LEGAL AFFAIRS: Akron School of Law’s new dean discusses her vision. PAGE 8
AKRON ‘Marriage counseling’ enabled area leaders to collaborate. PAGE 2
CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I MAY 9, 2022
ABORTION QUESTIONS ABOUND
Abortion rights demonstrators during a protest outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday, May 3. | AL DRAGO/BLOOMBERG
With Supreme Court poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, abortion access supporters and providers look closely at next steps BY LYDIA COUTRÉ
With the U.S. Supreme Court poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, Ohio’s abortion access supporters and providers are looking at next steps and the many questions that lie ahead. A draft opinion leaked to Politico in early May indicates the court plans to strike down the landmark 1973 decision that ruled the U.S. Constitution protects a pregnant woman’s right to an abortion. Though it is a draft opinion, the chances of the final decision being different is “unlikely,” said Jessie Hill, professor of law at Case Western Reserve University. If the court ultimately strikes down Roe, the legality of abortion would be left to the states, resulting in a patchwork of abortion access across the country. See ABORTION on Page 16
Intel’s plan has promise for suppliers GOJO embraces hybrid $20B commitment predicted to boost existing relationships with Northeast Ohio companies BY MICHELLE JARBOE
Intel Corp.’s $20 billion commitment to building a massive semiconductor production facility outside of Columbus has the potential to deepen the tech company’s relationships with existing Northeast Ohio suppliers — and to lure new businesses to the region. The Columbus area clearly will see the greatest benefit from the project,
a multiyear investment on a sprawling site in New Albany. But site selectors and manufacturing executives predict broad reverberations from a deal that’s being described as the largest single private-sector investment in the state’s history. Officials say there are 140 existing Intel suppliers in Ohio, though no one seems to have a list of those companies. The heaviest concentration of them — approximately 40% — is in
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Northeast Ohio, according to JobsOhio, the state’s private nonprofit economic development corporation, and Team NEO, its regional partner. Intel did not respond to questions about its supply chain, beyond sharing a roster of top global vendors published in its annual corporate social responsibility report. The company is soliciting interest from would-be suppliers on its website, in areas ranging from computing to warehousing, hospitality and sales. See INTEL on Page 17
THE
LAND SCAPE
return-to-work plan BY DAN SHINGLER
Seems like everyone in corporate America is thinking about how to handle some sort of return to work in the wake of the COVID pandemic and the new expectations for employment flexibility it brought on. Except for GOJO Industries down in Akron. It thought ahead. The maker of Purell hand sanitizer started thinking about it in 2020, the first year of the pandemic, and by
2022, company leaders had a working system that had already been conceptualized, thought out and communicated to their employees. Now, they’re only thinking about how to improve that system going forward. “We did spend a lot of time on it, and it is a work in progress. … Over about 18 months, we did a combination of employee surveys and See GOJO on Page 16
A CRAIN’S CLEVELAND PODCAST
5/6/2022 1:50:29 PM