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New Study Finds Northern Ohio Cities Have Work to do When it Comes to Economic Inequaltiy

The report from the National Urban League finds big employment and income gaps in three northern Ohio cities.
NATIONAL URBAN LEAGUE
The report from the National Urban League finds big employment and income gaps in three northern Ohio cities.
The report from the National Urban League finds big employment and income gaps in three northern Ohio cities.
Credit NATIONAL URBAN LEAGUE
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NATIONAL URBAN LEAGUE
The report from the National Urban League finds big employment and income gaps in three northern Ohio cities.

Some Ohio cities have the nation’s widest employment and income gaps between whites and blacks.  Those are the findings in a new report by the National Urban League. Out of 71 cities studied, Toledo ranked 70th in unemployment with a gap of more than 15 percent. Cleveland is 68th with Akron ranked 51st. The three cities also all rank near the bottom when it comes to wage inequality. The median income for black households in these cites is about $30,000 less than white households.  John Corlett is president of the Center for Community Solutions in Cleveland. He says the Cleveland’s overall poverty rate has declined recently, but it has also become more concentrated in certain neighborhoods. 

“And so when that happens you have less economic opportunity, less engagement, worse health, and those problems build on each other. And so I think that’s what might be contributing towards those ranks in this index.”

The National Urban League study says nationally the overall standard of living for blacks is about 30 percent less that of whites.

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Kevin Niedermier
Kevin was raised in New Washington in rural North Central Ohio. He attended Bowling Green State University and Ashland College (now Ashland University) before beginning his career in commercial radio news.