Ohio Sunday Papers – Casinos: State Newspapers No Likey
Filed under: Banking, Education, Gov Strickland, Ohio Economy, State of Ohio Govt, ohio politics
- Huron County’s 18.3% unemployment rate – Associated Press
- State making more records available online – Columbus Dispatch
- Banks face long climb – Cincinnati Enquirer
- New Schools Fall Short of Strickland’s Standards – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Fool’s Gold (Casinos) – Toledo Blade
- Editorial: False Promises (Casinos) – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Highway Funds, er, Safety – Toledo Blade
- Editorial: Strickland – Let Charter Schools Bloom – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: Trust in Change (Higher Ed) – Akron Beacon-Journal
- Op-Ed, Dennis Willard: Big Brother, Big Brother, big money – Akron Beacon-Journal
- Op-Ed, David Skolnick: Congressman Ryan Man of the Hour – Youngstown Vindicator
- Op-Ed, Thomas Suddes: Gambling Promoters & Their Self Serving Ideas – The Plain Dealer
- Op-Ed, Jonathan Riskind: Pollution plan fuels bipartisan fight – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Joe Hallett: Ohio needs to upgrade Capitol statuary – Columbus Dispatch
OSU Execs Take Pay Freeze, Forego Bonuses
Fair is fair. I was critical of Ohio State University’s budget axe falling on the school’s extension programs the other day. Tonight I have to say that President Gordon Gee made a public servant’s decision on executive pay this week.
He got OSU’s top execs to agree to freeze their pay and take no bonuses this year, according to the Columbus Dispatch. This will save the university $1 million which will go student financial aid.
Ohio Budget Process On Hold Until Rep. Morgan Works His Way Through Strickland’s Bibliography
Filed under: Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Gov Strickland
I got a chuckle out of this from the Associated Press today:
The House also announced it would delay final action on the budget until after its spring break, pushing expected passage from late March into mid-April. The spending plan has to make it through both the House and Senate before July 1.
One frustrated member of the House Finance committee, Republican Seth Morgan, filed a second public records request with Gov. Ted Strickland seeking a road map to understanding his “evidence-based” school-funding formula.
Morgan’s first request was met with an almost 400-source bibliography of studies and reports upon which the formula is based.
For as long it would take for a child to be born and advance all the way into junior high school, Republicans were in charge of both houses of the Ohio General Assembly. They had the Governor’s Office for four years longer than that. What did they do about public education in Ohio? Not a freaking thing.
Ted Strickland has been all over the state and worked with groups interested in fairly funding public ed and providing a 21st century curriculum for two years. He’s put his plan out there. If you’ve got particular issues, bring them up. But guess what Seth? Evidence-based study is not some right wing home schoolin’ methodology. It means the Governor and others have gone through an intellectual process. The road map is that bibliography. You might want to get reading …
Obama Answers Question on Seeming Disagreement With Strickland on Charter Schools
Filed under: Barack Obama, Education, Gov Strickland
President Barack Obama was interviewed this week by a group of regional newspaper reporters, including Stephen Koff of the Cleveland Plain Dealer. During the interview the subject of charter schools, and specifically the seeming divergence of opinion between Obama and Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland. The transcript does not identify the questioners by name, but perhaps this was Koff’s?
(Source: White House Press Office – Partial Transcript Below)
QUESTION: Mr. President, yesterday you called for eliminating restrictions on the number of charter schools while enforcing some vigorous standards. In Ohio, the Governor has called charter schools a destructive influence on public education, a few years ago tried to have a moratorium on new charters, now wants to cut state spending by about 20 percent for charter schools and restrict some other funding. I’m wondering whether you’ve ever talked with him about this, and is this just a fundamental disagreement between the two of you?
THE PRESIDENT: You know, I haven’t had a conversation with Governor Strickland. I know that part of his concern was prompted by some bad experiences with charters in Ohio that weren’t up to snuff. And if you looked at my statement yesterday, what I said was not only should we lift the cap on charters, we should also shut down charters that aren’t meeting standards. I don’t think that’s inconsistent with Governor Strickland’s position.My goal here is to create laboratories of innovation so that in the public school system, we are on a race to the top as opposed to stuck in the old ways of doing things. And we’ve got to — we’ve got to do that. In your home town of Cleveland, I don’t know off the top of my head what the dropout rate is, but I’ve got to assume that it’s hovering around 50 percent. If you look at the number of children going through the Cleveland public schools who are actually prepared to go to college, it’s probably one out of seven or eight or 10. And that’s just not acceptable. It’s not acceptable for them, it’s not acceptable in terms of America’s economic future. And so we’ve got to experiment with ways to provide a better educational experience for our kids, and some charters are doing outstanding jobs.
So, the bottom line is to try to create innovation within the public school system that can potentially be scaled up, but also to make sure that we are maintaining very high standards for any charter school that’s created.
Ohio Sunday Papers – It’s the Economy and Education with a smattering of Fisher, Brunner
Filed under: Big Three Automakers, Economic Stimuls, Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Environment, Gov Strickland, Jennifer Brunner, Lee Fisher, Ohio Economy, Recession, ohio politics
- Editorial: Lawmakers must stop Strickland from killing charter schools – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: Governor needs to tweek how he pays for education reform – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: No Stimulus for Teardown – Toledo Blade
- Op-Ed, William Hershey: Ohio Dems Face Likely ‘Family Fued’ – Dayton Daily News
- Op-Ed, Thomas Suddes: Will Ohio House Dems Hold Together on Budget? – The Plain Dealer
- Op-Ed, Joe Hallett: Governor Sinned a Bit in Securing Manna from Washington – Columbus Dispatch
- Welfare rolls soaring in Ohio – Columbus Dispatch
- Toledo aid agencies fear what’s over horizon – Toledo Blade
- Late bill payments cost state – Columbus Dispatch
- Big repairs needed for U.S. automakers – Toledo Blade
- How would you spend $500 million taxpayer dollars? – The Plain Dealer
- Dems’ fight a cost of success – Cincinnati Enquirer
- Op-Ed, Dennis Willard: Race crucial for Fisher, Brunner – Akron Beacon Journal
- Brunner: Senate bid not a conflict – Columubus Dispatch
- Ohio tries to clean up payday lending one more time – The Plain Dealer
- Op-Ed, Jonathan Riskind: Obama’s economic plans leave some edgy, angry – Columbus Dispatch
- Development board’s City Center planning only quasi-public – Columbus Dispatch
- Farmland disappearing – Columbus Dispatch
- Preservationists hope to see some stimulus – Columbus Dispatch
- Ohio businesses must file sales taxes electronically for first time this year – The Plain Dealer
- Ohio officials OK new workers compensation program – Dayton Daily News\
- KELLY PAVLIK COVERAGE – The Youngstown Vindicator
Ohio Sunday Papers – February 15
Filed under: Big Three Automakers, Economic Stimuls, Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Ohio Economy, Recession, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt, ohio politics
- Celeste, (Chris), exploring U.S. Senate run – The Plain Dealer
- Part of Strickland’s school funding formula involves judgement calls – Columbus Dispatch
- Plan calls for judging teachers on results – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: School Funding – Evidence of Confusion – Akron Beacon Journal
- State’s use of stimulus: Plodding or on Pace? – Columbus Dispatch
- Economists: This recession deeper than ‘83 – Dayton Daily News
- Op-Ed, Thomas Suddes: Ohio Legislature = Boys Town - The Plain Dealer
- GM, Chrysler labor talks slow – The Plain Dealer
- Steamed about heating bills – Toledo Blade
- Surprise: Pryce becoming a lobbyist – Columbus Dispatch
- Ohio Turnpike toll plan takes from other states – Toledo Blade
- Food inspection complex, has holes – Columbus Dispatch
- Payday lenders use loophole to continue high interest rates – The Plain Dealer
- Health agencies brace for cuts – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Improve Democracy – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Roger Geiger: Secret ballots must remain in union elections – Toledo Blade
- Op-Ed, Joe Hallett: High School buddies solve economic mess – Columbus Dispatch
Ohio Sunday Papers – February 8, 2009
Filed under: Economic Stimuls, Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Ohio Economy, Recession, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt, U.S. Congress, U.S. Economy, ohio politics

- Op-Ed, Thomas Suddes: Strickland’s budget has some odd twists and turns – The Plain Dealer
- GOP’s Carey scrutinizes Strickland budget – Dayton Daily News
- Op-Ed, Joe Hallett: Ohio Dems Clumsily stoop into the mud in attacking Portman - Columbus Dispatch
- Sen. Brown touts Ohio’s $6.8 BN in stimulus - Toledo Blade
- No stimulus deal for Voinovich – The Plain Dealer
- Unemployment hits nearly every area of Ohio analysis shows - The Plain Dealer
- Ohio likes Obama – Columbus Dispatch
- Ohio Mayors in line for stimulus cash – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Jonathan Riskind: Buy American is no sale for Obama – Columbus Dispatch
- Ohio prison staffs feeling strained – Dayton Daily News
- Malaise grows, resources shrink – Columbus Dispatch
- Some wealthy districts would gain, some poor would lose in school funding – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Dennis Willard: Reforming schools starts with audits – Akron Beacon Journal
- Factors in Strickland school funding plan – Columbus Dispatch
- Kasich says wait and see – Columbus Dispatch
- Region has clout in Ohio legislative ranks – Cincinnati Enquirer
- Ohio stem cell researchers get ready for old rules to be tossed – Columbus Dispatch
- Head of PUCO reappointed – Associated Press
- Maureen O’Connor to run for Chief Justice – The Plain Dealer
- Lake Erie ice fishermen rescued, one dies – The Plain Dealer
Ohio Newsbreak – State Budget Coverage
Filed under: Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Gov Strickland, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt, ohio politics
State of Pain – Columbus Dispatch- Budget winners and losers – Columbus Dispatch
- School funding plan not so simple – Columbus Dispatch
- Pay cuts, medical facilities stir outcry – Columbus Dispatch
- Higher fees a tax hike? – Columbus Dispatch
- GOP leaders troubled by one time budget money – Columbus Dispatch
- Federal money for federal debt – Columbus Dispatch
- Governor Strickland’s transportation plan – The Plain Dealer
- Budget effect on NE Ohio schools – The Plain Dealer
- New and increased fees – The Plain Dealer
- Strickland reveals budget – The Plain Dealer
Sen. Coughlin Tilting at Windmills or Just Building the Name Rec?
Filed under: Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Gov Strickland, State of Ohio Govt, ohio politics
He Can’t Really Be Running for Governor
Question: What distinguishes State Sen. Kevin Coughlin from any other Republican in Columbus?
Answer: Nothing.
What is this all about if it’s not about ego? Coughlin is running for Governor? Yep.
This quote from the Dispatch article takes the cake:
Promising to change “the smallness of our politics and our government,” Coughlin said, “We have to make sure we are focused on issues that are really important to Ohioans and there is nothing more important than reviving our economy and bringing jobs to this state and retaining jobs.”
The only “smallness” in Ohio politics and government has come from two places over the past six or seven years:
- Ohio Republicans
- Marc Dann
The only adults in the room at any given time on Capital Square are Ted Strickland and sometimes Sen. Harris. It appears that Strickland has put forth something the Republicans couldn’t do in sixteen years of being in charge – a plan for reforming Ohio’s education system. I also seem to remember that last year the Governor dragged the Republican House and Senate through the Energy bill. Without Ted Strickland’s leadership, Ohioans would be paying more to heat and light their homes and Ohio businesses wouldn’t be able to count on stable energy costs. Republicans came along, but only at the Governor’s urging.
Republicans have done a lot of small talk over the years when it comes to state regulatory reform – Strickland has done something about it. An Associated Press article that got more treatment around the country than it did in Ohio reported a couple of weeks ago about the weeks of time businesses are being saved in their dealings with Bureau of Workers Compensation. Not too long ago Strickland had ODNR, Ohio EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers all in one room for a week to fix the problems with some coal mining permit processes.
The “biggest” thing that’s happened to Ohio politics and its positive impact on people since the bygone era of Vernal G. Riffe and Jimmy Rhodes is Ted Strickland.
When Coughlin talks of “smallness” in state leadership he need only look at his own Ohio Republican Party for the best contemporary example.
If You Read One Thing This Sunday …
… read David Leonhardt’s long piece in the NYT Magazine.
If you’re from Ohio and watching the debate over Gov. Strickland’s education plan, you will get some additional perspective on the long term importance of a world class education system. Additionally, you may understand what Strickland means by “evidence-based.” Leonhardt’s article highlights successes in other parts of the country with education policies that sound like what our Governor has in mind ….
Ohio Sunday Papers – February 1, 2009 – A Lot of Ohio Education Debate
Filed under: Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Gov Strickland, Ohio Economy, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt, U.S. Congress, ohio politics
- PNC Bank considered less stable after National City purchase – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: ACT for Ohio – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Reshaping Ohio’s Schools – Toledo Blade
- Op-Ed, Dennis Willard: No Money to Back Up School Plan – Akron Beacon Journal
- Op-Ed, Michael Douglas: Flaws and all, Strickland’s plan good start – Akron Beacon Journal
- All day kindergarten reflects expectations – Dayton Daily News
- Officials: All Day K costly – Dayton Daily News
- Stakes high for Strickland – Dayton Daily News
- Strickland’s plan could help district retain teachers – Dayton Daily News
- Is Education Strickland’s ‘Afghanistan?’ – Dayton Daily News
- Will Strickland’s longer school year fly? – Toledo Blade
- Longer school year worries Ohio’s tourism industry – Associated Press
- LaTourette’s lobbyist wife’s clients – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: Closer look at Ohio lobbyists – The Plain Dealer
- Husted takes second job with Dayton Chamber – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Aaron Marshall: Strickland Boxes Himself In – The Plain Dealer
- Op-Ed, Jonathan Riskind: Boehner can have impact – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: What does it take to grow NCR here? – Dayton Daily News
- More nepotism from Cuyahoga Sherrif – The Plain Dealer
- Non-profit social service groups plight in this economy – Columbus Dispatch
- Property flipping scam bled $30 million from investors – Columbus Dispatch
- Truckers want uniform speed limit in Ohio – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: PD’s goals for Cleveland – 2009 – The Plain Dealer
Full Text: Gov. Ted Strickland, Ohio State of the State, January 28, 2009 | Ohio’s Economic Future & A New Plan for Education
Filed under: Education, Education Funding in Ohio, Gov Strickland, Health Care, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt
(Source: Office of the Governor)
Governor Strickland’s 2009 State of the State address
I’d like to first recognize that one of Ohio’s great leaders, Senate President Bill Harris, was not able to be with us today. I know that he is in all of our thoughts and prayers, and we wish him a very speedy recovery.
Speaker Budish, Senate President Pro Tem Niehaus, Leader Batchelder and Leader Cafaro, Lt. Governor Fisher, statewide elected officials, members of the Cabinet, members of the General Assembly and the Supreme Court, distinguished guests, First Lady Frances Strickland, and my fellow Ohioans…
There was a time when Ohio State University played its football games on a dusty field surrounded by a humble collection of wooden bleachers.
Back then, OSU played teams from universities and small private colleges. They even scheduled a game against the soldiers from an army camp in Chillicothe.
Just after World War I came to an end there was a painful combination of high inflation and high unemployment that produced economic misery in Ohio and across the nation.
It was a truly frightening moment – hardly the time for a bold new idea.
Ohio Sunday Papers | January 18, 2009 | Ohio Tuskegee Airman, Kevin Boyce, Casinos, Strickland, Ohio Economy, Cuyahoga Corruption, Fingerhut, OCSEA, Hobson, Voinovich, Taxes
Filed under: Big Three Automakers, Cuyahoga Corruption, Education, Gov Strickland, Ohio Economy, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt, ohio politics
- Toledo Tuskegee Airman savors inauguration – Toledo Blade
- State Treasurer fought obstacles on way to success – Dayton Daily News
- Op-Ed, Thomas Suddes: Don’t bet on Casino cure for budget woes – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: Don’t just give it away – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Joe Hallett: Voinovich look back – Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Dennis Willard: Tax Overhaul Needs Revisit - Akron Beacon Journal
- Demise of big city Republicans hurts GOP – Dayton Daily News
- Valley car dealers keep close watch on economy – Youngstown Vindicator
- Strickland working through clemency decisions – Columbus Dispatch
- Dark days for retail – Columbus Dispatch
- Prisons, drugs: A daily war – Columbus Dispatch
- FBI looking at Cleveland suburb – Associated Press
- Hobson to join Vorys, Sater – Columbus Dispatch
- U.S. Supreme Court to review Ohio case – Columbus Dispatch
- $1 billion in worker givebacks sought by state – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Fingerhut clear about higher-ed priorities – Youngstown Vindicator
- State employees stunned by concession requests – The Plain Dealer
Ohio School Funding Has Me Seeing Red Today, Literally
Filed under: Education, Education Funding in Ohio, State of Ohio Govt
It’s no wonder school funding in Ohio makes folks see red. What I got in my mailbox today, did, literally.
Notice to the left an image of the cover of some publication or other the wife and I received today from the Ohio Department of Taxation. This bad boy is all orange, red and scary. One minute you’re leafing through a handful of junk mail and in a second you are assaulted with this catalog-sized publication, seemingly on fire in your very hands, screaming: TAXES FOR SCHOOLS!
I wanted to weep. We’re just trying to get the credit card balance back to zero after Christmas. The Four Horseman of the American Economic Apocalypse may be just around the corner and I’m staring into the Great Seal of the State of Ohio with a nuclear burst in the center and the words, “2008 School District Income Tax Return and Instructions.” To add insult to my heightened senses, this document has pages and pages.
Well, this will be our first tax year in Ohio. I grew up here, went to college at Ohio University and then left for 15 or 16 years. I never owned property here and thought that my school district taxes were property-based and bundled into my mortgage like back in Illinois. I didn’t know there was ‘rigamarole.’
But then, this says, “School District Income Tax …”. Huh? I knew moving to Bexley, Ohio the property taxes were high because of the good city services and school system. What’s this with another income tax? I guess I’m going to have to read this damn book.
One hint to the marketing folks at Taxation. Taxes already make people see red – whether they willingly pay them, like me, or join the local chapter of Posse Comitatus, like others. I would suggest you adjust your color palette more to the muted blues or greens.
Well, I guess I know how I’ll spend the next hour or two …
Ohio Newsbreak – January 7, 2009: Budish, Jimmy Crum Dies, Blackwell’s Quest, Dannettes Reject Offer, Ohio Economy, Fingerhut warns on tuition
Filed under: Cuyahoga Corruption, Education, Health Care, Obama Transition, Ohio Economy, State of Ohio Budget, State of Ohio Govt, ohio politics

- Ohio’s college tuition freeze in jeapoardy – Dayton Daily News
- Lobbyists prepare for another power shift – Columbus Business First
- Somebody wants to hit Blackwell without leaving fingerprints – National Review Online
- With big dreams, Budish takes over as Speaker – Columbus Dispatch
- Budish plans to work hard for cities – The Plain Dealer
- New Ohio House Speaker sworn in – Dayton Daily News
- Dems run House again – Toledo Blade
- Jimmy Crum passes – Columbus Dispatch
- Local credit scores sliding – Cincinnati Enquirer
- Editorial: Cuyahoga Sheriff likes nepotism – The Plain Dealer
- Blackwell talks about guns and Facebook – Dayton Daily News
- Blackwell states his case – The Plain Dealer
- Blackwell continues campaign for RNC – Columbus Dispatch
- Dann Women Reject Settlement – Columbus Dispatch
- Medical Mart realty co. asks for Federal bailout – The Plain Dealer
- Capital Notes – Columbus Dispatch
- Kids’ health insurance touted – Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Ohio Courts’ Secrecy – Columbus Dispatch
- OU Prof will be Obama’s photog – The Plain Dealer
- Climbing prices for rock salt - Toledo Blade



