Village of North Randall
Recent News About Village of North Randall
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,796 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of August 11, 2,294 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,776 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of August 4, 2,290 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,749 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of July 28, 2,286 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,713 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of July 21, 2,284 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,665 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of July 14, 2,280 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,601 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of July 7, 2,277 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Census Bureau: 1.4% of people in North Randall identified as multi-racial in 2019
Of the 1,106 citizens living in North Randall in 2019, 98.6 percent said they were only one race, while 1.4 percent said they were two or more races, according to U.S. Census Bureau data obtained in January.
-
Census Bureau: 88.4 percent of people in North Randall were old enough to vote in 2019
Of the 1,106 citizens living in North Randall in 2019, 978 were old enough to vote as of Jan. 26, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,515 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of June 30, 2,275 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,401 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of June 23, 2,270 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,249 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of June 16, 2,211 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,243,046 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of June 9, 2,211 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,242,776 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of June 2, 2,209 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Cuyahoga County COVID-19 Update: 99.82% of infected residents still alive
Of the 1,242,416 Cuyahoga County residents estimated to have caught COVID-19 as of May 26, 2,205 (0.18 percent) have died.
-
Census Bureau: 1.6% of people in North Randall identified as multi-racial in 2020
Of the 1,091 citizens living in North Randall in 2020, 98.4 percent said they were only one race, while 1.6 percent said they were two or more races, according to U.S. Census Bureau data obtained in March.
-
Census Bureau: 87.9 percent of people in North Randall were old enough to vote in 2020
Of the 1,091 citizens living in North Randall in 2020, 959 were old enough to vote as of March 26, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.
-
Census Bureau reports North Randall population was 1,091 in 2020
North Randall had a population of 1,091 people in 2020, according to U.S. Census Bureau data obtained by the South Cuyahoga News.
-
Census Bureau: 79.2 percent of people in Cuyahoga County were old enough to vote in 2020
Of the 1,241,475 citizens living in Cuyahoga County in 2020, 983,768 were old enough to vote as of March 26, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.
-
Census Bureau: 4% of people in Cuyahoga County identified as multi-racial in 2020
Of the 1,241,475 citizens living in Cuyahoga County in 2020, 96 percent said they were only one race, while four percent said they were two or more races, according to U.S. Census Bureau data obtained in March.