Posts Tagged ‘John Kasich’

WedApr17

Bill requires teachers to endorse abstinence

Posted by akiefaber April 17th, 2013, 8:51 am Post a Comment

Associated Press:

A Republican-dominated Ohio House panel has cleared the state budget on a party-line vote after making changes to restrict what’s taught in health-education classes.

The House Finance and Appropriation Committee voted 20-9 Tuesday to approve the two-year budget plan that begins July 1. Democrats said the measure puts politics over people.

A full House vote could come Thursday.

The panel added a provision to prohibit teachers from distributing contraceptives on school property and to require them to endorse abstinence as the only acceptable way to avoid pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.

The House budget also drops Republican Gov. John Kasich’s (KAY’-siks) proposal to extend Medicaid health coverage under the federal health law.

The budget bill contains a 7 percent permanent income-tax reduction, while excluding the governor’s proposed small-business tax cut.

no comments yet

Posted in: Government, News |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , ,

MonFeb4

Last week in West Chester: Kasich unveils education plan

Posted by akiefaber February 4th, 2013, 2:28 pm Post a Comment

To let West Chester and Liberty Township residents catch up with the news that they need to know, WestChesterBuzz.com will list and link to all of last week’s top local stories every Monday.

Governor John Kasich. File photo.

Governor John Kasich. File photo.

Kasich unveils plan to fund, reform Ohio schools – Governor John Kasich offered a new way of funding schools last Thursday he says will be more equitable for poor and rural districts and add to the school choices of working class families. The plan raises the amount of state aid going to education in the next two years and Kasich promised no district will see a reduction in that amount next year, even with the changes he’s proposing.

Crossroads coming to Mason? – Crossroads is one step closer to opening a new church in Mason to serve its rapidly growing congregation in Butler and Warren counties, Rachel Richardson of MasonBuzz.com reported last week. Chuck Moore, Crossroads’ director of multi-site, told Richardson that the church “responded to the people in Mason and West Chester who asked for a site.”

Ryan Kelly grew from 6-1, 200 pounds as a high school sophomore to a 6-5, 285-pound senior before he committed to Alabama. Ironically, the team Bama defeated – Notre Dame – in this past season’s national championship game was Kelly’s favorite team as a child. Photo provided by the University of Alabama Athletics Communications.

Lakota West grad talks about winning two national titles – Ryan Kelly wasn’t supposed to be playing in the national championship game. Yet, there he was snapping the football during his team’s last offensive series, as Alabama finished off Notre Dame, 42-14, in the BCS National Championship game in Miami, Fla. Jan. 7. It was the second straight season where Bama finished as national champions.

Gray to have number retired - The best basketball player ever to don a Lakota West basketball jersey, Amber Gray, will become the school district’s first athlete of the sport to have her jersey retired. Gray, who owns school career records in points, rebounds, assists, blocked shots and games played, will have her No. 10 jersey hung permanently in her high school’s gym before the Lakota East at Lakota West girls’ basketball game this Wednesday, Feb. 6. The announcement was made last week.

Sheriff weighs in on immigration proposal – Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones went to Washington, D.C. last week, where he offered his ideas on immigration reform at a meeting of the National Sheriff’s Association Immigration Committee.

Lakota Board of Education approves 2014-15 school calendar – The Lakota Board of Education approved last week its school calendar for 2014-15. According to the calendar, school would begin Aug. 21, 2014. The last day of school for students is set for May 29, 2015, with graduation either May 30 or 31, 2015.

Trevon Broomfield. Photo provided by the West Chester Police Department.

Craigslist car thief – A man used the Craigslist classified-ads website to troll for cars – then stole three of the vehicles, and drove one stolen car in a chase that ended with a crash, a Warren County grand jury says. The incident, when Trevon Broomfield of Dayton was caught, began in West Chester Township where police said they received a report that a 2005 Nissan Sentra had been stolen from a home.

Kroger case won’t be reviewed in Feb. – The West Chester Township Zoning Commission won’t hear the case of a proposed shopping center, which is to be anchored by a new Kroger Marketplace, on Feb. 25. Instead, the project, that has local neighbors worried about their safety, has been tabled until the commission’s next meeting on March 18. In effort to halt plans for a 133,000-square-foot Kroger, Tom Eggert and his neighbors on Wethersfield Drive have lined their street and the corner of Tylersville Road and Princeton-Glendale Road (State Route 747) with lawn signs that read “StopKroger.com.”

Vote for the 2013 Shamrock Shuffle t-shirt design – For the first time in the history of the Shamrock Shuffle, the Community Foundation of West Chester/Liberty is hosting a t-shirt design contest for the annual event that attracts approximately 4,000 runners every March. Participants sent in their designs earlier this winter. Beginning last Thursday, Facebook users could vote for their favorite design.

no comments yet

Posted in: Crime, Fall sports, Government, News, Schools, Sports, Winter Sports |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

IN OUR SCHOOLS: Kasich touts school proposal

Posted by akiefaber February 4th, 2013, 10:28 am Post a Comment

Education funding plan draws mixed reviews; package must still pass legislative muster

Gov. John Kasich talks about his new school funding plan, Achievement Everywhere, at Taft Information Technology High School on Friday, Feb. 1, 2013. Photo by Leigh Taylor.

Gov. John Kasich talks about his new school funding plan, Achievement Everywhere, at Taft Information Technology High School on Friday, Feb. 1, 2013. Photo by Leigh Taylor.

Jessica Brown reports:

Gov. John Kasich came to Cincinnati Friday to tout his new “Achievement Everywhere” school funding plan intended to boost academics and fund Ohio’s schools more equitably.

He received high praise among superintendents during the panel discussion here at Robert A. Taft Information Technology High School. But the plan has its share of critics, too, including one group, Knowledgeworks, that plans to field its own alternate plan to legislators in the next few weeks.

The Republican governor will have to address those concerns as he moves to the next phase: getting his plan through the Republican-led House and Senate. It will be presented as part of his overall state budget proposal which is being unveiled Monday .

If the funding system in the plan passes legislative muster, it would be a big win for Kasich. He’s the fourth governor to attempt to “fix” Ohio’s system of funding schools, which has been ruled unconstitutional by the Ohio Supreme Court four times since 1997. Every previous attempt has been unsuccessful.

“So far people have been very excited,” said Kasich Friday when asked whether he thinks the education plan will be a tough sell to legislators. “There’s always a sense of ‘[maybe I can grab more for my district.’ But if you’re going to grab more for your district and it’s not justified, you’re taking it from a district that needs it. So it becomes difficult.”

“Look,” he said, “the legislature has to work its will, but so far the reaction I’ve received … I’m really pleased with.”

Experts and legislators expect much of Kasich’s plan will survive, simply because it has a lot of ideas that educators like, and it doesn’t cut schools’ basic state aid.

He’s positioned himself well, said David Varda, executive director for the Ohio Association of School Business Officials, which provides support and legislative advocacy for public school business managers.

Varda said historically, governors can get most of their budgets through by not cutting school funding sources like the business tax and the basic state aid.

“That certainly satisfies legislators,” he said. “Their districts are held harmless even if they’re wealthier districts.”

He predicts a fairly smooth ride.

“Not that it won’t be amended, but you have a Republican governor with a Republican House and Senate.” (more…)

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , ,

FriFeb1

ANALYSIS: Is Kasich school funding enough?

Posted by akiefaber February 1st, 2013, 5:04 pm Post a Comment
First day at Adena

In each of the past two years, the Lakota school district has cut in excess of $10 million from its operating budget. On Thursday, Jan. 31, Ohio Gov. John Kasich revealed his proposal to fund education. The proposal increases state funding for education by $1.2 billion over two years, funding education at $7.4 billion in 2013-2014 and $7.7 billion the following year. File photo.

Denise Smith Amos and Jessica Brown report:

There was a lot to like in Republican Gov. John Kasich’s proposal to fund education, which he revealed Thursday as part of his upcoming biennial budget plan.

The proposal increases state funding for education by $1.2 billion over two years, funding education at $7.4 billion in 2013-2014 and $7.7 billion the following year.

Kasich said his plan would more equitably spread state dollars to districts.

“We are now delivering (education funding) based on people’s ability to pay,” Kasich told superintendents in Columbus Thursday.

But Democratic legislators and left-leaning groups complained the proposal doesn’t go far enough to make up for school funding cuts in the last two years, which, they said, caused districts to ask voters for local levies totaling more than $1 billion in new taxes.

“Unfortunately, the proposed funding in this plan is a mere drop in the bucket compared to the $1.8 billion Gov. Kasich cut from schools during his last budget,” said Ohio House Democratic Leader Armond Budish, from Beachwood.

If lawmakers pass Kasich’s education plan, there will be more state money for many school districts – especially those with low property values or lots of low-income students – and more money for charter schools and private schools via vouchers.

There also will be extra funds for students who are disabled, low income or learning to speak English, and extra money for districts trying new improvements. The state will even increase what it sends to districts for kindergarten to help pay for all-day kindergarten programs, prompting a cheer from his audience of superintendents.

They were also pleased that their basic aid funding won’t be cut.

“Every superintendent was happy that no district is getting less money,” said Mary Ronan, Cincinnati Public Schools superintendent. “I like how (the governor) is looking to make schools more efficient.”

Districts are supposed to learn next week exactly how much they’d receive under Kasich’s plan. Many superintendents tempered their comments until then.

Ronan said she hopes the state lives up to Kasich’s promise to consider local taxpayers’ “ability to pay” for schools when deciding the amount to send to Cincinnati Public. Cincinnati has historically gotten less money than other big-city districts, she said, since the state considers the district “property wealthy” because of its downtown businesses, even though most of its families are low income.

Now income will be considered too, so Cincinnati may get more money from the state, she said.

After Kasich’s speech, detractors criticized his plan’s increased funding of school choice options such as charter schools and tuition vouchers for private schools. Public school advocates say expanding those programs will ultimately dismantle public schools, which must serve all students in their areas, while private and charter schools don’t have to.

Kasich’s proposal would broaden who qualifies for Ohio’s private school tuition vouchers, called Educational Choice Scholarships, to include low-income students from all districts, not just those who live near under-performing public schools.

And charter schools, which received $775 million last year from the state, will enjoy a 2 percent or more increase in per-student funding and $100 per student for facilities’ costs, long a complaint among operators here.

“It’s better than being cut or flat-lined,” said Terry Ryan, a vice president at Fordham Institute. Fordham sponsors charter schools, including Phoenix Community Learning Center in Avondale.

“For a school of 400 students, that could fund a couple teachers,” he said.

Loveland Superintendent John Marschhausen said he liked Kasich’s plans to fund innovations and improvements.

“It is a fair proposal that provides for equity, quality, creativity and transparency,” he said. “This budget proposal encourages school leaders to step up, take risks and push our education system to the next level.”

Disabled students

Kasich’s plan includes $100 million to help districts pay for students with severe and expensive disabilities.

This could be a boon for districts like Mason City Schools, which last year spent $122,000 and $114,000 on two children, respectively, who are medically fragile and have hearing and vision needs. Both students require a full-time nurse, a paraprofessional, an interpreter and special transportation, said Tracey Carson, district spokeswoman.

Under the current system, the state paid less than 35 percent of the costs.

Gifted students

Ann Sheldon, executive director of Ohio’s Association for Gifted Children, said she was encouraged that Kasich proposed $85 million in gifted education funding, but she still worries about how districts will spend that – how much will help gifted students directly, as opposed to programs that will help every student in the district.

She said 375 districts have cut their gifted services since 2008-09 and 201 districts provide no gifted services at all.

“The largest unknown factor is accountability,” Sheldon said. “I assume that if the governor is willing to put substantial funding into gifted education that he would want gifted children to actually benefit from those funds.”

English learners

Districts with a large number of students learning English will get $1,500 per student the first year and less money per student for each consecutive year. It’s the first time the state created this funding category.

Princeton and Cincinnati are expected to benefit. Princeton’s limited-English population was fifth highest in the state in the 2010-11 school year – 585 students, about 11 percent of its population that year. CPS has 3.7 percent limited-English students, or almost 1,200 kids.

What’s missing

Despite these special funds, critics say some things are missing in the plan.

Some school leaders complained that the plan doesn’t specifically target funds to the Third Grade Reading Guarantee; Ohio’s transition to Common Core college-prep curricula and testing; pay-for-performance bonuses for successful teachers; or technology investments.

The plan “does nothing to assure that students have enough resources to meet higher standards and expectations,” said Andrew Benson, executive director of Ohio Education Matters, a subsidiary of KnowledgeWorks in Cincinnati.

“The Kasich administration gets good marks for including some helpful ideas to get more money to disadvantaged students and poor school districts and for promoting efficiencies. But the plan does not do enough to tie resources to the academic outcomes they want to achieve.”

Superintendents at Kasich’s speech asked about expanding funds for science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) instruction and for school security upgrades.

Little Miami Schools Superintendent Greg Power wanted Kasich’s plan to point new funds toward state mandates for public school districts.

“The state has already sent us many new unfunded mandates like the Third Grade Reading Guarantee and the new teacher evaluation system that we are attempting to implement while in fiscal emergency,” he said. “We can’t help but be concerned with how any additional programs the governor has proposed may affect our path forward.”

Paul Kostyu and Michael D. Clark of the Enquirer staff contributed.

no comments yet

Posted in: News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , ,

ThuJan31

Kasich unveils plan to fund, reform Ohio schools

Posted by akiefaber January 31st, 2013, 4:31 pm Post a Comment

Plan brings big ideas, more money, lots of questions

Governor John Kasich. File photo.

Governor John Kasich. File photo.

Jessica Brown and Denise Smith Amos report:

Governor John Kasich offered a new way of funding schools Thursday he says will be more equitable for poor and rural districts and add to the school choices of working class families.

His budget plan also creates pots of money for “best-practice” grants to districts and to help educate certain groups of students like those with disabilities or who are learning English as a second language. He even gave a slight nod to early childhood education.

The plan raises the amount of state aid going to education in the next two years and Kasich promised no district will see a reduction in that amount next year, even with the changes he’s proposing.

He didn’t say how he plans to pay for much of it. He also didn’t offer a specific funding formula by which districts can plan their five-year forecasts.

State officials estimate his budget will spend $7.4 billion on preschool-through-grade 12 education in the 2013-14 school year and $7.7 billion in the following year. Kasich plans reveal his entire biennial budget proposal Monday.

This year, state aid to schools – which included basic aid and reimbursements for certain business tax reductions – totaled nearly $6.1 billion, said Rob Nichols, a Kasich spokesman.

It’s unclear from the initial discussion what would happen after the biennium. Kasich hinted that he wants school districts to wean themselves off of a guaranteed amount of state aid, but he didn’t say when or how.

With this plan, Kasich, who is up for re-election in 2014, became the fourth governor to try to fix school funding since the Ohio Supreme Court ruled the state’s method unconstitutional in 1997 because education funding relies too much on local property taxes. The plan must still be approved by the state Senate and the House.

Here are the highlights:

How much money is it?

Kasich promised state aid to districts will be flat in the coming year.

“No school district will receive less money next year than this year on the formula,” said Dick Ross, director of 21st century education for the Kasich administration. The amount of “general revenue funds” going to the state’s more than 600 school districts will be $6.2 billion the first year and $6.4 billion in the second year. That’s up from $6.1 billion this year, though it doesn’t make up for revenue districts lost in federal pass-through stimulus dollars. Kasich’s plan also adds a $300 million pot of incentive money called the “straight A fund” that will bump that state aid total up to $7.4 billion the first year and $7.7 billion in the second year.

But one complaint has been that state funding hasn’t been distributed equitably among school districts. Kasich hopes his plan will fix that.
A new way to fund schools

Currently schools are funded with a mix of state, federal and local dollars. The amount of state dollars depends on the amount of local tax dollars generated and what the state has said are minimum costs of education.

But the system results in too much disparity, Kasich said, with some students getting a poor or an adequate education based on where they live.

He says his plan will make education funding more equitable because the state will contribute more dollars to districts that have high concentrations of poverty or low property values.

He wants to also set aside extra money for disabled, poor or non-English speaking students.

Vouchers and charters

The plan expands the state’s Educational Choice voucher program – stipends families use to send their child to a private school. Under the plan, any family whose household income is below 200 percent of the poverty line (about $46,100 for a family of four) could apply for a voucher, not just families living near persistently failing schools. The vouchers will at first be available for kindergarteners in the next school year and will expand to include first grade students in the second year. Vouchers will also be available for students in grades K-3 whose schools are not improving in literacy performance.

“Straight A Fund”

The plan creates a $300 million pot of money to provide one-time grants to districts for projects that improve their effectiveness. Projects could include modernizing operations or improving achievement. Details are vague. The goal is to “move schools more from the schools my father and mother … attended to the schools of the 21st century that will prepare students for the jobs they need,” Ross said.

  • Students with disabilities

Kasich’s plan includes $100 million to cover the “catastrophic costs” of educating kids with severe disabilities. For example, some students can cost a districts $100,000 annually to educate because of their special needs. This money would let districts get reimbursed for more of that cost.

  • English-language learners

The plan will give extra money to districts to help offset the additional costs of educating students who are not native English speakers. (The state makes these students take state achievement tests in English after two years.) Kasich’s plan would allocate $1,500 per pupil in the first year. That child would get 75 percent of that next year and 50 percent the third year. An ongoing stipend will help schools pay for translation services for parents who don’t speak English.

  • Early Childhood

The plan allocates $90 million a year to fund preschools for children who live in high-poverty areas and who don’t have access to quality preschools. Cincinnati Public Schools, for example, has a 400-student waiting list to get into preschool programs.

  • Low-income students

The plan will allocate additional per-pupil funding above and beyond basic state aid for “economically disadvantaged” students. The amount was not specified.

  • Gifted

The plan gives districts $50 per student per year to identify and educate gifted students.

no comments yet

Posted in: Government, News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , ,

MonJan28

Enquirer: Educators on edge as funding plan nears

Posted by akiefaber January 28th, 2013, 9:36 am Post a Comment

Officials still in the dark on contents of Kasich’s formula

Denise Smith Amos reports:

Gov. John Kasich is expected to release a new school funding formula this week, becoming the fourth Ohio governor to try to fix a funding system the state Supreme Court has said is inequitable and unconstitutional.

But so far, not even the school districts and legislators know what to expect.

A group of legislators met with Cincinnati-area districts on Friday, and each group asked the other if they had any inside knowledge.

No one did, said Ken Dirr, director of the Hamilton County Educational Service Center, which hosted the event.

“Not even the legislators know. They say they have no idea and have been kept out of it,” Dirr said.

Although Kasich has kept his plans close to the vest, most school leaders in the Cincinnati region say they expect no increase in state funding for the next two years. Others fear a worst-case scenario.

“The (new funding) formula could result in a reduction in funding,” said Larry McDonough, Lockland schools treasurer. “I suppose I could put equal weight on an increase, but I’m just not feeling it.”

The state’s school funding formula is important because it affects the quality of education at Ohio’s public schools – how state and local taxes are spent, the quality of academic and other programs at each school, and how often schools seek to raise local property taxes.

So far this year Milford, Forest Hills and Oak Hills have all announced they’ll seek school tax levies or bonds on the May ballot.

Since the 1991 DeRolph v. State of Ohio lawsuit, Ohio policymakers – including governors and lawmakers of both parties – have tried to change the way Ohio’s schools are funded. The state supreme court has ruled four times that Ohio’s system is unconstitutional.

The crux of those rulings: School funding is too reliant on local property tax values, resulting in unfair funding and programming gaps between school districts and stark differences in education quality for Ohio students based on where they live and how much money their families earn.

The inequalities have become more glaring, school leaders say, with the recession and repeated defeats of local school levies. Some districts have cut music, art, gym and their libraries, while others are busing fewer kids or charging hundreds of dollars per student for sports and other extracurricular activities.

“We have a lot of districts around the state that are offering the bare minimums,” said Barbara Shaner, associate director of the Ohio Association of School Business Officers in Columbus.

“We have a lot of lower-wealth districts … not able to offer AP (advance placement) courses or multiple language opportunities or even the arts.”

But it’s unclear whether Kasich’s school plan will level the field.

Area school districts are bracing for cuts

Some Southwest Ohio school districts are bracing for cuts, new funding formula or not.

Northwest Local School District treasurer Randy Bertram is already budgeting for 5 percent less money from the state than last year.

“By law we’re required to have five-year forecasts,” Bertram said. “This governor has left us in the dark each year he’s been in the seat.”

Lakota, one of the region’s largest school districts, is assuming 1 percent less in state funding, said treasurer Jenni Logan.

But other district leaders find some hope among the rumors swirling around the topic.

Cincinnati Public Schools Superintendent Mary Ronan said part of the new formula may include a pot of money to fund innovation projects at districts. She and a delegation of CPS administrators already crafted a proposal and took it to Kasich’s budget staff on Jan. 11.

They’re asking for $28 million to fund 20 preschool classrooms, 42 literacy specialists and projects ranging from summer school to blended learning to Teach for America stipends.

How Ohio’s school funding works

In Ohio, the bill for a child’s public education is divvied up between the local community and the state in addition to some federal dollars. How much a community pays in school levies or income tax increases varies because of the way Ohio’s school funding formula is structured.

The funding system is supposed to funnel a larger percentage of state dollars to poorer districts. But there are some glitches. Cincinnati Public Schools and a handful of other Ohio districts with substantial poverty rates are actually considered wealthy by the state because there’s a lot of commercial property that can be taxed for schools.

Cleveland’s school system, for example, receives more than 70 percent of its money from the state, whereas only 32 percent of Cincinnati’s budget is money from the state. Taxpayers pay most of that balance via school levies. Cincinnati Public and various community groups have been lobbying for a change to the formula for years.

A few states, like Kentucky and Michigan, centralize most school funding and control over school spending. They also limit how much local taxpayers can augment state spending. Kentucky also limits how much local districts can raise taxes for schools.

no comments yet

Posted in: Government, News, Schools |

Tags: Tags: , , , , ,

FriNov16

Ohio defaults to feds on health care exchange

Posted by akiefaber November 16th, 2012, 1:32 pm Post a Comment

Gov. John Kasich says that Ohio will let the federal government run its health care exchange. Photo taken by Adam Kiefaber.

Cliff Peale reports:

Ohio will let the federal government run its health care exchange, a key portion of health care reform, Gov. John Kasich said today.

The state will try to keep control of several key features, such as determining who qualifies for Medicare and enforcing rules on plan benefits.

“Based on the information we have, states do not have any flexibility to build and manage exchanges in ways that respond to the unique needs of their citizens or markets,” Kasich wrote to federal health care officials.

The exchanges are meant to provide a market for individuals and the smallest companies to buy affordable health care policies.

Consumers are supposed to be able to choose policies by October 2013 with coverage starting in January 2014.

They are one of the latest flashpoints in implementing President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act.

Kentucky, with a Democratic governor, has moved aggressively toward its own state exchange, using about $66 million in federal grants to create and implement the marketplace. Indiana, with Republican leadership, is expected to default to a federal exchange.

The exchange issue is critical because at least 7 percent of companies, mostly smaller ones, are expected to stop offering benefits and force employees to buy insurance on health care exchanges.

Benefits of a federal exchange start with cost. A study commissioned by Ohio officials showed that annual operating costs of a state exchange would range from $19 million to $34 million, excluding technology. Fees from providers and insurers would pay most of those costs.

But the state exchange also holds benefits, most prominently the ability to manage the insurance marketplace while it also regulates doctors and hospitals.

For example, while any plan would have to meet federal standards for minimum benefits, the state could monitor compliance with enrollment periods, premium increases and consumer complaints in a state-based exchange.

“The positive (of federal control) is, it takes that monkey off the state’s back if the exchange can’t sustain itself,” said Kate Keller, senior program officer at the policy Group Health Foundation of Greater Cincinnati. “The negative is, you have someone else outside of Ohio making decisions.”

The distinction won’t matter much to consumers “until you have a problem,” Keller added. “It becomes a much bigger bureaucracy” under federal control.

House Speaker and West Chester resident John Boehner applauds the decision:

“I’m proud of my governor, John Kasich, for taking a stand and resisting the federal takeover of health care in Ohio. By declining to implement a government-run ‘exchange’ and preserving Ohio’s ability to regulate health insurance on its own, Governor Kasich is protecting Ohio families and small businesses from some of the steep costs and red tape created by ObamaCare. The president’s health care law is already raising costs, making it harder for small businesses to hire, and forcing employers to reduce worker hours. But with Democrats still in control of Washington, fighting it requires bold state leadership and aggressive oversight by the Republican-led House. While our goal is still full repeal, actions like the ones taken by Ohio and other states are critical in protecting the American people and our economy from the impact of this disastrous law.”

no comments yet

Posted in: Government, News |

Tags: Tags: , , ,

WedNov14

Clock ticking on Ohio health care decision

Posted by akiefaber November 14th, 2012, 8:59 am Post a Comment

Gov. John Kasich hasn’t yet announced a decision about how Ohio will comply with the Affordable Care Act. Photo taken by Adam Kiefaber.

Must pick method to implement next step of Obamacare

Cliff Peale and Barry M. Horstman reports:

Ohio is trying to retain some control of a health care exchange mandated by the Affordable Care Act, even as it probably will default operations to the federal government.

Even with a federal-run exchange, state control could include certifying health plans that participate and determining Medicaid eligibility.

Meant to provide affordable policies to those without insurance, the exchanges are a key part of President Barack Obama’s health care reform law. They are one of the latest flashpoints in implementing the law.

States have until Friday to declare if they will operate their own health care exchange. They also can default to a federally run exchange or choose a hybrid model, with deadlines later in those cases.

Gov. John Kasich, a Republican, hasn’t announced a decision, but it appears unlikely that Ohio will operate the exchange itself.

Kentucky, with a Democratic governor, has moved aggressively toward its own state exchange, using about $66 million in federal grants to create and implement the marketplace. Indiana, with Republican leadership, is expected to default to the feds.

With Obama’s re-election Nov. 6, the law colloquially known as “Obamacare” will remain in place, but setting up the exchanges is among dozens of steps before it is fully implemented in 2014.

“We now know what the playing field is,” said Robyn Chatman, a primary care doctor and president of the Academy of Medicine of Cincinnati. “For those who don’t like it, at least they know what to expect.”

Decisions on how to implement the ACA will impact millions of Ohioans. (more…)

no comments yet

Posted in: News |

Tags: Tags: , , ,

FriJun1

Ohio governor signs texting ban for drivers

Posted by akiefaber June 1st, 2012, 3:15 pm Post a Comment

Associated Press

Ohio has become the 39th state to prohibit texting while driving.

Gov. John Kasich signed a ban Friday on writing, reading and sending texts from behind the wheel. It goes into effect in 90 days.

The measure includes a stricter crackdown on teen drivers’ use of electronic devices. Minors would be banned from using cellphones, iPads or other electronics while driving.

Texting would be a secondary offense for adult drivers. They could be ticketed for typing messages only if they were first pulled over for another offense, such as running a red light.

Teens could more easily be pulled over for violating the texting ban.

According to the Governors Highway Safety Association, the measure would be among the broadest in the country in terms of teen distracted driving restrictions.

no comments yet

Posted in: Government, News |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , ,

WedMay16

Ohio ready to ban texting; Kasich to sign law

Posted by akiefaber May 16th, 2012, 7:45 am Post a Comment

Paul E. Kostyu reports

f you drive in Ohio, get ready to put away your cell phones, iPads and other electronic devices, especially if you’re a teenager. There will be no texting on the state’s roads and highways when a text ban is signed by Gov. John R. Kasich.

But enforcing a ban is almost impossible for law enforcement agencies and similar local bans already in place haven’t been effective. Adults will still be able talk on the phone and the text ban allows a number of exceptions for using hand-held devices, even for teens.

The passage of the legislation comes in the shadow of the death of a Colerain High School student and her exchange student passenger on May 3. She may have been texting just before she ran a stop sign in rural Milford Township and slammed into a tractor trailer.

The Ohio House approved on a 82-12 vote Tuesday the Senate’s changes to House Bill 99, sending the legislation to the governor. Rob Nichols, a spokesman for Kasich, said the governor will sign the measure. (more…)

no comments yet

Posted in: Government, News |

Tags: Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Connect with WestChesterBuzz

Subscribe

Get community news delivered straight to your inbox.

Featured Businesses

Send us Photos

  • Attach a JPEG (.jpg) photo to your story. Maximum file size is 4 MB.
  • Add a caption, include names & communities of people pictured. (Caption limit: 500 characters, including spaces)

Recent Photos

Nasty Boys Nasty Boys Nasty Boys Nasty Boys Nasty Boys Nasty Boys BN TRAIN 5 BN TRAIN 1 BN TRAIN 2
View more photos >