Posts Tagged ‘southwest ohio’

WedOct3

Expect mix of sun, clouds today

Posted by rrichardson October 3rd, 2012, 8:44 am Post a Comment

Jennifer Edwards Baker reports:

The sun returns to the forecast today after two straight days of rain.

Expect a mix of sun and clouds with a high temperature of 73 degrees by 5 p.m.

Temperatures will remain pleasant and mild with plenty of sun through Thursday, according to the National Weather Service in Wilmington.

Highs will be above normal and in the upper 70s with overnight lows hovering 60s, said meteorologist Jim Lott.

A major cool down is ahead for the weekend. A cold front will drop down from the north, pushing daytime temperatures into the low-to-mid-50s.

Friday’s high will struggle to reach 65 degrees as a chance of showers will develop after 1 p.m.

More showers are likely Friday night, mainly after 9 p.m. It will be cloudy overnight with a low of 46.

The chance for rain will stick around through Saturday night. It will be mostly cloudy with a high only of 52 degrees.

The normal high for this time of year is 71 degrees, and overnight lows typically hit 50.

The sun will return Sunday, but it will remain brisk with a high of 55.

Patchy frost will develop overnight Sunday into Columbus Day on Monday. The low will plunge to a downright cold 34 degrees.

The sun should begin to burn the frost off by 10 a.m.

Temperatures will rebound into the 60s by mid-afternoon.

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FriSep28

Fog to give way to beautiful weekend

Posted by rrichardson September 28th, 2012, 9:06 am Post a Comment

Jennifer Edwards Baker reports:

Watch out for patchy, dense fog across Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky this morning.

The fog should stick around until 9 a.m., according to a special weather statement issued early today by the National Weather Service in Wilmington.

Visibility is down to 3/4 of a mile at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport in Hebron and 5 miles at Lunken Airport in the East End is at five miles. Areas in between and all the way up to Wilmington are down to quarter of a mile or less, said meteorologist Andy Latto.

Later, there will be a mix of sun and clouds with a high temperature of 71 degrees.

This weekend will be gorgeous with mostly sunny skies and highs in the low 70s and upper 60s. Overnight lows will be brisk and in the upper 40s.

Looking ahead to next week, conditions will remain favorable with plenty of sun and highs hitting the mid-70s.

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ThuSep27

More showers and thunderstorms on tap for today

Posted by rrichardson September 27th, 2012, 8:01 am Post a Comment

Jennifer Edwards Baker reports:

More showers and thunderstorms are expected today before the forecast dries out for the weekend.

About a quarter of an inch of rain should fall by tonight. The high temperature will reach 72 degrees, which is normal for this time of year, according to the National Weather Service in Wilmington.

This weekend looks nice with plenty of sun and highs in the low 70s and overnight lows hovering in the upper 40s.

Originally, rain was predicted through Saturday. But now a wave of low pressure will move through Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, pushing the unsettled weather out a little sooner than expected, explained meteorologist Allen Randall.

This remains the fifth wettest September with 7.04 inches of rain, about 4.5 inches above normal, recorded at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport.

Why are things so wet this month, especially after such a hot and dry summer?

Blame Hurricane Isaac.

Remnants of the destructive Category 1 hurricane that caused severe damage on the Gulf Coast of the U.S. in late August dumped just over 6 inches across our the region at the beginning of the month.

“If it wasn’t for Isaac, rainfall totals would be below normal for the month of September,” Randall pointed out.

Rainfall overall this year remains down, So far, 28.73 inches have fallen. That’s 3.32 inches below the normal of 32.05 for this time in the year.

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TueSep25

Could this be area’s wettest September ever?

Posted by rrichardson September 25th, 2012, 8:43 am Post a Comment

Jennifer Edwards Baker reports:

After a long, dry summer that turned lawns brown and crunchy across Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, this is the fifth wettest September on record – and the month is not even over yet.

So far this month, 6.6 inches of rain has been recorded at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport – 4.52 inches above normal, according to the National Weather Service in Wilmington.

With 1-2 more inches expected through Saturday, the region could surpass that to become the wettest on record before month’s end next week.

The top three wettest Septembers since such records started being kept in the 1800s saw 8.61 inches fall in 1979; 8.25 inches in 1950 and 7.52 in 1911.

The fourth wettest September on record was last year, when 7.51 inches fell.

More rain is on the way today as a warm front comes in from the west. Light rain already is developing in southeastern Indiana.

Expect showers and thunderstorms with a high of 69 degrees. The strongest storms are expected tonight. While severe weather with high winds and hail cannot be ruled out, it is not likely, Randall said.

Rain will stick around in the forecast through Saturday. Highs will be in the 70s and lows will be in the 50s.

And even though we are plenty wet now, the region overall remains below normal rainfall totals for this time of the year.

So far in 2012, 28.38 inches have fallen. That’s 3.49 inches below the normal 31.87 we normally have by this time, Randall said.

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MonSep24

200K-plus locals on food stamps

Posted by rrichardson September 24th, 2012, 12:37 pm Post a Comment
Mason Food Pantry

Mason Food Pantry director Gina Grown instructs pantry client Janet Dale of Mason on the best way to peel a pomegranate. The pantry serves 500-600 people a month. The Enquirer/Rachel Richardson

Benjamin Lanka and Sheila McLaughlin report:

More than 200,000 Southwest Ohioans are on food stamps – including nearly 1 in 6 Hamilton County residents.

Data analyzed by CentralOhio.com and The Enquirer show in the four Southwest Ohio counties, those local food stamp benefits now cost taxpayers $30 million a month, triple the amount five years ago.

Federal spending has become a centerpiece in this year’s presidential campaign with programs from Medicare to Social Security being targeted.

•Database: Food stamps in Ohio

Even food stamps – now called Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program – have become the target for reform as participation and costs have spiked due to the Great Recession.

Yet people working with those needing assistance said the help is critical for families struggling to find their next meal.

Nationally 1 out of every 7 Americans receives federal food assistance, according to August data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That is after a nearly 70 percent jump in participation since 2007, a spike closely mirrored in Ohio.

In June there were nearly 1.8 million Ohioans receiving food assistance – 15 percent of its total population – costing nearly a quarter of a billion dollars per month.

The story is no better in Southwestern Ohio, where Butler, Clermont, Hamilton and Warren counties have seen tremendous leaps on their food assistance rolls in the past five years as more and more people lost their jobs to the recession.

Food assistance costs nearly $30 million a month – triple the spending from five years ago – in those four Southwest Ohio counties, where 210,288 currently receive the benefit. That federal money passes through the states down to the county governments which dole out the public benefits.

“The majority of people that get these food stamps really do use it to pay for food for their families, and it’s really needed by them. If we took it away it would be really tough for them,” said Brian Gregg, spokesman for the Hamilton County Department of Job and Family Services.

‘A grocery bag short each week’

Hamilton County, where 1 in 6 people receive food assistance, experienced an 84 percent jump since 2007. Butler County saw a 70 percent increase. Clermont’s was 84 percent. Warren County, which has the smallest number of food assistance recipients at about 10,000, experienced an increase of 162 percent.

The economy is not the only reason for the increase, said Warren County Administrator Dave Gully.

The federal government relaxed eligibility requirements for the food program a few years ago.

“They didn’t have to consider a person’s assets. So if you own a million dollar house and drive a $50,000 car, if you don’t have any income, you can still qualify for food stamps,” he said.

The impact of the change became sorely evident a couple of years ago.

“We had a lady come in in a $50,000 car. I don’t know whether she was testing the system, but she was obviously wealthy and she owned a lot of property, and we had to issue food stamps to her because she qualified. She lost her job and didn’t have any income. The commissioners went nuts,” Gully said.

Social service officials don’t know what to expect from Washington after the election. But they said any reductions in food assistance spending would likely come about through changes in eligibility requirements. That could weed out people who take advantage of the system, Gully said.

But it also could affect families who really need help putting food on the table, said Jerome Kearns, director of Butler County Job and Family Services.

“There’s a new group of people who have come in to apply for food stamps. They have either lost their job as a result of closure of their employer or downsizing or have become underemployed. They are finding themselves a grocery bag short each week. The need is still there,” he said.

Changes that limit eligibility means more people will be looking for food through local food pantries, putting a greater burden on those nonprofit organizations.

“These folks are going to need to go somewhere,” Kearns said.

Who can get food stamps

Federal assistance for food has been a given in the United States since the start of World War II and has been a permanent safety net since the 1960s.

To qualify for the program, a person’s income generally must be at or below 130 percent of the federal poverty line.

For a family of three, the poverty line in 2012 is $1,545 per month, meaning that family could earn up to $2,008 per month to qualify for the program. The program has not used actual stamps for years, instead using electronic debit cards.

Participation in the program has risen and fallen with the economy, and the recent Great Recession has seen a marked spike in people needing help paying for food.

Nationally, the number of people on food stamps jumped from 26.3 million in 2007 to 44.7 million people in 2011, costing $75.7 billion. To put in perspective, that is roughly 50 percent more than the federal government spends on its state department and foreign aid.

Food stamp assistance for a family varies based on its size and income. The maximum monthly benefit for a family of three is $526. In Ohio, the average benefit for all families was $293.68.

The cost explosion for food stamps has caught the attention of numerous budget hawks looking to reduce the federal deficit.

The program is part of the federal farm bill, which despite its name spends 80 percent of its money on food assistance.

Congress has not yet passed its next five-year farm plan and appears to be looking to approve a temporary extension of current spending until after the election, said Marilyn Tomasi, vice president of marketing and communications for the Mid-Ohio Food Bank.

The Senate in June passed a plan that would reduce assistance by $4 billion over 10 years, and the House Agriculture Committee the following month backed a $16 billion cut to the program.

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Coldest morning since April brings frost advisory

Posted by rrichardson September 24th, 2012, 9:07 am Post a Comment

Jennifer Edwards Baker reports:

A frost advisory is in effect until 10 a.m. across Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky.

This is the coldest morning since April 13, according to the National Weather Service in Wilmington.

The low temperature is expected to plunge to 36 degrees by 6:30 a.m. at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport.

Frost could develop on outdoor plants. To protect them, water thoroughly before nightfall or cover with a tarp or sheet.

Later this morning, the sun will take over and send the mercury into the upper 60s. By 5 p.m., the high should be 69 degrees, said meteorologist Brian Coniglio.

Increasing clouds will settle in tonight with showers and thunderstorms looming Tuesday. The low will be 50.

There’s a 70 percent chance for showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. It will be mostly cloudy and warmer with a high of 71 degrees. The worst of the storms is expected on Tuesday night, Coniglio said. Severe weather, including high wind hail, cannot be ruled out but does not appear likely, he said.

Up to an inch of rain is possible by Wednesday morning. The overnight low will be considerably warmer at 62 degrees.

More rain is expected Wednesday through Friday as temperatures continue to climb into the 70s with overnight lows in the upper 50s.

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