Residents of Springfield, Ohio, React to Influx of 20,000 Haitians

Haitians are asking people to give them more time to adapt to a new culture, but residents worry about their safety and the drain on resources.
Residents of Springfield, Ohio, React to Influx of 20,000 Haitians
A sign outside the Heritage Center of Clark County in Springfield, Ohio, on Sept. 11, 2024. Paul Vernon/AP Photo
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SPRINGFIELD, Ohio—They live on separate sides of Springfield, but Rhonda Zimmers and Melissa Skinner have noticed gradual changes to their neighborhoods in this Ohio city midway between Dayton and Columbus, starting around three years ago.

“Longtime residents who I used to see were no longer there. They moved out, and Haitian migrants moved in. They didn’t speak English,” Zimmers told The Epoch Times. “I started to see a lot of foot traffic on the streets. And you could see a dozen or more people coming and going from the houses. It was clear there were a lot of people living in the houses.”

Jeff Louderback
Jeff Louderback
Reporter
Jeff Louderback covers major news and politics, including the Make America Healthy Again movement and regenerative farming. Since joining The Epoch Times in 2022, he has covered national elections, the Robert F. Kennedy Jr. presidential campaign, the East Palestine train derailment, and the aftermath of Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina. Jeff has 30-plus years of professional experience as a reporter, editor, and author.