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Partial US government shutdown enters third day as funding standoff continues; NH lawmakers consider 'Medicare for All' bill as health care costs spike; Cold snap sends Ohioans to ER as winter risks continue; Push grows for PA in-home care funding in Gov. Shapiro's budget.

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A Texas special election is a 'wake up call' for the GOP. North Carolina students want a campus early voting site back and Maryland Democrats debate redistricting ahead of finalizing midterm maps.

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The immigration crackdown in Minnesota has repercussions for Somalis statewide, rural Wisconsinites say they're blindsided by plans for massive AI data centers and opponents of a mega transmission line through Texas' Hill Country are alarmed by its route.

Ohio Drops in Solar Jobs Ranking; Still in Top Ten

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Tuesday, February 24, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The sun is not shining as brightly on solar power in Ohio as it once did.

A new report ranks the Buckeye State 10th in the nation for the number of people employed in the solar industry, a drop from eighth place in 2013. According to The Solar Foundation, 500 solar jobs were added last year, bringing the total to 4,300 in Ohio.

Andrea Luecke, president and executive director of The Solar Foundation, says these are homegrown jobs in sectors like manufacturing and installation.

"There are a lot of solar companies in Ohio, about 208," says Luecke. "They're primarily in manufacturing with about 25 percent of those companies on the demand side."

Nationally, the Solar Jobs Census found the industry is exceeding growth expectations, adding workers at a rate nearly 20 times faster than the overall economy. It's estimated employment in solar has grown over 85 percent in the past five years, resulting in nearly 80,000 jobs.

According to the report, Ohio's solar workforce grew by 13 percent. But Luecke says despite the moderate growth, other states knocked Ohio further down the list in the overall jobs ranking.

"Ohio may see further drops with the governor's recent freeze of the state's renewable portfolio standard target," she says. "This may hamper the previously burgeoning non-residential solar market."

Last year, the state put a two-year delay on its renewable energy targets so a legislative panel could study the merits of the standards. Opponents claimed they increased electricity costs, but supporters say they are needed to help Ohio meet the EPA's Clean Power Plan proposal to reduce carbon emissions from power plants.


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