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Friday, March 19, 2010

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March 2010
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Rulers of the school

 

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Members of the Wapakoneta Middle School Student Council pose for photo outside the classroom earlier this year. To date, the group has raised nearly $2,300 in which they have donated to various local and area organizations throughout the 2009-2010 school year. Photo provided

By KRISTA HAYES
Staff Writer
With the end of the school year nearing, Wapakoneta Middle School Student Council members are hoping to end their term on a positive note.
During the school year, the school government raised nearly $2,300 for various local and area organizations.
“Each year, we try and raise as much money as we can for various clubs and organizations that we vote on and decide to help support at the beginning of the school year,” Wapakoneta Middle School Student Council President Neal Maxson said.
Elected a Student Council representative of his homeroom, Maxson, a seventh-grade student, said this is his second year serving on the council. This year as president, his main responsibility is to set forth an agenda and preside over the group’s monthly meetings which are held the first and third Thursday of each month.
“I joined the Student Council because I was looking for a new activity to do and thought it’d be challenging experience,” Maxson said. “Politics have always been one of the things to stick out in my head and when I grow up, I want to be a lawyer.
“Overall, as president I think I have done a pretty good job,” he said. “Being president is a lot harder than what I thought it would be since I have to make the agendas, run the meetings, and keep the advisers in the loop. I have the whole weight of the council on my shoulders, and at times it can get frustrating, but I would recommend it to all the kids coming to the middle school next year because it’s a fun activity to be involved in.”

 

HELP WANTED
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C'ville asks for support
Friday, 29 May 2009
By MATT NICHOLS
Staff Writer
Residents of a northern Auglaize County village are being encouraged to voice their opinion on a potential new sidewalk system designed to provide safety for children.
In an open house event, Cridersville village officials are to unveil its proposed new sidewalk system at 7 p.m. Monday at the Otterbein, in Cridersville.
Cridersville Mayor Lorali Myers said public input is imperative as village councilors prepare a grant application totaling up to $250,000 through the Ohio Department of Transportation’s Safe Routes to Schools program.
Myers said the schematic, which will be unveiled Monday night, illustrates a web of sidewalks which directs children from walking on Reichelderfer Road and Carlisle Street when walking to the new elementary school.
“This is an opportunity for the village to put in walkways and bike paths for the students to get from their homes
to the schools in a safe manner,” Myers said. “This event allows the community a chance to come and see what we are proposing, and give their input.”
Cridersville councilors are working in tandem with representative with the Floyd Browne Group to devise the new plan, and Myers said the marketing partner has identified key areas within the village as connecting points for the walking and bicycle paths. Hinkle Park, Tower Park, Meadowbrook Park and the planned Pioneer Park will each have spokes of sidewalks webbing out and connecting each other.
If the village receives the grant, Myers said she has future hopes of expanding the pathways to the Johnny Appleseed parks in Shawnee.
“It would be a wonderful opportunity to be able to connect two villages or townships together,” Myers said.
If the village is successful in obtaining the funds, Myers said the criss-crossing pathways could be in place by the first day at the new elementary school in the autumn of 2010.
During the open house, Myers said residents can take both a “walkability” and “bikability” survey to list where they walk. The survey helps village and Floyd Browne officials determine the ideal path locations.
“This is all for residents to share their voice,” Myers said. “Hopefully we’ll have a great turnout and people can let us know how they feel about the project.”
Last Updated ( Monday, 01 June 2009 )
 
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