Back house employees Taylor Talley and Andrew Lyon form dough into loaves while Ryleigh Butler wraps dough in plastic and...
Brimfield trustees met Wednesday to approve adding new firefighter/paramedic to the township's fire department roster. While employees have been hired as others moved on or retired, this will be the first time in 11 years that the township has actually added an employee.
Goose poop and what to do about it was a main talking point at Brimfield Trustees' April 7 meeting. It's everywhere in the township center area, making sports activities, and simply strolling, an exercise in judicious foot placement. The area is also the site of Brimfest, outdoor movie screenings and concerts.
In the first Don Faix Invitational at Bridget Franek Track, the Field Falcons girls track and field team took first...
Brimfield police officers Matt Kennedy and James Carrozzi each received a Life Saving Award after rescuing an allegedly suicidal woman who was hanging from an interstate bridge.
Parks Director Cassie Weyer is compiling the results from more than 100 survey responses about the Cranberry Creek Dog Park. Weyer will use the feedback to apply for a $5,000 PetSafe Bark for Your Park grant. If the grant funds come through, Weyer said she would like to improve or replace the park's fencing and gate.
Brimfield trustees held an emergency meeting Monday to consider placing a tax levy on the November ballot. How much, and how to encourage voters to approve it, are still unresolved questions.
As the population of Brimfield grows, so do the township’s bills. Most recently, trustees announced that they may place a tax levy on the November ballot, seeking funding for new requests from the police department.
Brimfield voters will likely find a 2.38-mill tax levy question on the November ballot, asking whether they want to expand their police force or maintain the status quo.
Thanks to a financial windfall in the form of American Rescue Plan funds, Brimfield residents will decided on a 1.95-mill police levy in November instead of the originally planned 2.38-mill levy.
This year, it was Waterloo’s football players and cheerleaders who rose to the challenge of bagging all the litter discarded in the parking lots and the grandstand. And Field Falcons stepped up to work the admissions booths day in and day out.
The Kent Civil War Society will feature "Signs of Civil War in Portage County" at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 12 at the Roy Smith Shelterhouse in Fred Fuller Park on Middlebury Road.