2025 is almost in the books! This was Scioto Analysis’s busiest year yet. We released twelve studies to the public this year and we’re very close to releasing a thirteenth before the year ends. Let’s take a look at these twelve studies and what we learned throughout the year.
In January, Scioto Analysis released its first study of the year, a qualitative study of economic barriers faced by immigrants and new Americans in central Ohio. In this study, we interviewed nearly 50 people in central Ohio who are either immigrants or who support immigrants in the region. This was timely due to the election that was occurring while we were doing these interviews and how immigration took center stage as a policy issue. One of the biggest things I learned from this study was the importance of language learning. Person after person told us that immigrants wanted to learn English and were looking for more opportunities to learn it because the resources in central Ohio for learning English do not meet the demand for language learning.
Later that month, we released a study we conducted on the economic impact of cycling and trails in Iowa. In this study, we surveyed over 2,500 cyclists across the state and used those surveys along with data from People for Bikes, the Census Bureau, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to estimate how cycling impacts the state economy and health of Iowans. We found that cycling contributes about $1.4 billion to the state economy every year, saves millions of dollars in health care costs, and prevents hundreds of tons of carbon emissions every year.
In March, we released a cost-benefit analysis conducted by then intern Jacob Strang on wildlife crossings. Wildlife crossings are bridges or underpasses built to help wildlife cross busy road corridors and to reduce collisions with vehicles. I can honestly say that to date, this was the most impressive cost-benefit analysis Scioto Analysis had done, with Jacob monetizing impacts that ranged from construction and maintenance costs to vehicle damage and value of lives saved to ecosystem services and the value of deer, elk, and moose lives.
Later that month, we released a cost-benefit analysis on Minnesota’s child tax credit conducted by policy analyst Michael Hartnett. Minnesota has one of the most generous and progressive child tax credits in the country so we took the model researchers at Columbia University used to win the Society for Benefit-Cost Analysis’s Best Journal Article of the Year Award to analyze the Minnesota child tax credit. We found investment in child tax credits will lead to hundreds of millions of dollars in higher labor market earnings and lower crime costs due to children having more household resources that put them on a better lifetime trajectory.
In April, we released a cost-benefit analysis on universal prekindergarten conducted by intern Omar Rangel. States like Georgia, Oklahoma, and West Virginia all have universal prekindergarten programs, so in this study, Omar analyzed what a universal prekindergarten program would look like in Ohio. He estimated a universal prekindergarten would lead to thousands more children enrolled in prekindergarten programs, which would lead to higher labor market earnings for these children down the road.
In May, we released the first of a series of studies we are doing on Oklahoma’s minimum wage, this one focused on housing affordability. In June of 2026, Oklahoma voters will cast their ballots to decide whether to raise their state minimum wage from the federal minimum wage of $7.25 to $15. In this analysis, we simulated wages at the household level to estimate that the change could pull as many as 40,000 Oklahoma households above the level of being housing cost burdened.
In September, we released the next report in that series, this time on public safety and the minimum wage. Poverty and crime are connected to each other, so policies that can reduce income stress on households can lead to lower crime rates. Using evidence of interaction between minimum wage changes and crime we estimated a $15 minimum wage in Oklahoma would lead to 7,000 fewer crimes per year, including 55 fewer homicides.
Later that month, we released a cost-benefit analysis by our intern Van Woodcock on the Move to Prosper program. This is a program that provides rental assistance and counseling support to move people from low-mobility into high-mobility neighborhoods. We estimated expanding the program would lead to over $100 million in increased future earnings for young children in households involved with the program.
In October, we released a cost-benefit analysis on another universal program: school meals. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States Department of Agriculture made the national school lunch program universal for all schools across the country. Since that national program expired, a number of states adopted state universal school meal programs. Our policy analyst Emily Cantrell estimated a universal school meal program for Ohio would lead to hundreds of millions of dollars in increased future earnings at the same time that it reduced health care costs due to obesity and saved parents time preparing meals for their children.
In December, we released a rash of studies. First came the third in our series of studies on the minimum wage in Oklahoma, this time on health. Families with higher incomes have more access to health resources and the health outcomes that come with that. Using our microsimulation model, we estimated a higher minimum wage for Oklahoma would save about 400 lives every year, including 240 infants.
Next came our cost-benefit analysis on a cigarette tax for Ohio by our intern Seneca Baldi. In January, Governor Mike DeWine proposed an increase in Ohio’s per-pack cigarette tax, a proposal that the Ohio House cut out of the state budget. Using the best available data of the impact of price on teenage consumption, Seneca estimated the cigarette tax would be effective at reducing teenage smoking initiation, leading to billions of dollars in benefits to teenagers who never begin smoking.
Our most recent study was a study we released with the Ohio Chamber of Commerce Research Foundation on energy permitting in Ohio. While energy permitting processes allow for community input into energy projects, they sometimes are used by competitors of an energy project to slow or even prevent energy projects from being approved. We found projects pulled from the energy production queue cost Ohio 9,000 megawatts of energy production, $440 million in capital investment, thousands of jobs, and millions of dollars in tax revenue each year.
Before the year ends, we plan to publish a report on home visiting in Ohio. It has been a great year and I’m looking forward to an even better year in 2026!
