The Columbus Dispatch

CHANGES ABOUND IN COLUMBUS

Big news included Wexners cutting ties, Equitas workers speaking out

- Columbus Dispatch | USA TODAY NETWORK

From the diminished presence of Ohio’s richest man in the local business scene to the bankruptcy of the owner of Polaris Fashion Place and several other local malls, 2021 was packed with business stories that changed Columbus. Here’s a sampling.

Wexner cuts ties: Leslie Wexner, wife Abigail step down from board of former L Brands

L Brands founder Leslie H. Wexner and his wife, Abigail, stepped down from the board of the retailer he created in 1963 with $5,000 he borrowed from his aunt. The move followed Wexner’s decision the year before to retire as chairman and CEO of the company. The Wexners subsequent­ly sold much of their stock in L Brands and L Brands later split into two companies, Bath & Body Works and Victoria’s Secret. Wexner’s move to step down as CEO and president came after he was criticized for his ties to child-sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

Equitas Health: Former Equitas Health staff condemn ‘disrespect­ful, degrading and dehumanizi­ng treatment’ of Black employees

The Columbus Dispatch

investigat­ed claims of racial discrimina­tion made by current and former employees of Equitas Health, a Columbusba­sed health-care provider for the LGBTQ community. Following the report, former CEO Bill Hardy and other senior leaders resigned from the organizati­on. The board hired an interim chief people and culture officer and employed a law firm to conduct an independen­t investigat­ion of the alleged racist culture in the workplace.

Mask mandates: Restaurant­s, other shops support Columbus mask mandate, but feel burdened by enforcemen­t

In September, Mayor Ginther signed an executive order on Friday that would require everyone, regardless of vaccinatio­n status, to wear masks inside publicly accessible buildings. While business owners said supported the decision amid surging cases of COVID-19, they expressed concern about enforcemen­t. They told stories of customers starting fights, damaging property— and even spraying mace.

Washington Prime: Polaris Fashion Place owner files bankruptcy, emerges from bankruptcy

Washington Prime Group, the Columbus-based, publicly traded owner of Polaris Fashion Place and 100 other shopping centers, filed for bankruptcy protection in June, after struggling for more than a year with pandemic-reduced traffic and sales. Washington

Prime operated as usual as it worked out an arrangemen­t with creditors, and Polaris even added two major tenants: Fieldhouse­usa and Public Lands. In November, the company emerged from bankruptcy as a private company under the direction of its largest creditor, the investment firm Svpglobal. In addition to Polaris, Washington Prime Washington Prime also owns Indian Mound Mall in Heath; the Mall at Fairfield Commons in Beavercree­k; Dayton Mall; New Towne Mall in New Philadelph­ia; Lima Mall and Lima Center; Great Lakes Mall in Mentor; and Southern Park Mall in

Youngstown.

Supply chain, worker shortages: Supply shortages, hiring problems plague economy

Shortages, delays and rising prices became common throughout much of the economy, whether it’s cars, new homes or grocery stores running short on basics, such as toilet paper, because of surging demand and not enough workers.

The Peninsula: Franklinto­n developmen­t takes shape

Work began in earnest on The Peninsula, the 26-acre developmen­t next to COSI in Franklinto­n. Significan­t constructi­on progress was made on the first six buildings in the developmen­t: two apartment buildings, a hotel, an office building and two parking garages. Developers were pleased enough with early tenant interest that in November they announced the next phase: a 30story apartment building and a sevenstory office building, both built atop a four-story parking garage. When completed, the developmen­t is expected to include up to 2 million square feet of offices, 1,800 residences, 200,000 square feet of retail space and 400 hotel rooms.

Columbus housing market: Prices for homes skyrocket amid fierce demand

The Columbus-area housing market spent the year smashing records, as a mountain of buyers competed for a hill of homes by offering incentives such as appraisal gaps, no-remedy inspection­s and escalation clauses. In the first 11 months of the year, the median sales price of a home in Greater Columbus was $260,000, up from $231,750 in the previous year. Columbus-area homes sold for an average of 102% of their asking price and in an average of 16 days in 2021. The market was so super-charged that in the spring, homes were selling faster in the Columbus area than anywhere else. Buyers received discouragi­ng news at the end of the year, when the listing service Realtor.com projected the Columbus area to be one of the nation’s hottest housing markets in 2022.

Schoedinge­r sells: Schoedinge­r Funeral Home, Columbus’ oldest business, sells

Schoedinge­r Funeral & Cremation Service, Columbus’ oldest familyowne­d business, announced in December that it had reached an agreement to be acquired by the Houston company Service Corporatio­n Internatio­nal, the nation’s largest operator of funeral homes. Founded in 1855, Schoedinge­r is now run by its sixth generation. Schoedinge­r said the sale will be largely invisible to customers. All 12 Schoedinge­r funeral homes will remain, along with the company’s 180 employees, including five family members. Service Corp. Internatio­nal, which also goes by the trade name Dignity, operates more than 1,900 funeral homes and cemeteries in 45 states and eight Canadian provinces.

Office space stays empty: Offices continue to vacate as workers stay home

As white-collar employees continued to work from home, office vacancies in Greater Columbus continued to climb. By fall, more than 20% of offices in the area were vacant, not including those that sat empty but were still paying rent. Meanwhile, developers continued to build new offices in the hopes that companies would still be drawn to new space with new amenities. While vacancies could be found throughout the Columbus area, they were especially acute in some Capital Square towers; during the third quarter, four high-rises around the Statehouse were at least 60% vacant. By the end of the year, corporate employers showed little appetite for returning to offices as some retreated from scheduled back-to-work plans.

Solar farms: Bill Gates farm property in Madison County to be part of massive solar farm

Renewable energy company Savion is moving ahead with plans to build one of the biggest solar farms in the U.S. on farmland in Madison County that includes land owned by Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates. The 10,000-acre Oak Run solar farm would be built north of London near Plumwood and would cost at least $1 billion to build. The project includes 6,300 acres owned by Gates. If approved by state regulators, constructi­on could begin in 2024 or ‘25.

Google data centers: Google to invest $1 billion in Greater Columbus as part of data center expansion

Google announced it will invest an additional $1 billion in New Albany for its data-center operations while buying additional land in Columbus and Lancaster for more data centers. Rising demand is behind Google’s $1 billion expansion in New Albany that will triple the size of those operations. The Columbus site is the home of the old Hartman Farm off of South High Street. Google said its purchase of 618 acres in Columbus and Lancaster will be for future potential developmen­t for data centers, and will give the tech giant more than 1,000 acres of land in the Columbus region.

Unemployme­nt fraud: Cases of unemployme­nt fraud surge in Ohio during pandemic

There were so many fraudulent claims for unemployme­nt benefits filed in Ohio that claims were even filed in the names of Gov. Mike Dewine and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted. At one point last January, 796,000 claims out of 1.4 million filed under a federal pandemic unemployme­nt program were flagged for potential fraud. Meanwhile, the state struggled under the weight of legitimate claims for benefits with unemployed workers complainin­g of lengthy wait times to collect benefits.

Where are the workers?businesses struggle to hire workers, meet surging demand

COVID-19 has created a plethora of problems from global supply chain bottleneck­s to labor shortages so severe that Greater Columbus businesses have struggled to meet surging demand. Beyond delays and shortages, soaring transporta­tion prices are pushing up costs, further frustratin­g customers, say business executives. The problem dates to the early days of the pandemic in March 2020 when the global economy was largely shut down. Then the unexpected happened: One of the steepest, quickest downturns in U.S. history was followed by a snapback nearly as sharp, even as COVID-19 cases raged out of control.

Sheetz comes to Columbus: Sheetz freakz celebrate Sheetz arrival in Columbus

Sheetz officially entered the Greater Columbus market in April when it opened its first store in Delaware. The Altoona, Pennsylvan­ia-based restaurant, convenienc­e store and gas station company had nine stores opened in the Columbus area by the end of the year and is on its way to 50 stores by 2025. The store is known for its avid fans called Sheetz freakz.

Restaurant delivery fees: Dining app contracts put some Columbus restaurant­s in a tight spot

In January the Columbus city council approved a 15% on third party delivery service fees, but the law only applied to contracts negotiated after the rule’s passage. As a result, most Columbus restaurant­s did not benefit from the rule because they were unwilling to renegotiat­e their agreements for fear of losing them altogether. While restaurate­urs felt the third party services were exploiting a loophole in the law, the companies said they were following the rule as it was written.

Business startups: Business startups surged during the pandemic, but will they last?

Ohioans filed to start their own business in record numbers during the pandemic, but economists are divided on what exactly the surge means. Many of the startups have no web presence and their owners did not return messages seeking comment, but others said they started their own business because they wanted greater flexibilit­y or the ability to work from home during a global pandemic.

Restaurant­s can’t find workers:

Restaurant­s are still having hiring problems, even with enhanced benefits gone

Restaurant­s across Ohio had to close in 2021 because they couldn’t find enough workers, a problem that some business owners attributed to enhanced unemployme­nt benefits. When those benefits, expired, however, the hiring woes continued. Workers who left the industry cited a raft of reasons for their decision, including a lack of childcare, rude customers and low pay.

Farming during pandemic: For Covid-stressed farmers, already more likely to die by suicide, OSU sending help

The coronaviru­s pandemic exacerbate­d some of the stresses farmers face as commodity prices skyrockete­d lockdowns cut off their support networks. Now Ohio State University’s extension service is training its workers to better spot some of the signs of mental illness and offer help to farmers who need it. Farmers are already more likely to die by suicide than the general population, and experts fear COVID will make the problem worse.

‘COVID puppies’: Ohio veterinari­ans swamped as pet owners return to work

Record levels of adoptions in Ohio inspired feel-good headlines about shelter animals finding good homes. But as the owners of those pets returned to the offices and social activities they abandoned for much of 2020, the so-called “COVID puppies” needed more medical care, inundating animal hospitals and veterinari­ans offices across the state and resulting in weekslong wait times.

Champion of diversity: How Gale King changed Nationwide — and Columbus

Gale King, former Nationwide Insurance executive vice president and chief administra­tive officer, announced her retirement after 37 years at the company. She was celebrated for leading diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, creating an engaging work culture and mentoring leaders in the company and beyond. Her impact was praised by current mayor, former mayor a former Ohio Supreme Court justice and many others.

Lower.com Field: Columbus Crew’s Lower.com Field contracts opened new doors for Ohio minority- and womenowned firms

The constructi­on of the Columbus Crew’s new $313.9 million, 20,000-seat stadium and $34.2 million training facility were completed with the help of 54 minority-owned enterprise­s and 27 women-owned enterprise­s in central Ohio, throughout the state and beyond. A total of 117 contracts were awarded to minority- and women-owned contractor­s (79 minority-owned contracts, 38 women-owned contracts) amounting to over $74 million in spending. Beyond the financial benefit, underrepre­sented companies said these efforts have given them access to key players in the industry.

Seeking to improve equity amid pandemic: Black women business owners across Ohio seek better access to capital, new survey finds

The Ohio RISE Survey, created by the Alliance of Black Businesswo­men & Entreprene­urs (ABBE) Ohio, tracked the impact of the pandemic on Black women-owned businesses and assessed their needs for survival moving forward. The research found that nearly 70% of responding businesses reported a loss of revenue, and 30% were forced to close temporaril­y. And their most pressing needs were access to capital, greater business operationa­l support (including technical assistance) and an equitable opportunit­y to get private and public contracts.

Dispatch business reporters Jim Weiker, Erica Thompson, Patrick Cooley and Mark Williams contribute­d to this report.

 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL/ COLUMBUS DISPATCH TO THE DISPATCH ?? TOP: From left, former Equitas Health employees Lisa Mclymont, Tia Carrington and Liz Rose-cohen said they experience­d or witnessed a culture of discrimina­tion at the organizati­on.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL/ COLUMBUS DISPATCH TO THE DISPATCH TOP: From left, former Equitas Health employees Lisa Mclymont, Tia Carrington and Liz Rose-cohen said they experience­d or witnessed a culture of discrimina­tion at the organizati­on.
 ?? JONATHAN QUILTER/SPECIAL ?? BELOW: Polaris Fashion Place is pictured. Washington Prime Group, the owner of Polaris Fashion Place and other shopping centers, filed for bankruptcy and emerged from bankruptcy in 2021.
JONATHAN QUILTER/SPECIAL BELOW: Polaris Fashion Place is pictured. Washington Prime Group, the owner of Polaris Fashion Place and other shopping centers, filed for bankruptcy and emerged from bankruptcy in 2021.
 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Abigail, left, and Leslie Wexner have left the L Brands board. Here, the high-profile couple is shown at the naming of the Wexner Medical Center at Ohio State University.
FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Abigail, left, and Leslie Wexner have left the L Brands board. Here, the high-profile couple is shown at the naming of the Wexner Medical Center at Ohio State University.
 ?? DORAL CHENOWETH/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? This tree-lined driveway, off of State Route 38, is part of the Madison County farmland owned by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates that might become part of a solar farm. The actual owner of the farm is a company called Midwest Farms, owner of about 6,300 acres of farmland in Union, Deer Creek, Monroe and Somerford townships.
DORAL CHENOWETH/COLUMBUS DISPATCH This tree-lined driveway, off of State Route 38, is part of the Madison County farmland owned by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates that might become part of a solar farm. The actual owner of the farm is a company called Midwest Farms, owner of about 6,300 acres of farmland in Union, Deer Creek, Monroe and Somerford townships.
 ?? KYLE ROBERTSON/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Sheetz opened its first store in the central Ohio area in Delaware in April. Eventually the Altoona, Pennsylvan­ia-based restaurant, convenienc­e store and gas station company plans to have 50 stores in central Ohio that it claims will employ 1,500 workers.
KYLE ROBERTSON/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Sheetz opened its first store in the central Ohio area in Delaware in April. Eventually the Altoona, Pennsylvan­ia-based restaurant, convenienc­e store and gas station company plans to have 50 stores in central Ohio that it claims will employ 1,500 workers.

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