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Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson is retiring, and for the first time in 16 years, City Hall is getting a new leader. What do the seven candidates offer? What do voters want? Host Nick Castele goes on the campaign trail in "After Jackson: Cleveland's Next Mayor" from 海角破解版. Follow: Spotify | iTunes | Stitcher | Feed

After Jackson: Cleveland's Next Mayor - Episode 9: Closing Arguments

Mayoral candidate and former U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich runs toward the reviewing stands at the 11th Congressional District Labor Day Parade in Cleveland. [Nick Castele / 海角破解版]
Mayoral candidate and former U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich runs toward the reviewing stands at the 11th Congressional District Labor Day Parade in Cleveland.

This is our last episode before the polls close on Sept.14.

With just about a week until Election Day, the seven candidates in the mayoral primary descended on Kinsman Road for the 11th Congressional District Labor Day Parade.

It's Cleveland鈥檚 marquee campaign event, with a history reaching back 50 years to the days when Carl and Louis Stokes built a political stronghold for the city鈥檚 Black community.

The day draws candidates for judge, council, mayor, governor 鈥 and even president. In 2016, Hillary Clinton held a rally at the end of the parade route at Luke Easter Park.

This is one of the mayoral candidates' last big chances to get in front of a crowd of potential voters.

Today, we鈥檒l talk about who votes and who doesn鈥檛 vote in primaries like these. Plus, a look at a political action committee that鈥檚 scraping by with little money, and an exploration of equity in Cleveland parks.

When you chat with people about the Cleveland mayor鈥檚 race, two questions often come up. First: who do you think makes it out of the primary? And second: how many people do you think will show up?

There are 247,610 registered voters in the city today. If the past is any guide, maybe around 33,000 to 40,000 will cast votes.

Many will come from a few turnout-leading neighborhoods: West Park and Old Brooklyn on the West Side, and Lee-Harvard on the East Side.

And 鈥 again, if the past is any guide 鈥 they鈥檒l probably be older. If you pull a registered voter list from the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, and you look at the Clevelanders who are still registered today and who voted in the municipal primary four years ago, the median birth year is 1957. They鈥檙e turning 64 this year.

A local coalition has come together to develop a platform calling for more equitable access to parks and outdoor spaces. They say neighborhoods with lower incomes and more minority residents often lack access to well-maintained facilities.

Take for example, Meyer pool in Cleveland's Clark-Fulton neighborhood. It鈥檚 surrounded by concrete and a few chairs for lifeguards. A mural of an octopus decorates the outside of the bathrooms, but otherwise, there鈥檚 no grass, no shade and no chairs.

鈥淭he pool is well used, but there it's not a great spot for kids,鈥 says Tiffany Graham Charkosky, senior project director for LAND Studio.

鈥淭he space that we're in predates the 鈥80s and also has not been improved in at least 30 years,鈥 says Tiffany Graham Charkosky. [Taylor Haggerty / 海角破解版]

She says they鈥檝e been working with Cleveland's landscape architect to consider improvements for the pool, like a splash pad or a play area for smaller children.

The Clark-Fulton neighborhood has one of the lowest ratios of green space per capita, according to a study done in 2019 by the Trust for Public Land. The area could use attention, Charkosky says, and it鈥檚 needed it for decades.

Follow 鈥淎fter Jackson: Cleveland's Next Mayor鈥 on NPR One, iTunes or on your favorite podcast platform. Or catch it every Wednesday at 9 a.m. on the 鈥淪ound of Ideas鈥 on 90.3 WCPN.

Nick Castele was a senior reporter covering politics and government for 海角破解版. He worked as a reporter for Ideastream from 2012-2022.