spot_img

Conservatives pleased, others not, with Ohio’s budget

(The Center Square) – Conservative tax and policy groups continue to applaud an Ohio budget that moves the state to a flat tax and reduces social spending, but some health care and children’s advocates say it ignores typical Ohio families.

Both the Senate and House debated throughout Wednesday afternoon and into the evening before Republicans eventually passed the budget for the next two years.

Now it’s in the hands of Gov. Mike DeWine, who can either sign it, veto it or use a line-item veto to remove specific areas.

Senate President Rob McColley, R-Napoleon, said the move to a flat tax reduces tax burdens by $1 billion across the state.

“The first thing moms and dads see on payday is the often disappointing amount of taxes taken out of their hard work,” McColley said. “I’m proud of the progress we have been able to make over the last decade by reducing the overall number of income tax brackets from nine down to one.”

- Advertisement -

The budget also tries to deal with rising property tax rates by abolishing any new emergency or new replacement levies from appearing on ballots and requiring any ballot issue to be more transparent for voters.

Also, any school district with more than 40% carryover in revenue from year to year would have to return that money to taxpayers. Republicans said the state’s 611 public school districts had a combined $10.5 billion in cash carryover in the last fiscal year.

“The budget that passed both chambers of the Ohio General Assembly contains a lot of good, pro-growth policies – a flat income tax, closing tax loopholes, reining in Medicaid, and smart property tax reforms,” said Greg Lawson, a research fellow at The Buckeye Institute. “There is always more to do, including bolder student-focused education reforms as well as local government reforms, but this budget keeps Ohio moving forward.”

But others are concerned about what is not in the budget, like less funding for the state’s program to reduce tobacco use, which the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network says will lead to 500 more children becoming addicted to smoking.

“It is unthinkable that the Legislature slashed funding for the Ohio Department of Health’s Tobacco Use Prevention and Cessation Program,” said Leo Almeida, the Government Relations director of the organization. “The governor proposed an increase in funding to $10 million per year, but the House and Senate chose to cut funding to $6 million annually. The legislative funding cuts are in addition to recent federal cuts to the program.”

Groundwork Ohio President and CEO Lynanne Gutierrez said the budget focused on wealthy Ohioans rather than babies and children.

- Advertisement -

“Despite overwhelming evidence, bipartisan support, and the voices of families across the state, Ohio policymakers turned their backs on babies, young children, and working families – rejecting the Governor’s budget and instead delivering tax breaks to the wealthy,” Gutierrez said. “This budget is a failure to meet the moment and a clear net loss for Ohio’s future. Our children deserved better, and we won’t stop fighting for them.”

The budget also included provisions that recognizes only two sexes in state law and forces libraries to keep any materials related to sexual orientation or gender identity separate from other materials.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Men of Color Expo – Celebrating Men of Excellence

Tinker Federal Credit Union & PPBC Present Men of Color...

Sports betting bill still alive in Georgia House

(The Center Square) – A bill that would allow...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Trump: Tariffs will return furniture industry boom days to North Carolina

(The Center Square) – Since the first Southern Furniture...

Feds investigate LA schools for sexual misconduct allegations

(The Center Square) - The U.S. Department of Education...

VA suicide screening doubles after watchdog found mass failures

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Veterans...

Seattle seeks more transportation funding just two years into record $1.5B levy

(The Center Square) - Seattle is already looking for...

Senators delay bill on making health insurance affordable

(The Center Square) - The Colorado Senate Appropriations Committee...

Trump’s Iran objective moves from ‘surrender’ to nuclear deal

(The Center Square) – In seven weeks, President Donald...

NYC comptroller criticized for opposing Exxon’s New Jersey exit

(The Center Square) — Legal reform groups are criticizing...

Feds sue Colorado over ban on certain firearm magazines

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Justice...

More like this
Related

Trump: Tariffs will return furniture industry boom days to North Carolina

(The Center Square) – Since the first Southern Furniture...

Feds investigate LA schools for sexual misconduct allegations

(The Center Square) - The U.S. Department of Education...

VA suicide screening doubles after watchdog found mass failures

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Veterans...

Seattle seeks more transportation funding just two years into record $1.5B levy

(The Center Square) - Seattle is already looking for...