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Employment

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Midwest metros with large declines in leisure and hospitality jobs.

Job loss hits region’s dining scene

The Dayton region’s restaurants, bars, music venues, gyms, hotels and other entertainment attractions suffered the worst job losses in April among urban areas in Ohio and the Midwest, according to a Dayton Daily News analysis. Payrolls of leisure and hospitality businesses shrank 5.3 percent in this region between April 2012 ...

PNC Building at Third and Main streets

Furniture store to open in downtown Dayton

A furniture sales company is locating in downtown Dayton and has signed a five-year lease for a large portion of the ground floor of the PNC Building at Third and Main streets.The company, Business Furniture LLC, is headquartered in Indianapolis and has locations in Bloomington, Illinois, and Peoria, Illinois. It ...

Ariel Walker is the assistant to the city manager for intergovernmental affairs for the City of Dayton. Originally from Pittsburgh, she studied at the University of Dayton and stayed in Dayton after she graduated. LISA POWELL / STAFF

Ohio leaders focus on ‘selling our state’ to keep, lure the young and educated

A brightening economy and better job prospects may be helping Ohio and the Dayton region stem the loss of young adults, and the much-dreaded brain drain. The state and region have finally seen the end of a decades-long trend of losing young adults, and for the first time, beginning in ...

17-year-old Tyra Whitlow works in the office as part of her duties at the Richmond Foot & Ankle Clinic in the Charles Drew Health Center 1323 W. Third Street this summer as part of the Montgomery County YouthWorks program. JIM WITMER / STAFF

Summer jobs program employs 1,250 teens

More than 3,100 teens applied for summer employment through Montgomery County’s Summer Youth Works Program for a chance at 1,250 jobs. “Do kids want to work? The answer is ‘yes,’” Health MacAlpine, assistant director of Workforce Development for the Montgomery County Department of Job & Family Services said. “We started ...

Two new eateries to open in Kettering

Kettering city officials said Wednesday the news that two vacant restaurant buildings across the street from one another on Wilmington Pike will be reborn as a sports bar and a Mexican restaurant is a welcome sign that their investments along the corridor are paying off. The former Grindstone Charley’s/Crocodile Louie’s ...

New sub, coffee shops coming to Centerville

A shuttered KFC restaurant at 6230 Far Hills Ave. will be demolished to make way for construction of a three-unit, 4,600-square-foot retail center that will likely include sub and coffee shops, the development’s owner said Wednesday. Commercial developer Jeff Zimmer, managing partner of the project tentatively called The Shops of ...

Two new Mexican restaurants to open in Dayton area

The restaurant building at 4139 Wilmington Pike that has been vacant for more than a year has been leased and is scheduled to reopen as an El Rancho Grande Mexican restaurant perhaps as early as mid-August, El Rancho Grande President of Operations Gary Rodriguez said this morning. The restaurant is ...

Boards now cover the hole left by a car that was forced into the wall of the Savona restaurant on Thursday afternoon.

Former Savona to reopen with new name, menu

The former Savona Restaurant & Wine Bar at 79 S. Main St. (Ohio 48) — closed since March 14, when a crash sent a car careening through an exterior wall — is scheduled to reopen today with a new name: The Twisted Root Restaurant. Keith Taylor, the chef and driving ...

Lisa Scott, owner of Beaute Box in downtown Dayton, struck out on her own years ago, giving up her employer sponsored health insurance with Sears. Since then not having the kind of affordable health care the ACA promises has forced her to make decisions about visiting her doctor based on how much she can afford to spend out of pocket, which comes directly from her business profits.JIM WITMER / STAFF

67K new businesses in Ohio could launch with health care law

Ohio could add as many as 67,000 new entrepreneurs as a result of the federal government subsidies made available to aspiring business owners through the Affordable Care Act, according to a new report from the Urban Institute. The number of newly minted entrepreneurs in Ohio would rank fourth nationally behind ...

The Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine held its annual graduation ceremony on Friday, May 24, at the Schuster Performing Arts Center. The graduating class included 106 medical students who will help fill the growing need for primary care physicians. Studies show that the millions of new enrollees in Obamacare and the aging population will lead to a need for as many as 45,000 more primary care physicians by 2020. The problem is most medical students tend to see primary care as less groundbreaking or prestigious than specialty fields. And many students enter more lucrative specialty fields to pay off student debt from medical schools.

U.S. and Ohio face shortage of family doctors

Margarette Shegog knows she won't be "making the big bucks" as a primary care doctor working in an under-served minority community, but that's exactly what she plans to do after graduating from Wright State University's Boonshoft School of Medicine on Friday. "I know I would get paid a higher salary ...

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