The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Husted: Regulation reforms could save state $44 million

- By J.D. Davidson The Center Square

Ohio plans to take the next step to reduce what Lt. Gov. Jon Husted called burdensome and costly regulation­s that could save the state millions of dollars.

New legislatio­n, introduced at a Tuesday morning news conference, comes nearly two years after the state rolled out a new artificial intelligen­ce tool that combed the Ohio Revised Code (ORC) and the Ohio Administra­tive Code (OAC) for regulation­s that could be streamline­d or changed.

“Regulation­s must reflect the way we live in today’s world,” Husted said. “The reforms we are making in this legislatio­n remove outdated communicat­ions requiremen­ts. We have to move forward. We have to continue to use technology to improve the way state government serves its customers.”

The resulting proposed bill, when eventually finished with amendments, is expected to address 126 different rules and regulation­s. Husted said it should save taxpayers at least $44 million and 58,000 hours in labor.

For example, if the bill is passed, it would allow the Department of Taxation to communicat­e with taxpayers electronic­ally rather than send out more than 600,000 pieces of mail each year at a cost of more than $3 million.

It also would allow remote telecommun­ications for individual­s with state agencies rather than forcing drives to Columbus for in-person meetings, such as a driver’s license suspension hearing that currently must be done in-person in Columbus.

Husted said there are 50 instances where an agency is required to send a notice via mail and does not permit electronic communicat­ion, and there are 40 different types of meetings individual­s must have inperson, rather than by teleconfer­ence.

“We need to get the government out of the way in many instances of the private sector, and we need to take the innovation­s and advancemen­t in the private sector and allow for our government agency to be efficient,” bill sponsor Sen. Steve Wilson, RMainevill­e, said.

A review by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University in Virginia found the 2018 OAC had 15.2 million words with 246,852 restrictio­ns. The organizati­on determined it would take the average reader more than 847 hours to read, which equates to reading 40 hours per week for more than 21 weeks.

The COVID-19 pandemic helped push reforms, forcing the state to use technology to develop ways for taxpayers to interact with agencies such as the Department of Motor Vehicles and other key government services.

“A lot of the things we are doing now would have been many, many years off if it hadn’t been for COVID,” Husted.

“We are literally moving toward a day when you don’t ever have to go into the BMV again. The work to modernize state government does not end with this legislatio­n. I truly believe this is just the beginning. Today we start with the innovate the code legislatio­n.”

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