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Volume 10, Issue 26
Lorain, Medina Counties among fastest aging OWEN MACMILLAN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
Recently released census data shows that Lorain and Medina counties are aging faster than the state and national norm; and that has wide-ranging implications, according to experts. Census data shows that between 2000 and 2022, the percentage of population that is 60 or older nearly doubled in Medina County, from 14.4 percent of total population to 27.1 percent, while Lorain County saw an increase from 16.5 percent to 27 percent. While Ohio as a whole has an aging population, the 60-plus population saw an increase of 50.5 percent statewide from 2000 to 2022, while Lorain and Medina counties are far outpacing that mark. Medina was the sixth-fastest aging county in the state, with a 128.2 percent
increase in proportion of people over 60, and Lorain County was 13th, with an increase of 81.7 percent. The total combined 60-plus population of Lorain and Medina counties nearly doubled in that span, from 68,806 to 135,172 last year. Organizations like the Lorain County Office on Aging that provide services to older adults already are feeling the pressure of an increased service population, Executive Director Lauren Ksiazek said. Ksiazek said that compared with 2019, the call volume that the Office on Aging received increased by roughly 94 percent in 2022. “We are seeing that very much in the number of calls we are receiving,” she said. “We are getting almost double the number of calls that we were just four years ago. We are seeing a lot more calls into our organization and are hearing from AGING PAGE A2
Seniors (ages 60 and older) as a percentage of total population 27.1%
27.1%
25.1%
17.3%
16.5%
16.3%
14.4%
Medina County
Lorain County 2000
23.7%
Ohio
U.S.
2020
Source: Census Bureau, 2000 census and population estimates as of July 1, 2022
Wellington first responders switch to L3 Harris radios CARISSA WOYTACH THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
WELLINGTON — Fire, police and ambulance personnel in Wellington and its surrounding townships will soon be the latest using L3 Harris radios. During a special meeting June 22, Village Council approved a $214,522 purchase from Cleveland Communications Inc. of 20 portable and eight car radios, as well as a new dispatch center console for the new police station.
Purchasing the equipment before June 28 saved the village about $87,000, Mayor Hans Schneider said. Schneider said the department’s current dispatch console is from the 1980s and there were concerns as to whether or not it would even survive the move to the new station. So either way, the department would have looked to purchase a new dispatch center. He said the expense will come out of the village’s capital project budget, or its RADIOS PAGE A2
League of Women Voters, labor leaders decry Issue 1 JEFF BARNES | The Community Guide
ABOVE: Dan Cherney along with his granddaughter, Drina Andres, 11, work on their large work of art during the Oberlin Chalk Walk on June 24. BELOW: Candace Traster designs her chalk art of Beavis and Butt-Head.
Chalk Walk invites artists to live in the moment CARISSA WOYTACH THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
OBERLIN — Artists young and old covered Oberlin’s sidewalks in colorful, temporary art on June 24. With the sidewalk as their canvas, more than 1,000 visitors decorated Oberlin for the 16th annual Chalk Walk. Committee Chair Barry Richard said the event was going strong Saturday afternoon, with more attendees than anticipated thanks to a cloudy day without rain. The event, which took a two-year hiatus due to COVID-19, hires sevCHALK PAGE A5
KEVIN MARTIN THE COMMUNITY GUIDE
AMHERST — Local labor leaders were joined June 21 by League of Women Voters of Ohio Executive Director Jen Miller in asking voters to reject Issue 1, calling a proposal to raise the threshold for amending the Ohio Constitution an “attack on every Ohioan.” Gathering at the Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers training center on Leavitt Road, representatives from Lorain County AFL-CIO, Lorain County Central Labor Council along with Miller blasted the move pushed by Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose that would require 60 percent support to amend the Ohio Constitution through a citizens ballot initiative, a proposal that upends the current requirement of 50 percent plus one in place
for more than 110 years. Voters will head to the polls Aug. 8 in a special election that has attracted criticism from both Republicans and Democrats. “For more than 110 years, Ohio voters have had the freedom and right to put Constitutional amendments directly on the ballot with a simple majority. We need to preserve the sacred principle of one person, one vote,” said Ron Adkins, president of the Lorain County Central Labor Council. “Now unions all across this state are working in a bipartisan fashion at all levels of government to spur massive job creation and economic development. “With so much opportunity in front of us, we believe Issue 1 is unnecessary and divisive. Working Ohioans are calling for more collaboration and less conflict. Vote No on Issue 1 on Aug. 8.” ISSUE 1 PAGE A3
INSIDE THIS WEEK Amherst
Man fined for Barra crash ● A3
Oberlin
LGBTQ Pride comes to Tappan ● A5
Wellington
Second Harvest distributes food ● A4
OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS • CROSSWORD A7 • SUDOKU A7 • KID SCOOP A8