The United States Navy is returning to Cleveland, Ohio for the tenth Navy Week of the year, from September 4th to 10th, 2023, to engage with the local community through various events, including educational presentations, demonstrations, and volunteer opportunities.
Category: Early Archived Coverage
A year later, Cleveland’s Central neighborhood still waiting on the Surge
The revitalization plan, announced more than a year ago, focused on “surging” support into Cleveland’s Central neighborhood…
Central residents long for a grocery store as negotiations drag on
Many Cleveland neighborhoods – almost 60% according to one estimate – don’t lie in close proximity to a grocery store, effectively stranding people without cars. The Central neighborhood is no different…
The Fight Against Divisive Concepts In Ohio Schools
Two pieces of legislation, House Bills 327 and 616, are currently being debated in the Ohio Statehouse, which would prohibit the teaching of race, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, and current social and political topics in Ohio schools, and would punish teachers and schools for violating the bill’s prohibitions.
The Child Tax Credit is helping Clevelanders, but some families have missed it
The Child Tax Credit is helping Clevelanders, but some families have missed it. What can be done to remedy that problem?
Central neighborhood will be first to get “surge” of support, but will it be what residents want?
Cuyahoga County Executive Armond Budish and other local politicians caught an earful
Cleveland Right to Counsel shows promising early results for tenants, and some landlords
Cleveland is one of seven cities in the U.S. that has enacted a right to counsel program that provides free legal representation to tenants facing eviction. Early statistics from the program’s first year of operation show…
Cleveland efforts to recruit black, minority patients for COVID-19 vaccine trials an uphill battle
How Black health care providers are trying to build back trust in their community for a critical need: to have adequate representation for clinical trials for the COVID-19
Historical mistreatment, modern-day disparities make Black Americans less likely to trust COVID-19 care, vaccine
When Carmen Bailey fell ill with COVID-19, she told her daughter not to take her to the hospital. Her story echoes that of many our community members
Home Visitation Program Reduces Infant Mortality in Medicaid Recipients
Part 3 of our Black women’s maternal health series with the Cleveland Observer

