Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

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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 VOLUME 47 No. 18 Wednesday, September 18, 2013 Fall Home Improvement Fall Home Improvement By Ann Wishart Fundraising plans for con- struction of the park and the dismembered Russell School arch have stalled for lack of a useable venue, said Russell Township Historical Society member Mary Beth Dale. Sept. 4, Dale told township trustees the group had planned to raise the money for the proj- ect, estimated to cost $30,000, but they have hit a snag in the antiquated electrical system of the Russell Town Hall. “We can’t make a $25 pot of coffee without blowing a bre- aker,” Dale said. When the historical society presented the idea for recreat- ing the arch on the northeast corner of Kinsman and Chilli- cothe roads on a strip of land owned by the township, they were given the green light by trustees in May. When trustees told the group the township wouldn’t be able to provide any funding for the reconstruction of the school’s arch-shaped entrance in the new park because of pro- jected budget shortfalls, society members said they would raise the money. One plan was to use the pic- turesque town hall for commu- nity events, but the facility is not sufficient. “Without an electrical up- grade to the town hall, we can’t do anything,” Dale said last Wednesday. Visitors to events at the his- toric town hall know the light- ing is weak, making the interior dark, even when lights are turned on. Trustees usually congregate in the fire station meeting room. The neglect of the town hall is not a new problem, Dale said. Two years ago, trustees approved the electrical upgrade, but the maintenance depart- ment never started the work, she said. “The electrical panel is very, very old. It needs to be updated so it will bare the load,” Dale said. Additionally, the landscap- ing around the town hall has Trustees Learn About Electrical Problems at Russell Town Hall Town Hall• Page 3 By Diane Ryder By a 2-1 vote, Chester Township Trustees have agreed to a zoning amendment that would allow outdoor wood- burning boiler systems on resi- dential lots of five acres or larg- er. During a public hearing last month, trustees heard from township Zoning Commission members, who proposed allow- ing the heating systems with restrictions they said would pro- tect neighbors from being sub- jected to toxic smoke. After hearing concerns and comments from residents, trustees voted to close the pub- lic comment portion and to con- tinue discussing the issue at last Thursday’s meeting. After Zoning Commission Chairwoman Margaret Muehl- ing read three minor modifica- tions to the amendment, Trustee Ken Radtke said he had a num- ber of questions. Radtke said he had not had enough time to research the issue, adding he believed the restrictions would make it diffi- cult for a homeowner to install a system. Muehling said at the previous meeting, they are not currently allowed because they are not Chester Allows Outdoor Boilers By Gwen Cooper Some parents in West Geauga Schools are questioning the district’s open enrollment practice, which accepts students from throughout the region in order to obtain increased state funding. Possible student safety, the cost to local property taxpayers, and potential effects on the dis- trict’s academic scores are of concern, said Joe Miller of Russell Township, a parent of a middle school student. “Parents have stopped kids from being dragged into cars in parking lots,” he said. “A girl got caught stealing four times in Westwood. She was suspended and got back into the class the next day.” Superintendent Geoff Pal- mer replied, “This is the first I have heard of that. The rumor mill is growing. It’s not neces- sarily true that the open enroll- ment students are a problem.” Palmer explained discipline is handled by each school admi- nistrator and state law dictates the discipline has to be the same for resident students and open enrollment students. Miller told the Geauga Cou- nty Maple Leaf a group of peo- ple saw parents stopping a girl from being dragged into a car parked near the Geauga West Public Library after a football game. “It’s not a rumor,” he said. “I won’t say who told me, but it’s not a rumor. People are afraid to speak up. But some are con- sidering moving their kids to private schools.” Miller attended the school board’s Sept. 9 workshop meet- ing. He noted that only he and one other resident were at the meeting, indicating a disconnect he sees between residents and the school board. “I have questions on how the board voted on open enrollment and did they take the easy way out instead of making cuts?” he asked. Board President Bill Beers said the decision to accept open enrollment students was unani- mous because it brings in about $1.2 to $1.3 million per year and helps to keep class sizes smaller. Miller further asked about the economic impact to taxpay- ers. “On the website, it says it costs $11,000 a year to educate a student, yet you only get $5,600 per year for an open enrollment student. Who’s paying for them?” he asked. Beers replied that the $11,000 per year figure was from 2010 and it represented an aver- age number, including the cost to teach special education students. Board member Sally Gill- more added it can cost $25,000 per year to educate a hearing- impaired student. “It’s hard to say how much it costs per child,” she said. “It could cost $4,000 to $5,000 for some, but our special education kids do cost more.” Gillmore said the school has declining enrollment, which makes it difficult to pay for expensive programs such as spe- cial education. Palmer said West Geauga has been able to maintain its honors classes and enrichment program teaching staff through the extra Parent Questions West G Open Enrollment Policy By Ann Wishart Available, full-time, good- paying jobs have dwindled since 2008, motivating many folks to dust off their skills, talents and passions and dive back into the workforce pool from a different platform. Some survive the dive and swim strongly toward their goals. Some sink. Others just paddle around, looking for direction. Two Geauga County women — Carol Yuko and Crystal Cassesa — are learning to swim on their way to realizing their entrepreneurial worth in to- day’s marketplace. Cassesa bakes dozens of works of art masquerading as delicious cookies in her kitchen in Chardon, calling her opera- tion “Sweet Love Cookies.” Yuko has set up her findart. studio in Chester Township where she helps children with autism discover their artistic tal- ents, giving them a positive and calming way to express them- selves. Her group art lessons for women provide many of the Entrepreneurs Find Direction, Support at Innovation Center Open Enrollment• Page 3 Entrepreneurs• Page 5 Outdoor Boilers• Page 8 JOHN KARLOVEC/GCML Russell Township Historical Society member Mary Beth Dale is dismayed with the condition and upkeep of the historical town hall at the corner of routes 87 and 306. ANN WISHART/GCML Sweet Love Cookies is the name of the cottage business Crystal Cassesa has opened in her Chardon kitchen, where she makes, bakes and decorates her creations while her toddlers are asleep.

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Chesterland News September 18th, 2013

Transcript of Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 1: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Your Community Newspaper Since 1967

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

VOLUME 47 No. 18 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Fall Home

Improvement

Fall Home

Improvement

By Ann Wishart

Fundraising plans for con-struction of the park and thedismembered Russell Schoolarch have stalled for lack of auseable venue, said RussellTownship Historical Societymember Mary Beth Dale.Sept. 4, Dale told township

trustees the group had plannedto raise the money for the proj-ect, estimated to cost $30,000,but they have hit a snag in theantiquated electrical system ofthe Russell Town Hall. “We can’t make a $25 pot of

coffee without blowing a bre-aker,” Dale said. When the historical society

presented the idea for recreat-ing the arch on the northeast

corner of Kinsman and Chilli-cothe roads on a strip of landowned by the township, theywere given the green light bytrustees in May. When trustees told the

group the township wouldn’t beable to provide any funding forthe reconstruction of theschool’s arch-shaped entrancein the new park because of pro-jected budget shortfalls, societymembers said they would raisethe money. One plan was to use the pic-

turesque town hall for commu-nity events, but the facility is notsufficient.“Without an electrical up-

grade to the town hall, we can’tdo anything,” Dale said lastWednesday.

Visitors to events at the his-toric town hall know the light-ing is weak, making the interiordark, even when lights areturned on. Trustees usually congregate

in the fire station meeting room.The neglect of the town hall

is not a new problem, Dale said. Two years ago, trustees

approved the electrical upgrade,but the maintenance depart-ment never started the work,she said. “The electrical panel is very,

very old. It needs to be updatedso it will bare the load,” Dalesaid.Additionally, the landscap-

ing around the town hall has

Trustees Learn About ElectricalProblems at Russell Town Hall

Town Hall• Page 3

By Diane Ryder

By a 2-1 vote, ChesterTownship Trustees have agreedto a zoning amendment thatwould allow outdoor wood-burning boiler systems on resi-dential lots of five acres or larg-er. During a public hearing last

month, trustees heard fromtownship Zoning Commissionmembers, who proposed allow-ing the heating systems withrestrictions they said would pro-tect neighbors from being sub-jected to toxic smoke. After hearing concerns and

comments from residents,trustees voted to close the pub-

lic comment portion and to con-tinue discussing the issue at lastThursday’s meeting. After Zoning Commission

Chairwoman Margaret Muehl-ing read three minor modifica-tions to the amendment, TrusteeKen Radtke said he had a num-ber of questions. Radtke said he had not had

enough time to research theissue, adding he believed therestrictions would make it diffi-cult for a homeowner to installa system. Muehling said at the previous

meeting, they are not currentlyallowed because they are not

Chester Allows Outdoor Boilers

By Gwen Cooper

Some parents in WestGeauga Schools are questioningthe district’s open enrollmentpractice, which accepts studentsfrom throughout the region inorder to obtain increased statefunding.Possible student safety, the

cost to local property taxpayers,and potential effects on the dis-trict’s academic scores are ofconcern, said Joe Miller ofRussell Township, a parent of amiddle school student.“Parents have stopped kids

from being dragged into cars inparking lots,” he said. “A girl gotcaught stealing four times inWestwood. She was suspendedand got back into the class thenext day.”Superintendent Geoff Pal-

mer replied, “This is the first Ihave heard of that. The rumormill is growing. It’s not neces-sarily true that the open enroll-ment students are a problem.”Palmer explained discipline

is handled by each school admi-nistrator and state law dictatesthe discipline has to be thesame for resident students andopen enrollment students.Miller told the Geauga Cou-

nty Maple Leaf a group of peo-ple saw parents stopping a girlfrom being dragged into a carparked near the Geauga WestPublic Library after a footballgame.“It’s not a rumor,” he said. “I

won’t say who told me, but it’snot a rumor. People are afraidto speak up. But some are con-sidering moving their kids toprivate schools.”Miller attended the school

board’s Sept. 9 workshop meet-

ing. He noted that only he andone other resident were at themeeting, indicating a disconnecthe sees between residents andthe school board.“I have questions on how the

board voted on open enrollmentand did they take the easy wayout instead of making cuts?” heasked. Board President Bill Beers

said the decision to accept openenrollment students was unani-mous because it brings in about$1.2 to $1.3 million per year andhelps to keep class sizes smaller.Miller further asked about

the economic impact to taxpay-ers. “On the website, it says it

costs $11,000 a year to educate astudent, yet you only get $5,600per year for an open enrollmentstudent. Who’s paying for them?”he asked.Beers replied that the

$11,000 per year figure was from2010 and it represented an aver-age number, including the cost toteach special education students.Board member Sally Gill-

more added it can cost $25,000per year to educate a hearing-impaired student.“It’s hard to say how much it

costs per child,” she said. “Itcould cost $4,000 to $5,000 forsome, but our special educationkids do cost more.”Gillmore said the school has

declining enrollment, whichmakes it difficult to pay forexpensive programs such as spe-cial education.Palmer said West Geauga has

been able to maintain its honorsclasses and enrichment programteaching staff through the extra

Parent Questions West GOpen Enrollment Policy

By Ann Wishart

Available, full-time, good-paying jobs have dwindled since2008, motivating many folks todust off their skills, talents andpassions and dive back into theworkforce pool from a differentplatform.Some survive the dive and

swim strongly toward theirgoals. Some sink. Others justpaddle around, looking fordirection.Two Geauga County women

— Carol Yuko and CrystalCassesa — are learning to swimon their way to realizing their

entrepreneurial worth in to-day’s marketplace.Cassesa bakes dozens of

works of art masquerading asdelicious cookies in her kitchenin Chardon, calling her opera-tion “Sweet Love Cookies.” Yuko has set up her findart.

studio in Chester Townshipwhere she helps children withautism discover their artistic tal-ents, giving them a positive andcalming way to express them-selves. Her group art lessons for

women provide many of the

Entrepreneurs Find Direction, Support at Innovation Center

Open Enrollment• Page 3

Entrepreneurs• Page 5 Outdoor Boilers• Page 8

JOHN KARLOVEC/GCMLRussell Township Historical Society member Mary Beth Dale is dismayed with the condition and upkeep of thehistorical town hall at the corner of routes 87 and 306.

ANN WISHART/GCMLSweet Love Cookies is the name ofthe cottage business CrystalCassesa has opened in her Chardonkitchen, where she makes, bakesand decorates her creations whileher toddlers are asleep.

Page 2: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 2 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Page 3: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

gone wild, the basement isdamp and the parking lot isonly partially paved, she said.“That building is the prize of

this township. It’s a shame it’snot being taken care of. Nobodyseems to care about this town-ship or this building,” Dale said. The only upgrade in recent

history was a new sink, she said.Trustee Justin Madden said he

would talk to Mainten-anceSupervisor Jack Gallagher aboutthe town hall upgrades, but hewasn’t in a position to give thesociety members an answerregarding the upgrades lastTuesday. Gallagher is due to retire

this fall.Fiscal Officer Chuck Walder

said Sept. 5 he is not aware theelectrical project was ever

broached during a budget hear-ing, but he has only been inoffice for a year. However, he said he is glad

the subject came up and he is infavor of seeing the buildingreceive more attention. “I’d like to see it rolled into

a bigger project,” he said,adding it could possibly includethe replacement of the vinyl sid-ing with something more histor-ically appropriate. “That building should be

better respected. It is Russell’shistory. We have to do some-thing with it,” Walder said.Last Monday, Madden said

he had talked to Gallagher andlearned upgrading the town hallis far more involved thaninstalling a new electrical panel. Getting permits and inspec-

tions would start a process thatcould become increasingly com-plicated and expensive. The actu-al work by a licensed electrician

would take at least a week.“It’s not an easy fix.

Inspections can lead to otherproblems,” Madden said.The issue was sidetracked

when the state cut funding to alltownships and Russell Townshipofficials have been workingtheir way through that, so thetown hall has been put on aback burner, he said.“It’s a big job,” Madden said. He explained the reasons for

the delay to members of the his-torical society and that thetrustees have no plans in placeto pursue work on the town hall. Fundraising by the Histor-

ical Society may be the onlyway to make progress on theproject, Madden said.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 3

funding provided by open enroll-ment fees.Miller suggested honors stu-

dents in grades 11 and 12 couldattend classes at LakelandCommunity College withoutadding to the cost of WestGeauga’s teaching staff.Board member Jackie Dot-

tore, who has children in theschool system, said it is not alight topic for her.She pointed out there were

220 students in the 2012 graduat-ing class while this year’s kinder-garten class had just 110 students. “In 12 years, our class size

will be cut in half,” Dottore said.“Every single year open enroll-ment is a new decision for me.The $1.2 million we got prevent-ed us from asking for an addi-tional levy, which is an advantageto property owners. But, we needto make sure we keep our excel-lent ratings. I’ve asked for test

scores of our open enrollmentstudents.”Beers said he has read nation-

al studies that indicate openenrollment students may outper-form resident students becausetheir parents are more involvedin their education. He said one of the challenges

the board faces is whether toaccept open enrollment studentsor cut teachers when enrollmentdeclines.“If we have 100 students in a

grade and four teachers, the classsize is 25,” he said. “What do youdo when you have 90 kids in agrade, cut back to three teachers?”State laws dictate against

looking at the academic achieve-ments, athletic records and disci-pline records of potential openenrollment students, Palmer said.“We have to take them based

on their order of application,”Palmer said. “We can deny themif they have been expelled fromschool more than 10 days duringthe previous semester.”Open enrollment students can

also be denied according to classsize limits and if they add to pro-gram costs, such as special educa-tion programs, he said.Palmer added the district

can limit open enrollment tostudents who live in adjoiningcommunities.Thus far West Geauga has lim-

ited the number of open enroll-ment students it will accept, but hasnot limited enrollment to adjoiningcommunities, Beers said. He said the school currently

has 194 open enrollment studentsdistributed throughout the gradesand it has turned down another80 students.At the meeting, Gillmore said

the school received calls as recentas that day asking about openenrollment slots.“We’ve been closed to new

students for about six months,”Gillmore said. “Can we privatize the

school?” Miller asked.“No, we can’t,” Beers re-

sponded. “By state law, we haveto have a public school system inthis district.”

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Listed are public meetings andexecutive sessions in the countyfor the coming week, unless other-wise noted. These meeting noticesare NOT legal notices.

Chester Twp.: Sept. 18, 7 p.m.,

Zoning Commission; Sept. 19, 7

p.m., Board of Trustees. All meet-

ings are held at the Township

Hall, 12701 Chillicothe Road,

unless otherwise noted.

Munson Twp.: Sept. 23, 7 p.m.,

Zoning Commission; Sept. 24,

6:30 p.m., Board of Trustees. All

meetings are held at Township

Hall, 12210 Auburn Road, unless

otherwise noted.

Russell Twp.: Sept. 18, 7 p.m.,Board of Trustees; Sept. 24, 7p.m., Board of Trustees, specialpublic meeting to discuss currentstate of township finances, TownHall, 14890 Chillicothe Road;Sept. 25, 7:30 p.m., ZoningCommission. All meetings areheld at Fire-Rescue Station,14810 Chillicothe Road, unlessotherwise noted.

West Geauga BOE: Sept. 23, 7p.m., regular meeting, MiddleSchool Community Room,8611 Cedar Road.

Visit Our Website:www.chesterlandnews.com

meetings

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Page 4: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Sept. 21: CommunityRecycling Day9 a.m. to 1 p.m.West Geauga residents and

businesses are welcome to joinat the Drug Mart Plaza, 12575Chillicothe Road, Chester Town-ship, for document shredding,electronics and metal recycling. Sponsored by the Kiwanis

Club of West Geauga in con-junction with Chester Township. Tax deductible receipts

available upon request. Call Ken Mantey, 440-729-

2869, for more information.

Sept. 21:Leukemia/LymphomaFundraiser6-9 p.m.Join for a fundraiser benefit-

ting the Leukemia and Lymp-homa Society.Held at Colonial Wine and

Beverage, 8389 Mayfield Road,Chester Township. Beer and wine tasting, food

included. $30 per person. Call Jason, 440-554-5849, for

more information.

Sept 24: ChesterlandConservative Forum7 p.m.The Chesterland Conserv-

ative Forum will hold a townhall meeting with CongressmanDavid Joyce, where the audi-ence will have the opportunityto ask questions.Meeting will also feature

former Ohio Rep. Seth Morgan,of Dayton, whose topic will be“It’s About Liberty, Stupid!”and former Ohio Sen. KevinCoughlin will speak on“Tyranny in Local Govern-ments.”Held at Orchard Hills Event

Center, 11414 Caves Road,Chester Township. Refreshments served.Call 440-552-4385 for more

information.

Sept. 25: FreeCommunity Lunch11 a.m. to 1 p.m.Join at St. Mark Lutheran

Church, 11900 ChillicotheRoad, Chester Township, for afree community lunch. Held in the Fellowship Hall. Presented by the Women’s

League at St. Mark. All are welcome. Call 440-729-1668 for more

information.

Sept. 29: WomenSafeLuncheonNoon to 3:30 p.m.WomenSafe is pleased to

present a visual experience ofshopping in Cleveland in theearly years.A narrator from the Western

Reserve Historical Society willshowcase the experience ofshopping in downtown Cle-veland and the honor it was tobe a part of it. In addition to the Chinese

auction, a sit-down brunch willalso be catered.Held at Pine Ridge Country

Club, 30605 Ridge Road,Wickliffe. Individual tickets are $38. Sponsorship opportunities

available.Proceeds from the event

assist WomenSafe, a NortheastOhio domestic violence shelterproviding critical shelter andoutreach services to adults andchildren fleeing violence inhomes. Call WomenSafe’s Event

Line, 440-286-7154 ext. 248 [email protected], fortickets or more information.

Oct. 3: Choo Choo ChowChow Fundraiser6 p.m.Howard Hanna will be hold-

ing the Annual Choo ChooChow Chow charity event atDanny Boys Restaurant, 8389Mayfield Road, Chester Town-ship. Tickets are $20 and include

all-you-can-eat pasta, gourmetpizzas, salad and breadsticksplus one well drink and unlimit-ed soft drinks. Items, many from local ven-

dors, prize wheel, silent and liveauction, game board for theBrowns vs. Bills game, 50/50 raf-fle, mystery key jewelry chanceand more also available. Proceeds helps children

without health insurance re-ceive the care needed as well aschildren who might have insur-ance that does not cover a cer-tain treatment and go directlyto hospitals in the Clevelandarea.

Stop by the ChesterlandHoward Hanna, 12668 Chilli-cothe Road, Chester Township,440-729-1600, or contact AllisonNyquist, 440-715-0634, for moreinformation.

Oct. 5: Raise a RoofFundraiser5-10 p.m.Join for a fundraiser for

Maple Leaf Community Re-sidences, which aims to pur-chase homes to provide resi-dences for people referred bythe Geauga County Board ofDevelopmental Disabilities. Held at Federated Church

Family Life Center, 16349Chillicothe Road, Chagrin Falls. Live music, magician and

Chinese auction available. $50 for clambake, $45 for

chicken only, $8 for extra clams. Dinner includes chowder,

chicken, potato, corn on the cob,salad, pasta, soft drinks anddessert. Call 440-729-4314 for tickets

or for more information.

Oct. 19: WG Trivia Night7 p.m. Bring friends, family, class-

mates for a fun, fast-paced nightof trivia at Fowler’s Mill GolfCourse, 13095 RockhavenRoad, Chester Township. Doors will open at 6 p.m.

and 10 rounds of trivia willbegin promptly at 7 p.m. Raffles, auctions, games and

prizes included. Come ready to bid on silent

auction packages. The event will again be

emceed by Anthony Lima, the92.3 “The Fan” personality,Action 19 News sportscasterand a West Geauga alum.Cash prize will be awarded

to the teams of eight or less thatcome out on top — $500 to thenight’s cleverest crew and $200for second place finishers.Ages 21 and older, no excep-

tions. Registration available at

www.westgtrivianight.com.$160 for a table, maximum

eight players per table to be eli-gible for cash prizes. Payment methods include

MasterCard, Visa, AmericanExpress, Discover and checks.Please bring snacks to share

for table; select complimentarybeverages provided. Guido’s pizzas may be pre-

ordered with table registration. All proceeds will benefit the

West Geauga Athletic Boosters.Email wgboosters@gmail.

com or call 440-729-8426 formore information.

Page 4 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

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same benefits.Both home-grown businesses

are in the early stages of theirdevelopment, but both creditTim Lybarger at the ChesterInnovative Center with provid-ing a road map to start and con-tinue their enterprises.

Connecting Through ArtYuko’s students search, dis-

cover and connect through artin the basement of the samebuilding where Lybarger has hisoffice at 8430 Mayfield Road inChester Township.

She sets up one-on-one ses-sions for her students withautism in a “guided art” envi-ronment. Yuko’s abstract expressionist

Matisse-style work lends itselfto the abilities of those withspecial needs and their parentstell her they like the effect herlessons have on their non-ver-bal children.“The parents are so grateful.

They notice a difference. Artseems to be very universal andvery soothing,” she said. “Mystudents are more peacefulwhen they leave here.”The work in her studio/class-

room is primarily in black andwhite and it doesn’t take muchtime to be creative.“You just throw something

down on paper and call it art,”Yuko said. “In half an hour youcan have a masterpiece.”One eighth-grade student

had his first show, called “Art ofJoe,” and made about $850 byselling his work and T-shirts. Hisnext show is set for Oct. 6.“I just love working with

autism and special needs kids.That’s where it’s at for me,”Yuko said.Her women’s groups are

more colorful, using pencils,crayons and markers to get intouch with their artistic sides. Self-expression is the goal

and a great side effect is thefriendships that evolve duringthe classes, she said.“We form good, positive

relationships,” Yuko said of thefirst class of four women she

taught. “They started doingtheir art, then they started con-necting.”

A Sweet Art FormCassesa said she heard

about the Innovation Centerfrom her friend, Yuko, about thetime everybody started encour-aging her to turn her cookie-making talent into a business.At the urging of her hus-

band, Larry, she joined the cen-ter’s success team of entrepre-neurs and found the encourage-ment to start Sweet LoveCookies.“We hold each other acc-

ountable and bounce ideas offeach other,” Cassesa said. But a lot of her direction

came from Lybarger, who sup-plied the nuts and bolts for thestart-up.“I give him credit for taking

my brain and giving me focus,”she said. “I didn’t know whatdirection to go with marketing. Iwasn’t sure what would beimportant to have — cards, liter-ature or web page.”Then there are bookkeeping

details and overhead that needto be figured into the cost of thespecialty baked goods. Cassesa finally decided to

charge for cookies by the inch,with 4-inch-by-1-inch cookiesbeing medium range, but thereare basic and high-detail cook-ies on her menu. There were other things to

consider in the pricing exercise.“I realized I wasn’t paying

myself at all,” she said.Accounting aside, Cassesa

has had to balance home lifewith her three cookie-loving

kids, ages 5, 3 and 20 months. High cooling racks on her

kitchen walls were an early andworthwhile investment.She mixes the dough in the

early morning before the kidsare up, makes and bakes thecookies while the two youngestare taking their naps and deco-rates after they are in bed forthe night.Her first contract was with

her friend, Stephanie Talty atThe Nest on Chardon Square,where her cookies were wellreceived. She also sells at the Chardon

Farmer’s Market on Fridayafternoons and takes individualorders. Most notable have beenthe sequined cowgirl boot cook-ies and globe cookies about sixinches across.Cassesa is amazed at the

demand for her gluten- anddairy-free cookies and she isexperimenting with makingsugar-free cookies with Steviasugar substitute.Eventually, she foresees

expanding her business to abakery in Chardon, but she ismoving at a manageable pace. Ohio’s cottage law allows

her to make her cookies athome, but not to sell them on aweb page. A home bakerylicense could open some doorsas Sweet Love Cookies grows.“I didn’t want to go LLC

until I had something to LLC,”she said.

Innovation Plans Fill OutLybarger, whose innovation

center continues to evolve, callsthe structure of his efforts“Dream Door Enterprises.” The base of the innovation

center is its market segments toaid pioneers in the new econo-my.The microbusiness segment

is designed to help entrepre-neurs like Yuko and Cassesa. Other parts of his budding

operation address forming part-nerships with the chambers ofcommerce for community con-nections and with lending insti-tutions to support a microfund-ing process. His success team concept in

the innovation center division isin the middle of a business bootcamp series, private consulta-tion and several learning oppor-tunities.“Success teams are really the

engine that keep you goingtoward your goal,” he said.“People have inspiration. Wehave to figure out how toaddress them — one inspirationat a time.”The world has changed since

2008 and Lybarger expects it tocontinue to morph.“This is too compelling an

opportunity to turn away from,”he said, adding he’s willing tohelp folks develop faith in theiridentities. “Don’t throw that idea away

— bring it here,” he said.Contact Yuko at www.find-

artchesterland.com, Cassesa at614-595-9510 and Lybarger [email protected].

Entrepreneursfrom page 1

“We hold eachother accountableand bounce ideasoff each other.” – Crystal Cassesa

“Art seems to bevery universal andvery soothing.” – Carol Yuko

Lock it UpRecently, police officers

from the Chester TownshipPolice Department have beenresponding to a high volume ofreported thefts from motorvehicles. Our investigations have

uncovered one single elementthat remains consistent inalmost every single report: thereis never any forced entry intothe vehicles.

Almost all of these reportedthefts have begun with anunlocked motor vehicle. By utilizing a couple no cost,

crime prevention actions, youcan dramatically help reduceyour chances of becoming a vic-tim of these types of crime.1. Lock Your Car Doors.

Lock them at your residence,when shopping or at anytimeyou leave your vehicle unat-tended.2. Avoid turning your vehicle

into a display window of yourvaluables. Take items such as

purses, wallets, cash or creditcards, ipad’s, ipod’s, computersor camera’s inside your home.I encourage you to always

contact the police department,anytime something or someonelooks suspicious to you. You all know your neighbor-

hoods best and can becomeactive crime prevention mem-bers of the community, by sim-ply reporting things that aren’tnormal.

Mark A. PurchaseChester Township Chief of

Police

A Message FromYour Chief of Police

Page 6: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 6 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

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Will We Ever Learn?Even a limited attack on

Syria with drones or bows andarrows will end up showing therest of the world that we consid-er ourselves the world’s police-men.Because Assad may have

used poison gas on his own citi-zens does not entitle us to per-petuate more killing anddestruction.We don’t need more ene-

mies, which our military actionswill surely guarantee. With allthe opposition and little supportfrom other nations, it’s noshame to back away from the“red line.”If President Obama is

turned down by Congress, it isno attack on his prestige or rep-utation. In fact, since Congressis the representative of the peo-ple and that’s the way our dem-ocratic system is supposed towork, this would be a goodmove. We take away car keysfrom drunk drivers and Mr.Obama appears to be tipsy onthis issue.The president has lots more

going for him beside action orinaction on Syria. His healthcare plan will benefit millionsand is a big plus. Other impor-tant policies in his favor are jobtraining, education and votingrights.

Proceeding militarily inSyria can taint an otherwisegreat presidency before the realstart of his second term.

Elliot BerensonChester Township

Fight for Rural ValuesReduxIn the Chesterland News,

Sept. 4 publication, page 7, itsaid Skip Claypool is a memberof the Northeast Ohio Area-Wide Coordinating Agency(NOACA). Ron Cotman voted in favor

of NOACA planning forChester. NOACA is a grantreceiving think tank of sortscreated to assist civil govern-ment seeking to “improve” thecurb appeal of a community. Ron Cotman supports a mix

of NOACA proposals, all ofwhich require changing zoningto accommodate heightenedcommercialism. Ron Cotman and Skip

Claypool being friends, seem-ingly control Ken Radke, a loneChester trustee, and guide himto favor a Cotman and Claypoolvision for the Chester Township. Q: What do they, along with

former township Fiscal OfficerKaren Austin have in common?

A: 730 days of attack on thecharacter and competence ofMike Joyce and Judy Caputo,the only two trustees who standagainst zoning changes that afew profiteers benefit fromfinancially and for the townshipvoters who will suffer the finan-cial burden that will ultimatelyfall to Chester township taxpay-ers to make happen.Enter the planning docu-

ment” The 2008 Geauga CountyNOACA Board and ChesterTownship Workshop Notes,”page 13. Therein lies the core reason

of the liberal hate tactics beingused by a bitter handful ofwannabe civic leaders to kill thecharacter of those putting up astrong resistance to protect thistownship from becoming a citywith a liberal commercializationagenda, at the heart of which, isthe deconstructing of ChesterTownship zoning to make it so.Mike Joyce and Judy Caputo

are the last line of defenseagainst those hateful interestsbent on changing Chesterlandinto a nightmare of out-of-townfinancial pirates out to make abuck on the back of townshipresidents through grants, taxfavors, eminent domain landseizures, high density housing

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Page 7: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

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initiatives, industrial zoning andnew commercial property zon-ing. Sounds fantastic to you as a

reader? It is buried in theChester Township workshopnotes for you to discover foryourself. The bottom line foundwithin these notes as written byGroup 1 is, “Zoning needs to bemodified.”There are a lot of people

waiting in the wings of ChesterTownship to take center stageand change the way of life inChesterland. They are meeting in private

to overthrow Mike Joyce andJudy Caputo and make theirvision of a city come true. Ask yourself why Mike

Joyce and Judy Caputo havebeen painted as the enemy ofChester Township. There are no scandals. There

is no malfeasance in their busi-ness of running the township. But if you listen to Ken

Radke, Ron Cotman, SkipClaypool, Karen Austin or theirminions, you would think thesky is falling and their hair wason fire because of these two. This is not the leadership

Chesterland deserves.

J.A. FrankChester Township

TreacherousIf you could grasp what the

letter from Skip Claypool wasall about, then you know thatNOACA (Northeast OhioCoordinating Agency) is a real-ly bad group that wants to messup rural areas, take away localleadership and create cities withapartments condos and lowincome housing to expandCuyahoga County into Geauga. Ron Cotman and the

Chester Observer are forNOACA. When Cotman was aChester Township trustee in2008, he voted for a SustainableCommunities Grant fromNOACA (Judy Caputo voted

against it). That should seemodd to all of you, since Cotmanclaims he is against grants andwants to protect our zoning. Theso-called meetings the masterplan steering committee hadwere nothing but a ruse to con-vince the public that what hewas doing was a good thing …far from it.Cotman and his group have

been lying to the public for thelast eight years about theirintentions. The only reason he isgunning for the two trustees inoffice is a simple one. He wantsto sabotage our zoning from theinside.Ken Radtke is his protege

and wants to see the same thinghappen. It amazes me that hehas gotten this far with thisscam on the good people ofChesterland. One more Cotmancrony in office and our large lotzoning and semi-rural way oflife is over.So Skip, maybe in your next

letter you can tell all of us whyyou had no clue about any ofthis and tell us what you reallythink of Ron and Ken. All ofthe proof is in public records ifyou had bothered to ask orlook. For all the people of

Chester, if they get their way,Chester will become a city. Anyone who works here will pay anincome tax. For home owners,you will see your taxes go upand your property values godown.Red flags should be up for

all of you who love our countyand townships and want themto stay open and free of uncon-trolled development.It only takes one case lost in

court to break our zoning.Chester zoning is the only thingthat can stop NOACA fromforcing us to become a part ofCuyahoga. Our zoning hasremained firm for the past 30years and that makes it verystrong. That is why this group ofindividuals are working so hard… to convince you that Judyand Mike are wrong forChester. Cotman and his people

should not to be trusted. Theproof will be their response.

They won't address my accusa-tions because they are facts andpart of the public record.Instead, they will make personalattacks directed at me.This should show all of you

how treacherous these peopletruly are.

Gary PaolettoChester Township

Chester ZoningClarificationA recent comment in the

Chester Observer mentionedthe trustees hired a surveyor “totell them, among other things,whether the parcel that thetownship bought in 2001 at thenorth end of Chillicothe Roadcontained 80-acres or 85-acres.” It should be noted the

Chester Township ZoningCommission requested trusteeshire a surveyor in order to con-solidate the existing four lotsand move forward on the adop-tion of a proposed park districtamendment.In the same issue, it was stat-

ed the zoning commission hasbeen working for three years onsuch a proposed amendment. The commission has spent

considerable time researching,discussing and preparing zoningregulations that would serve asa framework for future activeand passive park districts. Werequested the services of a sur-veyor both to provide legaldescriptions that would beneeded in the proposed amend-ment to differentiate betweenthe active and passive use of the80+ acres and consolidate thefour lots. If, after review by the

Geauga County Planning Co-mmission, and public hearingsby both the zoning commissionand trustees, the proposedamendment is passed by thetrustees, the township will havea framework for the develop-ment of future parks.

Chester Township ZoningCommissionMargaret Muehling, David

Short, Ruth Aster, Clyde Hornand Linda Gifford

To Chester TownshipResidentsWe are responding to a let-

ter written about Chester Town-ship Firefighters in a prior edi-tion. We would like to share our

dad’s story. First, our mom, Lori Holli-

day, grew up in Chester Town-ship, and along with GlennSanders, raised a family here forthe past 30 years. They both volunteered in all

aspects of our community,including the fire department.They volunteered countlesshours responding to calls. Our dad worked his way up

to Captain position and alsoserved as a trustee on the de-partment.Because of his dedication to

the fire department and town-ship, he was recommended for ajob in the road department.

He worked for both depart-ments for many years. The firedepartment members, now parttime, decided to turn over thedepartment to the township forthe good of the community. At the time of the transition,

the trustees looked intowhether an employee couldwork on two departments in thesame township and was toldthat it was allowable, so thetrustees approved our dad towork for two departments.He gave his time helping the

community, whether it wascleaning roads or responding onfire/rescue calls — all becausehe enjoyed helping his commu-nity.On Sept. 14, 2008, our dad

responded to fire calls all daydue to bad storms and then wascalled to clear trees for the roaddepartment. A drunk driver came

through the work zone, runningour dad over, causing traumatic

crush injury to his foot.This incident has changed

our whole family’s life forever.This devastating injury hascaused so much hardship for us,emotionally and financially andwe will never be the same.Our dad worked two jobs

for 20 years, 40 hours per weekat the road department and 36hours per week at the firedepartment, until the day of theaccident. He has since returned to the

road department after surgery,but is still working on his recov-ery in hopes of returning to firedepartment — the departmentthat is in his heart.Thank you for allowing us to

share our dad’s story and wethank him for his dedication tothis community.

Children of Glenn & LoriSanders, Ashley Sasak, GlennNorman Sanders, MichaelSanders and Rebecca Sanders

Guest Column

Lettersfrom page 6

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Page 8 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

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addressed in the zoning code. “If it’s not permitted, it’s

prohibited; I think it’s the otherway around,” Radtke said. Because he works in the

environmental air quality indus-try, Radtke said he was moreconcerned with monitoring airquality than he would be torestrict the systems with set-backs.Muehling said the amend-

ment could be modified whenmore efficient systems are madeavailable to consumers. “Of the 18 communities we

studied, all had problems deal-ing with the EPA because theEPA has nothing to say aboutemissions from these boilers,”she told him. “The zoning com-mission preferred to handle itby zoning setbacks. This is a sit-uation where we did as much aswe could to prevent a problem.”Muehling said the idea is to

be proactive to solve the prob-lem rather than reactive oncethe problem exists.“I don’t know that the dis-

tance is based on science ratherthan preference,” Radtke toldher, adding such restrictionsmay be open to legal liabilityquestions.“Right now it’s an unpermit-

ted use. The zoning inspectorhas to order a cease and desist

order if one is built,” Muehlingsaid. “We decided to make it aconditional use (in order toallow them). They can go infront of the BZA and if the con-ditions are met, approval isautomatic. If it’s not met, theycan ask for a variance and go tothe BZA again and the neigh-bors will be notified.She added, “We tried to be

fair, did a lot of research andput together something wethink is reasonable, rational andenforceable.”Radtke said he believes that

is likely “a difference of opin-ion.”Muehling said accepted

practices among township zon-ing boards is to consider some-thing not allowed unless it isspecifically allowed in the zon-ing code. Radtke asked whether or

not the practice has beenbacked up by case law. “I’m not aware of case law,”

she replied. “Hopefully thisamendment will go (forward).As we find more facts, we canamend the amendment.”Radtke asked her whether a

person with a smaller lot couldapply for a variance if he or shewanted to install a boiler sys-tem. “That is correct, yes,” she

told him. Radtke said he wanted to

conduct more research on theissue and set a meeting betweenhimself and residents, which hesaid was needed becausetrustees had closed the hearingto further public comment. “Then I would report (the

results) to my fellow boardmembers,” Radtke said. Muehling added, “Enforce-

ment is the issue; if it’s toorestrictive to enforce, it’s notworth the paper it’s written on.” Trustee Mike Joyce said the

zoning book can’t cover everyinstance which is why there is aboard of zoning appeals. Both Joyce and Trustee Judy

Caputo voted for the amend-ment; Radtke voted no. Theamendment passed.

Radtke

Outdoor Boilersfrom page 1

For more stories on Chester Township andthe surrounding communities, pick up a copyof this week’s Geauga County Maple Leaf.

Page 9: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 9

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SUBMITTEDCongratulations to Leah Matthews, the Grand Prize Winner of “CAB” Chesterland Auto Body, Mechanical andTowing’s free raffle at the first annual Chesterfest on Aug. 24. Matthews visited the “CAB” booth to enter the free raffle and was drawn as the winning ticket. The grand prize was a choice between two prizes; a detail on the vehicle of her choice or $125 in CAB Buckswhich can be used toward a Body/Mechanical repair or a free tow. “I never win anything,” Matthews said when finding out she was the winner. She chose the detail option of her Honda CRV.

SUBMITTEDDana Dodge, second place winner of the first annual Chesterland AppleFestival Pie Baking Contest.

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Page 10: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Following is a list of real estatetransfers for Chester, Munson andRussell townships for the weekending Sept. 6, provided as a pub-lic service by the Geauga CountyAuditor’s Office. Transfers mayinvolve sale of land only.

CHESTER TOWNSHIP

Federal National MortgageAssociation, 7350 SteelwoodLane, to David M. LoPresti,$95,000. (1.84 acres)John D. and Jodi E. Pinto,

12375 Falcon Ridge Road, toDavid and Natalie Cherosky,$535,000. (3.23 acres)

MUNSON TOWNSHIP

Michael and Jennifer Wolf,10640 Cedar Road, to Thomas J.and Tricia T. Drockton, $292,000.(5.00 acres)

RUSSELL TOWNSHIP

Marie T. Barni, 8536 KentRoad, to Elizabeth Annable andJoshua Gooden, $247,000. (1.00acres)Penny Mac Mortgage In-

vestment Trust Holdings I LLC,Watt Road, to Kristen L. Ropp,$155,000. (13.23 acres)

Page 10 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

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Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 11

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Page 12 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

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T R A F F I C S T O POfficers conducted a traffic

stop in the area of ChillicotheRoad and Sharp Lane. Driver ofvehicle was found to not havevalid license. Officers issuedcitation and court date andvehicle was towed from scene.

O V IOfficers responded to the

area of Sperry and Cedar roads

for a vehicle that had gone intothe ditch. Officers arrived onscene and found vehicle on itsside and driver was outside ofvehicle. Officers administered afield sobriety test and had driv-er checked out by EMS. Thedriver was then placed underarrest for OVI and transportedto the Geauga County SafetyCenter and vehicle was towedfrom scene.

L O S T & F O U N DA gentleman located a wal-

let in parking lot of Sun Martand dropped it off at the policedepartment. Officers were ableto locate owner due to the itemsinside the wallet and wasreturned with everything intact.

DAMAGED PROPERTYOfficers responded to Giant

Eagle for a vehicle that wasseen hitting shopping carts.When officers arrived on scene,the vehicle was no longer there.However, witnesses were ableto describe vehicle and driver.Officers contacted suspect andissued him a summons andcourt date.

A C C I D E N T Officers responded to a two-

car damage accident at theintersection of Sperry andMulberry roads. Driver of firstvehicle struck the second whileattempting to turn. Neither carhad to be towed from scene, anddriver of first vehicle was issueda citation.

Chester Police Beat

Spring Cleaning?Spring Cleaning?Your junk is someone’s treasure!

Place an ad in the Chesterland News Classifieds! Call (440) 729-7667Call (440) 729-7667 for rates and information.

Page 13: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 13

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Jill Scott, of Chester Town-ship, has been admitted into thePre-Doctoral/Certificate ofTheological Studies program atUnited Theological Seminaryfor the fall semester.

chatter

Visit Our Website: www.chesterlandnews.com

Page 14: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 14 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Fall HomeImprovement

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Hardware - AppliancesBuilding SuppliesBloomBloomBloomBloomBloom

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Clothes washed in hard water tend towear out 15% faster than those washed insoft water. So do your clothes a favor...fill your water softener withDiamond Crystal® salt.

Want Your FavoriteClothes To Last Longer?

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W E S T G E A U G AS E N I O R C E N T E RWest Geauga Senior Center

is located at 11414 Caves Road,Chester Township. Call 440-729-2782 to register or for moreinformation on these programs.

Line Dancing ClassMondays, 11 a.m. Join while instructor Tina

teaches a new dance each week. Beginners welcome.

YogaTuesdays, 2 p.m. Floor yoga with chair yoga

immediately following.

Stained Glass Wednesday & Fridays, 9 a.m. Instructors available for

beginners while others maywork on project at own pace.

Arthritis Exercise ClassWednesdays & Fridays, 10 a.m. This class accommodates all

skill levels and is recommendedfor anyone with arthritis.

Water AerobicsThursdays, 12:30 and 2 p.m.Held at Metzenbaum pool.Registration required. Classes held in four-week

sessions.

Fall Prevention DaySept. 20, 11 a.m. A therapist will be available

to provide balance screenings. Lunch and presentation on

being safe at home.

Hand and Foot CardGameSept. 23, 12:30 p.m.Keep mind active while

socializing and learning thisnew card game.

Heart/Stroke/CoumadinSupport GroupSept. 25, 11 a.m. Sponsored by University

Hospitals Stroke Institute andfacilitated by Nurse NinaChoski.

for the

Have a position open?Advertise in The Chesterland News Help Wanted Section!

Call (440) 729-7667 for rates and information.

Page 15: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 15

Fall HomeImprovement

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Free Ton of Coal with your Purchase of a Reading Stove

SPECIALIZING IN REPLACEMENT WINDOWSTHAT ARE MADE TO FIT ANY OPENING

Salsa Tasting Contest Sept. 21, 10 a.m. to noonThe Annual Geauga Fresh

Farmers Market Salsa TastingContest will take place in theSouth Russell Village parkinglot at Chillicothe and Bell roads. Two categories: mild and

hot. Bring a quart of salsa to the

market booth before 9:30 a.m.Mark it with name and identifyit as mild or hot. Ingredients must be local; no

mango or pineapple salsa.Everyone is welcome to tasteand vote.Market hours are 9 a.m. to

noon every Saturday, rain orshine, until early October.

Page 16: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 16 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Fall HomeImprovement

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G E A U G A PA R KD I S T R I C TAll programs are wheel-

chair/stroller accessible unlessotherwise noted. For more information on

these programs or to register, callthe Geauga Park District at 440-286-9516 or visit www.geauga-parkdistrict.org.

The Harvest MoonSept. 19, 7:30-8:30 p.m.Observatory ParkCome watch the full moon

rise over Observatory Park andlearn about the stories thataccompany the full moons ofearly autumn.

Insect ExtravaganzaDays Sept. 20, 2-3:30 p.m.Frohring MeadowsDiscover what makes insects

interesting with fun activities,then head into the meadow tocatch some. Different programs are

offered for the two age groupsof ages 5-8 and 9-12.Adults may attend (need not

register) or drop off childrenwith a waiver. Program is outdoors, dress

accordingly. Long pants recommended

for field work. Partially wheelchair/stroller

accessible. Registration required.

Cuyahoga Evening Kayak Sept. 21, 6:30-8 p.m.Eldon Russell ParkGroup will paddle along this

stretch of the Upper CuyahogaRiver watchful for birds, bea-vers and other beauties. Bring own kayak, or single-

seat kayak rental will be avail-able through Camp Hi for $15. This program is designed for

those comfortable being onwater; no lessons will be given,ages 12 and older. Registration required through

Sept. 21.

Horseback Trail RideSept. 22, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.Big Creek ParkBring horse for this leisurely

naturalist-led trail ride on theCreek and Highline Trails for

5.8 miles under saddle. Enjoy stream vistas and

wildlife traversing field and for-est. Helmets encouraged. Registration required.

Lost Ladybug SearchSept. 22, 1-2:30 p.m.Observatory ParkLearn about native and non-

native species of ladybugs inGeauga County, how to identifythem, life cycle and the benefitsand challenges faced in theenvironment. Then take nets to the fields

to discover area species. Any species discovered that

are new to Observatory Park willbe shared with Cornell Univer-sity's citizen science program,The Lost Ladybug Project.

The Sky TonightPlanetarium ShowSept. 22, 2-3 p.m.Open House, 1-4 p.m.Observatory ParkJoin during building open

house for a preview of what tolook for in the sky this month.

recreation

Visit Our Website: www.chesterlandnews.com

Page 17: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

G E A U G A W E S TL I B R A R YThe Geauga West Library is

at 13455 Chillicothe Road. Formore information on these pro-grams or to register, call 440-729-4250 or register in person.

Back-To-School-Trivia-GameStop in any time during the

month of September and tryback-to-school-trivia contest. Winners will be chosen at

month’s end.Program designed for teens.

Genealogy DatabasesReview and ResearchSept. 21, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.This refresher class helps

people use the two largestonline genealogy databases:Ancestry Library Version andFamilySearch. Program designed for adults.

Intro to the InternetSept. 24, 2 p.m.

Learn basic Internet search-

ing.

Basic mouse skills required.

Program designed for adults.

Jammy JamboreeSept. 26, 7 p.m.A family storytime. Wear

PJ’s and bring teddy bear forthis “almost ready for bedtime”storytime.Program designed for youth.

Book DiscussionOct. 2, 7 p.m.“City of Thieves,” by David

Benioff.

Intro to FacebookOct. 9, 6:30 p.m.This class is designed for

those new to Facebook or whohave little experience. It covers the purpose and

use of Facebook, privacy con-trols and managing newsfeedand timeline features.Program designed for adults.

Paint a PumpkinOct. 13, 2 p.m.Get ready for the fall by

decorating pumpkins. Pumpkins provided.Program designed for youth.

Minecraft�Oct. 23, 3:30 p.m.What kind of world can one

make in Minecraft in only anhour?Program designed for teens.

Genealogy Lock-In�Oct. 26, 6-10 p.m.

Bring family tree charts and

notes for an opportunity to use

library computers and databas-

es for an uninterrupted ancestry

hunting session.

Staff available for assistance.

Registration required.

Program designed for adults.

S T O R Y T I M E S �

Sept. 16 – Nov. 1.

Registration required begin-

ning Sept. 3.

Babytime�Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. or 10:30 a.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m.

Birth to age 2 with caregiver.

Toddler�Monday, 6:30 p.m.; Tuesday,9:30 a.m. or 10:30 a.m.

Ages 2 to 3 with caregiver.

Preschool�Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday,9:30 a.m. or 2 p.m.

Ages 3 to 5 years old.

Trailblazers

Monday, 6:30 p.m.

G AT E S M I L L SL I B R A R YGates Mills Library is at

1491 Chagrin River Road. For

more information on these pro-

grams or to register, call 440-

423-4808 or register in person.

Tween Book Discussion Sept. 19, 7-8 p.m.Fifth and sixth graders are

invited to join for snacks anddiscussion of “Liar and Spy,” byRebecca Stead. Registration required.

ACT Prep Sept.23, 7-8:30 p.m.College Now of Greater

Cleveland will come to thelibrary to help students ingrades six through 12 set per-sonal ACT score goal based onone’s talents. Learn which questions to

skip, specific strategies for eachsubject section and make a planto reach ACT score goal. Registration required.

Behavior BasedInterviewing Sept. 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m.Come to learn how to

answer competency-based andbehavior-based questions hiringmanagers ask. Program includes mock

interviews. Registration required

S T O R Y T I M E S

FamilyWednesdays, 10-10:30 a.m. Join for a program of

rhymes, songs, fingerplays andstories for children not yet inkindergarten.

Baby & Me/Toddler Thursdays, 10-10:30 a.m. Join for a program of

rhymes, songs, fingerplays andbooks for babies from birththrough 35 months old andcaregivers.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 17

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4th Generation

Scott A. LarrickATTORNEY AT LAW

ESTATE PLANNING • PROBATE • TAX • FAMILY LAWBus: (440) 729-3770 8442 Mayfield RoadFAX: (440) 729-3772 Chesterland, OH 44026

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Boarding, Lessons, Leases,Camps

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Reflective Roof Coatings

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Page 18: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 18 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

NEW STORE HOURS: Mon.-Wed. 10am - 6pm • Fri. 10am - 5pm • Sat. 10am - 2pm • Closed Thur. & Sun.

Page 19: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 19

treasure islandblanket sale

Hundreds of blankets and sheets in a variety of styles and sizes.

(Retail store ONLY!)

Store Hours: Mon-Wed, Fri 10am-6pm,Thurs 10am-7pm, Sat 10am-5pm, Sun Closed

800-365-1311 sstack.com

Schneider Saddlery8255 E Washington St.Chagrin Falls, OH 44023

September 28th, 10am – 5pm…on all Treasure Island blankets.

50 to75%

OFF!50 to75%

OFF!

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s happening Satur’What:Q , October 19yy, October 19th?das happening Satur , October 19th?

A: Geauga The West Third Annual Trivia Night

Boosters’ hletic AtGeauga Third Annual Trivia Night

Boosters’

engagements

Mickey O’Brien and Leah Fry.

Tom and Gia Mooney.

Fry-O’Brien EngagementMr. and Mrs. Larry Fry,

Russell Township, announce theengagement of their daughter,Leah Fry, to Mickey O'Brien,son of Mr. and Mrs. Mike

O'Brien, of Chester Township. The bride to be is a graduate

of Ohio University. She current-ly works as a News Producer atWFMJ, 21 News, in Youngs-town.The groom works as an

operations manager at AlegoHealth in Westlake. The couple resides in

Lakewood.A wedding is planned for

the spring of 2014 at St. AnselmChurch in Chester Township.

FREE ESTIMATES • Senior Discounts Available

21 Century Smoking Store7501 Mentor Ave.Mentor OH 44060

440-951-2111www.21ecigs.com

SpringSpring

Cleaning?Cleaning?Your junk is

someone’s treasure!

Call (440) 729-7667Call (440) 729-7667

for rates and information.

Mooney-Calo WeddingMr. and Mrs. Frank Calo, of

Chester Township, are please toannounce the marriage of theirdaughter, Gia, to Tom Mooney,son of Sally Mooney, of Chester

Township and Tom Mooney, ofNorth Ridgeville. The wedding ceremony was

held at St. Anselm Church inChester Township, with a recep-tion following at Quail HollowResort in Concord Township.

Immediate family membersand friends were part of thebridal party.The honeymoon was held in

Outer Banks, North Carolina. The couple currently resides

in Tremont.

For more stories on Chester Township and the surrounding communities, pick up a copy of this

week’s Geauga County Maple Leaf.

Page 20: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

David Wesley Carlton, Jr.David Wesley Carleton, Jr. a

Chester Township resident forthe past 38 years, was born in1938 in Cleveland. He enteredinto eternal rest on Sept. 8, 2013after a long illness.

Prior to moving to Chesterwith his wife, Ursula (neeRauer), they designed and builttheir home in an old appleorchard with a pond of his ownwhere no one could tell him“you can’t fish here youngman.” He had been an employee of

Brush-Wellman (formerlyBrush Beryllium) where heworked in the laboratory.When the company moved

out of town, he joined theUnited States Postal Service inWickliffe and retired 26 yearslater.He loved to travel and visit-

ed the National Parks — east towest and north to south,Yellowstone being his favorite. He returned there many

times and often invited friendsto meet him there. The fly-fishing was great in

some of the remote, less-visitedspots. Colorado was one of his

favorite states, camping in theFlat Tops. He also tried his fish-ing skills in Europe; he wasquite passionate about the sportand spent hours testing newlures, many he made himself, inhis pond.The beautiful scenery and

wildlife encountered in his trav-els inspired him to become anamateur photographer whoentered and won many a con-test. He respected our environ-

ment, became an outspokenadvocate and brought manylocal issues to the public’s atten-tion. He was the founder of the

nonprofit, publicly funded envi-ronmental organization, Chest-er Waste Watchers, Inc. andchairman/trustee for the last 25plus years. He and other dedi-cated members brought aboutpositive changes not only inChester Township, but through-out Northeast Ohio.Music was one of his talents.

He wrote lyrics; he sang joyful-ly; he joined the St. AnselmChurch choir. Prior to becoming ill four

years ago, he never missed aservice. Although not a memberof the cast, he was a dedicatedsupporter of Tetelestai. Many pleasant evenings

were spent at Willoughby FineArts where he participated inperformances or videotapedpresentations of other musi-cians.Few persons know that he

was quite an athlete in his youth— bowling, baseball and minia-ture golf were his biggest suc-cesses.Dave is survived by his wife

of 49 years, his daughterChristina (Mike) Davis, grand-son “Jack,” two years old (theyadored each other), his sistersDiane Tolle and JudithDonovan, his brother Dennis,uncle Jack Wolkens, and auntRita Bush; many caring nieces,nephews and cousins.Friends and family called at

Gattozzi and Son FuneralHome in Chester Township onSept. 12, 2013. Funeral Mass was held

Sept.13, 2013 at the Church ofSaint Anselm in ChesterTownship. Interment was inChester Township Cemetery. Online tribute video and

condolences at www.gattozziandson.comWe miss you so, you will

always remain in our hearts andwe will remember you for your

great zest for life, your wonder-ful sense of humor, your love ofmusic and devotion to yourchurch, as we bid you Adieu -Auf Wiedersehn.

Robert W. GrenierRobert W. Grenier, of Ouray,

Colo. and formerly of ChesterTownship, passed away Sept. 6in Colorado just days after his46th birthday. Rob attended Westwood

Elementary School and was a1985 graduate of West GeaugaHigh School. Very early in his school

years, he discovered a talent forthe piano and love of music thathe maintained throughout hislife. He was very active in many

school musical activities both atWest Geauga and Lakeland col-lege, as well as performingthroughout the area with sever-al groups. While living in Chester

Township, Rob was a memberof the Chesterland VolunteerFire Department.Rob moved to Colorado sev-

eral years ago where he wasemployed by the Ouray Brew-ing Company.In earlier visits to the area,

he fell in love with the San JuanMountains and the friendly,independent people, and vowedto make it his home. Prior, he lived in Fort Myers

Beach, Fla. for a number ofyears where he ran a propertymaintenance and remodelingoperation.Rob has a strong curiosity

and analytical mind becomingproficient in a number ofdiverse areas.He was particularly interest-

ed in the geology and history ofthe abandoned silver mines onthe Ouray and Silverton area.He loved studying the rocks andidentifying the minerals. Rob is survived by his long

term companion, Tracey Wolter,also a 1985 West Geauga gradu-ate, his parents Jean and DavidGrenier, of Chester Township;brother David (Tamara) ofHamilton; nephews David andAndrew and grand-nephewKaiden. A memorial service is

planned at 2 p.m. Sept. 21, visi-tation at 1 p.m. at Gattozzi andSon Funeral Home in ChesterTowship. A celebration of hislife will follow at the hone ofTracy’s sister, Kierston Huff-nagle. In lieu of flowers, the family

suggested donations to SanJuan Healthcare Foundation,c/o Caring Friends Fund, 600 S.5th St, 2nd Floor, Montrose, CO81401.

Page 20 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

������� ���������������

FREE ESTIMAFREE ESTIMAFREE ESTIMAFREE ESTIMAFREE ESTIMATES • 440-632-5402TES • 440-632-5402TES • 440-632-5402TES • 440-632-5402TES • 440-632-5402

Commercial • ResidentialDriveways • Parking Lots • Seal Coating

Basement WaterproofingPatch Work • Drain Tile • Concrete

The Chesterland Newsis not just a newspaper.

8389 Mayfield Rd., Chesterland OH 440268389 Mayfield Rd., Chesterland OH 440268389 Mayfield Rd., Chesterland OH 440268389 Mayfield Rd., Chesterland OH 440268389 Mayfield Rd., Chesterland OH 44026PHPHPHPHPH: 440-729-7667 • F: 440-729-7667 • F: 440-729-7667 • F: 440-729-7667 • F: 440-729-7667 • FAAAAAX 440-729-8240X 440-729-8240X 440-729-8240X 440-729-8240X 440-729-8240

Email: [email protected]: [email protected]: [email protected]: [email protected]: [email protected]: chesterlandnews.comeb: chesterlandnews.comeb: chesterlandnews.comeb: chesterlandnews.comeb: chesterlandnews.com

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Notices should be sent in writing by the funeral directors and memorial

societies to: Chesterland News, 8389 Mayfield Road, Chesterland, OH 44026,

emailed to [email protected] or faxed to 440-729-8240.

obituaries

Carlton

Bon Appetit!Invite new customers to enjoy your restaurant.

Advertise in the Chesterland News

Call 440-729-7667

Page 21: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

WG Secondary PTOMeetingSept. 19, 7-8 p.m.The West Geauga Secondary

PTO meetings will kick off atthe middle school CommunityRoom, 8611 Cedar Road,Chester Township. Parents with students in

either West Geauga middle orhigh school, these meetings area nice way to hear updatesdirectly from the superintend-ent and/or principals. The PTO 2013-2014 sign up

form was included in the formspacket and is also availablefrom the PTO link througheither school webpage.

Blank copies available at themeeting.

Volunteers NeededThe After Prom 2014 Co-

mmittee needs senior parentvolunteers to help with selling50/50 raffle tickets during theWest Geauga home footballgame. Proceeds from ticket sales

benefit the Class of 2014’s AfterProm. Email westgafterprom@

yahoo.com to sign up.Visit the After Prom table

on game night to learn aboutother ways to volunteer.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 21

The Community wishesyou the best

and will miss the services your business has offered for the past

44 years!

Congratulations onYour Retirement

Leo GeorgeOwner of

West Geauga Cleaners

West Geauga Cleaners12646 West Geauga Plaza • Chesterland

440-729-4762����������������������������������������� ������� ������

Additions, Framing, Roofing, Siding, Windows,Pole Barns, Decks, Garages

“Quality Amish work at affordable prices”“Quality Amish work at affordable prices”“Quality Amish work at affordable prices”“Quality Amish work at affordable prices”“Quality Amish work at affordable prices”

Dave Bitterman • 440-729-1877Dave Bitterman • 440-729-1877Dave Bitterman • 440-729-1877Dave Bitterman • 440-729-1877Dave Bitterman • 440-729-1877Insured and Bonded

Behind the Pines Construction LLCBehind the Pines Construction LLCBehind the Pines Construction LLCBehind the Pines Construction LLCBehind the Pines Construction LLC

311144

news

Notre Dame Elementary Preschool children are being asked to “change” the world. The preschool children have been encouraged to bring spare change to school in support of “Merry-Go-Round forMaasai” project — the 2013-14 project of the Sisters of Notre Dame Global Missions. The Maasai tribe of Tanzania, East Africa are ministered to by the Sisters of Notre Dame, who have formed aschool for the tribal children. In addition to playground equipment, the school also is in need of furniture and teaching equipment. Anyone interested in more information on this project should contact Sister Marie Manning, SND, 440-279-1160.Pictured is pre-kindergarten student Luke Orris, adding coins to the collection bucket.

CHESTERLAND NEWSCHESTERLAND NEWS

Copies available at thefollowing locations:

CVSTurney’sMcDonald’s

KIRTLANDKirtland Diner

Kirtland Library

RUSSELLCircle K John Anthony

Shell Gas Station

CHESTERLANDGiant EagleBurger KingDrug Mart

Shell Gas StationGeauga West Library

Chesterland News

Page 22: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 22 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

CARS & TRUCKS

FOR RENT

Salon Rental Opportunity/Independent Contractor: Est-ablished Chesterland hairsalon has openings severaldays for 2 stylists and 1 nailtechnician. To rent the entiresalon. Bring your clientele,tools and products. This is agreat opportunity to share withfriends. Please contact Sherry,440-796-6610 for all the details.

Chesterland: furnished 2

BR/1 BA, one car garage

space, new appliances, in-

cludes all utilities plus cable,

Internet, lawn and snow

removal (all inclusive), near

I-271. $1500/month plus de-

posit. 440-286-4848.

FOR SALE

Used oil fire hot water tank,

$250. 440-729-7631.

Modern style TV/DVD stand.

4 glass shelves. Approx. 30”

long x 3” high. Black and

wood. Great shape! First $50

takes! 440-338-3735.

Solid, heavy wood rocking

chair. Great condition! First

$50 takes! 440-338-3735.

Modern swinging baby cradlewith mattress. Wonderfulcondition! First $50 takes!440-338-3735.

Cedar chest- wood with cedarlining, Armstong Furniture.Good condition! First $50takes! 440-338-3735.

2 mausoleums on the WesternReserve Cemetery. On out-side, reasonable. 330-995-8989.

GARAGE SALES

If you need to have a moving

sale, estate sale or garage

sale, call Kathy Willis at 440-

729-2790 for assistance. Ex-

perienced. References avail-

able. We are now doing par-

tial estate buyouts.

Wanted: Grandma’s costume

jewelry, compacts, perfume,

linens, knickknacks.

Grandpa’s toys, trains, coins,

bottles and fishing lures.

Also buying misc. collections

and estates. 440-338-5942.

Large garage golf sale: clubs,

putters, bags, balls, tees,

accessories, greens mower,

Good prices. 440-338-1537 or

330-329-6452.

23rd Annual Barn Sale: 30

plus families. 9944 Mentor

Road (King Memorial),

Chardon, between Auburn

and Route 44. Sept. 19-22, 9

a.m to 6 p.m. Half price

Sunday.

Multi-Family- moving to new

location… Priced low to sell!

Household items, automotive

and mechanical tools, antique

full size drill press, jewelry,

kids toys, holiday items,

standup instructor easel, gen-erator, 2 sets of golf clubsand bag, leaf blower, toolsand dye maker boxes, babycradle, much misc. Thurs.,Sept. 19 thru Sat. Sept. 21, 9a.m. to 6 p.m. 13010 FairfieldTrail, Chesterland.

HELP WANTED

Restaurant help wanted, part

time. Experienced breakfast

cook, dishwasher. Call Karen

at Our Town Café, 440-729-

9010.

Now Hiring: AM & PM line

cooks, servers, pizza cooks

and professional hostesses.

Apply at Alfredo’s at the Inn,

780 Beta Drive, Mayfield

Village, OH.

MISC.

Flyers to distribute? Do it theeasy way. Insert them intothe Chesterland News foronly $37.50 per thousand or 3-3/4c per piece. Call 440-729-7667 for details.

Please check your ad! Wemake every effort to avoiderrors. We ask that you checkyour ad the FIRST day that itappears. Any errors should becalled in to the ClassifiedDept. at 440-729-7667 by noonFriday. We cannot be respon-sible for more than one incor-rect insertion if you do notcall the error to our attention.Thank you.

SERVICES

Flyers to distribute? Do it theeasy way. Insert them intothe Chesterland News foronly $37.50 per thousand or 3-3/4c per piece. Call 440-729-7667 for details.

Color copies, great price! TheChesterland News offers fullservice copying. Color orBlack ink, any quantity on any paper.8389 Mayfield Road,Chesterland, 440-729-7667.

Scanning and fax serviceavailable at the ChesterlandNews, 8389 Mayfield Road,Chesterland, 440-729-7667.

Graphics, design, typesetting:Beautiful work done at theChesterland News. Logodesigns, letterheads, broch-ures and business cards. 8389

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Military & Senior Discounts

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RussKallay

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Page 23: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Mayfield Road, Chest-erland,440-729-7667.

Construction and backhoeservice: Specializing in re-placing old drain tiles andcatch basins, reshape graveldriveways. Hauling of demo-lition materials. Call Mike,440-729-7810.

Offering special discounts forinterior and exterior paintingand staining this season. 14years experience. Profess-ional insured, call Dan at 440-342-4552.

Music Lessons - guitar - be-ginning to advanced. Rock,jazz, classical. All bandinstruments. Drums (win-ter/spring road lessons)Consignments, repairs, sales.440-221-2274.

Mowing and lawn care - reason-able, dependable. 440-729-9400.

Plumbing: Professional, af-fordable, reliable. Waterheaters, toilets, faucets, draincleaning. 440-537-6045 or 440-285-0800.

Yard and storm damageclean-up, down tree removaland brush chipping. Call 440-729-9400.

Carpenter - 30 years experi-ence. Kitchen, decks, finishwork, doors, storm doors,small jobs also. 440-729-8157.

Pressure washing and deckrefinishing. Chesterland resi-dent, references. 440-342-4552.

Personal training: No excusespersonal training. Loseweight! Banish fat! Boostyour metabolism! Live longer!Transform your body! Seeresults! Call today! 440-729-0528.

Music lessons/guitar and

bass guitar, theory, song writ-

ing, ukulele and beginning

piano. Denny Carleton,

instructor. West Geauga Mar-

ket House, 216-392-8749 or den-

[email protected].

I will do your laundry, iron-

ing and light housekeeping.

Betsy, 330-469-4081.

WANTED TO BUY

WORK WANTEDPrivate duty nurse- verycapable, loving care to theelderly who may need help intheir home. Has excellent ref-erence. 440-354-3273, leavemessage.

Independent Caregivers: 2Girls and a Heart to meetyour needs 24/7. Senior care,assisting with personalhygiene, cooking, light clean-ing, companionship, laundry,shopping, doctor visits anderrands. Experience withAutism, Dementia, Alz-heimer’s, hoyer lifts andcatheter care. No office fees.Leave message. Nora/Tracy,440-622-3789.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013 CHESTERLAND NEWS Page 23

Classified Adsfrom page 22

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Beautiful 36x60, 3-stall barnw/wood floors, wash room, tackroom, built in 2003 on 2.3 acres.2 stalls go out to pasture w/over-hang. Outdoor arena 60x80.Includes 220 electrical. Lift holds200 bales of hay.

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•We provide a guided pathway out of the confusion through hands-on, facilitated assistance.

•We’ll get you to a place where you can tell your story and then make it happen. •And, we do it in a way that increases speed to launch,

reduces risk, and provides strategic advantage.

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This size ad $36 or4 weeks for $123.

CALL USfor the

best ratesin town!

440-729-7667

www.chesterlandnews.com

You can reach many readers in this space.

PHOTO SUBMITTEDOver the weekend, the Perennial Gardeners of Chesterland worked to beautify the gardens at the ChesterTownship Parkside Park.

Spring Cleaning?Spring Cleaning?Your junk is someone’s treasure!

Place an ad in the Chesterland News Classifieds!

Call (440) 729-7667 Call (440) 729-7667 for rates and information.

CHESTERLAND NEWSCHESTERLAND NEWS

Copies available at thefollowing locations:

CVSTurney’sMcDonald’s

KIRTLANDKirtland Diner

Kirtland Library

RUSSELLCircle K John Anthony

Shell Gas Station

CHESTERLANDGiant EagleBurger KingDrug Mart

Shell Gas StationGeauga West Library

Chesterland News

REAL ESTATE

Page 24: Chesterlandnews 9 18 13

Page 24 CHESTERLAND NEWS Wednesday, September 18, 2013

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Scott A. LarrickATTORNEY AT LAW

ESTATE PLANNING • PROBATE • TAX • FAMILY LAWBus: (440) 729-3770 8442 Mayfield RoadFAX: (440) 729-3772 Chesterland, OH 44026

CHESTERLAND’S #1 SPORTS BAR AND EATERY

Where Friends, Family & Fans Get Together!

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Full Service ExteriorSoft Cloth Ride-thru

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Open 11am-2pm

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SNAVELY CONSTRUCTION, INC.SNAVELY CONSTRUCTION, INC.GENERAL CONSTRUCTION

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39119 Stevens Blvd.Willoughby OH 44094email [email protected]

PH 440-951-3363FAX 440-951-6436

CELL 216-389-1776

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