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Ohio House, Senate Approve Temporary Plan After Missing Budget Deadline

Ohio House approves temporary budget as both chamber miss June 30 budget deadline.
Andy Chow
Ohio House approves temporary budget as both chamber miss June 30 budget deadline.

Ohio lawmakers failed to reach a state budget agreement by the midnight deadline, missing the mark for a spending deal for the new two-year cycle. Because the House and Senate couldn’t reach a compromise, both chambers passed a temporary budget extension to keep the government running. 

The Ohio Statehouse was filled with activity all weekend long as lawmakers held several meetings and even huddled in the hallways to gather information while budget negotiations continued. But as afternoon turned to evening during a rare Saturday session for the Senate, hopes of passing a two-year operating budget started to fade in exchange for a temporary fix. 

Senate President Larry Obhof (R-Medina) said the House and Senate came to the table with hundreds of measures on which they needed to reach an agreement, and although he says they came close, they just ran out of time.

“When it became clear today that it was just logistically not gonna be possible to finish it by the end of the day tomorrow we decided to err on the side of caution and pass the interim budget instead,” says Obhof.

But Sen. Matt Dolan (R-Chagrin Falls), chair of the Senate Finance Committee, aimed the blame at a more specific problem.

“We’re here today because there was a cloud hanging over the whole process,” says Dolan.

Dolan was part of the conference committee where members of both chambers must pass a budget deal. He says the House never agreed on which budget version to use as the jumping off point, a decision he says must be made in order for legislators to see specific amendment language.

“But until about 9:30 tonight, we, the Senate, were not able to access the amendments of the House members. At 9:30 tonight there is no way this body can say to the state of Ohio ‘we are comfortable with the priorities of our state and the path you turn on,” Dolan says.

As Dolan made those claims on the Senate floor, House Speaker Larry Householder (R-Glenford) fired back on Twitter saying he was surprised by comments.

The next day, when the House took up the budget stopgap, Householder was asked about picking a document for the conference committee to work from.

“That absolutely makes no difference whatsoever and it was the most bizarre comment I’ve ever heard in my life. Makes no difference whatsoever,” says Householder.

The temporary budget, SB171, will fund the government at the same levels as FY19 and gives the House and Senate 17 days to come up with a complete plan for FY20-21. 

Both chambers passed their own versions of the budget bill with wide bipartisan support. The House approved its plan in early May, and the Senate had unanimous support after making its changes.

The House budget bill included a 6.6% income tax cut across the board, cut the bottom two tax brackets, lowered the small business income tax deduction to the first $100,000 earned, and put more money into wraparound services for schools.

In the Senate’s budget bill, income taxes were cut by 8%, the small business income tax deduction was restored to the first $250,000 earned, and the extra money dedicated to wraparound services in the House plan was funneled to school districts with growing enrollment.

Householder says among the main points of contention are the tax plans, health care reforms, and education spending.

As for making changes to Medicaid, Householder says it’s important to act now.

“We’re going through a pretty good economic time in the state of Ohio right now, our Medicaid rolls are down, now’s the time to try and initiate some good cost savings measures which are also very beneficial to the Medicaid population,” says Householder.

Rep. Emilia Sykes (D-Akron), House Minority Caucus leader, says failing to meet the budget deadline was the result of petty politics among the Republicans who control both the House and Senate. She adds that while most Ohioans won’t be impacted by a temporary fix, it only delays the increased funding they wanted for areas such as Lake Erie, children services, and school programs.

“The budget that was passed last General Assembly was not something that we supported and if that is the budget we will continue to have we know where that’s gonna get us," Sykes says.  

Despite missing the deadline, both Obhof and Householder expressed some optimism that they were close to a done deal.

“I think that in the relatively near future we will have a final version of the budget that everyone can be proud of,” Obhof says.

“At this stage you know we’ve got compromises in place and many of these things have already been worked out they just need to be agreed upon and moved on,” says Householder.

The chambers also failed to reach an agreement on the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation budget, marking the third time this year that they failed to meet a budget deadline. The first was the transportation budget with a gas tax increase, which came in two days late. The House and Senate approved a 30-day budget extension for the BWC in the form of SB172.

Gov. Mike DeWine signed the operating budget stopgap and issued a statement saying, “While I am disappointed that the budget process has extended beyond July 1st, I want assure all Ohioans that state services will not be interrupted in any way. The House and the Senate passed similar budget proposals, and they both share the principles outlined in my executive budget proposal. I urge the legislative conference committee to continue negotiations and pass a full budget promptly."

Copyright 2019 The Statehouse News Bureau

Andy Chow is a general assignment state government reporter who focuses on environmental, energy, agriculture, and education-related issues. He started his journalism career as an associate producer with ABC 6/FOX 28 in Columbus before becoming a producer with WBNS 10TV.