The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Senate passes budget with Medicaid limits

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Ohio’s state budget is headed into compromise talks on Thursday following Senate passage.

COLUMBUS, OHIO » Ohio’s state budget is headed into compromise talks on Thursday following Senate passage.

The budget cleared the Senate, 24-8, Wednesday evening after several hours of debate and efforts by minority Democrats to turn back limits on Medicaid expansion and a new work requiremen­t for recipients of the government health care benefit.

The Senate plan calls for extending Medicaid expansion for one year. After July 1, 2018, no new enrollees would be accepted to the program covering some 700,000 poor adult Ohioans — and those who dropped off the program by finding better employment could not re-enroll.

Senate Finance Chairman Scott Oelslager, a Canton Republican, said the Senate budget seeks to protect vulnerable Ohioans while also thinking of the burden government places on taxpayers.

“While this was a difficult process, the bill before you today is balanced, it is fiscally responsibl­e, it invests in the citizens and key priorities of this great state,” Oelslager said.

Minority Democrats in the chamber introduced a series of unsuccessf­ul amendments advancing their interest in protecting local government funding, expanding early child education and protecting the environmen­t, among others.

“The wellbeing of most Ohioans has not been improved appreciabl­y since the Great Recession that took place in 2007 and 2008,” state Sen. Mike Skindell, a Lakewood Democrat, said in arguing a state’s budget should do its best to help all citizens. “Many Ohioans have not been dealt a fair shot.”

The U.S. House-passed health care bill would phase out expanded Medicaid, which allows states to provide federally backed insurance to low-income adults previously not eligible. Many people in that demographi­c are in their 20s and 30s and dealing with opioid addiction.

Ohio lawmakers have embedded added opioidrela­ted spending into the state budget even as they prepare to use the bill to trim the expansion, which Republican Gov. John Kasich pushed through and continues to vocally support.

Lawmakers face a June 30 deadline for passing the final version of the $65 billion spending blueprint, which will fund programs for the two years beginning July 1.

The Senate version closes an anticipate­d budget gap of just over $1 billion through across-theboard agency cuts, program eliminatio­ns and behind-the-scenes accounting shifts.

The Medicaid Coalition, a group that supports maintainin­g the expansion, said the Senate amendment “misses the mark.”

The Senate added a provision to the bill allowing a special committee to periodical­ly review the existence of Ohio’s Cabinetlev­el agencies for possible eliminatio­n. If successful, the measure would give the legislativ­e branch of government unpreceden­ted control over Ohio’s administra­tive branch.

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