Tag: local news

  • Here is a photo sampling of the fierce play you’ve missed

    Here is a photo sampling of the fierce play you’ve missed

    CORRECTION: Indian Hills’ Ella Riggs did not play in the game. I was reading old news that was featured on the team’s web page. Riggs graduated last year.

    by David Miller

    David Miller with his buddy the Loveland Tiger at the Mental Health Awareness Night on January 17th.

    Loveland, Ohio – Haven’t seen the 2023 “Our Way” edition of Loveland High School Women’s basketball? Here is a photo sampling of the fierce play you’ve missed.

    The Tigers are currently in 3rd place in the tough Eastern Cincinnati Conference with an 8-3, 11-4 record.

    This past Monday they defeated Turpin on the Tiger court 39-36 and overwhelmed the Little Miami Panthers on the road, 54-39 on January 12. At home, on January 10 they defeated Winton Woods 37-36. And, on January 5 defeated Milford on the Tiger court 45-43.

    That’s a 4 game-winning streak and 6 wins in their last 7 games.

    The women travel tonight to nearby Indian Hill to take on their all-time leading scorer, Ella Riggs who on January 7 set the Braves record with 1638 career points. This is a non-conference game against the 5-4, 9-4 Braves, who are on a 8-win and 1-loss streak in the Cincinnati Hills League.

    In the Tiger win over Turpin Olivia Rabe scored 16. At Little Miami, she scored 23 and pulled down 13 rebounds, had 5 assists and steals, and blocked 4 shots. She leads the ECC averaging 3.6 blocks per outing.

    Jose Early scored 13 against Turpin and is second in the ECC with 4.1 assists per game. She is first among ECC opponents with 3 steals per game.

    The scoring was spread out in the Winton Woods game with Katy Wilber, Olivia Raby, and Josie Early scoring 9 each and Sophia Kapszukiewicz adding 7.

    For high school basketball fans, know that this Tiger team is aggressively smart and disciplined under the co-coaching staff of Keith Braswell and Brad Early.

    The next home game for the Tigers is Monday, January 23 vs Anderson, however, Indian Hill High School is a close enough venue, and it will be a short journey to see some incredible athletes tonight. The game time is 7:30.

    Standings 
     CONFERENCEOVERALL
    TEAMSW-LPCTPFPAW-LPCTPFPASTRK
    West Clermont11 – 01.00059.533.117 – 01.00057.933.2W17
    Kings8 – 2.80052.343.911 – 4.73350.940.4L1
    Loveland8 – 3.72745.842.911 – 4.73345.538.7W4
    Walnut Hills7 – 4.63649.042.611 – 5.68850.737.7L1
    Winton Woods6 – 4.60046.438.99 – 6.60046.141.7L2
    Lebanon6 – 5.54549.548.112 – 5.70652.044.4W1
    Milford5 – 6.45550.050.09 – 7.56351.247.6W2
    Turpin2 – 9.18234.748.64 – 12.25035.647.1L6
    Little Miami1 – 10.09136.553.42 – 14.12540.152.9L1
    Anderson0 – 11.00034.955.71 – 16.05935.953.1L16
  • Cindy Zetterberg: Either stop reporting one side of an issue or don’t report anything political at all

    Cindy Zetterberg: Either stop reporting one side of an issue or don’t report anything political at all

    Letter to Editor

    Dear Editor

    I have been a Loveland resident for 32 years and an avid supporter of the Loveland Herald and Loveland Magazine. It has been a delight to read articles about our community, the wonderful things our schools and businesses are doing, and the fabulous events that Loveland has to offer. It has always been a positive form of communication and has rarely shown bias until recently.

    I am saddened that Loveland Magazine has become an ally of the Democratic Party, showing one-sided reporting on abortion to the recent issue of Speaker of the House.

    Loveland has seen division over the recent school levy. Please don’t continue to divide us with political issues. Either stop reporting one side of an issue or don’t report anything political at all.

    Please continue to be a positive, encouraging voice that unites rather than divides.

    Sincerely,
    Cindy Zetterberg

  • In a state with 1M license suspensions, Ohio voter ID law could depress turnout

    In a state with 1M license suspensions, Ohio voter ID law could depress turnout

    New report says debt-related suspensions affect poor and minorities

    BY: MARTY SCHLADEN – Ohio Capital Journal

    When Gov. Mike DeWine last week signed what’s been called the nation’s strictest voter ID law, it raised fears that it would disenfranchise large numbers of voters in poor communities where people are less likely to meet the new requirements.

    Those fears seem to be supported by a September report that estimates 1 million Ohioans have suspended licenses because of debts from things such as a lack of insurance, unpaid fines, and court costs. That’s in a state with 8 million registered voters.

    The analysis, by the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland, said the suspensions by far fall most heavily on impoverished urban communities of color. In other words, debt-related suspensions disproportionately affect some of the communities least likely to vote for the Republican officials who passed and signed the voter ID law.

    DeWine and legislative sponsors sold the state’s controversial law by saying that it would boost public confidence in elections. That confidence, however, has likely been undermined by numerous lies by former President Donald Trump, and by dubious voting claims by Secretary of State Frank LaRoseOhio Auditor Keith Faber, and others.

    Meanwhile, LaRose found the rate of possible fraud in the 2020 Ohio General Election to be a vanishingly small 0.0005%.

    “There is absolutely no evidence that we need a voter ID law to prevent voter fraud,” said Collin Marozzi, deputy policy director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, which opposes the law.

    Even so, the voter ID law, House Bill 458, makes it considerably harder for many of the poorest to vote in Ohio. While voters previously could use documents such as bank statements and utility bills to establish their identity, they now must have a driver’s license, state ID, passport or military ID to cast a vote.

    Perhaps tellingly, college and university IDs didn’t make the list of acceptable IDs approved by Ohio’s heavily gerrymandered Republican legislature. College students were credited with helping to deliver victories to Democrats in key races around the country in the November election.

    Ohio’s voter ID law is already facing a legal challenge, which remains pending.

    Afflicting the afflicted

    While of questionable necessity, it’s unclear whether voter ID laws suppress turnout among the poor and communities of color as much as some advocates claim. MIT’s ​​Election Data and Science Lab says research into the matter has produced mixed results, citing “deficiencies in data quality and sensitivity of results to choices made in statistical estimation.”

    However, the analysis Legal Aid Society of Cleveland report shows that huge numbers of Ohioans have licenses that are suspended for debt-related reasons — and they face a steep climb in getting their licenses reinstated or to get a state-issued ID.

    “We have many examples of clients who are trapped by debt-related suspensions,” said Anne Sweeney, one of the report’s authors.

    The researchers issued open records requests to the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles to gather data showing that for each year between 2016 and 2020, more than 1 million drivers had licenses suspended because of debts related to traffic fines and fees and unpaid child support. In addition, the average suspended driver has multiple suspensions, with 3 million suspensions a year in the state, the report said.

    “Debt-related suspensions trap drivers with limited resources in a vicious cycle,” the report said. “Fines and fees related to seemingly minor traffic stops can easily spiral into thousands of dollars owed to the State. Drivers unable to pay these debts cannot get their licenses back, which for most Ohioans means they cannot drive to work to earn the money needed to pay down the debt, without risking even more driving restrictions, fines, fees, or even jail.”

    Unsurprisingly, such suspensions are concentrated most heavily in impoverished urban communities of color.

    For example, 53% of the residents in Cleveland’s 44104 zip code live below the federal poverty line, 98% are people of color, and there are 1,535 suspensions per 1,000 people old enough to drive (because a given person can have more than one suspension), the report said. 

    Voters in that zip code likely support Democrats far more than they do Republicans. While DeWine won the 2022 governor’s race by a whopping 25  percentage points statewide, he lost Cuyahoga County by 14 points.

    The Legal Aid Society report was written before DeWine signed the voter ID bill and it focuses on the cycle of debt in which Ohio’s system places ever-greater burdens on people who can’t pay fees and fines related to their driver’s licenses and vehicle registrations.

    “The way it steamrolls is hugely problematic,” Sweeney said as she described how unpaid debts often compound from the hundreds to the thousands of dollars and sometimes into criminal penalties.

    And, she pointed out, most Ohioans with suspended licenses have to choose between quitting their jobs, finding a ride, or driving to them illegally and risking still more fines and fees. All of which can sap a person’s ability to pay the debts he or she already has.

    “For someone who has no way to get to a job, you can’t make payments to get your license back so you can get to the job you do not have,” she said.

    Overall, the analysis said Ohio’s system placed the biggest burden by far on the communities with the least ability to shoulder it. Zip codes with the highest rates of people of color experienced more than 100 times as many suspensions as the areas with the fewest people of color  — 6.9 million versus fewer than 51,000, the report said.

    It added, “Debt-related suspensions cost residents of Ohio’s highest poverty zip codes an average of $7.9 million each year. Debt-related suspensions cost residents of Ohio’s zip codes with the highest percentages of people of color an average of $12 million each year.”

    In all, total outstanding debt across the state each year totals nearly $1 billion, the report said.

    Asked about Ohio’s system that catches up so many Ohioans, DeWine Press Secretary Dan Tierney said, “The General Assembly could certainly debate whether to change the ability of courts to issue such sanctions, I am not aware of any movement to remove these penalties.”

    Are existing reforms adequate?

    Tierney was asked whether the governor was concerned that the Ohio system condemns the state’s poor and communities of color to a debt trap and now — with the voter ID law DeWine just signed — disenfranchisement. He responded by sending an article from The Columbus Dispatch about a state amnesty program that BMV officials say put 100,000 drivers back on the road — or roughly a tenth of the number of Ohioans the Legal Aid Society analysis says have suspended licenses in a given year. 

    In addition, the Legal Aid Society analysis points out, “Drivers are not eligible (for amnesty) until 18 months have passed since the end of their court-ordered suspension and must provide proof of insurance to utilize the program. The BMV automatically notifies eligible drivers of the reduction; drivers eligible for a complete amnesty waiver of reinstatement fees must complete an application and provide proof of qualifying benefits, such as Medicaid or (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits.)”

    Sweeney added that producing the documentation required by the amnesty program also is much harder for the poor.

    “Access to documents and identification is a huge problem for our clients all the time,” she said. “The amount of time it takes to navigate the system when you have limited means is inordinately longer.”

    Asked about the limited reach of the program, Tierney said one should “remember that these are court-imposed fees and punishments issued by courts. They amnesty program is intended to help those in specific situations and provide them an opportunity to comply with the court-ordered sanctions on terms that can pay-off the debt and eventually restore license privileges, ultimately bringing these citizens in compliance with the law.”

    While some GOP officials have said the availability of a state ID card will enable Ohioans without valid driver’s license to vote, critics cite several obstacles. One is the just-cited difficulty in getting the needed documents. Another is the fact that one need get them from the BMV — an agency that people with outstanding fines and fees might be reluctant to deal with. And a third is that people struggling just to be able to drive legally might have more pressing things to do than get a state ID so they can vote.

    Marozzi of the ACLU, said that it stands to reason that a disproportionate number of license suspensions are in urban communities of color.

    “It happens most frequently in urban areas that are over-policed,” he said.

    And while DeWine’s spokesman didn’t address whether the new law will take away voting rights from many Ohioans with suspended licenses, Marozzi said, “I think there’s a very good chance that a significant number of Ohioans are going to get disenfranchised because of this bill.”

  • Wild Turkey Research Begins in Buckeye State

    Wild Turkey Research Begins in Buckeye State

    “There are growing concerns about the potential impacts regarding the timing of the removal of males during the hunting season…”

    Ryan Boyer, NWTF district biologist for Michigan, Indiana and Ohio.

    The NWTF Ohio State Chapter recently allocated $50,000 to support a new wild turkey research study that seeks to address population declines in the state.

    With increasing concerns over population declines in Ohio, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and Ohio State University are conducting the first broad-scale study of hen survival in the state in almost two decades. Findings will help researchers and wildlife managers understand how survival rates, harvest rates and reproduction have changed in the last 17 years and what factors may be causing those changes.

    In the early 2000s, researchers determined May 1 to be the median date for which hens begin incubating; however, it’s clear today that incubation start dates vary in different regions of the state. Changing weather and habitat conditions, too, may be impacting the initiation of nest incubation from the median date established in the early 2000s.

    “There are growing concerns about the potential impacts regarding the timing of the removal of males during the hunting season, and therefore it is important to know as precisely as possible when hens begin incubating nests,” said Ryan Boyer, NWTF district biologist for Michigan, Indiana and Ohio. “In many cases, state agencies set their season open dates to coincide closely with the median date for nest incubation initiation, allowing time for hens to be bred and for nesting to begin. Ensuring that season start dates align with nesting chronology greatly reduces the chance of negatively impacting populations by removing males too early.

    “Just like the world around us, wild turkey ecology is dynamic. We are proud to partner with the ODNR and Ohio State University to provide support for this research project and continue to ensure the best-available science is being used in informing management and regulatory decisions.”

    Mark Wiley, ODNR game bird biologist, notes that it is not just timing that can have an effect nesting success, but also changes in habitat.

    “Afforestation (establishment of a forest or stand of trees in an area where there was no previous tree cover) and forest maturation affect habitat quality, which in turn can affect nesting productivity and hen survival,” he said. “A more thorough understanding of hen demographics in relation to changing habitat conditions will improve our ability to successfully manage a dynamic wild turkey population.”

    Beginning in early January and through March, ODNR staff will capture birds using rocket nets. Once captured, researchers and ODNR staff will quickly work to attach leg bands as well as GPS transmitters. The information from the transmitters will be invaluable to researchers.

    “Researchers from OSU will download and monitor turkey location and activity data two to three times per week,” Wiley said. “They will use turkey location and activity data to detect nesting activity, movements and mortality events.”

    The researchers will confirm nesting activity by locating the birds on the ground, and after the incubation period, the team will be able to determine nest fate, hatching rates and causes of nest failure, if it fails.

    Three weeks after a successful hatch, the research team will locate and count the number of poults with each hen. They will also establish an annual survival rate of hens from transmitter data. That data will allow researchers to determine the sources of mortality and investigate the seasonal movements of hens.

    Results of the study will be shared with nearby states that are conducting similar wild turkey research projects, including New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland, and data will be aggregated to provide a larger representation of how climate and habitat changes impact nesting on a landscape scale.

    “The research project is important to all hunters, experienced or new,” said Bill Sulicks, NWTF Ohio State Chapter president. “We are all eager to see the turkey population begin to thrive again as in earlier years.  We believe this study can guide us, in a way, to approach the recent decline, and so in saying this: ‘Once you are aware of a problem, you need to understand how it works, before you can fix it.’”

    Field work, including turkey trapping and telemetry monitoring, will occur throughout this year and 2024 and may continue into 2025. The final project report, thesis and scientific manuscript will be available at the end of the project in 2025.

    About the National Wild Turkey Federation

    Since 1973, the National Wild Turkey Federation has invested over half a billion dollars into wildlife conservation and has conserved or enhanced over 22 million acres of critical wildlife habitat. The organization continues to drive wildlife conservation, forest resiliency and robust recreational opportunities throughout the U.S. by working across boundaries on a landscape scale.

    2023 is the NWTF’s 50th anniversary and an opportunity to propel the organization’s mission into the future while honoring its rich history. For its 50th anniversary, the NWTF has set six ambitious goals: positively impact 1 million acres of wildlife habitat; raise $500,000 for wild turkey research; increase membership to 250,000 members; dedicate $1 million to education and outreach programs; raise $5 million to invest in technology and NWTF’s people; and raise $5 million to build toward a $50 million endowment for the future. Learn how you can help us reach these lofty goals.

  • Ohio coalition moves forward with plans for abortion ballot measure

    Ohio coalition moves forward with plans for abortion ballot measure

    BY: SUSAN TEBBEN – Ohio Capital Journal

    A coalition of reproductive rights groups, along with the ACLU of Ohio say they plan to have a pro-abortion ballot initiative on the Ohio Attorney General’s desk by February.

    Ohioans for Reproductive Freedom announced the plan to do this with the help of a recently hired “general consultant” with experience boosting ballot initiatives on the topic in two other states.

    The coalition – made up of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Ohio, Abortion Fund of Ohio, New Voices for Reproductive Justice, the Ohio Women’s Alliance, Preterm-Cleveland, Pro-Choice Ohio and Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity (URGE), along with the ACLU of Ohio – said the amendment would “explicitly protect reproductive freedom for all Ohioans.”

    “We are working expeditiously and prudently because we know that skipping steps or rushing the process would be a reckless approach when stakes are so high,” said Erin Scott, co-founder and director of the Ohio Women’s Alliance, in a joint statement of ORP members.

    Mission Control, Inc., was hired by the group to help with the effort, after previously working on ballot initiative campaigns in Kansas and Kentucky, both of which showed voters in support of abortion rights. The company has offices in Washington, D.C., Connecticut, Colorado and California.

    ORP said it has “completed initial language drafting and is now moving into comprehensive qualitative and quantitative research and message testing.”

    Anti-abortion groups were quick to criticize the effort, saying support for the measure wouldn’t come in Ohio.

    “Any attempt to change Ohio’s constitution by these large out-of-state abortion groups will ultimately fail here in Ohio,” said Peter Range, Ohio Right to Life CEO, in a statement.

    The religious lobby group Center for Christian Virtue acknowledged Mission Control’s success in other states, but also said the Ohio effort is “doomed to fail.”

    CCV president Aaron Baer used his statement against the measure to support a joint resolution that would make it harder for the state constitution to be amended by raising the voting threshold to 60%. The measure was HJR 6 in the last General Assembly, and is now being led by state Rep. Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, and state Rep. Derrick Merrin, R-Monclova.

  • Loveland Board elects Lorenz and Eilert

    Loveland Board elects Lorenz and Eilert

    Loveland, Ohio – The Board of Education held its organizational meeting on January 10.

    Dr. Kathy Lorenz was elected to continue as President of the Board
    Jonathan Eilert will serve as Board Vice President this year replacing Kevin Dougherty.
  • The Eastside Business Bash is Coming!

    The Eastside Business Bash is Coming!

    Promoted Post

    Save the date for our 2nd annual business expo in partnership with

    Brought to you by the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance and Milford-Miami Township Chamber of Commerce!

    This is a fun event for the community and is the perfect way to see a variety of area businesses under one roof! 

    This expo is a great way to showcase your business, grow your network and gain new customers. Join us!

    • Network with a variety of local businesses and entrepreneurs
    • Establish new & valuable contacts
    • Interact with the movers and shakers of local business and industry
    • Leave the expo with a wide array of qualified and targeted sales leads
    • Have some fun!

    The expo is open to business-business and business-consumer.

    Anyone can attend!

    The Little Miami Brewing Company

    Check out the sponsorship opportunities!

    Reserve your Spot!
  • The tamandua pup born last week at Cincinnati Zoo has passed away

    The tamandua pup born last week at Cincinnati Zoo has passed away

    Cincinnati, Ohio – This report is from the FaceBook page of the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden :

    We have very sad news from our Animal Ambassador Team that the tamandua pup born last week has passed away. The pup appeared to be strong, curious and alert. Mom Isla showed great maternal instincts during their time together and the two had an obvious bond seen in the form of cuddles, grooming and tiny squeaks from the pup. Yesterday, the team was devastated to discover the pup was unresponsive (the exact cause of death is not known at this time). This tiny tamandua pup was already loved and adored by many, as our community had been awaiting its arrival since they learned of Islas pregnancy back in October.

    Read about the birth…

    First Zoo Baby of 2023

    David Miller – Jan 12, 2023

  • Jeff Williams and Luke Waddell will be inducted into Class of 2022 Loveland High School Athletic Hall of Fame

    Jeff Williams and Luke Waddell will be inducted into Class of 2022 Loveland High School Athletic Hall of Fame

    Loveland, Ohio – The induction into the Class 0f 2022 Loveland High School Athletic Hall of Fame will be on Friday, February 3 at Loveland High School. The time will be approximately at 7:30 PM between the JV and Varsity Men’s baseball games.

    Loveland Athletic Achievement Award

    Jeff Williams (right) escorts Tony Ricci and the game ball during 2019 Homecoming activities. (Loveland Magazine file photo)

    Jeff Williams served as Loveland Athletic Booster President from 2005 to 2020.

    There were three Loveland High School State Championships during his tenure for which he organized Tony’s dinners, championship rings, and state travel gear.

    Jeff raised $500,000 for the first turf field and $750,000 for a weight room that is used by all athletes in grades 7 thru 12.

    Jeff was responsible for the “Building Tradition” branding, creating the Friday Night football experience, revamping locker rooms, and the purchase of the “Bleacher Jersey” and two Tiger tunnels.

    During his tenure, he established a long-term relationship with a spirit wear vendor. He challenged City Hall when they tried to ban candy from being thrown during the Homecoming Parade. Jeff started the tradition of ECC Champs and Senior dinners for all athletes at Tony’s Steakhouse. He revamped the Hall of Fame dinner and gifts.

    Loveland Freshman, Like Waddell had 175 ground yards on 19 carries, and 194 total yards when Loveland High School won the state Division II championship in 2013.

    High School Accomplishments

    Graduated from Loveland High School in 2017.

    Football

    • 4 Year LHS Letterman 2013 through 2016.

    • 2013 (13 wins – 0 loses) Division ll State Championship Team.

    All ECC 2nd Team Freshman year.

    All ECC 1st Team, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.

    ECC Offensive Player of the Year, Senior year.

    All-City 1st Team Freshman, Sophomore, and Junior year.

    All-City Honorable Mention Senior year.

    Max Prep 1, 2nd Team All-American.

    Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown MVP Junior and Senior year.

    Edward Jones Student of the Month 3 times.

    All-State Special Mention Junior year.

    All-State Offensive Skill Player of the Year Junior and Senior year.

    All-State Offensive MVP 3.

    Archie Griffin Sportsmanship Award Senior year.

    Tri-State Offensive Player of the Year Finalist Junior year.

    LHS School Football Records

    Career Rushing Yards 5600.

    Career Points 500.

    Career Touchdowns 83.

    Career Receiving Yards 1699.

    Single Game Rushing Yards 383 set on September 11, 2015.

    Shattering nearly a half-century-old LHS record, Luke Waddell ran 19 times for 383 yards and scored 5 touchdowns at Oak Hills on September 11, 2015. (Read story…)

    Single Season Rushing Yards 1784 (2013).

    Single Season Points Scored 192 (2015).  

    Basketball

    Varsity Letter Junior year.

    All-ECC 2nd Team Junior year.  

    All-Conference Academic Junior year.

    Charlie Harker Assists Award Junior year.                                                          

    Baseball

    Varsity Letterman Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.

    Most Valuable Offensive Player Freshman and Junior year.

    Tiger Man Award Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.

    All-ECC 1st Team Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.

    Athlete of the Year Senior year.

    1st Team All-Ohio Junior, and Senior year.

    All-City Honorable Mention Freshman year.

    All-City 1st Team Sophomore, Junior, and Senior year.

    All-City 2016 

    All-USA Today Ohio 1st Team Senior year

    East-West All-Star Senior year.

    Cincinnati Sports Award Senior year

    Cincinnati Athlete of the Year Finalist Senior year

    Cincinnati Baseball Player of the Year Senior year

    2016-2017 LaRosa’s Male MVP Finalist.

    LHS School Baseball Records

    Career Doubles 39.

    Career Hit Leader 145.

    Games Played 105. 

    30 Hit Club Freshman and Sophomore.

    40 Hit Club Junior year.

    100 Hit Club (105) Career.

    College

    Georgia Tech Yellowjackets Baseball. Three year starter.

    Professional Baseball

    Currently with Atlanta Braves’ minor league Mississippi Braves.

  • Ohio House Republican faction brings back proposal making it harder for voters to pass amendments

    Ohio House Republican faction brings back proposal making it harder for voters to pass amendments

    Rep. Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, speaking to fellow Republicans in a closed door meeting. (Photo by Nick Evans, OCJ.)

    Secretary of State Frank LaRose says he talked to House Speaker Stephens about ‘the importance of getting this done’

    BY: NICK EVANS – Ohio Capital Journal

    After more than hour behind closed doors, a bloc of Ohio Republicans led by state Rep. Derek Merrin, Monclova Twp., trooped through the Ohio Statehouse.

    The faction — thirty-odd lawmakers who wound up on the losing side of the House Speaker’s race last week— climbed three floors and squeezed into the clerk’s office.

    After pausing for photos they filed a new version of their proposal to make it harder for Ohioans to pass constitutional amendments.

    The proposal asks voters to raise the passage threshold for future amendments. The idea proved controversial and ran out of steam at the tail end of the last legislative session.

    But with the resolution taking center stage now, as spurned Republicans lock horns with new Speaker Jason Stephens, it seems clear many in the party aren’t ready to drop the issue.

    New Year’s resolution

    Right after his plan went off the rails, sponsor Rep. Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, said he was “Looking forward to January.” Stewart noted then that Republican numbers were thin — a point he’d warned about previously — but argued there was plenty of support in the caucus.

    The outlook got a bit murkier after the speaker vote. Stewart, an ally of presumptive speaker Merrin, was set to be a part of leadership this term. After the floor revolt gave the gavel to Stephens, Stewart seemed to indicate his proposal was collateral damage.

    Wednesday, though, Stewart filed his “Ohio Constitution Protection Amendment” alongside more than 30 GOP co-sponsors. He noted two substantive changes from the previous version.

    “The new version would require that signatures come from all 88 counties instead of just 44,” Stewart said. “If an amendment is going to apply to every Ohio and then every community should have a hand in putting that potential constitution amendment on the ballot.

    “We’re also going to eliminate the cure period for constitutional amendments,” Stewart added. That period allows citizen-led organizations to gather additional signatures if their initial batch doesn’t meet requirements to make the ballot.

    Even with Wednesday’s show of force, Stewart has a long way to go to get his resolution on the ballot. Three-fifths of the members in both chambers have to approve the resolution first. In the House, that’s 60 votes. Only 45 Republicans voted for Merrin in speaker’s race, and only 38 participated in Wednesday’s rogue caucus meeting — a handful of them over the phone.

     Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose. (Photo by Justin Merriman/Getty Images)

    Getting the band back together

    While Stewart counts votes, supporters outside the House appear to be gearing up for another try, too. After previously deferring to House lawmakers, Secretary of State Frank LaRose seems to be on board. Monday at Gov. Mike DeWine’s inaugural celebration, LaRose said he wasn’t done pursuing changes.

    “What I was talking to the new speaker about and to Rep. Stewart about was the importance of getting this done,” LaRose explained.

    LaRose introduced the plan alongside Stewart last November, and he trotted out a version of the argument they’ve offered before.

    “Today people might want to pretend or think that it’s about, abortion or redistricting or whatever issue, but 50 years from now, it could be about holograms and flying cars,” LaRose said. “We just don’t know what the things are that are going to come up, but if it can’t get 60% it probably belongs in the Ohio Revised Code and not in the Ohio Constitution.”

    Shortly before HJR 6 stalled out, Cleveland.com obtained a memo written by Stewart urging GOP members to back the proposal. In it, he directly tied the effort to short-circuiting future abortion and redistricting ballot measures.

    Opponents are lining up, too. In a statement Wednesday, Jen Miller from the League of Women Voters of Ohio promised a fight.

    “For over a century, everyday Ohioans have had the freedom to collect signatures and pass ballot initiatives that make our lives better,” she said. “This resolution is unnecessary, unpopular, and undemocratic, and our broad coalition stands ready to defeat it.”

    Deadlines

    Democratic House Leader Allison Russo addressed the issue with reporters on Monday as well. She acknowledged “throughout even lame duck, speaking with both (Rep.) Merrin and Speaker Stephens, (the proposed amendment threshold change) was something that I expressed concern about.”

    She didn’t directly address whether killing any future proposal was part of a deal with Speaker Stephens.

    Stewart’s initial plan was to get the question on the ballot this May. To make that happen, lawmakers would need to pass the resolution by Feb. 1. Russo noted with leadership still figuring out committee membership, that’s not looking likely.

    Stewart, though, argued his colleagues are ready to advance the resolution, and he put the ball in Speaker Stephens’ court.

    “We certainly believe in introducing it today that we have ample opportunity to do that again,” Stewart said. “So we’re ready to pass it. It’s a question of whether the current leadership’s appetite is there as well.”

    “What Representative Stewart deserves and what the citizens Ohio deserve is a debate on this issue,” Merrin chipped in. “We want to have a debate and see where see where the votes are at.”

     Left to right, state Reps. Phil Plummer, R-Dayton, Derek Merrin, R-Monclova Township, Brian Stewart, R-Ashville. (Photo by Nick Evans, OCJ.)

    The math

    For all their bluster, Merrin’s camp faces some challenging math. The chances of them peeling off a single Democratic vote are virtually nonexistent. Even if all 45 Republicans who didn’t back Stephens are on their side, they still can’t force a floor vote.

    That maneuver, known as a discharge motion, requires a majority of members to sign on — at least under previous House rules. Convincing five members to back a discharge motion, and then fifteen to back a controversial ballot measure, may not be an insurmountable task, but it’s far from likely.

    Speaking Wednesday, Merrin and Rep. Phil Plummer, R-Dayton, put special emphasis on the rules package for the coming session. They argued the House should set rules giving greater latitude to individual members and sap some of the speaker’s power to control the process or punish members.

    Whether they’ll propose making it easier to force a vote is unclear. Why Speaker Stephens would go along with it if they did is similarly unclear.

    For his part, LaRose kept things positive — focusing on the goal rather than the ways and means. He wants to see the idea advance “whether it’s in the next few weeks or the next few months.” And in a feat of understatement, LaRose brushed off its previous failure.

    “The goal here was always to start a conversation,” LaRose said. “We’ve certainly done that.”

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