Senate Releases Budget Plan, Removes Autism Requirement

Senate Releases Budget Plan, Removes Autism Requirement

AP

The Republican-led Ohio Senate releases its version of the two-year state budget Friday.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio—The Republican-led Ohio Senate released its version of the two-year state budget Friday.

The chamber has been trying to find ways to cut at least $1 billion from the roughly $54 billion plan approved by the Democratic-controlled Ohio House in April.

The big difference in the Senate’s plan was school funding.

The Senate proposed to fund schools on a per-pupil basis, not Governor’s Strickland’s plan for evidence-based funding, which included all-day kindergarten, new tutors, nurses and counselors, and lower student-teacher ratios.

NBC 4’s Tanya Hutchins was reporting from the Statehouse during the Senate’s release.

The Senate’s budget highlights:

- Eliminates 10-year phase-in of school funding.

Instead, it increases funding to all schools over the next two years, using real, on-hand dollars to provide stability to school districts as they work to weather a slow economy.

For fiscal year 2010, all schools would receive a quarter-percent funding increase over 2009. For fiscal year 2011, all schools would receive a half-percent funding increase over 2010.

Schools in the state’s fast-growing districts (those that grow more than two percent each year) would get two percent increases in 2010 and 2011.

Senate President Bill Harris said his chamber’s version of the budget retained a committee that will continue to study Strickland’s evidence-based education approach.

“We are committed to working with the governor and the House to make further reforms to improve the quality of education for all children,“ Harris said in a statement. “However, we have looked closely at the evidence-based model and believe it to be fundamentally flawed.“

Charter school supporters immediately praised the Senate’s bill.

“The Senate’s restoration of funding for Ohio’s charter schools provides a lifeline to more than 80,000 public school students and their families,“ said Bill Sims, president of the Ohio Association of Public Charter Schools. “It also annuls the constitutional questions raised by House bill provisions which would have cut funding for Ohio’s public charter schools by as much as $160 million in 2010.“

- Eliminates 34 proposed fee increases, helping to reduce the burden on Ohio employers in agriculture, coal, construction, etc.

- The Senate’s budget would fund all public schools equally, regardless of charter school, e-school or traditional school.

- Eliminates mandates that private insurance offer coverage for dependents up to age 29.

- Removes requirement that health-insurance companies offer coverage for autism spectrum disorders, which would cost businesses and Medicaid tens of millions of dollars annually.

The Senate also cut $417 million in funding to state agencies, $42 million in Medicaid expenses, and imposed another $200 million in additional service cuts on agencies in line with a cost-trimming executive order by Strickland, a Democrat.

Senate was set to vote out of committee Tuesday and vote full Senate Wednesday or Thursday.

Ohio has faced a series of deep budget cuts in recent months as state revenues have come up short of projections.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by sme on June 03, 2009 at 8:42 pm

Gee, our company laid off a lot of people and it all started with administrative positions as in business worlds those are what they call “nonproduction, non-revenue” positions…. guess to make money, keep money or your job, you need to be a buddy to someone in the state government.  Or, a state trooper pulling over the high lord of the lotto :-)

Flag Comment Posted by unrepentent on June 03, 2009 at 7:40 pm

Sme
Mostly administration costs.
Why create a Govt. entity unless you can spread the wealth amongst your buddies?

Flag Comment Posted by sme on June 03, 2009 at 7:22 pm

Unrepentent - a whole dollar a year per student??  wow, that means the rest goes to all those stupid tv ads telling us to play play play the lotto it benefits our schools, the employees of the lottery, and I wonder which other state officials’ pockets…..

Flag Comment Posted by unrepentent on June 03, 2009 at 6:50 pm

sme
lasttime i heard the amount from the lottery proceeds it was a buck per student per year.

Flag Comment Posted by sme on June 03, 2009 at 5:35 pm

sooooo, how does this fix the unconstitutional, unfair funding of OH schools?? I still have not seen where they have abided by the courts multiple rulings. They are still taxing our paychecks or property and now more state funding as well.  I also don’t see them mentioning the Lottery money, all the commercials say it supports our schools, but I have not seen one word about how much or where it is going…....

Flag Comment Posted by Citizen on May 31, 2009 at 6:47 am

Right…they used the colorful rhetoric of their long winded ‘senate finance solutions’

Flag Comment Posted by unrepentent on May 30, 2009 at 11:31 pm

But they couldnt afford the paint!!!!!!!!!!!!

Flag Comment Posted by Citizen on May 29, 2009 at 4:52 pm

The senate solution was to paint itself in a corner.

Flag Comment Posted by unrepentent on May 29, 2009 at 4:06 pm

brianlc
No its not .I really wouldnt want to waste the 50 cents

Flag Comment Posted by unrepentent on May 29, 2009 at 3:28 pm

Catinthehat
Im proud of that one.
Clinton looks like a neo-con compared to Obamulesii.

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