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
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til å kommentere
Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Columbus Local Pulse sitt community!