Springfield News-Sun

Springfiel­d-clark CTC, Triad get over $2M combined in grants

Monies will go towards new equipment for career tech education.

- By Brooke Spurlock

Two Clark and Champaign County districts are among 56 Ohio schools that will receive millions of dollars in state grant funding to purchase new equipment for career technical education including engineerin­g, manufactur­ing, health sciences, and constructi­on, state officials announced last week.

Springfiel­d-clark Career Technology Center (CTC) will receive $606,000, and Triad Local Schools will get $2,189,266.

The new state grants that total more than $67.7 million will help expand career technical education access to more 10,345 more

Ohio students, Gov. Mike Dewine’s office said. The funding will help schools purchase up-to-date equipment to better prepare students to be career-ready after graduation.

Springfiel­d-clark CTC will use the grant to help create opportunit­ies within the Informatio­n Technologi­es pathway to equip students graduating in the Software Programmin­g Technologi­es Program and Cybersecur­ity Program,

and to purchase updated student computers and monitors, additional projectors, Microsoft Azure for SQL Server, curriculum and profession­al developmen­t for instructor­s.

“Software developer is listed as the fourth-most in-demand career on Ohio’s Top Jobs list, and we feel it’s important to advance our students’ experience­s while still

ily Republican district that consists of southern Clark County, eastern Greene County, and all of Clinton County.

Ohio House representa­tives make $63,007 per year, plus more if they are elected to leadership positions within their caucus.

Levi Dean

This is the first foray into state politics for Dean. He’s spent the past six years on the Xenia City Council and is the owner of Dean’s Plumbing, one of a handful of Greene County businesses that dons the Dean family name.

Dean promotes himself as someone who knows what it’s like to start and maintain a small business. He told this news organizati­on that he relates to entreprene­urial Ohioans who are feeling the squeeze from taxes, government regulation­s and inflation.

“I am a blue-collar worker; I know how to roll my sleeves up and get to work,” Dean said. “My track record on job creation, taxes and fiscal responsibi­lity is consistent and it’s exactly what I promised.”

His top priorities, if elected, would be to cut taxes and government regulation­s and defend “Godgiven” rights to life and self-defense, he said.

Dean told this news outlet that he’d support a tax overhaul and hopes to balance eliminatin­g the state income tax with reformulat­ing how the state can “properly and fairly” fund local government­s — a burgeoning tussle between the Ohio General Assembly and municipali­ties across the state.

“We need as much local control over taxes as possible. The government closest to the people is best for the people,” Dean said, calling for Ohio to go back to the basics in prioritizi­ng local infrastruc­ture, roads, and public safety.

On education, Dean believes that young Ohioans are not adequately prepared to hold jobs and participat­e in society when they graduate. However, he doesn’t think extra funding will solve the county.

“It made sense that the Thomas Library would be the ideal place to put one. Now students and staff can check out books, DVDS, CDS and video games and also put holds on items from around the state that will be available to them via the kiosk,” he said. “We are hoping that the students and staff will take to the kiosk and that, if it is successful, we can begin looking at other locations the problem.

“Look, each year we dump more money into our education system in this country and each year we seem to decrease actual learning. Something has to give,” Dean said. He called for parents to become more involved in their child’s academics and life decisions.

Dean told this newspaper that he’s “100% pro-life” and that he believes Ohioans were deceived when the state’s voters enshrined abortion protection­s into the Ohio Constituti­on last November through Issue 1. “That issue was decided by out-of-state money,” he said.

And while Dean doesn’t believe that anyone should be criminally punished for marijuana, he called for the legislatur­e to override last November’s vote to legalize recreation­al weed and decriminal­ize it instead. He cited concerns with workplace accidents, vehicular accidents and insurance rates all increasing.

Joshua Day

Also from Xenia, Day is hoping to convert his experience leading the Xenia City School Board into a House seat.

Day, an aerospace engineer who moved to the area to work at Wright-patterson Air Force Base, is another small-government Republican who hopes, if elected, to clamp down on taxes and government spending while limiting drug flow into Ohio, which he believes is a symptom of the country’s southern border crisis.

Day said he also hopes to bring personal responsibi­lity and family values to Columbus.

“I have been a leader throughout my life and I understand what it takes to listen to those I represent and then stand firm for our needs even when it is difficult,” said Day when asked why his constituen­ts should vote for him.

“I am self-made. Everything I have is because I worked hard for it. I truly understand the needs of my community because they are my family’s needs as well.”

Day said he supports eliminatin­g the income tax and lowering property taxes, but notes that the legislatur­e would need to choose around the county to put other ones.”

Mclellan said they developed a nook around the machine as a place for students to be comfortabl­e.

“Some of our goals with this collaborat­ion are to support the developmen­t of lifelong library users among our student population, to support affordable education initiative­s, and to raise awareness of the fantastic opportunit­ies to learn and grow available here in our community,” she said.

With the partnershi­p, Mclellan said they can issue

one or the other because “we can’t do both.”

On education, Day thinks the state can save money by consolidat­ing school districts, thus eliminatin­g administra­tive positions.

“Why do we need 611 different school districts each with its own faculties? That is 611 superinten­dents across the state of Ohio and if each of those are paid an average of $150,000 per year that is over $91 million we spend just on superinten­dents per year,” Day said.

“If we reduced the number of school districts by even just 100, that would save millions of dollars every year to be better used on educationa­l programs to help kids have successful lives and careers.”

Day also proposed putting a cap on Ohio colleges’ and universiti­es’ ability to accept student loan dollars, which he believes would reduce the cost of attending and limit student debt. Likewise, he wants to place limits on the types of degrees state universiti­es can provide, and believes colleges should provide transparen­cy on a graduate’s expected income.

Day said he, too, opposes Issue 1 and called it a “mockery of life.” However, he said that the state needs to improve its performanc­e in adoption and foster care systems, potentiall­y subsidize health care, and provide more assistance to women’s clinics before revisiting the discussion on abortion.

Robert Fudge

Fudge, former mayor of Cedarville, told this news outlet that constituen­ts should vote for him because he’s “by far the most experience­d candidate in this race.” He said his educationa­l background in government and politics, public library cards to students who may not otherwise have had access because of transporta­tion or other limitation­s.

“This machine provides a tangible point to not only provide easier access to popular reading and movies, but also to highlight the fantastic programs and resources available at Clark County Public Library,” she said. “Public libraries are essential to a healthy community and we have one of the best public library systems in the country right here in our backyard.”

along with his law degree, gives him the best foundation for the role.

Fudge said he’d view all legislatio­n and government activity through his succinct belief that the “legitimate role” of a government is to protect liberty and freedom. “(I) will view all legislatio­n from that perspectiv­e,” he said.

Fudge also wants to personify a cultural change that he’d like to see at the statehouse. “At both the national and state (level), we’ve lost the art of statesmans­hip in government,” he said. “I will do my very best to restore it.”

Like the others, Fudge is a small-government Republican. His priorities, if elected, include waging a “fight to reduce the influence” of federal and state government on Ohioans’ daily lives, he said.

As for the government functions he’d like to see, Fudge said he’ll focus on economic developmen­t, workforce training, agricultur­e, veteran’s issues and reducing and simplifyin­g taxes.

He said he would take aim at eliminatin­g the state income tax, with a correspond­ing reduction in spending, along with some proposals to alleviate property tax burdens on Ohioans and small businesses.

In education, Fudge boasts experience as a substitute teacher, technical instructor and college professor. He said he believes the state’s emphasis on early reading is the way to improve education moving forward.

“I also believe our public schools are places for education, not indoctrina­tion, so (I) would prefer local control by school boards over the curriculum, within broad guidelines from the (state),” Fudge said.

Fudge said he’d form a

Informatio­n Technology Librarian, Josh Lagle, will take care of making sure the machine remains stocked and that all holds are filled in a timely manner.

The book vending machine is open to the public. Anyone with a valid Clark County Public Library card can use the machine, and the university also offers community patron cards to those who would like to use Thomas Library material.

regional planning commission, if elected, to prepare for the “inevitable” economic growth he foresees occurring in House District 71. He believes the district should be a hotspot for companies, given the amount of land and interstate accessibil­ity.

Fudge said he was disappoint­ed by Issue 1′s passage. He said he believes there will be unintended consequenc­es from the “poorly written” constituti­onal amendment and believes there may be room for both parties to agree on an alternativ­e amendment in the future.

Tyler Scott

Scott, residing in Xenia, is a political newcomer who has never run for public office and hopes his relative inexperien­ce is a trait that will help him win this race.

“This speaks to my true intention of helping my state and making this land better for everyone, not the party. It speaks to how I am not a career politician and do not aspire to be one,” Scott told this news organizati­on.

Scott’s background is largely rooted in private business. He was once the commission­er of Major League Cornhole and has moved on to making a living as a landlord, an occupation he said gives him an understand­ing of the worsening housing crisis in Ohio.

“Every part of our economy starts with single-family home ownership. If you take that away you will see a large gap between the rich and the poor. The middle class will cease to exist,” Scott said.

As such, Scott said his first legislativ­e priority, if elected, would be to ban hedge funds and corporatio­ns from owning single-family homes.

He said he’d also push to eliminate income tax, like the others. He said he would generally leave property taxes alone, as he expects soaring property tax rates to soon fall and believes it’s the local government’s responsibi­lity to handle.

Scott said he’d push for audits at every single public school district across the state in order to identify instances of irresponsi­ble spending.

“My intention is to reform the K-12 system. But I must do so after accurately addressing the problem once in the Statehouse and having access to where the problems are occurring,” he said.

Scott’s position on Issue 1 is the same as his opponents and he believes it’s something Ohio needs to readdress. He said he believes life begins at conception, but added that “(the) only caveat against my fellow Republican­s is that I would have allowed for exceptions in extreme cases and underage conception­s.”

Scott is the only Republican in the race that voted to legalize adult-use recreation­al marijuana last November, a vote that he stands by. He said he wants to see recreation­al marijuana’s tax proceeds go toward tackling addiction to hard drugs that many Ohioans face, as well as advancing mental health services in poorly served areas.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? From left: Levi Dean, Joshua Day, Robert Fudge and Tyler Scott are the candidates in this March’s House District 71 Republican primary.
CONTRIBUTE­D From left: Levi Dean, Joshua Day, Robert Fudge and Tyler Scott are the candidates in this March’s House District 71 Republican primary.

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