Thursday, September 27, 2012

Time Article-The Columbus Comeback

 

COLUMBUS CITY COUNCIL

MEDIA ALERT

 

For Immediate Release:

September 27, 2012

 

For More Information:

John Ivanic, (614) 645-6798

WebFacebookTwitter

 

Another great national article that recognizes local leaders for helping to build a strong Columbus economy

 

 

The Columbus Comeback

By Rana Foroohar

If you ever wonder what kind of economic development might be accomplished in this country with more bipartisan cooperation, consider Columbus, Ohio. This low-key, Middle American metropolis of about 800,000 is becoming something of a celebrity city, talked up in a recent New York Times Magazine piece on the success of Ohio and visited more than a dozen times by presidential and vice-presidential candidates. No wonder. After taking a dive during the recession, Columbus has roared back, with the metro area creating more new jobs than any other city in Ohio over the past two years. In many ways, it's a model for what an economy can do when you admit that growth isn't about tax cuts and austerity but about both streamlining government and investing public money in the right things.

Some of Columbus' success is based on its diversified economy. As the state capital and home to institutions like Ohio State University, it has a large government and public-education sector, though not dramatically so--12.4% of the local economy vs. 11.5% for Ohio as a whole. Its relatively low cost of living, central location (its inland port makes it a logistical hub) and steady supply of talent from 18 nearby colleges, including many community colleges, helps too. The city has a robust manufacturing sector including Honda and Worthington Industries but also big retail and financial-services sectors: JPMorgan Chase actually employs more people there than in New York City.

For all these reasons, Columbus didn't fall quite as far off a cliff as the rest of the state did after the financial crisis. But what really sets it apart are the steps it has taken since. In 2009, Mayor Michael Coleman, a Democrat who has since been re-elected to a fourth term, was faced with chopping roughly $100 million in municipal spending--more than 15% of the total operating budget--to balance it as required by city statute. The mayor started with back-office cuts and moved on to mandatory furloughs, reduced trash pickup and the closure of 12 recreation centers. He persuaded thousands of public servants to forgo raises. He trimmed pensions.

It wasn't enough. By mid-2009, "things were getting worse, not better," says Coleman. "We were at a crossroads. If I cut more, we were going to have to lay off 1,100 public workers, including firefighters and police, and really compromise city safety. I'd also be contributing to unemployment." It was time, says the mayor, to "ask ourselves, What kind of city did we want to be?"

Coleman went to the city's business leaders--a mostly conservative group including major Republican donor Leslie Wexner, founder of Limited Brands--and asked them to support an income tax increase, the first in 27 years. They agreed and helped finance a successful protax ballot campaign, in large part because they believed the mayor had already proved his austerity chops and because he vowed to put a third of the tax hike into development. The plan: give businesses money to retrain workers, pour money into new infrastructure, improve the housing stock and redevelop the city's downtown and riverfront to attract more knowledge workers. "Communities are either moving forward or backward right now, with very little in between," says Wexner. "We chose to strategically invest in our future at a very critical time, and the results are paying off."

Indeed, there's plenty in Columbus that comes straight out of the Brookings or McKinsey Global playbook. There's the Edison Welding Institute, for instance: a state-initiated, privately funded enterprise that does cutting-edge manufacturing research resembling the German Fraunhofer institutes. The goal is to keep wages up by maintaining an advantage in making super-high-end exports. (Columbus' population was at one point a third German migrs, and the city has the Teutonic nose-to-the-grindstone, thrifty ethos that marks successful Midwestern towns.) Rather than sending generic delegations to China, as other American cities hunting for investment do, the economic-development team has smartly targeted a relatively untapped group of midsize western Chinese entrepreneurs looking to get their money out of the Middle Kingdom.

They'd be wise to invest. Columbus has gone beyond partisan politics and supply-side nonsense to create real growth. Once the election is over, I suspect many people will start paying more attention to this city--and the many others around the country that are quietly moving ahead while Washington remains gridlocked.

 

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2125517,00.html

 

 

 

 

JOHN IVANIC

COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR

_____________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

90 W. Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215

Direct: 614-645-6798

Cell:     614-701-1411

www.columbus.gov

    

 

    

 

Better Municipal Care for Veterans Home Fund

COLUMBUS CITY COUNCIL

 

For Immediate Release:

September 27, 2012

 

For More Information:

John Ivanic, (614) 645-6798

WebFacebookTwitter

 

 

Dear Columbus Resident:

  

My name is Councilmember Hearcel F. Craig and I am the Chair of the Veterans Affairs Committee at Columbus City Council. More importantly, I am a Vietnam-era veteran having served in the United States Army.

 

In a continuing effort to better address the needs of Columbus veterans and their families, I sponsored an amendment to the 2012 Capital Budget to include a pilot program for the Southside called the Better Municipal Care for Veterans - Home Fund (BMCV-HF), which provides financial assistance to eligible homeowners for home improvements. This pilot project is intended to help up to eligible homeowners invest in exterior home improvements – up to $15,000 per home.

 

The Better Municipal Care for Veterans - Home Program represents City Council's commitment to serving the housing needs of our nation's heroes.  Eligible homeowners are those homeowners who are a veteran or those homeowners with an eligible veteran who permanently resides in a household.  The pilot project will help eligible homeowners located within the boundaries of the Southern Gateway Initiative, which have been established asHigh Street on the west, Morrill Ave. on the north, Parsons Ave. on the East and Hosack Ave. on the south.

 

To implement this pilot project, the City has partnered with Community Development for All People, which is a faith-based, non-profit community development organization dedicated to creating a community that welcomes and cares for all people. CD4AP works to improve the economic, social and spiritual quality of life for residents of the South side. CD4AP renovates homes on the Southside and makes them available at a reduced cost to low-income buyers. This improves home-ownership and strengthens our community. The South Side Renaissance Home Repair Program assist homeowners with exterior repairs while facilitating pride and responsible ownership.

 

To apply for this exciting new project, please contact Rev. John Edgar, Pastor and Executive Director, Community Development for All People at 614-445-7342 or 946 Parsons Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43206. It’s easy to provide proof of eligibility.  Simply present a government record denoting your other than dishonorable discharge or release from active military, naval, or air service.

 

I’m proud of the work Columbus City Council continues to do in honor of our nation’s veterans.  If my office can be of assistance to you or if you have a new idea to help Columbus-area veterans, please call me at 614-645-7379.

 

 

Sincerely,

 

Hearcel F. Craig

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

EVENT POSTPONED: City Council Holds Financial Review

 

 

Thursdays meeting has been postponed.   I will inform the community when a new date and time has been set. 

 

 

From: Ivanic, John P.
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2012 5:07 PM
Subject: City Council Holds Financial Review

 

 

COLUMBUS CITY COUNCIL

MEDIA ALERT

 

For Immediate Release

September 20, 2012

 

For More Information:

John Ivanic, (614) 645-6798

WebFacebookTwitter

 

Columbus City Council Holds
Second Quarter Financial Review

 

WHO:

Councilmember Priscilla R. Tyson

Finance Department Director Paul Rakosky

 

WHEN:

Thursday, September 27, 2012
5:00 pm

 

WHERE:

Columbus City Council Chambers

90 West Broad Street

 

WHAT:

Councilmember Priscilla R. Tyson, chair of the Finance Committee, will hold a hearing to review the city's second quarter finances. Public testimony will be accepted and the meeting will be broadcast live on CTV, Columbus’ government television channel 3 on local cable systems.  Speaker slips will be accepted on the day of the hearing till 5:30 pm. General rules of speaking before Council apply.

 

 

-30-

 

 

 

 

 

JOHN IVANIC

COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR

_____________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

90 W. Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215

Direct: 614-645-6798

Cell:     614-701-1411

www.columbus.gov

    

 

    

 

Thursday, September 20, 2012

City Council Holds Financial Review

 

COLUMBUS CITY COUNCIL

MEDIA ALERT

 

For Immediate Release

September 20, 2012

 

For More Information:

John Ivanic, (614) 645-6798

WebFacebookTwitter

 

Columbus City Council Holds
Second Quarter Financial Review

 

WHO:

Councilmember Priscilla R. Tyson

Finance Department Director Paul Rakosky

 

WHEN:

Thursday, September 27, 2012
5:00 pm

 

WHERE:

Columbus City Council Chambers

90 West Broad Street

 

WHAT:

Councilmember Priscilla R. Tyson, chair of the Finance Committee, will hold a hearing to review the city's second quarter finances. Public testimony will be accepted and the meeting will be broadcast live on CTV, Columbus’ government television channel 3 on local cable systems.  Speaker slips will be accepted on the day of the hearing till 5:30 pm. General rules of speaking before Council apply.

 

 

-30-

 

 

 

 

 

JOHN IVANIC

COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR

_____________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

90 W. Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215

Direct: 614-645-6798

Cell:     614-701-1411

www.columbus.gov

    

 

    

 

City Coucnil Holds Financia Review

COLUMBUS CITY COUNCIL

MEDIA ALERT

 

For Immediate Release

September 20, 2012

 

For More Information:

John Ivanic, (614) 645-6798

WebFacebookTwitter

 

Columbus City Council Holds
Second Quarter Financial Review

 

WHO:

Councilmember Priscilla R. Tyson

Finance Department Director Paul Rakosky

 

WHEN:

Thursday, September 27, 2012
5:00 pm

 

WHERE:

Columbus City Council Chambers

90 West Broad Street

 

WHAT:

Councilmember Priscilla R. Tyson, chair of the Finance Committee, will hold a hearing to review the city's second quarter finances. Public testimony will be accepted and the meeting will be broadcast live on CTV, Columbus’ government television channel 3 on local cable systems.  Speaker slips will be accepted on the day of the hearing till 5:30 pm. General rules of speaking before Council apply.

 

 

-30-

 

 

 

 

 

JOHN IVANIC

COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR

_____________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

90 W. Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215

Direct: 614-645-6798

Cell:     614-701-1411

www.columbus.gov

    

 

    

 

E-News Bulletin - A Special Message from Superintendent/CEO Gen T. Harris, Ph.D.



n Special Edition – September 20, 2012

E-News Special Report



Dear CCS staff members, supporters, and friends:

On Tuesday evening, September 18, I met with the Board of Education in Executive Session to inform them of my plans to retire at the end of the current school year, on July 1, 2013.

This is something that I have been considering for more than a year. This is a decision that has been made with considerable thought, prayer and conversation with my family.  I have had a wonderful career in Columbus City Schools – spanning 35 years, with nearly 12 of those serving as District Superintendent.

When graduating from Linden-McKinley High School in 1971, it was one of my lifelong dreams to become the superintendent of my hometown school district.  I don't think anyone could be as fulfilled and fortunate as I feel today.  I chose this path for two reasons – the students and the people in the Columbus City School District.  To be able to give back to a system that laid the foundation for my life, my love for learning and for who I am today, is a gift that most people never experience.

Our work will continue, and one of my highest priorities over the next several months is to continue to work with the Auditor of State and the District's Internal Auditor to resolve the ongoing statewide investigation into student attendance record keeping.  I asked the Auditor of State to investigate the attendance reporting concern, and I plan to see it through and to get this challenge behind us before I leave, in July.

I also want to step up our efforts to increase our engagement between our schools and the community.  More than 80% of our students live in poverty, and their needs are many.  Forty-two percent of our entering kindergartners need intervention services, 8,700 CCS students have a special need or disability, and we have a growing population of students whose primary language is not English (more than 95 different languages are spoken across the District). Getting every element of our community involved to help us in this important work is critical, because our schools can't do it alone.

I have already spoken with Mayor Coleman about my concerns.  He has been an avid supporter of our students – and our school district, and he has expressed an interest in becoming even more active in Columbus City Schools. He has mentored some of our students and he has a true connection with them. He has his own Capital Kids program and he knows how critical it is to our future workforce to make sure every child graduates with a high quality education.

Together, we have accomplished many great things for the students of CCS. A sampling of these includes:
  • District schools earning an A or B academic rating on the State of Ohio Report Card has increased from 15 in 2004 to 29 in 2011.
  • Our graduation rates have increased by more than 30 points, from only 55% in 2001 to 85.1% in 2011.
  • Twelve CCS schools were named among the nation's best in 2010 by U.S. News and World Report.
  • We created the Higher Education Partnership to provide a single point of contact between CCS and eleven Central Ohio colleges/universities, as well as I Know I Can; designed to develop programs that boost student achievement and college readiness.
  • We established a no-cost Summer Institute to help students pass the Ohio Graduation Test.
  • We created The Virtual High School Program that enables students to earn high school credits online.
  • The District's Seniors-to-Sophomores Program was developed, enabling high school students to earn one year of college credit from a local college or university.
  • In 2010, the District earned a Standard & Poor's bond rating of AA, placing us among the twenty highest-rated school districts in Ohio.
  • We've had tremendous success with the development of our capital improvements program.  To date, 39 Columbus schools have been rebuilt or substantially renovated.
  • We continue to work hard to operate as efficiently and effectively as possible, closing underutilized buildings, reducing expenditures and/or restraining budget growth by nearly $280 million over the past 11 years.
  • Secured voter approval of two operating levies and two bond issues (In 2002, voters approved a 2.96 mills levy; in 2004 a 6.95 operating levy; and in 2008 a combined bond and operating 7.85 mill levy).
  • We have invested in our children reducing K-3 average classroom size, providing new school buses and textbooks, adding critical instruction time back into the school day, and providing innovative programs such as a new international high school; two, gender-based middle schools, a K-8 international studies program, and Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM)-focused schools located throughout the district.

As part of the recent discussions with the District's Levy Millage Committee, I introduced efforts to:
  • Expand CCS Pre K to substantially increase capacity to 50% of incoming Kindergartners and dramatically impact readiness skills
  • Create an Innovation Fund to aggressively improve persistently low-performing schools through collaborations with high-performing district and charter schools.
  • Launch a Leadership Academy with The Ohio State University to maximize principal leadership capacity to create transformational change leading to high-performing schools.

There are many more successes in store for Columbus City Schools, our students and our staff in the future.

It's been twelve years since the District last searched for a new superintendent, and I have made a commitment to the Board of Education – and I make that same commitment to our staff and community – that I will make sure the transition to new leadership goes smoothly.  I will not allow my departure to slow down our progress. We have a great leadership team, and a focused and caring staff who are committed to the students of Columbus.

Thank you for the support and encouragement you have provided me throughout this exciting 35-year journey.  Please know that we will keep you apprised of our progress and the efforts on the part of the Board of Education to find my successor.

Respectfully,


Gene T. Harris, Ph.D.
Superintendent/CEO

Are you receiving a pass-along copy of CCS eNews?
To subscribe to our FREE newsletter

Click here  

or here to opt out.



Disclaimer: This message and any attachments are for the intended recipient's use only. It may contain confidential, proprietary or legally privileged information or otherwise be protected from disclosure by other legal rules. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail and destroy all copies. If you are not the intended recipient, you may not use, disclose or reproduce this message, its attachment or any part thereof, or take any action in reliance thereon. Emails are not secure and cannot be guaranteed to be error free as they can be intercepted, amended, or contain viruses. Anyone who communicates with us by email is deemed to have accepted these risks.

E-News Bulletin - A Special Message from Superintendent/CEO Gen T. Harris, Ph.D.



n Special Edition – September 20, 2012

E-News Special Report



Dear CCS staff members, supporters, and friends:

On Tuesday evening, September 18, I met with the Board of Education in Executive Session to inform them of my plans to retire at the end of the current school year, on July 1, 2013.

This is something that I have been considering for more than a year. This is a decision that has been made with considerable thought, prayer and conversation with my family.  I have had a wonderful career in Columbus City Schools – spanning 35 years, with nearly 12 of those serving as District Superintendent.

When graduating from Linden-McKinley High School in 1971, it was one of my lifelong dreams to become the superintendent of my hometown school district.  I don't think anyone could be as fulfilled and fortunate as I feel today.  I chose this path for two reasons – the students and the people in the Columbus City School District.  To be able to give back to a system that laid the foundation for my life, my love for learning and for who I am today, is a gift that most people never experience.

Our work will continue, and one of my highest priorities over the next several months is to continue to work with the Auditor of State and the District's Internal Auditor to resolve the ongoing statewide investigation into student attendance record keeping.  I asked the Auditor of State to investigate the attendance reporting concern, and I plan to see it through and to get this challenge behind us before I leave, in July.

I also want to step up our efforts to increase our engagement between our schools and the community.  More than 80% of our students live in poverty, and their needs are many.  Forty-two percent of our entering kindergartners need intervention services, 8,700 CCS students have a special need or disability, and we have a growing population of students whose primary language is not English (more than 95 different languages are spoken across the District). Getting every element of our community involved to help us in this important work is critical, because our schools can't do it alone.

I have already spoken with Mayor Coleman about my concerns.  He has been an avid supporter of our students – and our school district, and he has expressed an interest in becoming even more active in Columbus City Schools. He has mentored some of our students and he has a true connection with them. He has his own Capital Kids program and he knows how critical it is to our future workforce to make sure every child graduates with a high quality education.

Together, we have accomplished many great things for the students of CCS. A sampling of these includes:
  • District schools earning an A or B academic rating on the State of Ohio Report Card has increased from 15 in 2004 to 29 in 2011.
  • Our graduation rates have increased by more than 30 points, from only 55% in 2001 to 85.1% in 2011.
  • Twelve CCS schools were named among the nation's best in 2010 by U.S. News and World Report.
  • We created the Higher Education Partnership to provide a single point of contact between CCS and eleven Central Ohio colleges/universities, as well as I Know I Can; designed to develop programs that boost student achievement and college readiness.
  • We established a no-cost Summer Institute to help students pass the Ohio Graduation Test.
  • We created The Virtual High School Program that enables students to earn high school credits online.
  • The District's Seniors-to-Sophomores Program was developed, enabling high school students to earn one year of college credit from a local college or university.
  • In 2010, the District earned a Standard & Poor's bond rating of AA, placing us among the twenty highest-rated school districts in Ohio.
  • We've had tremendous success with the development of our capital improvements program.  To date, 39 Columbus schools have been rebuilt or substantially renovated.
  • We continue to work hard to operate as efficiently and effectively as possible, closing underutilized buildings, reducing expenditures and/or restraining budget growth by nearly $280 million over the past 11 years.
  • Secured voter approval of two operating levies and two bond issues (In 2002, voters approved a 2.96 mills levy; in 2004 a 6.95 operating levy; and in 2008 a combined bond and operating 7.85 mill levy).
  • We have invested in our children reducing K-3 average classroom size, providing new school buses and textbooks, adding critical instruction time back into the school day, and providing innovative programs such as a new international high school; two, gender-based middle schools, a K-8 international studies program, and Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM)-focused schools located throughout the district.

As part of the recent discussions with the District's Levy Millage Committee, I introduced efforts to:
  • Expand CCS Pre K to substantially increase capacity to 50% of incoming Kindergartners and dramatically impact readiness skills
  • Create an Innovation Fund to aggressively improve persistently low-performing schools through collaborations with high-performing district and charter schools.
  • Launch a Leadership Academy with The Ohio State University to maximize principal leadership capacity to create transformational change leading to high-performing schools.

There are many more successes in store for Columbus City Schools, our students and our staff in the future.

It's been twelve years since the District last searched for a new superintendent, and I have made a commitment to the Board of Education – and I make that same commitment to our staff and community – that I will make sure the transition to new leadership goes smoothly.  I will not allow my departure to slow down our progress. We have a great leadership team, and a focused and caring staff who are committed to the students of Columbus.

Thank you for the support and encouragement you have provided me throughout this exciting 35-year journey.  Please know that we will keep you apprised of our progress and the efforts on the part of the Board of Education to find my successor.

Respectfully,


Gene T. Harris, Ph.D.
Superintendent/CEO

Are you receiving a pass-along copy of CCS eNews?
To subscribe to our FREE newsletter

Click here  

or here to opt out.



Disclaimer: This message and any attachments are for the intended recipient's use only. It may contain confidential, proprietary or legally privileged information or otherwise be protected from disclosure by other legal rules. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail and destroy all copies. If you are not the intended recipient, you may not use, disclose or reproduce this message, its attachment or any part thereof, or take any action in reliance thereon. Emails are not secure and cannot be guaranteed to be error free as they can be intercepted, amended, or contain viruses. Anyone who communicates with us by email is deemed to have accepted these risks.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Statement From Councilmember Michelle M. Mills

COLUMBUS CITY COUNCIL

MEDIA ALERT

 

September 19, 2012

 

For More Information:

John Ivanic, (614) 645-6798

WebFacebookTwitter

 

 

(Columbus)--Columbus City Councilmember Michelle M. Mills, chair of the Public Safety and Judiciary Committee, is asking all Columbus residents to take a moment today and keep in their thoughts and prayers the family of Columbus Police Detective Marcia Frederick.  Frederick was killed in a car accident Tuesday afternoon.  

 

“On behalf of the Columbus City Council, I would like to extend by sincerest condolences to the Frederick family and the entire Columbus Division of Police,” said Councilmember Mills.   “I know that Detective Frederick had spent many months bravely battling cancer and her contributions to the Division, and the special victims bureau in particular, will be greatly missed.” 

 

-30-

 

 

JOHN IVANIC

COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR

_____________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

90 W. Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215

Direct: 614-645-6798

Cell:     614-701-1411

www.columbus.gov