The Delaware Gazette

Kasich to Ohioans: ‘Don’t fear big ideas’

Ohio Gov. John Kasich deliv­ers his State of the State address at Vet­er­ans Memo­r­ial Civic and Con­ven­tion Cen­ter in Lima Tues­day. (Asso­ci­ated Press | Rick Osentoski)


ANN SANNER

JULIE CARR SMYTH

Asso­ci­ated Press

LIMA — Gov. John Kasich told Ohioans on Tues­day that the state has seen whole­sale improve­ments since he took office, but now is not the time to “rest on our laurels.”

“We must not fear big ideas. We must embrace them,” the Repub­li­can gov­er­nor said in a State of the State speech before about 1,700 at Lima’s Civic Cen­ter. “We can debate them, but at the end of the day, big ideas will renew us, they will restore us.”

Mak­ing the case for his lat­est round of sweep­ing pol­icy pro­pos­als in the upcom­ing bud­get, Kasich told law­mak­ers, statewide office­hold­ers, and invited guests that big changes he’s made to gov­ern­ment so far are show­ing results.

“I came into office to build a team that would put Ohio to work and reclaim our right­ful place in the United States of Amer­ica as one of the great states,” he said. “Ladies and gen­tle­men, today I can tell you with great con­fi­dence that we are suc­ceed­ing in turn­ing our state around — and it is fantastic.”

Kasich is push­ing for sup­port of sev­eral key pro­pos­als, includ­ing a plan to over­haul the state’s school fund­ing plan, an expan­sion of Med­ic­aid under the fed­eral health reform law and an over­haul in his $63.2 bil­lion, two-year bud­get of the state’s tax structure.

Kasich cited Job­sO­hio, the pri­vate non­profit job cre­ation agency that’s faced a per­sis­tent con­sti­tu­tional chal­lenge, as a vital eco­nomic dri­ver that’s diver­si­fy­ing Ohio’s econ­omy from just one or two sec­tors to include bio-health, auto man­u­fac­tur­ing, finan­cial ser­vices, aero­space, IT, agri-business and energy.

Kasich also said Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor’s Com­mon Sense Ini­tia­tive, a reg­u­la­tory retool­ing effort, is mak­ing things eas­ier on the pri­vate sec­tor with­out undue risk.

“If you use com­mon sense, you in fact can pro­tect people’s safety, you in fact can pro­tect our envi­ron­ment and still have job cre­ation in this state,” Kasich said.

The admin­is­tra­tion has also seen the state work­force drop to its low­est lev­els in 30 years, he said, and reduced redun­dancy and revi­tal­ized worn out pro­grams using private-sector man­age­ment techniques.

All that, the gov­er­nor argued, has got­ten the state noticed across the globe — includ­ing at the recent Global Eco­nomic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

But Kasich said now isn’t the time to let up.

“Should we just rest on our lau­rels? That’s what most peo­ple think, when we pull out of the depths of where we were, just kind of relax. Should we just put the state on cruise con­trol? Or, I’ve got another one for you, should we spend the sur­plus? Just kind of take the foot off the gas?” he asked. “Well, we’re going to keep our foot on the gas.”

Kasich’s plans include over­haul­ing Ohio’s tax code to reduce rates for sales, income and small-business taxes, broad­en­ing the sale tax base to include a laun­dry list of new ser­vices, and rais­ing the sev­er­ance tax on high-volume oil and gas drillers swarm­ing the east­ern half of the state.

Kasich also encour­aged law­mak­ers to sup­port his deci­sion to expand Med­ic­aid. The state would see $2.4 bil­lion from Wash­ing­ton to cover those newly eli­gi­ble for Med­ic­aid over the next two years begin­ning in July. Kasich said the action is vital to help Ohio’s safety net for the poor, and par­tic­u­larly for the men­tally ill.

“Some of them live under bridges, some of them live on streets, some of them are in our jails tonight,” he said, in a moment that hushed the crowd.

He pleaded with law­mak­ers, some from his own party who opposed the fed­eral health care man­date and oppose expanded gov­ern­ment, to exam­ine their con­science and keep an open mind.

Kasich fur­ther used the speech to defend the mer­its of his new school-funding for­mula, which deliv­ers $1.2 bil­lion more to K-12 edu­ca­tion by first rais­ing base fund­ing then pro­vid­ing add-ons for poor, dis­abled, gifted, and other cat­e­gories of stu­dents. He called it an objec­tive plan that applies equally to all dis­tricts based on their prop­erty tax wealth, res­i­dents’ income and indi­vid­ual char­ac­ter­is­tics of stu­dents they serve.

All these poli­cies are intended to cre­ate jobs, Kasich said — some­thing he char­ac­ter­ized as “our great­est moral pur­pose.” In Lima, a city with dras­ti­cally reduced unem­ploy­ment and 3,200 new private-sector jobs, Kasich found a “shin­ing exam­ple” for the state.

Despite the protests of a hand­ful of union work­ers out­side the speech, he said his tax and spend­ing changes aren’t about polit­i­cal lean­ings — they’re prac­ti­cal. “This is not ide­ol­ogy, this is just the way the world works.”

Kasich recalled vis­it­ing Ohio on vaca­tion as a boy and lov­ing it so much he knew it would be his home.

“We’ve all seen our state drift over time, we’ve seen it get old, we’ve seen in mis­fire and fall behind, but like a great old home, I knew Ohio could be restored to its grandeur, to its great­ness,” he said.

Recall­ing his time in Con­gress, he lamented the bit­ter­ness of today’s pol­i­tics — point­ing to a series of bills with bipar­ti­san back­ing that he’s worked for and supported.

“If anger, vit­riol and par­ti­san­ship pre­vail, our chil­dren, our state and our coun­try will con­tinue to suf­fer,” he said. “Peo­ple never pos­i­tively remem­ber those who tear down, peo­ple respect those who build up.”

He recalled the late Ohio Gov. James Rhodes, a Repub­li­can, and the late House Speaker Ver­nal Riffe, a Demo­c­rat, as they worked together for the good of the state.

“The sim­ple fact of the mat­ter is we’re going to have to work together,” he said.

Kasich pre­sented his annual Governor’s Courage Award to the sons of late astro­naut Neil Arm­strong, com­mu­nity mem­bers in Chardon, site of a school shoot­ing a year ago, and a woman who has worked to break stereo­types about autism.

AP News Posted by on Feb 19 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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