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Warning: Racism is Hazardous to Your Health in Columbus

GuidesArch CityHome & StyleDiningFeaturesWeddingsLegals Warning: Racism is Hazardous to Your Health in Columbus Franklin County and the city of Columbus have declared racism a public health threat for good reason. Just look at the statistics. What’s being done to attack the inequities? Kathy Lynn Gray Talk about a racial divide. Consider this:  There’s Bexley, which is 87 percent white. Compare it to the Near East Side of Columbus, which is 59 percent Black. They are essentially next-door neighbors. The average lifespan of residents in the wealthy suburb? A little more than 85 years. In the minority community? Try 67 years.  Think about that. A difference of more than 18 years based on where you live. 

Four Finalists Share Why They Should Be Columbus Next Police Chief

City Hall vs  the FOP

GuidesArch CityHome & StyleDiningFeaturesWeddingsLegals City Hall vs. the FOP A decades-old drama boils over as Columbus Mayor Andy Ginther and the powerful union fight over the future of police reform in Columbus. Columbus Monthly No Columbus mayor has more experience working with the local police union than Mike Coleman. Every three years during his 16-year tenure, Coleman and his team bargained over a new labor contract with the Fraternal Order of Police Capital City Lodge No. 9, which represents 28 law enforcement agencies in Central Ohio, including the Columbus Division of Police.  In the early years, the former mayor says he got along fairly well with FOP leadership. The negotiations were tough but respectful. But as the years went on, and FOP leadership turned over, things changed. “There was a big part of my time as mayor where everything was a fight. I

Columbus housing assistance project helps single moms find better apartments, schools

The nonprofit helps single moms bring their children to better neighborhoods. Steve Wartenberg The phone call from Move to Prosper couldn’t have come at a better time for Bessie Jackson and her two sons, Braylon, 12, and Derius, 8. “We were technically homeless,” Jackson says. Her grandmother’s old, drafty, money pit of a home on the East Side where she and her boys were living had caught fire four days earlier and was uninhabitable. Jackson, a home health care worker, had lost her job. “We were living in a hotel,” she says. It was 2018, and Jackson had been accepted into the three-year pilot of Move to Prosper, a collaboration between Ohio State University’s city and regional planning program and community organizations. The guiding principle is that single mothers and their children do better in higher-opportunity, safer neighborhoods with better school systems. The problem: These neighborhoods are expensive and beyond the means of most low-wage earners.

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