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Toledo Talk   (musing about Lake Erie West and beyond)
Ohio's Big Cities
Area Counties
WSJ blames taxes
Toledo Blade blames taxes
Toledo Councilman blames taxes
Tax unfriendly states
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Toledo's January unemployment rate highest among Ohio's major cities

Mar 4, 2008 WTVG story :

Toledo's rate of unemployment tops the list of Ohio's major cities at 9.3 percent. In northwest Ohio, two counties-- Ottawa and Huron-- have rates above 10 percent. The Ohio county-by-county unemployment figures for January were released Tuesday by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services. Ohio's unemployment rate is the second highest in the region, with Michigan's unemployment even higher. Officials reported last week that Ohio's overall unemployment for January was 5.5 percent, down from 5.8 the month before.

Ohio's Big Cities

1. Toledo 9.3
2. Youngstown 8.3
3. Cleveland 8.1
4. Dayton 7.6
5. Canton 7.5
5. Lorain 7.5
7. Springfield 7.4
8. Mansfield 7.1
9. Elyria 6.6
9. Euclid 6.6
11. Hamilton 6.5
12. Akron 6.4
13. Parma 6.3
14. Cuyahoga Falls 5.7
15. Cincinnati 5.6
15. Kettering 5.6
17. Lakewood 5.3
18. Mentor 5.0
19. Columbus 4.9
20. Cleveland Hts. 4.6

Census and city profile info

Area Counties

1. Ottawa 10.9
2. Huron 10.4
3. Lucas 8.6
4. Erie 8.3
5. Fulton 8.1
6. Henry 7.8
7. Sandusky 7.6
8. Seneca 6.5
9. Wood 6.4
10. Williams 6.3
11. Defiance 6.2
12. Paulding 5.8
13. Putnam 5.6
14. Hancock 4.9

Ohio County map

WSJ blames taxes

Mar 3, 2008 Wall Street Journal opinion :

Ohio now ranks 47th out of 50 in economic competitiveness, according to the American Legislative Exchange Council. Ohio politicians deplore plant closings even as they impose the third highest corporate income tax in the country (10.5%) and the sixth highest personal income tax (8.87%).

Ohio is a "closed shop" state, which means workers can be forced to join a union whether they wish to or not. Many companies -- especially foreign-owned -- say they will not even consider such locations for new sites. States with "right to work" laws that make union organizing more difficult had twice the job growth of Ohio and other forced union states from 1995-2005, according to the National Institute for Labor Relations.

Toledo Blade blames taxes

June 2006 Toledo Talk posting that pointed to a June 24, 2006 Toledo Blade editorial titled Our Shrinking Cities :

While some blame the often harsh northern climate, we blame taxes: Ohio remains a high-tax state, and the resultant job loss, worsened by the steady erosion of manufacturing as an economic base, seems unrelenting.

Toledo Councilman blames taxes

June 2006 posting about Toledo's one-year population decline being the 13th fastest in the U.S., Toledo City Councilman Frank Szollosi said:

"It's an indication that taxes are too high in Toledo."

Tax unfriendly states

From a spring 2007 Toledo Talk posting :

Least tax friendly states - Top 5
(State ---- State and local tax burden as % of income)

In the 2007 small business survival index ranking, which is about "Which states are low on taxes and light on government regulations?", Ohio is near the bottom, ranked 38th.

created by jr on Mar 04, 2008 at 04:31:31 pm
updated by jr on Mar 04, 2008 at 05:18:37 pm
    Comments: 0

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