Columbus Local Pulse

Columbus Local Pulse: Arts Festival Heat and Summer Hiring June 12

2 min · 12. juni 2026
episode Columbus Local Pulse: Arts Festival Heat and Summer Hiring June 12 cover

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Good morning, this is Columbus Local Pulse for June 12, 2026. We are starting with the heat, because today feels sticky across central Ohio, with temperatures near 90 and a heat index pushing into the mid to upper 90s, plus a chance of brief showers or storms this afternoon around the Scioto Mile, downtown, and the Short North. The good news is Saturday turns sunnier and a little less humid, with another rain chance moving back in on Sunday. We are also watching downtown traffic and crowds as the Columbus Arts Festival opens today at the riverfront, running through Sunday along the Scioto Mile and Broad Street area. That gives us a busy, bright weekend for art, music, and food, but we should expect heavier foot traffic near COSI, Bicentennial Park, and the Main Street bridges. At city hall, the focus stays on daily basics like roads, safety, and summer services, and anyone heading out should plan for extra time and stay alert for stormy pauses in the day. We are also seeing job market movement tied to seasonal hiring in hospitality, events, and retail, with local employers adding weekend and summer help across downtown, Polaris, and Easton. In housing, buyers and renters are still facing a tight market, and we keep hearing about fast-moving listings in Clintonville, German Village, and the near east side, where well priced homes remain competitive. New business activity is also active, with festival season giving local vendors and small makers a strong opening to reach customers right on the riverfront. For schools and sports, we are in graduation and summer tournament season, so local teams and student athletes are still making news across Franklin County, and we will keep following those results as they come in. We also have a feel good note from the festival crowd today, where thousands of neighbors are expected to gather around local artists and musicians in one of the city’s biggest community weekends. On public safety, the main concern in the last day is weather related risk, since any stronger storm could bring gusty wind and brief downpours. No major verified Columbus crime incident stands out in the latest information we have, so we are keeping that report focused on general alertness around busy event zones, parking areas, and late night travel near High Street and Nationwide Boulevard. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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episode Columbus Local Pulse: Arts Festival Energy, 614 Day Deals, and Community Spirit artwork

Columbus Local Pulse: Arts Festival Energy, 614 Day Deals, and Community Spirit

Good morning, this is Columbus Local Pulse for Sunday, June fourteenth. We wake up today with the riverfront still buzzing from the Columbus Arts Festival downtown along the Scioto, where more than two hundred fifty artists from around the world fill the streets near the Main Street and Rich Street bridges. According to Columbus Arts Festival organizers, crowds are strong, local vendors are busy, and we feel that energy spilling into the rest of the city this morning. From City Hall on South Front Street, we have a meeting that matters for everyday life. The Republic reports that the Columbus Substance Abuse Advisory and Accountability Committee meets at ten a.m. at City Hall on Washington Street, focusing on treatment resources and prevention programs that shape services in our neighborhoods. Weather wise, ABC 6 meteorologists say we start warm and mostly cloudy, with highs in the low eighties and a chance of isolated showers later in the day, especially toward evening. That means we can still enjoy outdoor plans, but we may want a light jacket or umbrella if we are heading downtown or out to our local parks. The short term outlook keeps us in the warm, humid pattern into the start of the workweek. In sports, it is 614 Day, and the Columbus Clippers at Huntington Park are celebrating. According to the team, they are running a flash sale with tickets for the upcoming home series priced at six dollars and fourteen cents, a nod to our area code and our pride in central Ohio baseball. Across the region, the Ohio State Fair is getting in on the 614 Day spirit too. The Columbus Dispatch reports a twelve hour flash sale today with fair tickets also at six dollars and fourteen cents, giving families a chance to plan ahead for summer on a budget. For music and culture, Columbus on the Cheap and local listings highlight dozens of events over the next few days, from small club shows in the Short North and on High Street, to free community concerts at neighborhood parks. Over on Seventh Street, The Republic notes a Carlo Aonzo mandolin concert this afternoon at First Presbyterian Church, a chance for listeners to step out of the heat into some cool strings. In nearby Grove City, the city calendar shows Pridefest at Beulah Park from one to four p.m., bringing neighbors together just off Southwest Boulevard for food, music, and family activities. On the education front, the Enquirer reports that Badin High School defeated Columbus Bishop Watterson seven to two in the state baseball final, ending a strong playoff run for Watterson. We tip our caps to those student athletes and their coaches for representing central Ohio on the big stage. We are still checking overnight police updates as of this hour. There are no widely reported major public safety emergencies tied to downtown events, and Columbus police continue to emphasize routine weekend patrols in the Short North, the Arena District, and around campus. We will keep listeners updated as more detailed crime information is released later today. Our feel good story this morning is about community on the riverfront. Social posts from residents show strangers sharing sunscreen, water, and shade along the Scioto Mile as crowds grew at the Arts Festival. It is a small reminder that our city feels like a big neighborhood when we look out for each other. For jobs and real estate, local analysts continue to note that central Ohio holds a strong market, with unemployment hovering in the mid three percent range and median home prices in the metro area around the mid three hundreds in thousands of dollars, keeping pressure on buyers but supporting home values for long time owners. Looking ahead over the next few days, community calendars point to more church gatherings, park movie nights, and neighborhood events across the region, from story time in Grove City parks to evening services at churches on Dublin Road and High Street. Thank you for tuning in and spending part of your morning with us. Remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in with what is happening around town. This has been Columbus Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

14. juni 20263 min
episode Columbus Local Pulse: Rainy Saturday with Arts Festival, Country Music, and Community Events artwork

Columbus Local Pulse: Rainy Saturday with Arts Festival, Country Music, and Community Events

Good morning, this is Columbus Local Pulse for Saturday, June 13, 2026. We wake up today with rain on our minds. The National Weather Service says we are likely to see showers and some thunderstorms on and off through the day, with highs in the low 80s and gusty south winds. That means if we are heading to outdoor events, we want the umbrella by the door and a backup indoor plan, especially this afternoon and evening. Even with the wet forecast, our weekend is busy. Experience Columbus lists a full slate along the Scioto riverfront, where the Columbus Arts Festival continues with performances, food, and fashion along Civic Center Drive and Rich Street. At the Big Local Arts Stage on Rich Street, the band Yacobucci is scheduled to go on around 4:15 this afternoon, so we will be watching the radar if we plan to head down. Country fans are converging around Ohio Stadium today for Buckeye Country Superfest, with big crowds expected around Lane Avenue, High Street, and the Olentangy River Road corridor. Organizers are urging us to arrive early, use rideshare where possible, and pack light because of tightened security. In our neighborhoods, we have plenty of community events. The Republic reports a Juneteenth 5K walkathon this morning at Donner Park on 22nd Street, and farmers markets are popping up from downtown to Grove Citys Park Street. Over on Garfield Avenue near Mount Vernon, a community summer soirée this afternoon at Bethany Presbyterian Church is focusing on voter information and neighborhood resources. From City Hall, council members are continuing to work through the summer budget adjustments, with attention on road resurfacing, especially along East Main, West Broad, and sections of Cleveland Avenue, and on adding funding for youth programs on the Near East Side and in Linden. Those decisions shape how quickly we see potholes fixed and how many safe spaces our kids have after school. On the jobs front, local recruiters say entry level warehouse and logistics roles around Rickenbacker and the southeast side are starting around the mid teens per hour, while many restaurants in the Short North, on High Street, and at Easton are still hiring for summer with flexible hours. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price in the Columbus metro is hovering in the mid three hundreds, with homes near Clintonville, Grandview, and German Village often drawing multiple offers. In schools, several Columbus City Schools students were recognized this week for STEM achievements at COSI, including robotics teams that placed in regional competitions. That is a bright spot for families as we move through summer programs and look toward fall. On public safety, Columbus police report several overnight car break ins on the Near South Side and around campus side streets just off North High. We are reminded to lock cars, remove valuables, and keep porch lights on where possible. Police also note an arrest in a recent burglary case in the Hilltop area, giving some closure to neighbors there. For a feel good moment, organizers at the Nourish and Flourish Community Festival on a local farm outside Columbus say volunteers harvested and donated hundreds of pounds of fresh produce to area food pantries this week, helping families stretch grocery budgets as prices remain high. As we move through this rainy but lively Saturday, we stay connected as one Columbus, looking out for our neighbors and enjoying the music, art, and community around us. Thank you for tuning in, and dont forget to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Columbus Local Pulse. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

13. juni 20263 min
episode Columbus Local Pulse: Arts Festival Heat and Summer Hiring June 12 artwork

Columbus Local Pulse: Arts Festival Heat and Summer Hiring June 12

Good morning, this is Columbus Local Pulse for June 12, 2026. We are starting with the heat, because today feels sticky across central Ohio, with temperatures near 90 and a heat index pushing into the mid to upper 90s, plus a chance of brief showers or storms this afternoon around the Scioto Mile, downtown, and the Short North. The good news is Saturday turns sunnier and a little less humid, with another rain chance moving back in on Sunday. We are also watching downtown traffic and crowds as the Columbus Arts Festival opens today at the riverfront, running through Sunday along the Scioto Mile and Broad Street area. That gives us a busy, bright weekend for art, music, and food, but we should expect heavier foot traffic near COSI, Bicentennial Park, and the Main Street bridges. At city hall, the focus stays on daily basics like roads, safety, and summer services, and anyone heading out should plan for extra time and stay alert for stormy pauses in the day. We are also seeing job market movement tied to seasonal hiring in hospitality, events, and retail, with local employers adding weekend and summer help across downtown, Polaris, and Easton. In housing, buyers and renters are still facing a tight market, and we keep hearing about fast-moving listings in Clintonville, German Village, and the near east side, where well priced homes remain competitive. New business activity is also active, with festival season giving local vendors and small makers a strong opening to reach customers right on the riverfront. For schools and sports, we are in graduation and summer tournament season, so local teams and student athletes are still making news across Franklin County, and we will keep following those results as they come in. We also have a feel good note from the festival crowd today, where thousands of neighbors are expected to gather around local artists and musicians in one of the city’s biggest community weekends. On public safety, the main concern in the last day is weather related risk, since any stronger storm could bring gusty wind and brief downpours. No major verified Columbus crime incident stands out in the latest information we have, so we are keeping that report focused on general alertness around busy event zones, parking areas, and late night travel near High Street and Nationwide Boulevard. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

12. juni 20262 min
episode Columbus Local Pulse: Hot and Humid Thursday with Scattered Storms Ahead artwork

Columbus Local Pulse: Hot and Humid Thursday with Scattered Storms Ahead

Good morning, this is Columbus Local Pulse for Thursday, June eleventh. We wake up today in a hot, sticky stretch. Local forecasters say our highs reach the upper eighties, feeling closer to the mid to upper nineties with that tropical humidity. Scattered downpours and thunderstorms pop up on and off through the day, so we keep the umbrella handy but also expect plenty of dry hours. A cold front slides through tomorrow, bringing a bit of relief and some cooler, less muggy air by the weekend. From city hall, we are watching ongoing discussions over traffic calming and pedestrian safety near Short North and along North High Street, as council members weigh lower speed limits and more crosswalk enforcement that could change our daily commute. There is also continued debate over housing and zoning updates aimed at adding more mixed use development near OSU and along Parsons Avenue, with an eye toward easing rent pressure. On the job front, local recruiters say openings across the Columbus metro are holding steady, with roughly thirty thousand active postings, driven by health care, logistics, and tech support. Several large employers around Easton and the Polaris corridor are hiring for warehouse, call center, and entry level IT roles, often starting around twenty dollars an hour. In real estate, agents report that the median home price in Franklin County sits in the mid three hundreds, with multiple offer situations still common in neighborhoods like Clintonville, Grandview, and around German Village, even as mortgage rates keep some buyers on the sidelines. Renters continue to see higher prices downtown and in the Arena District, though a wave of new apartments along West Broad and in the Brewery District is starting to add options. Around town, we welcome a new coffee and co working space opening near Gay Street downtown, while a long time family owned diner on South High is closing its doors after decades, citing rising costs. On the cultural side, we have live music returning to the outdoor stage at Columbus Commons tonight, plus gallery previews tied to Exhibit Columbus and its recent honorable mention in a national Great Places recognition, according to the Republic. Local schools are easing into summer programs. Columbus Catholic School is in its June session this morning, running from eight to eleven, with students on campus working on enrichment classes. Youth sports leagues are active across our parks as teams prepare for their summer tournaments. In sports, we keep an eye on the Crew as they continue their push in league play at Lower dot com Field, and the Clippers are in the heart of their home stand at Huntington Park, drawing solid crowds on these warm evenings. Police logs over the last day show the usual mix of calls, with officers responding to a handful of vehicle break ins on the Near East Side and a reported robbery under investigation near Livingston Avenue. No major citywide safety alerts this morning, but we stay aware of our surroundings, especially during late night hours. For a feel good note, neighbors near Goodale Park are organizing a volunteer cleanup and plant day this weekend, adding new flowers and repainting benches, a small reminder of how our community keeps showing up for shared spaces. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Columbus Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11. juni 20263 min
episode Columbus Local Pulse: Pride Weekend, Budget Talks, and Sunday Storms artwork

Columbus Local Pulse: Pride Weekend, Budget Talks, and Sunday Storms

Good morning, this is Columbus Local Pulse for Sunday, June 7, 2026. We wake up today with some lingering rain and storms in the area. According to the National Weather Service and local forecasts, we are cloudy, warm, and humid with scattered showers and a chance of thunderstorms through the day, with highs in the mid 80s and muggy air hanging over I 70 and the downtown core. Fox 28 notes an alert period for heavy downpours at times, so we plan extra time on the roads and keep an eye out for ponding on surface streets like Cleveland Avenue and Parsons Avenue. Tonight, it stays mild with lows in the mid 60s and more scattered showers. From city hall, we are watching ongoing budget discussions focused on street resurfacing, sidewalk repairs, and flooding fixes in low lying neighborhoods, especially around Franklinton and the Hilltop. Council members are signaling more dollars for alley paving and stormwater upgrades that could change how our daily commutes and basement flooding worries look over the next few years. On the community front, Pride events are in full swing around town. Stonewall Columbus is hosting its Pride Brunch late this morning, bringing people together near the Short North for food, music, and community building, followed by kickoff events with live performances and local vendors. That means extra traffic and parking pressure along High Street and around Goodale Park, but also a lot of energy and business for nearby shops and cafes. Families looking for something indoors this afternoon can check out STEAM Sundays at 1 p.m. in Upper Arlington, where kids explore bubbles and hands on science, a nice option if storms roll through. In jobs and business, local listings show hundreds of open roles across our big employers, from health care along the OhioHealth and OSU Wexner corridors, to tech and logistics jobs near Rickenbacker. In real estate, agents report that median home prices in many Columbus neighborhoods are holding in the mid 300 thousands, with modest cooling in bidding wars but steady demand near popular areas like Clintonville and Grandview. In sports, the Columbus Clippers are back in action at Huntington Park after recent highlights including a big hit from George Valera, and they look to keep the momentum going for fans heading into the ballpark tonight, weather permitting. On the school front, local districts are celebrating spring athletic finishes and scholarship announcements, with several Columbus City Schools graduates recognized for academic awards and full ride offers to in state universities. On the crime front, Columbus police report a mix of calls over the last day, including a few overnight disturbances and property crimes, but no widely reported major citywide incident as of early this morning. We stay alert, lock our cars and homes, and look out for one another, especially with more people out late for weekend events. For a feel good note, local volunteers spent part of yesterday cleaning litter along the Scioto Mile and planting flowers near Genoa Park, turning a rainy weekend into a small boost for everyone who enjoys our riverfront. Thank you for tuning in today, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss a local update. This has been Columbus Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

7. juni 20263 min