After an agonizing and expensive 20 months, the Civil Service Commission did the right thing Wednesday: It voted to reinstate police Chief Kim Nuesse, effective immediately.
The Register will present candidate forums for the Sandusky city commission, Sandusky school board and the Perkins Township trustee races later this month at the State Theatre.
I wanted to share an e-mail I received this morning from a reader who was not happy with the thoughts I shared in the column published in Sunday's paper, and my response. Here it is, for what it's worth. I have redacted the reader's name because I don't think she wanted the e-mail published.
He rendered an opinion, but he didn’t even write it. Retired judge Joseph Cirigliano did exactly what he was hired to do as the hearing officer for the Civil Service appeal in the firing of Sandusky police Chief Kim Nuesse.
Sandusky city manager Matt Kline and finance director Ed Widman are on the brink of a breakthrough to solve the city's ever escalating fiscal crisis: They want to increase the income tax residents and people who work in the city pay by 50 percent.
He had the stature of a working man, with big calloused hands and a lively disposition. We started talking when we were both in the buffet line at a wedding reception, five or more years ago.
Governor Ted Strickland and U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur were all atwitter Wednesday when the announcement came that 86 of 88 Ohio counties will receive $1 billion in federal loan assistance guarantees.