Missler, ’98, dies after car accident

By Spenser Hickey

Managing Editor

Ryan Missler (Aug. 23, 1975 - Aug. 9, 2014) in his Hall of Fame photo. Image courtesy of OWU Athletics.
Ryan Missler (Aug. 23, 1975 – Aug. 9, 2014) in his Hall of Fame photo. Image courtesy of OWU Athletics.

The Ohio Wesleyan community lost Athletics Hall of Famer Ryan Missler ’98 on August 9 following a car accident on Route 33 in Dublin, Ohio. He was 38.

Missler started on Ohio Wesleyan’s baseball team for three years and after graduation played two years in the independent minor leagues; he joined the Hall of Fame in 2008.

“He was one of the most outstanding baseball players that Ohio Wesleyan ever had,” said Roger Ingles, current Athletic Director and Missler’s coach on the baseball team.

“…He was just an outstanding player, outstanding person and everybody looked up to him. He was a leader on and off the field.”

Jodi Andes, Dublin Police Department spokeswoman, said the accident remains under investigation but did not have further details at this time.

In his time at OWU, Missler played third base and shortstop, earning the Player of the Year award from the North Coast Athletic Conference his senior year. He led the NCAC in batting average at .485, fourth best in OWU history, and set the OWU record for most home runs in a season.

That year, the Bishops defeated Ohio State’s baseball team 10-7 in the Buckeyes’ first home game; Missler had two home runs in the game.

“He was easily the best player on the field and they (Ohio State) were Big Ten champs that year so I think that tells you what kind of caliber of player he was,” Ingles said.

In his junior year, he was named to the All-NCAC first team, having been a nominee for that selection sophomore year, tying for fourth on OWU’s list of most runs batted in during a season.

His three year career batting average of .400 was fifth-highest in OWU history and he tied the  home run record at 27.

Following his time in the minor leagues, Missler worked alongside his brother Aaron as vice presidents of the family business, Missler’s Irrigation, based out of Dublin; their father Mike is president.

“After he graduated, he played in our golf outing every single year, he and his father and brother,” Ingles said.

“Their irrigation company did a lot of work on campus…he’s one of those guys that you get as a coach that’s kind of a once in a lifetime person. He’s just going to be missed by a lot of people, our thoughts are with his family.”

Parking hike aims to fill cheaper lots

Public Safety's parking price increase is meant to divert cars to C lots, such as this one at the Jay Martin Soccer Complex. Image: Google Maps
Public Safety’s parking price increase is meant to divert cars to C lots, such as this one at the Jay Martin Soccer Complex. Image: Google Maps

This story was updated on Sept. 17 with additional information.

Keeping a car on Ohio Wesleyan’s campus is now almost twice as expensive.

Students who want a B-level permit, which provides access to most residential lots, will have to pay $175 for the upcoming academic year, according to a Public Safety statement released July 30. The B permit cost $100 last year.

So far, though, the number of B passes issued are almost three times greater than the number of C passes: 434 to 153. The strategy involved raising B permits from $100 to $175 and C permits from $10 to $15.

The price of a C-level permit also increased from $10 to $15 for parking in lots further removed from residential buildings, such as those near the Jay Martin Soccer Complex, Beeghly Library and Selby Stadium.

The penalties for breaking OWU’s parking rules will also be steeper this year. Parking ticket fines are increasing from $20 to $30 for cars with permits and to $50 for cars without permits. Public Safety will put boots on the fifth violation for permitted cars and on the third violation for those without permits. Those drivers will have to pay $75 to get the boot removed, which cost $50 last year.

The hikes is an effort to reduce crowding both in OWU’s lots and on Delaware streets, according to Public Safety director Bob Wood. With last year’s influx of cars on campus, many students who needed B spaces often couldn’t get them. He said he hopes the cheaper C permit will divert drivers away from the crowded residential lots.

Also part of the effort is the Enterprise CarShare Program, now in its second year. Wood noted that the Delaware Area Transit Authority’s main bus hub is on Park Avenue in the center of OWU’s campus.

“We’ve got a lot of good transportation options, so we’re trying to encourage people — if you don’t need a car, why don’t you look at another way to do this?” he said.

The greater sanctions for drivers without permits is an effort to reduce crowding on Delaware streets, which has prevented residents from parking near their houses, Wood said. Public Safety will be stepping up enforcement of its requirement of all OWU students with cars to buy a permit.

Many students reacted negatively to the increase. Senior Emma Buening said she couldn’t afford a $175 B pass.

“I don’t even have books that cost that much,” she said. “I would have to get so many tickets from DPD for it to be worth it that it’s not.”

She only rarely parks on campus, and then for just as long as needed.

“If there was a cheaper option – if it was $40 or $50, I would think about it,” Buening said, adding that C lots were far away. “A C Pass, where can I even park? Selby?”

Sophomore Nicole Barhorst said the higher parking cost makes it more burdensome for her to travel home each month to visit her sick grandparents and the girl she mentors through Big Brothers Big Sisters.

I absolutely need my car to spend time with these very important people, yet every year it gets much less affordable to bring one to campus,” she said on Facebook.

Wood said he and other administrators compared the university’s parking prices to those at similar schools and found OWU’s were cheaper. But even with the additional $75 per permit, he said, there’s still a gap in maintenance costs, which are between $800 and $1,500 per space.

Sophomore Brian Burnett suggested Public Safety prohibit freshmen from having cars on campus or keep them to the C lots, which OWU used to do. The policy changed last year, when B and C lots both opened to all students.

Managing Editor Spenser Hickey contributed reporting to this story.

The Women’s City Club raises funds for repairs, rents

The ceiling of the WCC's dining room, which collapsed in early June.
The ceiling of the WCC’s dining room, which collapsed in early June.

The Women’s City Club of Delaware, Ohio will be giving a garden tour of 8 Delaware gardens this weekend in an attempt to raise money for housing renovations, including those for its dining room’s recently collapsed ceiling.

The nonprofit organization dedicates itself to providing women in need with low cost housing. The group consistently fundraises in order to provide the residents with low rents, which are about $60 a week per resident and include utilities. In addition to constantly fundraising to keep rents low, the WCC has to raise additional funds for the home’s many necessary repairs. The 135 N. Franklin St. home was once an Ohio Wesleyan University fraternity house and has been in business since 1954, so renovations are not an uncommon need for the historic home.

One of the club’s more recent fundraisers took place on Friday, April 14, 2014, when the volunteers of the WCC collected donated items for a rummage sale to be held the next day. The rummage sale was inspired by a need to make about $4,000 for renovations, but raised $900. April’s rummage sale could not have predicted a need for funding beyond their goal of $4000, but in early June, the home’s dining room ceiling collapsed. The ceiling continues to be the primary concern for the renovations and safety of the women living there. Even with insurance coverage, the WCC expects to spend a significant amount of money on the repair.

There are eight women who reside in the rooms on the second and third floor of the four-story home. Only single women are eligible to live at WCC, but women of all ages, from 20 to 90 and above, are welcome.

OWU alumna Emily Amburgey, ’13, is one of those eight women, but her reasons for occupancy are different than most. Amburgey is the house monitor as well as an intern coach for the Varsity Track team at Ohio Wesleyan.

“I needed a place to live in Delaware that was cheap,” she said. “I kind of intern coach, follow my head coaches around and do what they do. I don’t get paid anything.”

A former Women and Gender Studies/Sociology double major, Amburgey is applying to graduate school next year and plans to become a social worker. She said her position at the WCC helps her prepare for a future of helping others.

“(WCC) is right up my alley,” she said. “It’s interesting seeing the different mix of people that come through this house, and it’s just neat to be able to talk to and eclectic group of women and be able to help them out on their little journeys.”

As the monitor, Amburgey also acts as the house’s resident mediator, putting out any emotional fires that may arise within the residents.

“Anything like someone gets locked out of their room or if there’s any sort of question or dispute, that’s what I’m here for,” she said. “I mean it’s a house full of women, it can be difficult at times but for the most part it’s totally fine,” she said.

 

Kelly Abel, 21, who graduated from Rutherford B. Hayes High School in 2011, moved in about two weeks before the rummage sale.

“I was in Bowling Green, Ohio for a few months, couch hopping because things got really bad with my parents,” she said. “They were emotionally abusive, that’s why I left.”

Although Amburgey and Abel are both in their 20’s, most of the other residents vary in age. The WCC provides housing for single women of all ages, from 20-90 and above.

“I’m thinking that down the road I definitely want to not live here because I want to be married and have children of my own,” Abel said.

Abel said she is happy to call the WCC her temporary home, she said that she has many aspirations for her future and is currently looking for a job in Delaware.

“I’m trying to find work right now, anything that pays,” she said. “I heard possibly United Dairy Farmers.”

Like Abel, housemate Rebekah Nussbum, 32, from Orville, Ohio found the WCC after moving out of her childhood residence.

“I was ready to move out of my parents house, I heard about (WCC) and finally decided I might as well try it,” said Nussbum.

Nussbum has been living at the WCC for about 16 months. Currently unemployed, Nessbum had worked at the Columbus Zoo in season since 2003. Unlike Abel, she said she’s not sure what she wants to do in the future.

Treasurer for the WCC, Sue Capretta, intends on raising enough money so residents like Nussbum and Abel have a safe and inexpensive place to live for as long as they wish. She said the board for the WCC is bonded by this idea.

“I think it was just the concept of what the group does, being able to allow women to be here, you know for reduced price and helping them work through their struggles,” Capretta said.

Greta Bemiller, the current Vice President of the WCC, has been a member of the board for over 10 years.

“I came in and met everyone having dinner and liked the people and got involved,” she said of her start at the WCC. “It’s a fun group we work very hard but have fun as well.”

Zuilla Way founded the WCC 60 years ago, and Bemiller said that they frequently hold events to raise awareness and funds in an effort to honor her mission: providing safe and affordable housing for women below the poverty line.

“Board meeting is the first Tuesday of every month, and we have a dinner meetings, sometimes we go to restaurants. We usually have a potluck and we do some fun silly things,” Bemiller said. “We’ll have a chili cook off and give awards- they’re major awards,” she added in April as she was holding up decorations for the rummage sale.

Poverty in Delaware reflects gender gap

The Family Promise house in Delaware. Photo: Facebook
The Family Promise house in Delaware. Photo: Facebook

Employment gaps between men and women are widening nationally, and Delaware County is no exception.

The official definition used by the U.S. Census reads, “If a family’s total income is less than the family’s threshold, then that family and every individual in it is considered in poverty.”

In Delaware County there are 8,885 people living below the poverty line, with 1,818,886 of all of Ohio’s residents fall below the poverty line. Delaware holds approximately one-half of a percent of the underprivileged rate in Ohio. According to the 2014 Ohio Poverty Report, “
poverty rates are higher for families with children, families without a full-time, year-round worker, and single-parent households- especially those with a female head.”

Ohio Wesleyan women’s and gender studies instructor Rita Trimble, said she defines underprivileged people as those who are  economically disadvantaged. Trimble said she believes it “falls disproportionally on certain groups of women.”

“People who don’t totally fit the white, middle-class, feminine norm are at risk to be more economically disadvantaged,” she said.

According to the census data for 2011, 13.6 percent of males are under the poverty line, while 16.3 percent of females are impoverished.

In another census report from 2012, the poverty rates are displayed by age and gender. For ages 65 and over, 11 percent of women are suspected to be living in poverty, while 6.6 percent of men are believed to be living under the poverty line. From ages 18 to 64, 15.4 percent of women are underprivileged, compared to 11.9 percent of men. Ages under 18 show that 22.3 percent of women and 21.3 percent of men are living below the poverty line.

Children

Trimble said that “a big factor” of why more women than men are consider underprivileged is the fact that “unpaid labor that goes on is done by women.”

“We have an idea of how people should be able to pull their own weight and one difficulty for a single mother is that that unpaid labor doesn’t get recognized as labor,” she said.  “So it’s hard to be recognized as pulling your own weight.”

Various organizations throughout Delaware County provide multiple services to those who fall below the poverty line, with some focusing strictly on women.

OWU senior Tasha Cruz volunteers at Family Promise, a nonprofit organization in Delaware committed to helping those below the poverty line.

“We provide them with housing and food basically for a minimum duration of four weeks with a possible extension up to three months,” Cruz said.

Cruz said she believes a reason more women are underprivileged could be because they stay with their children.

Assistant professor of English Constance Richards defines an underprivileged person as “someone who doesn’t have access to basic needs: education, job, adequate food, safe home.”

Richards said women living in poverty often have children, which makes escaping hardship much more difficult. She also said it can be easier for men to be absent in the parent role than it is for mothers.

“Because we don’t have a subsidized child care system in this country, women are always going to have an extra job,” Richards said. “If we had subsidized child care — so safe, affordable child care — moms could put kids in child care then they might be better able to compete in the marketplace.”

Pay Inequalities

Trimble said there is a blaming stigma that occurs when a person is disadvantaged. Many people living below the poverty line work multiple jobs, but more often than not these workers earn minimum wage, making it difficult to achieve economic security. For women responsible for children, a minimum wage job makes earning a decent living especially difficult.  Despite their work at one or several jobs, people below the poverty line are frequently generalized as lazy.

Trimble said there is a sense of shame that the unprivileged face, as they can conform to society’s view of their situation.

According to the Insecure and Unequal Poverty and Income Among Women and Families Report for 2010 and 2011 by the National Women’s Law Center, “Poverty rates for all groups of women were higher than for their male counterparts.”

“The gender wage gap persisted, undermining women’s ability to support themselves and their families,” the report said.

It continued to show the discrepancies between men and women. Women on average make 77 cents to every man’s dollar, which for the year 2011 there was “an annual difference of $11,084 in median earnings.” African-American and Hispanic women earned 64 and 55 cents to every white man’s dollar, respectively.

Although there continues to be poverty, the report stated that poverty has stabilized between 2010 and 2011 after it had been increasing in the prior years.

In another report by The National Women’s Law Center, the center focuses on inequality of pay in Ohio.According to census data, women in Ohio earned $35,284 full-time to men’s $45,859 earnings in 2010. Additionally, 15.2 percent of Ohio women were in poverty to Ohio men’s 11.6 percent.

Local Organizations

Located in the middle of the Delaware community are three organizations that aimed to help those in need: Family Promise, he Andrews House and the Women’s City Club.

Family Promise volunteer Cruz said Family Promise works to take in and provide for low-income families. There is an on-staff social worker to help the families find work and housing for when they leave the organization.

Andrews House, located at the corner of North Franklin and West Winter Street, is a community center with offices that provide assistance to the underprivileged and works on programs to better lives.

The center includes offices for legal, financial, child care, health and food services. There is a full kitchen for the bi-monthly community dinners. Director Mel Corroto said about 40 to 90 people show up for each dinner.

Andrews House also works with other food programs like the Mobile Food Market with Mid-Ohio Foodbank and the Summer Lunch Program for children under 18 when they are not in school.

Every Wednesday the Andrews House offers free Medical services with its Grace Medical Clinic, and once a month the Delaware Bar Association offers free legal advice through a clinic.

Corroto said she does not necessarily see more women than men come in for the services offered at the Andrews House. However, the Andrews House is beginning to work with the program Support Through Empowerment and Partnerships (STEP), and she said she has seen more women through this program than men. Corroto said that last year the STEP class had eight students, seven of whom were women. Corroto said this year’s class is all women.

The Women’s City Club of Delaware focuses its attention specifically on women. Greta Bemiller, the club’s vice president, said the club offers housing for underprivileged women with a small rooming fee. All of the house’s nine rooms are currently occupied, and more women are on a waiting list to move into the club.

Bemiller said she believes there are more women in need than men because of “the glass ceiling” that prevents women from achieving the same successes of working men. She said it’s common for women to have less access to education, which can result in fewer job opportunities.

The Women City’s Club works as a transition place for the women to get them back on their feet. The club is able to stay afloat with government grants and fundraising events. The 37 members of the club are all volunteers.

Both Corroto and Bemiller said they have had Ohio Wesleyan students come and volunteer. Cruz said she hopes students can become aware of what is going on around Ohio Wesleyan.

“It would be so easy for a student to step outside off campus a little bit,” Cruz said. “They would be able to see that these are people.”

An insider’s look at central Ohio’s heroin problem

nursing
Danielle Adkins, a recovering heroin addict and Delaware native, is approaching her second year sober.

“When an oxycodone cost $80 and 30 milligrams of Percocet is $30 you can’t afford to sustain that habit for long. I told my dealer I couldn’t keep spending $120 a day, so he suggested I try his pure white heroin. Like that, I was hooked,” said 35-year-old Delaware native and recovering addict, Danielle Adkins.

Heroin originally became popular in the 1960s, but after four decades, it is now back funneling through U.S. streets at a high rate. According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, from 2007 to 2012 the number of Americans using heroin increased from 373,000 to 669,000.

Steve Hedge, executive-director of Delaware Morrow Mental Health and Recovery Services, said heroin is their No.1 problem.

“Heroin and opioids are some of the most addictive drugs you can take. You’ll hear former abusers say I got hooked the first time I injected it,” he said.

The narcotic analgesic directly depresses the central nervous system causing an intense high. Heroin can be naturally derived from the opium poppy or formulated synthetically in a lab.

Adkins said she had to learn how to hide her addiction from her husband, child and friends.

“While I was slamming (injecting through the veins), I shot up in my lower extremities, in between my toes, and in the veins on my breasts,” she said. “I always made sure the lights were off when I made love to my husband so he would not know my secret.”

The country-wide epidemic has severely affected. Ohio In 2011, there were 1,765 unintentional drug overdoses, according to the Ohio Department of Health. That means nearly five Ohioans died every day from unintentional drug overdose that year.

Judge David Sunderman of the Delaware County Municipal Court said heroin addicts are not worried about overdosing.

“I had a guy in court recently that was on probation, and he was a heroin user. His best friend and girlfriend had both died from an overdose. I mentioned to the court that he had tested dirty even after that occurred,” said Sunderman. “I said, ‘A logical person would conclude that once you see someone close to you die, you’re just not going to use again.’ He responded, ‘Judge to be honest, there’s no logic involved in this. I know that is how I should think, but when you’re a heroin addict you don’t care about that. There are times I’d be happy dead anyways.”

Adkins, a former registered nurse at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center, said the addiction is extremely strong.

“I would go to work high, inject myself while I was at work, and then get high when I got home. I still feel very guilty for taking an oath as a nurse to care for the sick, not to hurt them,” she said.

According to the Ohio Department of Health, from 1997 to 2011 the amount of unintentional drug overdose death rates and distribution rates of prescription opioids showed a strong relationship as both are currently at all-time highs.

Prescription opioid pills such as OxyContin and Percocet are the gateways to heroin. These prescription pills can be obtained from a pharmacy with a valid prescription or from “pill mills” where patient’s leftover prescription medication is distributed illegally.

Delaware Police Chief Bruce Pijanowski said the source of addiction is doctors over-prescribing opiate pain medication to some of their patients.

“My daughter just had very minor knee surgery, and she got a 30-day supply of Percocet when she only needed a one-day supply. Part of the problem is the left-over pain pills are just sitting there and they get diverted,” he said.

Dr. Andy Lee of the Smith Clinic said heroin addicts are solely worried about where the cheapest fix is coming from.

“As the supply of prescription opiates has dried up, they’ve become more and more expensive and more difficult to get. Simple economics dictates that I’m going to buy whatever is cheapest,” he said.

Addicts often resort to burglaries, shoplifting and home invasions, selling or pawning their stolen goods for their next cheap fix. Judge Sunderman said desperate addicts will do anything for a balloon of heroin.

“Since we are the municipal court, we see a tremendous amount of shoplifting cases,” he said. “Big shopping areas such as Polaris, all the stores down on Route 23 and stores in town are unfortunately convenient places for people to go get items. Their plan is they steal merchandise worth $300, to go get enough money out if it for their next fix.”

After months of being consistently using heroin, Adkins had a scare and decided to finally admit her addiction to her husband. He immediately took her to inpatient rehabilitation where she endured withdrawal.

Adkins then was admitted to outpatient rehabilitation at Maryhaven, a rehabilitation and addiction recovery care center in Delaware. Adkins has been clean for almost two years, and she said the road to recovery is rewarding.

“When I was high, my body was there, but I wasn’t,” she said. “Maryhaven saved my life, and I am now a more attentive mother to my child and better wife to my husband.”

Adkins said she is now pursuing her bachelor’s degree online to become a social worker to help other addicts and get her story out. Adkins explained she has learned one major lesson through her journey.

“I had a great family, nice house and a good paying job, but I still became addicted,” she said. “If it can happen to me, it can happen to anyone.”

OWU to receive new VP for enrollment

Susan Dileno, current Vice President for Enrollment Management at Baldwin Wallace University in Berea, will replace Interim VP for Enrollment, Dave Wottle.

 Dileno will now oversee the offices of Admission and Financial Aid at Ohio Wesleyan University.

President Rock Jones said Dileno has been an enrollment professional for 30 years.

Prior to her job as VP for Enrollment at Baldwin Wallace, she worked as Dean of Enrollment Management at Hartwick College in Oneonta, N.Y., for four years and at Cleveland-based Case Western Reserve University for 11 years, which included a seven year term as the Director of Admission.

“In each case, she was successful at building a strong program, increasing the size, strength and diversity of entering classes, and building an awareness of the institution among prospective students and their families as well as among high school counselors and other important participants in the college search process,” Jones said.

Dileno said she her skillset is a good match for OWU because she is nurturing and mentoring and has a collaborative style when it comes to her work.

At Baldwin Wallace, Dileno said she focused on improving first impressions for prospective students by incorporating the town around the campus and building a welcome center where Admissions is located.

“First impressions for prospective students and their parents could be everything,” she said.

She added that she does not have any definitive plans for OWU yet but she will focus on increasing enrollment, quality and selectivity of students.

“I hope the Admissions and Financial Aid here becomes a model for other schools,” Dileno said.

Jones said Dileno is highly respected and appreciated by her staff and faculty at the institutions she has served.

“I am confident she will bring new energy, vision, and strategy to our admission office and that with her leadership we will see Ohio Wesleyan continue to gain strength in student recruitment and in the composition of our student body,” Jones said.

Dileno said she is enthusiastic about health and physical fitness and runs as a hobby.

She said she has already started looking at TPX, platies and yoga facilities in the  Delaware area. She said she is also a movie buff who loves to cook Thai, Indian and Italian food.

“Anything’s fair game when you’re from Cleveland,” she said.

Science students receive national recognition

Every year the National Science Foundation awards Graduate Research Fellowships to outstanding young scientists.

This year, three Ohio Wesleyan students, senior Mary Ann Lee and alumni Brad Turnwald (’13) and Kristen Lear (’11), were honored in receiving the award.

Over 14,000 applications were submitted, 2,000 of which were selected.

With the award comes a $32,000 per year stipend and $12,000 per year to help pay tuition costs directly for three years.

“The fellowship will enable me to not have to TA for 3 years out of five years of my PhD, which will free up a lot more time for me to put into research,” Lee said.

All three described the application process to obtain an NSF Fellowship as difficult and lengthy.

“The application process was really taxing, because one of the essays basically asks you to design a PhD thesis, which I had no idea what I was going to write about or had not enough knowledge about the topic,” Lee said.

Turnwald echoed similar sentiments, adding simply completing the application alone was valuable experience.

Applications were submitted in early November, at which point they each were sent to three independent panelists, who judged the applications based on intellectual merits as well as the broader impact it would have for the scientific community.

Both Turnwald and Lee earned Goldwater scholarships last year, while Lear earned a Fulbright scholarship as a senior.

“Receiving the NSF fellowship is rewarding because it hinged on obtaining very positive reviews from established senior scientists that anonymously evaluated my research proposal,” Turnwald said.

 For Lee, doing research at OWU was instrumental in helping her think like a scientist and shape her as a scientist overall.

She expressed joy about the opportunities an NSF Fellowship provides.

Originally she had not planned to apply, but Dr. Downing strongly encouraged Lee to send  in a proposal, structuring a directed readings to guide her along.

Turnwald has begun  to study at Stanford University on a Graduate Fellowship.

Both Lee and Lear will start their studies next year at the University of Arizona and the University of Georgia, respectively.

Lear said she felt her time and research experience at OWU played a big part in her success.

“I have no doubt that my research experiences at OWU have opened many doors for me,” she said.

Rocking on Rowland

Wahoo Sam Crawford plays in the gazebo at Bicentennial Park, next to Rowland Avenue. Left to right: senior Erika Nininger on piano, junior Connor Stout on guitar, senior Michael Cormier on drums and senior Sam Sonnega on guitar. Photo by Spenser Hickey
Wahoo Sam Crawford plays in the gazebo at Bicentennial Park, next to Rowland Avenue. Left to right: senior Erika Nininger on piano, junior Connor Stout on guitar, senior Michael Cormier on drums and senior Sam Sonnega on guitar. Photo by Spenser Hickey

Day on the JAY may have been pushed inside because of the rain, but the sun came out for the inaugural Rock the Block event later that evening.

Although the event was the Student Involvement Office’s idea, they worked in conjunction with Residential Life, Campus Programming Board and Choosing and Learning Environments with Alcohol Respect (CLEAR).

Residential Life Coordinator (RLC) Jill Auxter said they decided to have the block party in the area on Rowland Ave in front of three Small Living Units (SLUs), because it has been seen as a “hidden treasure.”

“Anyone who grew up on a street that had block parties will know how much fun it is to be outside, play games, and hang out with your neighbors,” Auxter said.

“We wanted to give OWU students an event that brings our students together, not just as neighbors, but as a campus community.”

Levi Harrel, RLC for the SLss, theme houses and Welch Hall, said it was an event to join the city and campus.

“At its core, Rock the Block is a block party that is meant for members of the OWU and Delaware communities to come together and enjoy themselves,” he said.

The event featured food from Dan’s Deli and Kinetic, a food truck co-founded by OWU alum Andrew Tuchow and served free Whit’s custard.

The staff also distributed free t-shirts for the first 100 people. Student DJs the Arjune Brothers and band Wahoo Sam Crawford played music in the gazebo at Bicentennial Park.

“We are having this event for the students, and it adds another fun way to end the semester,” Auxter said.

“Rock the Block is a small-scale outdoor concert and all-campus block party meant for members of the OWU community to celebrate arrival of spring and the end of the academic year,” Harrel added.

Both Auxter and Harrel said the planning of the event has been pretty easy working with the different organizations and Delaware city.

Local venues can’t hold their liquor

Fiesta Mexico, soon to be the William Street Cafe, closed its doors in fall of 2013 due to problems with taxes as well as trouble with their liquor license and attracting customers. Photo by Sadie Slager
Fiesta Mexico, soon to be the William Street Cafe, closed its doors in fall of 2013 due to problems with taxes as well as trouble with their liquor license and attracting customers. Photo by Sadie Slager

Lacking liquor licenses the root of restaurant closings

Financial troubles and filled liquor license quotas are the root of the problem in the recent closings of several Delaware restaurants.

Matt Mullins, public information officer for the Ohio Department of Commerce’s Division of Liquor Control, said bars or restaurants need D-Class liquor permits if they wish to sell any type of alcohol. A D-Class permit, he said, allows patrons to consume alcohol on a restaurant’s premise, while different types of D-Class permits allow for the sale of different types of alcohol.

For example, a D5 liquor permit “give you all types – beer, wine, liquor, and low-proof spirits,” Mullins said. According to the Ohio Department of Commerce, a D5 permit allows for the sale of “spirituous liquor for on premises consumption only, beer, wine and mixed beverages for on premises or off premises in original sealed containers, until 2:30AM.”

Mullins added that the D5 permit allows for sale of these products Monday through Saturday, while adding a D6 license extends this sale of wine, beer and liquor to Sundays. Several restaurants in Delaware operate under active D5 liquor permits, like Chandra’s Bistro located at 10 N. Sandusky St. and El Vaquero located at 259 S. Sandusky St.

The first step the Division of Liquor Control takes to decide if they can approve an application for a liquor permit is to run criminal background and financial verification checks on the applicants, Mullins said.

“We also have to check if any public institutions are within 500 feet of the new applicant’s location for the license,” he said. “Public institutions like churches and schools can reject the application for a liquor permit and can request a hearing.”

Another step in a restaurant obtaining a liquor permit is looking at how many permits are available at a given moment based on the city’s liquor permit quota. This quota, Mullins said, provides for a certain amount of liquor permits in the city based on the city’s population.

“Ohio Revised code provides for one D-Class permit for every 2,000 people in the population of the city,” he said.

According to census data, the most recently estimated population for the City of Delaware was roughly 36,000 people in 2012. Using Mullins’ explanation, this leaves the City of Delaware with about 18 D-Class liquor permits available to be filled.

If a restaurant seeks a certain type of permit and the quota is filled, Mullins said restaurant owners can apply for transfer of ownership of a permit. This would involve a business becoming the owner of a permit previously owned by a business that no longer needed it.

The Face of the Problem

If residents of Delaware have dined in the city at any time in the past five years, they might recognize the name Nova Restaurant. Nova Restaurant, closed its doors at 5 N. Sandusky St. in 2012 after its owner filed for bankruptcy and was later indicted with fraud.

The liquor permit associated with Nova Restaurant, a D5 class permit, was cancelled before its closing on June 29, 2011 because of what Mullins described as a tax problem.

“In 2009, the Ohio Department of Taxation sent us a tax non-renewal order for the business,” he said. “There’s a statue in Ohio Revised Code that prevents us from renewing licenses if there’s a delinquent tax issue.”

On Jan. 29, 2010, Nova Restaurant’s owners sent an appeal to the Ohio Liquor Control Commission regarding the notice and a stay issue was ordered from this date until April 23, 2010, Mullins said, meaning liquor was sold between Jan. 29 and April 23 of 2010.

“The Franklin County Court of Common Pleas affirmed the commission’s decision and our own decision on June 29, 2011,” he said.

Following Nova’s closing, another restaurant, Generations, tried its hand at business in the same location. On Aug. 20, 2012, the owners of Generations applied for D1, D2 and D3 liquor permits, which would provide for the sale of a combination of beer, wine, spirituous liquor and mixed drinks, and the restaurant was granted a D2 and D3 permit.

“For the D1 permit, there was no opening under the quota,” Mullins said.

To bypass this issue, Generations applied for a D1 permit through the “trex” process, a transfer of permit ownership that is exempt from the city’s quota numbers.

“The City of Delaware designated it as an economic development project and they had a D1, D2, and D3 permit at one time,” Mullins said.

Generations ended up closing due to what Sean K. Hughes, business concierge and economic development director for the City of Delaware, called a “marketing issue.”

After Generations also closed, Son of Thurman took its place, officially opening on Feb. 13, 2014. All of the liquor permits possessed by Generations were transferred to DeVol Holdings LLC, under the DBA Son of Thurman.

Hughes said he thinks Son of Thurman will have more success than its predecessors in the same location.

“Son of Thurman ownership has tremendous restaurant experience and has a brand name,” he said. “They are already so successful that they are driving customers into surrounding restaurants who do not want to wait or who are making a return visit to Delaware.”

Hughes said the owner of Son of Thurman, Chris DeVol, has “tremendous experience” in low cost marketing and will use his abilities to properly market Son of Thurman in conjunction with its parent restaurant, Thurman CafĂ©.

This is key, Hughes said, because usually in Delaware, “restaurants close because business is bad or because of poor marketing.”

Hughes said other problems, like poor customer service, can impact the success of local businesses.

“Often times bad service can impact a restaurant faster than food quality issues,” he said. “If a restaurant gets a reputation for bad service, customers can be very unforgiving. A typical customer won’t give a restaurant a second chance if they have experienced bad service.”

Even Closer to Home

Independently-owned Fiesta Mexico closed amidst financial issues including problems with paying taxes.

Fiesta Mexico’s liquor permit, a D3 allowing for the sale and consumption of spirituous liquor, was cancelled on April 18 of this year because the restaurant did not renew its application since it had gone out of business in late 2013.

Ana Angeles, a former Fiesta Mexico employee, said she thinks part of the reason the restaurant went out of business was because of the limitations of its D3 liquor permit. Angeles said when Fiesta Mexico first opened and applied for liquor permits necessary for the sale of beer and wine, D1 and D2 class permits, were unavailable because the quotas for them in the City of Delaware were filled.

“We used to have a liquor license, that means like hard liquor – no wine, no beer,” she said. “And that was one of the problems. Some students like to drink beer, or some people like to go and enjoy their food with just one beer, not like something really strong like liquor. But there aren’t enough licenses for every place.”

Angeles said Fiesta Mexico originally intended to sell beer and wine, but a liquor-only permit was the only option available due to the full quota.

“The permit said that two other places were on the list to wait, so it depends on who made their application first,” she said.

Hughes said the closing of Fiesta Mexico was a “surprise” to the City of Delaware.

“Fiesta Mexico was a surprise to us as they did not indicate there was a problem, so we were not able to help,” he said.

Hughes also noted that the large space at 13 W. Williams St. could be hard for restaurateurs to manage successfully.

“This is an incredibly large restaurant space and probably more than an upstart restaurant can handle unless they have years and years of restaurant experience,” he said. “We are working to recruit experienced restaurateurs and existing successful restaurants into this space.”

Sean Hughes said many restaurants are looking at the city’s empty storefronts like Brooklyn Heights’ old space and a 38 E. Winter St. open location, next to the Strand Theatre.

In regards to Fiesta Mexico’s old location, Hughes said a Mexican cafĂ© is opening by an experienced restaurant owner. The windows of the restaurant currently indicate that this will be called William Street CafĂ©.

Worth the wait? Residential campus to receive $80 million makeover

One of the major changes to be made to residential campus will be moving the SLUs on Rowland Avenue  into a centralized community on Oak Hill. Image courtesy Craig Ullom
One of the major changes to be made to residential campus will be moving the SLUs on Rowland Avenue into a centralized community on Oak Hill. Image courtesy Craig Ullom

As part of phase one of the Student Housing Master Plan, Small Living Units on Rowland Avenue and Oak Hill Avenue will be replaced with apartment buildings and “connection communities.”

Collaborative Architects Sandy Carr and Mike Dinardo, who designed the buildings, said they will be more energy efficient and have a “residential feel.”

Craig Ullom, vice president for Student Affairs, said the process started in 2007 with the Residential Facilities Committee that worked with the Architects to develop the plan.

 “Since then we have been involved in a continual process of planning and refinement in tandem with the completion of over $20 million in improvements to student housing since 2009,” He said.

 Ullom said Mackey Mitchell, an architect firm that specializes in student housing, assessed the condition of the residential buildings last year with Lincoln Construction Company and Buildings and Grounds.

Director of Residential Life Wendy Piper said the infrastructure of the SLUs needs to be addressed in order to be a long-term investment for the university.

“A focused improvement was not enough,” Piper said. “There needed to be replacement as opposed to repair.

“As for the location for new construction, we are considering Rowland Avenue for apartment development and Oak Hill Avenue for a SLU neighborhood concept.”

Piper said not all of the details are set in stone, but the soonest construction could begin is in summer 2015, with the new residences opening in fall 2016. New construction would take 9 to 12 months.

“We will continue the discussion with our Board of Trustees at the meeting next month, and the Board has indicated that they are eager to move ahead,” she said.

Piper also said where the SLU residents will relocate during construction is still being discussed.

“Some facilities could feasibly be done over the summer without disruption of student housing during an academic year, but some others would need to be offline for an academic year,” she said.

SLU – Shared Living Unit

The architects said there are two potential design plans for Rowland Avenue, where the House of Thought (HoT), Women’s House and Modern Foreign Language House are located. Instead of SLUs, the plan is to construct apartments in the areas. There are two different design plans for the apartments, one with 96 beds in four “six-flats” and the other with 120 beds in 10 brownstone buildings.

“We want it to have a residential, urban feel,” architect Carr said.

The six-flats will have three floors and with 24 to 30 units in each flat with four beds per unit. All of the rooms will be singles, and each flat will have a full kitchen, common areas, dining, living and study rooms, and laundry room. There will be one bathroom per four students, a porch and exterior staircases to the upper floor. No elevator was shown on the plan.

The brownstones would have the same features but would have all single rooms and an elevator.

The second part of the plan is for construction on Oak Hill Avenue where the House of Black Culture, Interfaith House and Tree House are located. This area is intended for “connection communities” and would be the SLUs’ new location.

Each connection community would house two SLUs, separated and joined by a wall. Each half of the building would be identical and feature double and single rooms with two floors, a kitchen, common areas, living, dining, study and laundry rooms and a porch.

Senior Alex D’Amore-Braver, HoT’s moderator, said he is concerned that the grouping of different SLUs into the same building will have a negative effect on the members.

“Sharing a building with another SLU would be detrimental to our unique ideas and mission, along with that other SLUs’, because neither side would have the separate physical space to associate with their ideas,” D’Amore-Braver said.

Sophomore Emma Buening, HoT member, said being coupled with another SLU will be difficult, because different SLUs have people with different ideas.

“Those perspectives should both be respected, but I can easily see tension rising between the houses because of the closeness,” Buening said. “The only way to mitigate that would be to assimilate, and that takes away from our individuality.”

Senior Erin Gregory said she has never lived in a SLU, but she understands the purpose of the architect’s design plan to group the SLUs together.

“These architects are tasked with making this project as cost-effective as possible while providing SLU’s with the space necessary to maintain their individual identities,” Gregory said. “Although sharing a wall is not desirable, it is the most cost-effective solution.”

Fresh Face for Freshman Dorms

The architects also plan to build four-person suites in a building that would connect Thomson and Bashford Halls. This building, called the “Future Gateway” would have a tunnel going through it to make passage to the fraternities still possible.

The building, like Thomson and Bashford, would be reserved for first-year students, but would not have community bathrooms.

Buening said this could cause the freshmen housed there to be isolated from the rest of OWU.

“Making it so that they don’t have to leave their dorm is not going to help the freshmen branch out to any part of the community other than the section they already exist within,” Buening said.

D’Amore-Braver said he likes the open space between the two freshman dorms where the new building will go.

“I feel that the current green space/paved path between Bashford and Thomson serves as a perfect gateway to fraternity hill, D’Amore-Braver said. “But I also understand that there is little room for the expansion of OWU’s residential options without purchasing new land, and the tunnel idea would allow building expansion while maintaining the ability to pass to fraternity hill.”

The Cost of Renovations 

According to Dan Hitchell, vice president of finance and administration, the estimated cost of phase one of the renovations is $35 million.

The cost is part of the Student Housing Master Plan’s total projected cost of  $80 million.

Hitchell said there is a number of different ways to finance the renovations.

He said the university could borrow the money from a bank through a private loan or issue bonds to pay for the renovations. The money will be borrowed in phases.

Ullom said the Board of Trustees asked administrators to include a policy that would make maintenance of the buildings part of the funding. 

“The Board doesn’t want us to spend all this money and then not continue the upkeep,” he said.

The OWU of tomorrow

Highlights from the Student Housing Master Plan