© 2024 WOSU Public Media
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Four Ohio Cities Rank Poorly in Providing Opportunities for African-American Youth

The study considers education as one of its three factors in determining the opportunity index.
ROD LIBRARY
/
CREATIVE COMMONS
The study considers education as one of its three factors in determining the opportunity index.

A new study shows young people of color in Ohio have fewer opportunities for economic advancement. The national study done by the Institute for Child, Youth, and Family Policy at Brandeis University measures the opportunity index in 100 of the United States largest metro areas.

It considers poverty rates, education, and health as three of its major factors. Ohio has four cities that are in the bottom ten spots on that list. Brandeis University professor Dolores Acevedo-Garcia said Ohio has significant inequities.

“This is a pattern that we found in Ohio in general, in other areas of Ohio as well, not only Youngstown. That has to do, we think and we have seen in other work that we have done with very high levels of residential segregation in Ohio.”

Cleveland, Dayton, Toledo, and Youngstown all landed in the bottom ten. Acevedo-Garcia said the full study will be released at the end of January.

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit WKSU.

Nathan joined WKSU as an intern in May 2019. Nathan is a broadcast journalism student at Kent State. He’s previously been a correspondent for TV2 as well as a crew member of Teleproductions. His interests include entertainment and culture.
David Williams is an intern at WKSU for summer 2019. A junior at Kent State, Williams is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in multimedia journalism. Williams has reported for The Kent Stater, the university’s student-run newspaper, since spring 2018. His interests include history and politics.