Maid to Mop has providing maid service to Worthington and other
central Ohio locations since 1993. We’re owned and
operated in Columbus, and an
Accredited Member of the Better Business Bureau with an
A+ rating.
Worthington is a city in Franklin County, Ohio, with a population of 13,575 according to the 2010 U.S. Census. A northern suburb of and almost completely surrounded by Columbus, Worthington is situated to the east of Dublin, to the northeast of Hilliard and Upper Arlington, and to the west of Westerville. Worthington is served by ZIP code 43085 and area code 614.
Over 200 years old, Worthington was one of the first planned communities in Ohio, with charming brick sidewalks and historic original structures adorning the Village Green.
Let us keep your home in Worthington as clean and pleasant as your lovely community. Maid to Mop offers a full selection of residential and commercial cleaning services, including light housekeeping, full maid service, office cleaning, and construction cleaning.
Permit fees vary widely; some are rising. For more on the wide range of local permit fees paid by Franklin County residents, watch Dispatch reporter Quan Truong on WBNS-10TV between 6:30 and 7 this morning, or go to 10TV.com . Reynoldsburg businesses that want to install signs might be paying more - up to five times as much - just to get permission. The Columbus Dispatch, Feb 21 2012 6:42 AM.
Suburbs' blank checks for city, township officials vary. The amounts for administrators, mayors and city managers range from a few thousand dollars in villages to more than $70,000 in bigger cities such as Dublin. The Columbus Dispatch, Feb 21 2012 6:42 AM.
Design helps home blend with surroundings. UC's two victories last week at home over Providence and Seton Hall did not change the Bearcats' standing as a No. Cincinnati.com, Feb 20 2012 9:54 AM.
Agency focused on reining in regulations. A few Columbus City Schools employees may have committed criminal acts, and others may have been disciplined, by entering incorrect income information on their children's applications for federally subsidized school lunches. The Columbus Dispatch, Feb 20 2012 5:39 AM.
Worthington was founded in 1804 by James Kilbourne, a surveyor who compiled the first map of Ohio. Kilbourne later served as Ohio’s fifth district representative to the U.S. House of Representatives from 1813 to 1817 and as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives in 1823, 1824, 1838, and 1839.
Worthington was named after Thomas Worthington, who in 1802 was a delegate to the Ohio State Constitutional Convention, in 1803 was elected one of Ohio’s first U.S. Senators, and from 1814-1818 served as Ohio’s sixth governor.
In 1835, Worthington, with a population of approximately 1,000, was incorporated as a village, functioning as a center of commerce for the surrounding farms for the rest of the 19th century.
In 1893, electric streetcars were installed to connect Worthington to Columbus, and Worthington became a Columbus suburb, and fueling Worthington’s further growth.
In 1950, Worthington had a population of around 2,130,
which boomed to 15,300 by 1970 after annexations and
much additional building. I-270’s completion in
1975 defined Worthington's northern border, after which
the population became stabilized at a level closer to
today’s.