, 2011 rolledaround and the cancer returned.By then, another Potter, baby Mary,

joined the family.Luckily, the Potters heeded medical

practitioner Jeff Auletta’s advice to savethe blood from Mary’s umbilical cord. The newborn was a perfect match for

Erin’s bone marrow transplant. For thenext few months, Erin experiencedchemotherapy and received the cordblood via the transplant in June. After returning home July 30, things

were fine until the following March.On March 2, 2012, the checkup

revealed the leukemia returned again. Athird battle thus began. During that time, Erin met teen idol

Justin Bieber and President Barack Obamaeven referenced her story three days beforehe was re-elected in November 2012.Her third transplant took place July

18, 2012. The donor was Reynolds, an anony-

mous emergency medical technicianfrom Long Island, N.Y.

One New Tattoo Changed Many LivesIn the summer of 2011, the EMT

wanted to donate blood at the localSuffolk County Red Cross. But his recently acquired tattoo

meant no blood, so he registered withthe bone marrow registry at a worker’ssuggestion. Little did he know his deci-sion would later save a girl’s life 500miles and two states away.“We are eternally grateful for that

tattoo,” Kevin Potter said. “Less than ayear later, he was called to help saveErin's life.”He said when someone needs a bone

marrow transplant, databases searchesare run until hopefully a match is found. In March 2012 the matching process

began. A few months after that, Erinreceived the transplant in July. Over a year after the transplant, the

Potters discovered Reynolds was Erin’sdonor on New Year’s Eve 2013.Reynolds said he was amazed at the

coincidences involved in the story,including the fact both he and Erin sharethe same Nov. 28 birthday.“I was on the phone with Kevin and

Jeni, and they asked me how old I was

and when my birthdate was. I told themNov. 28 and they said, ‘That’s the same asErin,’” Reynolds said. “The chances ofbeing a match are one in a million, letalone a match with the same birthday.”The Potters contacted him at the end

of 2013 about seeing him in person. And, just like that, a new, life-chang-

ing friend entered the family’s lives.“The party was awesome,” Reynolds

said. “Everyone had questions. Ianswered them.”

‘Faith is All I Had’What helped Kevin and his family

through the ordeal?Faith in something else other than

himself.“I had nothing else,” Kevin said.

“Faith took its roots in me and shoteverything above ground. I am gratefulto give my daughter another chance atlife. Faith comes from a primal sense ofdesperation. Everything’s out of yourhands.”On March 15, after meeting Reynolds

at the airport, the Potters celebrated suc-cess with a party at Little MountainBrewing Company, whose owner, BobWeber, said everyone was “literally cele-brating life.”“It was like having a whole room full

of George Baileys — the main characterin the movie, ‘It’s a Wonderful Life,’”Weber said. “If even one of them hadbeen missing, the miracle of Erin’s remis-sion wouldn’t be happening. I’m still justamazed that God made sure that theywere all there for her.”The community has reached out to

her, including the Kirtland Hornets foot-ball team.In fall 2012, Erin and Annie were

headed across the practice field. HeadCoach Tiger LaVerde stopped practice,while each Hornet player shook herhand.“Her experience has affected so

many people,” Kevin said. “It’s amaz-ing.”Kevin also credited his wife, Jeni —

cool under pressure — and his children,resilient and willing to help Erin at allcosts.“Jeni’s the unstoppable force that

kept us going,” he said.Back in the office, Kirtland Chronicle

and Chesterland News Office ManagerMaureen Mooney listened to Potter tellthe story and unpack the last three yearsof his life. She took time to reflect, too.“The generosity of people around us

was amazing at the party,” Mooney said.“It was a very positive atmosphere. Thismakes me put things in perspective. Imay have a bad day, but it’s not a badday compared to what Erin wentthrough.”As she spoke, her eyes drifted over to

the wall and settled on the bulletinboard: Keep calm, and carry on.

Survivor from page 1

PHOTO COURTESY OF WISH PHOTO COMPANYThe Potter family: Kevin, Annie, donor Frank Reynolds, Erin, Jeni and Mary.

Page 6: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

The Geauga County BudgetCommission approved West GeaugaSchools’ 2014-2015 budget Monday, butnot before questioning figures in the per-manent improvement fund and a pro-jected carryover of nearly $10.7 millionduring a March 10 budget hearing.Earlier this month, Deputy Auditor

Beverly Sustar said former districtTreasurer Michelle Tullai had failed toinclude “outside” permanent improve-ment money in next school year’s budget.Interim Treasurer Dan Wilson called

the omission a “clerical oversight” andsaid the district’s Board of Educationhad approved appropriations thatincluded the revenue from the five-year,2.75-mill levy dedicated to re-roofing allfacilities in the district.“That was the reason for the levy

request to the community,” said Wilson,who serves as treasurer of MentorSchools. “In fact, just last week, weopened bids for roofs on two of our build-ings that are approximately $1.6 million.”He explained if the omitted levy rev-

enue were included in the budget and the$1.6 million in roofing projects deducted,the PI fund would have an ending bal-ance of $202,000. This would provide contingency funds

if issues were discovered with the tworoofing projects, he said.In addition, levy proceeds of $2.3 mil-

lion per year, to be collected through cal-endar year 2015, will be used to re-roofone other building and for technologyand deferred maintenance projects thatwere part of the levy campaign.“We’re hopeful that we will under-

spend the total amount of the five-yearproceeds, but we won’t know that untilafter the remaining three re-roofing proj-ects are done,” Wilson told commissionmembers, Treasurer Chris Hitchcock,Prosecutor Jim Flaiz and Auditor FrankGliha. “We’re taking a cautious approachto make sure, first and foremost, theroofs can be repaired correctly.”Hitchcock moved that Wilson amend

the district’s proposed budget to reflectthe missing levy revenue prior to anApril 1 deadline.Flaiz noted a “big jump” in expenses

next school year.Wilson explained there is some

planned additional programming, prima-rily at the secondary level, which wouldentail four more staff positions.

“Your cash balances are steadilyincreasing and I read in the paper thatthe school board is talking about puttinganother levy on in 2017,” Flaiz said.Wilson said in his experience, the tax

budget is a “placeholder with generousassumptions” that are refined when actu-al appropriations are made.He explained West Geauga has two

expiring levies — a 3.53-mill in 2015 anda 5.6-mill levy in 2017 — that will needto be renewed.“When I looked at the voting history

of levies in West Geauga, it’s not a 100percent certainty that any levy passes,whether it’s new or renewal,” Wilson said,adding statewide, about 15 percent of allrenewal levies have failed since the startof the “Great Recession” in 2008. “So, we’re taking a very cautious

approach,” Wilson said.Based on the district’s five-year forecast

and recent school board action, he toldcommission members he is predicting WestGeauga will need new millage in 2017.The recent board action includes the

elimination of the all-day kindergarten feebeginning next year, the purchase of iPadsand Chromebooks for educational purpos-es and the reduction of grade-level capaci-ties for open enrollment, Wilson said.“Based on those actions that the

board’s formally taken, I’m showing areduction in cash balances of $1.7 millionfrom what was in the forecast,” he said,adding beginning next year, the districtbegins to spend more than it takes in.“That’s the reality of school funding in

Ohio. Tax levies remain a constant oncewe’re fortunate enough to get communityapproval of them and state funding showsvery little change, and those are our twoprimary revenue sources,” Wilsonexplained. “Expenses, on the other hand,are driven by fixed costs that include fuelfor buses, tuition for children with excep-tional needs, benefit costs of our employ-ees and, even though we’ve not given wageincreases in three years, eventually there’llbe some wage adjustments in the future.”So, expenses are going to grow and

revenues will remain relatively flat, headded.“Assuming that we can renew both of

the tax levies as they expire, that ($10.7carryover) balance goes down to $2 mil-lion by ‘17-‘18,” Wilson said.In addition, if the district’s five-year

average increase in expense of 4.7 per-cent is applied to “out years” beyond the

Page 6 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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See Budget = Page 13

Page 7: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Springtime for CatsApril 13, 1-4 p.m.“Springtime for Cats” will benefit the

Happy Tails Cat Sanctuary in ChesterTownship. It will take place at the E.O.U.V Hall

in Gottscheer Club Park, 8636 PekinRoad, Russell Township. The event is $40 per person and will

include appetizers at 1 p.m., a family-style Sunday dinner at 1:30 p.m. and afree ticket for a reverse raffle with a$1,000 jackpot. There will also be sideboards, auction

items and a “treasure scoop” (a fungame of chance with prizes for all partic-ipants). Dinner will consist of chicken

schnitzel, roast beef, pasta, green beansalmondine, mashed potatoes, salad, rollsand butter, coffee and tea, with mini-pas-tries for dessert. There will be no extra charge for

beer, wine and soft drinks. Reservations required and must be

made by April 8. Tickets will be held at the door at the

event. “We are delighted that the benefit

will be held in this spacious and verycharming venue,” said Jeanne Bones, thesanctuary’s founder and director.Noting that the fundraiser is very

important for the mostly cageless catsanctuary, she added, “No one at ourfacility is paid a salary.”“We depend on donations and vol-

unteers. However, we stil l have toprovide food, kitty litter, vet care andother necessities for more than 70

cats — some of whom wil l stay atHappy Tails for the rest of their livesbecause they are unadoptable due tobeing physically disabled, old, feral ordistrusting of humans due to priorabuse, neglect or abandonment,” she

Wednesday, March 26, 2014 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 7

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SUBMITTEDChardon police officer James Klima holds“Jeepers,” a tabby cat he rescued in themidst of snowy, freezing weather. Klima andhis fiancée, Stefanie Mach, helped the starv-ing cat a great deal, but couldn’t keep her.Interested potential adopters can call theChardon Veterinary Hospital, 440-286-1611.

See Around Town = Page 12

Page 8: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Page 8 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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Scholastic Book Fairand Open House April 9-16, 9 a.m. to noonCome and meet Clifford the Big Red

Dog at the scholastic book fair and St.Mark Preschool open house at St. MarkLutheran Church, 11900 ChillicotheRoad, Chester Township.Purchase books to put in Easter bas-

kets. Clifford will be precent each day withthe preschool director, Virginia Burke, sobe sure to visit the preschool for childrenages 3-5. If you enroll your child in pre-school for the fall during the book fair, the$40 registration fee will be waived.Call 440-729-1668 for more information.

St. Anselm Preschool St. Anselm Preschool upcoming events

include “Native American Adventures”performance at 10 a.m. April 1 and “TheScience of Ladybugs” at 10 a.m. April 9.Programs are free and open to pre-

school-aged children in the community. Call the school office, 440-729-7806,

to register or for more information.

St. Anselm NEOSEF AwardsThe following seventh- and eighth-

grade students from Saint AnselmSchool competed in the Northeast Ohio

Science and Engineering Fair March 11. These students received the following

awards for their achievements:Benjamin Stankewicz, of Kirtland,

placed third in Physics and received abronze medal.

Andrew Sieminski, of Kirtland,placed second in Physics, received a sil-ver medal and a $25 cash award.

Erin Martin, of Chardon, placed thirdin Chemistry and received a bronzemedal.

Tyler Wiece, of Chester Township,placed third in Chemistry and received abronze medal.

Chris Velotta, of Chester Township,placed second in Chemistry, received asilver medal, a $25 cash award and theWilliam R. Sweet Family Award forChemistry with a $25 cash award.

Evan Ditchman, of Russell Township,placed second for his EnvironmentalScience Award, received a silver medaland a $25 cash award along with theGreat Lakes Science Center Awardwhere he received a Family Membership.

Summer Salem, of Chester Township,placed second in Health Medicine andreceived a silver medal.

Kevin McGinty, of Chester Township,

SUBMITTEDPreschoolers from Kirtland's Play-To-Learn Preschool recently visited Swine CreekReservation in Middlefield Township to learn about making maple sap into maple syrup.There are still a few openings for the 2014-2015 school year. Visit www.kirtlandptlpreschoool.comfor more information.

See School News = Page 9

Page 9: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

received second place in BehavioralScience, received a silver medal and a$25 cash award.

Eric Oyen, of Chester Township,placed second in Biology, received a sil-ver medal and $25 cash award. He alsoreceived the following awards for hisproject: Cleveland Clinic Department ofMolecular and Cellular Biology Awardand $50; Cleveland Clinic Office ofPatient Experience Award and $50;Cleveland Regional Council of ScienceTeachers Award and $100.

Ava Thomas, of Chester Township,received second place in EnvironmentalScience, a silver medal and a $25 cashaward. She also received the following

awards for her project: AmericanInstitute of Chemical Engineers Award($100 and dinner); Engineers WithoutBorders Northeast Ohio ProfessionalsAward ($100); Genius Olympiad Award(invitation to New York science fair);National Oceanic and AtmosphericAdministration Award (invitation toapply for scholarship); EnvironmentalResources Management Award ($150);Cleveland Clinic Department ofPathobiology Award ($100); BroadcomMASTERS Program Award (invitationto compete with the Society for Science);Northern Ohio Chapter of AWMAssociation Award ($150); U.S.Navy/Marine Corps Office of NavalResearch Award (medallion).

Wednesday, March 26, 2014 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 9

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New WG Track Storage BuildingThe West Geauga Athletic Boosters

and the West Geauga High School trackteam are proud to announce the con-struction of a new track team storagebuilding. Construction will begin June2014. The project will benefit the middleschool and high school track teams.The track team fundraiser is an alu-

minum can drive. The aluminum candrive will be held from 8 a.m. to noonJune 7. The West Geauga community isasked to drop off cans at the north endzone concession stand (middle schoolparking lot). Donations for the building construction

can also be made to the West GeaugaAthletic Boosters, P.O. Box 506, Chesterland,Ohio 44026. Call Eric Melkerson (SecretaryWGAB), 440-799-9223 or email [email protected], for more information.

Page 10: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Page 10 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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MJ Builders, Inc. is a custom homebuilding company with more than 50years combined experience in the indus-try. This family-owned and operated

company has opened a design gallery inthe heart of Chester Township, whereclients can take a look at what they haveto offer and make selections for theirbuilding project. Personal attention to customers and

detail-oriented workmanship are at thetop of their list. This company constructs a select

number of homes each year in order tomaintain quality control on every proj-ect. They are involved every step of theway to make sure their clients are com-pletely happy. “There are no surprises at the end of

our building process,” said Joseph Marra,president of MJ Builders. “Because ofthe ratio of homes we build each year,we are able to give our clients 100 per-cent personal attention and be on site ona daily basis. This gives our clients thepeace of mind they are looking for. Wehave the experience, knowledge and skilllevel to make every project enjoyable forour customers.”Joe Marra, Joseph’s father, has been

building homes for more than 40 years;his first at the age of 19. He is a master carpenter and is profi-

cient in all the trades.“His expertise and knowledge of the

construction process are trulyunmatched in this industry,” Joseph said. Currently, Joe is integral in the layout

and building processes. Melissa, Joseph’swife, coordinates the client selectionprocess. “There are so many options out

there, it can be overwhelming sometimes.She helps our clients get the look theywant without exceeding their budget,”Joseph said. Melissa also manages the design

enter and contributes in floor plandesign and marketing. Most of MJ Builders’ business is from

word of mouth and referrals. Whetherbuilding a spec home or a presold home,MJ Builders will work with the customeron all stages of the building process.Each project is completely custom.

Planning stages often begin with ideasfrom the client, possibly a photo or afloor plan the customer may have seen,then the company will build on theaspects and ideas they like.MJ Builders works with several archi-

tects and will decide on the one that bestfits the client’s needs.The business is a member of the

Home Builders’ Association of GreaterCleveland. The company was awarded aCleveland Choice Award for a majorhome addition/renovation in ChesterTownship. Joseph sits on the Board of the HBA.

He is also chairman of the HBA’sMembership Committee and is aCertified Green Professional. He can bereached directly at 216-513-6996.Visit the new custom home design

gallery at 12663 Chillicothe Road,Chester Township, or call 440-759-2668for more information and to make anappointment.

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Modern Elegance Meets Tradition MJ Builders Offers More Than 50 Years Experience

Page 11: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Thank YouThe West Geauga Kiwanis Club

would like to thank the people of theWest Geauga community for their out-standing effort put into making this

year’s pancake breakfast successful. Remember, all profits are donated

back to the community.It is the people and businesses of our

community who generously give of theirtime that make our project what it istoday.People came from miles around ...

from the north, south, east and west, butmostly from the West Geauga communi-ty.Thanks again — we will be back

again in 2015 to serve you for the 62ndyear.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 11

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SolicitingLast week, a stranger knocked on my

door. He had a clipboard with a folderand a jacket with the AT&T logo on it. He did not have an ID badge. He was

not in an AT&T vehicle. He had juststarted his pitch when I interrupted him,asking him if he had seen the “NoSoliciting” sign on my door. He said yes, but claimed he wasn’t

soliciting. After arguing with him aboutthe definition of soliciting for a minuteor two, I asked him to leave. He contin-ued his rant. I asked him again to leave. He again ignored me and continued

to talk. I then strongly demanded heleave my property. He still would not go. At this point, I let him know he was

trespassing and I was going to call thepolice to have him arrested. He stillwould not leave. After insisting a fewmore times, he finally left. I did call the police after he left and

made a complaint. The officer told methey knew this particular solicitor and hehas a history of being “overly aggressive”and he “makes people uncomfortable.”

The officer also told me that his com-pany, DePere Concepts, did have a per-mit and they have contacted them at216-543-3500 about this employee. They did not return the police

department’s calls. Why is this “overlyaggressive” solicitor allowed to return toour neighborhood?Why has the township continued to

issue them a “Transient Vendor Permit”when they clearly do not comply withregulation that states “All transient ven-dors shall comply with any postednotices stating that there shall be nosolicitors…,” let alone employing some-one who has no problem trespassing. Is the township that in need of the

$75 that they issue a permit to anyonethat asks? The trustees and township fis-cal officer who approve these permitsneed to review the regulations andrefuse permits to companies who cannothonor the regulations put in place forthe safety and security of our residents.

Anthony ZaffiroChester Township

to the EditorLLLLLettersettersettersettersetters the editor

Kiwanis Corner

GEAUGA PARK D ISTR ICTAll programs are wheelchair and

stroller accessible unless otherwisenoted. For more information on theseprograms, call the Geauga Park Districtat 440-286-9516 or visit www.geauga-parkdistrict.org.

Shutterbugs Camera ClubApril 3, 7-9 p.m.The West WoodsIt's competition night. The category is

Photographer’s Choice, one black andwhite, and one color. See “Things to Do”on the website for details.

Sky Dance: Courtship TakesFlightApril 4, 7:30-8:30 p.m.Frohring MeadowsA behind-the-bushes look at the

courtship antics of the AmericanWoodcock, highlighted by an amazingaerial ballet with “wing song” followedby a careening descent. Partially wheelchair/stroller accessible.

Hunter Education CourseApril 5 & 12, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.Big Creek ParkA fun and interactive two-day course

for those interested in obtaining theirfirst hunting license. Course covers firearm safety, archery,

ammunition, hunter safety, ethics andconservation. Students must attend both days to

obtain certificate. Registration is required by visiting

www2.ohiodnr.gov.

Nature Trek Fitness HikeApril 5, 2-3:30 p.m.The West WoodsBurn off calories on this fitness hike

along The West Woods’ beautiful trails. Hikers need the ability to walk at

least 1.5 miles with some hills, rain orshine. Dress for the weather and bring

water.

Chagrin Valley AstronomicalSociety Monthly MeetingApril 5, 7:30-10 p.m.Sunnybrook PreserveOpen to anyone with an interest in

astronomy. A business meeting will be followed

by monthly observation report, educa-tional program and night sky viewingwhen clear. Learn more at www.chagrinvalleyas-

tronomy.org.

recreation

chatterEmily Mosser, of Chester Township,

was named to the dean’s list at TheUniversity of Findlay for the fallsemester.

Page 12: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Listed are public meetings and execu-tive sessions in the county for the comingweek, unless otherwise noted. These meet-ing notices are NOT legal notices.

Chester Township: April 2, 7 p.m., ZoningCommission; April 3, 7 p.m., Board ofTrustees. All meetings are held at theTownship Hall, 12701 Chillicothe Road,unless otherwise noted.

Munson Township: March 26, 6:30 p.m.,Board of Trustees, special meeting forFowlers Mill bridge project. Allmeetings are held at Township Hall,12210 Auburn Road, unless otherwisenoted.

Russell Township: March 26, 7:30 p.m.,Zoning Commission; April 2, 1 p.m.,Board of Trustees. All meetings areheld at Fire-Rescue Station, 14810Chillicothe Road, unless otherwisenoted.

West Geauga BOE: March 31, 7 p.m.,regular meeting, Middle SchoolCommunity Room, 8611 Cedar Road.

Page 12 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

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Following is a list of real estate transfersfor Chester, Munson and Russell townshipsfor the week ending March 14, provided bythe Geauga County Auditor’s Office.Transfers may involve sale of land only.

CHESTER TOWNSHIP

Kevin Lewalk, 9658 Kim Drive, toNicholas A. Simoni, $145,000. (1.07acres)

MUNSON TOWNSHIP

Louise F. Steinbarger, 10216 MayfieldRoad, to Brian Danison, $120,000. (3.16acres)

RUSSELL TOWNSHIP

Dennis P. Mikonsky, 8398 RiversideDrive, to William C. and Rianna LynnThomas, $245,500. (1.51 acres)

meetings

transfers

SUSPENDED LICENSEOfficers conducted a traffic stop on a

vehicle that did not make a completestop at the stop sign at Sherman andChillicothe roads. Upon running thedriver, they were found to be underlicense suspension. Officers took driverinto custody and had vehicle towed fromthe scene. Officers gave driver a courtdate and transported him to the Geaugacounty safety center.

Officers reported to the lobby to han-dle a traffic crash report that occurredon Mayfield and Caves roads. Driveradvised they were struck from behindand only exchanged information withthe other driver. Upon making thereport, officers discover other driver hada suspended license. Officers made con-tact and cited driver for having a sus-pended license and for assured clear dis-tance.

Officers conducted a traffic stop on

Mayfield Road in frontof Word of GraceChurch. Officers discov-ered driver was under a license suspen-sion and issued a court date along with acitation. Vehicle was towed from scene,nothing further at this time.

Officers observed a vehicle go off theroad and into a pile of snow in the areaof Ward Drive. Officers stopped thevehicle and discovered the driver hadtwo open license suspensions and anexpired license plate. Driver was issued acitation for the violations and vehiclewas towed from scene.

FAILURE TO CONTROLOfficers responded to the area of

Mayfield and Sperry roads for a report-ed one-car accident. Officers discoveredthe vehicle had gone off the road andinto a ditch and needed to be towed out.Driver was cited for failure to control,officers cleared without incident.

Chester Police Beat

said. “Along with our usual expenses,some of our older cats need dentalwork and other specia l vet care.People who don’t attend the eventcan still assist the sanctuary with adonation.”Bones said a tabby “who has espe-

cially touched our hearts is ‘Jeepers.’”All four of her paws are declawed,

she has only a few tiny teeth and she wasabandoned in the midst of this winter’sheavy snowfall and arctic temperatures,she said.“A Chardon policeman named

James Klima rescued Jeepers, who was

on the verge of starvation,” Bonesadded.If people are interested in adopting

or getting more information aboutJeepers, they can call the ChardonVeterinary Hospital, 440-286-1611. Jeepers’ $40 adoption fee will be

donated by the veterinary practice toHappy Tails. For more information about the sanc-

tuary or for reservations to the April 13event, call Doreen, H/L Communications(the event’s corporate sponsor) at 440-759-0076 or send an email message [email protected]. Reservations and payments and/or

donations can also be mailed to: HappyTails Cat Sanctuary, P.O. Box 581,Chesterland, OH 44026.

Around Town from page 7

Page 13: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

GEAUGA WEST L IBRARYThe Geauga West Library is at 13455

Chillicothe Road. For information on theseprograms or to register, call 440-729-4250.

StorytimesSign up now for the spring session,

which began the week of March 17. Babytime: Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. or

10:30 a.m; Thursdays, 10 a.m.Birth to age 2 with caregiver.

Toddler: Mondays, 6:30 p.m.; Tuesdays,9:30 a.m. or 10:30 a.m.Birth to age 2 with caregiver.

Preschool: Tuesdays, 6:30 p.m.;Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. or 2 p.m.Ages 3-5.

Trailblazers: Mondays, 6:30 p.m.Kindergarten through second grade.

Take Me Out to the BallgameApril 6, 2 p.m.Celebrate the opening of baseball sea-

son with facts, trivia and games, along withsnacks. Program designed for youth.

Look, Lunch and ListenApril 9, noonVintage Fashion — a fun look at fash-

ion from Victorian times to present day.

Amphibian AwakeningApril 10, 7 p.m.Warm evening rains draw salamanders,

frogs and toads out of hibernation tobegin their annual courtship. The Geauga

Park District will be there to help studentsin kindergarten through fifth grade dis-cover habits and habitats, adaptations andlife cycles. Program designed for youth.

Book DiscussionApril 16, noonBob Grau, author of “Five Million

Steps: Thru Hiking the Appalachian Trail,”discusses his 170-day hike covering 14states and 270 mountains. This event will beheld in the Ekyn Room at the library. Bringlunch; coffee provided. This program is freeand open to the public and is sponsored bythe Geauga West Friends of the Library.

Crop 'Til You DropApril 26, 6 p.m.Bring own scrapbook materials and crop

'til you drop. Program designed for adults.

board-adopted five-year forecast, andrevenues remain constant, Wilson said itwould take 6.8 new mills to get beyondthe 2017-2018 school year.Although he is new to the district,

Wilson said the board of education hastaken a “very conservative approach, but avery prudent approach” to accumulatingmoney in the early years of a levy cycle. Itnow has begun the second half of the levycycle, spending more money than it takes in.“The only way we can do that legally

is to draw down our accumulatedreserve,” he said. “That will begin thisyear, accelerated by the actions theboard’s taken in the last six weeks.”Wilson added, “When you roll this

out into the future, we will not be able to

have a 2018-2019 balanced budget with-out new revenues.”And looking at the voting history in

West Geauga, it takes multiple attemptsto get new levies passed, he said.“In my view of the world, it’s how

long did you commit to the communitythat a new levy would fund the quality ofeducation the community expects,”Wilson said. “We’re now halfwaythrough whatever that cycle was andwe’ll begin to draw down that balance.”Based on his observations, Wilson

said West Geauga made a long-termcommitment to the community thatrequired accumulating more cash bal-ances in the first half of the levy cycle.“This is the exception to the rule (in

Geauga County), but it’s a good excep-tion,” he added. “It means we don’t haveto go back to the taxpayers for a goodlittle while.”

Wednesday, March 26, 2014 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 13

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QUESTION: My friend shares a house with a lady friendof his. He is still active and able to drive. She suffered astroke several years ago and needs help. Last week, hegot sick and has been put in the hospital and we havebeen going over to help her. His children want him to goto assisted living. She has no place to go, she has no fam-ily, her income is around a thousand, she is verydepressed and we do not know what to do for her and howto help. Where can she go and what would happen to her?

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for the Chester Township Senior Trash Pickup DayApril 14-16The Chester Township Trustees and

road department are joining forces withthe Geauga County Department onAging for the 2014 Chester TownshipSenior Trash Pick-Up Day.To sign up for the pick-up, you must be

60 years of age or older, live in ChesterTownship and be registered with the DOA. The Chester Township road crew and

the DOA will pick up refuse from thesenior’s home. No liquids, paint or otherhazardous materials, construction debris,rocks, yard waste or household garbagewill be accepted. Four tires off the rimand appliances (with Freon removed)accepted. All material should be consoli-dated in strong boxes and items should

be kept dry (tarped) if possible.Only 10 household items per home

and trash should be from the registeredsenior’s household only. Items for pick-up should be placed outside of home orgarage, not curbside, by April 14. If assistance is needed, let the DOA

know when registering. The senior orsomeone 18 years or older that isappointed by senior, must be home onthe day of the pick-up and sign a releasefor the items that will be picked up.The April clean-up is on a first-come,

first-serve basis and the number of seniorresidents who can be served is limited.Call the DOA, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

weekdays, 440-279-2130; 440-564-7131,ext. 2130 or 440-834-1856, ext. 2130 toregister or for more information.

WG Senior Citizens Recognition DinnerMay 7, 4:30 p.m.The 24th annual West Geauga Senior

Citizens Recognition Dinner will be heldin the West Geauga High SchoolCafeteria, 13401 Chillicothe Road,Chester Township. Sponsored by West Geauga Schools

and the Rotary Club of Chesterland, theevening promises to be enjoyable andentertaining.Payment of $5 per person will be col-

lected at the door. Call the West Geauga Board of

Education office, 440-729-6812 by May1 for reservations or more informa-tion.Additional information can be found

at www.westg.org.

Read About Your LLLLLocal Librarocal Librarocal Librarocal Librarocal Libraryyyyy

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440-548-2820Budget

from page 6

Angelo J. MarraliSales Partner to John DeSantisMega Million Dollar Producer

Howard Hanna Real Estate Services440-525-3718

Page 14: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Page 14 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

�����������Fax 440-729-3408

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Reese’sPeanut ButterEggOriginal or White1.2 oz.

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Classic ClingsWindow Decorations12 x 17”

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While Supplies Last on Seasonal Packaging

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Garden Art: Make Your OwnBirdbath, Fountain or BubblerApril 5, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.Spend an enjoyable morning learning

the basics of creating simple bubblersand fountains with Geauga CountyMaster Gardener volunteers. Enhance flowerbeds and attract birds

with your own creation. The cost to attend is $40. Materials include indoor/outdoor

ceramic, terra cotta or resin pot; waterpump and tubing; decorative stones andmore. Light refreshments provided. This event will be held at the Geauga

County OSU Extension Office,Patterson Building, 14269 Claridon-TroyRoad, Burton.Preregistration required and is limit-

ed to 24 participants. Send check payableto OSU Extension, P.O. Box 387, Burton,OH 44021. Discounts don’t apply for thisclass. Call 440-834-4656 for more infor-mation.

Introduction to Bonsai April 12, 10 a.m. to noonGeauga County Master Gardeners

present master of bonsai Dale Harder,from The Cleveland Bonsai Club.Learn about the history, origin andmeaning of the ancient art of bonsaiand how to get started in creating yourown bonsai tree. The cost to attend is $15. Light

refreshments will be provided. This eventwill be held at the Geauga County OSUExtension Office, Patterson Building,14269 Claridon-Troy Road, Burton.While walk-ins are welcome, early regis-tration is appreciated. Send check payable to OSU

Extension, P.O. Box 387, Burton, OH44021. Call 440-834-4656 to register orfor more info.

Dan McClelland discussed the relation-ship of local law enforcement and SWATteams with trustees. Trustee MikePetruziello said he was opposed to thetownship allocating $7,000 annual mem-bership dues with Valley EnforcementGroup and Valley Enforcement RegionalCouncil of Governments instead ofdirecting it toward existing GeaugaCounty Sheriff’s Office SWAT resourcesand local law enforcement training.The VEG, based in Cuyahoga

County, is composed of officers fromregional police departments. TheVERCOG is a governing body that reg-ulates equipment and training purchases.“VERCOG acts as an oversight

group for VEG,” said Chester TownshipPolice Chief Mark Purchase.Trustees will vote whether or not the

township will renew its VEG/VERCOGdues at the next trustees meeting.“Part of the reason we have VEG is

that it helps gives us a connection to thewestern suburbs,” added Trustee Ward L.“Bud” Kinney. “It gives us a networkingrelationship and it offers training to ourofficers.”

Chester from page 3

Page 15: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Smith, who specializes in dressage, andJenna Hoy, who also trains hunters andjumpers, he said.“A lot of the horses are in Florida,”

Enger said. “Everyone in Florida hasbeen watching our weather and put offtheir return until April.”Even if the temperatures are still low

by then, the horses will have a heatedindoor arena for their daily exercise, hesaid. The arena is sprinkled to keepdown the dust and groomed daily.“Our goal was to have 20 horses by

March 12. We’re now at 27,” Enger said. When the Florida contingent arrives,

they should fill more than 50 stalls, withboard ranging from $650 per month inthe trail barn to $950 per month at theshow barn. “We’d figured it might take a year to

fill up. We’re very much ahead of sched-ule,” he said. There are still about 30 stalls avail-

able, although the main barn attached tothe arena is pretty much full, Enger said.The staff of 10 full-time and part-

time employees keeps the stalls andbarns spotless, horses blanketed in coldweather, fed, watered and groomed. Even with frozen ground and snow

falling, horses are turned out in the manylarge pastures for part of each day. Some,like the three black Friesans who getalong, are turned out in the same field.

Fields of Turn-out Dreams Enger said the property has a good

balance of stalls and turn out, with theentire 142 acres fenced in. Donich passionately believes horses

need time outside to just wander around,graze, visit and act like horses. They are far more willing to cooper-

ate safely with their riders and trainerswhen they have that kind of freedomand aren’t trapped in their stalls 23 hoursper day, even stalls as roomy as those at

Legacy, she said.Having ridden as a child, Donich

picked up the hobby again when herown children started taking lessons. Her experiences over the years built

her philosophy about horse turn-out. When they learned the stable where

they were keeping their horses was clos-ing, she was appalled to discover mostboarding stables don’t pasture their hors-es, especially not at night.“In the summer, horses just want to

go out at night and sleep in their stalls allday,” Donich said. Horses that have bad habits like

chewing wood, cribbing, weaving, pacingor being hard to ride often shed theirtension-based behavior when given moretime at pasture, she said, adding makinghorses happy satisfies her.

Family Time at the FarmDonich also likes having Enger and

their four teenagers helping out at the farm. As a radiologist physician, she values

the time she and Jim can spend with theirteens, Austin, Justin, April and John. Enger said he has the time now to

dedicate to the farm since he sold 23 of

his Enger Tire Centers to Mr. Tire,retaining only two tire and auto partsstores to manage.So Legacy Equestrian Center will be

something between a career and a hobbyfor the Engers, with Donich the equineexpert; Enger the property manager, sched-uler and fixer of broken things; and theiroffspring helping the staff take care of thefour-footed boarders and their people. “It’s like a family affair,” Donich said,

with all six riding, to one degree oranother. Her husband, prefers to canter along

without a saddle. April, a junior atKirtland High School, has placed innational interscholastic competitions.“I’m the one they look for when they

can’t find anyone else to ride with,”Enger laughed.The acres of woods and rolling hills

provide more than two miles of trailsand some outside cross country fences,Donich said. Non-boarders may use the facilities

for $15 a visit, except for the three-fur-long track, which has to be groomed. For more information, visit www.

legacyec.com or call 440-479-4151.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 15

CLASSIFIED SERVICES

APEXLAND MANAGEMENT

SPRING CLEANUPSSPRING CLEANUPSSPRING CLEANUPSSPRING CLEANUPSSPRING CLEANUPSFERTILIZING

BRUSH CHIPPINGBRUSH HOGGINGSTUMP GRINDING

HARDSCAPEDRAINAGE

WATERPROOFINGPOND INSTALLATION

Yard & Storm Damage CleanupINSURED • REFERENCES AVAILABLE

440-729-9400440-729-9400440-729-9400440-729-9400440-729-9400

Complete Tree ServiceMOWING & LAWN CARE

DependableService

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EDUCATORSTHAT

Asphalt SealingHot Crack Filling • PatchingCall Nick • 440-786-1375

SEALCOAT

C A S H� ���� � � � � � �

FOR USED CARSTRUCKS • COMMERCIAL TRUCKS • DUMP TRUCKSBUSES • CONSTRUCTION OR FARM EQUIPMENT

TRACTORS - FARM OR LAWN �������� �������� ������������������������������������� ����������������

C A S H

440-465-8795 • 440-254-4281

MASTER PAINTERS

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR������ ������

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email: [email protected]

Schafer Remodelingand Repair, LLC���� ������������

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Place your classified ad by calling 440-285-2013

���"��"$ �!#�#��������%����������$"���""�"�#��#�"$ �!#

��"#����$���������"�All American Car WashApex Land ManagementArabica Coffee House

Benjamin Franklin PlumbingBob K. (Mr. Gettysburg)

Cardinal Community Credit UnionCardinal Physical TherapyCD&J’s Landscaping, LLC

Ceramics & YouChase Bank

Chesterland Chamber of CommerceChesterland Mini Storage

Chesterland NewsD&D Massotherapy

Debbie Paterno Graphic DesignDebord’s One Hour Heating & Air

Eddy Fruit FarmEdward Jones Investments/

Allyn McNaughtonGeauga Floor Care

Geauga PCGeorgio’s PizzaGlissful Boutique

Joshua Saxon/Ruscher InsuranceLisa Thoreson/Howard Hanna

Real Estate ServicesLuczkowski Agency/Nationwide Insurance

Merrill Lynch/ Anthony AndersonMonticello Garden Center

Ohio Connect, LLCOur Town Cafe

Painting SolutionsPalma’s Hair DesignPDC Home SolutionsPerennials PreferredPlayground WorldSAK Automotive

Spencer Printing Concepts, Inc.TecXpert & Computer Options

The Miniature CellarThe Quilted Thimble

Tom Basista/West Geauga PlazaTruline Industries

$"���""�"��!�!�"����#"�#��#�%�"��#������#��"���#%�!������!�$ ���&����#��#�

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ANN WISHART/CNDawn Donich visits with her horse at Legacy Equestrian Center in Chester Township. Donichand her husband, Jim Enger, recently purchased the 142-acre farm.

Horse Farm from page 1

Page 16: Chesterlandnews 3 26 14

Chesterland: For lease- up to 1600 sq.ft. can be used as office space orkitchen. Great rates. Please call 440-557-5045 for more information.

Brick Ranch: totally remodeled, 2 bed-rooms, 1 bath, gas heat, AC, 2 carattached garage, landscaping and snow-plowing included, no pets. 216-536-4608.

Dump trailer rental. Pick up anddelivery. Call 440668-2889 for details.

Large 4 bedroom in Chesterland. 440-409-2567.

Chesterland: Second floor, 2 bedroomwith den, 1 bath, gas heat & electrici-ty. Credit & background check. $800/month. 216-789-8076.

REAL ESTATE - FOR SALEKirtland: Brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2full baths. City water and sewers.Park-like yard. Call for details. 440-256-2304.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITYSerious Retirement Impact. Do youhave 10 hours a week to make produc-tive? Build your future by operating amini-office outlet from your home com-puter. Free online training and sup-port. www.GoodMorningFreedom.com.

CARS & TRUCKS2008 Chevy Avalanche: black, LT3,65,000 miles, heated leather, sunroof,6-disc CD/MP3, new brakes- 2012. GMserviced. $25,000. 440-552-6996.

FOR SALECemetery Plot: Western Reserve(ChesTary). Your pick, your choice.$500. 216-214-4979.

Car Tipper: (tips cars on its side)Easy way to work. $500. 216-214-4979.

Remote control gas car. $300 or bestoffer. Brian, 478-9061.

Remote control gas boat. #250 or bestoffer. Brian, 440-478-9061.

Lifestyler Fitness Trainer Treadmill.Asking $150. 440-479-5455.

2 cemetery lots, $750 each. WesternReserve Memorial Gardens. Jackie,704-463-0302.

Wedding Gown: Michelangelo fromDavid’s Bridal. Size 10-12, ivory, bead-ed, strapless bodice, pearl cutworkskirt. Beautiful train, full slip. Verypretty. $200 OBO. 440-669-1671.

Generator: Coleman, 400 watt. Steelbench with vice. Drill press. TableSaw. 440-256-1107.

GARAGE SALESIf you need to have a moving sale,estate sale or garage sale, call KathyWillis at 440-729-2790 for assistance.Experienced. References available.We are now doing partial estate buy-outs.

Wanted: Grandma’s costume jewelry,compacts, perfume, linens, knick-knacks. Grandpa’s toys, trains, coins,bottles and fishing lures. Also buyingmisc. collections and estates. 440-338-5942.

LOST & FOUNDMissing: female black cat. Yelloweyes, answers to Billie. Lost at 306and Mulberry Road. $500 reward. 440-951-6280.

SERVICESOffering special discounts for interiorand exterior painting and stainingthis season. 14 years experience.Professional and insured. Call Dan,440-342-4552.

Music Lessons: guitar- beginning toadvanced. Rock, jazz, classical. Allband instruments. Drums (winter/spring road lessons). Consignments,repairs, sales. 440-221-2274.

Complete Tree service, mowing andlawn care. Reasonable and depend-able. 440-729-9400.

Plumbing: Professional, affordable,reliable. Water heaters, toilets,faucets, drain cleaning. 440-537-6045or 440-285-0800.

Yard and storm damage clean-up,down tree removal and brush chip-ping. Call 440-729-9400.

Carpenter: 30 years experience.Kitchen, decks, finish work, doors,storm doors, small jobs also. 440-729-8157.

Fluid Film Undercoating and RustPreventative. $125 Truck, add $25 forPlow, $100 car. Nights and weekends.Brian, 440-668-6164, by appointment.

Joe Eicher doing roofing, siding,plumbing, church steeples, decks, gut-ters, clean-out houses. You name it,we do it! Insured. 440-813-4272.

Housecleaning: I clean homes forChristian families. $95/ 440-853-8034

Local Tile: serving the area installingtiles of all kinds. Bathrooms, kitchen,backsplashes. No job too small.Quality work, reasonable prices. CallRon for a free estimate. 440-336-2845.

Gertie the Grammarian, a-k-a LindaDurnbaugh, for proofreading, editing& writing guidance. Write what youmean with no grammar fear. [email protected]. 440-256-3062.

Housekeeping service provided bytrustworthy, responsible, thoroughand experienced woman. Excellentreferences. 216-246-4948.

WANTEDWanted: Vintage Stanley woodwork-ing planes, hand tools and machinisttools. Will pay reasonable prices CallKarl, 440-812-3392.

Page 16 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, March 26, 2014

CLASSIFIED ADS

��� ��������&� "� �������"������!�������� �����������������!��"��%����$�

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CHESTERLAND������������������ ���

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from $650 to $700, plus Deposit��������

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HELP WANTEDHelp Wanted! Two Men and a TruckMoving and Storage is hiring moversand drivers. No CDL required. Must bedrug free with reliable transportation.We offer great pay as well as benefitsafter 90 days. Motivated applicantscan apply in person 8-4 M-F at 1420Lloyd Road, Wickliffe, OH 44092.

Looking for cleaners for theBainbridge and Novelty area. Mondaythrough Friday, early evenings.Clean background, dependable andpunctual. Please call DependableCleaning Contractors, 440-953-9191.

Seeking reliable, responsible, expe-

rienced office assistant. Competent

knowledge of Quickbooks, Office

Suite 2007 and Outlook. Min. 5

years experience. Small/ busy,

casual office. 3-4 days per week,

possible full-time. Clean record.

Geauga County. Send resume to

[email protected].

Now Hiring: breakfast and lunch

servers and hostesses. Apply at

Alfredo’s at the Inn, 780 Beta Drive,

Mayfield Village.

REAL ESTATE - FOR RENT

Linda EbersbacherRealtor ® • Mega Million Dollar Producer

12668 Chillicothe Rd.• Chesterland OH 44026440-223-8900

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Place your classified: 440-285-2013

PUBLICATION NOTICE

Please check your ad! We make every effort to

avoid errors. We ask that youcheck your ad the first day thatit appears. Any errors should becalled in to the ChesterlandNews Classified Department at440-729-7667 by noon Friday. We cannot be responsible for

more than one incorrect inser-tion if you do not call the errorto our attention. Thank you.

FOUND

Find your future home inthe Chesterland News

classifieds!

Looking for a Job?We are looking for you!

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9360 Mentor Ave., Mentor OH 44060���������� ���������������

CURRENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE:1. YARD MAN FOR A SCRAP YARD in Willoughby & Cleveland2. LANDSCAPERS to mow grass, plant flowers & shrubs3. INJECTION MOLDERS & PARTS FINISHERS, ASSEMBLERS in Mentor4. SHIPPING & RECEIVING, TOWMOTOR POSITIONSin Macedonia & Twinsburg -- $10-14/hr.

5. GENERAL LABOR POSITIONS at a national food distributor in Solon -- temporary to permanent 1st, 2nd & 3rd shifts

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