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Election 2022: Brigid Kelly wants to go from General Assembly to Hamilton County auditor
cincinnati.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cincinnati.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
I haven t slept: Norwood residents tired of flooding demand action
cincinnati.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cincinnati.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mon April 26, 2021 - Midwest Edition #9
Irwin Rapoport â CEG Correspondent
OâRourke Wrecking Company Inc., based in Cincinnati, began the demolition of the historic former United States Playing Card Company headquarters and factory in Norwood, Ohio, last March and completed the job in October.
The historic former
United States Playing Card Company headquarters and factory in Norwood, Ohio, a suburb in Cincinnati, is being transformed into a $150 million plus mixed-use development that will have more than 500 residential units; a brewery; a public market and food hall; more than 100,000-sq. ft. of retail; and two office buildings along the highway on the 21-acre site.
WHS Class of 2006 grad enters politics, running for Norwood council
Franzen
NORWOOD – A Wilmington High School graduate is hoping to make an impact in her community in a public office.
Emily Franzen (nee Linkous) WHS Class of 2006 filed to run for an at-large positions for Norwood City Council.
Franzen and her husband, Justin, have lived in Norwood, where she works as a research associate for Xavier University, since 2015.
Norwood is the second-largest city in Hamilton County behind only Cincinnati with just under 20,000 residents.
Franzen’s motivation to run for public office had been building since 2016.
“I started paying a lot more attention to politics after that, although I had before. A part of that was I started to watch the Norwood City Council meetings that are streamed live,” she said. “I realized I had a lot of interest, the ability, and the time to potentially run for a position like that. I felt that I could do a lot of good at a local level in
Updated: Jan. 28, 3 p.m.
Hamilton County commissioners Thursday gave final approval to taking over 911 dispatching for the city of Norwood. County Administrator Jeff Aluotto says they’ve been working to de-fragment the county s emergency communication system. Norwood was one of three remaining public safety answering points in the county, Aluotto told commissioners Thursday. With this contact we will be down to two: Hamilton County and the areas that we serve, and the city of Cincinnati.
Aluotto says the transition is a huge policy accomplishment for the county. The change takes effect Monday.
Norwood City Council approved the deal earlier this month.
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