The Intelligencer | Ohio Valley Job Fair Coming to Mall in St. Clairsville May 19

MAR 11, 2022 | ROBERT A. DEFRANK | For The Intelligencer

Photo by Robert A. DeFrank | Belmont County Commissioner Josh Meyer listens to a report from Ohio Means Jobs. The upcoming Ohio Valley Job Fair and a lack of job seekers in the area led Wednesday’s talks.

Belmont County is preparing to meet the needs of job seekers and employers alike with the upcoming Ohio Valley Job Fair, but the workforce shortage is making an impact.

Mike Schlanz, workforce supervisor of Ohio Means Jobs of Belmont County, said the job fair is set for 1-4 p.m. May 19 at the Ohio Valley Mall. He said the annual event was canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic but returned in 2021 with a humbler turnout compared to prior years.

“We had 80-90 employers registered,” he said, adding it was more difficult to estimate the number of job seekers present since they tend to wander in and out. He speculated that about 100 people came seeking jobs.

He said in past years, there have been 120 businesses and agencies represented and 400-500 job seekers.

“That’s just a sign of the times right now,” Schlanz said. “We’re looking forward to hopefully a good turnout with employers and job seekers.”

Schlanz said the fairs always have potential.

“It’s something we look forward to. It’s a win-win situation for employers, job seekers and the mall,” he said.

Schlanz did not know how successful the job fairs and on-site recruitment are in helping businesses find and retain employees. He said employers continue to post job openings, but some have given up on-site recruitment.

He added that job seeking had begun to drop in 2019, prior to the pandemic.

“It just isn’t like all this has happened since COVID, but I think it’s increased due to COVID, the lack of job seekers,” he said.

He added that the number of people asking for help at the Ohio Means Jobs offices has fallen off sharply since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

“We were averaging 350-400 visits per month,” he said, adding that since the start of 2022 the office has averaged about 50 visits from people wanting work.

“I don’t see things changing. It just isn’t our county. It’s statewide at job centers and probably nationwide,” he said. “We still have employers who call us and post jobs.”

“That’s a pretty dramatic drop in people,” Commissioner Josh Meyer said. “It’s not for lack of jobs. Jobs are out there.”

Schlanz said there are many openings in the food service and health care fields. He said there may be several factors involved in the declining number of people looking for jobs, such as the retiring Baby Boomers, the decreasing population, day care issues for women, and an apparent lack of initiative among men.

Bradley Wells, business outreach executive, then spoke about the agency’s virtual job fairs. He said virtual job fairs are offered monthly, with the next one held 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 24 and featuring multiple industries including transportation and logistics, distribution, warehousing, health care, construction, landscaping, retail, social services and more.

Wells said the February virtual job fair included 25 businesses and organizations, 30 job seekers, nine resumes submitted and with 103 total job postings. He said 95 percent of users were first-time users. He said so far only six businesses have signed up for the March virtual job fair.

“I hope those numbers increase,” Wells said. “It seems like without the job seekers showing up, and we’ve got all these vacancies and all these jobs, the businesses therefore become frustrated. I’m starting to see that. I didn’t want to see it, but I’m seeing it.”

The virtual fairs cover Belmont, Harrison, Carroll and Jefferson counties.

Belmont County Department of Job and Family Services Director Jeff Felton said the county unemployment rate is about 4.5 percent.

For more information, visit OhioMeansJobs.com/Belmont or call 740-633-5627 or toll free at 877-516-5627. Ohio Means Jobs has an office at 302 Walnut St., Martins Ferry.

Stay tuned | Sandusky Mall CEO confident in county’s most successful retail center

By Matt Westerhold, Sandusky Living

SANDUSKY — The stretch from Strub Road to Ohio 2 on U.S. 250 was miles of country road and corn fields for those old enough to remember before the Sandusky Mall was built.

Today it remains the busiest commercial strip in Erie County and one of the busiest most successful retail districts in the state, in no small part thanks to the development 50 years ago of the mall.
Anthony Cafaro Jr. wasn’t born yet when his grandfather, William M. Cafaro and his grandfather’s brother, John A. Cafaro, began planning and meeting with representatives from the giant retailers of the day that would become the anchor stores at the mall.

He was just 1-year-old when it opened in 1976.

“It was a relationship business.  Everything was between them and the stores. You got an agreement from JCPenny and Montgomery Wards, and the smaller retailers would come along,” Anthony Cafaro Jr. said. “Once you had the anchors, the specialty stores followed.”
Today, Anthony Cafaro Jr. and his brother, William A. Cafaro, are co-CEOs of the company, carrying on the family tradition of running the company, which is based in Niles, Ohio, the original developers of the Sandusky Mall.

“It’s the only thing I’ve ever known. I enjoy what I do,” Cafaro said.

Cafaro Co. continues to manage and operate the Sandusky Mall, 11 other malls and a number of other shopping centers across the country stretching from Washington state to Virginia. The portfolio encompasses more than 50 properties, in all, and has developed over 30 million square feet of space in 14 states.

Cafaro Co. was the developer of both the Sandusky Plaza on Cleveland Road and the Perkins Plaza on East Perkins Avenue, a property it continues to own to this day, in the 1950s, including the beloved Hills store at Perkins Plaza.

FAMILY BUSINESS
Cafaro’s father, Anthony Cafaro Sr., became CEO in the 1980s, and worked alongside his brother and sister. Cafaro Jr. said he’s hard-pressed to remember a time when he wasn’t working in retail, in some capacity.

“I’m part of a family business. You can’t separate my family from the business,” he said. “I started working at the age of 12, at Eastwood Mall (in Niles).”

His job back then included painting curbs in the parking lot of that Cafaro Co.-owned mall, maintaining the decorative fountains and other facility work.

“Those were my summer jobs, working with our maintenance crews. We all started working from the ground up,” he said. That too is the the family tradition, he said.

There was never a time when he wasn’t thinking about the business, but after graduating from John Carroll University in Cleveland with a business management degree at the end of December 1996, Cafaro thought he might take some time off to celebrate his accomplishment.

It wasn’t like he needed to find himself or travel to Europe. He knew where he was headed, but his father agreed granted him the whole month of January off. Cafaro reported for work on Feb. 3, 1997, as a full-timer in the family business.

“I was very motivated to become an adult and take on adult responsibilities,” he said.
Some of his first responsibilities were the same ones his grandfather and great uncle took on when they started the company in 1949: leasing. It’s a job responsibility he’s had ever since he started in the management division with the company in 1997.

Cafaro remembers a retail center in Canton and small shopping plaza in Corry, Pennsylvania, were among his first job tasks.

“At one of the centers there were zero tenants,” he recalled. “It was 100% empty.”
His father still works today with his sons, as a consultant, with an office alongside theirs at corporate headquarters. If you’re a Cafaro, and you’re in the family business, you’re always working on some level.

“We don’t go home from work and not hear about what needs done at work. Working with family they are your shareholders and there’s nobody else in the world you can trust more,” Cafaro said.
Cafaro’s nephews — representing the fourth generation — have begun working during summers, he said.

Modern retailing

Anthony Cafaro Jr. is relying on that experience — the early training from the maintenance department up to the executive suite and everything in between over the last 25 years — to meet the challenges that exist in the retail environment today.

Malls across the country must adapt to survive, Cafaro said, and he and his brother are committed to restructuring the Sandusky Mall and the other Cafaro Co. properties.

Millions of dollars already have been spent rebuilding the mall. The Hobby Lobby store opened in 2020; the T.J.Maxx store moved from an interior storefront in the mall to a newly renovated front-facing storefront where the old Macy’s store stood along with Five Below; and the restaurant, Another Broken Egg, opened in the renovated space where the old Ruby Tuesday’s was located.

Another retailer, Ross Dress for Less, will open at the mall this year.

All of the retailers and the new restaurant are characteristically different from past tenants at the mall.

“There was a turning point,” Cafaro said, after Macy’s closed and after other anchor retailers, including the Sears store, Elder Beerman and others went out of business.

“The mall is in much better shape today than it was just a few years ago with those recent additions,” he said. “But there is more work to do.”

The Sandusky Mall and every retail center everywhere must adapt to modern consumers, he said, which includes a little bit of the old but some of the new, including online shopping.

“Bringing in the Hobby Lobby was a signal there’s a great opportunity for revival,” he said. “We have the attitude that we can re-imagine, or re-invent it. Our goal now is to make the mall not just viable, but relevant.”

One proposal that’s stalled is to build a high-end apartment complex near the mall, which was actually part of the original plan for the property in the early 1970s. It’s even more relevant today than it was then, he said.

It’s not just to provide apartments, but a residential community near the mall will also provide a different setting that will attract retailers to locate at the mall. The company must do everything in its power to keep the center the “go to” address for retailers and others.

The Erie County commissioners have been unable to reach an agreement that will provide some tax incentives to build the Villas at Sandy Creek, but Cafaro said he’s hopeful that conversation with commissioners gets re-started soon.

Cafaro Co. pays millions in property taxes each year on the mall property and at its other properties in Erie County and across the state and nation. In Ohio, that money primarily goes to fund local schools.

The Perkins Schools and township government both have approved the project, and he hopes commissioners will see that the Villas at Sandy Creek apartments project, which he called a mixed use development, is directly linked to securing the mall’s future, providing jobs and services in the community.

What else

Diversity is key, Cafaro said, for the Sandusky Mall and for other retail centers, to not only survive but to thrive in a changing market. “Brick & mortar” storefront retailing will never be like it was in the past, but providing different alternatives will be key to success in the future.

“This can’t be the mall from the 1970s,” he said. “We must change. It has to be broader, more diverse.”

That could include athletic training centers inside mall buildings, or reconstructed buildings, warehouse distribution centers or combination retailer-distribution or pickup centers and other changes he and his company continue exploring.

Consumers today are much different than they were in 1976 when the mall opened, and even more different that they were in the late 1940s and early 1950s when the plazas were being developed in Sandusky.

His family’s company is uniquely equipped to manage that changing retail environment and managing the changes, Cafaro said. It’s what they’ve been doing for 73 years.
And, just as when he started back in 1997 in the leasing division of Cafaro Co., Anthony Cafaro Jr. and his brother Willim A. Cafaro, like their father and their grandfather before them, are talking with retailers and other business interests of every kind looking to bring them to Sandusky, in some capacity.

BOX 1
William M. Cafaro and John Cafaro founded Cafaro Co. in 1949. and started their family business developing properties for grocers. Today, the Cafaro portfolio encompasses more than 50 properties and has developed over 30 million square feet of space in 14 states. A third generation of the Cafaro family is now guiding the company.  Co-Presidents William A. Cafaro and Anthony Cafaro Jr. seek to maintain the values of stability and integrity they learned from their father and grandfather.

BOX 2 – Three questions
• The most daring thing I ever did was … I’m going to pass on that one.”
• “The best decision I ever made was to start a family.”
• “I’m happiest when I’m playing with my kids.”

Dewey Furniture hosts grand opening

LynAnne Vucovich

Mar 09, 2022 6:00 PM

PERKINS TWP. — Dewey Furniture & Carpet celebrated the official opening of its new Sandusky location.

The store found its home in a brand new 11,000 square foot space in the newly revamped Sandusky Mall between Hobby Lobby and Five Below.

Owner Mike Dewey said the new space is nearly three times the size of its previous Sandusky location.

“Now we can offer a lot of upholstery, sofas, recliners, leather fabrics and beautiful selections,” Dewey said. “It just made sense to try and offer more selections so that our customers wouldn’t have to drive so far.”

Dewey said the store has quality furniture and mattresses, with a knowledgeable and low-pressure sales staff.

“It’s easy to shop, there’s plenty of room,” he said. “It’s big and beautiful. We’ve got a lot of traffic generated from the mall. Everyone has said how beautiful the new store is.”

Dewey Furniture still has a location in Vermilion and last year Dewey said they purchased a 60,000-foot warehouse for inventory.

“Over a year ago, we started ordering truckloads and it’s all coming in. We have a lot of furniture. Almost everything in this room is available immediately,” Dewey said. “That’s the biggest difference between us and other stores in the area.”

Dewey Furniture & Carpet was established in 1954 and is family-owned and operated.

Dewey said he’s the third generation and his children are all working in management positions, preparing to take over the business one day.

“It’s a nice thing. It’s what I think most parents would like that if they had the opportunity to build a company that the family can make a living on and take care of servicing the community,” he said. “Then be able to have the next generation come on and carry on the torch.”

With the new location’s opening, Dewey said the store is offering “the best deals of the year right now.”

Dewey said one of the most important aspects of his business is how sales staff handles customers.

“We treat people the way you want to be treated. Anyone that’s bought from us knows we’re honest,” he said. “Once a customer buys from us, they’re usually customers for life.”

Dewey said he’s very appreciative of his customers over the years and their support has been vital to their success.

“We’re only as good as the last customer we took care of,” he said. “We strive to do better every day.”

The vast majority of Dewey’s furniture and mattress products are American made and some are made in Ohio.

“I’m looking forward to taking care of people’s needs in Sandusky and being able to get them furniture quickly with good quality at great prices,” Dewey said. “We do thing right, the old-fashioned way.”