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Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19

Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19

Yahooa day ago
MARLBORO HISTORICAL – Marlboro Township Historical Society plans its annual meeting and dinner at 6 p.m. Sept. 18 at Sable Creek Golf Course, 5942 Edison St. NE in Marlboro Township. Dinner is $25 per person. During the meeting, group officials will discuss progress that has been made on the Dr. Kersey G. Thomas Home & Office and efforts to move the historical society forward. Speaker will be Marlboro Township resident Dr. David Mungo, who is an orthopedic surgeon and Civil War enthusiast, who will discuss "The Role of Marlboro and our Neighbors in the Civil War." Reservations can be made at this shortened link, shorturl.at/sD6V8. Payment can be mailed to Marlboro Township Historical Society, P.O. Box 275, Hartville OH 44632; or sent via PayPal to marlborotwphistorical@gmail.com. Add a note that payment is for dinner reservations. For more information, call 330-697-4036 or email marlborotwphistorical@gmail.com.
RABIES VACCINATIONS – Ohio and federal agencies will distribute the oral rabies vaccine from Aug. 18 through Sept. 9 in several areas of Mahoning County, along with Columbiana, Portage and Trumbull counties. The baits will be dropped from fixed-wing airplanes and helicopters or from vehicles on the ground. The vaccine will be an ORV bait called ONRAB in a blister pack covered in a waxy green coating that has a sugar-vanilla smell. The odor attracts targeted wild animals, such as raccoons, who eat the baits and are then vaccinated against rabies. Humans and pets cannot get rabies from contact with the baits. If found, leave the baits undisturbed. If a person has contact with a bait, immediately rinse the contact area with warm water and soap. For more information about the National Rabies Management Program, visit this shortened link, shorturl.at/cklAe.
WEST BRANCH − West Branch Local Schools' Board of Education plans a regular meeting at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 20 in the West Branch High School media room, 14277 S. Main St. in Beloit.
ALLIANCE CIVIL SERVICE – City of Alliance Civil Service Commission plans a meeting at 12:30 p.m. Aug. 19 in the City Administration Builiding, 504 E. Main St., in the second-floor conference room. Purpose of the meeting is to rule on protests and any business to come before the commission.
KNOX TRUSTEES – Knox Township trustees plan a regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 19 at 2895 Knox School Road. Trustees will convene at 6:45 p.m. to review bills. Note: This the change in the meeting's regular start time.
SEBRING COUNCIL – Sebring Village Council will meet at 7 p.m. Aug. 19 at Village Hall. Among items on the agenda are an ordinance amending legislation on a prohibition against parking commercial vehicles in the downtown district; and an ordinance amending Sebring laws covering littering and deposit of garbage, rubbish and junk in the village.
This article originally appeared on The Alliance Review: Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19
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RSF fighters ambush a Sudanese village, killing 7 and burning homes
RSF fighters ambush a Sudanese village, killing 7 and burning homes

Associated Press

time37 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

RSF fighters ambush a Sudanese village, killing 7 and burning homes

CAIRO (AP) — A notorious paramilitary group ambushed a village in south-central Sudan, looting and burning several houses, a medical group said Wednesday. At least seven people, including two children, were killed, it said. Tuesday's attack by the Rapid Support Forces on the village of al-Ghabshan al-Maramrah, an agricultural community in North Kordofan province, also wounded 13 others, said the Sudan Doctors Network, a group of medical professionals tracking the Sudanese civil war. The group said RSF fighters looted properties, burned several houses as well as the village's sole health care center, and 'stole the medical supplies stored there.' The RSF did not respond to an Associated Press inquiry about the attack. The attack on the Kordofan village came as the RSF attempted to seize control of the crucial, oil-rich region following a series of battlefield setbacks earlier this year in its war with the Sudanese government. The military kicked the RSF out of major cities in the first half 2025, including Khartoum and its sister city of Omdurman. Last month, RSF fighters rampaged through the village of Shaq al-Num and the surrounding area in Kordofan, killing more than 450 civilians, including 35 children and two pregnant women, according to UNICEF, the United Nations children's agency. Sudan plunged into chaos when simmering tensions between the military and the RSF exploded into open fighting in April 2023 in Khartoum and elsewhere. The fighting has turned into a full-fledged civil war that killed tens of thousands of people, displaced over 14 people out of their homes and pushed parts of the country into famine. The devastating conflict has been marked by atrocities including mass killings and rape, which the International Criminal Court is investigating as war crimes and crimes against humanity. The medical charity Doctors Without Borders, or MSF, meanwhile, said Tuesday it suspended its activities in the main hospital in RSF-controlled Central Darfur province in western Sudan following an armed attack on the facility. The attack happened after two people, one of them dead from a gunshot wound, were brought to the MSF-supported hospital Saturday night. Armed relatives stormed into the facility and tensions escalated among those accompanying the casualties, who reportedly sustained their wounds in a looting incident in a nearby camp, it said. 'Suspending our activities and evacuating our teams is a decision no medical organization wants to make, but our staff cannot risk their lives while providing care,' Marwan Taher, MSF's emergency coordinator in Darfur, said. The group said its operations can't be resumed until it receives 'clear security guarantees to protect staff and patients.'

Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19
Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19

MARLBORO HISTORICAL – Marlboro Township Historical Society plans its annual meeting and dinner at 6 p.m. Sept. 18 at Sable Creek Golf Course, 5942 Edison St. NE in Marlboro Township. Dinner is $25 per person. During the meeting, group officials will discuss progress that has been made on the Dr. Kersey G. Thomas Home & Office and efforts to move the historical society forward. Speaker will be Marlboro Township resident Dr. David Mungo, who is an orthopedic surgeon and Civil War enthusiast, who will discuss "The Role of Marlboro and our Neighbors in the Civil War." Reservations can be made at this shortened link, Payment can be mailed to Marlboro Township Historical Society, P.O. Box 275, Hartville OH 44632; or sent via PayPal to marlborotwphistorical@ Add a note that payment is for dinner reservations. For more information, call 330-697-4036 or email marlborotwphistorical@ RABIES VACCINATIONS – Ohio and federal agencies will distribute the oral rabies vaccine from Aug. 18 through Sept. 9 in several areas of Mahoning County, along with Columbiana, Portage and Trumbull counties. The baits will be dropped from fixed-wing airplanes and helicopters or from vehicles on the ground. The vaccine will be an ORV bait called ONRAB in a blister pack covered in a waxy green coating that has a sugar-vanilla smell. The odor attracts targeted wild animals, such as raccoons, who eat the baits and are then vaccinated against rabies. Humans and pets cannot get rabies from contact with the baits. If found, leave the baits undisturbed. If a person has contact with a bait, immediately rinse the contact area with warm water and soap. For more information about the National Rabies Management Program, visit this shortened link, WEST BRANCH − West Branch Local Schools' Board of Education plans a regular meeting at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 20 in the West Branch High School media room, 14277 S. Main St. in Beloit. ALLIANCE CIVIL SERVICE – City of Alliance Civil Service Commission plans a meeting at 12:30 p.m. Aug. 19 in the City Administration Builiding, 504 E. Main St., in the second-floor conference room. Purpose of the meeting is to rule on protests and any business to come before the commission. KNOX TRUSTEES – Knox Township trustees plan a regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 19 at 2895 Knox School Road. Trustees will convene at 6:45 p.m. to review bills. Note: This the change in the meeting's regular start time. SEBRING COUNCIL – Sebring Village Council will meet at 7 p.m. Aug. 19 at Village Hall. Among items on the agenda are an ordinance amending legislation on a prohibition against parking commercial vehicles in the downtown district; and an ordinance amending Sebring laws covering littering and deposit of garbage, rubbish and junk in the village. This article originally appeared on The Alliance Review: Alliance-area news in brief for Aug. 19 Solve the daily Crossword

Rehab can keep you out of jail — but become a prison itself
Rehab can keep you out of jail — but become a prison itself

New York Post

time4 days ago

  • New York Post

Rehab can keep you out of jail — but become a prison itself

Chris Koon didn't read the fine print. Sitting in the Cenikor Baton Rouge rehab center's intake office in 2015, flanked by his mom and grandmother, he signed where told. 'A lot of it read like legalese,' writes Shoshana Walter in 'Rehab: An American Scandal' (Simon & Schuster, Aug. 12). 'Incomprehensible but also innocuous, like something you might see before downloading an app on your phone.' Koon felt lucky. He wasn't going to prison. Just days earlier, he'd been arrested for meth possession. The alternative to five years in state prison? A brutal two-year Cenikor inpatient program. Koon took the deal. In signing the intake documents, he agreed to 'receive no monetary compensation' for work he did, with wages going 'directly back to the Foundation.' He signed away his right to workers' compensation if injured. He forfeited his food stamps, disability payments and any other government assistance. And he agreed to 'adopt appropriate morals and values as promoted by the program.' Koon's story isn't an outlier — it's a glimpse into what Walter calls 'America's other drug crisis.' While overdoses and opioid deaths dominate headlines, far less attention goes to the 'profit-hungry, under-regulated, and all too often deadly rehab industry,' writes Walter. Across the country, thousands of treatment programs are propped up by federal policies and rooted in a distinctly American blend of punishment and personal responsibility. People were 'lured to rehab with the promise of a cure for what ailed them,' Walter writes, 'only to repeatedly falter and fail inside a system that treated them like dollar signs.' The idea hard labor can cure someone isn't new. After the Civil War, US slavery was abolished except as punishment for a crime. That loophole became the foundation for a forced-labor system that conveyed newly freed black people into prisons and chain gangs. Over time, prison officials began marketing this arrangement as 'rehabilitation.' As Walter writes, this legacy has been repackaged for the modern drug crisis. The Affordable Care Act promised expanded treatment access through Medicaid. But the rehab industry that exploded in response was lightly regulated, profit-driven and increasingly dangerous. The result: thousands of people like Chris Koon, lured into treatment by courts, cops or family members, only to find themselves stuck in a system that looked less like therapy and more like punishment. They include women like April Lee, a black woman from Philadelphia. Despite growing up in addiction's long shadow — her mother died from AIDS when Lee was just a teenager, after years of selling sex to support a crack habit — Lee didn't start using drugs herself until after having her second child, when a doctor prescribed her Percocet for back pain. That opened the door to addiction. Child-welfare authorities eventually took her kids. Fellow users nicknamed her 'Mom' and 'Doc' for her uncanny ability to find usable veins, no matter how damaged. April Lee returned to her recovery house — as an unpaid house monitor. April Lee / ACLU She entered recovery in 2016. Every morning at 6, 18 women gathered in the dining room of one of two overcrowded houses to read from the Bible. Lee stayed 10 months. With nowhere else to go, she returned — this time as a house monitor, working without pay in exchange for a bed. 'She was still early into recovery, and she felt stressed by the intensity of the job,' Walter writes. 'On top of that, she wasn't getting a paycheck, so she couldn't save up money to leave.' 'Don't really know how to feel right now,' Lee wrote in her journal. 'The lady I work for — for free, mind you — wont me to watch over women witch mean I have to stay in every night.' She felt physically and emotionally trapped. 'I wanted to snap this morning. Miss my children so much.' Like so many others, Lee found herself stuck in the recovery-house loop — forced to work, unable to leave and earning nothing. She helped with chores, mainly cooking and cleaning. Residents' food stamps stocked the kitchen. Lee loved to cook, and she made comfort food for the house: mac and cheese, fried chicken, beef stew. But all the warmth she gave others couldn't buy her a way out. For others, like Koon, it was about more than just forced labor. During his first 30 days at Cenikor, the other patients policed each other. If one person broke a rule, the entire group might be punished with a 'fire drill' in the middle of the night. 'If anyone stepped out of line or did something wrong during the drill, they'd have to stay awake even longer,' Walter writes. Discipline was obsessive. In his first month, Koon sat in a classroom with about 30 other residents, most sent by courts like he was, reciting rules out loud, line by line. There were more than 100. 'He could get in trouble for not having a pen, not wearing a belt, for an untied shoelace, for leaving a book on the table, for his shirt coming untucked,' Walter details. Koon learned the punishment system fast. A common one was 'the verbal chair,' in which any participant could order him to sit, arms locked and knees at a 90-degree angle, and stare silently at the wall while others screamed at him. 'Go have a seat in the verbal chair. Think about having your shirt untucked,' they'd say. And Koon, like everyone else, was expected to respond, 'Thank you.' There were others. 'Mirror therapy,' where he'd stand and yell his failings at himself in the mirror. 'The dishpan,' where he'd be dressed in a neon-green shirt, scrubbing floors and dishes while loudly reciting the Cenikor philosophy, 'a paragraph-long diatribe about self-change,' Walter writes. And the dreaded 'verbal haircut,' when another resident, sometimes even a staff member, would berate him as part of his treatment. Dressed up as a therapeutic community, Koon thought instead, 'This is like a cult.' Walter believes he wasn't far off. Everyone was required to tattle. Koon had to turn in weekly at least 10 'pull-ups' — written reports detailing rule infractions committed by fellow residents. If he didn't, he could lose points and with them privileges like phone calls, family visits or permission to grow a mustache. Confrontations were public and ritualized: Residents would sit in a circle around one or two people forced to listen as everyone else denounced them. 'They took turns confronting that person, professing their faults and errors, while the person was permitted only to say 'thank you,'' Walter writes. Staff called it 'The Game.' He saw grown men cry. He heard women called bitches and sluts. He realized many employees were former participants enforcing the system that once broke them. Not everyone saw a problem. Many in the legal system embraced tough-love rehab programs, especially judges looking for alternatives to jail. One of Cenikor's biggest champions was Judge Larry Gist, who ran one of the first drug courts, in Jefferson County, Texas, in the 1990s. 'The vast majority of folks that I deal with are basically bottom-feeders,' Gist told the author. 'They've been losers since the day they were born.' Cenikor's extreme model was ideal for 'the right people,' he believed. Cenikor rewarded such loyalty, giving judges and lawmakers steak dinners served by participants and annual awards banquets, complete with gleaming, diamond-shaped trophies. Gist 'proudly displayed his' in 'his chambers, where he liked to host his happy hours with prosecutors and defense attorneys.' Koon was booted out of Cenikor after just two years, for faking a urine sample and contracting a contagious staph infection, but managed to stay sober on his own. He proposed to his childhood sweetheart, Paige, moving in with her two daughters, and finding the stability he'd been chasing for years. He went back to school to learn welding, and the daily rhythms of family life kept him grounded. 'He hasn't taken a drug recreationally for eight years,' Walter writes. Lee's path out took longer, and her recovery was, as Walter writes, 'in some ways a stroke of luck.' She left the house after landing a job at a law firm that helped women reunite with their children in foster care — a world away from the nights she'd once spent tricking at the Blue Moon Hotel but one that barely covered her bills and pushed her just over the poverty line, cutting off assistance. She earned her GED, took online college courses, regained custody of her kids and bought her own home by 2021. 'And yet many days she felt she was teetering on the edge, one crisis or unpaid bill away from making a terrible mistake,' Walter writes. That year, she returned to Kensington, where her addiction had once thrived, bringing fresh food and water to people still living on the streets. As for Cenikor, its time in the shadows ended, at least temporarily. Investigators found evidence of exploitation: residents forced to work without pay, unsafe housing conditions, staff-client relationships, even overdoses inside the facilities. The state of Texas fined Cenikor more than $1.4 million in 2019, but the agency struck a settlement, and it continued to operate. Koon and Lee don't represent everyone who's experienced addiction, treatment or recovery. But they do reflect a system that often promises far more than it delivers. 'When rehab works, it can save lives,' Walter writes. 'It can mend families and be among the most redemptive narrative arcs in a person's life.' But sometimes, rehab not only fails to help people, it actively harms them, recycling them through a gauntlet of relapse, shame and risk: 'Despite the rehab industry's many claims, there is no magical cure for addiction.'

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