Cleveland Heights, Ohio
A message from your neighbors

A small group wants to take five
of your seven councilors away.
Cleveland Heights should think twice.

Today, every Cleveland Heights resident votes for every councilor. A ward-based proposal would end that.

45,312Neighbors, all welcome
7Councilors, all yours
1 CityLet's keep it whole
Where this stands

There's no bill in front of council. No mayor's signature. No petition being circulated. It's being pushed by a small group of residents who'd rather have council put the change on the ballot than gather the signatures themselves.

Their plan is to keep showing up until nobody else does.

That's where your voice comes in.

What they're proposing

Seven seats. Divided up by ward.

Here's their plan: take our seven, chop five of them into wards, leave two for everybody. Call it local. Call it reform. Call it whatever you want. Most of your council stops being yours.

Today

7 seats. All yours.

one branch · one city ALL ELECTED BY EVERYONE

All seven councilors answer to every resident.

Proposed

5 wards + 2 at-large.

W1 W2 W3 W4 W5 AT-LARGE five slices citywide YOU PICK ONLY ONE YOU PICK BOTH most of your council stops being yours

Five councilors answer to just a slice. Only two still cover everyone.

A cautionary tale

Look across Cedar Road. This is what wards do.

Last January, Cleveland's ward council drew a new map. Here's what they did.

Slavic Village? Cut into three wards.
Shaker Square? Split in half.
A councilor who criticized leadership? Drawn out of her own district.

Vote: 14 to 2. No committee hearing. The League of Women Voters objected. Didn't matter.

Cleveland · Slavic Village, split

Slavic Village Ward 5 Ward 6 Ward 12 three wards · one neighborhood

One neighborhood. Three wards. Drawn to punish a dissenting councilor.

Cleveland Heights · Today

Noble Forest Hill Severance Coventry Cedar–Fairmount Cedar–Lee one canopy · every block

Every neighborhood connected to every councilor. No lines to gerrymander.

"I don't think this map did right by our neighborhoods."— Cleveland Councilwoman Rebecca Maurer

When the people running for ward seats get to draw the ward lines, this is what happens. No reason to think we'd do it any prettier.

The practical cost

Wards make it harder to build homes. We need more.

When cities swap at-large for wards, they build less. Every study says so. We can't afford less.

Total housing permits
−21%
Multifamily permits
−38%
Single-family permits
−11%

After cities switched from at-large to ward-based councils. Evan Mast, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.

Ward councilors catch all the flak for every new building — and get none of the citywide upside. So they say no. Every time.

We have a lot of yes left to do. Severance. Noble Road. Cedar-Lee-Meadowbrook. Top-of-the-Hill. If we mean All Are Welcome, somebody's gotta build the houses.

Representation

More councilors accountable to you. Not fewer.

The case for wards usually starts with someone feeling unheard. That's real. That matters. But wards are the wrong medicine.

Today, every one of our seven councilors needs your vote. All of them. If they don't show up for you, they don't come back.

Under their plan? Four of them stop needing you at all.

If you live in Cleveland Heights — any neighborhood: TODAY your house 7 councilors need your vote PROPOSED your house at-large at-large your ward 3 need your vote. Four don't.

The fewer councilors who need your vote, the fewer who have to listen.

Feel unheard today? Going from seven councilors who need you down to three doesn't fix that. It makes it permanent.

Wards don't grow representation. They ration it.

The reform we just finished

Let our new charter breathe.

We just rebuilt the whole city government. It's a few months old. Give it a minute.

2019
Issue 26 passes

Voters move Cleveland Heights from council-manager to mayor-council government.

2023–24
Charter Review Commission

Nine residents meet 35+ times over 16 months to draft the updates completing the transition.

2025
Issue 7 passes

Voters approve the new charter. Our form of government is officially, fully in place.

Now
The charter we built is just getting started

Our newly restructured government is a few months old. It deserves a chance to work.

???
Another structural fight — already?

Back-to-back overhauls aren't reform. They're churn.

The value

We say it. We mean it.

Cleveland Heights is rare. One of the most integrated cities in America — not by luck. By choice. Generations of it.

All seven of our councilors are elected by all of us. Every one has to answer to every neighbor — Forest Hill or Noble, Coventry or Cedar-Fairmount. That's not an accident. That's the system we built on purpose.

We built this. It works. Let's not break it.

One city. One canopy.

Seven branches of the same tree. Every one reaches over every street. Let's keep it that way.

If this resonates, pass it on.