Missing Nelsonville, Ernest Rollins, 45 white male, 5’ 10”, 250lbs, Bald, goatee, mustache red brown, call 7407531736 or 911

MISSING
ERNEST ROLLINS

Ernest Rollins

  • Age: 45, white male
  • Height: 5 foot 10 inches
  • Weight: 250 pounds
  • Hair: Bald with a reddish brown mustache and goatee
  • Description: Last seen wearing work clothes with a black shirt that has yellow reflective trim.
  • Last seen: Tuesday, 3/27 at 11 pm on Jackson Street in Nelsonville, Ohio.

If you have information that can assist in helping safely locate Ernest Rollins, please call 9-1-1 or contact the Nelsonville Police Department at 740-753-1736.

FLOOD WATCH IN EFFECT FOR ATHENS CO, 8AM, WED, 3/28/18 TO 2PM, FRI, 3/30/18, WATCH FOR CHANGING WEATHER

Flood Watch

The National Weather Service has issued a Flood Watch for Athens County from 8:00AM, Wednesday, 3/28/18 until 2:00PM, Friday, 3/30/18.

Excessive rainfall of up to 2.50 inches, with locally higher amounts possible through the watch period. With the ground being wet from previous rains and the expected rainfall, the potential for flooding of small streams and creeks and possibly river flooding is high.  Flooded roads, low lying and poor drainage areas, along streams, creeks and rivers, is possible.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS; A Flood Watch means there is a potential for flooding based on current forecasts.

You should monitor later forecasts and be alert for possible Flood Warnings. Those living in areas prone to flooding should be prepared to take action should flooding develop.

Nelsonville street paving and pothole repair will resume on Fri, 3/23/18, use caution and watch for stopped traffic

Nelso Pothole Repair

The City of Nelsonville announces that street paving and pothole repair will resume on the following streets in Nelsonville;

  • Friday, March 23 – Poplar Street, NO PARKING ON THE STREET
  • Monday, March 26 – East Canal Street near the Poplar Street intersection.
  • Monday, March 26 – Scott Street, NO PARKING ON THE STREET

Please use an alternate route and watch for stopped traffic!

THIS IS A TEST!! Join in the Statewide Tornado Drill, Consider what actions you would take if there was a tornado now!

Statewide Tornado Drill

This is the Ohio state-wide TORNADO DRILL!! Consider what actions you would need to take if there was a tornado now!

Whether practicing in a tornado drill or sheltering during a warning, you are encouraged to remember DUCK!

  • D – Go DOWN to the lowest level
  • U – Get UNDER something
  • C – COVER your head
  • K – KEEP in shelter until the storm has passed
  • Take responsibility for your safety and be prepared before a watch or warning is issued. Meet with household members to develop a disaster plan to respond to tornado watches and warnings. Conduct regular tornado drills. When a tornado watch is issued, review your plan – don’t wait for the watch to become a warning. Learn how to turn off the water, gas and electricity at the main switches.
  • Despite Doppler radar, tornadoes can sometimes occur without any warning, allowing very little time to act. It is important to know the basics of tornado safety. Know the difference between tornado watches and tornado warnings.
  • Tune in to one of the following for weather information: NOAA Weather Radio, local/cable television (Ohio News Network or the Weather Channel), or local radio station.
  • If you are a person with special needs, register your name and address with your local emergency management agency, police and fire departments before any natural or man-made disaster.
  • NOAA Weather Radio has available an alerting tool for people who are deaf or have hearing impairments. Some weather radio receivers can be connected to an existing home security system, much the same as a doorbell, smoke detector or other sensor. For additional information, click here.
  • The safest place to be during a tornado is a basement. If the building has no basement or cellar, go to a small room (a bathroom or closet) on the lowest level of the structure, away from windows and as close to the center of the building as possible.
  • Be aware of emergency shelter plans in stores, offices and schools. If no specific shelter has been identified, move to the building’s lowest level. Try to avoid areas with large glass windows, large rooms and wide-span roofs such as auditoriums, cafeterias, large hallways or shopping malls.
  • If you’re outside or in a mobile home, find shelter immediately by going to the lowest level of a nearby sturdy building. Sturdy buildings are the safest structures to be in when tornadoes threaten. Winds from tornadoes can blow large objects, including cars and mobile homes, hundreds of feet away.
  • If you cannot quickly get to a shelter, get into your vehicle, buckle your seatbelt and try to drive to the nearest sturdy shelter.
  • If you experience flying debris while driving, pull over and park. Choose to either stay in your vehicle, stay buckled up, duck down below the windows and cover your head with your hands, or find a depression or ditch, exit your vehicle and use your arms and hands to protect your head. Never seek shelter under highway overpasses and bridges.