John O'Grady, Franklin County Commissioner

John O'Grady, Franklin County Commissioner This page is for politics and public policy

06/13/2020

My memory from this morning was the Editorial that appeared one year ago in the Columbus Dispatch regarding my colleagues and I releasing the Rise Together Blueprint to fight poverty. The Editorial points out that we named racism as the number one cause of poverty in Franklin County. Proud of the work of my colleagues, directors and staff. I’ve included my post and the Editorial.

This appeared in this mornings Columbus Dispatch. Very proud of the effort by everyone involved. All aspects of the community were a part of developing this Blueprint from those who use the county’s services and are most impacted by poverty to subject matter experts that run non-profits working in this space to county staff to the business community. Once again, a great example of how we stack hands in this community to get things done. Lots of hard work ahead but let’s get to it so we can start helping those in this community who need it most!

Editorial: County plan takes on poverty and its partner: persistent racism

If rising rates of poverty are ever going to be reversed in Franklin County, the work going on now stands a good chance of making a meaningful difference.

Franklin County Commissioners have put themselves at the front of the fight and they deserve credit for owning the issue, but their success ultimately depends on how well they muster the community’s collective resources and political will to engage with them.

Commissioners Marilyn Brown, John O’Grady and Kevin Boyce announced their Rise Together Blueprint this week and are rolling out its recommendations in a series of four community meetings to seek feedback and support.

This is not easy work; stubborn patterns of economic disparity have deep roots and cannot be quickly remedied. The pervasiveness of economic segregation in Columbus, one of the nation’s worst such examples, was documented in the 2017 Dispatch series “Dividing Lines.”

It is especially frustrating that local poverty rates have continued to rise in Franklin County —approaching nearly 17% — even as the area enjoys one of the state’s lowest unemployment rates at 2.7%.

But central Ohio already knows how to join hands to tackle large problems, as has been demonstrated over the past decade by the work of Columbus 2020 to drive economic development in central Ohio.

Sadly, poverty persists here despite the success of Columbus 2020 on its goals of creating new jobs, attracting capital investment and raising per capita income, and that may be in large part because of a sinister culprit the county has identified: racism.

“We needed to name the issue and we needed to own the issue,” O’Grady told the Dispatch editorial board. He said local symptoms of racism include African Americans having higher rates of unemployment and incarceration and lower rates of home ownership.

Racial-equity training will be offered to help the community understand and address the role race plays in individuals’ disparate opportunities to prosper.

It is important that this difficult issue be addressed to understand why some families and individuals continue to struggle in a strong local economy.

It is especially significant that the Columbus Partnership, a leadership group of central Ohio corporate and nonprofit executives, is working with the county to fight poverty. “We’re full partners here,” said President and CEO Alex Fischer.

In a move that is both symbolic and symbiotic, a planned Innovation Center tasked with overseeing the county’s initiative to reduce poverty will initially be housed with the Partnership. Yet-to-be hired staff there will focus first on three of 13 goals identified in the poverty blueprint, plus a “big idea” of making child care more available for children in the county.

The commissioners have tapped two very able co-chairs for the center’s leadership council: Mid-Ohio Foodbank President and CEO Matt Habash and Trudy Bartley, an associate vice president at Ohio State University who previously directed OSU’s Near East Side revitalization initiative, Partners Achieving Community Transformation.

The county has pledged $13 million over five years to fund its work and is seeking a similar investment from the business community.

As Columbus 2020 wraps up its decade of economic development and creates new goals, it would be wise to target economic disparity next.

Poverty is not on the run yet in Franklin County, but the forces lining up against it are formidable.

05/30/2020

This day has been one of the toughest in my 12 years as a county commissioner. I see the hurt in our community, and I want to help heal it. That’s easier said than done, though, and I understand why people are frustrated, angry, and lashing out. Last week, the Franklin County Commissioners declared racism a public health crisis, and last evening we declared it a threat to our entire community.

There was a time not that long ago when I too would have been on the street protesting last night. I have a different responsibility now, though. My colleagues and I are working very hard to protect the public’s right to protest and also to keep the public safe. On those two things, I am inflexible: the public has the right and even the responsibility to protest injustice; and the public (and public property) must also be kept safe, whether the threat is from protesters, from the police, from a virus, or from something else.

The community doesn’t belong to any of us. We belong to it and we have a responsibility to it. And community doesn’t just mean the people on your block or the people you went to high school with. It’s the people from across town who work very different jobs than you, go to different churches than you, people with very different ambitions than you, people who are cops, and people who are crying out that they’ve been getting a raw deal from cops their whole lives. We all have a responsibility to our community, even the parts we don’t understand. I don’t know all the ways that we can fulfill that responsibility or to help our community heal, but I am committed to trying.

For today, this weekend, my hope is that everyone who needs to cry out in this difficult time can be heard. My prayer is for everyone’s safety. I want to hear you and I want to help keep you safe. Tell me your fears, and also your hopes and dreams for helping our community to heal, and I promise to try to help.

Sorry to those of you who were planning to watch Franklin County Job and Family Services Director Joy Bivens and I discu...
04/10/2020

Sorry to those of you who were planning to watch Franklin County Job and Family Services Director Joy Bivens and I discuss available Social Services assistance. We have been experiencing technical difficulties linking Zoom and Facebook. I am sharing some of the information we were going to discuss. We are rescheduling time to visit with Director Bivens very soon as well as several other interesting guests over the next few weeks. Thank you for your time.

Time is of the essence. Please move quickly to request your absentee ballot and once you receive it move quickly to fill...
04/03/2020

Time is of the essence. Please move quickly to request your absentee ballot and once you receive it move quickly to fill it out and get it back in the mail! MAIL VOTE!!

Attending the Community, Economic and Workforce Development Steering Committee meeting at the National Association of Co...
02/29/2020

Attending the Community, Economic and Workforce Development Steering Committee meeting at the National Association of Counties Annual Legislative Conference. We have a long day of business meetings, speakers, resolutions to consider. Great committee and I’m honored to serve as the subcommittee chair of the workforce committee.

Proud to help kick off Black and Gold Week this morning with the Columbus Crew at the North Market!! Today marks the sta...
02/24/2020

Proud to help kick off Black and Gold Week this morning with the Columbus Crew at the North Market!! Today marks the start of a week of celebration leading up to Sunday’s season opener against NYC FC . The team, including the Edwards and Haslam families, are helping sponsor community soccer clinics for 1,100 kids across Franklin County, because when kids get involved in after school programs and extracurriculars they are more likely to be engaged and successful in school and life.

America’s Game! Army v Navy. To paraphrase the Superintendent of United States Military Academy Lt Major Williams “they ...
12/14/2019

America’s Game! Army v Navy. To paraphrase the Superintendent of United States Military Academy Lt Major Williams “they are brothers and in arms and America’s defenders 365 days a year but today they want to kick the hell out of each other on the football field.” Here with Linda Logan of the Greater Columbus Sports Commission observing all things surrounding the game because the organizing committee will be putting the 2023 to 2027 games out to bid next year. Cheering on the Army Black Knights today because my father Pete O’Grady and brother Tom served in the United States Army and my brother Kevin served in the Ohio National Guard. Go Army Beat Navy!

Very interesting day today here in Tokyo. Started late last night with the arrival of Typhoon Faxai that was a rare dire...
09/09/2019

Very interesting day today here in Tokyo. Started late last night with the arrival of Typhoon Faxai that was a rare direct hit on the city and lasted all night leaving some pretty serious damage in its wake. Have to admit that while many folks here at the 51st Annual Meeting of the Japan-Midwest US Association/Midwest US-Japan Association slept through the high winds, rain, creaking and popping of the building I was awake for it all as I was up paying attention to the miseries and failures of my beloved Cleveland Browns. The storm has caused 900,000 to be without power and wreaked havoc on Tokyo’s transportation system. It also caused the temperature to rise several degrees overnight to the upper 90’s and the humidity remains high. After the conference opened this morning and we heard from speakers, including Governor DeWine and other Midwestern Governors, we headed out to meet with another of our local Franklin County partners the Tosoh Corporation of Grove City. Tosoh is a great corporate partner doing fantastic things in Franklin County including
making component parts for smart phones.

We had a great day Friday in Osaka with a very full schedule.Our first stop was at Tigers Polymer Corporation where we m...
09/07/2019

We had a great day Friday in Osaka with a very full schedule.

Our first stop was at Tigers Polymer Corporation where we met with Kentaro Watanabe and his team to discuss their operation in Grove City. We had a great conversation that ran long and put us a bit behind schedule but was well worthwhile.

Next, We traveled to the Panosonic Museum to meet our friends and traveling companions from the City of Marysville and Union County to learn more about the history of the Panosonic Corporation and its founder Kenosuke Mastsush*ta. Fascinating story and a fascinating man and such a huge part of Japanese technological history and culture.

After Panasonic, We headed to the suburb of Higashiosaka to meet with Director Toshiyuko Kawachi and his economic development team to discuss how we may help them in assisting small and medium size businesses to make entry into the Franklin County market. All in all it was an exciting and interesting day.

Made it out today to the Columbus Public Health Farmers Market. They have a great array of vendors and also provide some...
07/25/2019

Made it out today to the Columbus Public Health Farmers Market. They have a great array of vendors and also provide some fantastic information on all sorts of services that community members can benefit from such as SNAP (supplemental nutritional assistance program), WIC (women infants and children), Celebrate One (the City’s infant mortality task force) and much more. The Farmers Market will be at CPH the next two Thursday’s 8/1 and 8/8 from 10am until 1pm so try to take advantage of it if you can. Today I picked up some beautiful blackberries and green beans.

Attending the Annual Conference of the National Association of Counties in Clark County, Nevada. Currently sitting in on...
07/12/2019

Attending the Annual Conference of the National Association of Counties in Clark County, Nevada. Currently sitting in on the Community Economic and Workforce Development Committee of which I am the Economic Development Subcommittee Chair...Well that’s a mouthful! This organization and in particular this committee does fantastic work on behalf of the nation’s counties and their residents. Tomorrow morning I’ll be presenting Franklin County’s Poverty Blueprint to my colleagues at the Large Urban County Caucus. LUCC represents the country’s roughly 125 largest counties. So glad to be inside working as it’s 109 degrees in the desert today!!

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