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Washington Park creates outdoor experience for Sycamore students

Students at Sycamore High School gained insight on current issues in Over-the-Rhine through a unique photography project created by David Rosenthal, founder and director of Prairie, Inc.  By interacting with residents of the Drop-Inn Center and photographing Washington Park, the arts education program called New Voices connects high school students with their community through photography and writing projects."The idea of the whole program is to introduce students to the inner city of Cincinnati through art making, photography, and creative expression. We do that specifically by connecting them with a hot button issue or a specific community in the center of Cincinnati so that they get first hand experience of something that's important to that community," Rosenthal explained. Students collaborated with residents of the Drop Inn Center in order to gain insight about redevelopments in the area. They focused on Washington Park with the intent to give a positive spin on the negative reputation that the Park generally possesses. Through the process, students developed themes based on their experiences. Some students focused on the sense of spirituality that the residents possessed, others focused on the division and separation between communities, and some concentrated on the openness and friendliness of the residents, which led into friendships. Sycamore student, Gabriella Chronis, noted that the close relationships the program allowed her to develop would have been difficult under different circumstances. The experience, she said, has inspired further interest in the community."I know New Voices has furthered my interest in social advocacy and I hope to continue working and volunteering in OTR. It also brought communication to my attention; everyone involved speaks another language; we just added a visual one to the mix, hoping to shed a different kind of light on the issues at hand," Chronis said.Rosenthal hopes that this program will take the students beyond the project alone."I hope that the things that they learn will factor into the decisions they make in their lifetime and I hope it's going to factor in their lives in lots of little ways for a very long time," he said. The students and residents from the Drop Inn Center will participate in a panel discussion during the opening of Welcome to Washington Park at the Cincinnati Art Museum on February 5th.Writer: Lisa EnsmingerPhotography by Olivia Smith, provided by David Rosenthal

Latest in General
Western & Southern move could bring up to 150 jobs to Cincinnati

Up to 150 new jobs could come to Cincinnati as part of a plan by Western & Southern Financial Group to relocate an Indiana-based unit to the Queen City.Western and Southern is moving the operations of The Lafayette Life Insurance Company from Lafayette, Ind. - and those 150 jobs -  to Cincinnati by the middle of this year. "Lafayette Life is a very important high-performing part of our family of companies," John F. Barrett, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Western & Southern said. "In Cincinnati, we have the capacity and resources to help build on Lafayette Life's strengths and enhance its support by taking full advantage of our scale through the back office services we have built."Current Indiana-based, full-time employees will be given an opportunity to move to Cincinnati, those who decide to stay put will be offered a severance package."While Indiana and the Lafayette community both have been outstanding places to do business, we need to more fully leverage the resources and financial strength available through Western & Southern to ensure a successful second century for Lafayette Life and our customers," said Jerry B. Stillwell, president and chief executive officer of Lafayette Life. "Our policyholders and producers will receive even greater value through improved products and enhanced services as a result of this move." Lafayette provides life insurance and annuity products to individuals and small businesses. Like many other member companies under the Western & Southern umbrella, Lafayette Life will remain a unique insurance company -  retaining its name, marketing and distribution structure. Lafayette Life has been a member of Western & Southern Financial Group since 2005.and is a 105 year-old company licensed in 48 states and the District of Columbia.Writer: Feoshia HendersonSource: Western and Southern CommunicationsYou can follow Feoshia on twitter @feoshiawrites

New CincyTech Fund II gets $2 million from Ohio Third Frontier for tech-based startups

A new CincyTech seed fund that will go toward the nonprofit's mission of financing Greater Cincinnati tech-based startups has received a $2 million match from the Ohio Third Frontier fund.CincyTech Fund II comes just as the first fund - started in 2007 with a mix of private and public dollars - is nearly fully committed or reserved. CincyTech Fund I was launched in 2007 with a $6 million from Third Frontier and $4.4 million from local corporations, foundations and institutions."This newest investment in CincyTech from Ohio Third Frontier is a strong endorsement of the success we have had to date and will allow us to continue to invest in high-growth-potential local companies," CincyTech President Bob Coy said in a release announcing the award.The $2 million award is part of the $25 million invested across the state through Ohio Third Frontier's Pre-Seed Fund Capitalization Program and Entrepreneurial Signature Program Continuity Initiative. Third Frontier is a target economic develop and job creation program approved by voters. The 10-year $1.6 billion state initiative aims to grow Ohio's economy by investing in key competitive economic sectors: advanced and alternative energy, biomedical, advanced materials, instruments, controls, electronics and advanced propulsion. The effort launched in 2002. In May 2010 voters overwhelmingly approved a $700 million bond issue renewal.CincyTech raised $2.3 million for CincyTech II; the state match maxed out at $2 million. A number of local organizations have committed to investing: the Castellini Foundation, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Fort Washington Capital Partners, the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, the Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile Jr. /U.S. Bank Foundation, and the Health Foundation of Greater Cincinnati, as well as several private investors.The initial CincyTech Fund led to investments in 18 local companies; the organization plans to invest in five more this spring. These investments have created 250 jobs and attracted $60 million in additional investor dollars, CincyTech says.Among the companies CincyTech has invested in are AssureRx, formed to license and commercialize personalized medicine technology research from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and the Mayo Clinic, ThinkVine, a high-tech consumer marketing firm, and Brighton Technologies, whose highly specialized Surface Energy Probe assesses a surface's readiness for bonding, coating, or printing.Writer: Feoshia HendersonSource: CincyTech, Ohio Third FrontierYou can follow Feoshia on twitter @feoshiawrites

Hamilton County sustainability workshop encourages cooperation, fiscal reform

"Don't waste a crisis."  Michael Pagano wasn't referring to the most recent Cincinnati snow storm, which delayed Hamilton County Planning Partnership's latest workshop on Jan. 21 by a few hours. In the first presentation of this workshop, third in a series on "Sustainable Hamilton County: Reinventing Our Communities," Dr. Pagano acknowledged that the real crisis was the severe economic downturn of 2007, which, he insists, "should encourage a political discourse about reforming the fiscal architecture of municipalities." Planners, county administrators, elected leaders and community activists braved the icy commute to UC's Tangeman University Center to attend the workshop "Fiscal Sustainability and Quality of Life of Our Communities."  Pagano, Dean of the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs at the University of Illinois in Chicago, was blunt in his recommendations for cash-strapped local and state governments.  Reforming the current tax structure and incentivizing healthy development will happen, he says, when regions and their governments begin to work together. Joining Pagano in this call for regional cooperation were fellow presenters and panelists:  Florida planner and New Urbanism leader Peter Katz; Levea Brachman, executive director of Greater Ohio; and Travis Miller, planning manager for the Ohio Kentucky Indiana Regional Council on Governments (OKI).   Katz and Miller recommended the use of property tax and land use analysis to see the true cost of development in a new economy that values walkable, compact, urban neighborhoods.  Brachman encouraged municipalities to look at their older neighborhoods, brownfields, and a dense downtown core not as liabilities but as valuable assets in that new economy.   "Hamilton County's new landbank…could be extremely valuable in addressing the vacant property redevelopment challenge that faces the urban core as well as many suburbs."  She found that these innovative efforts and visionary plans like Agenda 360 in southwest Ohio "demonstrate that governance reform is possible and beneficial to not just local jurisdictions but the entire region and the entire state."Jonathan Wocker, a planner with McBride Dale Clarion, complimented the Hamilton County Planning Partnership on this series of workshops. "[It's] doing a great job bringing together speakers and participants to talk about these issues.  When you look at the topics collectively, you really start to see the impact that these types of programs can make."A final, follow-up session, "Sustainable Hamilton County: We Can Do It!" is scheduled for March 11.  It will give participants the chance to discuss their thoughts about the sessions and suggest what the community needs to do to move forward with a sustainable revitalization plan.  For information about this session, contact Catalina Landivar, Hamilton County Regional Planning Commission Senior Planner, at (513) 946-4455 or catalina.landivar@hamilton-co.org. Writer: Becky JohnsonPhotography by Scott Beseler. UC's Tangeman University Center

Fighting Hunger: There’s an app for that

Now there's an app to help fight hunger in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky thanks to some Northern Kentucky University students.Students in NKU's College of Informatics developed a mobile application for two Smartphone platforms for the Freestore Foodbank.The new mobile application, which can be downloaded for free from the iTunes App Store or from the Android Market, provides a brief introduction to the Freestore Foodbank, a news feed of recent and relevant information, involvement opportunities for community members, a member agency locator and important contact information to connect with Freestore Foodbank."Ultimately, we're about connecting people to what they need, and the app allows us to do this in a variety of ways," John Young, president and CEO of the Freestore Foodbank, said in a news release about the collaboration that resulted in the new application. "We're connecting volunteers and donors to our current opportunities and advocacy issues, and connecting those in need to food and services to help stabilize their lives and bring them hope."Read the full story here.

Report looks at progress, future of NKY shared services

A new report is celebrating the shared government service successes already achieved by regional municipalities, and it's encouraging more.Titled "Connecting Communities," the report was produced in collaboration by the Northern Kentucky Area Development District, Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce and Vision 2015. It looks at the eight most northern counties of Kentucky: Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Owen and Pendleton. It highlights what communities in those counties already have done. (Grant County provides police services to the city of Crittenden, for example.)The report's call to action? "Collaboration has clearly helped Northern Kentucky to achieve progress. In these increasingly challenging times, it will be important to seek even more opportunities for collaboration."Read more about the report's recommendations and access the full report here.

Surgical Energetics Moves Headquarters to Covington, KY

bioLOGIC Corp, a Covington, KY based life science accelerator, announced today that Surgical Energetics LLC (SE) has moved its headquarters to the bioLOGIC facility in Covington, KY.Founded in 1998 by the late Dr. David Melvin, previously known for performing the region's first heart transplants, SE has developed technology for the coupling of tissues never before reliably closable. This new coupling technology utilizes force-transfer surface dynamics to join living tissue to either a prosthetic device or other living tissue. SE's first product, FiberSecure, has been shown pre-clinically to connect tissue more strongly than existing sutures or staples, and holds durably where they cannot. The Company is pursuing FDA compliance through 510K process during Q4 2011, which will result in a commercially marketed product.bioLOGIC and SE have been in close collaboration since early 2007. "We are extremely pleased that Surgical Energetics has now chosen to move its operations to bioLOGIC," stated Dr. Charlie LeCroix, COO and partner at bioLOGIC. "The addition of SE and their patented wound closing technology to the current life science companies already located at bioLOGIC continues to expand the emerging life science corridor in Northern Kentucky.""Moving our headquarters to bioLOGIC in Northern Kentucky provides our company access to additional programs and support that will accelerate our path towards the 510K filing with the FDA," Dr. Natalia Juncosa-Melvin, Scientific Director at SE, commented.

Video Time-lapse video shows progress of Griffin Hall construction

At the new home of Informatics at NKU, a new generation of professionals will build our region's information economy. Watch Griffin Hall come together in a time-lapse movie of its construction from the ground up.

INVEN LLC

Since winning the Northern Kentucky Commercialization Awards at the Cincinnati Innovates competition in 2010, the young owners of INVEN LLC have opened an office in Florence and are ready to seize what they see as a major opportunity to become industry leaders in innovative, high-tech devices for dentistry.

Northern Kentucky Tri-ED Announces New Board Members

The Northern Kentucky Tri-County Economic Development Corporation (Tri-ED), the primary economic development marketing agency for Boone, Kenton and Campbell counties in Northern Kentucky, recently welcomed one new board member, four ex-officio members and a new foundation board member to its team.As an organization, Tri-ED's mission is to build a world-class economy in Northern Kentucky through the expansion of existing businesses and the creation and attraction of high quality, primary industry employers. Northern Kentucky Tri-ED strives to promote the region as a prime location for new and expanding industries to conduct business.Board members provide strategic leadership and active participation in Business Retention & Expansion, Entrepreneurship and Marketing efforts for Northern Kentucky Tri-ED.The following professionals were appointed to the board on Tuesday, January 11, 2011:Tri-County Economic Development Corporation Board of Directors• Steve Arlinghaus, newly-elected Kenton County Judge-Executive will serve through term of officeTri-County Economic Development Foundation• Dee Ellingwood, Senior Vice President of Planning & Business Development, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center for a three-year term from January, 2011Tri-County Economic Development Corporation Ex-Officio Members• John Mok, CEO Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport• Dr. James Votruba, President Northern Kentucky University• Dr. G. Edward Hughes, President & CEO Gateway Community & Technical College• Sr. Margaret Stallmeyer, President Thomas More College"Each of our new board members brings with them unique specialties that will serve as a benefit to the Northern Kentucky/Cincinnati region as a whole," said Steve Pendery, Campbell County Judge-Executive and Northern Kentucky Tri-ED Chairman of the Board. "This high-level expertise across a variety of industries will strengthen our community and advance economic development initiatives ensuring that Northern Kentucky is focused on its future success."

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