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Showing posts with label Appalachian Ohio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Appalachian Ohio. Show all posts

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Appalachian Ohio And The Hunger Factor: In A Sinking Economy, Ohio's Poorest Region Needs Help

ATHENS, Ohio (TDB) -- Ohio's Democratic Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher -- who heads the state's economic development office -- surely goes to bed each night without having to worry about where he'll find his next meal. But for a lot of Ohioans in the state's Appalachian region -- never prosperous to begin with -- a deteriorating economy threatens families with empty pots and dinner dishes. Fisher needs to deliver a virtuoso performance soon, or step aside. Simply put, Fisher needs to score some jobs, a tough task for sure. He's clearly been dealt a bad hand. But the time for big talk and big plans is probably over. After all, he did run two summers ago on a ticket promising to turn Ohio around. From the Athens News comes a report of increasing concern about food shortages in the state's hill country. Dick Stevens, district director of the Second Harvest Food Bank, is worried about rural Ohioans squeezed by high gasoline prices and a never robust regional economy:

"And the food couldn't come soon enough, Stevens said. In 2007, the food bank put out around 8 million pounds of food, down almost 2 million pounds from the previous two years. Rising gas and food prices, Stevens said, 'have had a tremendous impact on our operation here.' While the average family's budget is being stretched further by the month, Stevens said, 'More and more people are resorting to going to a food pantry for assistance.' In the Second Harvest Food Bank's service area, about half the population is at or below the poverty line."

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Ohio. Gov. Ted Strickland's Home County: Scioto Has Highest Poverty Rate In State

CINCINNATI (TDB) -- The Census Bureau is out with reams of new poverty data, and it shows that Scioto County in Appalachian Ohio -- the home of Gov. Ted Strickland -- has the state's highest percentage of poor residents, some 28.3%. Neighboring Pike County has 21.4% of its residents in poverty, followed by Adams County at 20.5%. All three counties are in Ohio's 2nd Congressional District, which is now represented by Republican U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt. The poverty rate for Scioto gets even bleaker for those under age 18 -- some 36.3% are poor. Overall, the Census reports that 13% of all Ohioans live in poverty.

Other data shows that 36,108 kids in the Cleveland schools live in poverty. That is nearly as many as Cincinnati, 15,746, and Columbus, 21,954, have when their city school systems are lumped together.

The hill country of Appalachian Ohio has long been wracked by chronic hard times. This latest batch of data from Washington clearly indicates that any national economic growth which took place during this decade seems to have bypassed that region.