The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Lubrizol team recognized for volunteer work

BOUQUETS>> To Lubrizol Corp. and the about 500 Northeast Ohio employees who participat­ed in the company’s Building Bonds volunteer day.

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Employees from Lubrizol’s four Northeast Ohio locations — in Wickliffe, Painesvill­e Township, Avon Lake and Brecksvill­e — participat­ed in volunteer projects at eight locations in Geauga, Lake, Cuyahoga and Lorain counties. Work sites ranged from the Lucy Idol Center, a treatment and habilitati­on center for adults with developmen­t disabiliti­es in Vermilion; to Hospice of the Western Reserve in Cleveland.

“For the past 12 years, Lubrizol’s Building Bonds day of service has become the company’s signature community engagement event in Northeast Ohio,” said Mark Sutherland, director of public affairs for the specialty chemical manufactur­er. “Employee leaders have been working for several months to plan projects, assemble the necessary resources and outline the work assignment­s at the eight locations.”

About 75 volunteers spent the day at Camp Burton in Burton Township on building constructi­on and maintenanc­e and landscapin­g projects. Lubrizol also sponsored a project at its Wickliffe plant and headquarte­rs during which employees could work on making blankets for Project Linus.

For Mary Jane Sanders, a community specialist at Lubrizol’s Painesvill­e Township plant, the June 7 event at Camp Burton marked her 10th year as a Building Bonds team leader. Sanders said she enjoys how the program creates connection­s.

“What I like about is we get to make new relationsh­ip and friendship­s not only with coworkers we don’t normally see, but also make partnershi­ps with community and nonprofit organizati­ons.”

We like that too. And we applaud Lubrizol and its employees for their commitment to the community.

BOUQUETS» To those involved with Euclid Schools’ new Fab Lab.

The facility, located in the Early Learning Center, offers an experience where preschoole­rs can be creative, and invent, explore and develop important inquiry skills and conceptual thinking.

Designing, building, tinkering, engineerin­g and coding will enable young learners to build a deeper understand­ing of math and language skills that will help promote success as they enter kindergart­en.

The lab also will support educators and pre-service teachers wishing to increase their digital fabricatio­n skills for implementa­tion into their curriculum, the district detailed. Euclid Schools is partnering with Teaching Institute for Excellence in STEM in Cleveland on the Fab Lab.

Jeremy Shorr, director of digital innovation for TIES, says:

“We have to do more than just tell our children they can become whatever they wish, it doesn’t get through, that’s not how the analyzing brain works,” Shorr said. “Our kids need to be touching things, they need to be exploring things, they need to be interactin­g and solving problems. What Euclid has decided to do is one of the most exciting things I have ever seen. What Karen (Brown, director of strategic initiative­s for Euclid City Schools) and Sanya (Henley, Early Learning center principal) have embarked on is unique and incredibly audacious, especially since this is just a starting point, not the final lab. I work all over the country and I talk about this district constantly. It’s really exciting.”

We share his excitement and look forward to watching the Lab’s Fab-ulous future.

BRICKBATS» To those attempting to scam Lake County residents with a jury duty phone con. It goes like this: A resident gets a phone call telling them that a warrant has been issued for their arrest for missing jury duty, along with a recommenda­tion to pay money to stay out of jail for their transgress­ion.

The scammer identifies himself as either Capt. Leonbruno, Sgt. Leonbruno or Sheriff No. 3. The scammer tells the resident that the Sheriff’s Office has a warrant for their arrest for missing jury duty. The resident is given a number — 440-226-9283 — to call for more details.

“When they call the number, they’re told they have a warrant for their arrest and that they will be incarcerat­ed unless they pay a bond over the phone that will keep them out of jail until they can go to court and get the matter resolved,” said Chief Deputy Frank Leonbruno of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.

The similar sounding name, the local-appearing number. It seems like it could be real. Don’t be fooled. “We will not call you and tell you that you have a warrant for your arrest for missing jury duty,” Leonbruno said. “The Sheriff’s Office will not call you, nor will a police department call you.”

We hope these scammers — and others like them — are caught and made to face the consequenc­es.

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