Dayton Daily News

Military wives win fight to get DeWine to sign occupation­al bill. Law helps military spouses land jobs

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE — For Brianna McKinnon, Tina Kosobud and their allies, Monday represente­d the culminatio­n of two years of work as Gov. Mike DeWine signed legislatio­n making it easier for military spouses to land jobs in an array of licensed occupation­s.

DeWine signed Ohio Senate Bill 7 at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force, requiring state occupation­al licensing agencies to issue temporary licenses or certificat­es to uniformed service members and their spouses who are validly licensed in another jurisdicti­on and have moved to Ohio for military duty.

As McKinnon — a Washington state special education teacher who lived in Ohio — argued for the bill, she found herself testifying before Ohio legislator­s several times and personally briefing U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper on the legislatio­n at the Pentagon.

McKinno nfound on moving to Ohio that if she wished to teach here, she had to take a university course and spend nearly $500 on a trio of exams.

“I said ‘No,’” said McKinnon, who started pushing for the bill before moving back to Washington from Ohio. “I started calling everyone, and eventually ran into (bill sponsor Ohio Rep. Rick) Perales. We talked, and that was the start of this two-year fight to get this bill passed.”

Perales, a Beavercree­k Republican, said colleagues almost immediatel­y saw the value of the legislatio­n, but the process was cumbersome and time-consuming.

“It’s not an easy process,” said Perales, a former Air Force officer. “Even something as good as this. It ended up going, and it was unanimous in both chambers, but to get to that point, it took some time.”

“When I looked, there were 86 special ed(ucation) positions open,” said Kosobud, a West Carrollton special education teacher who found herself in a predicamen­t to similar to McKinnon’s.

“I had all of the criteria to do that. I had a job that accepted me, but then Ohio turned down my licensure,” added Kosobud, who moved to Ohio from Virginia. “I had a master’s in special education, a 10-year profession­al license in a different state, but Ohio would not recognize that.”

The bill will make it easier for service members and their spouses to use their profession­al licenses from other states, advocates say.

The idea in part is to make Ohio more friendly and welcoming to military families, something the DeWine administra­tion has identified as a priority. The bill offers a pathway for licensing in an array of occupation­s, including nurses, home health aides, dental assistants and other occupation­s.

“This bill is one way of helping those family members,” DeWine said in remarks before signing the bill.

Congressma­n Mike Turner, R-Dayton, said Esper followed the course of the state legislatio­n with interest.

“This was an injustice and probably a surprise for most individual­s,” Turner said of previous licensure requiremen­ts.

In a release Monday, the Dayton Developmen­t Coalition said it’s an issue that former Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson has raised with coalition leaders.

In 2018, Wilson, with the other service secretarie­s, said that occupation­al licensing reciprocit­y and quality of local schools will be considered in choosing bases for additional missions, the coalition noted.

Perales, Lt. Gov. Jon Husted and others at the signing ceremony pointed to data showing that spousal joblessnes­s is one of the biggest burdens military families can bear. Such families can be reassigned to different locales every two or three years, if not more often.

McKinnon, who flew to Ohio Monday from Washington for the signing ceremony, said her advice to military spouses is simple: “You can be heard. Call your state representa­tive and tell them how you can fight for all of us.”

“The families of those who are serving our country should not be deprived of the right to earn a living by needless regulation,” said Robert Alt, president and chief executive of the Buckeye Institute.

‘You can be heard. Call your state representa­tive and tell them how you can fight for all of us.’ Brianna McKinnon

Teacher and military spouse

 ??  ?? Gov. Mike DeWine signed Senate Bill 7 with Brianna McKinnon, left, a military spouse and special education teacher; Rep. Rick Perales; Sen. Bob Hackett; and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted.
Gov. Mike DeWine signed Senate Bill 7 with Brianna McKinnon, left, a military spouse and special education teacher; Rep. Rick Perales; Sen. Bob Hackett; and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted.

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