Thursday, January 31, 2013

January 31


Updated: 3:44 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013 | Posted: 3:44 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013

School safety included in early Ohio House bills

The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio —

School safety, Internet cafes and municipal income taxes are among the issues the Ohio House hopes to tackle this legislative session.

The topics were included in the first bills that representatives introduced on Wednesday.

Other proposals would streamline the state's job-matching services and create grants for local governments. One bill would set training and certification requirements for a new group of professionals who will help guide consumers through the new health insurance exchange.

House Speaker William Batchelder says the bills reflect some of the bigger issues lawmakers will face in the first half of the year, but don't encompass all of his Republican caucus' priorities. http://www.daytondailynews.com/ap/ap/education/school-safety-included-in-early-ohio-house-bills/nWBLG/

 

 

Updated: 12:32 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013 | Posted: 12:32 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013

Where Ohioans stand on Medicaid expansion in state

By JOHN SEEWER

The Associated Press

TOLEDO, Ohio —

A look at where Ohio's political leaders, health industry organizations and others stand on expanding Medicaid benefits. Gov. John Kasich is to announce Feb. 4 whether he'll push for expansion.

LEGISLATIVE LEADERS: Republicans control both the House and Senate in Ohio and many don't like Obama's health care law and made that clear in the most recent elections, campaigning against the law. Because the state's Legislature will ultimately get to vote on expanding Medicaid if Kasich decides he wants it, the governor will need to persuade some to change their positions. GOP House Speaker William Batchelder said his fellow Republicans have concerns about the expense of enlarging Medicaid. He also acknowledged that there are philosophical questions over the law itself, which mandates almost everyone to obtain insurance.


 

 

School safety high on legislators’ list


The Columbus Dispatch Thursday January 31, 2013 6:57 AM

Meanwhile, the Ohio House yesterday introduced a place-holder bill among the first 10 bills that it plans to focus on in the first half of this year. Details of the bill will be filled out as the committee gathers input.

“We do have schools in Ohio that presently have armed employees, so that’s one possibility,” said Speaker William G. Batchelder, R-Medina. “Also, we are anxious to hear from parents. That’s an important part of how we create changes that will actually make people more comfortable with the school setup.”

LaRose said legislators passed a school-safety plan in 2006. “After eight years of experience, maybe we can improve on that,” he said. “It’s about us hearing from the professionals, and we’re open-minded about it.”


 

 

Kasich rolling out his plan for schools


Thursday January 31, 2013 6:43 AM

Republican legislative leaders briefed on the governor’s school-funding and policy changes say that, at first blush, they like them.

“I think you’ll be impressed with some of it,” Speaker William G. Batchelder, R-Medina, told reporters. “He’s trying to do some things that are going to be very helpful to young people, particularly in urban areas.”

Batchelder said Kasich introduced him to 35 superintendents on Tuesday who were gathered in the governor’s office to talk about the budget.

“They were impressed with the effort that had gone into it,” Batchelder said.


 

 

Posted: 5:45 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013

Jobs, school safety among issues Ohio House to target in 2013


Columbus Bureau, Dayton Daily News

Offering an early glimpse at some of the issues they plan to tackle for the year, Ohio House Republicans on Wednesday rolled out their first bills of the 130th General Assembly.

“While these ten bills are not part of an official House Republican “priorities list,” they reflect some of the bigger issues we will face in the first six months,” Ohio House Speaker William Batchelder, R-Medina, said in an emailed statement.


 

 

EXCLUSIVE: Should Ohio expand Medicaid?

Kasich appears to be in favor. Pros - more funds, more insured. Cons - that federal debt...

Jan 31, 2013 |

 

Written by


Ohio could be among a growing contingent of Republican-led states leaning toward expanding Medicaid coverage for hundreds of thousands of low-income residents.

In an exclusive interview with The Enquirer this week, Gov. John Kasich hinted he would call for expanding the joint federal-state health care program for the poor and disabled in his pending two-year budget proposal, which is due Monday.

Doing so would bring billions of dollars to the state and extend Medicaid coverage to thousands of low-income people currently left out.


 

 

 

Published: 1/31/2013

Ohio school funding formula unlikely to be cut

Plan gives more to charter schools, private education vouchers

BY JIM PROVANCE
BLADE COLUMBUS BUREAU CHIEF

COLUMBUS — Details remained tight Wednesday, but the amount of money going into the new school funding formula that Gov. John Kasich will publicly unveil today is not expected to be reduced again.

But how well individual districts do overall will depend on whether they benefit from pools of additional money targeting poorer districts and such things as reading programs and services for gifted and special needs students.

The plan also will hold additional help for charter schools and taxpayer-funded vouchers for students to attend private and religious schools.

The sales job will begin immediately when Gov. John Kasich unveils his long-awaited revamp of how Ohio pays for K-12 schools.

Mr. Kasich will present his plan at a meeting of the Buckeye Association of School Administrators before talking with reporters and leading a town hall-style discussion with an invitation-only audience in Columbus.

“He’s trying to do some things that I think are going to be helpful to young people, particularly in urban areas,” House Speaker Bill Batchelder (R., Medina) said. “Part of that is just a reflection of [Cleveland Mayor Frank] Jackson.”


 

 

 

House Dems seek input on Kasich schools plan

 

Published: Thu, January 31, 2013 @ 12:00 a.m.



COLUMBUS

Democrats in the Ohio House hope Gov. John Kasich includes all-day kindergarten, smaller class sizes and charter-school accountability in his education-reform bill.

And restored funding for districts.

“If Gov. Kasich is serious about education reform, his plan must focus on these areas and address historical, deep cuts to the schools in his last budget,” said Rep. Teresa Fedor, a Democrat from Toledo. “When spending on schools is reduced as much as it was in the last budget cycle, new state programs become unfunded mandates.”

She added, “Schools need the proper tools and the proper funding to do their jobs.”


 

 

 

Bills introduced by House Republicans

 

Published: Thu, January 31, 2013 @ 12:00 a.m.



COLUMBUS

Improvements to offices that help out-of-work Ohioans find jobs, regulations of so-called Internet cafes and procedures for removing fiscal officers are among the first law changes proposed by Republicans in the Ohio House.

The bills were among more than 20 offered during Wednesday’s session.

The first 10 often are considered as priorities among the chamber’s majority caucus, though Speaker Bill Batchelder downplayed that symbolic significance.


 

 

 

House, Senate Approve ‘State of the State’ Move to Lima

Hannah Report 1/30/13

 

In a less-contentious debate than a year prior, the House and Senate approved a resolution to move the “State of the State” address to Lima, with some of the opponents of last year’s move to Steubenville supporting the move to Lima this year.

Rep. Matt Huffman (R-Lima) introduced HJR1 (Batchelder), saying that while he understands that tradition is important and trumps proposals such as moving the “State of the State,” he noted that when those traditions were established throughout history, someone was probably complaining that they liked the old way better. He added that he thinks it’s great to hold the “State of the State” outside of Columbus for representatives like him, and said they have a great deal of hometown pride in Lima.

Huffman said that those in Lima are getting excited about the prospect of being a host city, with local officials putting together events to hold for officeholders.


 

 

 

Workforce Development, Municipal Tax Reform Top Introduced House Bills

Hannah Report 1/30/13

 

The first round of House bills dropped during Wednesday’s session, with the House Republicans issuing 10 bills addressing topics such as workforce development, local government performance, municipal tax reform, sweepstakes machines, and school safety.

House Speaker William Batchelder (R-Medina) said the bills are not a part of an official House Republican “priorities list,” but said they do “reflect some of the bigger issues we will face in the first six months.

“These are the first in a series of many important bills that we will be introducing over the course of this General Assembly as we work to boost workforce development efforts, improve our tax climate, enhance local government operation, improve health care, and create a better quality of life for all Ohioans.” http://www.hannah.com/DesktopDefaultPublic.aspx?type=hns&id=191804

 

 

 

 

 

House GOP's First 10 Bills Include Workforce, Sweepstakes, Muni Tax Measures; Democrats Seek To Bolster LGF

 

Gongwer 1/30/13

Legislative activity kicked up a notch Wednesday with the introduction of the first substantive measures of the 130th General Assembly.

With the biennial budget measure not expected to be released in legislative form for at least a week, Speaker Bill Batchelder (R-Medina) stopped short of calling the first set of House GOP bills "priority" measures.

"While these 10 bills are not part of an official House Republican 'priorities list,' they reflect some of the bigger issues we will face in the first six months," Speaker Batchelder said in a statement.

"These are the first in a series of many important bills that we will be introducing over the course of this General Assembly as we work to boost workforce development efforts, improve our tax climate, enhance local government operation, improve health care, and create a better quality of life for all Ohioans."


 

 

 

Legislature Approves State Of The State Venue Change With Little Opposition; Speaker Talks Surplus, K-12 Plan

Gongwer 1/30/13

 

Speaker Skeptical About Surplus: House Speaker Bill Batchelder (R-Medina) said after session that he's "not as sanguine" as Gov. Kasich that the next two-year budget will have a $1 billion surplus, saying he thought the state would continue to have employment problems.

"I hope that the governor's right and there's no reason to assume that there's anything right now in the economy that would indicate that he isn't right," he told reporters Wednesday. "But a two-year budget - that's a long time."

Any surplus money in the budget, he said, should go into the state's rainy-day fund.

Speaker Batchelder said he talked with the governor Tuesday about his education funding plan, scheduled to be unveiled on Thursday.

While declining to give specifics about the plan, Speaker Batchelder said he expects people will be impressed by many parts of it.

"He's trying to do some things that I think are going to be very helpful to young people, particularly in urban areas," he said.

Asked if the plan might include like the Cleveland school improvement plan on a statewide basis, the speaker demurred.

"I think we'll see that on a school district by school district basis where they come in and asked for something," he said.

Speaker Batchelder said he also talked with the governor about his trip last week to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. He said the governor met with several European companies in hopes they will agree to do business in Ohio.

"I don't know if we can get another Honda, but we'll be doing, I think, some things that will attract people that are not here now," the speaker said.

Speaker Batchelder said he didn't want to reply to a question about what prompted the Fiscal Integrity Act (HB 10 ), a reintroduction of legislation that failed last year (SB 339 , 129th General Assembly).

"I think that we had a shot at that last time around, and I think it was misunderstood by some of the folks who were going to apply it," he said.


 

 

 

 

 

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