Posts Tagged ‘Wyandot Early Childhood School Lakota’

TueMay7

Paige’s Princess Run & Carnival to take place May 18

Posted by akiefaber May 7th, 2013, 12:54 pm Post a Comment

The third annual Paige’s Princess Run & Carnival will take place next Saturday, May 18 at 9 a.m. at Wyandot Early Childhood School, 7667 Summerlin Boulevard, in Liberty Township.

The event includes a run or walk that ends with a full carnival for kids of all ages. The carnival will have inflatables, face painting, a petting zoo, food and drinks and even a pony.

It is a family event that benefits local patients of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital with chronic disabilities held in memory of Paige Alessandro, a former Kindergarten at Wyandot Elementary.

To register or donate, go to paigesprincessrun.com.

In March, The Cincinnati Enquirer ran a story (below) about the foundation.

“Are you Paige’s mom?”

Heather Alessandro loves to hear that question, especially now. Heather knows that she is about to hear something nice about her daughter.

“She just had a way of making people feel good about life,” Heather said. “She was extremely happy all of the time. I think that is what made people gravitate toward her.”

Paige died in May 2010 from acute liver failure at age 6. She was a kindergartner at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township.

Heather Alessandro, mother of Paige, created the Princess Paige Foundation in honor of her daughter, who passed away unexpectedly in May of 2010 at the age of 6. In photo, Alessandro poses in Paige's former kindergarten classroom at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township. In the room, Paige's picture and Bengals jersey are still on display. Photo by Adam Kiefaber.

Heather Alessandro, mother of Paige, created the Princess Paige Foundation in honor of her daughter, who passed away unexpectedly in May of 2010 at the age of 6. In photo, Alessandro poses in Paige’s former kindergarten classroom at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township. In the room, Paige’s picture and Bengals jersey are still on display. Photo by Adam Kiefaber.

Doctors never could diagnose what was wrong with Paige, but her family called it spinal vascular disease. It caused her to suffer many physical limitations, making her sit out of recess and other activities.

Heather and Bre Griffith, Paige’s teacher, witnessed other children fight for Paige’s attention. When she had to sit out of an activity, the rest of the class wanted to follow suit.

“They all competed for her attention,” Griffith said. “You would never know that there was anything lacking in her life. Everyone wanted to be friends with her.”

A picture of Paige dressed as a princess and her tiny Bengals jersey are still on display in Griffith’s classroom.

Her spirit is also carried on in a much more significant way through Paige’s Princess Foundation. It was created by Heather in 2011 and provides grants to pediatric patients who need therapeutic services and equipment that might not be covered by insurance.

After donating more than $30,000 to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s Occupational and Physical Therapy department in 2011, the foundation modified its outreach program in 2012 and provided 45 families with assistance through referrals from the hospital.

“It is probably the most special part of my life now, being able to take Paige’s spirit and meet all these other kids who are somewhat like her and help them in a small way,” Heather said.

The foundation’s biggest fundraiser of the year, the Princess Run, will take place May 18.

The donations will help local children, like Trey Couch, 11, a student at Independence Elementary in Liberty Township. Trey’s family doesn’t know the origin of his Cerebral Atrophy, a disease that causes his muscles to deteriorate.

“The disease has affected his entire world,” said Gina Couch, his mother. “Football and basketball, this is his world, and even though he doesn’t play, he is still on the team and his boys have his back.”

Recently, the disease has reached his hands and he is unable to write. In response, the foundation presented him with an iPad in March. The foundation also provides Trey with lessons taught by a therapist every week.

“The foundation opens up doors to things,” his mother said. “These are opportunities that never interested my son.’’

no comments yet

Posted in: Events, News, School events, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , ,

MonApr1

Last week in West Chester: Local girl is a ‘survivor’

Posted by akiefaber April 1st, 2013, 12:16 pm Post a Comment

To let West Chester and Liberty Township residents catch up with the news that they need to know, WestChesterBuzz.com will list and link to all of last week’s top local stories every Monday.

WestChesterBuzz.com also recently added a new video page last week. To view West Chester and Liberty Township related videos, visit westchesterbuzz.com/videos.

Yosselin Villatoro beams at her eighth birthday party March 16. The year before, Yosselin's family was preparing for her surgery at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. Photo taken by Cara Owsley.

Yosselin Villatoro beams at her eighth birthday party March 16. The year before, Yosselin’s family was preparing for her surgery at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. Photo taken by Cara Owsley.

Yosselin Villatoro is a ‘survivor’ – Sue Kiesewetter again shared the story in The Cincinnati Enquirer of Yosselin Villatoro, who recently celebrated her eighth birthday. Villatoro was diagnosed just before Christmas in 2011 with osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs. Recently, she told her grandmother that she was a “cancer survivor.”

Butler County resists switching to full-time judges - Sheila McLaughlin reports for The Cincinnati Enquirer: Thomas Moyer, the late Ohio Supreme Court chief justice, tried for more than a decade to eliminate the use of part-time judges across the state. They more recently came under attack by Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser. He called one local judge “the fox in the hen house” and was instrumental in getting the judge kicked off of 10 drunken driving cases.

Punxsutawney Phil is off the hook – Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser has since changed his mind and dismissed the charge of “misrepresentation of early spring” against the groundhog. Gmoser said Phil is a scapegoat for the misinterpretation of his handler. Phil’s handler has “stepped up to the burrow to take full responsibility for misrepresenting said Defendant’s prediction of an early spring,” he said in the official looking dismissal document.

The Woodland 6th grade girls' team won their 4th consecutive March Madness championship. Photo provided.

The Woodland 6th grade girls’ team won their 4th consecutive March Madness championship. Photo provided.

‘Lakota Style’ March Madness – Around 1,300 Lakota elementary students on 146 different teams helped raise more than $13,000 for local non-profits by participating in this month’s March Madness “Lakota Style” basketball tournament. Last year, the event raised $3,000.

AK Steel forecasts first quarter loss – AK Steel Holding Corp. said Friday it expects to post a net loss of between 9 cents and 13 cents per share in the first quarter. The West Chester Township-based parent of AK Steel said it is dealing with lower levels of steel shipments and below average spot market demand compared to the fourth quarter.

Lakota West grad Brigit Reder makes professional roster – Lakota West graduate and former Ball State soccer player Brigit Reder has recently made the preseason 25-person roster for the Western New York Flash of the National Women’s Soccer League. On the roster, Reder joins Abby Wambach and Caril Lloyd, both members of the U.S. Women’s National Team.

no comments yet

Posted in: Business, Crime, News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

TueMar26

At 8, Yosselin Villatoro is a battle-tested survivor

Posted by akiefaber March 26th, 2013, 12:41 pm Post a Comment

Sue Kiesewetter reports:

Tammy Randall burst into tears when her granddaughter said the four words she’s waited months to hear.

“I’m a cancer survivor,” Yosselin Villatoro told her grandmother one day after school this month.

“I stood there and cried,” said Randall, who has custody of Yosselin and her 6-year-old brother Freddy.

“With all she’s been through and struggled with – to finally have her say that, well, all I can say is I’ve been waiting a long time to hear those words.”

Yosselin Villatoro beams at her eighth birthday party March 16. The year before, Yosselin's family was preparing for her surgery at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. Photo taken by Cara Owsley.

Yosselin Villatoro beams at her eighth birthday party March 16. The year before, Yosselin’s family was preparing for her surgery at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. Photo taken by Cara Owsley.

Fifteen months ago, just before Christmas 2011, Tammy and her husband, Keith, got the devastating news that their then-6-year-old granddaughter had osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs.

Since then, Yosselin has undergone four surgeries – including one to remove 8 inches of her femur, replacing it with an expandable metal rod – to remove the cancer. Another operation is scheduled June 14 to lengthen the rod since Yosselin has grown 2.5 inches in the last year.

In December, doctors gave the Randalls the news they had been praying for since the ordeal began: Yosselin was in remission and if her now quarterly tests remain the same – her next scan will be done in June – she will be declared cancer free in five years.

“I told Yosselin, but I don’t think she really believed it until she said those words after she did a school report on Sally Ride,” Randall said. “Even though Sally died of cancer (in July), Yosselin recognized she had survived cancer.”

(Ride, a physicist, in 1983 became the first American woman astronaut to orbit the earth.)

“It’s breathtaking just to watch her grow into a beautiful young lady,” Randall said with tears in her eyes.

“She had her first sleepover at a friend’s house, and I was a nervous wreck. It was the first time she’s been away since the diagnosis.… It went well.”

Yosselin is now going to school most days, and the family is settling into a routine that doesn’t involve constant doctors’ visits and runs to the hospital every time Yosselin gets a cold or fever.

She still tires easily and frequently takes a nap after school. Her immune system is getting stronger, but, when she does get sick, it takes longer to recover and the illness tends to be more severe than before the cancer diagnosis.

Physical therapy that Yosselin is undergoing has strengthened her leg enough that she bears full weight on it. Yosselin uses her walker at Cherokee Elementary – where she is a second-grader – only as a safety precaution as her leg strengthens.

Classmate Savannah Evans is glad Yosselin is back in the classroom full time.

“My favorite part is spending time with her,” Savannah said. “She’s the kindest person in the whole world.”

Yosselin likes physical education and art classes and was excited to help her team win a race.

“In gym class I get to run and exercise my leg and that’s good,’’ Yosselin said. “We did a one-legged relay race – you gotta take big hops – and we had teams and my team won because of me. I’m the fastest hopper.”

For her eighth birthday, Yosselin invited her entire class, along with family and friends, to a birthday party that featured a live Candyland game set up in the family’s basement. It was quite different from her seventh birthday when there was no party as the family prepared for surgery to insert the rod into Yosselin’s leg.

For five weeks before the party Randall worked on re-creating the Candyland game board complete with Chocolate Mountain, Lollipop Woods, Snowflake Lake, Peanut Acres, King Candy and Peppermint Forest.

More than two dozen children turned out.

“I’m lucky, very, very, very lucky to have a birthday party with this many people,” Yosselin said.

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

MonMar25

Last week in West Chester: Plan for new Kroger withdrawn

Posted by akiefaber March 25th, 2013, 2:35 pm Post a Comment
Grant Ingram of West Chester at a township zoning meeting holds a sign in favor of stopping a Kroger Marketplace from being built on the corner of Tylersville Road and Princeton-Glendale Road (State Route 747). Photo taken by Adam Kiefaber March 18, 2013.

Grant Ingram of West Chester at a township zoning meeting holds a sign in favor of stopping a Kroger Marketplace from being built on the corner of Tylersville Road and Princeton-Glendale Road (State Route 747). Photo taken by Adam Kiefaber March 18, 2013.

To let West Chester and Liberty Township residents catch up with the news that they need to know, WestChesterBuzz.com will list and link to all of last week’s top local stories every Monday.

WestChesterBuzz.com also recently added a new video page last week. To view West Chester and Liberty Township related videos, visit westchesterbuzz.com/videos.

Developer withdraws plans for Kroger Marketplace – A Blue Ash developer has scrapped plans to bring a Kroger Marketplace to West Chester Township – at least, for now. West Chester Township officials received a notice of withdrawal Wednesday morning from Silverman and Company, which planned to build a shopping center that included a 133,000-square-foot Kroger Marketplace on the corner of Tylersville Road and Princeton-Glendale Road (Ohio 747).

bilde

Thomas P. Farrell. Photo provided.

Liberty Township names Thomas Farrell trustee – A small business owner has been tapped to join the Liberty Township Board of Trustees. Thomas P. Farrell was named trustee Tuesday to fill the unexpired term of Patrick Hiltman, who resigned his seat last month. Farrell was selected from a field of 13 who submitted letters of interest and resumes.

Deputies plan daily visits to Butler schools – Butler County sheriff’s deputies will be stopping by county schools every day beginning this week through a new initiative being launched this week to help make schools safer. Sheriff Richard K. Jones on Monday announced the start of Operation Safe School, which is designed to have a deputy stop by any school in his or her geographical patrol area every day that school is in session.

VIDEOS: Lakota students do the Harlem Shake - Last week WestChesterBuzz.com posted four videos of Lakota students doing the Harlem Shake. Tell us which one is your favorite and pass on any others that might be floating around the Web.

Butler County prosecutor wants Punxsutawney Phil executed – Death to Punxsutawney Phil! That’s what Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser has suggested. Gmoser on Thursday issued a fake single-count direct indictment of the groundhog charging him with “misrepresentation of spring” for making people believe the season would arrive early.

Princess Paige lives on through foundation – Heather Alessandro, mother of Paige, created the Princess Paige Foundation in honor of her daughter, who passed away unexpectedly in May of 2010 at the age of 6. The foundation provides grants to pediatric patients who need therapeutic services and equipment that might not be covered by insurance.

no comments yet

Posted in: Board of Trustees, Business, Government, News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

FriMar22

Princess Paige lives on through foundation

Posted by akiefaber March 22nd, 2013, 2:05 pm Post a Comment

“Are you Paige’s mom?”

Heather Alessandro loves to hear that question, especially now. Heather knows that she is about to hear something nice about her daughter.

“She just had a way of making people feel good about life,” Heather said. “She was extremely happy all of the time. I think that is what made people gravitate toward her.”

Paige died in May 2010 from acute liver failure at age 6. She was a kindergartner at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township.

Heather Alessandro, mother of Paige, created the Princess Paige Foundation in honor of her daughter, who passed away unexpectedly in May of 2010 at the age of 6. In photo, Alessandro poses in Paige's former kindergarten classroom at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township. In the room, Paige's picture and Bengals jersey are still on display. Photo by Adam Kiefaber.

Heather Alessandro, mother of Paige, created the Princess Paige Foundation in honor of her daughter, who passed away unexpectedly in May of 2010 at the age of 6. In photo, Alessandro poses in Paige’s former kindergarten classroom at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township. In the room, Paige’s picture and Bengals jersey are still on display. Photo by Adam Kiefaber.

Doctors never could diagnose what was wrong with Paige, but her family called it spinal vascular disease. It caused her to suffer many physical limitations, making her sit out of recess and other activities.

Heather and Bre Griffith, Paige’s teacher, witnessed other children fight for Paige’s attention. When she had to sit out of an activity, the rest of the class wanted to follow suit.

“They all competed for her attention,” Griffith said. “You would never know that there was anything lacking in her life. Everyone wanted to be friends with her.”
A picture of Paige dressed as princess and her tiny Bengals jersey are still on display in Griffith’s classroom.

Her spirit is also carried on in a much more significant way through Paige’s Princess Foundation. It was created by Heather in 2011 and provides grants to pediatric patients who need therapeutic services and equipment that might not be covered by insurance.

After donating more than $30,000 to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s Occupational and Physical Therapy department in 2011, the foundation modified its outreach program in 2012 and provided 45 families with assistance through referrals from the hospital.

“It is probably the most special part of my life now, being able to take Paige’s spirit and meet all these other kids who are somewhat like her and help them in a small way,” Heather said.

The foundation’s biggest fundraiser of the year, the Princess Run, will take place May 18. In addition, the foundation will host Paige’s Memorial Birthday Party and Toy Drive at The Little Gym of Mason. Toys donated at the event will be given to Cincinnati Children’s.

The donations will help local children, like Trey Couch, 11, a student at Independence Elementary in Liberty Township. Trey’s family doesn’t know the origin of his Cerebral Atrophy, a disease that causes his muscles to deteriorate.

“The disease has affected his entire world,” said Gina Couch, his mother. “Football and basketball, this is world, and even through he doesn’t play, he is still on the team and his boys have his back.”

Recently, the disease has reached his hands and he is unable to write. In response, the foundation presented him with an iPad this month. The foundation also provides Trey with lessons taught by a therapist every week.

“The foundation opens up doors to things,” his mother said. “These are opportunities that never interested my son.’’

PRINCESS PAIGE FUNDRAISERS

  • Paige’s Memorial Birthday Party and Toy Drive. Saturday at The Little Gym of Mason, 8201 Arbor Square Drive. Play times are 3-5 and 5 -7 p.m. Toys from the event will be collected and donated to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. To register, call 513-204-1400.
  • Paige’s Princess Run. 5K run, walk and family carnival 9 a.m. May 18 at Wyandot Early Childhood School in Liberty Township. Proceeds to benefit Paige’s Princess Foundation, which gives therapeutic scholarships to assist children with disabilities. Event includes food, games, prizes, pony rides, basket raffles and silent auction items. To register, go to paigesprincessrun.com.
no comments yet

Posted in: Events, News, School events, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , ,

SunDec23

WestChesterBuzz.com’s top 12 stories of 2012: No. 8

Posted by akiefaber December 23rd, 2012, 2:01 pm Post a Comment

Volunteers build a house for a 7-year-old’s family as she copes with cancer

WestChesterBuzz.com will count down the area’s top 12 stories of 2012 this month, concluding with West Chester’s most discussed topic of the year on Sunday, Dec. 30.

Sue Kiesewetter reports:

Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012 marked a new beginning for 7-year-old Yosselin Villatoro and her family.

That’s because, on that day, Yosselin, her 6-year-old brother, Freddy, and grandparents, Tammy and Keith Randall, moved into a new house built for the family by volunteers.

Before they could move in, they were greeted that evening by 30 to 40 community members, who wanted to reveal the home they built for the family.

“It was unreal. Totally unreal,” Tammy Randall said. “You always hear about all the bad. This is a good thing. People came together for strangers, for a cause, for a 7-year-old child battling cancer, and it is just wonderful.”

No longer will they worry that mold or walls separating from the floor in their old, flood-damaged home would compromise Yosselin’s delicate immune system damaged by months of chemotherapy.

There are no uneven floors or too-narrow hallways to hamper her movement with her walker or wheelchair as she gradually builds up her strength to walk unaided.

“It’s wonderful,” said her grandmother, who has custody of Yosselin and Freddy. “I thank God. He gave me all the answers and these wonderful people that have helped us.”

Keith Randall, kisses his granddaughter, Yosselin Villatoro, 7, after seeing the inside of the their new home for the first time in Liberty Township. The family’s home old home was torn down and rebuilt after after a group of friends from Vineyard Community Church in Springdale learned of Yosselin’s diagnosis of osteosarcoma. A New Chance Foundation and and High Pointe Custom Homes tore down the old flood-damaged home and built a new one on the same land. Yosselin, is now in remission of the bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs. Photo shot by Cara Owsley on Tuesday Nov. 20, 2012.

The family’s life changed dramatically nearly one year ago when doctors told the Randalls that Yosselin had osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs.

Since that December 2011 diagnosis just before Christmas, Yosselin has undergone four surgeries – including one to remove eight inches of her femur, replacing it with an expandable metal rod – to remove the cancer.

She has been hospitalized dozens of times for chemotherapy treatments, infections and transfusions.

Through it all, a group of dedicated volunteers joined the family on their journey, expanding the circle of help as needed.

“And all these strangers came together and created all of this for a 7-year-old little girl,” Tammy Randall said. “Who does that anymore? It needs to be out there, it really does.”

It all began with a phone call offering help and support from Kristan Dooley, the mother of one of Yosselin’s classmates at Cherokee Elementary School who was concerned about Yosselin after she had missed several days.

“It started out that we’ll pray for you, get meals and buy gas cards,’’ said volunteer Angie Roehm. “We started by redoing Yosselin’s room – a few families, our parents and close friends.”

From there, the group thought about redoing three or four parts of the house but soon discovered that wouldn’t be an option because of the extent of the damage.

Money the Randalls had put aside for the repair work – which had begun before Yosselin’s diagnosis – was diverted to mounting medical bills. Repairs were halted – until the volunteers stepped in.

“At every step that we took toward what we felt was the right thing to do – what we felt God was calling us to do – our circle of volunteers from the community grew,” Roehm said.

“We started out with doing a few core things to make the house more livable, but we knew we needed to do more.”

Eventually that core group of about 10 partnered with A New Chance Foundation and Lebanon-based High Pointe Custom Homes to tear down the old house and construct the new, 2,100-square-foot brick and stone ranch home .

Dooley estimates 300 to 400 volunteers helped build the home.

“I woke up today at 3 o’clock this morning and I felt like it was Christmas,” Dooley said. “This is the moment we have been waiting for – for the past 10 months. The realization that this is all happening and all these pieces are being put together just gives me butterflies.”

Once construction began, the family wasn’t allowed in the house – until it was unveiled.

Besides building the house, the group provided new appliances, filled the cabinets with plates, cups and silverware. They put new towels in the bathrooms, sheets and comforters on new beds, a couch in the great room, along with table and chairs in the kitchen and canisters on the counter.

Things are so much better now, Tammy says, pointing to Yosselin, who can stand unaided on both legs for short periods of time. That’s something she couldn’t do just two months ago.

“She’s touched a lot of lives,” Randall said, her eyes tearing up. “She’s brought everyone together.”

Yosselin’s immune system is improving and a slight rise in her temperature no longer sends the family to the emergency room. She is now receiving therapy twice a week to strengthen her leg muscles. She is allowed to put 50 percent weight on her leg and put both feet on the ground for short periods.

Yosselin received her last chemotherapy treatment Sept. 6 and only has to schedule appointments with her oncologist quarterly.

“Looking at her today – it was worth it,’’ Randall said. “Thank you, God, for everything.”

After next month’s doctor visit, the Randalls expect to hear four magic words: Yosselin is in remission.

Until then, she continues her therapy. She is coping with some memory loss from the chemotherapy treatments and her family is working to reduce Yosselin’s panic attacks.

After Christmas, she should be able to start second grade at Cherokee.

“We still have to be careful, but things are good,” Randall says. “We’re not done yet, but we’re in a better place.”

Enquirer reporter Adam Kiefaber contributed

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

TueNov20

Volunteers build a house for a 7-year-old’s family as she copes with cancer

Posted by akiefaber November 20th, 2012, 11:36 pm Post a Comment

Sue Kiesewetter reports:

Tuesday marked a new beginning for 7-year-old Yosselin Villatoro and her family.

That’s because Yosselin, her 6-year-old brother, Freddy, and grandparents, Tammy and Keith Randall, moved into a new house built for the family by volunteers.

Before they could move in, they were greeted Tuesday evening by 30 to 40 community members, who wanted to reveal the home they built for the family.

“It was unreal. Totally unreal,” Tammy Randall said. “You always hear about all the bad. This is a good thing. People came together for strangers, for a cause, for a 7-year-old child battling cancer, and it is just wonderful.”

No longer will they worry that mold or walls separating from the floor in their old, flood-damaged home would compromise Yosselin’s delicate immune system damaged by months of chemotherapy.

There are no uneven floors or too-narrow hallways to hamper her movement with her walker or wheelchair as she gradually builds up her strength to walk unaided.

“It’s wonderful,” said her grandmother, who has custody of Yosselin and Freddy. “I thank God. He gave me all the answers and these wonderful people that have helped us.”

Keith Randall, kisses his granddaughter, Yosselin Villatoro, 7, after seeing the inside of the their new home for the first time in Liberty Township. The family’s home old home was torn down and rebuilt after after a group of friends from Vineyard Community Church in Springdale learned of Yosselin’s diagnosis of osteosarcoma. A New Chance Foundation and and High Pointe Custom Homes tore down the old flood-damaged home and built a new one on the same land. Yosselin, is now in remission of the bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs. Photo shot by Cara Owsley on Tuesday Nov. 20, 2012.

The family’s life changed dramatically nearly one year ago when doctors told the Randalls that Yosselin had osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs.

Since that December 2011 diagnosis just before Christmas, Yosselin has undergone four surgeries – including one to remove eight inches of her femur, replacing it with an expandable metal rod – to remove the cancer.

She has been hospitalized dozens of times for chemotherapy treatments, infections and transfusions.

Through it all, a group of dedicated volunteers joined the family on their journey, expanding the circle of help as needed.

“And all these strangers came together and created all of this for a 7-year-old little girl,” Tammy Randall said. “Who does that anymore? It needs to be out there, it really does.”

It all began with a phone call offering help and support from Kristan Dooley, the mother of one of Yosselin’s classmates at Cherokee Elementary School who was concerned about Yosselin after she had missed several days.

“It started out that we’ll pray for you, get meals and buy gas cards,’’ said volunteer Angie Roehm. “We started by redoing Yosselin’s room – a few families, our parents and close friends.”

From there, the group thought about redoing three or four parts of the house but soon discovered that wouldn’t be an option because of the extent of the damage.

Money the Randalls had put aside for the repair work – which had begun before Yosselin’s diagnosis – was diverted to mounting medical bills. Repairs were halted – until the volunteers stepped in.

“At every step that we took toward what we felt was the right thing to do – what we felt God was calling us to do – our circle of volunteers from the community grew,” Roehm said.

“We started out with doing a few core things to make the house more livable, but we knew we needed to do more.”

Eventually that core group of about 10 partnered with A New Chance Foundation and Lebanon-based High Pointe Custom Homes to tear down the old house and construct the new, 2,100-square-foot brick and stone ranch home .

Dooley estimates 300 to 400 volunteers helped build the home.

“I woke up today at 3 o’clock this morning and I felt like it was Christmas,” Dooley said. “This is the moment we have been waiting for – for the past 10 months. The realization that this is all happening and all these pieces are being put together just gives me butterflies.”

Once construction began, the family wasn’t allowed in the house – until it was unveiled.

Besides building the house, the group provided new appliances, filled the cabinets with plates, cups and silverware. They put new towels in the bathrooms, sheets and comforters on new beds, a couch in the great room, along with table and chairs in the kitchen and canisters on the counter.

Things are so much better now, Tammy says, pointing to Yosselin, who can stand unaided on both legs for short periods of time. That’s something she couldn’t do just two months ago.

“She’s touched a lot of lives,” Randall said, her eyes tearing up. “She’s brought everyone together.”

Yosselin’s immune system is improving and a slight rise in her temperature no longer sends the family to the emergency room. She is now receiving therapy twice a week to strengthen her leg muscles. She is allowed to put 50 percent weight on her leg and put both feet on the ground for short periods.

Yosselin received her last chemotherapy treatment Sept. 6 and only has to schedule appointments with her oncologist quarterly.

“Looking at her today – it was worth it,’’ Randall said. “Thank you, God, for everything.”

After next month’s doctor visit, the Randalls expect to hear four magic words: Yosselin is in remission.

Until then, she continues her therapy. She is coping with some memory loss from the chemotherapy treatments and her family is working to reduce Yosselin’s panic attacks.

After Christmas, she should be able to start second grade at Cherokee.

“We still have to be careful, but things are good,” Randall says. “We’re not done yet, but we’re in a better place.”

Enquirer reporter Adam Kiefaber contributed

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

MonAug20

Golf outing to help local Make-A-Wish story

Posted by akiefaber August 20th, 2012, 2:43 pm Post a Comment

Tammy Randall pushes granddaughter Yosselin Villatoro, 7, across their Liberty Township lawn before their water-damaged house was demolished. Photo taken by Cara Owsley.

The West Chester Fraternal Order of Police Lodge #186 will be hosting a charity golf outing Wednesday, Sept. 12, at the Beckett Ridge Golf Club, which will benefit a local child’s wish to visit Disney World.

Yosselin Villatoro of Liberty Township, who is fighting cancer, is event’s honorary wish child. Her wish is to visit the princesses and to enjoy the rides at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Fla.

Yosselin was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs, just before Christmas.

Since then, she has had surgeries to remove eight inches of her femur, replacing it with an expandable metal rod, and to remove tumors. She has also been hospitalized countless times for treatments, infections and transfusions.

Net proceeds from the golf outing will go towards Yosselin’s trip with her family to Disney World.

The golf outing will begin with a shotgun start at noon. Registration begins at 11 a.m.

For more information on the event or to register, call John Morgan at 513-759-7269.

Information about Yosselin Villatoro was taken from a July article by Sue Kiesewetter for The Cincinnati Enquirer.

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

FriJul20

For Yosselin, demolition marks new beginning

Posted by akiefaber July 20th, 2012, 1:39 pm Post a Comment

Tammy Randall pushes granddaughter Yosselin Villatoro, 7, across their Liberty Township lawn before the water-damaged house was demolished. Photo taken by Cara Owsley.

Sue Kiesewetter reports

When the first swing of the track hoe struck Tammy and Keith Randall’s home of nearly 18 years, there were no tears.

Those had already been shed.

Instead, family and friends took out video and still cameras and began recording the nine-minute demolition of the family home.

The tear-down this week signaled a fresh start for the family, especially for the couple’s 7-year-old granddaughter, Yosselin Villatoro, who is fighting cancer and lives with the Randalls and her younger brother, Freddy.

“We’re excited. I got all my tears out while we were moving. This is a new beginning,” Tammy Randall said.

“Take it all away – it’s where the cancer began. We’re going to get a safe environment for her with no mold, no cracks for her to fall over.”

Just before Christmas, Yosselin was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg and spread to her lungs.

Since then, Yosselin has had surgeries to remove 8 inches of her femur, replacing it with an expandable metal rod, and to remove tumors. She still can’t bear weight on her left leg; she uses a walker and wheelchair to get around.

Yosselin has been hospitalized more than 35 times for chemotherapy treatments, infections and transfusions. Last weekend was the most serious, her grandmother said. Yosselin’s blood presure dropped to 73/30 and her heart rate increased to 130 beats per minute.

Yosselin is being treated this week at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center for one of five remaining chemotherapy treatments. Each treatment requires a hospital stay of at least three days.

Keith Randall said it is hard to believe how generous the community has been to his family. Even before Yosselin became ill, the family had begun work to repair and remodel the water-damaged house, but those plans were halted as bills began mounting. (more…)

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

ThuMay17

New house plans buoy cancer patient’s spirits

Posted by akiefaber May 17th, 2012, 1:15 pm Post a Comment

Yosselin Villatoro, 6, uses her walker and hops on one leg as she heads in her home after a prayer vigil for her. The Liberty Township girl was diagnosed in December with osteocarsonoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in the femur of her left leg that has spread to her lungs. Yosselin lives with her grandparents whose home is in need of rebuilding because of water severe water damage. The home has structural damage and mold. Photo shot Monday May 7, 2012 by Cara Owsley.

Sue Kiesewetter reports

A new house and a new start for young cancer patient Yosselin Villatoro can only be described one way.

“Her guardian angels are working overtime,’’ said Tammy Randall, Yosselin’s grandmother, with whom she lives. “God works miracles. He’s working through her, through the community.”

Since an Enquirer story about Yosselin ran Feb. 22, more community members and businesses have stepped forward to help the family.

Instead of improving the home as originally planned by members of Springdale’s Vineyard Community Church, a custom home builder has offered to tear down the water-damaged house with its narrow hallways and uneven floors, which doesn’t accommodate Yosselin’s walker.

With the help of other contractors, construction workers and suppliers, the builder, who wishes to remain anonymous, will replace it with a new home on the same lot, by October.

The news came May 10, two days before Yosselin went into Children’s Hospital Medical Center to have three tumors removed from her lungs. Testing showed two active cancer cells remain in one of the tumors, but Yosselin is home again, sitting up and using her walker.

“It’s not the news we were hoping for, but she’s still doing wonderfully,’’ Randall said. “We’ll continue with the chemotherapy as planned and they’ll do another scan and see what happens in the next 3-4 weeks.”

In December, Yosselin was diagnosed with osteosarcinoma, an aggressive bone cancer that started in her left thighbone and spread to her lungs. In March doctors successfully removed 8 inches of her femur, replacing it with an expandable metal rod.

Finding out about the new house gave the family hope they would be able to leave their deteriorating home worsened by water flowing into the crawl space during heavy rains due to drainage issues.

“I cried, Keith (her husband) cried,” Randall said. “They answered my prayers. It will be so much better for Yosselin’s health.”

Plans for “Yosselin’s House” show a one-story, 2,100-square-foot brick and stone home with a two-car garage and porch, to be built, said Ashley Chance, who founded A Chance Foundation with his wife, Beth.

The non-profit foundation is partnering with the church group to oversee the project – the first undertaken by the four-year-old organization. So far, about 70 percent of materials and labor have been secured, Chance said.

The house will have an open floor plan to make it easier for Yosselin to get around with her wheelchair and walker. Three bedrooms are planned – a master suite for the Randalls and two large bedrooms with a bathroom between them for Yosselin and her 5-year-old brother, Freddy.

Besides building the house, contractors plan on doing site work to correct drainage issues from a channel near the house.

“The goal is to have the house built by early fall,’’ Chance said. “We’re also trying to collect donations to help pay off the family’s mortgage.”

As plans move forward on the house – drawings to submit for building permits should be completed in the next two weeks – the Randalls continue to focus on Yosselin.

“If we go anywhere with Yosselin,’’ Randall said, “we call the doctors first, and have her tested first to make sure her (white blood) cell count is high enough.”

Yosselin is looking forward to a December trip to Disney World in Florida, being arranged by the Make A Wish Foundation.

“When all this is over, we get to go to Disney World,’’ she said. “I get to have lunch with the princesses.”

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Connect with WestChesterBuzz

Subscribe

Get community news delivered straight to your inbox.

Featured Businesses

Send us Photos

  • Attach a JPEG (.jpg) photo to your story. Maximum file size is 4 MB.
  • Add a caption, include names & communities of people pictured. (Caption limit: 500 characters, including spaces)

Recent Photos

ohsoftball9 ohsoftball3 ohsoftball1 ohsoftball6 ohsoftball7 ohsoftball4 ohsoftball2 ohsoftball10 bn teen crash season 11
View more photos >