Columbus Local Pulse
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
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