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Cleveland Councilwoman Jasmin Santana questions Tracy Martin-Thompson and Brian Kimball at a Human & Health Service Committee Meeting.
In the early months of the pandemic, Cleveland City Councilwoman Jasmin Santana, who represents a West Side ward with the densest population of Latinos in the city, said health department officials reassured her that when the city released urgent health updates, they would be translated into Spanish.
It didn’t happen.
The city put out public releases, sometimes daily as the pandemic evolved, about safety precautions, work restrictions and how many people were infected with the virus. But the information didn’t seem to make its way to the Spanish-speaking residents in Santana’s ward, where close to 40% of residents are Hispanic.
Cleveland could require licenses for short-term rentals, public hearings for full-time Airbnbs
Derek Lindsay, Vista Design Pro LLC
Realtor Lauren Cromwell has transformed three of the four units in a Detroit-Shoreway property, which she calls the Grey Barn, into short-term rentals. A one-bedroom, one-bathroom unit has rents that start at $79 a night, though the total price actually comes to $141 with taxes and fees, including a cleaning fee.
Two Cleveland councilmen are taking another run at reining in short-term home rentals, a growing segment of the lodging economy that has been a boon to pandemic-weary travelers but a bane in some city neighborhoods.
Why Cleveland has only given out half of its COVID-19 vaccines on hand
As of Jan. 15, city distributed 3,117 does; says it’s holding back to ensure second shot for those eligible for Phase1A Author: Mark Naymik (WKYC) Updated: 7:13 PM EST January 18, 2021
CLEVELAND Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson is blaming federal and state officials for over-promising vaccines - and leaving distribution details to others.
“There s criticism because it s failed from the top, down,” Jackson said during a press conference on Facebook last Tuesday.
As of Friday, the city had only given out about half of its 6,500 doses to frontline workers and elderly eligible under phase one guidelines, though the city has had the vaccine on hand for more than three weeks.