Newsletter: Safety and business

Slowly, it appears a consensus is forming — or renewing. A consensus that insists that downtown Dayton can, and will, be made safer.

“We’re all trying to do the same thing here,” said Erhardt Preitauer, who leads CareSource, downtown’s biggest employer. “A lot of it is, how do we organize that? How do we all commit to that?”

In this newsletter:

  • Meta invests in Ohio nuclear power
  • A police dog’s last walk.
  • Butler Tech Aviation Center aims to help students soar.

Dayton businesses and neighborhoods need each other, leaders say

Dayton Mayor Shenise Turner-Sloss (at the podium) speaks at a recent event at CareSource. BRYANT BILLING/STAFF

Credit: Bryant Billing

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Credit: Bryant Billing

The issue: Dayton leaders at a recent CareSource event said the health of Dayton’s businesses and neighborhoods are “not separate conversations.”

Money quote: “For too long, we have treated economic growth as something that happens over here inside boardrooms, on the balance sheets, and the quarterly reports — where neighborhoods, stability happens over there, inside homes, schools, and streets,” said Dayton Mayor Shenise Turner-Sloss. “Businesses do not grow in a vacuum and neighborhoods do not thrive without commerce.”

Read the story.

ALSO: Residents, leaders react to new security effort

Downtown safety: What to know about the latest efforts

U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Dayton, speaks Jan. 5 on how downtown safety can be improved. BRYANT BILLING / STAFF

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Safety first: The “Downtown Dayton Security Working Group” recently revealed itself and its work. Here’s some of what to know.

The focus: The group is state government representatives, law enforcement and members of the Dayton business community organized by U.S. Rep. Mike Turner. It was intended to create and share recommendations about how to make downtown safer.

Read the story.

Butler Tech Aviation Center a $500K economic boon

In March, next to an airstrip at Middletown Regional Airport, Butler Tech is set to open its $15 million free-standing Aviation Education Center. Contributed

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Taking flight: As Butler Tech’s Aviation Center is set to open before the end of the month, its economic impact is becoming clear.

Impact: Based on the hiring of 160 workers in Butler County, the center’s construction has generated $450,000 of new economic activity in the Middletown area as of November.

Read the story.

Centerville orthodontist calls it a day after 30 years

Dr. Steve Burke, who recently retired from Burke Orthodontics after 30 years as an orthodontist. CONTRIBUTED

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Milestone: This story turned a few readers’ heads. For three decades, Steve Burke has helped people achieve confident smiles while using humor to make the journey enjoyable.

Now the 59-year-old Centerville resident has called it a career, stepping away from Burke Orthodontics at the end of December.

Read the story.

Facebook parent Meta goes nuclear in Ohio

This 2017 file photo shows the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station in Oak Harbor, Ohio.

Credit: Ron Schwane

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Credit: Ron Schwane

What you need to know: Driven by power-hungry data centers and AI needs, Facebook parent company Meta has entered into an agreement that will boost nuclear power generation in Ohio.

  • The 20-year power purchase agreement between Texas power generation company Vistra and Meta will increase the energy output of three Vistra nuclear plants in the PJM Interconnection region, including the Perry and Davis-Besse plants in Ohio.

Read the story.

Newsletter numbers

$15 million: Value of the new Butler Tech Aviation Center in Middletown. Read the story above.

$71,407: The amount Central State University Vice President of Institutional Advancement Rebecca Kocher says the university paid Dec. 22 for its water bill. Read the story.

Contact me: Drop a line at tom.gnau@coxinc.com or on X, where DMs are always on. I’m also on LinkedIn and on our Dayton Business page, with my colleagues. Find me as well on my Facebook page.

Newsletter roundup

Best deli in Ohio? It’s in Centerville, according to this reckoning.

Arch: Tears for Scooby Doo’s last walk.

Tipp tax abatement: Approved for 39 new jobs.

Big cheese: Festival returns to Jungle Jim’s.

50 years of A-10 basketball: A look back.

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