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The Hilliard Beacon Podcast

Podcast door Franklin Street Creative

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Nieuws & Politiek

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As The Hilliard Beacon our only goal is to help keep you informed and develop a reliable source of steady information and reporting for you - our community. hilliardbeacon.substack.com

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141 afleveringen

aflevering HBAC 156: Hilliard Short Film Festival artwork

HBAC 156: Hilliard Short Film Festival

We were recently joined in studio by Austin Rutherford and Megan Miracle as they promoted Hilliard’s upcoming short film festival. Both Austin and Megan are former students in Hilliard and we’re very pleased to see them developing their passion into local opportunities for fellow creators. 0:00 - 17:34 Intro with the guys… 17:35 - 19:21 Meet Austin and Megan! 19:21 - 21:56 Origins and structure of the festival 21:56 - 24:24 AI and filmmaking 24:23 - 29:28 Record participation (100+ submissions) and FilmFreeway [https://filmfreeway.com/HilliardShortFilmFestival] 29:28 - 31:31 Establishing Hilliard’s film culture 31:31 - 35:04 Creative careers and entrepreneurship 35:04 - 40:01 Early mentorship and building a film ecosystem 40:01 - 42:15 Production and momentum 42:15 - 45:50 Future goals 45:50 - 48:45 Festival details and closing * Date: June 20 * Time: 5:00 PM * Location: Hilliard Civic & Cultural Arts Center * Final lineup: * 6 student films * 14 animated films * 10 open submission films The Hilliard Beacon is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe [https://hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

14 jun 2026 - 49 min
aflevering HBAC #155: The Coffee Connection w/ Nate Grenier artwork

HBAC #155: The Coffee Connection w/ Nate Grenier

It was a real treat to host old friend Nate Grenier for a chat about our shared history and the business he, his wife and family have grown in Hilliard. 0:00-5:30 - In the beginning...two ‘wild and crazy’ guys [https://coffeeconnectionhilliard.wordpress.com/2018/03/26/values-serve-your-city/]. 5:30-10:30 - Building a local coffee culture 10:30-16:30 - Family, marriage, and entrepreneurship 16:30-20:30 - Expansion and COVID’s hard lessons 20:30-23:30 - The economics of Main Street 23:30-25:00 - “It’s no Stonehenge…” 25:00-31:30 - Rent vs Ownership in small business survival 31:30-34:45 - Business incubators and community building 34:45-37:15 - ‘Small-Town’ identity under growth pressure and what it reveals 37:15-41:15 - Counseling, mental health, and coffee shop as touchstone 41:15-45:00 - Faith, diversity and the enduring value of ‘Main Street’ Thanks again to Nate for coming out! It only took us 3 years to get one of our oldest friends on the pod! The Hilliard Beacon is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe [https://hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

6 jun 2026 - 45 min
aflevering HBAC# 154: Public / Private Eyes are Watching You artwork

HBAC# 154: Public / Private Eyes are Watching You

Thanks for listening, everyone! In this episode: * We review our recent interview with Chief Woods. * We spend a good portion of the episode discussing expanding surveillance technology in Hilliard, including the prevalence of residential cameras and growing police use of Flock license plate reader systems [https://hilliardohio.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Policy-426-Automated-License-Plate-Reader-ALPR-1.pdf]. * The growing resistance to the data center buildout at local, state, national levels * Attention then turned to Hilliard City Council’s postponed vote on allowing Capital Church to operate out of the Makoy Center property. (Postponed 5/11 - Vote occuring 5/26 Tuesday) [https://hilliardohio.civicweb.net/Portal/MeetingInformation.aspx?Org=Cal&id=4701] * We discuss perceptions surrounding the vote. * Discussion broadened to overall religious growth in Hilliard. * Housing Study Open House coming 5/28 from 5-7 pm [https://hilliardohio.civicweb.net/Portal/MeetingInformation.aspx?Org=Cal&Id=4747]. * School construction and almost certain naming drama. * Corvo might re-start work on his 1967 Silver Bridge [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Bridge] project and related historical reporting! The Hilliard Beacon is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe [https://hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

25 mei 2026 - 41 min
aflevering HBAC #151: Hilliard Division of Police Chief Michael Woods artwork

HBAC #151: Hilliard Division of Police Chief Michael Woods

With the latest episode of the HBAC the guys welcome Hilliard Police Chief Michael Woods to the program for a focused conversation on our burgeoning suburb. Community Policing Woods described community policing as a core operational philosophy beginning at the hiring stage. Officers, he said, are expected to be visible and approachable whether that means walking neighborhood events, interacting with children at city celebrations, teaching self-defense classes or participating in programs like the Citizens Police Academy and Youth Safety Academy. The chief emphasized that officers are encouraged to build relationships before crises occur hoping residents view police as a resource rather than a distant enforcement mechanism. Growth in Population and the Staffing Challenge The conversation also explored the realities of policing a rapidly growing suburb. Woods explained that roughly two-thirds of Hilliard’s officers are assigned to patrol functions with specialized units focus on investigations, school resource operations, traffic safety and crime analysis. He discussed how the department uses a newer civilian intelligence analyst to identify crime patterns, analyze digital evidence and direct patrol resources toward emerging trouble spots such as vehicle break-ins and theft clusters. Chief Woods acknowledged ongoing concerns over reckless driving along Interstate 270 and major corridors throughout Hilliard and Norwich Township, noting that the department works jointly with the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, Ohio State Highway Patrol and neighboring jurisdictions on targeted enforcement operations. As Hilliard continues adding residents and commercial development, Woods said the department is always monitoring and revising staffing projections. A recent recurring analysis determined that four additional officers will likely be needed over the next two years to maintain service levels as areas like TruePointe continue building out for businesses and residents. Woods also detailed the department’s extensive vetting process for lateral hires, emphasizing that prior police experience does not exempt applicants from undergoing the same scrutiny and background review as new recruits. Technology Technology and transparency formed another major thread throughout. The chief discussed the city’s emerging drone first-responder program [https://hilliardohio.gov/collaborations-for-technology/], describing scenarios where aerial response can help locate missing individuals, assess highway crashes or direct medics to emergency scenes more quickly. He also addressed public concerns surrounding Flock license plate reader cameras, stressing that the system does not use facial recognition and that all searches are logged, audited and publicly reported [https://transparency.flocksafety.com/hilliard-oh-pd]. The interview concluded with discussion of the district’s threat assessment partnership with Hilliard City Schools. Woods described the initiative as an effort to identify students displaying troubling behavioral patterns and connect families with resources before situations escalate into violence. He framed the program as preventative rather than punitive, centered on intervention, counseling and coordination between schools, police and community support systems. Topics Discussed and approx. timestamps 00:00 – 02:00 Introduction of Chief Michael Woods and discussion of a past Hilliard infant death investigation handled by the department. 02:00 – 05:15 Community policing philosophy, officer visibility, Citizens Police Academy, Youth Safety Academy and public outreach programs. 05:15 – 06:40 Discussion of policing culture differences between Hilliard and larger cities like Baltimore. 06:40 – 10:55 Breakdown of department structure, patrol staffing, investigations, school resource officers and the civilian crime analyst role. 11:00 – 13:15 Traffic enforcement strategy, speeding concerns, drag racing complaints and regional coordination on Interstate 270. 13:15 – 16:20 Norwich Township policing contract, jurisdictional boundaries and patrol zone deployment. 16:20 – 19:35 Population growth, staffing studies, future hiring needs and development pressures on police services. 19:35 – 26:50 Lateral hiring, officer vetting, field training and maintaining departmental culture and standards. 26:50 – 30:30 School resource officers, post 2020 policing debates and the “Parks, Passes and Pools” summer initiative. 30:30 – 32:55 Drone first-responder program and examples of emergency deployment scenarios. 32:55 – 36:15 Flock license plate reader cameras, transparency reporting, privacy concerns and investigative uses. 36:15 – 37:30 Mayor’s Court operations and local traffic citation handling. 37:30 – 40:00 Threat assessment partnership with Hilliard City Schools aimed at identifying and assisting at-risk students before violence occurs. The Hilliard Beacon is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe [https://hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

13 mei 2026 - 41 min
aflevering HBAC #150: w/ Jake Trubiano of Gold Path Solar artwork

HBAC #150: w/ Jake Trubiano of Gold Path Solar

All jokes aside… * Milestone episode (No. 150) and recap of recent studio activity, including filming a documentary segment with Nicolette Jaworski on our Data Center reporting. Her team recently produced a documentary short on another Ohio story. * We then kick off the episode proper with the return of local super guest Jake Trubiano! Gold Path Solar [https://www.goldpathsolar.com/solar-spotlights/] * Performance and visibility impact of the Westwood Fieldhouse and Junction solar installations in Hilliard * Recognition as 2025-2026 Ohio Installer of the Year [https://www.energysage.com/supplier/27305/gold-path-solar/] and growth in residential solar business * Sharp shift in demand due to expiration of the 30% residential solar tax credit * Current installation volume, crew structure, and balancing residential vs. commercial workloads * Industry contraction, including major company failures, and resulting surge in his own brand’s service/repair work * Quality control issues in third-party installations (e.g., improper roof attachments/footers) * Internal business model: profit sharing, family and friends-based workforce, and how operational cohesion Conditions in the Wider Industry * Importance of early-stage design coordination to optimize solar placement in new construction. * Lack of “solar-ready” considerations in most residential builds despite low implementation cost. * Policy and market tensions: anti-renewable state politics vs. rising electricity prices driving demand. [https://www.eia.gov/electricity/monthly/update/end-use.php] * Tariffs, domestic manufacturing constraints, and disruption of solar supply chains post-Inflation Reduction Act. Fumbling the ball as China accelerates. * Future outlook: increased role of battery storage, grid age concerns, and status of net metering in Ohio. We thank Jake for stopping by and we thank you our listeners! The Hilliard Beacon is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe [https://hilliardbeacon.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

30 apr 2026 - 44 min
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