Facing the Mortgage Crisis: Northeast Ohio WVIZ
Videos concerning the housing crisis that Northeast Ohio faced in the early and middle 2000s
www.teachingcleveland.org
Facing the Mortgage Crisis: Northeast Ohio WVIZ
Videos concerning the housing crisis that Northeast Ohio faced in the early and middle 2000s
2012 Ohio School Report Cards – Searchable Database (Plain Dealer)
Written by Sally H. Wertheim
HIGHER EDUCATION. The origins of the institutions of higher education in Cleveland can be traced in many respects to the needs and belief systems of their early founders, often reflecting the larger society. Developments in American higher education were closely related to major events in the nation’s social and political history, worldwide intellectual and technical revolution, rising egalitarianism, and population growth. The pre-Civil War years were emphatically the age of the college, and witnessed the proliferation of colleges on both the national and local levels. Most of these were originally religiously affiliated and privately sponsored. The period after 1865 was dominated by the rise of the university based on the German system, which stressed publication, research, and graduate study.
Early Cleveland colleges were founded by prominent community and church leaders to provide a trained ministry to transmit the values of the society. Western Reserve College, largely a Presbyterian endeavor, chose Hudson as its first site in 1826, later moving to Cleveland in 1882. In 1851 several Baptist ministers helped found CLEVELAND UNIVERSITY, which had a brief life until it closed in 1853. In the 1850s, Western College of Homeopathic Medicine opened, which lasted several decades. Dyke School of Commerce, a proprietary school, was established in the early 1850s to serve the growing needs of the mercantile community, teaching practical courses for office workers, such as bookkeeping. It merged and became Dyke & Spencerian College in 1942, and then developed into DYKE COLLEGE, a nonprofit educational institution granting 2- and 4-year business degrees.
As Cleveland grew and became industrialized, its educational needs expanded. In 1880 Case School of Applied Science was founded, and 2 years later Western Reserve College moved from Hudson to Cleveland. Case offered an engineering curriculum, the first west of the Alleghenies, and was characterized by linear growth in applied science and engineering until 1947. From 1947-67 it experienced a transition to Case Institute of Technology and became nationally recognized. Thereafter, it struggled to retain its identity, and by 1973 enjoyed a renaissance and reassertion of its position as a technical institute as part of CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY., which had resulted from a federation with Western Reserve Univ. in 1967.
Western Reserve College, with the assistance of a $500,000 donation from AMASA STONE, moved from Hudson to Cleveland in 1882, after having experienced great financial difficulty, often unable to pay its president, and losing many students and faculty during the Civil War. Stone controlled the Board of Trustees; stipulated that the college be named for his son, Adelbert; and mandated that the college and Case School be located in close proximity on a site about 5 mi. east of downtown Cleveland. Many wanted Adelbert to admit only, men, even though Western Reserve College had admitted women. So in 1888, a separate women’s college was established across the street, which became known as Flora Stone Mather College. By the end of the 19th century, WRU added graduate, law, nursing, and dental schools, a school of library science, and a school of applied social science, reflecting the German model of higher education with its graduate programs.
In 1846 METHODISTS founded Baldwin Institute in Berea. In 1864 German Methodists separated the German department from Baldwin, establishing German Wallace College. BALDWIN-WALLACE COLLEGE, still affiliated with the Methodist church, resulted from a merger of these two institutions in 1913. Following World War II, Baldwin-Wallace broadened its traditional liberal-arts curriculum to include business and evening programs.
Most of the private colleges continued their Protestant church affiliation and orientation toward middle-class and upper-middle-class values. Though WRU discontinued formal affiliation with any denomination after the move to Cleveland, most of its presidents were Protestant clergymen. These orientations did not meet the needs of an emerging economically successful Catholic population, which began establishing its own colleges. St. Ignatius College was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1886; it was renamed JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY in 1923 after the first archbishop of the Catholic church in the U.S. In 1935 it moved from its original location on Cleveland’s west side to its current location in UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, adding business courses, a graduate school, and an evening program in the 1950s. In 1968 the university moved from full-time male enrollment to a coeducational institution.
The history of URSULINE COLLEGE parallels that of the URSULINE SISTERS OF CLEVELAND who came to Cleveland in 1850 from France to establish the first religious teaching community in Cleveland. In 1871 Ursuline nuns founded the first chartered women’s college in Ohio in a large house on EUCLID AVE.., moving to an Overlook Rd. campus from 1922-66, and then to PEPPER PIKE. The SISTERS OF NOTRE DAME first established an academy in downtown Cleveland in the 1870s. Then in 1922 they founded a liberal-arts college for women, currently (1996) located in S. EUCLID, which reflects the mission of the order’s founder, Sr. Julie Billiart, the 18th-century pioneer in women’s education.
Another group that did not fit the traditional college-student mold was the part-time student. To meet their needs, the YMCA offered evening classes in downtown Cleveland in a variety of subjects, such as art, bookkeeping, and French, as early as the 1880s. By the beginning of the century, daytime classes were added. Enrollments increased and degree, programs were developed in engineering and business by 1923. There was also a 2-year Vocational Jr. College program, with a unique cooperative plan in which students worked half a term, then attended classes. Later, in 1929, the college was named Fenn College after a benefactor, SERENO P. FENN. NEWTON D. BAKER, former Cleveland mayor and university trustee, helped WRU establish Cleveland College to serve the adult learner in the 1920s, in which classes were held in different parts of the community. It eventually moved downtown to PUBLIC SQUARE, moving in the early 1950s to Western Reserve campus, where it was eventually absorbed by the university.
Higher education continued reflecting the milieu in which it found itself. As the Depression, followed by World War II, beset Cleveland, the colleges experienced some retrenchment and little growth. The applicant pool began changing, reflecting the World War II veterans who had discontinued or interrupted their college years and could now take advantage of the G.I. Bill of 1944; while many students from working-class families were beginning to see the value of a college education. There was also an anticipated growth in the college-age population resulting from the postwar baby boom, with this group increasing from 4% in 1900 to 40% in 1964. At this time the Cleveland area did not have any publicly supported colleges, and it appeared that the private colleges would be unable to absorb the anticipated increase in potential students. Private colleges seemed to make little effort to accommodate students with special needs: the married, part-time, or commuter students, and those with diverse social or racial backgrounds. Cleveland’s strong Democratic political tradition, different from the downstate Republican orientation, seemed to stand in the way of establishing a public (state) college system. Ohio State Univ. dominated the public university scene, and Clevelanders had not demonstrated much interest in public higher education.
By the late 1950s, the community-college concept had still not been adopted in Ohio. Early efforts to establish public institutions of higher education in Cleveland emanated from the work of the Ohio Commission on Education beyond the High School in 1958. It issued a report, “Ohio’s Future in Education beyond High School,” recommending that the general assembly enact permissive legislation so that 2-year colleges or technical institutes financed by state and local funds and by student fees could be founded, and that these types of programs be established in Cleveland as soon as possible. Funds were available by 1960. In 1959 Gov. Michael DiSalle held a State House Conference on Education, from which came relatively strong support for the comprehensive community college as a viable alternative for new efforts in higher education in the 1960s. Despite strong support, there was much difference of opinion about the type and organization of public higher, education in Ohio.
Meanwhile, as early as 1952 the CLEVELAND FOUNDATION supported the CLEVELAND COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION, a coalition of local colleges which coordinated planning among the member colleges. In 1952 the commission issued a study, “These Will Go to College,” which predicted a rise in the college population and found a sharp distinction among various socioeconomic groups attending college in the Cleveland area. At this time there were only 2 low-cost public universities in the area (at Kent and Akron), and they were 30-40 mi. from downtown Cleveland. The private colleges seemed to have fixed abilities to expand, whereas the population was expected to increase 3-fold. A later commission report (1955) noted that general education and vocational education should be offered in 2-year institutions, also suggesting that less able students attend those institutions where programs would be more appropriate to them, thus preserving the elitism of the private institutions.
By 1959 the commission issued another report, “The Future of Higher Education in Cleveland,” advocating more opportunities for part-time and adult students, with an emphasis on community-service courses, conferences, and specialized courses. It did not take into account potential black and women students, predicting that these groups would not increase materially. The report also described a very active role for the commission in creating a community college. Two years later, Ohio passed enabling legislation permitting counties to create a community college district, and in 1963 the state legislature provided state financial support for community colleges. CUYAHOGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE was founded in 1963. Its first home was at Brownell School, a 19th-century building leased from the Cleveland Board of Education. Later it moved to its own downtown campus and established both an eastern campus in WARRENSVILLE TWP.. and a western campus in PARMA, making it the largest college in Cleveland.
The expanding college population during the late 1950s and early 1960s led the Cleveland Commission on Higher Education to recommend creation of public 4-year higher education. Kent State and Ohio Universities were offering classes at 2 local public high schools, clearly documenting the need for a 4-year state university in Cleveland. CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY was established in 1964. In 1965 the trustees of CSU and of FENN COLLEGE formulated a contract to utilize Fenn as the nucleus of the new university. Fenn gave CSU its land and buildings and transferred its faculty and staff in 1965. This new downtown university mainly served a commuter population. In 1986 its colleges included Graduate Urban Affairs, Arts & Sciences, Business Admin., Engineering, and Education. The Cleveland Marshall School of Law (est. 1897) merged with CSU in 1969 to become the, CSU College of Law (see CLEVELAND-MARSHALL LAW SCHOOL).
During the 1970s the higher-education community continued responding to the demands of a growing population by building and adding programs. Some of the expansion, such as a series of dormitories constructed at CWRU in the 1960s, proved a liability as the college-age population shrank in the late 1970s. As local colleges and universities move into the 1990s and beyond, their thrust will once again need to be evaluated and changed because of the diminution of the potential pool of candidates. In the 1990s, colleges continued targeting non-traditional-age students, including housewives and working men and women. With the era of rapid growth behind them, it was hoped that they might be better able to address the issue of quality curriculum offerings to meet the education needs of their many constituencies.
Sally H. Wertheim
John Carroll Univ.
Last Modified: 12 May 1998 04:01:25 PM
Cleveland University from the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History.
CLEVELAND UNIVERSITY became the city’s first institution of higher learning in a brief career lasting from 1851-53. It was chartered by the Ohio general assembly on 5 Mar. 1851, and its trustees included AHAZ MERCHANT, SAMUEL STARKWEATHER;, and RICHARD HILLIARD. For president, they tapped the recently resigned head of Oberlin Institute, Asa Mahan, who brought most of the new university’s first students from Oberlin with him. Classes began in the Mechanics’ Block on Ontario Street, but the school’s future was closely bound to a proposed campus planned for an area on the west side, hopefully named University Heights. Most of the trustees appeared to be speculating in property in the neighborhood, later known as TREMONT. They set aside a 275-acre parcel for the university, part for the campus and part to raise an endowment fund. Streets in the area were endowed with such academic names as College, Literary, Professor, and Jefferson, and a 3-story building was raised among them for the future home of Cleveland University.
Philosophically, Mahan charted the university along a progressive, non-sectarian course. Citing the examples of Brown and Rochester University, he advocated a practical as opposed to classical course of study. Included in the ultimate plans of Mahan and the trustees was a visionary complex encompassing not only a national university of European scope, but an orphan asylum, old-age retreat, and female seminary as well. After a full year of operation, culminating with the awarding of 8 degrees in June 1852, Cleveland University declined rapidly the following fall. Mahan resigned as president on 13 December, possibly because of a clash of personalities with some of the trustees. One of the school’s chief benefactors, Thirza Pelton, died shortly thereafter on 19 February 1853. Although the Board of Trustees was reorganized that year, the university apparently was liquidated by the end of the academic year. From 1859-68, the Cleveland University building was occupied by the HUMISTON INSTITUTE, a college preparatory school operated by Ransom F. Humiston.
Holtz, Maude E. “Cleveland University: A Forgotten Chapter in Cleveland’s History” (Masters thesis, Western Reserve Univ., 1934).
From Cleveland Memory/CSU Special Collections
Elizabeth Sullivan, who received a BA and MA in Russian and East European Studies from Yale University, started at The Plain Dealer in 1979 as a business reporter. She served in a variety of local and overseas reporting capacities, with one earlier stint as an editorial writer, before rejoining the editorial board in 2003 as an associate editor and foreign affairs columnist. In 2009, Sullivan was named editor of the editorial pages. Additionally, Sullivan writes many of the newspaper’s editorials on energy, international and national security topics.
Steven Litt, a native of New York, has been the art and architecture critic of The Plain Dealer in Cleveland since 1991. He lives in Shaker Heights with his family.
Brent Larkin joined The Plain Dealer in 1981 and in 1991 became the director of the newspaper’s opinion pages. In October 2002 Larkin was inducted into The Cleveland Press Club’s Hall of Fame. Larkin retired from The Plain Dealer in May of 2009, but still writes a weekly column for the newspaper’s Sunday Forum section.
Transportation in Greater Cleveland by James A. Toman
James A. Toman has authored or co-authored 18 books on various Cleveland topics, particularly those relating to the downtown district and to public transportation. An inveterate collector of Cleveland streetcar photographs, he has also photographed most of the streetcar, light rail, and subways systems in North America. He holds a doctorate in education/clinical counseling, and retired in 2006 after 43 years in the teaching field.. His last educational post was as dean of the Social Sciences/Human Services Division at Lorain County Community College.
Overview on Transportation from Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
The link is here
Cleveland Connects: Transforming Cleveland Schools: Video(Ideastream)
How Did Cleveland Restaurant Scene Get so Awesome? Lessons for Buffalo (Buffalo News)
Ohio’s Proposed Tax Changes Could Mean Higher Tax Bills For Some(Plain Dealer)
Expert: Lake Erie Better But Still at Risk (Columbus Dispatch)
Big Data is Starting to Bring Big Jobs to Greater Cleveland (Plain Dealer)
Region Needs Growth Plan and This is Crucial Year: Steven Litt (Plain Dealer)
Exploring the Themes of Kasich’s Budget: Editorial (Plain Dealer)
What Role Did Supervisors Play in Controlling November Car Chase(Plain Dealer)
Ohio Ranks Poorly on Election Performance (Patch.com)
What is the Cleveland Plan and Why Would I Want One? (State Impact)
Cleveland Needs a New Police Chief and a New Safety Director Now: Phillip Morris (Plain Dealer)
Exclusive: How Ohio’s Republican Governor Sold the State on Expanding Medicaid (Washington Post)
Home Prices Gain in Dayton’s Hardest Hit Communities (Dayton Daily News)
West Side Market’s History of Closings and Fires (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Sales Tax Changes: What Gov. Kasich’s Proposal Means to You(Plain Dealer)
Air Force Outlines Sequester Cuts (Dayton Daily News)
Names of Black Civil War Veterans to be Added to the Soliders and Sailors Monument in Cleveland (Plain Dealer)
How Ohio’s School Funding Plan Could Affect Your School District (Plain Dealer)
Governor Recommends Cleveland Regain Control of Cleveland Lakefront State Park (Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Mayor Responds to State’s Findings in Deadly Chase (WKYC)
New Sales Taxes to Hit Many (Dayton Daily News)
Lake Huron and Michigan Record Lowest Water Levels Ever; Lake Erie Well Below Average (Associated Press)
In Cleveland, Bringing Back Baseball History and a Neighborhood (New York Times)
Columbus Commuters Top State in Time Stuck in Traffic (Columbus Dispatch)
Gov. Kasich Budget Overhauls Education Funding (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Ohio State Students Develop Alternative to Facebook With More Privacy (Columbus Dispatch)
Proposed Budget Would Shift Tax Burden By Expanding Base (Columbus Dispatch)
The Politics of Gov. John Kasich Budget: Analysis (Plain Dealer)
Gov. Kasich Announces Two-Year $63.7 Billion Budget (Toledo Blade)
Ohio to Expand Medicaid, Despite Gov. John Kasich’s Opposition to Obamacare (Plain Dealer)
Kasich Proposes Cutting Ohio’s Sales Tax, Expand Medicaid (Dayton Daily News)
Cities’ Hearts Beating Strong in Ohio’s Three C’s (Columbus Dispatch)
Tom Mulready of Cool Cleveland Thinks Our Town is Hot: My Cleveland (Plain Dealer)
What to do With City’s Abandoned Houses? (Plain Dealer)
Farmers in Ohio Divided on Fracking (Columbus Dispatch)
Turnpike Toll Proposal Robs Future Generations of Funds: Angie Schmitt (Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Pipe Organ Manufacturer in its 110th Year as Maker of Music for Nation’s Churches (Newsnet5)
Cleveland Has $50.5 Million Budget Surplus in 2013 (Plain Dealer)
Transformer Station Launches in Ohio City (Cool Cleveland)
Gov Kasich’s School Plan Would Dramatically Overhaul Ohio’s Funding Formula (Plain Dealer)
Exclusive: Should Ohio Expand Medicaid? (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Report: Ohio Poverty Increasing (Akron Beacon Journal)
Sustainable Cleveland 2019 to Focus on Advanced and Renewable Energy This Year (Plain Dealer)
Manufacturing Surge Powers Ohio Rebound (Dayton Daily News)
Deep Spending Cuts are Likely, Lawmakers Say, With No Deal on Sequester in Sight (Washington Post)
Secretary of State Husted and Other Republicans Say Electoral College Changes Not in Store in Ohio (Plain Dealer)
Transformer Station is Set to Transform Cleveland’s Art Scene (Plain Dealer)
Stuck in Reverse, Detroit Edges Closer to Bankruptcy (Reuters)
Anti-Smoking Marketing Works, But Ohio Spends Almost Nothing On It(Plain Dealer)
Lake Erie Off to Another Slow Start for Ice Cover (Plain Dealer)
Ohio State to Save $1 Million a Year by Buying Wind Power (Columbus Dispatch)
Cuyahoga County Still Paying Off Gateway Bonds (Plain Dealer)
Virginia Bill on Electoral College Change Appears Headed for Defeat(Washington Post)
Republicans Hit Obstacles in Altering Electoral College (Los Angeles Times)
Pieces Are Starting to Move Into Place for 2014 Ohio Governor’s Race: Joe Hallett (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio State Tests Slated to Get Much Harder in Two Years (Plain Dealer)
Google Fiber Provides Faster Internet and, Cities Hope, Business Growth(Washington Post)
Road Priorities Uncertain Pending Deal for Ohio Turnpike (Mansfield News Journal)
Hope For Redistricting Reform in Ohio: Dan Moulthrop (Huffington Post)
Courdray Pick May Affect Ohio Governor’s Race in 2014 (Columbus Dispatch)
Cleveland Outpaces Nation Drawing Venture Capital to its Tech Scene(Plain Dealer)
2013 Great Ohioans of All Time Chosen by Statehouse Review Board(Ohio Statehouse)
Ohio Waste-Handling Infrastucture is Being Overwhelmed by Marcellus Shale Wastewater (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
Pittsburgh’s Three Rivers, Now a Public Attraction (New York Times)
Northeast Ohio House Sales Rose 13.4% in 2012. Condo Sales Jumped(Plain Dealer)
Ohio Labor Pool Continues to Shrink (Dayton Daily News)
Owner May Close Former Huntington Building if County Locates HQ Elsewhere (Crain’s Cleveland Business)
Cleveland’s Urban Scene Gets a Boost From Young Adults Moving In(Plain Dealer)
Teachers Could Be Next to Retire En Masse (Columbus Dispatch)
Opposing Views on Obama and Future of Country Split Ohio Community(Washington Post)
Shaker LaunchHouse Director Reflects on Big Year (Shaker Patch)
Priest Shortage Pressing Ohio Catholics (Dayton Daily News)
Universities Face Drop in Future Enrollees (Akron Beacon Journal)
Cleveland Orchestra Attendance Surging Thanks to Programs Aimed at Children, Students (Plain Dealer)
“Captain America” Sequel Slated For Early Summer Shoot in Cleveland(Plain Dealer)
Redistricting Tops Husted’s Agenda (Cincinnati Enquirer)
FirstEnergy Sponsorship Deal With Browns Worth $102 Million Over 17 Years (Akron Beacon Journal)
Flats Based Fishmongers Look to Lake Erie to Boost Local Food Production (Fresh Water)
Cleveland’s RTA to Unveil Nonpolluting Hydrogen-Fueled Bus (Plain Dealer)
Ohio May See $1.4 Billion Gain By Expanding Medicaid Coverage (Toledo Blade)
Cleveland State University Expected to Reduce Number of Credit Hours Needed to Graduate (Plain Dealer)
FirstEnergy Buys Cleveland Browns Stadium Naming Rights (Akron Beacon Journal)
Free Online Classes Have Area Colleges Determining the Best Way to Proceed (Crain’s Cleveland Business)
Cleveland Institute of Art Will Sell Its East Blvd Site to Cleveland Museum of Art and CWRU (Plain Dealer)
Ohio State to Require Sophomores to Live On Campus Starting in 2016(Dayton Daily News)
200th Horizontal Well Drilled in Ohio’s Utica Shale Play (Youngstown Business Journal)
New Water Lows for Great Lakes Could Drain Local Economies (CNN)
Cuyahoga County Council President Questions Executive’s Right to Fire Sheriff (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Drillers Gird for Fight with Kasich (Youngstown Vindicator)
Right-to-Work: Issue is a Poltical Hot Potato (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Unemployment Rates Falls in All Ohio Metro Areas (Plain Dealer)
Cashing in Assets or Selling City’s Jewels? (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Cleveland Museum of Art to Launch Interactive Center, iPad Custom Tours (Plain Dealer)
Merger Study to Involve Four Communities: Moreland Hills, Pepper Pike, Orange and Woodmere (Sun News)
Honda to Assemble 2014 Accord Hybrid in Ohio (New York Times)
Americans Under 50 Fare Poorly on Health Measures, New Report Says(New York Times)
Cuyahoga County Chief Fitzgerald Seems Ready to Run for Governor(Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Republicans Voted More Heavily Than Dems in 2012 Early Voting(Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Voters Cast Record Number of Absentee Ballots in November 2012 Election (Associated Press)
Colleges Lose Pricing Power (Wall Street Journal)
Cleveland Healthcare Industry the Darling of Venture Capitalists in 2012(Plain Dealer)
Ideas to Reinvent Detroit (Detroit Fr. Press)
Strickland Won’t Run for Governor in 2014 (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Graduation Test Will Be Replaced After 2013-2014 School Year(Plain Dealer)
Ohio’s High-Risk Legislative To-Do List: Editorial (Plain Dealer)
Nearly Half-Million Ohio Kids Likely to Fall From “Proficient” Under New Standards (Akron Beacon Journal)
Second Inner Belt Bridge, Estimated at $330 Million, Drawing Contactors’ Interest (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Third Graders Face Ultimatum: Learn to Read or Repeat the Year (PBS)
Toledo Turbines’ Future Pondered (Toledo Blade)
Time For a Change in Ohio’s Public Education Funding: Mica Caine(Huffington Post)
Never-Seen Cleveland Police Pursuit Video (WKYC)
A Shocking and Shameful Lack of Imagination: Why Don’t More Companies Emulate Lincoln Electric? (The Motley Fool)
Kent State Bowl Appearance Looks to be a Sellout (Akron Beacon Journal)
Keeping Cleveland Classical (Waco Tribune)
2012 was the Warmest Year on Record in Cleveland (Plain Dealer)
Ohio College Grads Make $20K More Than High School Grads (Dayton Business Journal)
Ohio House Delagation Backs “Fiscal-Cliff” Deal; See How They Voted (Akron Beacon Journal)
Utica Shale Development Continues Slow, Steady Progress in Ohio (Akron Beacon Journal)
Drilling Industry Wants to Use Barges to Remove Wastewater (Akron Beacon Journal)
Retired Celeste Reflects at 75 on His Public Career (Columbus Dispatch)
Budget, School Funding, Taxes Major Issues Facing Ohio Leaders in 2013 (Dayton Daily News)
Cleveland’s Population Loss Means 2 More City Council Seats Eliminated Next Year (Plain Dealer)
Record Levels of Plastic Pollution Found in Lake Erie (Plain Dealer)
University Circle’s Uptown Development Offers Lessons For Budding Upper Chester Project (Plain Dealer)
Government Keeping More Secrets in Ohio (Chillicothe Gazette)
Faced With Tight Budgets, More Ohio Schools Consider Open Enrollment(StateImpact Ohio)
East Cleveland to Cut 20% of Police Force (Fox 8)
Port of Cleveland Expects New Rail Link to Boost Traffic (Plain Dealer)
As Swing Districts Dwindle, Can a Divided House Stand: Nate Silver(New York Times)
Cleveland Club Connects Students to City (Beachwood Beachcomber)
New Ohio Drivers License Will Cost More, Take Longer to Get (Dayton Daily News)
JobsOhio Claims the Buckeye State Nearly Tops For New Jobs: PolitiFact Ohio (Plain Dealer)
Part-Visionary, Part-Realist, All In: Joe Frolik (Plain Dealer)
Approaching Illness as a Team at the Cleveland Clinic (New York Times)
Toledo Public Schools Adopts New Curriculum Model (Toledo Blade)
NHL Lockout Has Tax Cost (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Schools Budget Squeeze Means Fewer Teachers (Dayton Daily News)
Does Ohio Still Have Clout on Capitol Hill? (Dayton Daily News)
FBI Agent Oliver Leaves Cleveland After Co-leading Five-Year Cuyahoga County Corruption Case (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Population Still Lagging (Akron Beacon Journal)
Ohio Unemployment Rate Drops for Third-Straight Month (Dayton Daily News)
Right-to-Work Would Face Public Fight in Ohio, Unlike Michigan (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Shale Gas Development Supports 39,000 Jobs According to Industry Study (Plain Dealer)
Uptown Project in University Circle Starts Second Phase in January(Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Clinic Diagnoses Healthcare Act (Wall Street Journal)
Lakes Erie, Ontario Most Threatened (Detroit Fr Press)
Cincinnati Airport Trying to Rebuild After Drastic Reduction in Flights(NewsNet 5)
Cleveland Metro School District to Seek New Headquarters (Crain’s Cleveland Business)
Electoral College is Unpopular, Yet Lives On (Columbus Dispatch)
Trayless Cafeterias at Bowling Green State Univ. Cut Waste (Toledo Blade)
More Seniors Trapped in Children’s Student Debt (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Lawmakers and Elections Officials Must Get Started on Voting Reforms: Mark Naymik (Plain Dealer)
Gov. Kasich’s Turnpike Plan is Chuck-Wagon Politicking at its Best: Tom Suddes (Plain Dealer)
Road Legislation Won’t Be Quick (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Senate Votes 32-1 to Change Redistricting Process (Akron Beacon Journal)
Legal Challenges Could Put a Lid on the Shale Gas Boom in Ohio (Plain Dealer)
Detroit Faces Fresh Fight For Control (Wall Street Journal)
Green City Growers to Plant First Winter Crop in Large Cleveland Greenhouse (Plain Dealer)
Ohio ACLU Calls for Special Prosecutor and New Investigators into Fatal Cleveland Shooting (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Lost More Residents Than it Gained Last Year (Akron Beacon Journal)
Ohio Governor Releases Road Plan Funded by Turnpike Bonds(Reuters)
LEEDCo Awarded $4 Million to Launch Offshore Wind Development on Lake Erie (Plain Dealer)
Samuel Gompers Debates With Newton D. Baker about “Right-To-Work” Laws in 1922 (Google Books)
New Plan Surfaces to Redraw Districts (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Turnpike to Stay Public (Columbus Dispatch)
Poll: Ohioans Support System of Selecting Justices (Columbus Dispatch)
Geis Cos. Plan for New Cuyahoga Cty Offices Could Revive Troubled Downtown Intersection (Plain Dealer)
Michigan Votes to Restrict Union Rights (Reuters)
Gov. Kasich Set to Suggest Changes For Turnpike (Toledo Blade)
Ohio’s Health Ranking Remains Poor as State Battles Smoking, Obesity(Plain Dealer)
Why Rivers No Longer Burn (Slate)
Golf Courses Fade Away in Rough Conditions (Crain’s Cleveland Business)
Cleveland Schools to Auction It’s Headquarters (Crain’s Cleveland Business)
Lack of Reading Skills “Alarming” (Columbus Dispatch)
Revamped Crawford Auto Collection to Open Next Yeat at Revived Historical Society (Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Grants Historic Capital Theater 5 Extra Years to Pay Off Loan(Plain Dealer)
Kasich Turning From Tax Credits (Columbus Dispatch)
Readying a 2016 Convention Bid: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Police Shooting Leaves More Questions Than Bullets (Plain Dealer)
Northeast Ohio Named a Tech Hotspot for High-Tech Job Growth (Plain Dealer)
Cuyahoga County to Sell Ameritrust Buildings to Unnamed Buyer (Plain Dealer)
$1 Billion Ohio Natural Gas Processing Plant to Open in May, Encouraging More Drilling (Plain Dealer)
Michigan Oks Right-to-Work Law Amid Angry Protests (USA Today)
Cleveland Clinic CEO Shares His Vision For the Future of Healthcare(Business Insider)
Detroit Faces Threat of State-Appointed Emergency Financial Manager(New York Times)
Honda to Export More Cas from N. America Than it Imports Within Two Years (Plain Dealer)
Paper Carriers Concerned About Plain Dealer Future (WKYC)
Cuyahoga County Considers Consumer Affairs Department (Plain Dealer)
Program to Help Ohio Schools Teach Historic Texts (Akron Beacon Journal/Associated Press)
Cleveland Plain Dealer Tells Guild it Plans to Cut About One-Third of Newsroom Staff (Poynter)
American Cities Fighting to Keep Millennials From Moving to Suburbs(USA Today)
Ohio City Residents Fight to Keep McDonald’s Franchise Out (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Shale Drilling Slows (Columbus Dispatch)
Cleveland Plain Dealer Workers Fight Layoffs and Loss of Daily Paper(New York Times)
How Will Kasich Play the Turnpike? – Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Gets Another High-Speed Broadband Alternative (Plain Dealer)
What’s Next For Ohio Redistricting? (Akron Legal News)
Ohio House OKs Plan to Give Letter Grades to Schools (Akron Beacon Journal)
Cuyahoga County Wants to Set Up College Savings Accounts For All Kindergartners (Plain Dealer)
Cleveland Plain Dealer Mulls Layoffs, Restructuring (USA Today)
Inside the Talks: Fiscal Framework Emerges (Politico)
Rep. Marcy Kaptur Optimistic That She’ll Win Top Appropriations Job (Plain Dealer)
Part-Time “Road Scholars” Teaching More Classes at Ohio Universities (Akron Beacon Journal)
Ohio Grad Rates Show Racial Disparity (Columbus Dispatch)
As Great Lakes Plummet, Towns Try to Save Harbors (Associated Press)
Ohio Supreme Court Upholds Legislative Maps (Columbus Dispatch)
Split Ohio Supreme Court Says Redistricting Map is Constitutional (Plain Dealer)
Is There Enough Water for “Fracking” Boom? (Columbus Dispatch)
Expanded Medicaid Could Cost State $3.1 Billion (Dayton Daily News)
What’s the Real Cause of Looming Physician Shortage? (Cincinnati Business Courier)
Many Ohio Third-Graders in Danger of Failing (Bucyrus Telegraph Forum)
4 Decades Later, Kent State Turns a Page (Wall Street Journal)
Algae, Invaders Threaten Lake Erie (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio Launches Website to Ease College Planning (Chillicothe Gazette)
Electing Black Statewide Officeholders Remains an Elusive Challenge (Plain Dealer)
iPad Thefts Challenge School District: Sharon Broussard (Plain Dealer)
College Readiness Exam Replacing Ohio Graduation Test (Toledo Blade)
Property Owners Want Out of Dublin (Columbus Dispatch)
Health Insurance Costs Rising, with Cleveland-Area Employees Paying More (Plain Dealer)
World’s First “Biocellar” to be Built in Cleveland’s Hough Neighborhood (Plain Dealer)
One in 9 Ohio Teens Smokes, Survey Finds (Fremont News-Messenger)
October Home Sales Climb in NE Ohio, Statewide vs. Year Ago (Crain’s Clevelands Business)
Team NEO Predicts Strong Job Growth in NE Ohio by 2020 (Plain Dealer)
Dissecting Ohio Dialects (Columbus Dispatch)
Cleveland Metroparks Close to Lakefront Takeover (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Won’t Set Up State Health-Care Exchange (Akron Beacon Journal)
Ohio, Wisconsin Say They Will Not Run Their Own Health Exchanges (Reuters)
Ohio University Nears “Fiscal Cliff” of its Own (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohio a Battlegound State for Lincoln, too (Washington Post)
Ohio Unemployment Rate Drops Again, Below U.S. Rate (Akron Beacon Journal)
Gap Between Rich and Poor Ohioans Widens (Dayton Daily News)
Northeast Ohio Losing Three Key Voices on Capital Hill (Plain Dealer)
Charter Schools Attracting Larger Share of Students in Cleveland (Plain Dealer)
Bar Association Urges Commission to Take Up Redistricting Reform (Plain Dealer)
Shale Gas Fueling an American Industrial Revival (Washington Post)
Once a Point of Civic Pride, the Stadium Could End Up Being Another Mistake on the Lake (Cleveland Scene)
Chesapeake Sees Dimming Oil Prospects in Ohio (Wall Street Journal)
Judging Judges in Ohio: Jill Miller Zimon (Civic Commons)
Clock Ticking on Ohio Health Care Decision (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Process of Drawing Legislative and Congressional Maps May Change (Columbus Dispatch)
Ohioans’ Food Stamp Aid to Be Cut (Toledo Blade)
Chin Refugees Nestle in Columbus Area (Columbus Dispatch)
Cuyahoga County Precinct Map Shows Areas Where Obama Beat Romney Unanimously (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Voters Place Practicality Over Ideology Every Time: Tom Suddes (Columbus Dispatch)
Now 10 Years Old, the Peter B. Lewis Building is Quietly Transforming Business Education at CWRU (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Polls Need Short Answer to Long Lines (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Plain Dealer Staff Launches Campaign to Save the Daily Paper (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Supreme Court Candidate Who Shunned Donations Ends Up Victorious (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Iffy on Health-Insurance Exchange (Columbus Dispatch)
University of Akron President Says High Tuition Rates No Longer Can Be Justified (Akron Beacon Journal)
Cleveland Schools Restore Programs After Levy Wins (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Supreme Court Races Historic (Toledo Blade)
Library Issues Favorable With Taxpayers Statewide (Dayton Daily News)
Summit County No Longer Has Representative in Congress (Akron Beacon Journal)
Port Authority Issue Failed Heartily With Most Votes Counted (Plain Dealer)
It Really Did Come Down to Ohio (Cincinnati Enquirer)
President Obama Wins Second Term, Wins Ohio (Plain Dealer)
Sherrod Brown Wins Re-Election to U.S. Senate (Columbus Dispatch)
Cleveland Schools Tax Passing By a Wide Margin (Plain Dealer)
Two Statewide Issues Soundly Defeated (Toledo Blade)
Few US House Races in Ohio Truly Competitive (San Francisco Chronicle/Associated Press)
5 Maps to Election Victory in Ohio (Plain Dealer)
Ohio Law Could Bring Long Delays in a Recount (New York Times)
Ohio’s Complicated Process for Counting Provisional Ballots Could Decide the Presidency (Plain Dealer)
All Eyes on Ohio on Eve of Election (Los Angeles Times)
12 Counties to Watch for Clues to the Presidential Race as Ohio Votes Roll in (Plain Dealer)
How to Tell Who’s Winning Ohio on Election Night (Plain Dealer)
Port Authority an Asset: Lute Harmon Sr. (Inside Business)
Decision 2012: Key Ohio Ballot Issues (WKYC)
Breakdown: How Cleveland Public Schools are Funded (WKYC)
“5 Ohios” Analyzed in Swing State (Boston Herald/Associated Press)
The Vanishing Electoral Battleground (New York Times)
Out-of-State Students Cast Their Ballots in Ohio (Chillicothe Gazette)
From the Primaries to Portmania, 5 Events That Shaped the Presidential Race in Ohio (Plain Dealer)
Driller Says It’s Thrilled With Ohio Shale Results (Akron Beacon Journal)
Lawyers Descend on Ohio – Just in Case (Cincinnati Enquirer)
Early Voting Takes on Circus-Like Quality in Ohio (Los Angeles Times)