Dayton Daily News

Lake Erie breaks July high water record

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For the third month in a row, Lake Erie broke its monthly high water record, though at least the lake has dropped a third of an inch since June’s all-time record high.

Lake Erie in July averaged 574.59 feet above sea level, or 33 inches higher than average, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The Army Corps expects Lake Erie to top its August and September monthly records, too.

The records were all set in 1986.

Much of the blame lies on the upper Great Lakes — Superior, Michigan and Huron — and the rain they received this past spring.

About 92% of the water in Lake Erie comes from the upper lakes, through Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River, into Lake Erie. Lake Erie then flows into the Niagara River, into Lake Ontario.

Superior and Ontario also at a record high, and Michigan and Huron aren’t far behind. 171 of the days. He added to a $200 fine, two years of probation and the completion of a parenting class.

Skinner said his suspension of much of the jail sentence was due to the amount of support shown to Jessie, who also goes by Chavay Williams, and what that said about her character.

“I don’t think you’re a bad person,” Skinner said. “But I think you made a horrible mistake.”

The video was posted to Snapchat, prompting Columbus Police to begin investigat­ing the incident on June 14, 2018. In the video, children can be seen running around and screaming, with some hanging from a 6-foot wooden fence and others coming to physical blows with each other. Two children hit each other with shoes, a girl swings her jacket at another child and others can be seen kicking or pushing.

Jessie and her defense attorney, Sallynda Rothchild Dennison, maintained that Jessie went inside the school shortly after taking the one-minute video. She admitted in court that she added smiling-face and boxing-glove emojis to the video, but continued to say that she did not know how the video got on social media. around Whitehall.

During the execution of the warrant, detectives found 1,296 grams of cocaine, equivalent to about 2.9 pounds, 80 grams of marijuana, an AR-15 rifle that had been reported stolen and more than $53,000 in cash.

One person was taken into custody as a result of the search warrant. Court records show that 40-yearold Thomas Edwards, of the Near East Side, is charged with a first-degree felony possession of drugs charge and is being held on a $25,000 bond.

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