The 42nd annual event, presented by KeyBank and in partnership with Cain Park, returns in September. Author: WKYC Staff Updated: 10:01 AM EDT May 14, 2021
CLEVELAND
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It s back in person. Music lovers can once again experience the Tri-C JazzFest live again in 2021.
The 42nd annual festival is presented by KeyBank and in partnership with Cain Park. It returns on September 11 and 12 at Cain Park in Cleveland Heights.
A variety of national acts will be performing at Cain Park this year, in the covered Evans Amphitheater there.
The 2020 edition of the festival took place entirely online due to COVID-19 restrictions.
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Cleveland Heights is set to receive $38 million. The city was among 38 Ohio municipalities allocated financial support through the support program. (Shutterstock)
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OH The U.S. Department of Treasury on Monday released a breakdown of what kind of financial help communities can expect from the $350 billion Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds.
Cleveland Heights is set to receive $38 million. The city was among 38 Ohio municipalities allocated financial support through the support program. Cuyahoga County, meanwhile, will receive $239.9 million. With this funding, communities hit hard by COVID-19 will be able to return to a semblance of normalcy; they ll be able to rehire teachers, firefighters and other essential workers – and to help small businesses reopen safely, said Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in a statement.
Posted By Sam Allard on Fri, Apr 23, 2021 at 11:15 AM click to enlarge AdobeStock The City of Cleveland Heights added Source of Income protection to its fair housing law Monday night, becoming one of a handful of communities in Northeast Ohio where tenants may not be denied housing due to their use of federal housing vouchers. Cleveland Heights joins Linndale, South Euclid, University Heights and Warrensville Heights in Cuyahoga County and Wickliffe in Lake County as communities with Source of Income protections. Cleveland Heights Vice Mayor Kahlil Seren, who introduced the legislation, celebrated the ordinance s unanimous passage earlier this week.
I’m particularly proud to say that this PASSED unanimously!!! #ClevelandHeights renters deserve protection from discrimination.
Holden Arboretum launches People for Trees campaign to green up balding patches of Cleveland, Northeast Ohio Steven Litt, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio Government can only do so much to solve the tree-cover crisis that’s spreading bald patches across Northeast Ohio, making communities uglier, less livable, more polluted, and more vulnerable to flooding, erosion and heat waves.
That’s why the nonprofit Holden Forests & Gardens is launching a “People for Trees,’ a campaign to enlist volunteers to plant 15,000 trees across the region by 2025.
Holden, which operates a 3,500-acre arboretum in Kirtland and the 11-acre Cleveland Botanical Garden in University Circle, hopes to enlist some of its 17,000 members, 1,500 volunteers and 380,000 annual visitors to buy, plant, and care for the trees on private property, in yards or businesses.