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Controversial H2Ohio

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The 2024 algae bloom at Maumee Bay State Park. (TFP Photo/Christy Frank)

Will pumping money into wetlands yield clean water?

TOLEDO – There are mixed reviews of Governor Mike DeWine’s H2Ohio program among area conservation groups, Lucas County commissioners and Toledo Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz.

DeWine’s H2Ohio program, which launched in 2019, is a comprehensive water quality initiative that is “working to strategically address serious water issues that have been building in Ohio for decades. Such problems include harmful algal blooms on Lake Erie caused by phosphorus runoff from farm fertilizer, failing drinking water, wastewater, and home sewage treatment systems due to aging infrastructure, and lead contamination from old water pipes and fixtures,” according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Ohio Department of Agriculture, and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.

The 2024 summer algae bloom coating the coastline at Maumee Bay State Park. (TFP Photo/Christy Frank)

$270 million has been invested in this program for 2024-2025.

·  $60.7 million to the Ohio Department of Agriculture to support and research best management practices in the Western Lake Erie basin and to expand the program statewide

·  $46.6 million to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources for continued investment in creation, restoration, and enhancement of wetlands

·  $27.5 million to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to improve the quality of life for Ohioans by ensuring safe drinking water and protecting public health

·  $46.6 million to the H2Ohio Rivers Initiative to ensure community health, support economic development, and provide opportunities for recreation across the state

·  $131,250 to the Ohio Lake Erie Commission to continue funding accountability tools to evaluate H2Ohio efforts

One of the controversial parts of the H2Ohio initiative is the $60.7 million spent on the Department of Agriculture. With the agricultural leg of the initiative, farmers can enroll in the H2Ohio program and receive funds by participating in a Voluntary Nutrient Management program (VNMP). The lack of regulations around the initiative has some area leaders up in arms and worried about Lake Erie’s water quality.

“The governor has a program called H2Ohio, which basically just throws good money after bad,” said Kapszukiewicz at a Lake Erie Waterkeepers event this past month.

Kapszukiewicz said that H2Ohio throws money at agricultural interests to encourage them to do the right thing. The problem will not be solved until there are some meaningful regulations and restrictions on the major manure-producing agricultural interests.

“I’m not talking about mom-and-pop farmers; I’m talking about mega Death Star entities that generate incredible amounts of pollution and manure that go untreated into Lake Erie every year,” said Kapszukiewicz.

How much manure?

Sherry Flemming of Williams County reported that “in our county alone, we have six permitted facilities that house over 30,000 hogs and two permitted dairies that have over 6,000 cows. These operations alone produce 90 million gallons of liquid manure a year, and this doesn’t even count the CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) that operate below the permitting level.”

“Other states that have regulations on concentrated feeding operations have moved that industry out of those states and into Ohio,” said Lucas County commissioner Lisa Sobecki. “That’s one of the reasons why we are bringing the lawsuit against the EPA. We’ve partnered with the city in doing that.”

According to a complaint filed with the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio Western Division on May 1, 2024, The Board of Lucas County Commissioners, City of Toledo and Environmental Law & Policy Center claim the United States Environmental Protection Agency has failed to comply with its obligations under the Clean Water Act to prevent harmful algal blooms in western Lake Erie.

“The regional director’s office for the federal EPA is in Chicago,” said Sobecki. “And I will guarantee you if they looked out over their lake and it looked like our lake looks here, they’d be all over it. So, come on, treat this like this is your home and help us get this cleaned up. Be a partner. The residents have done their part as taxpayers, but the lawmakers have not.”

But with the criticism of the program also comes praise.

“Lake Erie has been impacted for a long time, a couple hundred years, from the loss of wetlands around it,” said Black Swamp Conservancy Conservation manager Melanie Coulter. “We need to get back some of the wetland functions that were lost.”

Black Swamp Conservancy’s restoration land of the St. Joseph Confluence in Pioneer, Ohio. (TFP Photo/Christy Frank)

Black Swamp Conservancy buys farmland and works with initiatives like H2Ohio.

“We change the land from intensive crops back into a native habitat such as a wetland, a forest, or, like the Great Black Swamp, a forest wetland,” said Coulter. “In strategic locations, farmland to wetland will clean the most water.”

Rob Krain, executive director of the Black Swamp Conservancy, said the H2Ohio program is helping make great progress.

“We have been partnering with Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR), providing money for purchasing land and turning it back into natural habitats for water quality and recreation,” said Krain.

In a wetland, sediments and nutrients have a chance to settle at the bottom, and then the vegetation can utilize that settlement for growth. If the wetland isn’t there, that sediment goes into the lake to feed toxic algal blooms instead of the wetland vegetation.

“One of the best things about ODNR’s use of H2Ohio is they have the Lake Erie Aquatic Research Network (LEARN) that are studying these wetlands on the ground,” said Krain. “They are informing us on how to better create these wetland restorations.”

“The reality,” he added, “is the long-term data shows wetlands are the most cost-effective, easiest ways to help with water quality. Wetlands will play a significant role in solving this problem.”

“We take direct action and what we are doing is improving water quality. Using Mother Nature’s defenses to help solve this problem is a critical piece of this puzzle,” said Krain.

Unions celebrate Labor Day

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Thousands march in solidarity to support the labor movement

TOLEDO – Thousands gathered in downtown Toledo to watch local unions march through the streets of downtown to celebrate the labor movement during the annual Labor Day parade on Monday.

Attendees watched as about 85 union groups marched for two hours carrying banners representing local unions they belong to. Marchers held signs, chanted, and threw candy and toys to the children, while attendees viewed trucks, trolleys, classic cars and other vehicles slowing make their day down Summit and Monroe streets. Several local school marching bands also performed in the parade.

The Clay High School band performs in the parade. (TFP Photo/Au’Ree Antoinette)

John Kowalski, a United Steel Workers Local Union 912 member and an employee at the Toledo Refining Company, was in attendance for the parade. He explained why he thinks unions are important.

“Unions fight for the small guy, bring up wages, bring up the work-life balance so you’re not working 80 hours a week,” he said.

Anyone who does not support unions needs to “do their homework and look into the actual facts, not just what the media portrays it as.”

John Kowalski, United Steel Workers Local Union 912

Kowalski said he believes the parade is important because it gets people to come out in support of the City of Toledo.

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, “Labor Day is an annual celebration of the social and economic achievements of American workers.” Labor Day has been celebrated since 1882 but did not become a federal holiday until President Grover Cleveland signed a bill into law on June 28, 1894.

Union workers march to ‘Make America Union Again.’ (TFP Photo/Au’Ree Antoinette)

Before unions, workers would be forced to spend long hours in unsafe and deadly working conditions while earning low wages. To prevent this, unions work to improve workplace conditions and the well-being of the workers. Unions negotiate benefits for their members, such as fair pay, breaks, vacation and sick time, and a fair schedule to ensure members are well-rested.

In the United States, unions trace their origins to 1794, when Philadelphia Shoemakers formed The Federal Society of Journeymen Cordwainers.

Thousands lined the parade to support unions. (TFP Photo/Au’Ree Antoinette)

Mark Schmiehausen, president of Teamsters Local 20, has been personally involved with the Labor Day parade for 34 years. He believes the local unions represent hardworking men and women across the United States.

Schmiehausen explained where workers would be without union representation. “The employer would be able to direct the workforce without a contract, without rules, it would be an unfair playing field.

Schmiehausen closed by saying he wants to see more people be unionized and have a voice in the workplace.

“We have to celebrate labor: The middle class built this country, they continue to build the country, and it’s a day to celebrate all the hard labor. It’s the tiers of making America great,” he said.

Unions march for better contracts, and to have a contract. (TFP Photo/Au’Ree Antoinette)
About 85 unions marched for solidarity in the workforce. (TFP Photo/Au’Ree Antoinette)

Daily Dose | The Humorist

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Cartoon by Steven J Athanas for the Toledo Free Press.

Joe Boes knows guitars

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Sylvania guitarist Joe Boes is working on a new CD he hopes to release by the end of the year. (TFP Photo/David Yonke

‘Mojoe’ Joe Boes picked up a guitar at 15 and never stopped playing

SYLVANIA Joe Boes knows guitars.

The Toledo-born musician has built his life and career around the six-stringed instrument. He plays them, collects them, makes and repairs them, teaches others to play them, and just enjoys being around guitars.

“I love them all, especially electric guitars,” Boes said in his home studio, surrounded by dozens of guitars and amplifiers, most of them painted in his signature color, seafoam green.

He started playing when he was 15. He had a friend who was selling a Squier Bullet guitar for a little under $300. Boes said he didn’t have the money so he hand-wrote a promissory note to his parents begging them to buy it.

I, Joe Boes, promise to learn guitar and not give it up because my dad payed (sic) good money for the guitar and I promise to make him proud of me.

Joe Boes

They bought him the guitar and he played it for about nine years before he bought another one. He still has it, hanging proudly on a wall in his studio.

When he graduated from Bowling Green State University with a music degree, his father pulled the note out of his wallet, where he had kept it all those years, and handed it back to Joe.

Obviously, Boes kept his promise.

“Pretty much,” he said. “I feel pretty good so far.”

Joe Boes wrote this note to his parents when he was 15. His father kept it in his wallet and gave it back to Joe when he graduated with a music degree from Bowling Green State University. (TFP Photo/David Yonke

Boes has never stopped playing. As a teenager, he used to practice when he got home from school until he went to bed.

“I’m fortunate because I still play every day,” he said.

Sitting on a desk chair at a recording console, cradling a mug of coffee, the musician with the distinctive spiked gray hair and long goatee said he not only loves guitars, he loves to talk about them — or anything that has to do with music.

His career is a mix of performing, teaching, recording, and working with local luthier Larry Wagner to set up and repair guitars.

“I’m blessed. My wife Laura is very much a person who supports me doing what I do, and that’s important. She’s like a champion for me. My wife’s not saying, ‘You should be outside cutting the grass.’ No, she’ll say, ‘Why aren’t you recording your songs?’”

Boes is taking her up on that, working on a new CD of original material that he hopes to release by the end of the year. His last CD featured songs he wrote during his engagement to Laura and they gave copies to their guests at their wedding in 2005.

Joe Boes sits at a keyboard and recording console in his home studio where he recently has been recording background music for TV and movies. (TFP Photo/David Yonke)

Lately he has been recording .library music,’ creating a catalogue of multilayered instrumental tunes on keyboards with just a touch of guitar designed for television or movie soundtracks. He enjoys it because the moody instrumental songs are vastly different from his usual guitar-based music and vocals.

“It’s like there’s another corridor you can walk down in my brain. I love it. The good news is it still has guitar, but the main thing is that it has character.”

Character is vital to Boes, saying it’s what separates good music from the bland, overproduced music that dominates popular music.

“There are so many people who have a record deal who would never win American Idol, but they have character in their voice. I embrace that because I don’t have the best singing voice, but I have character.”

He feels the same about his guitar abilities, which are formidable but not flashy.

“I’m not a monster player,” Boes said. “I’m not just going to blow over a blues tune with a bunch of solos and people might go, ‘So?’ Instead, from a writer’s standpoint, you can steer where the tune goes, which means you can kind of steer where the audience goes. You get a chance to basically be in the driver’s seat, not just responding to a blues chord change.”

He has been leading his trio, Mojoe Boes & His Noble Jones, for about 20 years. He likes to describe their style as eclectic electric music. They perform Boes’ arrangements of songs by artists ranging from the Beatles and Oasis to Frank Sinatra and the Archies.

His band plays at local clubs but not every week, or even every month. The group played at the Majestic Oak Winery in Grand Rapids, Ohio, in August and will be there again on Oct. 11 and Dec. 7.

Boes is quite busy with another gig that landed in his lap about two years ago, playing in the Ultimate Kenny Rogers Tribute band led by Alan Turner, who performs as the 1980s Kenny Rogers, with white hair and beard and a white suit.

Joe Boes plays guitar in the Ultimate Kenny Rogers Tribute band, a gig that has taken him all over the country in the last two years. (Photo courtesy of Joe Boes)

“It was kind of out of nowhere,” Boes said. “Alan contacted me because he needed a guitar player. A guy that I did know and a guy that I didn’t know referred me to him.”

The tribute band travels all over the country and performs about 20 of Rogers’ biggest hits each night, including the 1977 Top-10 single Lucille.

Lucille is like maybe the fourth song in our set and I always chuckle because of the line, ‘In a bar in Toledo,’ and that’s kind of cool. How did I end up in a band where there’s actually a line in a song from my hometown?”

Boes said Rogers’ music has more depth to it than people might think. “I dig it because much of his material is written like jazz tunes. They don’t swing but they have interesting chord changes.”

He strives to play the familiar songs with an artful balance of being faithful to the original recordings while adding some of his own ideas.

“My goal is to do like 75 to 80 percent like the tune, and personally add about 20 percent of my own musical ideas. I want to change it a pinch but I know when to, and that’s the key — not to change it just because you’re bored.

“Most of the people would say it’s perfect because I know they’re keyed into Kenny. I get like two guitar solos that aren’t on any of his records but they have the feel of what the record was. But I move it around so it’s not just a duplicate of a record every night.”

That personal touch and his deft variations keep it interesting for Boes and the other musicians in the seven-person band, as well as for fans who have seen the show multiple times.

“I don’t want to think it’s totally self-serving. And if somebody were to say, ‘Well, that’s not 100 percent like the record.’ I’d say, ‘You’re absolutely right!’,” he added with a laugh.

Guitars and amplifiers abound in Joe Boes’ home studio, most of the gear painted in his signature color of seafoam green. TFP Photo/David Yonke)

The guitar

While he enjoys the reference to Toledo in Lucille, that’s just one of the many ways that Boes is strong on Toledo. He loves to support the local music scene, musicians and companies that make guitars and music gear.

He has several Wagner guitars built from scratch by Larry Wagner. He is quick to point out that his current favorite is a uniquely shaped electric Wagner — painted seafoam green, of course — and featuring gold-plated DeArmond pickups that were made in Toledo in the 1960s.

“I love the fact that I travel with a guitar that’s from my hometown, and these pickups were made here back in the ‘60s.”

Boes also has several guitars made by Reverend. That company manufactures its guitars in South Korea but distributes them nationwide through its headquarters in Toledo.

One of his students paints and refinishes guitars with a scratched-up “relic” look, making them look aged and worn. One was a Gibson SG that originally was brown but was refinished in … what else, seafoam green.

When talking about music and guitars, Joe Boes says he’s something of a “Chatty Cathy.” (TFP Photo/David Yonke)

“Seafoam green is my aesthetic,” Boes said. “Everybody kind of expects the green now. He brought it to a lesson and I’m playing it and he says, ‘What do you think?’ And I go like, ‘It’s pretty cool.’ And he goes, ‘Do you want to buy it?’”

“He’s a good dude and I want to support his relic-ing stuff, and he’s a local guy, so, yeah.”

Boes picks up a seafoam green Wagner electric guitar that had been lying on a stool and starts playing a tune, unplugged. The notes flow smoothly and melodically.

“The guitar has always been my musical awakening,” Boes said. “There’s just so much about it that I love.”

This 1980s Squier Bullet guitar, which started Joe Boes on his musical journey, hangs on the wall of his home studio. (TFP photo/David Yonke)

Daily Dose | The Humorist

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Editorial cartoon by Don Lee for the Toledo Free Press.

Chasing the musical Muse

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Courtesy screenshot image of a video performance of "C'mon" by the Coosters (featuring Yasmin Naylor) by Steven Jay.

How a testoterone-induced, jealous rage became Jello-o ‘s first song

The phenomenon of puberty, as we all know, is a challenging period for the human biped, both male and female. It comes with weird and sometimes inexplicable physical feelings, emotions that run all over the map, hair sprouting all over our young, heretofore smooth bodies, menstruation (for half of us), and the emergence of the libido.

It was this pesky libido of mine, along with a few of my fellow Old Orchard Elementary School cronies, that we dealt with in a way common to all of that age.

On a weekend night (heaven forbid, never on a school night!) we would gather at someone’s house (as I recall, it was either Marc B’s or Penny W’s) and seek shelter in the basement of that house. It was always couples, boyfriends and girlfriends, usually about 10 of us. No reason for single stragglers for this party, and way before the presence of any openly LGBTQ+ folk.

We all would find our way to the basement (avoiding any parental confrontation) and almost like lab rats, the girls would gather in one corner and the boys in another. There was music, provided by a record player (yes, but who changed the 45s when everyone got down with the gettin’ down?), and mostly mushy ballads to set the mood. I particularly remember a song by The Outsiders, Girl In Love.

Just a thought: make-out parties in the 21st Century! No more gettin’ up to put on a new record!! Now there’s Spotify, AppleMusic, et al. AND! Who’s gonna get the lights when everybody’s assumed the position? “Hey Alexa, TURN OFF THE LIGHTS!!!” Damn, I was born too soon.

At some point, about a half hour into the gathering, one brazen, cocksure guy (usually Marc B) would break from the dudes, walk over to the girls, in particular his girl, talk for a minute, take her hand, walk to a designated spot, lay down with her, and start making out. Simple as that. Not long after, the other guys would follow suit. My girl’s name was Linda. I had a very hard time initiating my first kiss – but that’s another story.

We called these sessions “make out parties.” Everyone knew what was gonna happen, and everyone knew the “rules.” As far as I know, it was just kissing – well, French-kissing, of course, but no groping, no dry-humping, no moaning, no orgasmic activity. Just kissing. Upwards of two hours! Lotta chapped lips!

No Muscle was written on an Amtrak sleeper compartment, going from NYC to Toledo. It was recorded live at Nirvana’s by Moseka Studios, performed by The Best. (Courtesy video)

Anyway, it was right before one of these gatherings that yours truly did something that got me grounded (I’m sure it was nothing!), and with all my newly implanted testosterone, I went off!! Knowing that my girl would be at this party without me made me berserk. I went down to the family basement, shouting and yelling, and with one empowered thrust, punched a hole in the wall (in all fairness, it was old drywall, this was no Herculean feat, just pure rage.)

The “grounders” (my parents) stayed upstairs and let me rant, whilst I screamed and yelled downstairs (see the aforementioned unexplainable physical feelings and emotions). My three brothers must’ve wondered what the hell my problem was.

After I’d settled a bit, but still thinking it was the end of my world, sure that Linda would think me a mommy’s boy, I picked up a guitar. When I think about it now, I wonder if that wasn’t the birth of my Muse. As is so often the case, and in a ‘solution’ as old as man, I channeled my feelings through music.

After doodling about for who knows how long, a melody started to evolve, borne of a simple two chord progression (A-G), and a melody humbly befitting a musically untrained, untalented eighth-grader. Still it didn’t match the rage I was feeling; it was soft and quiet, as though I hoped it would appease my girlfriend, and make amends for my absence at Lip Fest.

The first lines that eventually came out were “Gotta get out tonight/We gotta go/Gotta get out tonight/and watch that little girl go . . .” Apropos, no?

Gotta Get Out Tonight (duh) was learned and performed by Jell-o, my band at the time. It was our first original composition. We even recorded it on a primitive wire recording machine that my grandfather Laspisa owned. Grampa took it a step further and pressed a few copies of a 45 (the B-side was a group jam “original,” a rip-off of Paul Revere & The Raiders’ Steppin’ Out, that we called The Green Blues).

Sadly, and to my great dismay, there are no copies of those 45s anywhere to be found on this planet. What I wouldn’t give to have a copy!

There is something about bringing a song into the world that is magical, mysterious and invokes a sense of pride like nothing else. My visual art gives me a similar exultation, but not quite the same. It’s almost like having children that I brought into this world, showing them off when I perform them. The conjuring of  a mixture of notes, melodies and words, all expressing what can be very personal feelings or opinions.      

This brings to mind the concept of the Muse (yes capitalized!). Where does it all come from? Is it a higher power? Where in the brain does it occur? What makes a song/piece of art/what-have-you go in one direction and not another?

Since Gotta Get Out Tonight, I have written many songs, performed them and even released a few CDs (see below). Some I’m quite proud of while others suck (you’ll have that).

And so it was that primal lust as inspiration, in all of its raw, sloppy, directionless, pubescent form, morphed into yet another example of all that which makes rock n’ roll the great beast that it is.

A word about the music below:

C’mon was born from a car ride with my two sons. We’d go back and forth swapping multiple simile references to love. This version was recorded by The Coosters. The video was a high school art project, directed by Yasmin Naylor, starring her sister, Sierra Naylor

Courtesy video.

Aerospace & Natural Science Academy

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One of the planes owned by Toledo Public Schools in its hangar at Eugene F. Kranz Toledo Express Airport. The hangar at the aviation campus is used for classroom training. (TFP Photo/Paula Wethington)

Aerospace & Natural Science Academy welcomes families at open house

Bryan Ellis, an urban agriculture instructor with TPS, assists senior Angel Gilbertson, of Toledo, in a rope climbing demonstration during a school open house at the Natural Science Campus on Thursday. (TFP Photo/Paula Wethington)

TOLEDO – Interest among students and parents is booming at two campuses of the Toledo Public Schools’ Aerospace and Natural Science Academy, which has seen a dramatic enrollment jump in recent years.

The aerospace campus held its open house Wednesday, and the natural science campus opened its doors to the public on Thursday.

Both are part of the TPS magnet school programs, where students from across the district, and sometimes other Ohio districts, can take all of their classes that specializes in a topic or theme on one campus. Community partnerships, such as Toledo Metroparks, contribute to the workforce preparation experience.

Kurt Wicklund, senior director of the Aerospace and Natural Science Academy of Toledo, described it as a full high school, but the interest is most definitely in the practical skills.

“Our students get internships. They learn directly from people out in the field,” he said during the open house.

What’s new in career technology?

Kurt Wicklund, senior director of the Aerospace and Natural Science Academy of Toledo. (TFP Photo/Paula Wethington)

According to Wicklund, career technology education, also known as vocational education, has a long history in Toledo Public Schools. For example, the district’s aviation studies dates back to 1929, and the natural science center opened in 1976.

In the meantime, TPS administrators, such as Dr. Romules Durant, have been hosting family meetings at the grade schools to explain the options.

That’s how Karina Vea, a 7th grader from Toledo, and her family found out about the magnet school opportunities. Her father, Robert Vea, said he didn’t know there were so many choices within TPS. Karina said she enjoyed her first few days of class at the Natural Science Technology Center.

“It makes me excited to go to school,” she said at the open house.

As a result of the updates, total enrollment in the Aerospace and Natural Science Academy has tripled since it was organized in 2018, Wicklund said.

By 2021, according to school district records, there were 246 students in grades 9 to 12 in the program. There are now 450 students, roughly 225 at each campus, ranging in grades from 7 to 12.

What is different?

The student demographics of this career-focused magnet school academy are noticeably different than a traditional neighborhood high school.

For example, Wicklund said that ANSAT enrollment is open to any students from Ohio. The current student ratio is 65 percent from Toledo Public Schools, and 35 percent from out of the district.

But there have been significant updates in academic options, along with facilities and equipment updates, during just the past few years. Specifically, the ANSAT program started welcoming students from grades 7 and 8 as of this school year.

In addition, there are tradeoffs when picking a small magnet school instead of a larger high school. For example, Vea said his daughter won’t be able to take an art class at the natural science campus; but they have learned there is an art club that meets after school.

Aerospace campus

The aerospace campus is in two buildings at Eugene F. Kranz Toledo Express Airport. The academic building has classrooms, workshop spaces and a cafeteria whose windows look out over the airport runway. The hangar building houses four small planes that instructors and students use for training.

Students at the Toledo Public Schools’ Aerospace Campus will use these engine parts in their classroom work. (TFP Photo/Paula Wethington)

The sophomores are learning practical lessons in electricity, while the juniors and seniors get hands-on experience in building and working with drones.

Eric Parraz Jr., of Toledo is one of the 7th graders this year at the aerospace campus, said he has an interest in planes and would like to be a pilot, so he was excited to be accepted to the program.

“It’s an honor and a privilege, and now he’s in,” his father, Eric Parraz Sr., said about the magnet school option.

New resources this year include a row of computers set up as flight simulators.

“We’ve grown so much, we are redoing lab areas,” instructor Rick Naves said about the aerospace campus. “We’re bursting at the seams.”

Whether as a mechanic, pilot or other supporting roles, Wicklund said aviation is currently a career field where there is high demand for an interested and prepared workforce.

Over the years, alumni of the aerospace studies have continued their studies at Bowling Green State University, Kent State University and other schools, while others go on to become commercial pilots, explained Wicklund.

There’s also a track record of graduates going into the military, and at least one who was accepted into the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Natural sciences campus

The Natural Science Technology Center campus is on Elmer Drive near Toledo Botanical Garden. The updates this year include a new academic classroom wing to accommodate the increased number of students on campus.

Those attending the open house could look for a caiman that lives in a habitat enclosure in the greenhouse, and find newly hatched corn snakes in the classroom terrariums.

Senior Angel Gilbertson of Toledo was among those participating in a rope climbing demonstration during the open house. That’s a skill that urban agriculture instructor Bryan Ellis said is applicable to urban forestry.

Students also get hands-on lessons about hydroponics, wildlife sustainability and related topics. Every year in May, the campus hosts a plant sale for the public.

“Kids that come here, they’re interested in nature. They’re interested in the natural world,” said Ryan Ackerman, assistant director for the Toledo Public Schools’ Natural Science Technology Center.

Ryan Ackerman, TPS assistant director for the Natural Science Technology Center, showcases a newly hatched corn snake in a classroom container during an open house at the Natural Science Campus on Thursday. (TFP Photo/Paula Wethington)

Balance Pan-Asian Grille

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Fried rice bowl with broccoli and chicken chow mein. (TFP Photo/Kevin Tiell)

Review: Award-winning local franchise founded right here in 2010

TOLEDO – Have you ever dreamed of owning your own restaurant, or becoming so popular and, well, organized, as to offer franchising opportunities? In this week’s edition of Flavor in the 419, we profile Toledo-based, award-winning Balance Pan-AsianGrille, whose co-founders Prakash Karamchandani (PK) and HoChan Jang (CJ) did just that.

Chissandra Price, Sofia Tiell, and Chesney Paulson enjoy their meals at Balance Pan-Asian Grille. (TFP Photo/Kevin Tiell)

Since 2010, they’ve worked to innovate new technologies across a range of functions including menu creation, customer engagement, operations and brand marketing. They’ve garnered attention from notable industry publications and have made the annual list of Fast Casual’s “Top 100 Movers and Shakers” multiple times, ranking #28 on this year’s list.

With restaurants in Toledo, Cleveland, Dallas and Denver, and an aquaponics facility downtown that grows fresh produce for corporate locations and other local restaurants, you should have plenty of opportunity to taste their modern Asian-inspired cuisine. If you’ve never tried Balance or are a long-time fan, I encourage you to indulge in their seasonal variety of flavorful appetizers, colorful rice bowls, inspired tacos and curated collection of bubble teas. Your taste buds will thank you and leave you craving more.

Balance employee Mia Albright makes tacos. (TFP Photo/Kevin Tiell)
Balance employee Mia Albright makes tacos. (TFP Photo/Kevin Tiell)

With seemingly endless combinations of fresh, organic ingredients, sauces, halal meats, vegan and gluten-free options, you will not get tired of exploring all that Balance offers. Ordering online, in-person or through their mobile app is quick and easy.

When I was there, I witnessed a steady stream of customers running in to pickup food they had ordered ahead. In the parking lot, I met one happy customer and his two dogs who were waiting for food to be delivered curbside.

Balance also provides catering options for your next graduation party, corporate function or special event. They have reimagined every detail of the restaurant experience to create consistently high-quality, nutritious meals, full of flavor, served fast in compostable packaging.

Don’t take my word for it, try it for yourself. Balance currently has locations locally in Perrysburg, Sylvania and downtown Toledo.

If you happen to see PK or CJ in the restaurant or on a catering run, or speaking at an upcoming event, say hello and thank them for bringing their best to our community!

Have more suggestions for food reviews? Comment below or contact Kevin Tiell at kevin@tiell.com.

Daily Dose | The Humorist

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Cartoon by Jerry King for the Toledo Free Press.

Girl Named Tom homebound

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Girl Named Tom will return to Maumee to celebrate Sunshine Communities' 75th anniversary on Sept. 7.

Sunshine Communities celebrate 75 years With Girl Named Tom band

MAUMEE – A little background: Sunshine Communities is a community that has an agenda of supporting people with developmental disabilities. In 1950, Roy and Georgette Engler founded Sunshine Homes due to the dissatisfaction of the poor living conditions in the in-state institutions.  Aiming for better living environments for children, the Englers used donated material and labor to build a structure next to their home that included a medical staff and care. 

By 1978, Sunshine had expanded enough to include family care and vocational services that helped adults with disabilities who were working. As of today, Sunshine supports 250 individuals everyday with 430 employees, 50 nurses, 28 residual homes, and 60 vehicles that provide transportation. 

75 years later, the community still thrives. A coffee shop in downtown Maumee named Georgette’s allows some of the community members to work in the public. The community itself holds jobs for their members, such as helping raise and take care of farm animals and horses. With a strong tie to the Mennonites, Sunshine is sponsored by the Mennonite Health Services, sharing core values and beliefs, like empathy, integrity, mutuality and a shared faith-centered mission.

On Sept. 7, Sunshine will throw their grand finale celebration in downtown Maumee, near Georgette’s, as it “aligns perfectly with our sunshine footprint and strengthens our connection with the community,” stated Sunshine Communities’ CEO Jason Abodeely.

Caleb, Bekah and Joshua Liechty, of Pettisville, Ohio, of Girl Named Tom. (Courtesy Photo)

To celebrate, Girl Named Tom, winners of the hit NBC TV show, The Voice, will perform. 

Girl Named Tom, based out of Pettisville, Ohio have strong ties to the Mennonite community, a community that also has strong ties to Sunshine. 

In a statement from Abodeely, he shared why Girl Named Tom was a good fit for the event:

We approached Girl Named Tom due to their strong ties to the Mennonite faith, from which we built our core values in the 1960s. Mennonite congregations supported Sunshine Children’s Home, now Sunshine Communities, through quilt-making and other philanthropic efforts. Those relationships, and our mission, have stood the test of time, as we continue to create community through Anabaptist values. It’s come full circle, and we’re incredibly proud to remain deeply connected to our roots in Northwest Ohio 75 years later.

Abodeely wrote that “we wanted to bridge our past with the present. We host summer concerts each year on our campus, and bringing Girl Named Tom to Uptown Maumee alongside our friends, neighbors, and retail locations marks a new chapter in this tradition”

Beginning at 5 p.m., the event is free to the public and will be standing room only, but chairs are permitted with no umbrellas. Port-a-potties will also be on site, food trucks will be available.

Opening for Girl Named Tom at 5:30 p.m. is local band Chloe and the Steel Strings. Girl Named Tom will perform at 7:15 p.m.

 Here are a few more details to know before you go:

  • First aid will be located at Sunshine Studios
  • Guests are asked to bring chairs
  • Food trucks will be present
  • This is not a ticketed event
  • Jacky’s Depot will be offering signature Sunshine partnership ice cream flavors

Below is a map of the event: