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Zoning variance granted to keep pickleball balls on the courts and out of the roadway – BG Independent News

By JAN McLAUGHLIN BG Independent News For the sake of pickleball players and the people driving on Haskins Road, a variance was granted last week for a taller fence than normally allowed separating the new courts and the nearby road. The Bowling Green Board of Zoning Appeals voted to allow the city to install an […]

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By JAN McLAUGHLIN

BG Independent News

For the sake of pickleball players and the people driving on Haskins Road, a variance was granted last week for a taller fence than normally allowed separating the new courts and the nearby road.

The Bowling Green Board of Zoning Appeals voted to allow the city to install an 8-foot fence along Haskins Road, rather than the maximum 4-foot height permitted in a front yard. The new pickleball courts are currently under construction between the Bowling Green Community Center and the road.

The same variance was granted nearly 10 years ago for the athletic fields already located behind the community center.

Kristin Otley, director of the Bowling Green Parks and Recreation Department, explained that the project is the result of three years of coordination with the local pickleball advisory group. The project designer recommended the 8-foot fence as the standard height for courts. Outdoor pickleball facilities in Perrysburg and Oregon have 8-foot fences.

Not only will the higher fence keep pickleball players from chasing balls, it will also keep the balls from bouncing out onto Haskins Road.

The winning bid for the eight-court pickleball project was $640,000 was submitted by Geddis Paving and Excavation in Toledo. 

The pickleball courts are expected to be finished by the end of June, with a tentative opening planned near July 4.

In addition to the eight courts, the project also includes lighting, a shelter house, seating and fencing around the entire area.

The outdoor courts will allow players to gather anytime during daylight hours in the warmer months.

The project has been championed by the BG Parks and Recreation Foundation and a dedicated group of local pickleball enthusiasts, who have raised more than $100,000 for the courts. 

Currently Bowling Green residents travel to Perrysburg, Holland and Findlay if they want to play on outdoor pickleball courts. The only courts in Bowling Green currently are inside the community center, in space that has to be shared with many other purposes – youth sports, fitness classes and National Guard activities. 

So in 2022, the local pickleball players served up a proposal for outdoor pickleball courts in Bowling Green. The city started the ball rolling with $150,000 in ARPA funding.

Four pickleball courts can fit on one tennis court. The games are shorter, averaging 10 to 15 minutes each. The players cover less space, don’t have to be in great shape to play, and don’t have to be super skilled to enjoy the game.

Thirty to 40 people show up every weekday from 8 to 11 a.m., to play on the indoor community center courts. It is believed that more people will use the outdoor courts.





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Silicon Valley begins countdown to next year’s World Cup

The countdown has begun for the FIFA World Cup coming to Silicon Valley next year. Representatives from the Bay Area Host Committee and Santa Clara celebrated the one-year countdown to the World Cup Wednesday with speeches and a youth soccer clinic led by the San Jose Earthquakes. Levi’s Stadium will host six games in 2026, […]

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The countdown has begun for the FIFA World Cup coming to Silicon Valley next year.

Representatives from the Bay Area Host Committee and Santa Clara celebrated the one-year countdown to the World Cup Wednesday with speeches and a youth soccer clinic led by the San Jose Earthquakes. Levi’s Stadium will host six games in 2026, beginning June 13. City officials dedicated a plaque to commemorate the games and unveiled a one-year timer, which will be moved around the community and presented at various city events.

“Let’s make sure that when the world looks at Santa Clara, they’re not just seeing a host city, but a community that never stopped believing in its children’s future,” Mayor Lisa Gillmor said.

Metal plaque reading "FIFA World Cup 26th Host City"
This plaque commemorates the six FIFA World Cup games set to be hosted at Levi’s Stadium in 2026. Photo by B. Sakura Cannestra.

About 160 children from Santa Clara youth sports groups participated in the soccer clinic after the commemoration ceremony, according to Bay Area Host Committee CEO Zaileen Janmohamed.

She said the host committee is working on events to include Santa Clara and Bay Area residents in the World Cup festivities, such as more clinics and watch parties. She said the World Cup has historically had seismic impacts on the nation’s soccer communities, as the 1994 World Cup helped create Major League Soccer.

“Today is a really good example of what you can expect,” Janmohamed told San José Spotlight. “We want to make sure that we have … a way for people in the community to feel like they’re part of the World Cup, even if they’re not coming to a game. That’s what you should start to see.”

Darker skinned woman with bob wearing black puff sleeved jacket speaks at a podium in front of a crowd, with Bay Area Host Committee and City of Santa Clara banners behind her
Bay Area Host Committee CEO Zaileen Janmohamed said she’s excited to bring Bay Area communities together with the FIFA World Cup. Photo by B. Sakura Cannestra.

Santa Clara is gearing up for a busy 2026, as Levi’s Stadium will host Super Bowl 60 Feb. 8, only a few months before the World Cup matches in June, both facilitated by the Bay Area Host Committee. Preparations are underway for both events and Janmohamed said the largest lift — a roughly $25 million renovation of Levi’s Stadium’s field to fit FIFA requirements — is nearly complete.

“We’ve been in this planning phase, ‘what if we did it this way,’” Janmohamed said. “We’re moving from that ‘what if’ to a ‘let’s do this.’”

Santa Clara officials have been looking for ways to get residents involved and see more local economic benefits from these mega sporting events. When Santa Clara hosted Super Bowl 50 in 2016, the Bay Area collectively saw a $240 million boost, but only about 7% of that revenue went to Santa Clara.

Councilmember Karen Hardy said she wants to work with the host committee and FIFA to bring more benefits into the city. She suggested letting Santa Clara youths have a moment on the field during the games or letting residents purchase discounted tickets, but both are up in the air. The city is working on hosting a concert at Santa Clara University in the months between Super Bowl 60 and the World Cup games, to give residents more opportunities to celebrate.

“We’re working on getting that funding and doing that for the community … as a present to our residents,” Hardy told San José Spotlight.

Engaging the community will be key in this year’s run up to the events. Aly Wagner, founder of the local National Women’s Soccer League team Bay FC, said engaging with the larger soccer community as a youth during the 1994 World Cup inspired her to pursue the game. Wagner won two Olympic gold medals and two FIFA World Cup bronze medals during her 20 years playing internationally.
Keep our journalism free for everyone!Wagner said she hopes the upcoming World Cup games similarly inspire Silicon Valley’s youngest generations of soccer players. FIFA is expected to announce the World Cup’s group stage teams on Dec. 5, which includes all teams in the various groups and who will play at which stadiums. She said it’ll be easier to rally the community around the games once it’s known who will play at Levi’s Stadium.

“Touching it and feeling it and being a part of it is very different from watching it on a broadcast,” Wagner told San José Spotlight. “We’ve always been a hotbed for talent in soccer, now we have an opportunity to grow that because more people are going to be exposed and fall in love with this game.”

Contact B. Sakura Cannestra at [email protected] or @SakuCannestra on X.





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More than 700 clothing items worth nearly $19,000 stolen from Spooky Nook Sports in Lancaster County, Pa., police say

More than 700 clothing items worth nearly $19,000 stolen from Spooky Nook Sports in Lancaster County, police say OAKMONT COUNTRY CLUB WITH THE LATEST. GOOD AFTERNOON. I’M SUSAN SHAPIRO. THE FIRST ROUND OF THE US OPEN GOLF TOURNAMENT IN PITTSBURGH IS NOW UNDERWAY. THIS IS THE SECOND YEAR IN A ROW THE TOURNAMENT IS IN […]

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More than 700 clothing items worth nearly $19,000 stolen from Spooky Nook Sports in Lancaster County, police say

OAKMONT COUNTRY CLUB WITH THE LATEST. GOOD AFTERNOON. I’M SUSAN SHAPIRO. THE FIRST ROUND OF THE US OPEN GOLF TOURNAMENT IN PITTSBURGH IS NOW UNDERWAY. THIS IS THE SECOND YEAR IN A ROW THE TOURNAMENT IS IN PENNSYLVANIA. NEWS EIGHT SPORTS DIRECTOR BETHANY MILLER IS LIVE AT OAKMONT COUNTRY CLUB IN PLUM, ALLEGHENY COUNTY. BETHANY, HOW WAS THE FIRST ROUND? THE FIRST ROUND IS STILL UNDERWAY HERE, SUSAN. AND WHAT A BEAUTIFUL DAY FOR ACTION ON THE COURSE BEHIND ME. AS YOU CAN SEE HERE, WGAL IS LIVE AT OAKMONT COUNTRY CLUB HERE IN PITTSBURGH AT THE 125TH U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP. AND FANS MAY REMEMBER THAT THIS IS THE SECOND YEAR THAT WGAL WILL BE COVERING A U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP. YOU MAY REMEMBER OUR FULL, IN-DEPTH COVERAGE OF THE WOMEN’S TOURNAMENT LAST YEAR AT LANCASTER COUNTRY CLUB, BUT AS YOU CAN SEE HERE, IT IS A GORGEOUS DAY OUT HERE IN PITTSBURGH. BEHIND ME RIGHT NOW AT OAKMONT COUNTRY CLUB IS THE DRIVING RANGE. YOU CAN SEE GOLFERS CURRENTLY TAKING PART IN THAT AS THEY GEAR UP FOR THE FIRST ROUND. TEE TIMES ARE GOING ON ALL MORNING AND ALL AFTERNOON RIGHT NOW. NOW THE COURSE HAS BEEN OPEN ALL WEEK LONG. THE WORLD’S TOP GOLFERS HAVE DESCENDED HERE TO PITTSBURGH, AS THE U.S. OPEN WILL SEE 156 GOLFERS COMPETE FOR THAT U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP TROPHY. AND THIS TOURNAMENT SAW THE HIGHEST EVER ENTRIES IN HISTORY, 10,202 GOLFERS ALL ENTERED TO BE A PART OF THIS OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP. BUT OF COURSE, ONLY 156 ARE HERE TO COMPETE TODAY. 15 OF THOSE ARE AMATEURS. I DID INTRODUCE VIEWERS TO ONE OF THOSE AMATEURS, A PITTSBURGH NATIVE, MATT VOGT. HE’S A FULL TIME DENTIST AND A FORMER OAKMONT CADDIE HIMSELF, TAKING PART IN ONE OF THE BIGGEST TOURNAMENTS OF HIS CAREER. HE IS CURRENTLY UNDERWAY ON THE COURSE NOW. YOUR REIGNING CHAMPION IS BRYSON DECHAMBEAU. HE’S A TWO TIME WINNER, 1 IN 2024 AND ALL THE WAY BACK IN 2020. BUT THE HIGHEST ODDS TO WIN THIS TOURNAMENT JUST AFTER THIS FIRST DAY AND THE MIST OF THIS FIRST ROUND IS NONE OTHER THAN SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER. YOUR PGA CHAMPIONSHIP WINNER. AND OF COURSE, YOUR MASTERS CHAMPION RORY MCILROY. NOW, MCILROY IS CURRENTLY IN THE TOP TEN ON THE LEADERBOARD RIGHT NOW, BUT THIS IS A FOUR DAY TOURNAMENT, SUSAN, AND THERE IS A LOT OF ACTION STILL TO BE HAD, SO OUR LIVE COVERAGE HAS NOW BEGUN FROM THE U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP. MAKE SURE TO STICK WITH WGAL ALL NIGHT LONG AND OF COURSE ALL WEEKEND LONG AS YOU CAN CATCH THE ACTION RIGHT HERE ON NBC. SUSAN, BACK TO YOU. ALL RIGHT. WE’RE GOING TO CHECK IN WITH MIKE SUSKO FOR A LOOK AT OUR FORECAST FOR THE OPEN. AND HERE IN THE SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY. THANK YOU. BETHANY. YEAH. GOOD AFTERNOON SUSAN. GOOD AFTERNOON EVERYONE. AS YOU CAN SEE, IT LOOKS LIKE THAT WE’RE HAVING SOME NICE WEATHER THERE FOR BETHANY AND THE OPEN TODAY, BUT THAT WILL NOT BE STICKING AROUND. I DO THINK WE’RE GOING TO SEE SOME SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS AROUND FOR FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. SO IT’S GOING TO BE INTERESTING TO SEE IF THEY’RE GOING TO BE ABLE TO GET ALL THOSE ROUNDS IN HERE WITHOUT HAVING TO DEAL WITH THE WEATHER, BUT THEY WILL HAVE TO CONTEND WITH SHOWERS AND STORMS FOR THE OPEN. THERE. OVER IN OAKMONT. NOW HERE’S A LOOK AT THE PREDICTOR WITH THIS RAIN. LIKE I SAID, TODAY SHOULD BE GOOD, BUT IT’S TOMORROW WHERE WE’RE REALLY GOING TO START SEEING THOSE SHOWERS AND STORMS DEVELOP BY PITTSBURGH HERE, NOT IN THE MORNING, BUT IN THE AFTERNOON. YOU CAN SEE WE START TO SEE THAT DEVELOPMENT THERE IN WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA DOES MOVE INTO OUR AREA AS WELL AS WE GO INTO TOMORROW NIGHT AND SATURDAY. SATURDAY YOU CAN SEE A LOT OF RAIN THERE BY PITTSBURGH. AND THEN THAT WILL ALSO CONTINUE TO SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY AS WELL. BUT NEITHER DAY WE’RE GOING TO BE CONSISTENT ALL DAY RAINS. WE WILL SEE SOME BREAKS RIGHT NOW THOUGH. IN OUR AREA WE ARE SEEING A HAZY SKY AND WE’LL SHOW YOU YOUR 12 HOUR FORECAST. HERE. WE’LL BE GETTING UP TO 88 THIS AFTERNOON HERE, AND THAT HUMIDITY IS MAKING A LITTLE BIT OF A RETURN. COULD SEE A SPOTTY SHOWER NORTH OF THE TURNPIKE TODAY, SUSAN, BUT IT WILL BE MOSTLY NORTH OF THE TURNPIKE AND VERY HIT OR MISS WITH THOSE SHOWERS THIS AFTERNOON. ALL RIGHT. THANK YOU. AND YOU CAN WATCH THE TOURNAMENT LIVE ON WGAL TOMORROW FROM 1 TO 7. IT WILL PREEMPT OUR NORMAL EVENING NEWSCAST. WE’LL HAVE A SPECIAL NEWSCAST AFTER THE TOURNAMENT AT 7:00. AN AIR INDIA PLANE CRASH THIS MORNING, SHORTLY AFTER TAKEOFF IN THE CITY OF AHMEDABAD, WITH MORE THAN 240 PEOPLE ON BOARD, THE BOEING 787 DREAMLINER, SLOWLY DESCENDED AND THEN EXPLODED NEAR THE AIRPORT. AS YOU CAN SEE IT GOING DOWN THERE ON ITS WAY TO LONDON, AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL RECEIVED A MAYDAY CALL SIGNALING AN EMERGENCY, BUT THERE WAS NO FURTHER RESPONSE FROM THE AIRCRAFT. THE PASSENGERS INCLUDED 169 INDIAN NATIONALS, 53 BRITISH NATIONALS, SEVEN PORTUGUESE AND ONE CANADIAN. OFFICIALS HAVE SAID THERE ARE NO KNOWN SURVIVORS, BUT THE BBC IS REPORTING THAT A BRITISH NATIONAL SURVIVED. BOEING RELEASED A STATEMENT THIS MORNING SAYING WE ARE AWARE OF INITIAL REPORTS AND ARE WORKING TO GATHER MORE INFORMATION. INDIAN PRIME MINISTER MODI SAID IT IS HEARTBREAKING BEYOND WORDS. THIS IS THE FIRST CRASH OF A BOEING 787 DREAMLINER. LOS ANGELES IS GETTING READY FOR A SEVENTH STRAIGHT DAY OF PROTESTS. A SMALL SECTION OF THE DOWNTOWN IN LA HAD A SECOND NIGHT UNDER CURFEW. THE ONGOING IMMIGRATION RAIDS IN THE CITY ARE NOW BEING SUPPORTED BY FEDERAL TROOPS, DESPITE STATE AND LOCAL OFFICIALS WHO SAY THEY’RE NOT NEEDED. NBC’S LIZ CRITES HAS THE LATEST FROM L.A. WELL HEY THERE. YEAH, THINGS CONTINUE TO BE PRETTY ACTIVE IN DOWNTOWN LA RIGHT NOW WITH THAT CURFEW NOW LIFTED, YOU CAN SEE THERE’S STILL A VERY LARGE POLICE PRESENCE HERE. PROTESTS ARE GROWING ACROSS THE COUNTRY. THERE WAS ACTIVITY IN LAS VEGAS, SPOKANE, SEATTLE OVERNIGHT. AND HERE AS YOU’RE SEEING THIS POLICE MOTORCADE GO LAST NIGHT, THERE WAS ANOTHER BIG PROTEST IN DOWNTOWN LA. DEMONSTRATORS GATHERED OUTSIDE OF CITY HALL, AND THEY WERE OVERALL VERY PEACEFUL. THESE PROTESTERS. BUT POLICE IN RIOT GEAR, A FULL HOUR AND A HALF BEFORE THE 8:00 CURFEW WENT INTO EFFECT. POLICE IN RIOT GEAR AND ON HORSEBACK CHARGED INTO THE PROTESTERS CHASING PROTESTERS TRYING TO DISPERSE THE CROWDS. WE WERE THERE, OUR TEAM. WE ALMOST GOT RUN OVER AS WELL. IT’S JUST A SIGN THAT THESE CLASHES ARE NOT ENDING ANYTIME SOON. WE HAVE REACHED OUT TO LAPD TO ASK THEM WHY DID THEY KIND OF DISPERSE THE CROWDS IN THIS WAY? A FULL HOUR AND A HALF BEFORE THE 8 P.M. CURFEW? THEY HAVE NOT RESPONDED TO THAT QUESTION, BUT PROTESTERS TELL US THEY ARE GOING TO CONTINUE TAKING TO THE STREETS. THEY SAY THEY WILL BE OUT HERE AS LONG AS THE NATIONAL GUARD AND MARINES ARE. BACK TO YOU. AND A COURT HEARING IS SET FOR TODAY OVER PRESIDENT TRUMP’S DECISION TO MOBILIZE THE NATIONAL GUARD AND MARINES IN LOS ANGELES. NEWS EIGHT’S JACKIE DEFUSCO WILL PREVIEW THE HEARING LATER ON NEWS EIGHT AT NOON. A WOMAN WHO IS FROM YORK WAS DETAINED BY POLICE DURING THE PROTESTS IN LOS ANGELES. BRITTANY DAUM MOVED TO CALIFORNIA AT THE START OF THE YEAR AND HAS BEEN WORKING AS A PHOTOJOURNALIST, AS SHE HAD IN THE PAST FOR NEWS EIGHT. SHE SAYS SHE HEADED OUT WITH HER CAMERA WHEN THE PROTESTS BEGAN, BUT WAS ARRESTED. THIS IS VIDEO FROM DAUM, WHICH SHOWS WHERE SHE WAS STANDING WHEN SHE AND OTHER PHOTOGRAPHERS WERE APPROACHED BY OFFICERS WHO TOLD THEM TO SHOW PRESS CREDENTIALS OR LEAVE. DAUM SAYS SHE CAN’T UNDERSTAND WHY SHE AND OTHERS WOULD BE ASKED TO LEAVE, GIVEN HER DISTANCE FROM THE PROTEST AND THE FACT THAT SHE DIDN’T HAVE ANY SIGNS OR FLAGS INDICATING SHE WAS TAKING PART. I KEEP REPLAYING IN MY HEAD LIKE, WHAT DID I DO WRONG? IS THERE SOMETHING DIFFERENTLY THAT I COULD HAVE DONE? AND I JUST KEEP GOING BACK TO NO, BECAUSE, YOU KNOW, WITH THE TYPE OF JOB, WITH PHOTOJOURNALISM, YOU KNOW, THEY YOU WANT TO KEEP YOURSELF DISTANCED. THAT WAY YOU DON’T BECOME A PART OF THE STORY. YOU JUST KIND OF WANT TO SHOW AND TELL THE STORY. AND THAT’S REALLY WHAT I THOUGHT I WAS DOING AND ENDED UP. BECOMING A PART, IF NOT THE STORY. DAUM SAYS SHE WILL CHALLENGE THE CHARGES AGAINST HER AT A COURT HEARING IN SEPTEMBER. CONEWAGO TOWNSHIP POLICE IN ADAMS COUNTY ARE INVESTIGATING AFTER A BODY WAS FOUND IN THE WOODS NEXT TO A FARM. POLICE SAY A FARMER DISCOVERED THE BODY WHILE HE WAS CUTTING BRUSH ON HIS PROPERTY. INVESTIGATORS SAY THEY RESPONDED TO THE SCENE ON NORTH BLATTNER AVENUE AROUND 1230 YESTERDAY AFTERNOON, AND SPENT NEARLY FIVE HOURS THERE. THE FARMER OBVIOUSLY WAS A LITTLE BIT ALARMED TO FIND A BODY LAYING IN SOME WOODS NEXT TO HIS FIELD. THE MAN’S NAME HAS NOT YET BEEN RELEASED, OR WHAT MAY HAVE LED TO HIS DEATH. THE U-S MARSHALS SERVICE IS OFFERING A REWARD OF UP TO $3,000 FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO THE ARREST OF A FUGITIVE WHO’S BEEN WANTED FOR A DECADE. A GRAND JURY INDICTED 50 YEAR OLD LASHONDA DURANT IN NOVEMBER OF 2015, WITH DRUG DELIVERY RESULTING IN DEATH AND OFFENSES RELATED TO THE DISTRIBUTION OF COCAINE AND HEROIN. DURANT HAS BEEN WANTED SINCE THEN. A FORMER YORK COUNTY REGIONAL POLICE OFFICER IS CHARGED WITH USING A STATE LAW ENFORCEMENT NETWORK FOR PERSONAL USE. STATE POLICE HAVE NOW NAMED HIM SHAWN LAKE. THEY SAY HE USED THE NETWORK 32 TIMES OVER SEVERAL YEARS FOR PERSONAL USE. ACCORDING TO CHARGING DOCUMENTS, LAKE SOUGHT INFORMATION ON 19 PEOPLE AND THEN SEARCHED OR DIRECT MESSAGED 15 OF THEM ON FACEBOOK. THE DOCUMENTS ALSO SAY THAT LAKE USED TO WORK FOR LOWER WINDSOR TOWNSHIP POLICE AND THE STATE FISH AND BOAT COMMISSION. TWO MEN ARE CHARGED WITH ARMED ROBBERY THIS WEEK IN COLUMBIA, LANCASTER COUNTY. COLUMBIA POLICE SAY 24 YEAR OLD DANIELLE RHODES OF HARRISBURG AND 25 YEAR OLD JAKAI DANIELS OF COLUMBIA ROBBED THE J. K MART AROUND 830 TUESDAY MORNING. POLICE SAY SURVEILLANCE PHOTOS SHOW THEM ENTERING THE STORE AND TAKING ITEMS AND

More than 700 clothing items worth nearly $19,000 stolen from Spooky Nook Sports in Lancaster County, police say

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Updated: 2:33 PM EDT Jun 12, 2025

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A box of clothing worth thousands of dollars was stolen from Spooky Nook Sports in Lancaster County, according to the East Hempfield Township Police Department. Video above: Headlines from WGAL News 8 Today.A representative of MADE Hoops, a youth basketball organization, reported the theft on May 30, according to police. The report stated that a box containing 783 pieces of clothing was stolen at Spooky Nook Sports sometime between 4 p.m. on April 18 and 9 a.m. on April 19. The total estimated value of the loss is $18,992, according to police. There’s been no word of any suspects at the time. Stay with WGAL for updates as we learn more. See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at https://www.wgal.com/upload.

A box of clothing worth thousands of dollars was stolen from Spooky Nook Sports in Lancaster County, according to the East Hempfield Township Police Department.

Video above: Headlines from WGAL News 8 Today.

A representative of MADE Hoops, a youth basketball organization, reported the theft on May 30, according to police.

The report stated that a box containing 783 pieces of clothing was stolen at Spooky Nook Sports sometime between 4 p.m. on April 18 and 9 a.m. on April 19.

The total estimated value of the loss is $18,992, according to police.

There’s been no word of any suspects at the time.

Stay with WGAL for updates as we learn more.

See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at https://www.wgal.com/upload.



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Lwanga awardee finds blessings in mixing faith, science as Catholic educator

Jacob Wiegand | jacobwiegand@archstl.org Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School biology/genetics teacher Venus D. Spain is a recipient of the Father Edward F. Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Charles Lwanga Center. Spain is a graduate of Cardinal Ritter and teacher at the school for more than two decades. One of the perks of […]

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Jacob Wiegand | jacobwiegand@archstl.org
Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School biology/genetics teacher Venus D. Spain is a recipient of the Father Edward F. Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Charles Lwanga Center. Spain is a graduate of Cardinal Ritter and teacher at the school for more than two decades.

One of the perks of working at a Catholic school is discovering ways to incorporate faith into academics.

That’s exactly what Venus D. Spain has done with her freshman biology class at Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School. This past school year, she invited students to attend Mass at her parish, St. Peter Claver, which was followed up with a reflection paper on the “biology of God.”

Students were asked to make a connection between biology — the scientific study of life and living organisms — and what they’ve learned in theology class.

“It was, what’s the correlation, where does the faith fit into their study of science and the theology that they learned?” she said. “The Eucharist was a big part of that connection.”

It’s one example of how Spain integrates faith into her work as a science teacher at Cardinal Ritter. Earlier this month, the St. Charles Lwanga Center honored Spain with the Father Ed Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award at its annual Testimonial Dinner and Celebration. She was one of several who were honored for their contributions in the community.

A career in education wasn’t originally in Spain’s plans, but as a student at Xavier University in the 1990s, she became involved in several youth-focused programs and helped coach basketball. It was there that a fellow coach encouraged her to pursue teaching.

Once she returned to St. Louis, Spain continued to coach youth sports and was hired as a third-grade teacher at the former Bishop Healy School. Three years later, she received a call from former Cardinal Ritter principal Carmelle Hall, who asked her if she’d consider a job teaching high school science. She recently celebrated her 25th anniversary at the school. In addition to freshman biology, she also teaches genetics to juniors and seniors.

In her nomination for the award, Spain was described as having aspired, inspired, and empowered her students to achieve their best and as modeling the threefold mission of Cardinal Ritter: academic excellence, leadership and faith development.

Spain said that the most rewarding part of her career has been being able to practice her Catholic faith through education.

Biology is largely focused on the characteristics of living things, but students also understand it through the lens of faith, she said. “We begin with cells, but they know there is a higher power connected to our whole formation as living human beings,” she said. “God formed us, and He formed this earth and living things in six, seven days, and He saw that it was good, right? He gave us the ability to think, to take care of all the other living creatures, and it is our responsibility to make sure that we’re doing that.”

Spain has been inspired in faith by the women of her parish and her late mother, Elizabeth Spain, who taught her that daily devotion, prayer, and service to God would manifest in abundant blessings. Over the years, she’s served at several parishes as an acolyte, an extraordinary minister of the Eucharist and a youth Sunday school leader. At St. Peter Claver, she’s involved in the Sister Antona Ebo Women’s Ministry.

Spain, who recently assisted with tornado recovery efforts, said it’s not about the things she has done but the blessings she’s received from God through the people and she’s encountered throughout her life, whether that’s at school, in church or in the community.

“I am really humbled that I was nominated to receive this award, and I just think there’s more to do,” she said. “I’m starting to realize that there’s more than I can do beyond my church.”

Father Carl Scheble also lifetime honoree

Fr. Carl Scheble

Father Carl Scheble was honored with the Father Ed Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Charles Lwanga Center in June.

Father Scheble was raised in the former Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in the Baden neighborhood of north St. Louis. He later attended the former Prep North High School in Florissant, where he felt a calling to the priesthood.

After ordination in 1983, Father Scheble spent 18 years of his priesthood serving several predominantly African-American parishes on the northside of St. Louis, including Holy Rosary, Visitation-St. Ann and St. Elizabeth, Mother of John the Baptist. In all, he’s been a parish priest for 41 years, serving in urban, suburban and rural parishes across the archdiocese.

In 2023, he was named archdiocesan vicar general and moderator of the curia (the archdiocesan staff). He works closely with the episcopal vicars who oversee the archdiocese’s three vicariates (groupings of parishes within the archdiocese) to provide parish support and administration.

The Lwanga Center played an instrumental role in introducing him to the Black Catholic community, he said. Through the center, he became involved in youth and young adult ministry, marriage prep and the National Black Catholic Congress, among other activities. He also heard speakers hosted by Lwanga, including the late Benedictine Father Cyprian Davis, a prolific chronicler of black Catholic history, and Sister Thea Bowman.

“There were just incredible experiences that the Lwanga Center afforded me that I would have never had otherwise,” Father Scheble said. “For me, as a white clergyman, it was wonderfully formative.”

Father Scheble has overseen several parish mergers over the years, which he said is always a difficult process. However, at the same time, he has always felt welcomed by each parish community he has served.

“Coming as a priest … I was brought into their families, literally,” he said. “What a blessing to experience that.”

Lwanga Center awardees

Fr. Edward F. Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement: Venus D. Spain and Father Carl Scheble

Trailblazer Award: Sister Gail Guelker, SSND, and Lynn Woolfolk

Torch Bearer Award: Jesuits of the Central and Southern Province, USA

Leon Henderson Award: Jessica Pou

Parish adult, young adult and youth honorees

Christ the King: Mimi Taylor-Hendrix (adult)

St. Ann: Dr. James Paunicka (adult); Ke’Von Reynolds (youth)

St. Josephine Bakhita: Sister Janice Munier, SSND (adult); Markus Willem Dowdy (posthumously, young adult)

St. Norbert: Jane Kariuki (adult); Kadin A.J. Anderson (youth)

St. Peter Claver: Rosalind Williams (adult); Andrea Lowe (young adult); Kennedy Thomas (youth)



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Parents spending more time, resources and money on kids’ sports

Parents, it is not just your imagination – you are spending more time, money and resources on your kids’ sports activities than moms and dads from previous generations. A new nationwide study found that these trends are particularly pronounced for those parents who are highly educated, those immersed in sports cultures and those whose kids […]

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Parents, it is not just your imagination – you are spending more time, money and resources on your kids’ sports activities than moms and dads from previous generations.

A new nationwide study found that these trends are particularly pronounced for those parents who are highly educated, those immersed in sports cultures and those whose kids are highly committed to sports activities.

“Our findings suggest that recent changes in youth sport and parenting cultures have prompted parents to invest more time and money in their children’s athletic activities,” said Chris Knoester, lead author of the study and professor of sociology at The Ohio State University.

Chris Knoester“Since the 1980s, supporting a child’s athletic development has appeared to have required levels – or at least felt pressures – of involvement not demanded of parents in previous generations.”

Knoester conducted the study with Chris Bjork, professor of education at Vassar College.  The research was published online recently in the journal Leisure/Loisir.

This study is one of the first to provide evidence of what parents have been talking about with each other for years, Bjork said.

“We’ve heard these stories about how parents are spending so much time going to their kids’ athletic events, spending more money, going all in. But it wasn’t clear if these were just stories,” Bjork said.

“Now we have some empirical evidence that parents aren’t wrong about this. Things have changed.”

The study used survey data on 3,993 adults who participated in the National Sports and Society Survey (NSASS), sponsored by Ohio State’s Sports and Society Initiative. Those surveyed volunteered to participate through the American Population Panel, run by Ohio State’s Center for Human Resource Research. Participants, who came from all 50 states, answered the survey online between the fall of 2018 and spring of 2019.

Participants were asked questions about how often their parents attended their athletic events (on a scale from “never” to “every day or nearly every day”), how much they supported their sports participation through coaching, providing transportation, etc. (from “never” to “every day or nearly every day”) and how much money their parents spent on their sports participation (from “none” to “a lot”), in a typical year, while they were growing up.

Respondents were born beginning in the 1950s through the 1990s, and were 21 years or older when surveyed, so this study essentially covered youth sport experiences from the 1960s through about 2015.

Chris BjorkResults showed that participants from nearly every generation who had better-educated parents said their moms and dads attended more sporting events than did those with lower levels of education. But that difference increased over time.

For those born in the 1950s, most participants said their parents attended their sporting events on average a few times a year, in a typical year, while they were growing up.

But for those born in the 1990s, it was closer to an average of once a month for those with lower levels of education up to about once a week for those whose parents had a college degree.

Families who were most immersed in sports culture showed a slight increase in parental sports attendance over generations, but of course they started at a much higher level and didn’t have as much room to rise. They were already attending more than once a week for their children born in the 1950s and rose to nearly every day for those children born in the 1990s.

Similar generational trends were found in how much parents supported sports participation and how much they spent on sporting activities.

Most participants throughout the generations said their parents only spent “a little bit” of money for them to play sports in a typical year. But the youngest generations, especially those from families of higher socioeconomic (SES) status, were more likely to say their families spent “some” on sports for them. Respondents who were highly immersed in sports culture reported that their parents spent “quite a bit,” in a typical year.

Many of the changes found in the study seemed to accelerate beginning for children born in the 1980s and continuing through the 1990s, said Bjork, who is co-author of the book More Than Just a Game: How the Youth Sports Industry Is Changing the Way We Parent and What to Do About It.

This corresponded with societal shifts in parenting and an emphasis on “intensive parenting.”

“There’s been this intensification of parenting over the past 50 years or so that has seen a shift of parents from casual supporters to managers of their kids’ extracurricular lives,” Bjork said.

Parents have done this in part because schools have cut back on how much they spend on sports and higher SES families have put more resources into helping their kids succeed in sports.

“Parents see this as a way to enhance their kids’ resumes as they are applying for college or trying to get a job,” Knoester said.

“It has been this convergence of an increased emphasis on intensive parenting, reduced public support for sports participation and a stark rise in a mostly privatized youth sports industry. It has all led to higher levels of parents’ involvement in their children’s sports participation, especially among higher SES families.”





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NJ umpire awarded $650K after NY Little League coach broke his jaw

How to file a lawsuit against a public entity: Video To file a lawsuit against a public entity, a person must first file a tort claim notice. Miguel Fernandez and Stephanie Noda, NorthJersey.com The coach, Jerry Otero, pleaded guilty to aggravated assault charges and received probation after punching the umpire, James Neely, breaking his jaw. […]

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  • The coach, Jerry Otero, pleaded guilty to aggravated assault charges and received probation after punching the umpire, James Neely, breaking his jaw.
  • The verdict includes compensatory and punitive damages, addressing Neely’s medical expenses, pain, suffering, and deterring future incidents of violence at youth sporting events.
  • Neely, who has since retired from umpiring baseball but continues to referee soccer, hopes the verdict will promote a safer environment for children in youth sports.

A youth baseball umpire in his 70s who was assaulted by a Little League coach three years ago when he suffered a broken jaw and a concussion has been awarded a $650,000 verdict.

The verdict in favor of Middlesex Borough resident James Neely was reached June 10 in a bench trial before Middlesex County Superior Court Judge Christopher Rafano, according to court officials.

Neely, then 72, was umpiring a game at White Oak Park in Branchburg on June 4, 2022 when an assistant coach, Jerry Otero, 43, of Staten Island, became upset over a call and spent several innings harassing and cursing at Neely, according to Andrew L. O’Connor, the Nagel Rice firm lawyer who handled Neely’s civil lawsuit.

Neely ejected Otero from the game and Otero responded by entering the field and struck Neely in the face.

Neely suffered a concussion and fractures to his jaw which had to be wired shut. O’Connor said his client, now 75, still has residual pain in his jaw and has difficulty eating certain foods and will require monitoring for the rest of his life to make sure his jaw doesn’t further shift.

Otero was charged by the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office with third-degree aggravated assault and fourth-degree assault at a youth sports event. O’Connor said Otero pleaded guilty to the criminal charges and was sentenced to five years’ probation. Otero has been barred from future coaching positions, according to O’Connor.

O’Connor said Otero, who was 40 at the time of the incident, testified during the trial and admitted he hit Neely, but said he didn’t hit him that hard to cause the damage his client suffered. O’Connor said there was a big size and strength difference between the two men. He said Otero is over 6 feet tall and about 280 pounds while Neely is about 5-foot-6 and 140 pounds.

The case stemmed from a game at a United States Amateur Baseball League tournament where the New York Prospects, based in Staten Island, were playing. Otero was a coach for the Prospects.

Neely’s lawsuit originally named the New York Prospects, the United States Amateur Baseball League and Frank Cambria, president of the New York Prospects, as defendants. O’Connor said they settled for a confidential amount prior to trial.

O’Connor said the $650,000 verdict included $500,000 in compensatory damages and $150,000 in punitive damages which will come from Otero’s assets, not insurance. O’Connor said the verdict will cover his client’s medical expenses as well as his pain and suffering.

“People’s behavior at youth travel sports have become completely out of control. This verdict sends a strong message that this type of outrageous conduct will not be allowed at youth sporting events,” O’Connor said. “You can’t have coaches beating up senior-citizen umpires in front of a bunch of 12- and 13-years-olds. It’s just completely unacceptable. Coaches are supposed to set a good example for the kids, provide a safe environment for the kids to learn, grow and have fun with their friends.”

O’Connor said Neely became involved in youth sports and umpiring after retiring from his job.

“It was a big part of his life. He liked being out with the kids and helping them grow and learn,” O’Connor said, adding that after the incident his wife made him promise to never umpire baseball again, a promise he has kept, even after her death. He does still referee soccer games, O’Connor said.

Neely said the focus needs to be on the kids.

“We need to ensure that youth sports remain a place for them to learn and grow in a safe environment. I hope this verdict will prevent any future events from occurring,” he said.

Email: srussell@gannettnj.com

Suzanne Russell is a breaking news reporter for MyCentralJersey.com covering crime, courts and other mayhem. To get unlimited access, please subscribe or activate your digital account today.



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A Nationwide Celebration of Youth Sports at DICK’S House of Sport

Originally published on DICK’S Sporting Goods Sideline Report June 11 marked a historic first for DICK’S Sporting Goods and The DICK’S Sporting Goods Foundation. Twenty DICK’S House of Sport locations nationwide came alive with energy, excitement and sport for the inaugural “Sports Matter Day of Play”. As part of the festivities The DICK’S Foundation invited […]

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Originally published on DICK’S Sporting Goods Sideline Report

June 11 marked a historic first for DICK’S Sporting Goods and The DICK’S Sporting Goods Foundation. Twenty DICK’S House of Sport locations nationwide came alive with energy, excitement and sport for the inaugural “Sports Matter Day of Play”. As part of the festivities The DICK’S Foundation invited youth organizations from communities across the country to participate in a day dedicated to celebrating play, access and opportunity in sports at their local DICK’S House of Sport location.

This first-of-its-kind event was designed to give young athletes the chance to explore and experience new sports. From soccer drills in Boston to softball swings in Miami, each House of Sport became a vibrant, hands-on arena where kids could discover the joy of play. Designed to be inclusive and engaging, the activities encouraged curiosity and confidence in a variety of sports. For many, it was their very first time holding a lacrosse stick, swinging a golf club or rock climbing with encouragement from local coaches and mentors.

“There is nothing better than seeing kids light up when they get to play a sport for the first time,” said Rick Jordan, VP of The DICK’S Sporting Goods Foundation. “Thats what the day was all about, getting to create those moments and showing young athletes that they belong on the field, the court or wherever their passion leads them.”

In addition to a fun day of play at House of Sport, participating organizations also received a Sports Matter grant from The DICK’S Sporting Goods Foundation, to help ensure that their vital work in the community can continue to thrive. The grants underscore The Foundation’s ongoing mission to provide access and equity in youth sports, one athlete at a time. Since 2014, DICK’S Sporting Goods and The DICK’S Foundation has helped over 3 million kids and committed over $100 million to support young athletes with equipment, registration fees, league costs and playing fields through its Sports Matter Program.

“To have our organization recognized and supported today means a lot to us,” said Jamaal Wornum, CEO and Founder of One Love Sports Academy in Boston. “The kids had a blast trying new sports and events like these are a game-changer for our program that will keep more kids doing what they love.”

The Full List of Participating Organizations and DICK’S House of Sport Locations includes:

  • Flyght Academy (Dayton, OH)
  • Boys & Girls Club of SEVA (Chesapeake, VA)
  • We ALL-EN Foundation and Pitreboyz Foundation (Katy, TX)
  • Tulsa Dream Center (Tulsa, OK)
  • Boston SCORES and One Love Sports Academy (Boston, MA)
  • Bolder Options and Girl’s On The Run (Minnetonka, MN)
  • Emerald Youth Foundation (Knoxville, TN)
  • Houston reVision (Baybrook, TX)
  • Rochester City Soccer (Victor, NY)
  • Play Ball Foundation (Salem, MA)
  • Girl Scouts of Western Oklahoma and Oklahoma Adaptive Sports Association (Oklahoma City, OK)
  • Boys & Girls Club Capital Region (Latham, NY)
  • Friendly House (Davenport, IA)
  • Sulfur Springs YMCA (Tampa, FL)
  • Champaign Parks District (Champaign, IL)
  • Pembroke Pines YMCA (Miami, FL)
  • Rodney Street Tennis (Brandywine, PA)
  • Boys & Girls Club of Binghamton and Police Athletic League of Binghamton (Johnson City, NY)
  • Girls on the Run (Scranton, PA)
  • Primetime Elite Bulldogs and Two-Six Elite (Fayetteville, NC)

Written by Peyton Moriarity



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