Rays of employment hope shine brightest on Ohio's largest

cities. Without them, Ohio would have lost 18,000 jobs in

the past five years. With them, Ohio gained 227,000 jobs.

And the job growth momentum in Ohio's largest cities,

especially the 3Cs, appears to be increasing (KJP file).

CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM

Billions of dollars in new investment are pouring

into Ohio cities from local, national and interna-

tional investors. Cleveland has been no exception

as more than a dozen new high-rises are planned

downtown. Plus, numerous mid-rises and single-

family homes and rapidly expanding businesses

are enjoying new investment (APhotoshopman).

In contrast, Ohio's smaller metro areas, smaller cities and rural areas aren't doing as well as their big brothers. Their job growth has slowed, stopped or reversed course in recent years.

Large and small employers are moving into Ohio's biggest

cities to attract more talent, especially the young, creative

kind. Among those desiring to move in is Cross Country

Mortgage, currently in suburban Brecksville. This fast-

growing employer will reportedly renovate and move

into historic buildings in the Superior Arts District

on the east side of Downtown Cleveland (KJP).

CHANGE IN EMPLOYMENT IN PAST 5 YEARS





When it comes to describing Ohio's economy, there's the 3Cs and then there's everyone else. With a few exceptions, if you want to find a job in Ohio, the best place to look is Ohio's three largest metropolitan areas -- Columbus, Cincinnati and Cleveland.Consider that, since the start of 2015, Ohio has gained 227,000 jobs, according to the. The 3Cs accounted for 216,000 of those new jobs.But it gets more compelling than that. If you add in the employment data from Ohio's next three largest metro areas -- Dayton, Toledo and Akron -- the employment in the state's six largest metro areas grew by 245,000 jobs.In other words, Ohio would have lost 18,000 jobs in the last five years if it wasn't for Ohio's largest metro areas. It's safe to say that Ohio's six largest metro areas and especially its three largest are carrying the state's economy.And the 3Cs are sustaining their near-decade-long momentum based on the job growth numbers displayed in the charts posted at the bottom of this article. I began to research that momentum when I wrote an article last month about Cleveland's documentedsince 2016.But Cleveland's newfound job growth (after the prior decade's job losses) was doubled by that of Columbus and Cincinnati. All three cities are seeing billions of dollars of real estate investment pouring into their urban centers.And it's not limited to their downtowns. Long-neglected neighborhoods like Cleveland's Hough, Cincinnati's Over-The-Rhine and Columbus' Olde Towne East are seeing investment unlike any era since the 19th century.While demographers have coined the term "Fifth Migration" to describe the flood of Millennials and, to a lesser extent empty-nesters into America's larger urban centers since before the 2010s, it appears there is another demographic contributing to this ongoing migration pattern more recently.The new urban migrant is the former small-town and rural resident who is fleeing conditions ranging from, to the agglomeration of agribusiness, to the closing of small-town/rural hospitals, to the relatively poorer quality of Internet connections.The Fifth Migration was detailed inby The Center for Population Dynamics at the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University (CSU).To put this migration into context, the CSU report said the First Migration was the pioneers that settled North America; the Second Migration from farms to the factory towns; the Third Migration to the great metropolitan centers like Cleveland; and the Fourth Migration to the suburbs of these centers.With the apparent movement of rural Ohioans to its larger cities (and to other cities nationwide), this migration pattern has much in common with the second and third migrations from the mid-1800s to the early 1900s.Another factor in this migration pattern that has not been seen in past decades (at least, not since the early 1800s) is the movement of employers and residents from more expensive coastal cities to large, albeit less expensive cities in Ohio. NEOtrans documented this in articlesand againOhio's 3Cs have big-city amenities without the expense of the coastal cities. As a visitor to Ohio once remarked, "Cleveland is the smallest big city I've ever visited and Cincinnati is the biggest small town I've ever visited."Ohio's declining small-city, small-town and rural employment situation along with its growing larger metro areas has some important political considerations locally, statewide and nationally as well.While Cleveland has always been a center of strength for the Democratic Party, Columbus and Cincinnati were not. That is changing. Today, more Democrats are getting elected to municipal and county positions in Greater Columbus and Cincinnati.But, as more rural residents move to Ohio larger cities, will these cities change the views of these new arrivals or will these migrants change the electorate's voting patterns in Ohio's larger cities? And it remains to be seen how these changes will affect statewide issues like gerrymandering, education and transportation investments or national matters like future presidential races.Here is a summary of Ohio's employment situation, shown first in numbers and then in charts. Here is the change in employment in Ohio's metro areas over the past five years when Ohio's largest metros increased their employment momentum and all other parts of Ohio either stagnated or declined:STATEWIDEOhio +227kOHIO'S SIX LARGEST METROSColumbus +88kCincinnati +85kCleveland +43kDayton +17kToledo +7kAkron +5kEVERYONE ELSEWheeling +3kCanton +2kLima +1KMansfield 0Springfield -1kHuntington -3kSteubenville -3kYoungstown -9kHere are charts showing the changes in employment in Ohio's metro areas in the past decade:END