“WHAT’S HONEST AND WHAT’S HYPE?”: HOW THE AFFORDABLE HEALTHCARE ACT
AND OTHER REFORMS WILL CHANGE HEALTHCARE IN NORTHEAST OHIO
March 19, 2014
Panel members include:
Dr. Eric Bieber, President, University Hospitals Accountable Care Organization
Dr. Akram Boutros, President and Chief Executive Officer, The MetroHealth System
Martin Hauser, Chief Executive Officer, SummaCare
Dr. David Longworth, Chairman of Medicine Institute, Cleveland Clinic
Moderated by Eileen Korey, former medical journalist
Presented by:
CWRU Siegal Lifelong Learning, Teaching Cleveland Digital, and Cleveland Jewish News Foundation
Category: Policies
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Ohio Politics & Election News from the Plain Dealer
2015 State of the State Speech
2015 State of State Speech: Video (Ohio Channel)
2015 State of State Speech: Text (Associated Press)
Reform, Charity and Philanthropy from the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
A comprehensive listing of the people, places and events concerning philanthropic topics in NE Ohio from the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
or click on any of the subjects below
1525 FOUNDATION
ABOLITIONISM
ACHIEVEMENT CENTER FOR CHILDREN
ADAMS, ALMEDA C.
ADDISON, HIRAM M.
AHS FOUNDATION
AIDS TASKFORCE OF GREATER CLEVELAND
AIKEN, SAMUEL CLARK
AIR FOUNDATION
ALI-BEY, OMAR
AMERICAN LUNG ASSN. OF NORTHERN OHIO
AMERICAN RED CROSS, CLEVELAND CHAPTER
AMERICAN WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE ASSN.
AMERICANIZATION
ANIMAL PROTECTIVE LEAGUE
ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETIES, BLACK
ASSOCIATED CHARITIES
B’NAI B’RITH
BAKER, EDWARD MOSE (MAX)
BAKER, HENRY M.
BAKER, NEWTON DIEHL
BALDWlN, JOHN
BAPTIST BROTHERHOOD
BARNETT, JAMES
BARRY, FRANK T.
BATH HOUSES
BATTISTI, FRANK JOSEPH
BEARD, CHARLES AUGUSTINE
BEAUMONT LOUIS D.
BEECH BROOK, INC.
BEGIN, FLOYD L.
BELL NEIGHBORHOOD CENTER
BELLAMY, GEORGE ALBERT
BELLEFAIRE
BELLFLOWER CENTER FOR PREVENTION OF CHILD ABUSE, INC.
BEMIS, EDWARD W.
BENJAMIN ROSE INSTITUTE
BERNON, (BERNSTEIN) MAURICE
BETHEL UNION
BICKNELL FUND
BICKNELL, WARREN, JR.
BIG BROTHER/BIG SISTER MOVEMENT
BINGHAM, CHARLES W.
BIRTHRIGHT, INC.
BLACK, COL. LOUIS
BLACK, MORRIS ALFRED
BLANCHARD, FERDINAND Q.
BLOSSOM HILL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
BLOSSOM, DUDLEY S.
BLOSSOM, EMILY ELKINS
BLUE, WELCOME T. , SR.
BOHN, ERNEST J.
BOLE, ROBERTA HOLDEN
BOLTON FOUNDATION
BOLTON, CHARLES CHESTER
BOLTON, CHESTER CASTLE
BOLTON, FANNY MANN HANNA
BOLTON, FRANCES PAYNE
BOLTON, KENYON C.
BOND, ROBERT L.
BOOK AND THIMBLE CLUB
BOOTH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA (BSA)
BOYER, WILLIS BOOTH
BOYSTOWNS
BRITTON FUND
BRITTON, BRIGHAM
BRITTON, GERTRUDE HASKELL
BROWN, ANNA V.
BROWN, DOROTHY GRACE MASON
BROWN, JOHN
BRUSH FOUNDATION
BRUSH, DOROTHY ADAMS HAMILTON
BRYANT, ELIZA
BUCKEYE-WOODLAND COMMUNITY CONGRESS (BWCC)
BUILDING CODE OF 1904
BUREAU OF CHILD HYGIENE
BURROUGHS, NELSON MARIGOLD
BURTEN, LONNIE L. JR
BURTON, HAROLD HITZ
BUSINESSMEN’S INTERRACIAL COMMITTEE
BYERS, EDGAR S.
CADWALLADER, STARR
CAMP WISE
CAMPBELL, MARION WINTON STRONGHEART
CARR, CHARLES VELMON
CASE, LEONARD, JR.
CASE, LEONARD, SR.
CATALYST: FOR CLEVELAND SCHOOLS
CATHERINE HORSTMANN HOME
CATHOLIC CHARITIES CORP.
CATHOLIC CHARITIES SERVICES CORP.
CENTER FOR COMMUNITY SOLUTIONS
CENTER FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN
CENTER FOR THE PREVENTION OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
CHADSEY, MILDRED
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE-CITY PLAN COMMITTEE
CHARITY ORGANIZATION SOCIETY
CHASE, RUSSELL N.
CHIEF THUNDERWATER
CHILD CARE
CHILDREN AND YOUTH
CHILDREN’S AID SOCIETY
CHRIST CHILD SOCIETY
CITIZENS LEAGUE OF GREATER CLEVELAND
CITY CLUB OF CLEVELAND
CITY MANAGER PLAN
CITY MISSION
CLARK, HAROLD TERRY
CLEAN-LAND, OHIO
CLEMENT, KENNETH W.
CLEVELAND AMERICAN INDIAN CENTER
CLEVELAND ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY
CLEVELAND BAPTIST MISSION SOCIETY
CLEVELAND BEAUTIFUL COMMITTEE (CBC)
CLEVELAND BOYS’ SCHOOL IN HUDSON
CLEVELAND CITY TEMPERANCE SOCIETY
CLEVELAND COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION
CLEVELAND COUNCIL ON WORLD AFFAIRS
CLEVELAND DAY NURSERY AND FREE KINDERGARTEN ASSN., INC.
CLEVELAND DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION
CLEVELAND FEMALE ORPHAN ASYLUM
CLEVELAND FOUNDATION
CLEVELAND HUMANE SOCIETY
CLEVELAND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
CLEVELAND INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM (CIP)
CLEVELAND JOB CORPS
CLEVELAND LADIES TEMPERANCE UNION
CLEVELAND MUSIC SCHOOL SETTLEMENT
CLEVELAND RAPE CRISIS CENTER
CLEVELAND SIGHT CENTER OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE BLIND
CLEVELAND TENANTS ORGANIZATION
CLEVELAND WORKHOUSE
CLEVELAND WORKS INC.
CLEVELAND: NOW!
COAKLEY, JOHN ALOYSIUS
COMMISSION ON CATHOLIC COMMUNITY ACTION
COMODECA, CHARLOTTE
CONNERS, WILLIAM RANDALL
CONSUMERS LEAGUE OF OHIO
COOLEY, HARRIS REID
CORCORAN, CHARLES LESLIE
CORLETT, SELENE
COTILLION SOCIETY OF CLEVELAND
COUNCIL FOR ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES (CEO) IN GREATER CLEVELAND
CRAIG, LILLIAN
CRAWFORD, FREDERICK COOLIDGE
CUNIN, JOHN
CUYAHOGA COUNTY ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY
CUYAHOGA COUNTY COLONIZATION SOCIETY
CUYAHOGA COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
CUYAHOGA COUNTY SABBATH SOCIETY
CUYAHOGA COUNTY TEMPERANCE SOCIETY
CUYAHOGA COUNTY UNIT OF THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
CUYAHOGA METROPOLITAN HOUSING AUTHORITY
DALTON, HENRY GEORGE
DAUBY CHARITY FUND
DAUBY, NATHAN L.
DAVIS, ALAN
DAY, WILLIAM HOWARD
DE LANCEY, WILLIAM J.
DELANEY, RALPH DAVID
DEMMY, OLEAN WELLS
DIABETES ASSN. OF GREATER CLEVELAND
DISPLACED HOMEMAKER PROGRAM
DIVELY, GEORGE SAMUEL
DIVORCE EQUITY, INC.
DORCAS HOME
DRURY, FRANCIS EDSON
DU PONT, ZARA
DUMOULIN, FRANK
DURDEN, EDWARD
EAST END NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE
EATON, CYRUS STEPHEN
EDUCATIONAL TRUST
EDWARD J. AND LOUISE E. MELLEN CENTER FOR MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS TREATMENT AND RESEARCH
EINSTEIN, RUTH WEINER
EISENMAN, CHARLES
ELEANOR GERSON
ELISABETH SEVERANCE PRENTISS FOUNDATION
ELIZA BRYANT VILLAGE
ELIZABETH RING AND WILLIAM GWINN MATHER FUND
ENVIRONMENTALISM
EVA L. AND JOSEPH M. BRUENING FOUNDATION
F. J. O’NEILL CHARITABLE CORP.
FAGAN, HARRY
FAIR HOUSING PROGRAMS
FAMILY PLANNING
FAMILY SERVICE ASSN. OF CLEVELAND
FATHER MATHEW TOTAL ABSTINENCE SOCIETY
FEDERATION FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING
FENN, SERENO PECK
FENSTER, LEO
FERRELL, FREDERIC LEONARD
FESLER, MAYO
FINKELSTEIN, LOUIS
FIRMAN FUND
FITCH, SARAH ELIZABETH
FLORENCE CRITTENTON SERVICES OF GREATER CLEVELAND
FLYNN, EILEEN ELEANOR FINLIN
FOOTE, JOHN A.
FOSTER, CLAUD HANSCOMB
FOUNDATION CENTER-CLEVELAND
FOUNDATIONS
FRANKLIN CLUB
FRED A. LENNON FOUNDATION
FREE MEDICAL CLINIC OF GREATER CLEVELAND
FREIBERGER, ISADORE FRED
FRIEDMAN, MAX R
FRIENDLY INN SOCIAL SETTLEMENT
FRITZSCHE, ALFRED
FROHRING, PAUL R.
GANNETT, ALICE
GAY COMMUNITY
GAYLORD, GLADYS
GEORGE GUND FOUNDATION
GEORGE M. AND PAMELA S. HUMPHREY FUND
GEORGE S. DIVELY FOUNDATION
GEORGE W. CODRINGTON CHARITABLE FOUNDATION
GEORGE, ZELMA WATSON
GERSON, ELEANOR
GIDDINGS, JOSHUA REED
GILBERT W. AND LOUISE IRELAND HUMPHREY FOUNDATION
GIRL SCOUTS
GITLIN, DAVID
GLICK, HELEN RUTH WEIL
GOFF, FREDERICK H.
GOLDEN AGE CENTERS OF GREATER CLEVELAND, INC.
GOLDEN AGE CLUBS
GOLDHAMER, SAMUEL
GOODRICH-GANNETT NEIGHBORHOOD CENTER
GOODWILL INDUSTRIES
GORDON, WILLIAM J.
GREATER CLEVELAND NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS ASSN.
GREATER CLEVELAND ROUNDTABLE
GREVE, BELL
GRIES FAMILY FOUNDATION
GRIES, LUCILE DAUBY
GRIES, MOSES J.
GRIES, ROBERT HAYS
GROSSMAN, MARY B.
GUND, GEORGE
HAAS, VINCENT P.
HADDEN FOUNDATION
HADDEN, MARIANNE ELISABETH MILLIKIN
HALLE, SALMON PORTLAND
HANNA, LEONARD C., JR.
HARAMBEE: SERVICES TO CHILDREN AND FAMILIES
HARKNESS, ANNA M. (RICHARDSON)
HARRISON, MARVIN CLINTON
HARRY K. AND EMMA ROSENFELD FOX CHARITABLE FOUNDATION
HART, ALBERT BUSHNELL
HARVEY, KATE BENEDICT HANNA
HASKELL FUND
HAUSER, ELIZABETH
HAYES, MAX S. (MAXIMILIAN SEBASTIAN)
HCS FOUNDATION
HEALTH FUND OF GREATER CLEVELAND
HEIGHTS AREA PROJECT
HEIGHTS COMMUNITY CONGRESS (HCC)
HEITLER
HENRIETTA, SISTER, CSA
HERRICK, MARIA M. SMITH
HERZOG, BERTHA BEITMAN
HILL HOUSE
HIRAM HOUSE
HOLDEN, LIBERTY EMERY
HOLLY, JOHN OLIVER, JR.
HOLMES, ALLEN C.
HOLY CROSS HOUSE
HOLY FAMILY CANCER HOME
HOME OF THE HOLY FAMILY
HOMELESS, VAGRANTS, AND TRAMPS
HOPE HOUSE
HORACE KELLEY ART FOUNDATION
HORVATH, HELEN
HOUGH AREA DEVELOPMENT CORP.
HOWE, FREDERIC C.
HUNTER, JANE EDNA (HARRIS)
HUNTINGTON, JOHN
HURLBUT, HINMAN B.
IGNATIA, SISTER MARY, CSA
INGALLS, DAVID SINTON JR.
INNER CITY PROTESTANT PARISH (ICPP)
INNER CITY RENEWAL SOCIETY (ICRS)
INTERCHURCH COUNCIL OF GREATER CLEVELAND
IRELAND FOUNDATION
IRELAND, JAMES DUANE
IRELAND, MARGARET ALLEN
IRWIN, JOSEPHINE SAXER
JACKSON, JAMES FREDERICK
JACKSON, PERRY B.
JAYCEES
JELLIFFE, ROWENA WOODHAM
JELLIFFE, RUSSELL W.
JENNINGS HALL
JENNINGS, ELIZABETH (ELIZA) WALLACE
JENNINGS, MARTHA F. HOLDEN
JEWISH CHILDREN’S BUREAU
JEWISH CHRONIC RELIEF SOCIETY
JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER
JEWISH DAY NURSERY
JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE ASSN.
JEWISH FEDERATION OF CLEVELAND
JEWISH VOCATIONAL SERVICE (JVS)
JOCHUM-MOLL FOUNDATION
JOHN F. AND DORIS E. ERNSTHAUSEN CHARITABLE FOUNDATION
JOHN HUNTINGTON FUND FOR EDUCATION
JOHN P. MURPHY FOUNDATION
JOHNSON, TOM L.
JONES HOME OF CHILDREN’S SERVICES, INC.
JONES, CARLOS L.
JONES, MYRTA L.
JUDSON RETIREMENT COMMUNITY
JUMPSTART INC.
JUNIOR LEAGUE OF CLEVELAND, INC.
KARAMU HOUSE
KELLEY, HORACE
KELVIN & ELEANOR SMITH FOUNDATION
KIDNEY FOUNDATION OF OHIO, INC.
KIWANIS CLUB
KLAIMAN, RALPH
KLUNDER, BRUCE W.
KOKLOWSKY, ALBERT, S.T.
KULAS FOUNDATION
KULAS, ELROY JOHN
LAKEVIEW TERRACE
LAMPL, JACK W. JR.
LANG, H. JACK
LAUB FOUNDATION
LAZAR, ALMA TREBEC
LEAGUE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS (LWV) OF CLEVELAND
LEBLOND, CHARLES HUBERT
LEGAL AID SOCIETY OF CLEVELAND
LEIMKUEHLER, PAUL ELMER
LEONARD, WILLIAM ANDREW
LESBIAN/GAY COMMUNITY SERVICE CENTER OF GREATER CLEVELAND
LEVIN, ALBERT ARTHUR
LEVINE, MANUEL V.
LEWIS, ROBERT ELLSWORTH
LINKS, INC.
LIPSCOMB, JAMES SAMUEL
LITTLE SISTERS OF THE POOR
LOMOND ASSN.
LOUIS D. BEAUMONT FOUNDATION
LOUISE HARKNESS AND DAVID SINTON INGALLS FOUNDATION, INC.
LUCAS, CHARLES P. , SR.
LUCILE DAUBY AND ROBERT HAYS GRIES CHARITY FUND
LUDLOW COMMUNITY ASSN.
LUTHERAN HOME
MADONNA HALL
MAGEE, ELIZABETH STEWART
MANDEL ASSOCIATED FOUNDATIONS
MANDELBAUM, MAURICE J. (MOSES)
MARGARET WAGNER HOUSE
MARGUERITE M. WILSON FOUNDATION
MARINE TOTAL ABSTINENCE SOCIETY
MARKS, MARTIN A.
MARTHA HOLDEN JENNINGS FOUNDATION
MARTHA WASHINGTON AND DORCAS SOCIETY
MARTINEK, JOSEPH
MARY B. TALBERT HOME AND HOSPITAL
MASTIN, THOMAS
MATHER, ELIZABETH RING IRELAND
MATHER, FLORA STONE
MATHER, SAMUEL
MATHER, SAMUEL LIVINGSTON
MATHER, WILLIAM GWINN
MAYO, LEONARD WITHINGTON
MCBRIDE, LUCIA MCCURDY
MCCULLOUGH, W. THOMAS
MELLEN FOUNDATION
MELLEN, EDWARD J., JR.
MERRICK HOUSE SOCIAL SETTLEMENT
MEYETTE, GRACE E.
MIDTOWN CORRIDOR, INC.
MILDRED ANDREWS FUND
MILLER, RUTH RATNER
MITCHELL, L. PEARL
MONTGOMERY REV. ANZO
MORGAN, DANIEL EDGAR
MORIARTY, ELAINE M.
MT. ST. MARY’S INSTITUTE
MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP
MURCH FOUNDATION
MURCH, MAYNARD HALE
NARAL OHIO
NASH, HELEN MILLIKIN
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN (NCJW), CLEVELAND SECTION
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN (NOW)
NEIGHBORHOOD PROGRESS INC.
NORTH COAST HARBOR, INC.
NORTH, JESSE (JACK) E.
NORTHERN OHIO SANITARY FAIR
NORTON, DAVID Z.
NORTON, LAURENCE HARPER
NORWEB, EMERY MAY HOLDEN
OHIO CITIZEN ACTION
OHIO REGIONAL COUNCIL OF THE UKRAINIAN NATIONAL WOMEN’S LEAGUE OF AMERICA, INC.
OLD AGE/NURSING HOMES
OLLENDORFF, HENRY B.
ORPHANAGES
ORTHODOX JEWISH CHILDREN’S HOME
OUR LADY OF FATIMA CENTER
PACE ASSN.
PARK SCHOOL
PARMADALE FAMILY SERVICES
PAUL & MAXINE FROHRING FOUNDATION, INC.
PAWS
PAYNE, OLIVER HAZARD
PERERA, JOHN B.
PERKINS, ANNA “NEWSPAPER ANNIE”
PERKINS, EDNA BRUSH
PERKINS, JOSEPH
PERRY, HILBERT W.
PHILANTHROPY
PHILLIS WHEATLEY ASSOCIATION
PIERCE, LUCY ANN BOYLE
PLANNED PARENTHOOD OF GREATER CLEVELAND
PODOJIL, ANTOINETTE “TONI”
POLICE ATHLETIC LEAGUE (PAL)
POLLOCK, SAMUEL
PORTER, NANCY LYON
POUTNEY, RICHARD IRVING
PRENTISS, ELISABETH SEVERANCE ALLEN
PRENTISS, FRANCIS FLEURY
PRETERM, INC.
PRITCHARD, D. JAMES
PROGRESSIVE SLOVENE WOMEN OF AMERICA
PROHIBITION AMENDMENT
PROHIBITION PARTY
PROJECT EVE
PROSSER, DILLON
PROSTITUTION
PUBLIC HOUSING
PUTNAM, MILDRED OLIVE ANDREWS AND PETER ANDREWS PUTNAM
RAINEY INSTITUTE
RANKIN, ALFRED M.
RATNER, LEONARD
RATNER, MAX
RAWSON, BARBARA HAAS
RAWSON, LOUISE R. BARRON
REAVIS, JOHN WALLACE
REGIONAL GOVERNMENT
REINBERGER FOUNDATION
REINBERGER, CLARENCE THOMPSON
RELIANCE ELECTRIC CO.
RENNER FOUNDATION
REVELT, RICHARD D.
REVOLUTION BOOKS
ROCKEFELLER, JOHN D.
ROGERS, MARGARET MARIE HARDEN
ROSE, BENJAMIN
ROSE-MARY CENTER
ROTARY CLUB OF CLEVELAND
ROUSE, REBECCA CROMWELL
RUBINSTEIN, JUDAH
RUTHENBERG, CHARLES
S. LIVINGSTON MATHER CHARITABLE TRUST
SAINT ANN FOUNDATION
SALTZMAN, MAURICE
SALVATION ARMY
SAMPLINER, HERMAN
SAPIRSTEIN, JACOB J.
SCHMITT, DOROTHY PRENTISS
SCHMITT, RALPH S.
SCHOENFELD, MAX
SCHOTT, HAROLD C.
SCHUBERT, LELAND
SEARS-SWETLAND FAMILY FOUNDATION
SECOND FOUNDATION
SETTLEMENT HOUSES
SEVERANCE, CAROLINE M.
SEVERANCE, JOHN LONG
SEVERANCE, LOUIS HENRY
SHERWIN, BELLE
SHURTLEFF, GLEN KASSIMER
SILVER, ABBA HILLEL
SMITH, ALBERT KELVIN
SMITH, DOROTHY
SMITH, HARRY CLAY
SNOW, JANE ELLIOT
SOCIAL SERVICE CLUB
SOCIETY FOR THE RELIEF OF THE POOR
SONS OF TEMPERANCE
SOUTH WAITE FOUNDATION
SPALDING (SPAULDING), RUFUS
SPANISH AMERICAN COMMITTEE
SPARLIN, ESTAL EARNEST
ST. HERMAN OF ALASKA MONASTERY AND HOUSE OF HOSPITALITY
ST. JOSEPH HOME FOR THE AGED
ST. JOSEPH’S ORPHANAGE FOR GIRLS
ST. MARY’S ORPHAN ASYLUM FOR FEMALES
ST. VINCENT DEPAUL SOCIETY
ST. VINCENT’S ORPHAN ASYLUM
STANTON (DAY SESSIONS), LUCY ANN
STELLA MARIS DETOX CENTER
STONE, AMASA
STONE, MORRIS SAMUEL
SUTLER, ELEANORE MARGUERITE YOUNG
SUTPHEN, REV. PAUL FREDERICK
TAYLOR, RICHARD S.
TEMPERANCE
TEMPLUM HOUSE
THOMAS H. WHITE FOUNDATION
THOME, JAMES A.
TILLEY, MADISON
TOWNSEND PLAN
TRACY, FLORENCE COMEY
TRACY, JANE ALLYN FOOTE
TRANZONIC FOUNDATION
TRAVELERS AID SOCIETY
TREMCO FOUNDATION
TRENKAMP, HERMAN J.
TREU-MART FUND
TREUHAFT FOUNDATION
TREUHAFT, WILLIAM C.
TUCKERMAN, LOUIS BRYANT
TULLIS, RICHARD BARCLAY
TURNER, CARRIE STARK
UNDERGROUND PRESS
UNITED BLACK FUND OF GREATER CLEVELAND
UNITED FREEDOM MOVEMENT (UFM)
UNITED LABOR AGENCY
UNITED WAY SERVICES
UNIVERSITY SETTLEMENT
URBAN COMMUNITY SCHOOL
URBAN LEAGUE OF GREATER CLEVELAND
URBAN, HELEN E. WILLIAMS
VISITING NURSE ASSN. OF CLEVELAND
VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE SERVICES
VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA OF NORTHEAST OHIO, INC.
WADE, EDWARD
WADE, JEPTHA HOMER II
WADSWORTH, HOMER C.
WAGNER, MARGARET W.
WALTON, JOHN WHITTLESEY
WEIL, HELEN KAHN
WEIL, JULIUS
WELFARE/RELIEF
WEST SIDE COMMUNITY HOUSE
WEST SIDE ECUMENICAL MINISTRY
WESTERN RESERVE CHILD WELFARE COUNCIL
WESTERN SEAMEN’S FRIEND SOCIETY
WHITE CONSOLIDATED INDUSTRIES FOUNDATION, INC.
WHITE, THOMAS H.
WHITMAN, SAMUEL
WILLIAM BINGHAM FOUNDATION
WILLIAM O. AND GERTRUDE LEWIS FROHRING FOUNDATION, INC.
WILLIAMS, EDWARD MASON
WILLIAMS, KATHERINE WITHROW
WING, MARIE REMINGTON
WISE, SAMUEL D.
WITT, PETER
WITT, STILLMAN
WOLF, EDITH ANISFIELD
WOLPERT FUND
WOMAN’S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION CONVENTION
WOMAN’S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION, NON-PARTISAN, OF CLEVELAND
WOMAN’S GENERAL HOSPITAL
WOMANKIND MATERNAL AND PRENATAL CENTER
WOMEN SPEAK OUT FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
WOMEN’S CITY CLUB
WOMEN’S COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
WOMEN’S COUNCIL PEACE PARADE FOR THE PREVENTION OF FUTURE WARS
WOMEN’S PHILANTHROPIC UNION
WOMEN’S PROJECT FOUNDATION
WOMEN’S PROTECTIVE ASSN.
WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION
YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSN.
YOUNG WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSN. (YWCA)
ZUCKER, HENRY L.
Fracking news from the Youngstown Vindicator
Constitutional editors gather in Ohio: editorial (Plain Dealer 1/1/12)
Constitutional editors gather in Ohio: editorial (Plain Dealer 1/1/12)
on January 01, 2012 at 8:19 PM, updated January 04, 2012 at 5:51 PM
Ohioans periodically are asked, by a statewide ballot question, if they wish to call a convention to revise or replace the Ohio Constitution, last overhauled in 1912.
Voters said no in 1932, 1952, 1972 and 1992. They’ll be asked again this November, and there’s at least a chance they’ll say yes. Either way, the timing couldn’t be better for the new Ohio Constitutional Modernization Commission, which met Wednesday for the first time.
The commission’s two chairmen are experienced legislators: Ohio House Speaker William Batchelder, a Medina Republican, and Rep. Vernon Sykes, an Akron Democrat.
Other Northeast Ohio legislators on the panel are Sen. Michael Skindell, a Lakewood Democrat, and Reps. Lynn Slaby, a Copley Republican, Kathleen Clyde, a Kent Democrat, and Sen. Larry Obhof, a Republican who represents Medina, Holmes and Wayne counties and portions of Ashland County.
All told, six state senators and six state representatives — half from each party — are members of the commission. The 12 legislators will pick 20 nonlegislators as commissioners, for a grand total of 32.
The aim of the commission is to make recommendations to the General Assembly for potential constitutional amendments. And if Ohio voters do call a constitutional convention, the commission is required to recommend potential amendments to the convention.
‘Any commission recommendation for an amendment would have to be supported by at least two-thirds of the commission’s 32 members. And no recommended amendment could become part of the Ohio Constitution without supermajority votes of the General Assembly, followed by a statewide referendum.
Through General Assembly grandstanding and voter-petitioned special-interest amendments, the constitution is bloated with arguably unnecessary verbiage. For example, the constitution specifies, by tax-parcel numbers, the exact locations of the four casinos under construction in Ohio. That meant that re-siting the Columbus casino across town required a statewide referendum. That’s just one of the legal absurdities the Constitutional Modernization Commission needs to address as it moves forward.
It’s sure to find others.
Ohio Utica Shale from the Akron Beacon Journal
News about drilling and hydraulic fracturing or fracking in Ohio from the Akron Beacon Journal. Plus an excellent list of links.
Threats to Town Halls Stir Voter Backlash -Wall Street Journal 6/8/2011
ONEKAMA VILLAGE, Mich.—Michigan has 1,773 municipalities, 609 school districts, 1,071 fire departments and 608 police departments. Gov. Rick Snyder wants some of them to disappear.
The governor is taking steps to bring about the consolidation of municipal services, even whole municipalities, in order to cut budgets and eliminate redundant local bureaucracies. His blueprint, which relies on legal changes and financial incentives, calls for a “metropolitan model” of government that would combine resources across cities and their suburbs.
In doing so, Mr. Snyder, a Republican, is taking aim at that twig of American government so cherished by many citizens—the town hall. The long national tradition of hyperlocal government prevails in much of the Northeast and Midwest, with their crazy quilts of cities, towns, villages and townships.
“You do have to ask: ‘Boy, do we really need 1,800 units of government?'” says Mr. Snyder’s budget director, John Nixon. “Everybody likes their independence, and that’s nice to have. But if you’re not careful, it can cost you a lot more money.”
Around the country public officials are asking themselves similar questions. Plunging property-tax receipts and rising pension and health-care costs have pushed many municipalities to the brink of financial collapse. The idea is that local governments can operate with fewer workers and smaller budgets if they do things like combine fire departments, create regional waste authorities and fold towns and cities into counties.
But selling the notion in small communities like Onekama is no easy job. Public officials have floated a proposal to merge this village of 1,500 along Lake Michigan into the township that encircles it. Some residents worry that a leaner government risks becoming a less responsive one.
Snow plowing already has emerged as a potential sticking point. If the merger passes a vote later this year, Manistee County would take over snow removal, and Onekama’s quiet streets would be among the last sections cleared.
Bonnie Miller, a village resident for 43 years who emerged as an early opponent of the merger, doesn’t want anyone to mess with the current plowing schedule. “At five in the morning, you can hear the plow truck is already out,” she says.
Over the years, consolidation proposals haven’t fared well with voters. Of the 105 referendums on city-county mergers since 1902, only 27 have passed, the most recent in 2000, when Louisville, Ky., merged into Jefferson County, according to David Rusk, a Democratic ex-mayor of Albuquerque and a proponent of consolidation. Last year, voters vetoed a merger of Memphis, Tenn., with Shelby County. In March, Memphis voters approved a merger of the city and county school systems, over strong suburban opposition. The county board of education has sued to block the merger.
Proponents of consolidation come from both ends of the political spectrum. Some conservatives argue that having fewer layers and divisions of government is cost-efficient and improves the economic climate by streamlining regulation and taxation. Some liberals support eliminating local-government boundaries that they say have cemented economic and racial disparities between cities and surrounding towns.
Researchers, however, have raised questions about whether such consolidation actually delivers significant savings. Typically, they say, only a few administrative positions overlap between jurisdictions, and further savings can’t be realized without compromising service. Public-safety agencies, for example, need a certain staff level to ensure the response times that residents demand.
A 2004 study by Indiana University’s Center for Urban Policy and the Environment found that costs creep back in, partly because bigger pools of employees can negotiate for better wages, offsetting the savings of job cuts. Academic studies of Jacksonville, Fla.’s combination with Duval County, and Miami’s merger with Dade County found that costs actually rose post-merger as new bureaucracies emerged.
In a study of Wheeling, W.Va.’s proposed merger with surrounding Ohio County, Mr. Rusk, the ex-mayor of Albuquerque, estimated that the potential cost savings would be barely 2% of the combined budget, because the overlap of services wouldn’t be as extensive as expected.
Mr. Rusk says the benefits of consolidation don’t necessarily come from cost savings. Fragmentation retards economic growth, he says, “not so much because of waste and duplication of services as an inability to unify a region’s resources” in everything from business development to road repair.
Various state legislatures are moving to spur consolidation. New Jersey, which has 566 municipalities, recently made it easier for communities to pursue mergers, and several are contemplating it. In New York state, which has more than 1,547 overlapping local governments—a system Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo once called “a ramshackle mess”—the Senate passed a bill in 2009 that gave voters the power to consolidate local municipalities and services. In Indiana, which has 1,008 townships, a legislative panel this year unanimously backed offering financial incentives to local governments that seek efficiencies through consolidation.
Michigan’s laws make municipal mergers difficult. Minimum-staffing requirements and prevailing-wage laws protect public employees and make it hard to cut payroll costs. Thus far, only two mergers have occurred: The city and township of Battle Creek, and two cities and a village in the sparsely populated Upper Peninsula.
Gov. Snyder has pushed legislators to dismantle those barriers. The Legislature earlier this year strengthened the state’s powers to take control of the finances of failing cities, empowering so-called emergency financial managers to void contracts, sidestep elected officials and dissolve municipalities.
While the governor can’t force consolidations, he is trying to coax financially troubled municipalities to pursue them. He is withholding about $200 million of funds for cities in need, making that aid contingent on evidence of consolidation of services such as fire departments and trash collections. His budget sets aside $5 million in transition aid for communities seeking mergers.
Similar incentives are being offered to school districts to share services such as busing, or to merge altogether. In addition, the governor has proposed a new policy that would in effect blur the existing school-district boundary lines.
“It is an evolutionary process, starting with service consolidation.” Gov. Snyder said in an interview.
The Detroit suburb of Hazel Park, in Oakland County, is considering merging its fire department with neighboring Ferndale’s. North of Hazel Park, the suburb of Pleasant Ridge is discussing sharing police and fire services with two of its neighbors.
“The economic reality has come home to roost,” said L. Brooks Patterson, county executive of Oakland County. “They are going to have to consolidate or find themselves in the cold grip of an emergency financial manager.”
Gov. Snyder plans to introduce legislation to ease city-county mergers and allow for the creation of metropolitan zones to coordinate services and economic-development efforts. His hope is for affluent suburbs to share resources with fiscally strapped cities. Such an effort is already under way for Grand Rapids and Kent County.
Today’s fragmented governments grew out of voter demands for home rule and tighter control over local resources such as emergency services and schools. Voters tend to protect those resources, even if it means paying more for them. “Local voters almost never approve voluntary mergers,” says Mr. Rusk.
Earlier this year, half a dozen struggling communities in Oakland County held votes on property-tax increases to avoid consolidation of services with neighboring towns or the county. All but one of the increases passed comfortably.
In Hazel Park, one of the county’s poorest communities, residents voted overwhelmingly for a five-year tax increase to avert deep cuts to the police and fire departments, whose costs, including retiree benefits, account for 64% of the city’s $13.7 million budget.
Larry Wallace, a 46-year-old father of six, stood up at a public meeting to endorse the higher tax. He said he moved to Hazel Park two decades ago after he was robbed in his house in Detroit and a gun was held to his five-year-old daughter’s head. He said he had waited eight hours for Detroit police, but they never showed. “I will pay whatever to live somewhere safe for me and my family,” he said.
In Onekama, two governments—the village’s and the township’s—operate out of single-story buildings half a block apart on Main Street. Each employs a clerk and a treasurer. Each has an elected board of trustees. The village has a president to run its affairs; the township, a supervisor.
Many residents like it that way. Township residents pay lower taxes in return for a mostly hands-off administration that controls public access to Portage Lake. Village residents pay higher taxes for services that include maintaining a park on the lake and the early-morning snow plowing.
Several years ago, the two governments came together over a shared interest: the health of the lake. Concerns about aging septic systems in lake-side cottages spurred the passage of a new septic ordinance for both areas.
The village and township then began cooperating on a plan to protect the lake. In 2009, both the village and township approved a special tax to help protect the watershed—a vote described by local officials as a turning point.
Next came a joint master plan, and late last year, Village President Bob Blackmore, a retired auto executive, and Township Supervisor David Meister, a farmer and muscle-car enthusiast, began discussing an outright merger. Their goal was to avoid duplication of services and to jointly seek resources.
Under the proposal they are considering, the village government would be dissolved and the township would take over. Village residents would see their tax bills shrink, and township residents would see them stay the same. A couple of part-time administrative jobs would be eliminated. State funds to facilitate the transition could sweeten the deal.
But some village residents worry the plan will somehow change the character of their community, that a township government will not value what the village does.
Ms. Miller, who runs a summer fruit stand in the village, initially called the proposed merger a “hostile takeover” by the township.
Some township residents also are wary. Jim Trout, a retiree from Grand Rapids who recently moved from the village to the township, says he fears a merger with the village, whose voters he says are more politically active, will bring more demands, and costs, for municipal services.
“If they demand amenities, they can go down and live in urbanland,” said Mr. Trout. “I chose to live here.”
Public meetings that began in February raised a host of questions, recalls Mr. Meister, the township supervisor: “What’s going to happen to their streets? Is the park system going to change? Will we have a new form of government? Who is going to lose their jobs?”
Mr. Meister is trying to work out a way for villagers to pay more to retain services such as early plowing.
Another public meeting is slated for Wednesday to include summer residents. Officials plan to address concerns raised at earlier meetings and to outline what the new government would look like. Residents will vote later this year.
“It will happen either now or later,” says Mr. Blackmore, the village president. “It is going to happen.”
Ms. Miller, who says she’s beginning to soften her opposition, doubts the merger would be the end of the consolidation process. She sees Onekama ultimately being swallowed up by the county. “You can’t stand in the way of progress forever,” she says. “But sometimes you do like to see the little Norman Rockwell image of a quaint village.”
Write to Kate Linebaugh at kate.linebaugh@wsj.com
PLAIN DEALER REPORT: A REGION DIVIDED 2004
- PLAIN DEALER REPORT: A REGION DIVIDED
- Read The Plain Dealer’s original 2004 series on how Cuyahoga County and its surrounding communities might benefit from consolidating governments and city services
- Part 1: Is there a better way?
A new Cleveland without borders?
Sunday, January 25, 2004
By Robert L. SmithPlain Dealer Reporter
Corrections and clarifications: The following published correction appeared on January 29, 2004:Because of a reporter’s error, a story on Sunday’s Page One incorrectly ranked the population of Louisville, Ky. Upon merging with its home county last January, Louisville became America’s 16th most populous city.
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A REGION DIVIDED / Is there a better way?
Welcome to the city of Metro Cleveland. We’re new, but we suspect you’ve heard of us.
We’re the largest city in Ohio, by far. With 1.3 million residents, we’re the sixth-largest city in America. Right back in the Top 10.
Our freshly consolidated city covers 459 square miles on the Lake Erie shore. Our economic development authority, enriched through regional cooperation, wields the power to borrow a whopping $500 million.
So, yes, America, we have a few plans.
How do you like us now?
Merging Cleveland and Cuyahoga County into a single super-city is only one example of “new regionalism” being discussed across the country. In fact, it illustrates one of the most aggressive and seldom-used strategies to revive a metropolitan area by eliminating duplicated services, sharing tax dollars across political boundaries and planning with a regional view.
At the other end of the spectrum stand places like present-day Cleveland, a tired city with rigid boundaries watching helplessly as its wealth and jobs drain away.
In between are dozens of regions where city and suburbs agreed to plan new industries, or began sharing taxes, or staked out “green lines” to slow sprawl and encourage investment in urban areas, cooperative strategies aimed at lifting the whole region.
Some dreams came true and others did not. Regional government does not solve every problem or achieve overnight success, experts caution. But the evidence suggests it allows cities like Cleveland to do something not dared here in a long time. It allows them to dream.
Dream big.
“Regional government would let Cleveland compete in the new economy,” said Bruce Katz, a specialist in metropolitan planning for the Brookings Institution.
“Overnight, we’d become a national player,” said Mark Rosentraub, dean of the College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.
“These ideas are not crazy,” insists Myron Orfield, a Minnesota state senator and one of the nation’s best-known proponents of regional planning. “Regionalism is centrist. It’s happening. Ohio is one of the few industrialized states that has not done anything.”
Orfield is often credited with popularizing new regionalism through his 1997 book, “Metropolitics.” It details regional partnerships he fostered in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area, strategies like tax sharing.
In 1969, the seven counties surrounding the Twin Cities began sharing taxes from new business and industry, pooling the money and giving it to the communities that needed it most.
Designed to revive the cities, the plan worked so well that Minneapolis now sends taxes to its suburbs.
(SEE CORRECTION NOTE) These days, a newer model of regionalism is drawing policy planners and mayors to northern Kentucky. Louisville merged with its home county last year to form the Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government, becoming America’s 23rd-largest city as Cleveland slipped to 34th.
Much of the messy work of merging city and county departments remains, but Louisville Mayor Jerry E. Abramson said his community is already enjoying cost savings and something more: rising self-esteem.
Louisville residents had brooded as civic rivals Nashville and Indianapolis used regional cooperation to lure jobs, people and major-league sports teams. Fearful of being left forever behind, voters approved a dramatic merger that had been rejected twice before.
“I think people saw that those cities were moving ahead more quickly,” Abramson said. “We decided we would do better speaking with one voice for economic growth.”
History suggests such unity would not come easy to Northeast Ohio. Look at a detailed map of Ohio’s most populous county, Cuyahoga, and you’ll see a kaleidoscope of governments: one county, 38 cities, 19 villages, two townships, 33 school districts, and dozens of single-minded taxing authorities.
The idea of huddling them behind a single quarterback is not new. At least six times since 1917, voters rejected plans for regional government, spurning the most recent reform plan in 1980.
“You know why? People like small-town atmosphere,” said Faith Corrigan, a Willoughby historian who raised her family in Cleveland Heights. “It’s been said Cleveland is the largest collection of small towns in the world.”
Any effort at civic consensus in Northeast Ohio also means bridging a racial divide, which helped to defeat the last three reform efforts. Black civic leaders suspected a larger, whiter city would dilute their hard-won influence and political power. Those sentiments remain.
“Yes, we’re fearful of less representation,” said Sabra Pierce Scott, a Cleveland City councilwoman who represents the Glenville neighborhood, which is mostly black. “It’s taken us a long time to get here.”
Meanwhile, residents of wealthy suburbs may see little to gain by sharing taxes with Cleveland, let alone giving up the village council.
“I think it’s almost a fool’s dream to think you could even accomplish it,” said Medina County Commissioner Steve Hambley.
Yet opposition to regional government is softening. Recently, Urban League director Myron Robinson told his board members that regional cooperation could give black children access to better schools and should be discussed.
Mayors of older suburbs, facing their own budget woes, are questioning the wisdom of paying for services that might be efficiently shared, like fire protection and trash collection.
And Cleveland business leaders, many of whom live in the suburbs, are emerging as some of the strongest supporters of regional sharing and planning. They say a strong city is essential to the region’s prosperity and that Cleveland cannot rise alone.
For models of what might work, they look to any one of a dozen metropolitan areas that forged regional partnerships in recent decades; and to a few impassioned local believers.
“If I were God for a day,” CSU’s Rosentraub declares, he would simply merge the city and county bonding powers behind a planning agency with teeth. He would create a $500 million revolving development fund, big enough to launch the kinds of projects that change skylines.
That kind of cooperation, Rosentraub said, would also send a message across the land. We’re big. We’re regional. We’re working together.
To comment on regional government or this story:
theregion@plaind.com, 216-999-5068
Frank G. Jackson, Mayor of Cleveland, delivers his annual State of the City address March 8, 2012
State of the City sponsored by the City Club March 8, 2012
Frank G. Jackson, Mayor of Cleveland, delivers his annual State of the City address at the Cleveland Public Auditorium.