The Columbus Dispatch

Tax cuts, school choice top GOP’S agenda

- Anna Staver and Haley Bemiller State Bureau USA TODAY NETWORK

House Republican­s want to cut income taxes, make it easier to adopt, expand school choice to every Ohio student and ban transgende­r girls from female sports teams in both high school and college.

The priorities, which were announced Wednesday by House Speaker Jason Stephens, R-kitts Hill, can be found in the first 12 bills introduced.

“I am proud to be here today as we lay out our plan of action to deliver for the people of Ohio,” Stephens said. “The House Republican­s are putting forth an agenda all about growing the economy, protecting Ohio families, and educating our communitie­s.”

Here’s the list of those priority bills broken down by category:

Economic bills:

House Bill 1: This would flatten Ohio’s income tax down to a single rate. Everyone would pay nothing on the first $26,050 they earn and 2.75% on everything above that amount.

That would be a significan­t cut in the amount of taxes the state takes in, so the legislatio­n proposes eliminatin­g about $1.2 billion a year in payments (known as rollbacks) to schools and local government­s.

It’s basically “your income taxes paying part of your property taxes,” state Rep. Adam Mathews, R-lebanon, said.

When Ohio raised income taxes in 1983, the state also agreed to cover a portion of people’s property taxes to offset that increase. HB 1 would eliminate those payments, but that doesn’t mean it would increase your property taxes.

Ohioans currently pay taxes on about 35% of their home’s value. This bill would drop that down to 31.5%.

“We expect people to pay less on their income taxes and their property taxes,” Matthews said.

But it means they’re paying less for local schools and services.

“I’ve raised those concerns,” House Minority Leader Allison Russo, D-upper Arlington, said.

Mathews acknowledg­ed the need for some transition­al dollars to help impacted communitie­s, but he also pointed out that local school districts, for example, could go to their voters for a new levy.

“Putting those dollars into a more accountabl­e form of government for our taxpayers and our communitie­s,” he said. “I think that’s a win for everyone.”

House Bill 2: To declare an intent to direct state funds to projects across the state for economic growth and community developmen­t.

House Bill 3: Authorize an affordable housing tax credit.

House Bill 4: This bill deals with a particular kind of investing that factors environmen­tal and social concerns into how companies manage their risks and opportunit­ies. Basically, an investor might accept lower rates of return in order to support companies that align with their values.

Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron Desantis calls this “woke investing,” and HB 4 would restrict how financial institutio­ns and other businesses use ESG (environmen­tal, social, and governance) investing.

HB 4 doesn’t explain how it will do this yet. The bill is a single page and simply says lawmakers intend to enact legislatio­n that deals with how public pension systems, universiti­es and other industries might “discrimina­te against certain companies or customers based on certain factors.”

“This legislatio­n will provide consumer protection, ensures the rate of returns on investment­s or access to capital isn’t sacrificed for the sole purpose of influencin­g environmen­tal, social, or governance standards,” Rep. Angie King, R-celina, said in a statement.

Family and culture bills

House Bill 5: Make adoption more accessible and affordable.

House Bill 6: Called the “Women’s Sports Act”, this piece of legislatio­n would ban transgende­r girls from playing on female teams in both high school and college. But unlike previous iterations

of the bill it makes no mention of how a student’s sex would be determined.

Instead, HB 6 would create a way for students and their families to sue schools and universiti­es that were caught allowing transgende­r girls on their female sports teams.

Russo and House Democrats oppose this legislatio­n.

“As I’ve said from the beginning, we are well aware of what this alliance is and is not,” she said.

House Bill 7: This is the Strong Foundation­s Act, and it’s aimed at reducing both maternal and infant mortality.

House Bill 8: This would enact the “Parents’ Bill of Rights” and require public schools to notify parents about their student(s) health, well-being and instructio­nal materials with sexually explicit content.

Education bills

House Bill 9: Establish a loan repayment program for teachers.

House Bill 10: Continue to phase in the “Fair School Funding Plan,” a new formula for funding public schools, that was enacted in the last budget.

House Bill 11: This is known as the backpack bill and would let any child in Ohio receive a school voucher for a private school.

“Every child has different gifts, different interests, and different needs,” state Rep. Riordan Mcclain, R-upper Sandusky, said in a statement. “This bill seeks to find the right educationa­l opportunit­y for each one of these children throughout Ohio.”

The biggest potential obstacle to this idea will likely be its cost. Public education advocates speculate the total cost of a universal voucher program could hit $1 billion.

Gov. Mike Dewine proposed expanding income eligibilit­y for Edchoice scholarshi­ps to 400% of the federal poverty level in his budget proposal. And while that’s not a universal voucher program, it would cover about 80% of Ohio’s schoolchil­dren.

The cost estimates for that program range from $25 million to $178 million per year.

House Bill 12: This bill would put a greater focus on career readiness in public education and appears to be a companion bill to something introduced by Senate Republican­s in January.

Senate Bill 1 would change who’s in charge of writing the curricula for Ohio’s 1.6 million school children. The bill proposed taking that responsibi­lity from

the partially elected state board of education and giving it to an appointee within the governor’s office. And it would create a new deputy director to oversee workforce readiness.

House Joint Resolution 1: Another bill that was re-introduced is a resolution to ask Ohio voters whether they want to require more votes to amend the state constituti­on. House Joint Resolution 1 would raise the percentage needed to pass an amendment from the current 50% plus one to 60%.

Will this heal GOP divisions?

The flurry of new legislatio­n came Wednesday after weeks of inaction by the Ohio House. Rep. Derek Merrin, Rmonclova, and his allies repeatedly criticized Stephens for canceling House sessions and not considerin­g the constituti­onal amendment resolution in time for it to make the May ballot.

“I understand it now has a number,” said Rep. Brian Stewart, R-ashville, who’s sponsoring the resolution. “That’s a good place to start. That’s also just a constituti­onal requiremen­t. To say that it’s going be referred to a committee, that’s pretty basic stuff. We want to see actual movement, actual commitment.”

Merrin said Wednesday they’re glad to see movement in the House. But it remains to be seen whether the speaker’s priorities are enough to unify a caucus that’s been sparring since January. While proposals like the backpack bill and transgende­r athlete ban are among their top priorities, they’re not sure if the tax legislatio­n goes far enough for them.

The group plans to release its own policy priorities as session progresses. Some of them were formally introduced Wednesday, including an ethics reform bill unveiled on the eve of former Speaker Larry Householde­r’s trial.

“Last General Assembly ... I took note that we never passed a bill that did not have 50 Republican­s voting for the bill, supporting the bill, and I’m curious if this GA if that’s going to be any different,” state Rep. Ron Ferguson, R-wintersvil­le, said. “Are we going to pass some bills that can’t get to 50 Republican votes?”

Anna Staver and Haley Bemiller are reporters for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

 ?? COURTESY OF OHIO HOUSE ?? “I am proud to be here today as we layout our plan of action to deliver for the people of Ohio,” Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens said Wednesday. “The House Republican­s are putting forth an agenda all about growing the economy, protecting Ohio families, and educating our communitie­s.”
COURTESY OF OHIO HOUSE “I am proud to be here today as we layout our plan of action to deliver for the people of Ohio,” Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens said Wednesday. “The House Republican­s are putting forth an agenda all about growing the economy, protecting Ohio families, and educating our communitie­s.”

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