The Living Cities responds
to communities’ inclusion in Forbes.com article, “America’s
Fastest-Dying Cities”
An
Aug. 5, 2008 report by Forbes.com that named four Ohio cities — Canton,
Cleveland, Dayton and Youngstown — to its list of top-10
fastest-dying cities has generated much discussion, especially
in northeast Ohio’s three communities that made the unfavorable
list.
Western Reserve PBS (formerly PBS 45 &
49) will give local and regional community leaders an opportunity
to respond
to the
Forbes rankings in a
one-hour broadcast, The Living Cities.
The program will present field segments
on each of northeast Ohio’s so-called “dying cities,” featuring
interviews with city officials and business leaders; a review
of the statistics used by Forbes to make its assessments; and
a broader view of what is happening in the three cities. It also
will discuss the cities’ economic development plans and
neighborhood revitalization projects, plus the growing focus
on regionalism.
These segments will be used as a springboard
for a live, studio-based conversation during which viewers will
be invited to participate through live call-in, e-mail, Twitter
and other instant response technology.
Community leaders interviewed for the program,
which is a joint production of Western Reserve Public Media in
cooperation with Municipal Leader magazine, include the following:
-
David Abbott, chairman, Fund for Our Economic Future
-
Canton Mayor William Healy II
-
Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson
-
Warren Mayor Michael O’Brien
-
Robert Torres, director, City of Canton Department of Development
-
Chris Warren, chief of regional development, City of Cleveland
-
Youngstown Mayor Jay Williams
The live panel discussion will be moderated
by Eric Mansfield, host of Western Reserve PBS’s NewsNight
Akron and Akron/Canton reporter for WKYC-TV3. Participating on
the panel will be these civic leaders:
-
Pepper Pike Mayor Bruce Akers, who also is an advisory committee
member of the Regional Economic Revenue Study (RERS)
-
Leah Anglin-Walsh, Akron regional economic development director,
Ohio Department of Development
-
Ann Womer Benjamin, executive director, Northeast Ohio Council
on Higher Education
-
Robert Torres, director, City of Canton Department of Development
-
Thomas Waltermire, chief executive officer, Team NEO
-
T. Sharon Woodberry, director, City of Youngstown Economic
Development
-
Cleveland City Councilman Matt Zone, Ward 17, who is also
president of the Northeast Ohio City Council Association
“Western Reserve Public Media and Municipal Leader magazine
were very interested in digging under the surface of this report
from Forbes,” stated Tom Speaks, editor-in-chief of Municipal
Leader magazine. “We believe it is critical that the leaders
of Canton, Cleveland and Youngstown and regional experts in the
field of economic development address this controversy in a meaningful
and open forum.”
|
Funding for The Living
Cities has been provided by


|