Ohio by the numbers, part 2: Where we lag in jobs, safety, mental health, housing, and more

What people said they would like to change about Ohio shows up in data as areas where the state is falling behind. Your Voice Ohio hired former Akron Beacon Journal investigative and data reporter David Knox to generate data on all 88 Ohio counties going back several decades so that reporters can explore the state and communities in context.

Here are numbers he provided, and information as noted from other sources, on key topics:

Income losses

One of the starkest illustrations of Ohio’s difficulties can be found in the median household income. Median represents the midpoint between highest and lowest. From 2000 to the most recent year for which data are available. Most of Ohio, and Black Ohioans in particular, suffered extraordinarily even before the pandemic.

Median household income, 2000-2018, adjusted for inflation:

  • U.S Whites, non-Hispanic, $69,168 in 2018, down $663
  • U.S. Blacks $42,263 in 2018, down $3,026
  • Ohio Whites, non-Hispanic, $62,162 in 2018, down $3,870
  • Ohio Blacks $34,199 in 2018, down $5,375

The numbers show that Black Ohioans not only have median household incomes that are far lower than the U.S. and regional white households, they also lost more dollars.

Some highly populated counties have endured extraordinary economic declines since 2000, accompanied by some of the nation’s worst opioid overdose death rates. Those counties, and the decline in annual median household income from 2000, are:

  • Montgomery (Dayton), down $9,900
  • Butler (Middletown-Hamilton), down $11,800
  • Lucas (Toledo), down $10,100
  • Trumbull (Warren), down $11,700

Over just three years, median households lost the equivalent of a new car or a three-day hospital stay.

Only seven of Ohio’s 88 counties have experienced an increase in median household income — most of them small and rural: Holmes, Belmont, Lawrence, Meigs, Harrison, Union, and Delaware.

To see the numbers in your county, click here.

Jobs

Because of efforts to slow the coronavirus pandemic, about one in seven Ohioans is unemployed — that’s more than 750,000 people out of work — far worse than the Great Recession of 2007-09.

Ohio’s peak year for employment was in 2000 when 5.5 million were working. That number fell during two recessions and never recovered. In 2019, 5.4 million were working — down about 100,000 from the peak — although the population had increased 335,000. In May, the number of workers was an estimated 4.8 million.

Here is a list of Ohio’s total employment, in all sectors, broken down by region and county.

Mental health

As Ohio’s job market began significant deterioration due to automation in 2005, there was growth in deaths due to drug overdoses — considered a mental health issue. More than 28,000 Ohioans have died of opioid overdoses alone in the past decade.

Suicide in Ohio is on the rise and 37 of 88 counties have rates above U.S. average, according to a recent Ohio University study. Moreover, unemployment is associated with depression, and Ohio’s unemployment rate is at one of the highest rates in a century.

Overall, the U.S. spent 20% more on mental health per capita than Ohio in 2013. Ohio ranked 25th in the country. That’s from a study by the respected Kaiser Family Foundation. Studies by special interest groups since then suggest that Ohio ranks high for the percentage of people needing and having access to mental health services, but meanwhile there was a drop in spending.

Housing

U.S. News and World Reports ranks Ohio second for affordability, but the study examines only home ownership. One-third of the homes in the state are rental properties, and in cities such as Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo, rentals are the majority.

A Business Insider study showed Ohio is 10th-most expensive for rent, and the EvictionLab at Princeton University places Akron, Dayton, Toledo, Cincinnati, Columbus, and Cleveland in the top 53 major cities for eviction rates.

Access to healthy food

This was a primary concern in Your Voice Ohio conversations in cities where many residents live below the state median household income. The largest complaint was access to healthy food as opposed to canned, high-salt products that imperil quality of life and increase healthcare costs.

A 2017 Ohio State University Center for Public Health Practice study concluded that the state ranks 45 for reliable, daily access to food, with 16 percent of the population in food-insecure households.

A Robert Wood Johnson Foundation study showed that 7% of Ohioans don’t have convenient access to healthy food. Counties with the worst access were: Vinton, 24% without convenient access; Marion, 18%; Athens, 14%; and Noble, 13%. Several urban counties also were above 10%: Montgomery (Dayton), Mahoning (Youngstown), Richland (Mansfield).

Education

Ohio ranks 22nd for its high school graduation rate and is below the national average for enrollment in early education programs, according to a Gannett newspapers study. Early education is considered to be one of the most important factors in school success.

Ohio lags the nation for college education, often attributed to the fact that manufacturing workers could earn meaningful wages with benefits with no more than a high school diploma.

While 32% of U.S. adults have at least a four-year college degree, only 28% of Ohioans have a degree.

The Education Law Center analyzed multiple factors to determine that Ohio spends $990 above the U.S. per-pupil average for K-12 education, does an excellent job of distributing the money equitably, but gives the state only a C for funding effort.

Ohio had the fourth-largest gap between white and Black students on the National Assessment of Education Progress eighth-grade math test. However, Ohio overall outperforms the U.S.

Ohio ranks 16th-highest for in-state tuition and fees at four-year colleges, according to the College Board.

And Ohio ranked 15th in 2016 for college loan defaults, according to a MoneyWise magazine analysis of the latest data from the U.S. Department of Education.

Here is a county-by-county breakdown of education levels attained by adults 25 and over.

Safety

Ohio’s violent crime rate has declined for the last several years, including 5.5% in 2018, according to a recent Gannett Newspapers study. The state ranks 35th for violent crime.

Black people are incarcerated in Ohio at a rate five times that of whites, and Ohio ranks 17th for its incarceration rate of Black males — one in every 22 — according to The Sentencing Project.

Health and health care

Ohio ranks 39th in overall quality of life, according to the World Population Review. For access to health care, the state ranks 35th.

The state is 18th-best for the percentage of people with health-care coverage. A Gannett Newspapers analysis, which shows Ohio with the 10th-shortest life expectancy, ranks the state 39th for quality of life.

For other rankings from the Centers for Disease Control:

Deaths from diabetes: 10th worst

Infant mortality: 10th worst

Suicides: 28th worst

Death by accident: 7th worst

Death from heart disease: 10th worst


Shape the news with your voice!

Want to express your thoughts about the upcoming election and issues that are important to you? The Your Voice Ohio project and Soapbox Cincinnati are partnering to sponsor a series of online conversations so that you can contribute to presidential election coverage in Ohio. Volunteer to contribute to this effort by going to this website: www.yourvoiceohio.org/election2020. Participants will be selected from the list of volunteers to represent Ohio demographics and will receive a $125 stipend for participation in a session.

About the project: Your Voice Ohio is the largest sustained, statewide media collaborative in the nation. Launched nearly five years ago, more than 60 news outlets have participated in unique, community-focused coverage of elections, addiction, racial equity, the economy, and housing. Nearly 1,300 Ohioans have engaged with more than 100 journalists in dozens of urban, rural, and suburban communities across the state. Over and over again, Ohioans have helped journalists understand their perspectives and experiences while sharing ideas to strengthen their local communities and the state. The Democracy Fund, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and Facebook are the primary funders of Your Voice Ohio. To learn more about Your Voice Ohio visit www.yourvoiceohio.org. To learn more about the Jefferson Center visit www.jefferson-center.org.

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Read more articles by Doug Oplinger.

Doug Oplinger is former managing editor of the Akron Beacon Journal where he worked for 46 years. He now is the project manager for Your Voice Ohio, a collaborative of more than 50 news outlets in Ohio, sharing resources to better represent the voices of Ohioans in the democratic process.