Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Columbus Dispatch: Columnist Mike Harden dies after battle with cancer





Wednesday, October 13, 2010 10:15 PM

The Columbus Dispatch

Mike Harden, whose columns have been appearing in The Dispatch since 1983, died tonight after a battle with cancer. He was 64.

"He had the gift," said former Dispatch editor Luke Feck. "He had that unique skill to make the complex understandable, to see the funny side of the follies of people."

In recent years, Harden had semiretired. Even then, he was still writing two columns a week.

Harden wrote often and honestly about his lean upbringing on the West Side. The family eventually moved to West Jefferson, where Harden graduated in 1964 from West Jefferson High School. He worked at the Westinghouse plant on W. Broad Street, then in December 1965 enlisted in the Navy. He served as a medical corpsman in Vietnam with the Navy and the Marines.

Harden later enrolled at Ohio State University, graduating with a bachelor's degree in journalism in 1973. From 1975 to 1978, he worked as a writer and editor for the Ohio Historical Society. He also worked as an associate editor for Ohio magazine, as a contributing editor at Columbus Monthly and as a speechwriter at Nationwide Insurance Cos. before becoming a columnist for the Columbus Citizen-Journal in 1981.

Two years later, he was hired by The Dispatch.

Harden's column ranged widely, from humor and human-interest to profiles. He created an alter ego, Aunt Gracie, who commented on the idiosyncrasies of life from her fictional perch in the southern Ohio town of Methane. The character was so vivid, a few readers thought she was real.

Throughout his career, Harden won many statewide and national awards, including honors from the National Society of Newspaper Columnists and the Associated Press. Collections of his columns were published as books, and he also wrote Fight for Life, the story of a Columbus-area father's successful battle to get an epilepsy drug legalized so his daughter could take it.

Inside the newsroom, he was widely respected, both for his writing knowledge and his generosity in sharing it.

"He was a throwback, a traditional newsman who understood that he was the eyes and ears of his readers," said Dispatch Editor Ben Marrison. "His passing is a great loss to our newspaper and the community."

Harden is survived by his wife, Debra; daughter Annie; sons Erik and Aaron; stepdaughter Jen; and six grandchildren. Funeral services are pending.

jblundo@dispatch.com

NPR: Food Trucks Taking Sidewalks By Storm (in Columbus)


"Talk of the Nation" was in Columbus Today

Food Trucks Taking Sidewalks By Storm

Listen to the Story

October 13, 2010

Food trucks are booming across the country, hawking everything from cupcakes to Korean tacos. Food writer Bethia Woolf explains how the food truck trend is playing out in Columbus, Ohio, and cart owner Kenny Kim dishes on the life of a Japanese crepe vendor.


The Political Junkie Hits The Buckeye State


Listen to the Story

October 13, 2010

In Ohio, Representative Steve Driehaus, D-1st District, hopes to hold onto his seat in his race with Republican Steve Chabot. Both candidates join NPR's political editor Ken Rudin on Talk of the Nation's annual Buckeye edition of the Political Junkie.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Chicago Tribune: Columbus Demands Exploration




The story is here




New York Times: Why You Need Title Insurance


Your Money

After Foreclosure, a Focus on Title Insurance


When home buyers and people refinancing their mortgages first see the itemized estimate for all the closing costs and fees, the largest number is often for title insurance.

This moment is often profoundly irritating, mysterious and rushed — just like so much of the home-buying process. Lenders require buyers to have title insurance, but buyers are often not sure who picked the insurance company. And the buyers are so exhausted by the gauntlet they’ve already run that they’re not interested in spending any time learning more about the policies and shopping around for a better one.

Besides, does anyone actually know people who have had to collect on title insurance? It ultimately feels like a tax — an extortionate one at that — and not a protective measure.

But all of the sudden, the importance of title insurance is becoming crystal-clear. In recent weeks, big lenders like GMAC Mortgage, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America have halted many or all of their foreclosure proceedings in the wake of allegations of sloppiness, shortcuts or worse. And a potential nightmare situation has emerged that has spooked not only homeowners but lawyers, title insurance companies and their investors.

What would happen if scores of people who had lost their homes to foreclosure somehow persuaded a judge to overturn the proceedings? Could they somehow win back the rights to their homes, free and clear of any mortgage? But they may not be able to simply move back into their home at that point. Banks, after all, have turned around and sold some of those foreclosed homes to nice young families reaching out for a bit of the American dream. Would they simply be put out on the street? And then what?

The answer to that last question may depend on whether those new homeowners have title insurance, because people who buy a home without a mortgage can choose to go without a policy.

Title insurance covers you in case people turn up months or years after you buy your home saying that they, in fact, are the rightful owners of the house or the land, or at least had a stake in the transaction. (The insurance may cover you in other instances as well, relating to easements and other matters, but we’ll leave those aside for now.)

The insurance companies or their agents begin any transaction by running a title search, sifting through government filings related to the property. They do this before you buy a home or refinance your mortgage to help sort out any problems ahead of time and to reduce the risk of your filing a claim later.

But sometimes they miss things, and new issues can arise later.

For instance, the person doing the title search may not notice that a home equity loan is still outstanding or that a contracting firm filed a lien against the owner years ago. That could create problems for you later, when you try to sell the home.

Then there are the psychodramas that can ensue. The previous owner’s long-lost heirs or a previously unknown love child could show up, saying that they never agreed to the sale of the property. Or perhaps there was fraud against a seller who was elderly or had a mental disability, or forgery of an estranged spouse’s signature. It’s rare, but it happens, and when it does, your title insurance company is supposed to provide legal counsel or settle with whomever is making a claim.

Title insurance companies would like you believe that they are the good guys standing behind you. After all, you are the customer who owns the policy.

In fact, many of the title insurance companies are more concerned about the real estate agents, lawyers and lenders who can steer business their way. The title insurance companies are well aware that most people do not shop around for title insurance, even though it’s possible to do so — say through a Web site like entitledirect.com.

While the title insurers are not supposed to kick back money directly to companies or brokers that send business their way, various government investigations over the years have turned up all sorts of cozy dealings that make you shake your head in disgust.

But since you have to buy the insurance if you need a mortgage, there is not much you can do except hold your nose.

That’s what John Kovalick did in January when he bought a foreclosed house in Deltona, Fla., for $102,000 from Deutsche Bank. But in recent weeks, he’s seen the headlines about other banks halting foreclosures and wondered whether something might have gone wrong with the foreclosure on his new house. A spokesman for Deutsche Bank declined comment.

Mr. Kovalick is not the only one pondering what could go wrong. While the banks were pressing the pause button on many foreclosures, some title insurers were growing concerned as well.

On Oct. 1, Old Republic National Title Insurance Company released a notice forbidding any agents or employees to issue new policies on homes that had been recently foreclosed by GMAC Mortgage or Chase.

Clearly, the title insurer was also worried about a situation in which untold numbers of former homeowners have their foreclosures overturned. At that point, those individuals might claim the right to take back their old homes, but they’d also be responsible for, say, a $400,000 loan on a home that is worth half that.

So what would happen next? The banks that foreclosed might start the process over again. At that point, lawyers for the people who had been foreclosed upon might take the next logical step and try to show that the banks never had the documents to prove ownership of the mortgage in the first place. The banks might settle at that point, writing checks to everyone who had gone through a disputed foreclosure in exchange for each of them giving up the title.

But if banks did not settle, or the evicted homeowners refused to settle and fought on and won, they might end up owning their homes once again and not owing the bank either.

Or banks might agree to slice a big chunk off the remaining balance in exchange for a release from any liability for the errors it made.

At that point — and again, this is what Old Republic and investors in other title insurers fear — those homeowners might actually want to move back in. But some foreclosed homes were sold by the banks to others who now live there. And those new residents would have big, fat title insurance claims if their predecessors ever turned up at their doorsteps, proclaimed them trespassers and told them to leave.

“All of these Joe Schmos who did everything legally would then be in the middle of it, too,” said Mr. Kovalick, who manages an auto repair shop and is now hoping not to be one of those Schmos.

“Now, you’d have two total disasters,” he said. “How would you like to be the judge to get that first case?”

While homeowners like Mr. Kovalick may have title insurance, it generally covers them only for the purchase price of the home. When you buy a home out of foreclosure, however, it often needs a lot of work. “If I bought it at $200,000 and it’s a steal but I had to gut it and sink $100,000 more in, my recovery is limited if there is a problem,” said Matthew Weidner, a lawyer in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Indeed, this possibility has occurred to Mr. Kovalick, who has plans to put an addition on his home and is asking how he could extract that investment if someone ever turned up on his doorstep and asked him to leave. “What do I do, take the paint off the walls and the custom blinds off the windows?”

Chances are, it will not come to that. After all, title insurers could settle with the previous residents, allowing them to walk away with a big check to restart their lives elsewhere.

Still, for anyone considering buying a bargain home out of foreclosure anytime soon, consider asking your title insurer if any special riders are available that can cover appreciation on your home in the event of a total loss.

That said, if you can possibly help it, stay away from foreclosed homes until the scene shakes out a little bit.

Some people will undoubtedly make a fortune investing in these properties in the next few months. But if your down payment represents most of what you have in the world, it’s hard to justify betting it all on a situation like this one.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Business First: Property and violent crimes continue to decline in Columbus

FBI Uniform Crime Reports

Business First


Property and violent crimes continue to decline in Columbus, according to the most recent FBI Uniform Crime Report for 2009. The city reported a drop in crime for the fifth year in a row with 5,328 fewer property crimes, a 9.8 percent decline from 2005. It also reported 12.6 percent fewer violent crimes last year compared to 2005.

The FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program collects counts of crimes from police agencies. This includes information about violent crime (murder and non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery and aggravated assault), and property crimes (burglary, larceny and theft, motor vehicle theft and arson). Included in this database are all reporting agencies in Ohio. Not all agencies may participate in this program.

Select a city from the drop-down menu and click the view details page for 2005-08 crime data for that city.

Source: FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program

Read more: FBI Uniform Crime Reports - Business First of Columbus

Friday, October 1, 2010

Top 10 Reasons to come to the Short North Gallery Hop Tomorrow

Gallery Hop Logo



Top 10 Reasons to come to Gallery Hop this Saturday...


Reason #1: HighBall Designers feature garments with live models


Miki Gotoh Costume Couture

And from 7pm - 9pm you will see the 2010 HighBall Designers featuring their designs with live still modeling in the windows at Mary Catherine's Antiques, GrandView Mercantile, Camelot Cellars, Substance, TORSO, Voodoo Denim, ROWE Boutique, Big Rock Little Rooster, and leChocoholique


Reason #2: Grilled Cheese Cook-Off

Grilled Cheese

Hosted by: MoJoe Lounge and Local Matters.
Where: MoJoe Lounge
600 N. High Street
When: October 2nd 6:30-8:30 or until the
grilled cheese runs out!

Sample approximately 8 different grilled cheese sandwiches made from local breads and cheeses by both chefs and amateurs and then vote for the winner!


Reason #3: Tequila flights

La Fogata Patio


Where:
LaFogata Grill
790 N. High Street

Tequila has come a long way from the hangover-inducing protocol of salt, shot, lime, repeat. Many people are drinking tequila on more occasions, experimenting with new labels, and learning to appreciate the nuances of flavor. La Fogata is offering an opportunity to try their most popular flight, Blanco Flight;

  • Patron Silver
  • Don Julio Blanco
  • Cuervo Plantino


Reason #4: HighBall Costumes

HighBall street walkingAt Gallery Hop you'll see the characters from Alice in Wonderland giving you all the details of HighBall Halloween: October 30th. The costumes were provided by Costume Specialties and they will be on-site at Hop Hub (663 N. High) to help you with tips and tricks for your HighBall Halloween Costume!


Reason #5: Live Music From KaTanya Ingram



KaTanya Ingram has been playing at Gallery Hop since 2009. In the past she's played with Flytown Soul Revue or just herself with a few musician friends.

This month you will see KaTanya on vocals and Alan Reed on Guitar. KaTanya is an amazing vocalist and brings emotions to life with her music.

When: 4-10PM
Where: In front of Victorian Gate Condominiums next to
Bakery Gingham at 647 N. High Street.


Reason #6: Battle of the Bras

Battle of the Bras

Battle of the Bras: RSVP now!
Where: Undone Lingerie and Shoes

We have enlisted local celebs and talented people to artistically decorate a bra, with either a fun theme or a theme regarding defeating breast cancer. We limited it to 18 creations that we will unveil during the October Gallery Hop. We will be inviting folks to vote for their favorite creation. Each Vote will cost you a $5 donation. BUT, we'll give you a $5 gift card as a thank you.
All proceeds go to the American Cancer Society.


Reason #7: Brandt-Roberts Galleries Opening

BrandtRoberts Painting

Open! Saturday, October 2 will be Brandt-Roberts Galleries, a new fine art venture located at 642 N. High St. The gallery, co-owned by Michelle Brandt and Bryan Roberts, will feature fine paintings and sculpture of the 20th and 21st centuries, including mid-century modern artwork from America and Scandinavia. Works by present-day painters, including several nationally known artists, will range from impressionism to abstract.

Mr. Roberts currently owns the Bryan H. Roberts Gallery in Bexley, which has been in business for 14 years. Ms. Brandt has managed galleries both in Charleston, SC and Columbus and was most recently the manager of the Kathryn Gallery in the Short North. Together, Brandt and Roberts bring over 30 years of professional fine art experience to their new venture. The two met earlier in the decade when Ms. Brandt was hired to assist Mr. Roberts at the Bexley gallery.

For more information, contact the gallery at 614-223-1655, info@brandtrobertsgalleries.com, and www.brandtrobertsgalleries.com


Reason #8: Columbus Food Adventures

Columbus Food Adventures

Stop by the Greystone (corner of W. Hubbard & High) to meet Columbus Food Adventures.

When you take the Short North Tour you'll be guided to the historic North Market, Columbus's only public market, where you'll meet some of the vendors and learn the history of the building. You then stop at 6 establishments, sampling some of their signature dishes and hearing their stories. Stops will include some neighborhood favorites, some already highly regarded new additions, and some of the finest dining in the city. We will finish on a sweet note with a trip to the renowned Jeni's ice creams. You should have enough food along the way for lunch.
To see a video of the Short North Tour >>>>


Reason #9: Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams


Jeni's Roxbury Road

Stop by Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams this Hop and enjoy their menu of new fall flavors being release October 1st. Flavors like Pumkin, Apple Butter, and many more. Yum!


Reason #10:Breast Cancer Benefit Show

Rivet Breast Cancer Show

7pm - 10pm at Rivet Gallery

25% of all exhibition sales will be donated to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation to assist in their research into discovering cures for breast cancer.

This particular exhibition has a very personal connection to Laura, owner of Rivet Gallery, as she is a breast cancer survivor, being diagnosed less than a week after signing the lease for Rivet. In its own way, she'd like this exhibition to help in a small way to further fund the research that played such a role in her own treatment as it has in countless other lives.

If you have interest in any of the artwork or would like additional information, please contact Laura at 614-294-8697. rivetart.com


Parking Meter image
Parking 101

Tips on getting here and parking.There are more options than you think.