Avon-Avon Lake, OH|News|
Man Who Killed 2003 ALHS Grad Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison
The July 29 crash left two dead and two others injured.

I am the editor of Lakewood Patch and a local news enthusiast.
I joined Patch because the company is at the forefront of the future of journalism — and I am deeply committed to this changing media landscape. And, I love Lakewood.
I have delivered, printed, packed, stacked, written for, edited and, of course, read newspapers. My first reporting gig came in the fourth grade when Mrs. Williams ordered – since I talked so much — that I report news and weather to begin the class each day. No sweat.
So, the kid with soda-pop-bottle eyeglasses began his career, sharing the latest news and weather forecasts with a room full of confounded classmates.
Since then, I have worked in different media environments, and worn several different hats. I have picked up a camera; learned to handle video equipment and edited my own work. I have kept a blog. I have taped interviews and posted them to the Web. These are a few of the skills that I have acquired in an ever-changing media environment.
After stints in Chicago and Southern California, I returned to home to Northeast Ohio to attend the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Kent State University. I held a reporting internship at the Record Publishing Co. by day and worked in the Akron Beacon Journal production department by night, stacking newspapers.
I later worked as a reporter and wire editor at the Record-Courier and received several awards for news and sports reporting.
In my freelance work, most notably for hiVelocity, I have followed the changing economic landscape in Ohio. I have identified start-up bio-tech and biomedical companies as they sprout up around the fertile health-care industry, with area institutions of higher education propping them up. The state's economy is changing.
Not unlike my own industry.
I live in Lakewood with my wife, Kelly Flamos, and our children, Ruby and Clyde.
Kelly co-owns and operates Mahalls 20 Lanes with my brother-in-law, Joe Pavlick.
... In case you're curious, that will never affect my ability to report news professionally and fairly in this city that I love.
The July 29 crash left two dead and two others injured.

The July 29 crash left two dead and two others injured.
The district received notice that it could get funding approval in 2013, or 2014 at the latest.
The investigation that started in Lakewood ends with guilty pleas in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court.
The following arrest information was supplied by the Lakewood Police Department. It does not indicate a conviction.
More than 100 firefighters from several area fire departments will participate in the practice drills this week at McKinley Elementary.
Bill Hixson recently returned from his annual trip to Washington, D.C., where he’s gone for three decades, to help decorate the White House.
For the past three decades the owner of Hixson’s has helped to decorate the most famous home in the country. But he’s still waiting for his one-on-one with President Obama.
Mayor Michael Summers said state government has a “township versus city mentality,” and Lakewood’s not coming out on the winning end.
Gary Fix set to retire at the start of 2013 after 27 years with the bank.
While the official 2010 census count put the city at 52,131 residents, that figure dropped to 51,724 in 2011, the estimate says — a loss of 407 people in one year.
Building that houses The Exchange and the Root Café is set for some serious changes this spring.
The following arrest information was supplied by the Lakewood Police Department. It does not indicate a conviction.
The beloved musical set to run from Dec. 7 through Jan. 6 on the Mackey Stage.
The local bank presents a huge check to school officials at the boys basketball game on Friday.
Faulty HVAC fan may be the culprit in Friday’s evacuation of the middle school.
People now entering the court and the probation office, will now pass through a security screening that includes metal-detecting wands and an additional armed guard.
The following arrest information was supplied by the Lakewood Police Department. It does not indicate a conviction.
The city's commission must now vote on whether the property should receive the official designation, which may keep it from a wrecking ball.
Meanwhile, neighbors are proposing to make the 98-year-old house the city’s fourth-ever historic landmark.