The Evening Leader

Ohio governor advocates childThe tax deduction, school vouchers

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The wellness and opportunit­ies of Ohio’s children drive a state budget proposal that includes offering a $2,500 child tax deduction, expanding school vouchers, investing in mental health and spending $2.5 billion to prepare large sites for economic developmen­t, Gov. Mike DeWine said Tuesday in his State-of-the-State address.

DeWine, a Republican beginning his second term, told the GOP-dominated Legislatur­e his upcoming budget plan would extend efforts to implement a fairer, more reliable school funding formula, something already incorporat­ed into the previous budget.

The governor also proposed creating a new Department of Children and Youth Services focused on children’s physical and mental health, as well as foster care.

He said the two-year state operating budget also would provide quality childcare for 15,000 more children and repeal the state sales tax on critical infant supplies, such as diapers, wipes and cribs.

Additional­ly, DeWine wants to provide $300 million in one-time funding for capital improvemen­ts and equipment for career tech education — an investment Democrats welcomed — and $5,000 a year incentive to students in the top 5% of their high school classes to remain in the state for college.

“We want our children to grow, to learn and ultimately live and work right here in the state of Ohio,” DeWine said. “And we know that the changes we have announced today will help them do that. Keeping our young people in Ohio has never been more important, as we create jobs faster than we can fill them.”

He called for creating an Our Ohio Future Fund that would spend $2.5 billion to prepare economic investment sites throughout the state, seeking for every Ohioan to be within “commuting distance” of such locations.

DeWine asked the Legislatur­e to support creating the State of Ohio

Action for Resiliency Network, or SOAR Network, to conduct a multiyear study on Ohioans’ mental health. The network would include counselors, social workers, psychologi­sts, nurses and more to determine the most effective interventi­ons and discover new ways to treat mental illness and addiction.

“We will do these things because they keep Ohioans working and our state thriving,” he said. “But we will also do them because it is simply the right thing to do.”

He also wants to fund an updated 911 system for emergency calls and allot $40 million a year to training law enforcemen­t officers on topics such as de-escalation, use of force and crisis interventi­on for people with mental illnesses.

Both provisions received a bipartisan standing ovation.

DeWine called the budget proposal “fiscally sound, spending onetime money on one-time expenditur­es.”

Senate President Matt Huffman, R-Lima, said there are lots of budget details to examine but he’s mostly “delighted” by the proposal, especially provisions aimed at making it easier to have or adopt children.

He has concerns, however, about proposals that depend on one-time funding from sources like the American Rescue Plan Act.

“What this means is that the state government will be responsibl­e for paying these things into the future, probably, and if the state doesn’t have the money to pay for those things, then there has to be a cut some place,” Huffman said.

Democratic lawmakers and teachers unions raised concerns about how DeWine’s plans would affect public schools if he succeeds in expanding eligibilit­y for the school voucher program, known as EdChoice.

He also proposed an additional $3,000 each to help economical­ly disadvanta­ged students attend public charter schools, and doubling the per-pupil facilities funding for those schools from $500 to $1,000.

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