Ohio Politics: Know what's really going on
Email not displaying correctly? View Online
Dayton Daily News
Ohio Politics on Facebook Ohio Politics on Twitter

AVERY KREEMER
Thursday, December 12, 2024
 
 

It’s crunch time at the Ohio Statehouse. We have three scheduled General Assembly sessions left: Senate on Wednesday, House on Wednesday and Thursday.

So, luck permitting, the 135th General Assembly might be wrapped up by the time you hear from me next week.

For now, lower priority bills are flying out the door and the big-ticket items — regulations on delta-8, controversial education bills, and legislation to pave the way for $2.5 billion in bonds for bridges and roads — remain logjammed.

As ever, I can be contacted with tips, comments or questions at 614-981-1422, avery.kreemer@coxinc.com or @AveryKreemer on X. You can also follow our coverage at our Politics page and through our Ohio Politics Facebook page.

***

Ohio House moves closer on bill that would let Ohioans refuse vaccines without punishment

 FILE — A COVID-19 booster is administered at the Portage Park Senior Center in Chicago, Sept. 13, 2022. In nearly two dozen interviews by The New York Times, voters who like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. say he shares their grievances about health care and share their interest in alternative medicines and natural remedies. (Jamie Kelter Davis/The New York Times)

Credit: NYT

The story: Progress was made last week on an Ohio House bill that would establish the “conscientious right to refuse” in Ohio law and bar private and public employers and businesses from taking action against Ohioans who opt not to take vaccines and other medical treatments.

• The proposal: The bill, which cleared committee, would bar private and public entities from denying someone employment, terminating their employment, denying them services, denying them access to commerce, segregating them, penalizing them, or treating them differently based on their decision to forgo vaccines and other medical interventions.

• Republican support: Montgomery County Rep. Tom Young, R-Washington Twp., told methat he believes businesses made many mistakes that violated Ohioans’ medical freedom during the COVID-19 pandemic and believes that the bill could rectify some of that.

• Friendly fire: Despite the bill reportedly having broad support in the House GOP caucus, Republican House Speaker Jason Stephens told reporters this week that he’d likely block it from reaching the House floor for a full vote.

• Democratic opposition: “If we push laws like this, we, as physicians, will see illnesses that we’ve never seen before,” Columbus-area Democrat Rep. Anita Somani, a practicing OBGYN, told me. “(Measles, mumps and rubella) are diseases that have been eradicated. We are in a place of privilege where people can say, ‘We don’t need vaccine mandates because nobody gets these diseases’ — well, no one gets these diseases because we have vaccines.”

DeWine on Springfield Haitians: ‘They are welcome and they’re needed here.’

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine along with Dom Tiberi of the Maria Tiberi Foundation announced Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024 at the High Street Church of the Nazarene a new driver training initiative in Clark County. The initiative will primarily focus on teaching members of the migrant population the skills of safe driving. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

• The story: Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine met with a Springfield-area Haitian minister last week and discussed the issue of Haitian immigrants leaving Springfield or Ohio in response to President-elect Donald Trump’s deportation threats.

• On the move: Pastor Fontil Daity said his church’s numbers are dwindling as more and more Haitians opt to leave Springfield in connection to Trump’s focus on Springfield during the campaign. “At the end of the day, I don’t have any problem with Mr. Trump when he said what he said because he’s trying to protect the country,” Daity said, “but at the same time, when you create fear, things happen to people when they fear.”

• Response: “Their legal status does not depend on where they are, so if they’re concerned about something changing in the future, being in some other state doesn’t help them,” said DeWine. “They have put down roots here, they’ve become part of the community and we would like for them to stay here and understand that they are welcome and they’re needed here.”

Local political news of the week

Dr. Pamela Combs is the superintendent of the Montgomery County Board of Developmental Disabilities Services. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

• Payout: An $8.9 million budget shortfall this year led the Montgomery County Board of Developmental Disabilities Services to weigh layoffs and service reductions to developmentally disabled adults. Now they’re paying their CEO $400K to leave. Sydney Dawes has the story.

• Old problems: New Lebanon’s new village manager resigned from his position just days before starting the role, a decision that continues the cycle of instability in the Montgomery County village. Aimee Hancock has the story.

State political news of the week

FILE - Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost speaks during an election night watch party, Nov. 8, 2022, in Columbus, Ohio. Ohio's top lawyer has advised the state's public universities that a law written to deter Ku Klux Klan demonstrations could be used to impose felony charges on students who wear face coverings while protesting the war in Gaza. (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete, File)

Credit: AP

• New power: Finishing touches are all that’s left on an Ohio bill that would expand state Attorney General Dave Yost’s power by giving his office the authority to reject citizen ballot initiatives based on their title just months after being rebuked by the state’s top court for doing just that. Here’s my story.

• GOP split: A last-ditch effort to pass legislation that would block local and state police from both enforcing and helping to enforce federal gun restrictions failed in the Ohio House this week following hours of private deliberations among its Republican supermajority. Here’s my story.

• Pharmacies ailing: Pharmacists came to the Ohio House this week to make their case as to why pharmacy benefit managers — the top three of which handle 80% of U.S. prescriptions per year — need more regulation from the state. Here’s the story from Samantha Wildow.

• Bond ballot: Ohio voters will likely face another statewide ballot measure this coming May, this time a constitutional amendment to give Ohio the authority to issue $2.5 billion in bonds to fund bridges, roads and other capital projects. Here’s my story.

• Making it count: Speaking of ballot measures, did you know that we won’t have another “Ohio Issue 1″ for, well, a very long time? Starting with last month’s failed redistricting amendment, state ballot initiatives will be counted sequentially from here on out until we reach 500. Here’s my story on the change.

National political news of the week

 FILE — The U.S. Capitol in Washington, Sept. 9, 2024. The projection by the Congressional Budget Office could deflate Republican promises to supercharge the economy with tax cuts. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)

Credit: NYT

• Vote looms: The U.S. Senate is pushing toward a vote on legislation that would provide full Social Security benefits to millions of people, setting up potential passage in the final days of Democrats’ control over the nation’s higher chamber. The Associated Press has the story.

Dayton Daily News
You received this email because you signed up for Ohio Politics from the Dayton Daily News. If you don’t want this newsletter, unsubscribe here.

You can manage your email preferences here.
Stay connected anywhere, any time with the Dayton Daily News app.
Get it on Google Play Download on the Apple App Store
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Instagram TikTok
Today’s ePaper  |  Manage Account  |  Terms of Use
Privacy Policy  |  Unsubscribe