Cleveland, OH
Salt shortage affecting several Northeast Ohio communities
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Several Northeast Ohio communities have announced they are dealing with a salt shortage and a major winter storm is heading our way.
LATEST FORECAST: 19 FIRST ALERT DAYS: Dangerous cold Friday and Saturday, winter storm Sunday
In Cleveland, city officials said they have less than 10,000 tons of salt remaining.
The city will continue to plow throughout Cleveland, but only priority routes will receive salt.
“Main roads, that’s your dangerous intersections, or schools, and that’s your hospitals,” said Tyler Sinclair, a city spokesperson.
Cleveland uses between 4,000 and 7,000 tons of salt per winter storm event, meaning current supplies could be exhausted within days.
City officials are placing blame squarely on their supplier, Cargill, saying deliveries have been delayed and the city is not receiving the full amounts ordered. The orders in question were placed back in August—six months ago.
In Avon, city officials said they have been conserving salt for several weeks and will continue to do so.
Roads will still be plowed in Avon, but salt use will be limited and prioritized for main roads, hills, and curvs.
Side streets may receive little or no salt.
Avon city officials added their next salt delivery from Cargill is expected in February.
In North Royalton, city officials said they ordered 1,000 tons of salt from Cargill on Jan. 15 and only received 300 tons.
City officials added they have 400 tons in reserves in their barn and an average three-day snow event can consume 1,500 tons.
Streets will be plowed, but salt rationed, said North Royalton city officials.
Independence city officials are advising drivers to be careful on streets and in parking lots, since crews may not be able to apply salt after plowing due to a shortage.
19 News will continue pressing Cargill for answers.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Man in critical condition after shooting on Cleveland’s East Side: EMS
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Cleveland EMS responded to the city’s east side for a shooting late Friday night.
According to EMS, a the victim was shot in the area of E 105th Street and Grantwood Avenue around 11:15 p.m.
The 35-year-old man was transported to University Hospitals with a gunshot wound in critical condition.
19 News has reached out to Cleveland Police for more information.
This is a developing story. Return to 19 News for updates.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Gas prices surge again across Northeast Ohio to nearly $5 per gallon on Friday
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Drivers across Northeast Ohio have watched gas prices climb sharply over the past few days, and now most stations are nearly $5 per gallon.
On Friday, Ohioans woke up to gas prices that jumped again overnight, 37 cents more than Thursday, according to AAA.
AAA said the Ohio average gas price is now $4.83.
That’s 92 cents more than last week, and $1.06 more than last month!
Ohio is usually middle of the road when it comes to prices, but because of surges over the past week we have unfortunately climbed up the list.
The Buckeye State currently ranks 8th highest in the country for gas prices.
Analysts say relief may not be coming soon.
On top of the conflict in Iran sending oil prices higher, there was also a refinery issue at a plant in Indiana.
The BP plant in Whiting, Indiana had a temporary power problem, but as it’s one of the largest refineries in the country it sent prices higher.
“That’s because the Midwest is relatively isolated from other fuel supply centers. When a major refinery stumbles, there aren’t many quick alternatives—and prices react fast,” according to Patrick De Haan with GasBuddy.com.
“This is exactly what we’re seeing now:
- Sudden supply tightness
- Rapid wholesale price spikes
- Retail stations adjusting prices sharply higher
And because many stations refill tanks at higher costs, those increases cascade quickly to consumers,” De Haan advises.
At one Cleveland gas station on Wednesday, the price on the sign read $4.99, a number drivers say is becoming harder to avoid.
That number was the same at another Cleveland gas station on Friday morning.
Many people filling up Wednesday evening told 19 News they’re frustrated by the rapid increases.
“It’s crazy. Sooner or later, we’re going to be at like $5 or like $6,” one driver said.
Another driver added, “We’re getting gas now, but not here.”
According to AAA, the average price for gas in Ohio is $4.22 for regular fuel as of Wednesday. In Cleveland the average was $4.23.
One major factor: crude oil prices. Those prices are trading above $100 a barrel, which can raise the cost of gasoline.
“Crude oil is the main ingredient of gasoline,” said Jim Garrity, the director of public affairs for AAA east central. “So, when it goes up and down, even by a couple dollars here and there, that has an impact on the pump.”
Experts say the last time Ohio experienced prices this high was 2022, when the Russia-Ukraine conflict pushed gas prices above $5 a gallon.
Garrity added even when the U.S. isn’t buying oil directly from certain countries, global events can still affect prices here.”
“Even though we’re not importing Iranian oil in America, it is a globally traded commodity,” Garrity said. “When you see an impact happen overseas well, that splash has ripples and those ripples make their way to us.”
When 19 News was at another Cleveland gas station, prices changed quickly: within about 30 minutes, the price jumped from $4.79 to $4.99. It cost us $30.55 for a little more than six gallons.
“The lady said they went up 70 cents,” another driver said. “She said it was $4.19 earlier, then it shot up to $4.79. Now it’s $4.99. I was going to get gas yesterday, but I forgot.”
One driver who uses premium gas said the surge hits even harder.
“It’s $4.99, I just texted my buddy yesterday, like oh it jumped 80 cents,” the driver said. “I’m glad I’ve got a company card, but this is my personal and I’ve got to spend almost $6 a gallon on gas because it’s premium.”
As for whether prices will drop soon, Garrity says it depends on what crude oil does next.
“What happens next remains to be seen with crude oil prices,” he said.
Garrity says a few options to say on gasoline is drive less or slow down.
“The faster you go, at AAA, we have found every roughly five miles over 50 an hour you’re going, you’re exponentially burning fuel less efficiently and that’s making you a less safe driver, but it’s also making your car work harder and burning fuel less efficiently,” Garrity said.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Francine Esther Nshimirimana Obituary April 24, 2026 – Slone and Co. Funeral Directors
Francine Esther Nshimirimana, age 47, passed away on April 24, 2026.
Family and friends are welcome on Saturday, May 2, 2026, from 11 a.m. until time of Service at 12 p.m., at Slone & Co. Life Celebration Center 3556 W. 130th St. Cleveland, OH 44111. Interment West Park Cemetery.
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