Crain's Cleveland Business

Page 1

CRAIN’S LIST

HEALTH CARE: University Hospitals reports $104.5M 2021 operating income. PAGE 2

CEOs at local public companies got particularly large raises in 2021. PAGE 26

Farming is still a billion-dollar piece of state economy Impact of region’s oldest industry is far reaching BY JAY MILLER

Decades of urbanization and improvements in transportation have reduced the role of farming in the Northeast Ohio economy. But farming is the region’s oldest industry, and it continues to touch everyone in the region — not just at the dinner table. The early settlers of the Western Reserve raised corn and wheat, with Ohio becoming a leading producer of those crops. The early farmers also raised hogs and cattle, and the region soon became a leader in the production of butter and cheese. The 14-county region that surrounds Cleveland is now home to more than 13,000 farms, which hire more than 15,000 workers and pro-

duce nearly $1.3 billion in farm products, according to the 2017 National Agricultural Statistical Survey (NASS) census of agriculture, the latest data available. The farms range in size from 2,000-acre spreads that grow corn and soybeans for markets around the world to small operations that grow products such as herbs or mushrooms in a barn. In between are farms that raise significant amounts of dairy and beef cattle, chickens, fruits and vegetables, maple syrup and wine grapes, according to the NASS census. Many of the smaller farms produce products that are sold to restaurants, farmers markets or Community Supported

These young professionals are hardworking, engaged, innovative, forward-thinking, altruistic and proactive. They care about their work and their communities. PAGE 10

PHOTOS BY JASON MILLER/ PIXELATE PHOTOGRAPHY

CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I JUNE 6, 2022

See FARMING on Page 28

No office blues in Westlake Developers set newest multitenant project BY STAN BULLARD

Co. co-founder Rich Desich said he and his investor group are planTo write an obituary for the office ning another, bigger building market, it would require ignoring a nearby. Although the next building, recent round of office leasing and four new office buildings in the which has a three-story design but planning stages in Westlake, on the can be altered to suit tenants who commit to it early, will not rise until western fringe of Cuyahoga County. tenants commit to it, Desich and other inves“IT’S FOR FORWARD-LOOKING tors in Dreamland II COMPANIES THAT WANT TO LLC have made a big inINVEST IN THEIR COMPANIES AND vestment in the plan. The investor group acTHEIR TALENT.” quired the wooded, 10acre site for the structure — Rich Desich, Equity Trust Co. co-founder for $850,000. JTEKT On the heels of landing leasing Corp. of Nagoya, Japan, which had commitments to declare Conver- held it since the 1980s for an expangent — a high-end office complex sion it never made, shed the site afthat opened in 2020 near the ter shutting its adjoining building, northwest corner of the I-90 and which faces Clemens Road. Crocker Road interchange — fully leased, developer and Equity Trust See WESTLAKE on Page 28

NEWSPAPER

VOL. 43, NO. 21 l COPYRIGHT 2022 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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