Tag: Ohio Capital Journal

  • Economists: Ohio school funding cuts would hurt economy, increase inequality

    Economists: Ohio school funding cuts would hurt economy, increase inequality

    By:  – Ohio Capital Journal

    In a survey released Monday, the overwhelming majority of economists said cuts to public education funding proposed by Republican Ohio House Speaker Matt Huffman would dampen the state’s future economic output at the same time that they would increase inequality in an already unequal state.

    According to the Ohio Supreme Court, the state’s public schools have been chronically underfunded. Over the past several years, the Ohio General Assembly has attempted to address the problem through the Cupp-Patterson plan passed as part of the state budget. Because it was included in the state budget, it wasn’t fully funded, so full implementation will only come if lawmakers approve the third and final phase of funding in the two-year state budget due July 1.

    But fresh off championing nearly $1 billion in new money for families sending their kids to private and religious schools last year as Senate president, Huffman last month said Ohio’s public school funding was “unsustainable.”

    A panel of Ohio economists said Huffman’s proposed $325 million-a-year cut to the state’s public school funding would be a huge mistake. Not only would that put poor families even further behind, it would sap the state’s economic output in the long run, the economists agreed by large margins.

    Scioto Analysis surveyed 17 Ohio economists and asked if they agreed that “cutting school spending by $650 million (over two years) would significantly reduce the state’s future economic output.” Fourteen, or 82%, agreed, while two were uncertain. Just one disagreed.

    In the comment section of the survey, Bill LaFayette of Regionomics said it all goes back to why we spend money on public schools in the first place.

    “School spending is not an expenditure, it is an investment in our future workforce,” he wrote. “If we don’t have the revenue to support our schools, colleges, and universities adequately, perhaps we should rethink some of those tax cuts.”

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    Kathryn Wilson of Kent State University said the costs from cutting education would be multiple.

    “There are two effects I foresee,” she wrote. “One is that there will be less productivity because there will be less human capital (fewer high school graduates, lower test scores and skills). A second effect is that there will be more reliance on government assistance programs and criminal justice costs due to the lower graduation rates and earnings potential of Ohio’s students.“

    The economist who disagreed that cutting spending on public education would harm economic output, Michael Jones of the University of Cincinnati, didn’t explain his thinking.

    A similarly large majority of economists agreed that “cutting school spending by $650 million would significantly increase inequality in Ohio.” Again, 14 agreed, two were uncertain and one disagreed.

    Such inequality is already a big issue in the Buckeye State. A 2024 analysis said that the lowest-paid 20% of Ohioans paid twice as much of their incomes in taxes as the highest-paid 1% did. Also, more than a quarter of Ohioans are poor enough to qualify for Medicaid, meaning that for an individual woman who isn’t pregnant, she makes less than $21,600 a year.

    Helping drive inequality might be such mechanisms as Ohio’s $1 billion-a-year LLC tax break. Sold on promises that it would supercharge the state economy, its boosters haven’t been able to show it’s had any effect. Most of its benefit, however, accrues to the wealthiest Ohioans.

    There’s also more than $1 billion the state has forgone in liquor franchise taxes to fund JobsOhio, which according to its own metrics, has shown middling performance. And Gov. Mike DeWine continues to give tech giants massive tax cuts to build data centers that would create relatively few jobs, and that the companies may well have built without the tax breaks.

    In the Scioto Analysis survey, the economists said Huffman’s school funding cuts would only exacerbate inequality.

    “Public education funding has always been America’s biggest spending program for reducing inequality,” wrote Jonathan Andreas of Bluffton University. “In places without any public education funding, there is huge inequality in education which causes huge inequality in income.”

    Wilson of Kent State said that less state funding for public schools meant more reliance on local property taxes. Therefore, poorer districts would have poorer schools.

    “The purpose of the funding (Huffman proposes to cut) was to have less reliance on local property taxes,” she wrote. “There are large differences in per-student-spending across districts within Ohio. Reducing this funding will increase those gaps and increase inequality.”

    Jones of the University of Cincinnati was the sole economist to disagree that slashing public school funding would increase inequality, but again he didn’t offer an explanation for that stance.

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    Marty Schladen
    Marty Schladen

    Marty Schladen has been a reporter for decades, working in Indiana, Texas and other places before returning to his native Ohio to work at The Columbus Dispatch in 2017. He’s won state and national journalism awards for investigations into utility regulation, public corruption, the environment, prescription drug spending and other matters.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Ohio foster-to-college bill aims to bring kids out of system, into higher ed, career tech

    Ohio foster-to-college bill aims to bring kids out of system, into higher ed, career tech

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    By:  – Ohio Capital Journal

    A bipartisan bill introduced in the Ohio General Assembly seeks to establish a pipeline from foster care to college or careers.

    The sponsors of House Bill 25 are targeting a population of Ohioans who struggle to get through high school, and therefore may not have the guidance needed to lead them to a fruitful career in the state after leaving the foster care system.

    “They are experiencing some of the worst outcomes of our state and yet the state could and should do more,” said bill co-sponsor state Rep. Dontavius Jarrells, D-Columbus.

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    The bill is a reintroduction of a similar bill that didn’t get through the last General Assembly before it ended in December. House Bill 164, which Jarrells co-sponsored with former state Rep. Bill Seitz, passed 85-5 in the House in June 2024, before getting tied up in the Ohio Senate Finance Committee.

    Also as before, state Sen. Michele Reynolds, R-Canal Winchester, has introduced a companion bill, Senate Bill 13, for consideration in the Senate.

    According to the National Foster Youth Institute, just 3-4% of former foster youth across the country obtain a four-year college degree, and between 2% and 6% receive a two-year degree. The NFYI also found that high school dropout rates are higher for foster youth than even other low-income children and more than 40% of foster children in school face “educational difficulties.”

    “Aspiring to attend college motivates students to stay in school and keep their grades up,” the Children’s Defense Fund of Ohio said in support of the previous foster-to-college legislative effort. “Reducing financial barriers increases the likelihood that a student will complete their degree.”

    H.B. 25 would create a scholarship program for Ohioans who are in foster care after their 13th birthday, funding tuition, fees or other education expenses outside of federal or state financial aid, according to Jarrells.

    When word got out that Jarrells was reintroducing the bill, state Rep. Sharon Ray, R-Wadsworth, said she quickly reached out to become a co-sponsor, hoping to help the state and the “strong” foster care system she has in her district.

    She compared the scholarship program to the GI Bill that subsidizes educational opportunities for military personnel, saying that in the same way the GI Bill “changed so many lives” by giving them the financial support they needed, this new bill could create change for foster kids.

    “These kids, when they’re 18, they just age out of the system, and for these kids that have been working hard, we want to make sure they have the best chance at life,” Ray said.

    Under the bill, which would appropriate $7.5 million each over the next two years, “foster care student navigators” would be hired by the state to guide those coming out of foster care with applications, higher education admission processes and things like career tech or post-high school training.

    “When we invest in them, they invest back in Ohio,” Jarrells said.

    According to the Children’s Defense Fund of Ohio, 35 states, including Texas and Florida, had already voted in favor of legislation like Ohio’s bill at the time it was introduced in the last GA.

    The House bill has been referred to the House Workforce & Higher Education Committee, and the Senate bill has been sent to the Senate Finance Committee for consideration.

    Jarrells and Ray are hopeful the fact that the bill was introduced early in the GA gives it a better chance of passage, though they also see potential for budget negotiations to include the measures in their bill.

    “We want this just to be a win for the future, and hopefully something that gets continued investment so we can reach as many foster kids as we can,” Jarrells said.

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    Susan Tebben
    Susan Tebben

    Susan Tebben is an award-winning journalist with a decade of experience covering Ohio news, including courts and crime, Appalachian social issues, government, education, diversity and culture. She has worked for The Newark Advocate, The Glasgow (KY) Daily Times, The Athens Messenger, and WOUB Public Media. She has also had work featured on National Public Radio.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Ohio GOP proposal seeks to change voter-passed marijuana law with higher tax, lower THC levels

    Ohio GOP proposal seeks to change voter-passed marijuana law with higher tax, lower THC levels

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    A Republican lawmaker is trying to reduce the amount of marijuana grown at home, lower the level of THC in recreational marijuana, increase the tax, and redirect the revenue from it.

    Ohio Sen. Steve Huffman, R-Tipp City, recently introduced Senate Bill 56 which would make several changes to the state’s marijuana laws.

    “This bill is about government efficiency, consumer and child safety, and maintaining access to voter-approved adult-use marijuana,” Huffman said in his sponsor testimony last week.

    Ohioans voters passed a citizen-initiated law to legalize recreational marijuana in 2023 and sales started in August 2024. Since it was passed as a citizen initiative, Ohio lawmakers have the ability to change the law.

    The state’s total recreational marijuana sales were $292,874,669 as of Jan. 25, according to the Ohio Department of Commerce Division of Cannabis Control.

    The bill would lower THC levels in adult-use marijuana extracts from a maximum of 90% to a maximum of 70% and merge the state’s medical and recreational marijuana programs under the Division of Cannabis Control.

    “Consolidating both programs under the Division will allow for consistent requirements regarding testing, packaging, labeling, and advertising, especially those related to protecting children,” Huffman said in his testimony. “It also provides for streamlined licensing standards and general compliance procedures, cutting down on bureaucracy, red tape, and government waste.”

    On the home grow side, the law currently allows 12 marijuana plants to be cultivated at a single residence, but the bill would cut that in half. Huffman said folks who are growing marijuana at home could be supplying the illicit market.

    “The people did vote for home grow,” Huffman said. “I think that this is an example that we’re trying to move it to a little bit more reasonable.”

    S.B. 56 would require marijuana to be transported in the trunk of a car when traveling and it specifies that marijuana is only allowed in a private residence.

    “Ohio has long established open container laws regarding alcohol in motor vehicles; common sense mandates a similar rule for adult-use and medical marijuana access in motor vehicles,” said Steve Barnett, the Carroll County Prosecuting Attorney and a current officer of the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association.

    The bill would also up the tax on adult-use marijuana from 10% to 15%, cap the number of active dispensaries at 350, and funnel all revenue from the adult-use tax to the state general fund. There are currently 128 marijuana dispensaries in Ohio as of Friday, according to the Ohio Department of Commerce.

    The current tax revenue is divided up in multiple ways — 36% to the cannabis social equity and jobs fund, 36% to the host community cannabis fund, 25% to the substance abuse and addiction fund and 3% to the Division of Cannabis Control and Tax Commissioner Fund.

    Ohio Senators tried to pass a similar bill during the previous General Assembly, but it died in the House.

    “So we’re basically telling the voters … screw you,” said Sen. Bill DeMora, D-Columbus. “You don’t know what you’re talking about. You passed it with an overwhelming majority of the state, but we know better.”

    Huffman responded by saying he believes his bill corrects “some of the societal needs.”

    “I don’t want to sit at the ball game and the guy next to my nine-year-old kid is smoking marijuana,” he said. “I think that’s wrong. That’s what the voters voted for. …  I wouldn’t say we’re gutting everything. We’re trying to improve it.”

    There is currently nothing in the bill related to expungement, so DeMora asked about the possibility of adding expungement to the bill and Huffman sounded open to that possibility.

    “Through this committee process, we will certainly be open to any type of amendments to do something along that line,” Huffman said.

    Despite Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine pleas to lawmakers to regulate or ban delta-8 THC products, hemp is not included in the bill. There was a bill in the last General Assembly that would have banned the sale of intoxicating hemp, but the bill never made it out committee.

    However, Huffman hinted that a separate bill dealing with hemp will be introduced soon.

    “I find both of them to be very complex issues,” he said.

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.


    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Ohio Senate bill aims to help students with math interventions, including high-dosage tutoring

    Ohio Senate bill aims to help students with math interventions, including high-dosage tutoring

    (Getty Images)

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    As Ohio math scores continue to be below pre-pandemic levels, a proposed bill would bring math interventions to Ohio school districts that score below certain proficiency standards.

    Ohio Sen. Andrew Brenner, R-Delaware, recently introduced Senate Bill 19 which would require school districts or individual schools to come up with a math achievement improvement plan if they don’t have at least 52% of students receive a proficient score in math comprehension. A student’s comprehension is rated at one of five levels of proficiency: limited, basic, proficient, accomplished, and advanced.

    The bill would also require every district to create a math improvement and monitoring plan for students who qualify for math intervention services.

    During the 2022-23 school year, almost a third of Ohio students scored “limited” on their math proficiency, Brenner said Wednesday during his sponsor testimony.

    “Clearly, a disturbing number of Ohio children are in need of significant and prolonged academic intervention before it is too late to address their desperately-needed learning deficiency,” Brenner said to the Senate Education Committee.

    He introduced a similar bill in the last General Assembly and it passed unanimously in the Senate, but died in the House Primary and Secondary Education Committee.

    “It is still needed to address the critical need for learning acceleration for Ohio’s students most in need of additional academic support,” Brenner said in his sponsor testimony.

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    Under the bill, schools would be required to develop math improvement and monitoring plans for each student that qualifies for math intervention services within 60 days after getting the student’s third grade assessment math results.

    A math improvement and monitoring plan would identify the student’s “specific math deficiencies,” describe the additional instructional services they will receive, offer a chance for their parent or guardian to be involved, outline a monitoring process and offer high-dosage tutoring at least three days a week.

    Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee have enacted math legislation similar to what Ohio is proposing and those states have seen their math scores improve, said Lindsey Henderson, math policy director for ExcelinEd.

    “It’s never too late to get policy in place to move the needle on math improvement,” she said. “It’s really exciting to see states really taking a leap and going after it like they did literacy.”

    A lot of education policy at the state level has focused on reading in recent years.

    Ohio’s 2023 budget included provisions that are going toward implementing the science of reading, which is based on decades of research that shows how the human brain learns to read and incorporates phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.

    Forty states and the District of Columbia have passed or implemented new policies related to evidence-based reading instruction since 2013, according to Education Week.

    “Reading has taken a lot of oxygen, for good reason,” Henderson said. “Reading and writing is a skill you can’t be an engaged citizen without, but the next most important skill is going to be mathematics. … We would never say I’m not a literacy person, that’s not socially acceptable. But to say that I’m not a math person is a socially acceptable thing to say, and we’re really trying to change that narrative.”

    S.B. 19 is not just limited to math. The bill would also require school districts to provide evidence-based academic intervention services to students based on their English language arts state assessment.

    National Report Card

    Ohio math and reading scores continue to be below pre-pandemic levels, according to the latest report from the National Center for Education Statistics.

    The Nation’s 2024 Report Card was released this week and the only increase at the national level was a slight bump in fourth grade math. There was no significant change with eighth grade math and scores declined in four and eighth grade reading.

    Approximately 235,000 fourth-graders from 6,100 schools and 230,000 eighth-graders from 5,400 schools participated in the 2024 math and reading assessments between January and March of last year.

    For Ohio, the average fourth-grade math score was 239, two points higher than the national average and one point higher than the state’s fourth grade math scores in 2022. The scale for NAEP scores is 0-500.

    The state’s average eighth-grade math score was 279, seven points higher than the national average and three points higher than the state’s 2022 test.

    Ohio’s average fourth-grade reading score was 216, two points higher than the national average, but three points less than the state average in 2022.

    The state’s average eighth-grade reading score was 260, three points higher than the national average, but two points lower than Ohio’s score in 2022.

    Aaron Churchill, Ohio Research Director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, called the state’s NAEP scores a disappointment.

    “Overall, these results indicate that far too many Ohio students are struggling to master core math and reading skills,” he said in a statement.

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.

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    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Trump order prioritizes school choice and vouchers, which Ohio has been expanding for decades

    Trump order prioritizes school choice and vouchers, which Ohio has been expanding for decades

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    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    An executive order signed by President Donald Trump directs an emphasis on school choice and private school voucher programs when it comes to education funding, something that’s been happening in Ohio for several decades now.

    While it’s unclear how much power the executive order will have with spending decisions decided by Congress, the executive order directs to the U.S. Department of Education to prioritize “school choice” programs in grant funding, and requires the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to guide states on block grants that can be used for private schools.

    The executive order also directs the U.S. Department of Education to release guidance on using federal funding formulas for private school scholarship programs, and for military families in particular to be given information on scholarships.

    It’s not yet clear how this will affect individual states, but Ohio has already vastly expanded its private school voucher programs over the last two decades, and recently passed near-universal levels eligibility.

    Ohio House Speaker Matt Huffman began 2025 by saying the six-year phase-in of the public school funding model in Ohio was “unsustainable,” which received massive pushback from public school supporters, especially after the lawmakers poured nearly $1 billion into private school scholarships last year.

    Huffman called the future of the current funding model – also called the Fair School Funding Plan or the Cupp-Patterson plan – a “fantasy,” but has seemingly softened his stance for now after hearing from members of his own party.

    A spokesperson for Huffman and the House Majority Caucus did not respond to a request for comment on the executive order.

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    The president and CEO of EdChoice, Ohio’s private voucher program, praised the order in a statement, saying prioritizing and expanding such programs “is a crucial step toward empowering families and giving them greater control over their children’s education.”

    “This initiative reflects a commitment to funding students not systems and to ensuring the proper role of the federal government in education,” EdChoice President and CEO Robert Enlow said in the Wednesday statement. “It recognizes both the appropriate role of the federal government on education and the fact that education is primarily a state function.”

    Public school advocates feel the same way about a federal push for private school funding expansion as they do about state-level funding increases, for which a lawsuit was filed in Franklin County Common Pleas Court to eliminate the private school voucher program.

    The lawsuit argues that funding for private schools is coming out of the coffers of the public school system, something the state is constitutionally obligated to fund properly.

    “Diverting public money to unaccountable and ineffective private schools is a failed strategy that runs counter to public opinion,” Ohio Federation of Teachers head Melissa Cropper told the Capital Journal.

    2024 survey done by All4Ed, Lake Research Partners and the Tarrance Group, found a majority of American voters support public education, and an increase in funding to improve public schools. This included 58% of Republicans surveyed. Only 34% of GOP voters polled said funding for voucher programs should be increased.

    “Voters view public schools, including their local public school, more favorably than charter, private or religious schools,” the study stated.

    Cropper called the move by the Trump administration “a strategy straight of Project 2025,” the playbook written and supported by right-wing Heritage Foundation members, some of whom have become players in the Trump administration, including the White House budget office.

    “Regardless of what politicians do, Ohio educators and school staff will continue fighting for the resources that our students deserve,” Cropper said.

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    Susan Tebben
    Susan Tebben

    Susan Tebben is an award-winning journalist with a decade of experience covering Ohio news, including courts and crime, Appalachian social issues, government, education, diversity and culture. She has worked for The Newark Advocate, The Glasgow (KY) Daily Times, The Athens Messenger, and WOUB Public Media. She has also had work featured on National Public Radio.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Second federal judge seems to be prepared to block Trump spending pause

    Second federal judge seems to be prepared to block Trump spending pause

    President Donald Trump attends inauguration ceremonies in the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    WASHINGTON — A second federal judge appears ready to issue an order blocking the Trump administration from freezing funding on grant and loan programs, despite a move by the Office of Management and Budget to rescind a controversial memo Wednesday just before the hearing.

    Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. of the U.S. District Court in Rhode Island opted not to issue his ruling during the virtual hearing, saying that he first wanted the Democratic attorneys general who filed the suit to suggest how such an order might be worded. He then wants to hear from the Justice Department lawyer arguing the case on behalf of the Trump administration about the scope of that possible order.

    McConnell, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama, said the state attorneys general had convinced him that the Trump administration was likely to continue with the funding halt detailed in the now-revoked OMB memo in some way, based on a social media post from White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

    “That hasn’t changed based on comments by the president’s press secretary,” McConnell said. “And so I’m inclined to grant the restraining order, though I’m struggling with how it would be worded and what effect it would have.”

    A ruling from McConnell would be the second order blocking the Trump administration from implementing a spending pause on certain grant and loan programs.

    District Judge Loren L. AliKhan on Tuesday issued a short-term administrative stay preventing President Donald Trump’s administration from starting the spending freeze. She then set a hearing in that case, brought by organizations that receive federal funding, for Feb. 3.

    The original memo, released Monday evening by the Office of Management and Budget, led to widespread confusion and frustration among organizations like Meals on Wheels and grantees that rely on funding from the Department of Veterans’ Affairs, as well as members of Congress from both political parties.

    Memo rescinded

    The Trump administration’s Office of Management and Budget rescinded that memo Wednesday, though comments from Leavitt just afterward led to even more confusion just before the hearing began.

    Leavitt wrote in a social media post that OMB rescinding the memo was “NOT a rescission of the federal funding freeze.”

    “It is simply a rescission of the OMB memo,” Leavitt wrote. “Why? To end any confusion created by the court’s injunction.”

    “The President’s EO’s on federal funding remain in full force and effect, and will be rigorously implemented,” she added.

    Separately, Leavitt issued a written statement to reporters that seemed to suggest rescinding the OMB funding freeze memo was meant to get around AliKhan’s order.

    “In light of the injunction, OMB has rescinded the memo to end any confusion on federal policy created by the court ruling and the dishonest media coverage,” Leavitt wrote in a statement. “The Executive Orders issued by the President on funding reviews remain in full force and effect and will be rigorously implemented by all agencies and departments. This action should effectively end the court case and allow the government to focus on enforcing the President’s orders on controlling federal spending. In the coming weeks and months, more executive action will continue to end the egregious waste of federal funding.”

    Appropriators praise withdrawal of memo

    Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins, chairwoman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, welcomed OMB’s action before Leavitt’s post and the hearing.

    “I am pleased that OMB is rescinding the memo imposing sweeping pauses in federal programs,” Collins wrote in a statement. “While it is not unusual for incoming administrations to review federal programs and policies, this memo was overreaching and created unnecessary confusion and consternation.”

    Senate Appropriations Committee ranking member Patty Murray, D-Wash., released a statement that the Trump administration reversal was the right decision. That was also before Leavitt weighed in.

    “This is an important victory for the American people whose voices were heard after massive pressure from every corner of this country — real people made a difference by speaking out,” Murray wrote. “Still, the Trump administration — through a combination of sheer incompetence, cruel intentions, and a willful disregard of the law — caused real harm and chaos for millions over the span of the last 48 hours which is still ongoing.”

    White House assurances

    OMB’s decision to rescind the memo Wednesday followed the White House making public assurances Tuesday that the spending freeze wouldn’t impact Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and direct food assistance programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.

    Two separate lawsuits seeking to block the OMB memo from taking effect on Tuesday evening at 5 p.m. were filed in federal district court.

    The lawsuit filed by the National Council of Nonprofits, American Public Health Association and Main Street Alliance led to federal District Court Judge AliKhan placing a temporary hold on the planned spending freeze until Feb. 3 at 5 p.m.

    The second lawsuit, heard Wednesday, was filed by Democratic attorneys general from New York, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, North Carolina, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.

    Last updated 5:42 p.m., Jan. 29, 2025


    Jennifer Shutt
    Jennifer Shutt

    Jennifer covers the nation’s capital as a senior reporter for States Newsroom. Her coverage areas include congressional policy, politics and legal challenges with a focus on health care, unemployment, housing and aid to families.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • More than 280,000 Ohio kids would be impacted by proposed national school meal program cuts

    More than 280,000 Ohio kids would be impacted by proposed national school meal program cuts

    Students getting their lunch at a primary school. (Photo by Amanda Mills/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    As the federal government looks at ways to cut costs and fund Trump-administration measures, a congressional committee is considering a cut that could take billions from school breakfast and lunch programs.

    That cut could impact more than 280,000 students in Ohio alone, and 728 schools in the state, according to data from the Food Research & Action Center.

    FRAC identified this loss from a proposal being discussed by the Republican-led U.S. House Ways and Means Committee — membership of which includes Ohio Reps. Mike Carey and Max Miller — as part of upcoming budget reconciliation in the Capitol. The proposal would chop $3 billion from school breakfast and lunch programs.

    “Taking away this important and effective way for local schools to offer breakfast and lunch at no charge to all their students would increase hunger in the classroom, reintroduce unnecessary paperwork for families and schools, increase school meal debt and bring stigma back into the cafeteria,” according to FRAC senior child nutrition policy analyst Erin Hysom and interim child nutrition programs and policy director Alexis Bylander.

    The proposal would directly impact schools that don’t fall under the Community Eligibility Provision, a service based out of the federal National School Lunch Program, that serves districts in high poverty areas, allowing them to distribute meals at no cost to the students.

    Schools are deemed eligible for CEP based on their participation with other programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF).

    According to a summary of the proposal among a list of possible budget reconciliation plans obtained by Politico, the CEP eligibility would be raised from the previous level of schools with 40% participation in the other federal programs to 60%.

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    Hysom and Bylander say the new proposal would reduce eligibility for CEP, making more than 24,000 schools nationwide and 12 million children no longer eligible, including the more than 280,000 Ohio children impacted.

    The advocacy group Children’s Defense Fund-Ohio said the loss from this proposal would impact more Ohio children “than there are residents in the city of Toledo, Ohio’s fourth-largest city.”

    “As I’ve said before, free meals can help our students thrive mentally, socially and physically, especially those whose parents are currently trying to do all they can to support their children while juggling their responsibilities at work and fighting inflationary costs at home,” Dr. John Stanford, state director of CDF-Ohio, told the Capital Journal.

    Stanford also pointed to public opinion and a 2024 Republican research firm poll that showed a majority of Ohioans support universal free school breakfast and lunch programs for public schools.

    “So why would our lawmakers on Capitol Hill look to pass federal legislation that goes against the wishes of all Ohioans and effectively reduces access to free meals for students by increasing bureaucratic paperwork for school administrators,” Stanford asked.

    A 2023 report from the CDF-Ohio showed 1 in 6 children live in a household that experiences hunger and more than 1 in 3 children who live in households with food insecurity already don’t qualify for school meals.

    Both Stanford and FRAC said the changes proposed by the Ways and Means Committee would create further opportunities for students to “fall through the cracks” by requiring proof of income to apply for free and reduced meals. The meal programs had already seen decreases in participation, due to the lapsing of COVID-19 pandemic waivers of school meals costs.

    Ohio saw a 14% drop in average lunch participation due to the loss of the waivers.

    “We need our lawmakers to be completely focused on helping children and not creating unnecessary bureaucratic red tape for an evidence-based, best practices program that’s working,” Stanford added. “This proposal would achieve the opposite.”

    The state used its own budget in 2023 to make meals free for those who qualified for reduced-price meals, along with those who qualified for no-cost meals, but didn’t go the distance on universal school meals. The state is set to pass another operating budget this year that could include the discussion again, with a new House Speaker and Senate President at the helm.

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    Susan Tebben
    Susan Tebben

    Susan Tebben is an award-winning journalist with a decade of experience covering Ohio news, including courts and crime, Appalachian social issues, government, education, diversity and culture. She has worked for The Newark Advocate, The Glasgow (KY) Daily Times, The Athens Messenger, and WOUB Public Media. She has also had work featured on National Public Radio.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • 1 ,777 Ohioans died by suicide in 2023, according to new Ohio Department of Health report

    1 ,777 Ohioans died by suicide in 2023, according to new Ohio Department of Health report

     (Photo by Quentin Young/Colorado Newsline.)

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    This story is about suicide. If you or someone you know needs support now, call, text or chat the 988 Lifeline.

    More than 1,700 Ohioans died by suicide in 2023, according to the Ohio Department of Health.

    The number of Ohioans who died by suicide decreased 1% in 2023, according to ODH’s 2023 Suicide Report.

    “Every death by suicide is a tragedy that deeply affects so many,” said ODH Director Bruce Vanderhoff. “This is a sobering fact, and it is why, even though we take some encouragement from this slight decline, we are committed to continuing to work hard to drive those numbers down further.”

    This is the first time in three years there has been a decrease. 1 ,777 Ohioans died by suicide in 2023 — 20 fewer than 2022.

    “While this decrease in suicide deaths is certainly a step in the right direction, we must continue to make improvements in suicide prevention and mental health,” Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said in a statement. “Depression and suicide remain a serious threat – especially to our kids. If anything, our progress should inspire us to further advance our commitment to this life-saving work, because the life of every Ohioan is precious.”

    GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

     

    Nearly five Ohioans died by suicide each day — including one person ages 10-24 every 36 hours, according to the report.

    “These are moms, dads, brothers, sisters, neighbors, co-workers and all of these losses are truly a human tragedy and a reminder that we have to do more,” said LeeAnne Cornyn, director of the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services. “We want all Ohioans to be well, get well and stay well, so that they can live up to their full God given potential every single day.”

    Suicide was the 12th leading cause of death overall in Ohio and was the second-leading cause of death among Ohioans ages 10-14 and 20-34, according to the report.

    Nearly 70% of Ohio suicide deaths were white-non-Hispanic males and Ohioans ages 45-54 was the age group with the highest rate of suicide deaths, according to the report.

    Firearms were used in more than half of all Ohio suicide deaths and and the use of drug poisoning increased by 11% in 2023, according to the report.

    Black non-Hispanic females and white non-Hispanic females saw the largest decrease in rate of suicide deaths, both by 6%, according to the report.

    The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline launched in July 2022 and Ohio’s 19 call centers have responded to more than 440,000 calls, chats and texts.

    “Every single Ohioan plays a role in reducing suicides, and that’s why we have also worked to equip thousands and thousands of Ohioans with the skills that they need to recognize mental illness or substance use disorder and have the skills that they need to talk to their peers, to talk to their family members and help connect them to care,” Cornyn said.

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    YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.


    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Ohio GOP lawmaker again proposes to overhaul higher ed, ban diversity efforts and labor strikes

    Ohio GOP lawmaker again proposes to overhaul higher ed, ban diversity efforts and labor strikes

     Ohio State Sen. Jerry Cirino, R-Kirtland, introduced Senate Bill 1 on Jan. 22, 2025. (Photo by Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal).

    Cirino’s proposed overhaul failed to move forward under previous Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens, but has new potential life under Speaker Matt Huffman

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    A Republican state senator has reintroduced a controversial proposal to massively overhaul higher education in Ohio, including a ban on diversity and inclusion efforts as well as a ban on labor strikes by faculty and staff.

    Kirtland Republican state Sen. Jerry Cirino’s proposed Senate Bill 1 — the Advance Ohio Higher Education Act — was introduced during a press conference Wednesday and is similar to the bill Cirino introduced during the last General Assembly, with some additions.

    “It’s called Senate Bill 1 for a reason,” Cirino said. “It is our top priority, and we’re going to move this along quickly. … We’ve already had a lot of hearings on Senate Bill 83.”

    He said the bill is going to be on a fast track and Senate Higher Education Committee Chair Kristina Roegner said hearings on the bill will likely start next week.

    “We are promoting more speech, not less speech, as some of our opponents have said, more discussion and debate on all topics, less indoctrination, institutional support by trustee actions and policy moves that we’re requiring the trustees to make, to support an environment of diversity of thought,” Cirino claimed.

    S.B. 1 includes “virtually everything from Senate Bill 83,” said Cirino, who is the vice chair of the Ohio Senate Higher Education Committee.

    GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

     

    Cirino’s former higher education bill, Senate Bill 83, was unable to make it across the finish line during the previous General Assembly. It passed in the Senate and in the House committee, but former Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens, R-Kitt Hill, never brought it to the House floor for a vote. The previous bill underwent 11 revisions.

    Cirino made good on his promise to reintroduce a similar bill in January and the bill could have an easier time in the House now that Matt Huffman, R-Lima, is the House Speaker.  Lawmakers in the Ohio House plan on introducing a companion bill.

    What is in S.B. 1?

    S.B. 1 has yet to be posted online, but Cirino said the bill includes a post-tenure review, annual performance reviews of faculty, a retrenchment provision that would block unions from negotiating on tenure and public syllabuses. The bill would prohibit political and ideological litmus tests in hiring, promotion, and admissions decisions.

    A big change with S.B. 1 is banning diversity, equity and inclusion courses in addition to the trainings. The former bill would have banned mandatory diversity, equity and inclusion training unless it is required to comply with state and federal law, professional licensure requirements or receiving accreditation or grants.

    “(DEI) has become institutionalized discrimination paid for by the taxpayers,” Cirino said.

    Ohio House Rep. Bob Young, R-Dayton, said the focus of the bill shouldn’t be the DEI ban.

    “Let’s truly focus on why we’re here and who we are in higher education, and that is to educate a workforce to compete globally and grow Ohio and jobs and families and attract more people to come in,” Young said.

    The on faculty and staff’s ability to strike is back in the bill, something Cirino claimed was not an anti-labor issue.

    “When a student signs up for instruction for a semester, they pay in advance, or they can’t go into the class,” Cirino said. “That represents a contract between the students and the institution, and because there are public institutions, therefore a contract with the state, they have to deliver that instruction and trade for the dollars per pen.”

    Youngstown State University workers went on strike for a few days in 2020 over pay disputes, and Wright State University went on strike for almost three weeks in January 2019 over pay disputes and health care.

    “The threat of (a strike) is what is used, and the students are being used as pawns in order to get better working hours, a better dental plan, or whatever the case may be,” Cirino said. “If we value higher education the way we do, we should also value the fact that that contract needs to be fulfilled, and nothing except force majeure should ever get in the way of students getting what they have paid in advance for.”

    S.B. 1 would shorten university board of trustees terms from nine years down to six years.

    “It’s been difficult to find trustees willing to make nine year commitments and the governor agrees with this,” Cirino said. “We’re talking about not just changing their terms, but also requiring new trustee training programs that would be adjudicated through the Chancellor’s Office.”

    Requiring students to take an American history course is also back in the bill.

    “I have become more and more convinced of that necessity over time now, since we first wrote the bill, as I’ve talked with more and more young people who have no clue about so many important things about our history and our founding documents and so on,” Cirino said.

    Opposition to S.B. 1

    Cirino acknowledged there will be lots of opposition with S.B. 1, just as there was with his previous bill.

    “Senate Bill 1 is a misguided attempt to micromanage higher education in Ohio, imposing unnecessary restrictions on our universities, faculty, and students,” state Sen. Casey Weinstein, D-Hudson, said in a statement.

    More than a dozen students from the Ohio Student Association protested S.B. 1 with chants of “When Black studies are under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight,” and “Higher ed will be dead,” among others.

    “The students that were out here protesting are probably getting extra credit for being here,” Cirino said. “I don’t believe that they have studied the bill and all the implications of this legislation and the impact on higher education in Ohio. I believe that they were asked to be here by their professors.”

     Brielle Shorter, a 20-year-old Ohio State University student, protests against Senate Bill 1 on Jan. 22, 2025. (Photo by Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal). 

    Brielle Shorter, a 20-year-old Ohio State University student, was among the students who protested against the bill Wednesday.

    “No, we are not here for extra credit,” she said. “That’s not how this works. I believe that this bill is being pushed very fast and very rapidly.”

    Pranav Jani, president of the Ohio State University chapter of the American Association of University Professors and an English professor, said Cirino’s quip about students protesting for extra credit is “one of the most insulting things I’ve ever heard said about students.”

    “It shows how out of touch he is with what happens in the classroom,” Jani said.

    If this bill is signed into law, Shorter — who is from Cincinnati and wants to be a psychiatrist — said she would go out-of-state to continue her education.

    “I fear that I can no longer call Ohio my home,” Shorter said. “It feels like students are being pushed out, and it feels like I might be one of them.”

    Many college students have said they would move out of Ohio if this bill was signed into law, but Cirino called that “a red herring” during Wednesday’s press conference.

    Education organizations were quick to oppose S.B. 1.

    “(S.B. 1) uses culture war politics to attack workers’ rights and turn campuses into hostile environments for people of color, immigrants, and other marginalized communities,” Ohio Federation of Teachers President Melissa Cropper said in a statement.

    Ohio Conference of the American Association of University Professors Executive Director Sara Kilpatrick hopes Cirino will listen to the students’ concerns with this bill.

    “He’s not interested in hearing opposing views, which shows that this bill isn’t about intellectual diversity, but is actually about pushing a partisan agenda,” Kilpatrick said in a statement.

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.

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    ________________
    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Donald Trump is sworn in as president of the United States

    Donald Trump is sworn in as president of the United States

    Donald Trump at his inauguration ceremony in the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, 2025 in Washington, D.C. Trump took office for his second term as the 47th president of the United States. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    By:  and  Ohio Capital Journal

    WASHINGTON — Donald Trump took the presidential oath of office for the second time Monday during an inauguration ceremony inside the U.S. Capitol rotunda.

    The swearing-in marked the culmination of a four-year journey for Trump, whom many Republicans distanced themselves from following the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, but nonetheless supported during his third campaign for the White House. Trump’s running mate, J.D. Vance of Ohio, was sworn in as vice president.

    “Many people thought it was impossible for me to stage such a historic political comeback,” Trump said during his inaugural address following the swearing-in. “But as you see today, here I am — the American people have spoken.”

    Trump spent much of his speech detailing the executive orders he plans to sign later Monday addressing immigration, energy and more.

    “With these actions we will begin the complete restoration of America and the revolution of common sense,” he said.

    He pledged to declare a national emergency at the southern border, which drew a standing ovation from the audience in the rotunda. He said all illegal entry into the United States would be “immediately halted” and vowed to begin the process of deporting “millions and millions” of undocumented immigrants.

    “As commander in chief, I have no higher responsibility than to defend our country from threats and invasions, and that is exactly what I am going to do,” Trump said.

    Trump defeated the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Kamala Harris, in November’s general election, after receiving 312 Electoral College votes to her 226.

    He also won the popular vote with 77.3 million votes, 49.9%, compared to Harris’ 75 million, 48.4%. Harris attended the inaugural ceremony with her husband, Doug Emhoff.

    The inauguration was supposed to take place outside the Capitol building on the terrace overlooking the National Mall, but Trump announced Friday he wanted it moved indoors amid polar temperatures.

    It was the first time since former President Ronald Reagan’s inauguration the ceremony was held in the rotunda. Looking on along with top government officials was a trio of billionaires — Mark Zuckerberg of Meta, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and tech entrepreneur Elon Musk.

    Some of the guests and supporters who couldn’t fit inside the rotunda watched on large screens inside the Capitol Visitor Center or at the Capital One Arena in downtown Washington, D.C.

    Trump later in the afternoon was expected to return to the arena, where he rallied with supporters on Sunday, for the traditional inaugural parade that was moved inside.

    ‘The envy of every nation’

    Trump’s first speech of the day, in the Capitol rotunda, focused extensively on his vision for the country, in which he sharply criticized the current condition of the United States while former President Joe Biden listened.

    “The Golden Age of America begins right now,” Trump said, vowing to “put America first” during his next four years in the White House.

    “From this day forward, our country will flourish and be respected again all over the world,” he said, noting that the United States “will be the envy of every nation, and we will not allow ourselves to be taken advantage of any longer.”

    The president, who said he wants to be a “peacemaker” and a “unifier,” pointed to the hostage and ceasefire deal made between Israel and Hamas last week.

    Trump said he would declare a “national energy emergency” later Monday and reiterated his “drill, baby, drill” approach when it comes to oil and gas production.

    He also called for an “External Revenue Service” that would collect “all tariffs, duties and revenues.”

    Trump said he would sign an executive order to “immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to America.”

    He said he wants to create a “color-blind” and “merit-based” society and said “it will henceforth be the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders: male and female.”

    He also echoed his pledge to take control of the Panama Canal, to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America” as well as to revert Alaska’s Mount Denali back to “Mount McKinley.”

    Back to campaign rhetoric

    Trump bid farewell to Biden and former first lady Jill Biden after the rotunda ceremony, before they departed on a helicopter. The Bidens were scheduled to travel to California as they began their life after the White House.

    Trump then gave a freewheeling, 35-minute speech in the Capitol Visitor Center’s Emancipation Hall, which event organizers used as an overflow room to accommodate governors, lawmakers’ spouses, the diplomatic corps and others who couldn’t fit inside the rotunda.

    “I just want to say you’re a younger, far more beautiful audience than I just spoke to and I want to keep it off the record,” he said, later adding he gave them the “A+ treatment.”

    Trump’s second speech was more reminiscent of his campaign rallies than the official speech he gave during the rotunda ceremony. He reiterated false claims he’s made about his 2020 election loss to Biden and the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol that was spurred on by those false statements.

    “I was going to talk about that. They said, ‘Please, don’t bring that up right now. You can bring it up tomorrow.’ I said how about now,” Trump said. “We’re giving you a little more information than we gave upstairs.”

    Trump said he didn’t want to make his first speech “complicated,” he wanted to make it “beautiful and “unifying.”

    “Then, when they said we have a group of people who are serious Trump fans, I said ‘This is the time to tell those stories,’” he said.

    Trump also spoke at length about border security and immigration during his second speech, saying it has become a problem during Biden’s term as president.

    “I think it probably was the number one issue for me back in 2015, 2016,” Trump said. “This border is much worse. We fixed the border. It was totally fixed. There was nothing to talk about.”

    Flags at full staff

    Trump signed several documents in the President’s Room by the U.S. Senate chamber Monday afternoon, including a proclamation that the U.S. flag be flown at full staff for this inauguration and all future inauguration days.

    Then-President Biden ordered U.S. flags to be flown at half staff until Jan. 28, the customary 30-day period, to commemorate former President Jimmy Carter, who died in December.

    Last week, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana ordered the flags at the U.S. Capitol to be flown at full staff on Inauguration Day. Some Republican-led states followed suit.

    Last updated 3:46 p.m., Jan. 20, 2025


    Jennifer Shutt
    Jennifer Shutt

    Jennifer covers the nation’s capital as a senior reporter for States Newsroom. Her coverage areas include congressional policy, politics and legal challenges with a focus on health care, unemployment, housing and aid to families.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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    Shauneen Miranda
    Shauneen Miranda

    Shauneen Miranda is a reporter for States Newsroom’s Washington bureau. An alumna of the University of Maryland, she previously covered breaking news for Axios.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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