As Pending in House Finance and Appropriations Committee
| 127th General Assembly | | Regular Session | | 2007-2008 |
| |
A BILL
To amend sections 9.821, 9.822, 9.823, 9.83, 107.12, 107.40, 109.57, 109.572, 109.93, 111.18, 118.01, 118.08, 118.17, 118.20, 118.23, 119.07, 120.33, 122.17, 122.171, 122.602, 124.152, 125.45, 125.93, 125.96, 125.97, 125.98, 126.07, 126.08, 126.16, 126.21, 126.22, 127.14, 127.16, 131.44, 133.01, 133.10, 133.25, 135.35, 135.352, 151.08, 151.40, 152.31, 156.02, 164.03, 164.05, 164.051, 164.08, 164.09, 166.08, 173.04, 173.35, 173.71, 173.85, 173.86, 174.03, 174.06, 183.01, 183.021, 183.17, 183.33, 183.34, 183.35, 307.021, 307.37, 307.695, 307.6910, 307.98, 307.981, 308.04, 317.08, 319.202, 319.281, 319.54, 321.08, 322.01, 323.151, 323.152, 323.153, 323.154, 325.31, 329.04, 329.05, 329.14, 340.03, 505.376, 517.08, 521.01, 709.191, 711.05, 711.10, 711.131, 718.13, 742.301, 1503.05, 1504.02, 1506.01, 1506.99, 1521.01, 1521.20, 1521.21, 1521.22, 1521.23, 1521.24, 1521.25, 1521.26, 1521.27, 1521.28, 1521.29, 1521.99, 1531.06, 1531.35, 1548.06, 1555.08, 1557.03, 1901.34, 2151.362, 2913.40, 2921.42, 2927.023, 2935.03, 3109.04, 3109.041, 3119.022, 3119.023, 3119.27, 3119.29, 3119.30, 3125.12, 3301.0711, 3301.0714, 3301.53, 3302.03, 3302.10, 3311.24, 3313.41, 3313.615, 3313.64, 3313.646, 3313.66, 3313.661, 3313.98, 3314.015, 3314.02, 3314.03, 3314.074, 3314.08, 3314.26, 3317.01, 3317.012, 3317.013, 3317.014, 3317.015, 3317.016, 3317.017, 3317.02, 3317.021, 3317.022, 3317.023, 3317.024, 3317.025, 3317.026, 3317.027, 3317.028, 3317.029, 3317.0216, 3317.0217, 3317.03, 3317.04, 3317.05, 3317.06, 3317.08, 3317.16, 3317.20, 3317.201, 3318.12, 3318.15, 3318.26, 3319.55, 3321.01, 3323.01, 3323.11, 3327.05, 3333.04, 3333.122, 3333.38, 3357.01, 3365.01, 3375.05, 3375.121, 3375.40, 3375.85, 3381.04, 3501.17, 3701.74, 3701.741, 3701.83, 3702.52, 3702.5211, 3702.5212, 3702.5213, 3702.57, 3702.68, 3704.03, 3704.14, 3705.24, 3709.09, 3709.091, 3721.51, 3721.541, 3721.56, 3734.57, 3735.672, 3745.11, 3746.04, 3769.087, 3770.03, 3770.06, 3905.36, 4123.35, 4141.09, 4301.43, 4503.06, 4503.061, 4503.064, 4503.065, 4503.066, 4503.067, 4503.10, 4503.102, 4503.35, 4505.06, 4513.263, 4513.35, 4519.55, 4717.07, 4723.621, 4723.63, 4723.64, 4723.65, 4723.66, 4731.142, 4731.22, 4736.01, 4743.05, 4755.03, 4766.05, 4775.08, 4921.40, 5101.162, 5101.21, 5101.211, 5101.212, 5101.213, 5101.24, 5101.242, 5101.244, 5101.24, 5101.47, 5101.50, 5101.571, 5101.572, 5101.58, 5101.59, 5101.802, 5101.98, 5104.30, 5107.02, 5107.03, 5107.05, 5107.10, 5107.12, 5107.14, 5107.16, 5107.17, 5107.281, 5107.30, 5107.36, 5107.41, 5107.42, 5111.01, 5111.014, 5111.016, 5111.019, 5111.0112, 5111.023, 5111.03, 5111.06, 5111.084, 5111.10, 5111.101, 5111.163, 5111.17, 5111.20, 5111.871, 5111.8814, 5111.95, 5111.96, 5112.341, 5115.12, 5119.611, 5123.01, 5123.043, 5123.045, 5123.051, 5123.19, 5123.196, 5123.198, 5123.20, 5123.211, 5123.38, 5123.41, 5123.51, 5123.99, 5126.038, 5126.042, 5126.046, 5126.055, 5126.057, 5126.06, 5126.11, 5126.12, 5126.15, 5126.18, 5126.19, 5126.25, 5126.40, 5126.42, 5126.43, 5126.45, 5126.47, 5139.27, 5139.271, 5139.43, 5302.30, 5528.54, 5531.10, 5537.04, 5537.16, 5537.99, 5705.28, 5705.281, 5705.29, 5705.30, 5705.31, 5705.32, 5705.321, 5705.37, 5709.68, 5709.882, 5715.36, 5719.041, 5725.151, 5725.24, 5727.45, 5727.84, 5727.85, 5727.87, 5733.01, 5733.12, 5733.98, 5739.02, 5739.033, 5739.12, 5739.21, 5741.02, 5741.03, 5743.01, 5743.20, 5743.331, 5745.02, 5745.05, 5745.13, 5747.03, 5747.46, 5747.47, 5747.48, 5747.50, 5747.501, 5747.51, 5747.52, 5747.53, 5747.54, 5747.55, 5747.98, 5748.01, 5748.02, 5748.021, 5748.04, 5748.08, 5751.20, 5751.21, 5751.23, 5907.15, 6109.21, 6111.04, 6111.44, 6121.04, 6121.043, and 6131.23; to amend, for the purpose of adopting new section numbers as indicated in parentheses, sections 1521.20 (1506.38), 1521.21 (1506.39), 1521.22 (1506.40), 1521.23 (1506.41), 1521.24 (1506.42), 1521.25 (1506.43), 1521.26 (1506.44), 1521.27 (1506.45), 1521.28 (1506.46), 1521.29 (1506.47), 1521.30 (1506.48), 3702.63 (3702.591), 3702.68 (3702.59), 5101.521 (9.15), 5111.95 (5111.033), and 5111.96 (5111.034); to enact new sections 3318.47, 5101.521, and 5123.16 and sections 122.051, 122.071, 122.076, 122.174, 126.24, 126.40, 131.51, 183.51, 183.52, 901.261, 991.08, 3123.23, 3301.162, 3310.51 to 3310.63, 3314.016, 3314.086, 3314.087, 3314.19, 3317.161, 3323.052, 3327.17, 3333.50, 3345.02, 3353.20, 3353.21, 3353.22, 3353.23, 3353.24, 3353.25, 3353.26, 3353.27, 3353.28, 3353.29, 3353.30, 3357.13, 3701.135, 4766.22, 4923.26, 5101.52, 5101.522, 5101.523, 5101.524, 5101.525, 5101.526, 5101.527, 5101.528, 5101.529, 5101.541, 5101.573, 5101.574, 5101.575, 5101.591, 5107.04, 5111.0119, 5111.028, 5111.031, 5111.032, 5111.102, 5111.84, 5111.861, 5114.01, 5114.02, 5114.03, 5114.04, 5114.05, 5123.033, 5123.0414, 5123.0415, 5123.161, 5123.162, 5123.163, 5123.164, 5123.165, 5123.166, 5123.167, 5123.168, 5123.169, 5123.605, 5323.011, 5533.91, 5733.48, 5739.029, 5739.213, 5747.77, 5748.022, 5907.16, and 6111.0381; to repeal sections 125.95, 183.02, 183.27, 183.32, 3318.47, 3318.48, 3318.49, 3333.29, 3702.68, 3718.01, 3718.02, 3718.021, 3718.03, 3718.04, 3718.05, 3718.06, 3718.07, 3718.08, 3718.09, 3718.10, 3718.99, 4911.021, 5111.161, 5123.16, 5123.182, 5123.199, 5126.035, 5126.036, 5126.053, 5126.431, 5126.44, 5126.451, 5747.61, 5747.62, 5747.63, and 6111.441 of the Revised Code; to amend Section 310.10 of Am. Sub. H.B. 67 of the 127th General Assembly; to amend Section 252.70 of Am. Sub. H.B. 530 of the 126th General Assembly, to amend Section 153 of Am. Sub. H.B. 117 of the 121st General Assembly, as subsequently amended, to amend the version of section 127.16 of the Revised Code that is scheduled to take effect July 1, 2007, and to repeal the version of section 3702.68 of the Revised Code that was to have taken effect July 1, 2007, to make operating appropriations for the biennium beginning July 1, 2007, and ending June 30, 2009, and to provide authorization and conditions for the operation of state programs; to confirm and order implementation of sections 9.833, 9.90, 3311.19, 3313.12, 3313.202, 3313.33, 4117.03, and 4117.08 and to confirm and order complete implementation of section 9.901 of the Revised Code as the sections result from Am. Sub. H.B. 66 of the 126th General Assembly; to repeal Section 611.03 of Am. Sub. H.B. 66 of the 126th General Assembly; and to amend sections 9.90, 9.901, 3313.202, 3313.33, and 4117.03 of the Revised Code to make other specifications pertaining to that implementation as have become necessary; and to terminate operation of section 5101.213 of the Revised Code on July 1, 2008, by repealing the section on that date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 101.01. That sections 9.821, 9.822, 9.823, 9.83, 107.12, 107.40, 109.57, 109.572, 109.93, 111.18, 118.01, 118.08, 118.17, 118.20, 118.23, 119.07, 120.33, 122.17, 122.171, 122.602, 124.152, 125.45, 125.93, 125.96, 125.97, 125.98, 126.07, 126.08, 126.16, 126.21, 126.22, 127.14, 127.16, 131.44, 133.01, 133.10, 133.25, 135.35, 135.352, 151.08, 151.40, 152.31, 156.02, 164.03, 164.05, 164.051, 164.08, 164.09, 166.08, 173.04, 173.35, 173.71, 173.85, 173.86, 174.03, 174.06, 183.01, 183.021, 183.17, 183.33, 183.34, 183.35, 307.021, 307.37, 307.695, 307.6910, 307.98, 307.981, 308.04, 317.08, 319.202, 319.281, 319.54, 321.08, 322.01, 323.151, 323.152, 323.153, 323.154, 325.31, 329.04, 329.05, 329.14, 340.03, 505.376, 517.08, 521.01, 709.191, 711.05, 711.10, 711.131, 718.13, 742.301, 1503.05, 1504.02, 1506.01, 1506.99, 1521.01, 1521.20, 1521.21, 1521.22, 1521.23, 1521.24, 1521.25, 1521.26, 1521.27, 1521.28, 1521.29, 1521.99, 1531.06, 1531.35, 1548.06, 1555.08, 1557.03, 1901.34, 2151.362, 2913.40, 2921.42, 2927.023, 2935.03, 3109.04, 3109.041, 3119.022, 3119.023, 3119.27, 3119.29, 3119.30, 3125.12, 3301.0711, 3301.0714, 3301.53, 3302.03, 3302.10, 3311.24, 3313.41, 3313.615, 3313.64, 3313.646, 3313.66, 3313.661, 3313.98, 3314.015, 3314.02, 3314.03, 3314.074, 3314.08, 3314.26, 3317.01, 3317.012, 3317.013, 3317.014, 3317.015, 3317.016, 3317.017, 3317.02, 3317.021, 3317.022, 3317.023, 3317.024, 3317.025, 3317.026, 3317.027, 3317.028, 3317.029, 3317.0216, 3317.0217, 3317.03, 3317.04, 3317.05, 3317.06, 3317.08, 3317.16, 3317.20, 3317.201, 3318.12, 3318.15, 3318.26, 3319.55, 3321.01, 3323.01, 3323.11, 3327.05, 3333.04, 3333.122, 3333.38, 3357.01, 3365.01, 3375.05, 3375.121, 3375.40, 3375.85, 3381.04, 3501.17, 3701.74, 3701.741, 3701.83, 3702.52, 3702.5211, 3702.5212, 3702.5213, 3702.57, 3702.68, 3704.03, 3704.14, 3705.24, 3709.09, 3709.091, 3721.51, 3721.541, 3721.56, 3734.57, 3735.672, 3745.11, 3746.04, 3769.087, 3770.03, 3770.06, 3905.36, 4123.35, 4141.09, 4301.43, 4503.06, 4503.061, 4503.064, 4503.065, 4503.066, 4503.067, 4503.10, 4503.102, 4503.35, 4505.06, 4513.263, 4513.35, 4519.55, 4717.07, 4723.621, 4723.63, 4723.64, 4723.65, 4723.66, 4731.142, 4731.22, 4736.01, 4743.05, 4755.03, 4766.05, 4775.08, 4921.40, 5101.162, 5101.21, 5101.211, 5101.212, 5101.213, 5101.24, 5101.242, 5101.244, 5101.26, 5101.47, 5101.50, 5101.571, 5101.572, 5101.58, 5101.59, 5101.802, 5101.98, 5104.30, 5107.02, 5107.03, 5107.05, 5107.10, 5107.12, 5107.14, 5107.16, 5107.17, 5107.281, 5107.30, 5107.36, 5107.41, 5107.42, 5111.01, 5111.014, 5111.016, 5111.019, 5111.0112, 5111.023, 5111.03, 5111.06, 5111.084, 5111.10, 5111.101, 5111.163, 5111.17, 5111.20, 5111.871, 5111.8814, 5111.95, 5111.96, 5112.341, 5115.12, 5119.611, 5123.01, 5123.043, 5123.045, 5123.051, 5123.19, 5123.196, 5123.198, 5123.20, 5123.211, 5123.38, 5123.41, 5123.51, 5123.99, 5126.038, 5126.042, 5126.046, 5126.055, 5126.057, 5126.06, 5126.11, 5126.12, 5126.15, 5126.18, 5126.19, 5126.25, 5126.40, 5126.42, 5126.43, 5126.45, 5126.47, 5139.27, 5139.271, 5139.43, 5302.30, 5528.54, 5531.10, 5537.04, 5537.16, 5537.99, 5705.28, 5705.281, 5705.29, 5705.30, 5705.31, 5705.32, 5705.321, 5705.37, 5709.68, 5709.882, 5715.36, 5719.041, 5725.151, 5725.24, 5727.45, 5727.84, 5727.85, 5727.87, 5733.01, 5733.12, 5733.98, 5739.02, 5739.033, 5739.12, 5739.21, 5741.02, 5741.03, 5743.01, 5743.20, 5743.331, 5745.02, 5745.05, 5745.13, 5747.03, 5747.46, 5747.47, 5747.48, 5747.50, 5747.501, 5747.51, 5747.52, 5747.53, 5747.54, 5747.55, 5747.98, 5748.01, 5748.02, 5748.021, 5748.04, 5748.08, 5751.20, 5751.21, 5751.23, 5907.15, 6109.21, 6111.04, 6111.44, 6121.04, 6121.043, and 6131.23 be amended; sections 1521.20 (1506.38), 1521.21 (1506.39), 1521.22 (1506.40), 1521.23 (1506.41), 1521.24 (1506.42), 1521.25 (1506.43), 1521.26 (1506.44), 1521.27 (1506.45), 1521.28 (1506.46), 1521.29 (1506.47), 1521.30 (1506.48), 3702.63 (3702.591), 3702.68 (3702.59), 5101.521 (9.15), 5111.95 (5111.033), and 5111.96 (5111.034) be amended for the purpose of adopting new section numbers as indicated in parentheses; and new sections 3318.47, 5101.521, and 5123.16 and sections 122.051, 122.071, 122.076, 122.174, 126.24, 126.40, 131.51, 183.51, 183.52, 901.261, 991.08, 3123.23, 3301.162, 3310.51, 3310.52, 3310.53, 3310.54, 3310.55, 3310.56, 3310.57, 3310.58, 3310.59, 3310.60, 3310.61, 3310.62, 3310.63, 3314.016, 3314.086, 3314.087, 3314.19, 3317.161, 3323.052, 3327.17, 3333.50, 3345.02, 3353.20, 3353.21, 3353.22, 3353.23, 3353.24, 3353.25, 3353.26, 3353.27, 3353.28, 3353.29, 3353.30, 3357.13, 3701.135, 4766.22, 4923.26, 5101.52, 5101.522, 5101.523, 5101.524, 5101.525, 5101.526, 5101.527, 5101.528, 5101.529, 5101.541, 5101.573, 5101.574, 5101.575, 5101.591, 5107.04, 5111.0119, 5111.028, 5111.031, 5111.032, 5111.102, 5111.84, 5111.861, 5123.033, 5123.0414, 5123.0415, 5123.161, 5123.162, 5123.163, 5123.164, 5123.165, 5123.166, 5123.167, 5123.168, 5123.169, 5123.605, 5323.011, 5533.91, 5733.48, 5739.029, 5739.213, 5747.77, 5748.022, 5907.16, and 6111.0381 of the Revised Code be enacted to read as follows:
Sec. 5101.521 9.15. When the body of a dead person is found in
a
township or municipal corporation, and such person was not an
inmate of a correctional, benevolent, or charitable
institution of
this state, and the body is not claimed by any
person for private
interment or cremation at the
person's own expense,
or delivered
for the purpose of medical or surgical study or dissection in
accordance with section 1713.34 of the Revised Code,
it shall be
disposed of as follows:
(A) If the person was a legal resident of the county, the
proper officers of the township or municipal corporation in which
the person's body was found shall cause it to be buried or
cremated at
the expense of the township or municipal corporation
in which the
person had a legal residence at the time of death.
(B) If the person had a legal residence in any other
county
of the state at the time of death, the superintendent
of the
county home of the county in which such body was found
shall cause
it to be buried or cremated at the expense of the township
or
municipal corporation in which the person had a legal
residence at
the time of death.
(C) If the person was an inmate of a correctional
institution of the county or a patient or resident of a
benevolent
institution of the county, the person had no legal residence
in
the state, or the person's legal residence is unknown,
the
superintendent shall cause the person to be buried or
cremated at
the expense of the county.
Such officials shall provide, at the grave of the person
or,
if the person's cremated remains are buried, at the grave of the
person's
cremated remains,
a stone or concrete marker on which the
person's name and
age, if known, and date of death shall be
inscribed.
A political subdivision is not relieved of its duty to bury
or cremate a person at its expense under this section when the
body is
claimed by an indigent person.
Sec. 9.821. (A) The department of administrative services
shall direct and manage for state agencies all risk management
and
insurance programs authorized under section 9.822 of the
Revised
Code.
(B) The office of risk management is hereby established
within the department of administrative services. The director
of
administrative services, or a deputy director appointed by the
director, shall control and supervise the office.
(C) The office may take any of the following actions that
it
determines to be in the best interests of the state:
(1) Provide all insurance coverages for the state,
including, but not limited to, automobile liability, casualty,
property, public liability, and, except as provided in division
(C)(6) of this section, fidelity bond insurance bonding. The cost of
insurance coverage shall be paid from appropriations made to the
state agencies that the office has designated to receive the
coverage.
(2) Provide coverage of legal expenses that are necessary
and related to the legal defense of claims against the state;
(3) Purchase insurance policies consistent with sections
125.01 to 125.111 of the Revised Code, develop and administer
self-insurance programs, or do both;
(4) Consolidate and combine state insurance coverages;
(5) Provide technical services in risk management and
insurance to state agencies;
(6)(a) Establish and administer a self-insured fidelity
bond
program for a particular class or subclass of state officer,
employee, or agent, if, prior to the establishment and
administration of this program, the director does both of the
following:
(i) Holds a hearing in accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code to determine whether fidelity bond insurance for
that
particular class or subclass of state officer, employee, or
agent
is available in the voluntary market;
(ii) If, as a result of that hearing, the director
determines that fidelity bond insurance for a particular class or
subclass of state officer, employee, or agent is unavailable in
the voluntary market and that the absence of this insurance
threatens the operation of state government and will be
detrimental to the general welfare of the citizens of this state,
adopts rules in accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code
to establish standards and procedures governing the
establishment,
administration, and termination of the fidelity
bond program for
that particular class or subclass of state
officer, employee, or
agent.
(b) Division (C)(6)(a) of this section does not apply to
any
self-insured blanket fidelity bond program that, on
September 20,
1993, has
been
established
pursuant to section 9.831
of the
Revised
Code.
(7) Except as provided in division (C)(6) of this section,
adopt Adopt and publish, in accordance with section 111.15 of the
Revised Code, necessary rules and procedures governing the
administration of the state's insurance and risk management
activities.
(D) No state agency, except a state agency exempted under
section 125.02 or 125.04 of the Revised Code from the
department's
purchasing authority, shall purchase any insurance
described in
this section except as authorized by the department, when the office of risk management determines that the purchase is in the best interest of the state pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section,
and in
accordance with terms, conditions, and procurement methods
established by the department.
(E) With respect to any civil action, demand, or claim
against the state that could be filed in the court of claims,
nothing in sections 9.82 to 9.823 of the Revised Code shall be
interpreted to permit the settlement or compromise of those civil
actions, demands, or claims, except in the manner provided in
Chapter 2743. of the Revised Code.
Sec. 9.822. (A) The department of administrative services
through the office of risk management shall establish an
insurance
plan or plans
that may provide for self-insurance or
the
purchase
of insurance, or both, for any either of the following
purposes:
(1) Insuring state real and personal property against
losses
occasioned by fire, windstorm, or other accidents and
perils;
(2) Insuring the state and its officers and employees
against liability resulting from any civil action, demand, or
claim against the state or its officers and employees arising out
of any act or omission of an officer or employee in the
performance of
official duties, except acts and omissions
for
which
indemnification is prohibited under section 9.87 of the
Revised
Code;.
(3) Insuring (B) The department of administrative services through the office of risk management shall establish one or more insurance plans that provide for the purchase of insurance for the purpose of insuring the state through the fidelity bonding of
state
officers, employees, and agents who are required by law to
provide
a fidelity bond. Nothing in this section shall be construed to allow the department of administrative services through the office of risk management to administer the state's fidelity bonding program through a program of self-insurance.
(B)(1) Prior to the establishment of any self-insured
fidelity bond program for a particular class or subclass of state
officer, employee, or agent authorized pursuant to division
(A)(3)
of this section, the director of administrative services
shall
follow the procedures for holding a hearing and adopting
rules set
forth in division (C)(6)(a) of section 9.821 of the
Revised Code.
(2) Division (B)(1) of this section does not apply to any
self-insured blanket fidelity bond program that, on
September 20,
1993, has been
established
pursuant to section 9.831
of the
Revised Code.
(3) The director shall prepare annually a written report
detailing any self-insured fidelity bond program established
pursuant to division (A)(3) of this section. The report shall
include, but is not limited to, information relating to premiums
collected, income from recovery, loss experience, and
administrative costs of the program. A copy of the report,
together with a copy of those portions of the most recent reports
submitted under division (D) of section 9.823 of the Revised Code
that pertain to any such self-insured fidelity bond
program,
shall
be submitted to the speaker of the house of
representatives
and
the president of the senate by the
last
day of
March of
each
year.
Sec. 9.823. (A) All contributions collected by the
director of administrative services under division (E) of this
section shall be deposited into the state treasury to the credit
of the risk management reserve fund, which is hereby created.
The fund shall be used to provide insurance and self-insurance
for the state under section sections 9.822 and 9.83 of the Revised Code. All
investment earnings of the fund shall be credited to it.
(B) The director, through the office of risk management,
shall operate the risk management reserve fund on an actuarially
sound basis.
(C) Reserves shall be maintained in the risk management
reserve fund in any amount that is necessary and adequate, in the
exercise of sound and prudent actuarial judgment, to cover
potential liability claims, expenses, fees, or damages. Money in
the fund may be applied to the payment of liability claims that
are filed against the state in the court of claims and determined
in the manner provided for under Chapter 2743. of the Revised
Code. The director may procure the services of a qualified
actuarial firm for the purpose of recommending the specific
amount of money that would be required to maintain adequate
reserves for a given period of time.
(D) A report of the amounts reserved and disbursements
made from the reserves, together with a written report of a
competent property and casualty actuary, shall be submitted, on
or before the last day of March for the preceding calendar year,
to the speaker of the house of representatives and the president
of the senate. The actuary shall certify the adequacy of the
rates of contributions, the sufficiency of excess insurance, and
whether the amounts reserved conform to the requirements of this
section, are computed in accordance with accepted loss reserving
standards, and are fairly stated in accordance with sound loss
reserving principles. The report shall include disbursements
made for the administration of the fund, including claims paid,
cost of legal representation of state agencies and employees, and
fees paid to consultants.
(E) The director shall collect from each state agency or
any participating state body its contribution to the risk
management reserve fund for the purpose of purchasing insurance
or administering self-insurance programs for coverages authorized
under section sections 9.822 and 9.83 of the Revised Code. The contribution shall
be determined by the director, with the approval of the director
of budget and management, and shall be based upon actuarial
assumptions and the relative risk and loss experience of each
state agency or participating state body. The contribution shall
further include a reasonable sum to cover the department's
administrative costs.
Sec. 9.83. (A) The state and any political subdivision
may procure a policy or policies of insurance insuring its
officers and employees against liability for injury, death, or
loss to person or property that arises out of the operation of an
automobile, truck, motor vehicle with auxiliary equipment,
self-propelling equipment or trailer, aircraft, or watercraft by
the officers or employees while engaged in the course of their
employment or official responsibilities for the state or the
political subdivision. The state is authorized to expend funds
to pay judgments that are rendered in any court against its
officers or employees and that result from such operation, and is
authorized to expend funds to compromise claims for liability
against its officers or employees that result from such
operation. No insurer shall deny coverage under such a policy,
and the state shall not refuse to pay judgments or compromise
claims, on the ground that an automobile, truck, motor vehicle
with auxiliary equipment, self-propelling equipment or trailer,
aircraft, or watercraft was not being used in the course of an
officer's or employee's employment or official responsibilities
for the state or a political subdivision unless the officer or
employee who was operating an automobile, truck, motor vehicle
with auxiliary equipment, or self-propelling equipment or trailer
is convicted of a violation of section 124.71 of the Revised Code
as a result of the same events.
(B) Funds shall be reserved as necessary, in the
exercise of sound and prudent actuarial judgment, to cover
potential expense, fees, damage, loss, or other liability. The
superintendent of insurance office of risk management may recommend or, if the state
requests of the superintendent office of risk management, shall recommend, a specific
amount for any period of time that, in the superintendent's
opinion of the office of risk management, represents
such a judgment.
(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed to require
the department of administrative services to purchase liability
insurance for all state vehicles in a single policy of insurance
or to cover all state vehicles under a single plan of
self-insurance.
(D) Insurance procured by the state pursuant to this
section shall be procured as provided in section 125.03 of the
Revised Code.
(E) For purposes of liability insurance procured under this
section to cover the operation of a motor vehicle by a prisoner for whom the
insurance is procured, "employee" includes a prisoner in the custody of the
department of
rehabilitation and correction who is enrolled in a work program that is
established by the department pursuant to section 5145.16
of the Revised Code and in which
the prisoner is required to operate a motor vehicle, as defined in section
4509.01 of the Revised Code, and who is engaged in the operation of a motor
vehicle in the
course of the work program.
(F) There is hereby created in the state treasury the vehicle liability fund. All contributions collected by the director of administrative services under division (I) of this section shall be deposited into the fund. The fund shall be used to provide insurance and self-insurance for the state under this section. All investment earnings of the fund shall be credited to it risk management reserve fund created in section 9.823 of the Revised Code to the credit of the vehicle liability program.
(G) The director of administrative services, through the office of risk management, shall operate the vehicle liability fund on an actuarially sound basis.
(H) Reserves shall be maintained in the vehicle liability risk management reserve fund to the credit of the vehicle liability program in any amount that is necessary and adequate, in the exercise of sound and prudent actuarial judgment, to cover potential liability claims, expenses, fees, or damages. Money in the fund may be applied to the payment of liability claims that are filed against the state in the court of claims and determined in the manner provided in Chapter 2743. of the Revised Code. The director of administrative services may procure the services of a qualified actuarial firm for the purpose of recommending the specific amount of money that is required to maintain adequate reserves for a specified period of time.
(I)(H) The director of administrative services shall collect from each state agency or any participating state body its contribution to the vehicle liability fund program for the purpose of purchasing insurance or administering self-insurance programs for coverage authorized under this section. The amount of the contribution shall be determined by the director, with the approval of the director of budget and management. It shall be based upon actuarial assumptions and the relative risk and loss experience of each state agency or participating state body. The amount of the contribution also shall include a reasonable sum to cover administrative costs of the department of administrative services. The amounts collected pursuant to this division shall be deposited in the risk management reserve fund to the credit of the vehicle liability program.
Sec. 107.12. (A) As used in this section, "organization" means a faith-based or other organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 100 Stat. 2085, 26 U.S.C. 1, as amended, and provides charitable services to needy residents of this state.
(B) There is hereby established within the office of the governor the governor's office of faith-based and community initiatives. The office shall:
(1) Serve as a clearinghouse of information on federal, state, and local funding for charitable services performed by organizations;
(2) Encourage organizations to seek public funding for their charitable services;
(3) Act as a liaison between state agencies and organizations;
(4) Advise the governor, general assembly, and the advisory board of the governor's office of faith-based community initiatives on the barriers that exist to collaboration between organizations and governmental entities and on ways to remove the barriers.
(C) The governor shall appoint an executive assistant to manage the office and perform or oversee the performance of the duties of the office.
(D)(1) There is hereby created the advisory board of the governor's office of faith-based and community initiatives. The board shall consist of members appointed as follows:
(a) The directors of aging, alcohol
and drug addiction
services, rehabilitation and correction, health, job
and
family services, mental health, and youth services shall each
appoint to
the board one employee of that director's
department.
(b) The speaker of the house of representatives shall
appoint to the board two members of the house of
representatives, not more than one of whom shall be from the same
political party and at least one of whom shall be from the legislative black caucus. The speaker of the house of representatives shall consult with the president of the legislative black caucus in making the legislative black caucus member appointment. The president of the senate shall appoint to the
board two members of the senate, not more than one of whom
shall be from the same political party.
(c) The governor, speaker of the house of representatives,
and president of the senate shall each appoint to the board
three representatives of the nonprofit, faith-based and other
nonprofit
community.
(2) The appointments to the board shall be made within
thirty days after the effective date of this section. Terms of the office shall be one year. Any vacancy
that occurs on the board shall be filled in the same manner
as the original appointment. The members of the board shall
serve without compensation.
(3) At its initial meeting, the board shall elect a
chairperson. The
chairperson shall be a member of the board who is a member of
the house of representatives.
(E) The board shall do both of the following:
(1) Provide direction, guidance, and oversight to the office;
(2) Publish a report of its activities on or before the first day of August of each year, and deliver copies of the report to the governor, the speaker and minority leader of the house of representatives, and the president and minority leader of the senate.
(F) No member of the board or organization that the member is affiliated or involved with is eligible to receive any grant that the office administers or assists in administering.
Sec. 107.40. (A) There is hereby created the
governor's residence advisory commission. The commission shall
provide for the preservation, restoration, acquisition, and
conservation of all decorations, objects of art, chandeliers,
china, silver, statues, paintings, furnishings, accouterments,
and other aesthetic materials that have been acquired, donated,
loaned, or otherwise obtained by the state for the governor's
residence and that have been approved by the commission. In addition, the commission shall provide for the maintenance of plants that have been acquired, donated, loaned, or otherwise obtained by the state for the governor's residence and that have been approved by the commission.
(B) The commission shall
be responsible for the care, provision, repair, and placement of
furnishings and other objects and accessories of the grounds and
public areas of the first story of the governor's residence and for the care and placement of plants on the grounds. In
exercising this responsibility, the commission shall preserve
and seek to further establish all of the following:
(1) The authentic ambiance and decor
of the historic era during which the governor's residence was
constructed;
(2) The grounds as a representation of Ohio's natural ecosystems;
(3) The heritage garden for all of the following purposes:
(a) To preserve, sustain, and encourage the use of native flora throughout the state;
(b) To replicate the state's physiographic regions, plant communities, and natural landscapes;
(c) To serve as an educational garden that demonstrates the artistic, industrial, political, horticultural, and geologic history of the state through the use of plants;
(d) To serve as a reservoir of rare species of plants from the physiographic regions of the state.
These duties shall not affect the obligation of
the department of administrative services to provide for the and adopt policies and procedures regarding the use,
general maintenance, and operating expenses of the governor's
residence.
(C) The commission shall
consist of eleven members. One member shall be the director of
administrative services or the director's designee, who shall
serve during the director's term of office and shall serve as
chairperson. One member shall be the director of the
Ohio historical society or the
director's designee, who shall serve during the director's term
of office and shall serve as vice-chairperson. One
member shall
represent the Columbus
landmarks foundation. One member shall represent the
Bexley historical society. One member shall be the mayor of the city of Bexley, who shall serve during the mayor's term of office. One member shall be the chief executive officer of the Franklin park conservatory joint recreation district, who shall serve during the term of employment as chief executive officer. The
remaining five members shall be appointed by the governor with
the advice and consent of the senate. The five members appointed by the
governor shall be persons with knowledge of
Ohio history, architecture,
decorative arts, or historic preservation, and one of those members shall have knowledge of landscape architecture, garden design, horticulture, and plants native to this state.
(D) Of the initial appointees, the representative of the
Columbus landmarks foundation shall serve for a term expiring
December 31, 1996, and the representative of the Bexley
historical society shall serve for a term expiring
December 31, 1997. Of the five
members appointed by the governor, three shall serve for terms
ending December 31, 1998, and two shall serve for terms ending December 31,
1999. Thereafter, each term shall be for four years, commencing on the first
day of January and ending on the last day of December. The member having knowledge of landscape architecture, garden design, horticulture, and plants native to this state initially shall be appointed upon the first vacancy on the commission occurring on or after June 30, 2006.
Each
member shall hold office from the date of the member's
appointment until the end of the term for which the member was
appointed. Any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring
prior to the end of the term for which the member's predecessor
was appointed shall hold office for the remainder of the term.
Any member shall continue in office subsequent to the expiration
of the term until the member's successor takes office.
(E) Six members of the
commission constitute a quorum, and the affirmative vote of six
members is required for approval of any action by the
commission.
(F) After each initial
member of the commission has been appointed, the commission
shall meet and select one member as secretary and another as
treasurer. Organizational meetings of the commission shall be
held at the time and place designated by call of the
chairperson.
Meetings of the commission may be held anywhere in the state and
shall be in compliance with
Chapters 121. and 149. of the Revised Code. The commission may
adopt, pursuant to section 111.15 of the
Revised Code, rules necessary to carry
out the purposes of this section.
(G) Members of the
commission shall serve without remuneration, but shall be
compensated for actual and necessary expenses incurred in the
performance of their official duties.
(H) All expenses
incurred in carrying out this section are payable solely from
money accrued under this section or appropriated for these
purposes by the general assembly, and the commission shall incur
no liability or obligation beyond such money.
(I) The Except as otherwise provided in this division, the commission may accept any payment for the use of the governor's residence or may
accept any donation, gift, bequest, or devise for the governor's residence or as an endowment for the maintenance and care of the garden on the grounds of the governor's residence in furtherance of
its duties. The commission shall not accept any donation, gift, bequest, or devise from a person, individual, or member of an individual's immediate family if the person or individual is receiving payments under a contract with the state or a state agency for the purchase of supplies, services, or equipment or for the construction, reconstruction, improvement, enlargement, alteration, repair, painting, or decoration of a public improvement, except for payments received under an employment contract or a collective bargaining agreement. Any revenue received by the commission shall be
deposited into the governor's residence fund, which is hereby
established in the state treasury, for use by the commission in
accordance with the performance of its duties. All investment
earnings of the fund shall be credited to the fund. Title to
all property acquired by the commission shall be taken in the
name of the state and shall be held for the use and benefit of
the commission.
(J) Nothing in this
section limits the ability of a person or other entity to
purchase decorations, objects of art, chandeliers, china,
silver, statues, paintings, furnishings, accouterments, plants, or other
aesthetic materials for placement in the governor's residence or on the grounds of the governor's residence or
donation to the commission. No such object or plant, however, shall be
placed on the grounds or public areas of the first story of the
governor's residence without the consent of the commission.
(K) The heritage garden established under this section shall be officially known as "the heritage garden at the Ohio governor's residence."
(L) As used in this section, "heritage garden" means the botanical garden of native plants established at the governor's residence.
Sec. 109.57. (A)(1) The superintendent of the bureau of
criminal identification and investigation shall procure from wherever
procurable and file
for record photographs, pictures, descriptions, fingerprints,
measurements, and other information that may be pertinent of
all persons who have been convicted of committing within this state a
felony, any crime
constituting a misdemeanor on the first offense and a felony on subsequent
offenses, or any misdemeanor described in division
(A)(1)(a) or (A)(10)(a) of section 109.572 of the Revised Code, of all
children under eighteen years of age who have been adjudicated
delinquent children for committing within this state an act that would
be a felony or
an offense of violence if committed by an adult or who have been
convicted of
or pleaded guilty to committing within this state a felony or an offense
of violence, and of all
well-known and habitual criminals. The person
in charge of any
county, multicounty, municipal, municipal-county, or
multicounty-municipal jail or workhouse, community-based correctional
facility, halfway house, alternative residential facility, or
state correctional institution and the person in
charge of any state institution having custody of a person
suspected of having committed a felony, any crime constituting
a misdemeanor on the first offense and a felony on subsequent offenses,
or any misdemeanor described in division (A)(1)(a) or (A)(10)(a)
of section 109.572 of the Revised Code or having custody of a child
under eighteen years of age with respect to whom there is
probable
cause to believe that the child may have committed an act that would
be a felony or
an offense of violence if committed by an adult shall furnish such
material
to the superintendent of
the bureau. Fingerprints, photographs, or other
descriptive information of a child who is under eighteen years of age,
has not been arrested or otherwise taken into custody for committing an act
that would be a felony or an offense of
violence if committed by an adult, has not
been adjudicated a delinquent child for committing an act
that would be a felony or an offense of violence
if committed by an adult, has not been convicted of
or pleaded guilty to committing a
felony or an
offense of violence, and is not a child with respect to whom there is
probable cause to
believe that the child may have committed an act
that would be a felony or
an offense of violence if committed by an adult
shall not be procured by the superintendent or furnished by any
person in charge of any
county, multicounty, municipal, municipal-county, or
multicounty-municipal jail or workhouse, community-based correctional
facility, halfway house, alternative residential facility, or
state correctional institution, except as
authorized in section 2151.313 of the Revised Code.
(2) Every clerk of a
court of record in this state, other than the
supreme court or a court of appeals, shall send to the
superintendent of
the bureau a weekly report containing a summary of each case
involving a felony, involving any crime constituting a
misdemeanor on the
first offense and a felony on subsequent offenses, involving a misdemeanor
described in division (A)(1)(a) or (A)(10)(a) of section 109.572
of the Revised Code, or involving an
adjudication in a case in which a child under eighteen years of age was
alleged to be a delinquent child
for committing an act that would be a
felony or an offense of violence if committed by
an adult. The clerk
of the court of common pleas shall include in the report and summary the clerk
sends under this division all information described in divisions
(A)(2)(a) to (f) of this section
regarding a case before the court of appeals that is served by that
clerk. The summary shall be written on the standard forms
furnished by the
superintendent pursuant to division (B) of this section and shall
include the following information:
(a) The incident tracking number contained on the standard forms
furnished by the superintendent pursuant to division (B) of this
section;
(b) The style and number of the case;
(d) The date that the person was convicted of or pleaded guilty
to the offense, adjudicated a delinquent child for committing the act that
would be
a felony or an
offense of violence if committed by an adult, found not guilty of the
offense, or found not to be a delinquent child for committing an act that
would be a
felony or an
offense of violence if committed by an adult, the date of an entry
dismissing
the charge, an entry declaring a mistrial of the offense in which the person
is discharged, an entry finding that the person or child is not competent to
stand trial, or an entry of a nolle prosequi, or the date of any other
determination that constitutes final resolution of the case;
(e) A statement of the original charge with the section of the Revised Code
that was alleged to be violated;
(f) If the person or child was convicted, pleaded guilty, or was
adjudicated a delinquent child, the sentence or
terms of probation imposed or any other disposition of the
offender or the delinquent child.
If the offense involved the disarming of a law enforcement officer or an
attempt to disarm a law enforcement officer, the clerk shall
clearly state that fact in the summary, and the superintendent shall ensure
that a clear statement of that fact is placed in the bureau's records.
(3) The superintendent shall cooperate with and assist
sheriffs,
chiefs of police, and other law enforcement officers in the establishment of
a complete system of criminal identification and in obtaining
fingerprints and other means of identification of all persons
arrested on a charge of a felony, any crime constituting a
misdemeanor on the first offense and a felony on subsequent
offenses, or a misdemeanor described in division
(A)(1)(a) or (A)(10)(a) of section 109.572 of the Revised Code and of all children
under
eighteen years of age arrested or otherwise taken into custody for committing
an act that would
be a felony or an offense of violence if committed by an adult.
The
superintendent also shall file for record the
fingerprint impressions of all persons confined in a county, multicounty,
municipal, municipal-county, or multicounty-municipal jail or workhouse,
community-based correctional facility, halfway house,
alternative residential facility, or state correctional institution for
the violation of state
laws and of all children under
eighteen years of age who
are confined in a county, multicounty, municipal, municipal-county, or
multicounty-municipal jail or workhouse, community-based
correctional facility, halfway house, alternative residential facility, or
state correctional
institution or in any
facility for delinquent children for committing an act
that would be a felony or
an offense of violence if committed by an adult, and any other
information
that the superintendent may receive from law enforcement
officials of the state and its political subdivisions.
(4) The superintendent shall carry out Chapter 2950. of
the
Revised Code with respect to the registration of
persons who are convicted of or plead guilty
to either a sexually oriented offense that is not a registration-exempt sexually oriented offense or a child-victim oriented offense and with respect to all other duties imposed on
the bureau under that chapter.
(5) The bureau shall perform centralized recordkeeping functions for criminal history records and services in this state for purposes of the national crime prevention and privacy compact set forth in section 109.571 of the Revised Code and is the criminal history record repository as defined in that section for purposes of that compact. The superintendent or the superintendent's designee is the compact officer for purposes of that compact and shall carry out the responsibilities of the compact officer specified in that compact.
(B) The superintendent shall prepare and furnish to every
county, multicounty, municipal, municipal-county, or
multicounty-municipal jail or workhouse, community-based correctional
facility, halfway house, alternative residential facility, or
state correctional institution and to every clerk of a court in this
state specified in division (A)(2) of this
section standard forms for reporting the information required
under division (A) of this
section. The standard forms that the superintendent prepares pursuant to
this division may be in a tangible format, in an electronic format, or in both
tangible formats and electronic formats.
(C) The superintendent may operate a center for
electronic, automated, or other data processing for the storage
and retrieval of information, data, and statistics pertaining to
criminals and to children under eighteen years of age who are adjudicated
delinquent children for committing an
act that would be a felony or an offense of
violence if committed by an adult, criminal activity, crime prevention,
law
enforcement,
and criminal justice, and may establish and operate a statewide
communications network to gather and disseminate information,
data, and statistics for the use of law enforcement agencies. The
superintendent may gather, store, retrieve, and
disseminate information, data, and statistics that pertain to children who are
under eighteen years of age and that are gathered pursuant to sections 109.57
to 109.61 of the Revised Code together with information, data, and
statistics that pertain to adults and that are gathered pursuant to those
sections. In addition to any other authorized use of information, data, and statistics of that nature, the superintendent or the superintendent's designee may provide and exchange the information, data, and statistics pursuant to the national crime prevention and privacy compact as described in division (A)(5) of this section.
(D) The information and materials furnished to the
superintendent pursuant to division (A) of this section and
information and materials furnished to any board or person under
division (F) or (G) of this section are not public records under section
149.43 of the Revised Code.
(E) The attorney general shall adopt rules, in accordance
with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code, setting forth the
procedure by which a person may receive or release information
gathered by the superintendent pursuant to
division (A) of this
section. A reasonable fee may be charged for this service. If a
temporary employment service submits a request for a determination
of whether a person the service plans to refer to an employment
position has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to an offense
listed in division (A)(1), (3), (4), (5), or (6) of section 109.572
of the Revised Code, the request shall be treated as a single
request and only one fee shall be charged.
(F)(1) As used in division (F)(2) of this section, "head
start agency" means an entity in this state that has been
approved to be an agency for purposes of subchapter II of the
"Community Economic Development Act," 95 Stat. 489 (1981), 42
U.S.C.A. 9831, as amended.
(2)(a) In addition to or in conjunction with any request that
is required to be made under section 109.572, 2151.86, 3301.32, or
3301.541, division (C) of section 3310.58, or section 3319.39, 3701.881, 5104.012, 5104.013, 5123.081, 5126.28,
5126.281, or 5153.111 of the Revised Code, the board of education
of any school district; the director of mental retardation and
developmental disabilities; any county board of mental retardation
and developmental disabilities; any entity under contract with a
county board of mental retardation and developmental
disabilities; the chief administrator of any chartered nonpublic
school; the chief administrator of a registered private provider that is not also a chartered nonpublic school; the chief administrator of any home health agency;
the chief administrator of or person operating any child
day-care center, type A family day-care home, or type B family
day-care home licensed or certified under Chapter 5104. of the
Revised Code; the administrator of any type C family day-care
home certified pursuant to Section 1 of Sub. H.B. 62 of the 121st
general assembly or Section 5 of Am. Sub. S.B. 160 of the 121st
general assembly; the chief administrator of any head start agency;
or the executive director of a public children services agency
may request that the superintendent of the bureau investigate and
determine, with respect to any individual who has applied for
employment in any position after October 2, 1989, or any individual
wishing to apply for employment with a board of education may
request, with regard to the
individual, whether the bureau has any
information gathered under division (A) of this section that
pertains to that individual. On receipt of the request, the
superintendent shall determine whether that information
exists
and, upon request of the person, board, or entity requesting
information, also shall request from the federal bureau of
investigation any criminal records it has pertaining
to that
individual. The superintendent or the superintendent's designee also may request criminal history records from other states or the federal government pursuant to the national crime prevention and privacy compact set forth in section 109.571 of the Revised Code. Within thirty days of the date that the superintendent
receives a
request, the superintendent shall send to the board, entity, or
person a report of any information that the superintendent
determines exists,
including information contained in records that have been sealed
under section 2953.32 of the Revised Code, and, within thirty
days of its receipt, shall send the board, entity, or person a
report of any information received from the federal
bureau of investigation, other than information the dissemination
of which is prohibited by federal law.
(b) When a board of education or a registered private provider is required to receive information
under this section as a prerequisite to employment of an
individual pursuant to division (C) of section 3310.58 or section 3319.39 of the Revised Code, it may accept a
certified copy of records that were issued
by the bureau of criminal identification and investigation and that are
presented by an individual applying for employment with the
district in lieu of requesting that information itself. In such a case, the
board or provider shall accept the certified copy issued by the bureau in order to make a
photocopy of it for that individual's employment application documents and
shall return the certified copy to the individual. In a case of that nature,
a district or provider only shall
accept a certified copy of records of that nature within one year
after the date of their issuance by the
bureau.
(3) The state board of education may request, with respect
to any individual who has applied for employment after October 2,
1989, in any position with the state board or the department of
education, any information that a school district board of
education is authorized to request under division (F)(2)
of this section, and the
superintendent of the bureau shall proceed as if the request has
been received from a school district board of education under
division (F)(2) of this section.
(4) When the superintendent of the bureau receives a
request for information under section 3319.291
of the Revised Code, the superintendent shall proceed as if the
request has been received from a school district board of
education under division (F)(2) of this section.
(5) When a recipient of a classroom
reading
improvement grant paid under section 3301.86 of the Revised
Code
requests, with respect to any individual who applies to participate in
providing any program or service
funded in whole or in
part by the grant, the information that a school district board of
education is authorized to request under division
(F)(2)(a) of
this section, the superintendent of the bureau shall proceed as if the
request has been
received from a school district board of education under division
(F)(2)(a) of this section.
(G) In addition to or in conjunction with
any request that is required to be made under section 3701.881,
3712.09,
3721.121, or 3722.151 of the Revised
Code with respect to an individual who has applied for employment in
a position that involves providing direct care to an older adult, the chief
administrator of a home health agency,
hospice care program, home licensed under Chapter 3721.
of the Revised Code, adult day-care program
operated pursuant to rules adopted under section 3721.04 of the
Revised Code, or adult care facility
may request that the superintendent of the bureau
investigate and determine, with respect to any individual who has
applied after
January 27, 1997, for employment in a position that
does not involve providing
direct care to an older adult, whether the bureau has any information
gathered under division (A) of this section that pertains
to that individual.
In addition to or in conjunction with any request that is required to be made under section 173.27 of the Revised Code with respect to an individual who has applied for employment in a position that involves providing ombudsperson services to residents of long-term care facilities or recipients of community-based long-term care services, the state long-term care ombudsperson, ombudsperson's designee, or director of health may request that the superintendent investigate and determine, with respect to any individual who has applied for employment in a position that does not involve providing such ombudsperson services, whether the bureau has any information gathered under division (A) of this section that pertains to that applicant.
In addition to or in conjunction with any request that is required to be made under section 173.394 of the Revised Code with respect to an individual who has applied for employment in a position that involves providing direct care to an individual, the chief administrator of a community-based long-term care agency may request that the superintendent investigate and determine, with respect to any individual who has applied for employment in a position that does not involve providing direct care, whether the bureau has any information gathered under division (A) of this section that pertains to that applicant.
On receipt of a request under this division, the
superintendent shall determine whether that information
exists
and, on request of the individual requesting information,
shall also request from the federal bureau of investigation any
criminal records it has pertaining to the applicant. The superintendent or the superintendent's designee also may request criminal history records from other states or the federal government pursuant to the national crime prevention and privacy compact set forth in section 109.571 of the Revised Code. Within
thirty days of the date a request is received, the superintendent
shall send to the requester a report of any
information determined to exist, including information contained
in records that have been sealed under section 2953.32 of the
Revised Code, and, within thirty days of its
receipt, shall send the requester a report of any
information received from the federal bureau of
investigation,
other than information the dissemination of which is prohibited
by federal law.
(H) Information obtained by a government entity or person under this section is confidential
and shall not be released or disseminated.
(I) The superintendent may charge a reasonable fee for
providing information or criminal records under division (F)(2)
or (G) of this section.
(J) As used in this section, "registered private provider" means a nonpublic school or entity registered with the superintendent of public instruction under section 3310.41 of the Revised Code to participate in the autism scholarship program or section 3310.58 of the Revised Code to participate in the special education scholarship pilot program.
Sec. 109.572. (A)(1) Upon receipt of a request pursuant to section 121.08, 3301.32, 3301.541, 3319.39, 5104.012, or 5104.013 of the Revised Code, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.05, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.04, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.21, 2907.22, 2907.23, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2919.12, 2919.22, 2919.24, 2919.25, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.04, 2925.05, 2925.06, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code, felonious sexual penetration in violation of former section 2907.12 of the Revised Code, a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, a violation of section 2919.23 of the Revised Code that would have been a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, had the violation been committed prior to that date, or a violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code that is not a minor drug possession offense;
(b) A violation of an existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(1)(a) of this section.
(2) On receipt of a request pursuant to section 5123.081 of the Revised Code with respect to an applicant for employment in any position with the department of mental retardation and developmental disabilities, pursuant to section 5126.28 of the Revised Code with respect to an applicant for employment in any position with a county board of mental retardation and developmental disabilities, or pursuant to section 5126.281 of the Revised Code with respect to an applicant for employment in a direct services position with an entity contracting with a county board for employment, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check. The superintendent shall conduct the criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2903.341, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.04, 2905.05, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.04, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.12, 2907.21, 2907.22, 2907.23, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2919.12, 2919.22, 2919.24, 2919.25, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code;
(b) An existing or former municipal ordinance or law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(2)(a) of this section.
(3) On receipt of a request pursuant to section 173.27, 173.394, 3712.09, 3721.121, or 3722.151 of the Revised Code, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check with respect to any person who has applied for employment in a position for which a criminal records check is required by those sections. The superintendent shall conduct the criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.11, 2905.12, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.12, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2911.13, 2913.02, 2913.03, 2913.04, 2913.11, 2913.21, 2913.31, 2913.40, 2913.43, 2913.47, 2913.51, 2919.25, 2921.36, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.11, 2925.13, 2925.22, 2925.23, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code;
(b) An existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(3)(a) of this section.
(4) On receipt of a request pursuant to section 3701.881 of the Revised Code with respect to an applicant for employment with a home health agency as a person responsible for the care, custody, or control of a child, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check. The superintendent shall conduct the criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.04, 2905.05, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.04, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.12, 2907.21, 2907.22, 2907.23, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2919.12, 2919.22, 2919.24, 2919.25, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.04, 2925.05, 2925.06, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code or a violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code that is not a minor drug possession offense;
(b) An existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(4)(a) of this section.
(5) On receipt of a request pursuant to section 5111.95 or 5111.96 5111.032, 5111.033, or 5111.034 of the Revised Code with respect to an applicant for employment with a waiver agency participating in a department of job and family services administered home and community-based waiver program or an independent provider participating in a department administered home and community-based waiver program in a position that involves providing home and community-based waiver services to consumers with disabilities, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check. The superintendent shall conduct the criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this
section to determine whether any information
exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request
previously has been
convicted of or, has pleaded guilty to, or has been found eligible for intervention in lieu of conviction for any of
the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04,
2903.041, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16,
2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.05, 2905.11, 2905.12, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.04, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.21, 2907.22, 2907.23, 2907.24, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2911.13, 2913.02, 2913.03, 2913.04, 2913.11, 2913.21, 2913.31, 2913.40, 2913.43, 2913.47, 2913.48, 2913.49, 2913.51, 2917.11, 2919.12, 2919.22, 2919.24, 2919.25, 2921.13, 2921.36, 2923.02, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2923.32, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.04, 2925.05, 2925.06, 2925.11, 2925.13, 2925.14, 2925.22, 2925.23, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code, felonious sexual penetration in violation of former section 2907.12 of the Revised Code, a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, a violation of section 2919.23 of the Revised Code that would have been a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, had the violation been committed prior to that date;
(b) An existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(5)(a) of this section.
(6) On receipt of a request pursuant to section 3701.881 of the Revised Code with respect to an applicant for employment with a home health agency in a position that involves providing direct care to an older adult, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check. The superintendent shall conduct the criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.11, 2905.12, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.12, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2911.13, 2913.02, 2913.03, 2913.04, 2913.11, 2913.21, 2913.31, 2913.40, 2913.43, 2913.47, 2913.51, 2919.25, 2921.36, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.11, 2925.13, 2925.22, 2925.23, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code;
(b) An existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(6)(a) of this section.
(7) When conducting a criminal records check upon a request pursuant to section 3319.39 of the Revised Code for an applicant who is a teacher, in addition to the determination made under division (A)(1) of this section, the superintendent shall determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any offense specified in section 3319.31 of the Revised Code.
(8) On a request pursuant to section 2151.86 of the Revised Code, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.05, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.04, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.21, 2907.22, 2907.23, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2909.02, 2909.03, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2919.12, 2919.22, 2919.24, 2919.25, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.04, 2925.05, 2925.06, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code, a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, a violation of section 2919.23 of the Revised Code that would have been a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, had the violation been committed prior to that date, a violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code that is not a minor drug possession offense, or felonious sexual penetration in violation of former section 2907.12 of the Revised Code;
(b) A violation of an existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(8)(a) of this section.
(9) When conducting a criminal records check on a request pursuant to section 5104.013 of the Revised Code for a person who is an owner, licensee, or administrator of a child day-care center or type A family day-care home, an authorized provider of a certified type B family day-care home, or an adult residing in a type A or certified type B home, or when conducting a criminal records check or a request pursuant to section 5104.012 of the Revised Code for a person who is an applicant for employment in a center, type A home, or certified type B home, the superintendent, in addition to the determination made under division (A)(1) of this section, shall determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2913.02, 2913.03, 2913.04, 2913.041, 2913.05, 2913.06, 2913.11, 2913.21, 2913.31, 2913.32, 2913.33, 2913.34, 2913.40, 2913.41, 2913.42, 2913.43, 2913.44, 2913.441, 2913.45, 2913.46, 2913.47, 2913.48, 2913.49, 2921.11, 2921.13, or 2923.01 of the Revised Code, a violation of section 2923.02 or 2923.03 of the Revised Code that relates to a crime specified in this division or division (A)(1)(a) of this section, or a second violation of section 4511.19 of the Revised Code within five years of the date of application for licensure or certification.
(b) A violation of an existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses or violations described in division (A)(9)(a) of this section.
(10) Upon receipt of a request pursuant to section 5153.111 of the Revised Code, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following:
(a) A violation of section 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.16, 2903.21, 2903.34, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.05, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.04, 2907.05, 2907.06, 2907.07, 2907.08, 2907.09, 2907.21, 2907.22, 2907.23, 2907.25, 2907.31, 2907.32, 2907.321, 2907.322, 2907.323, 2909.02, 2909.03, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2911.12, 2919.12, 2919.22, 2919.24, 2919.25, 2923.12, 2923.13, 2923.161, 2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.04, 2925.05, 2925.06, or 3716.11 of the Revised Code, felonious sexual penetration in violation of former section 2907.12 of the Revised Code, a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, a violation of section 2919.23 of the Revised Code that would have been a violation of section 2905.04 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to July 1, 1996, had the violation been committed prior to that date, or a violation of section 2925.11 of the Revised Code that is not a minor drug possession offense;
(b) A violation of an existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to any of the offenses listed in division (A)(10)(a) of this section.
(11) On receipt of a request for a criminal records check from an individual pursuant to section 4749.03 or 4749.06 of the Revised Code, accompanied by a completed copy of the form prescribed in division (C)(1) of this section and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in a manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists indicating that the person who is the subject of the request has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to a felony in this state or in any other state. If the individual indicates that a firearm will be carried in the course of business, the superintendent shall require information from the federal bureau of investigation as described in division (B)(2) of this section. The superintendent shall report the findings of the criminal records check and any information the federal bureau of investigation provides to the director of public safety.
(12) On receipt of a request pursuant to section 1322.03, 1322.031, or 4763.05 of the Revised Code, a completed form prescribed pursuant to division (C)(1) of this section, and a set of fingerprint impressions obtained in the manner described in division (C)(2) of this section, the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation shall conduct a criminal records check with respect to any person who has applied for a license, permit, or certification from the department of commerce or a division in the department. The superintendent shall conduct the criminal records check in the manner described in division (B) of this section to determine whether any information exists that indicates that the person who is the subject of the request previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the following: a violation of section 2913.02, 2913.11, 2913.31, 2913.51, or 2925.03 of the Revised Code; any other criminal offense involving theft, receiving stolen property, embezzlement, forgery, fraud, passing bad checks, money laundering, or drug trafficking, or any criminal offense involving money or securities, as set forth in Chapters 2909., 2911., 2913., 2915., 2921., 2923., and 2925. of the Revised Code; or any existing or former law of this state, any other state, or the United States that is substantially equivalent to those offenses.
(13) Not later than thirty days after the date the superintendent receives the request, completed form, and fingerprint impressions, the superintendent shall send the person, board, or entity that made the request any information, other than information the dissemination of which is prohibited by federal law, the superintendent determines exists with respect to the person who is the subject of the request that indicates that the person previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any offense listed or described in division (A)(1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), or (12) of this section, as appropriate. The superintendent shall send the person, board, or entity that made the request a copy of the list of offenses specified in division (A)(1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), or (12) of this section, as appropriate. If the request was made under section 3701.881 of the Revised Code with regard to an applicant who may be both responsible for the care, custody, or control of a child and involved in providing direct care to an older adult, the superintendent shall provide a list of the offenses specified in divisions (A)(4) and (6) of this section.
(B) The superintendent shall conduct any criminal records check requested under section 121.08, 173.27, 173.394, 1322.03, 1322.031, 2151.86, 3301.32, 3301.541, 3319.39, 3701.881, 3712.09, 3721.121, 3722.151, 4749.03, 4749.06, 4763.05, 5104.012, 5104.013, 5111.95, 5111.96 5111.032, 5111.033, 5111.034, 5123.081, 5126.28, 5126.281, or 5153.111 of the Revised Code as follows:
(1) The superintendent shall review or cause to be reviewed any relevant information gathered and compiled by the bureau under division (A) of section 109.57 of the Revised Code that relates to the person who is the subject of the request, including any relevant information contained in records that have been sealed under section 2953.32 of the Revised Code;
(2) If the request received by the superintendent asks for information from the federal bureau of investigation, the superintendent shall request from the federal bureau of investigation any information it has with respect to the person who is the subject of the request and shall review or cause to be reviewed any information the superintendent receives from that bureau.
(3) The superintendent or the superintendent's designee may request criminal history records from other states or the federal government pursuant to the national crime prevention and privacy compact set forth in section 109.571 of the Revised Code.
(C)(1) The superintendent shall prescribe a form to obtain the information necessary to conduct a criminal records check from any person for whom a criminal records check is required by section 121.08, 173.27, 173.394, 1322.03, 1322.031, 2151.86, 3301.32, 3301.541, 3319.39, 3701.881, 3712.09, 3721.121, 3722.151, 4749.03, 4749.06, 4763.05, 5104.012, 5104.013, 5111.95, 5111.96 5111.032, 5111.033, 5111.034, 5123.081, 5126.28, 5126.281, or 5153.111 of the Revised Code. The form that the superintendent prescribes pursuant to this division may be in a tangible format, in an electronic format, or in both tangible and electronic formats.
(2) The superintendent shall prescribe standard impression sheets to obtain the fingerprint impressions of any person for whom a criminal records check is required by section 121.08, 173.27, 173.394, 1322.03, 1322.031, 2151.86, 3301.32, 3301.541, 3319.39, 3701.881, 3712.09, 3721.121, 3722.151, 4749.03, 4749.06, 4763.05, 5104.012, 5104.013, 5111.95, 5111.96 5111.032, 5111.033, 5111.034, 5123.081, 5126.28, 5126.281, or 5153.111 of the Revised Code. Any person for whom a records check is required by any of those sections shall obtain the fingerprint impressions at a county sheriff's office, municipal police department, or any other entity with the ability to make fingerprint impressions on the standard impression sheets prescribed by the superintendent. The office, department, or entity may charge the person a reasonable fee for making the impressions. The standard impression sheets the superintendent prescribes pursuant to this division may be in a tangible format, in an electronic format, or in both tangible and electronic formats.
(3) Subject to division (D) of this section, the superintendent shall prescribe and charge a reasonable fee for providing a criminal records check requested under section 121.08, 173.27, 173.394, 1322.03, 1322.031, 2151.86, 3301.32, 3301.541, 3319.39, 3701.881, 3712.09, 3721.121, 3722.151, 4749.03, 4749.06, 4763.05, 5104.012, 5104.013, 5111.95, 5111.96 5111.032, 5111.033, 5111.034, 5123.081, 5126.28, 5126.281, or 5153.111 of the Revised Code. The person making a criminal records request under section 121.08, 173.27, 173.394, 1322.03, 1322.031, 2151.86, 3301.32, 3301.541, 3319.39, 3701.881, 3712.09, 3721.121, 3722.151, 4749.03, 4749.06, 4763.05, 5104.012, 5104.013, 5111.95, 5111.96, 5123.081, 5126.28, 5126.281, or 5153.111 of the Revised Code shall pay the fee prescribed pursuant to this division. A person making a request under section 3701.881 of the Revised Code for a criminal records check for an applicant who may be both responsible for the care, custody, or control of a child and involved in providing direct care to an older adult shall pay one fee for the request. In the case of a request under section 5111.033 of the Revised Code, the fee shall be paid in the manner specified in that section.
(4) The superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation may prescribe methods of forwarding fingerprint impressions and information necessary to conduct a criminal records check, which methods shall include, but not be limited to, an electronic
method.
(D) A determination whether any information exists that indicates that a person previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any offense listed or described in division (A)(1)(a) or (b), (A)(2)(a) or (b), (A)(3)(a) or (b), (A)(4)(a) or (b), (A)(5)(a) or (b), (A)(6)(a) or (b), (A)(7), (A)(8)(a) or (b), (A)(9)(a) or (b), (A)(10)(a) or (b), or (A)(12) of this section that is made by the superintendent with respect to information considered in a criminal records check in accordance with this section is valid for the person who is the subject of the criminal records check for a period of one year from the date upon which the superintendent makes the determination. During the period in which the determination in regard to a person is valid, if another request under this section is made for a criminal records check for that person, the superintendent shall provide the information that is the basis for the superintendent's initial determination at a lower fee than the fee prescribed for the initial criminal records check.
(E) When the superintendent receives a request for information from a registered private provider, the superintendent shall proceed as if the request has been received from a school district board of education under section 3319.39 of the Revised Code. The superintendent shall apply division (A)(7) of this section to any such request for an applicant who is a teacher.
(F) As used in this section:
(1) "Criminal records check" means any criminal records check conducted by the superintendent of the bureau of criminal identification and investigation in accordance with division (B) of this section.
(2) "Home and community-based waiver services" and "waiver agency" have the same meanings as in section 5111.95 of the Revised Code.
(3) "Independent provider" has the same meaning as in section 5111.96 of the Revised Code.
(4) "Minor drug possession offense" has the same meaning as in section 2925.01 of the Revised Code.
(5)(3) "Older adult" means a person age sixty or older.
(4) "Registered private provider" means a nonpublic school or entity registered with the superintendent of public instruction under section 3310.41 of the Revised Code to participate in the autism scholarship program or section 3310.58 of the Revised Code to participate in the special education scholarship pilot program.
Sec. 109.93. The attorney general education fund is hereby created in the
custody of the treasurer of state treasury. The fund shall consist of gifts and grants
received by the attorney general for the purposes of the fund. The fund shall
be administered by the attorney general and shall be used to support various
educational programs. These educational programs may include programs for
consumer protection, victims of crime, environmental protection, drug abuse,
child abuse, peace officer training, crime prevention, and law. The fund may
also be used to pay costs associated with the solicitation of gifts and grants
for the purposes of the fund, and the costs of administering the fund. The
fund shall not be used to replace money spent by local programs for similar
purposes.
Sec. 111.18. (A) The secretary of state shall keep a
record
of all fees collected by the secretary of state and,
subject to
division (B) of section
1309.528
of the Revised Code
and except
as otherwise provided in
the Revised Code, shall
pay
them into the
state
treasury to the credit of the
corporate and uniform
commercial code filing
fund created
by section
1309.528 of the
Revised Code.
(B)
The secretary of state may implement alternative payment
programs that permit payment of any fee charged by the secretary
of state by means other than cash, check, money order, or credit
card; an alternative payment program may include, but is not
limited to, one that permits a fee to be paid by electronic means
of transmission. Fees paid under an alternative payment program
shall be deposited to the credit of the secretary of state
alternative payment program fund, which is hereby created. The
secretary of state alternative payment program fund shall be in
the custody of the treasurer of state but shall not be part of the
state treasury. Any investment income of the secretary of state
alternative payment program fund shall be credited to that fund
and used to operate the alternative payment program. Within
two
working days following the deposit of funds to the credit of the
secretary of state alternative payment program fund, the secretary
of state shall pay those funds into the state treasury to the
credit
of the corporate and uniform commercial code filing fund,
subject
to division (B) of section 1309.401 of the Revised Code
and except
as otherwise provided in the Revised Code.
The secretary of state shall adopt rules necessary to carry
out the purposes of this division.
Sec. 118.01. As used in this chapter:
(A) "Advance tax payment notes" means the notes authorized
by section 118.24 of the Revised Code.
(B) "Appropriation measure" means any appropriation
measure, amendment of an appropriation measure, or supplement to
an appropriation measure of a municipal corporation,
county, or township referred to in
sections 5705.38 and 5705.40 of the Revised Code and any other
action of a municipal corporation, county, or
township authorizing expenditure of money not
previously included in any appropriation measure.
(C) "Bond anticipation notes" means notes issued in
anticipation of the issuance of bonds.
(D) "Certificate of estimated resources" means the
official certificate of estimated resources of the county budget
commission and amendments of the certificate certified to the
municipal corporation, county, or township
as provided for in Chapter 5705. of the Revised
Code.
(E) "Commission" means a financial planning and
supervision commission created by section 118.05 of the Revised
Code with respect to a municipal corporation, county,
or township.
(F) "Construction funds" means proceeds from the sale of
debt obligations restricted by law or pursuant to the proceedings
for the issuance of such debt obligations to use for permanent
improvements as defined in division (E) of section 5705.01 of the
Revised Code, including acquisition, construction, or extension
of public utilities, and moneys from any other sources restricted
to such purpose.
(G) "County auditor" means the county auditor with whom tax
budgets of the municipal corporation, county, or
township
are to be filed in accordance with
section 5705.30 of the Revised Code.
(H) "County budget commission" means the county budget
commission to which the tax budget of the municipal
corporation, county, or township is to be
submitted in accordance with section 5705.31 of the Revised Code.
(I) "Current revenue notes" means debt obligations
described in section 133.10 or Chapter 5705. of the Revised Code
or any other debt obligations issued to obtain funds for current
operating expenses.
(J) "Debt limits" means the limitations on net
indebtedness provided in sections 133.05,
133.07, and 133.09 of the Revised Code, and
also includes the limitation, known as the "indirect debt limit,"
upon the issuance of unvoted bonds, notes, or certificates of
indebtedness resulting from the ten-mill limitation provided for
in section 5705.02 of the Revised Code.
(K) "Debt obligations" means bonds, notes, certificates of
indebtedness, bond anticipation notes, current revenue notes,
local government fund notes, local communities fund notes, or other obligations issued or
incurred in borrowing money, or to renew, refund, fund, or
refinance, or issued in exchange for, such obligations, and any
interest coupons pertaining thereto other than bonds or other
obligations issued under authority of Section 13 of Article VIII,
Ohio Constitution.
(L) "Default" means failure to pay the principal of or the
interest on a debt obligation, or failure to make other payment
to be made to the holder or owner of a debt obligation, in the
full amount and at the time provided for in the contractual
commitment with respect thereto, unless the time for such payment
has been extended by the owner or holder of the debt obligation
without penalty or premium and without the effect of subjecting
the municipal corporation, county, or township
to the initiation of remedies pertaining to such
debt obligation or other debt obligations.
(M) "Deficit fund" means the general fund or any special
fund that, as at the time indicated, has a deficit balance or a
balance that is less than the amount required to be in such fund
pursuant to law or pursuant to contractual requirements,
demonstrating that over a period of time expenditures charged or
chargeable to the fund have exceeded moneys credited to the fund,
or that moneys credited to the fund have not been in the amounts
required by law or contractual requirements.
(N) "Effective financial accounting and reporting system"
means an accounting and reporting system fully in compliance with
the requirements prescribed by and pursuant to Chapter 117. of
the Revised Code, with such modifications and supplements as are
to be provided pursuant to this chapter in order to meet and deal
with the fiscal emergency, provide to the auditor of state, the
commission, the financial supervisor, and the county budget
commission the information needed to carry out their functions,
and better ensure the implementation of the financial plan.
(O) "Financial plan" means the financial plan approved by
the commission in accordance with section 118.06 of the Revised
Code, as it may from time to time be amended in accordance with
this chapter.
(P) "Financial supervisor" means the auditor of state.
(Q) "Fiscal emergency" means the existence of fiscal
emergency conditions determined as provided in section 118.04 of
the Revised Code.
(R) "Fiscal emergency conditions" means any of the events
or occurrences described in section 118.03 of the Revised Code.
(S) "Fiscal emergency period" means the period of time
commencing on the date when the determination of a fiscal
emergency is made by the auditor of state pursuant to section
118.04 of the Revised Code and ending when the determination of
termination is made and certified pursuant to section 118.27 of
the Revised Code.
(T) "Fiscal watch" means the existence of fiscal watch conditions
as determined in accordance with section 118.022 of the Revised Code.
(U) "Fiscal officer" means the fiscal officer of the
municipal corporation, county, or township as
defined in division (D) of section 5705.01 of the
Revised Code.
(V) "Fringe benefits" means expenditures for goods and
services furnished to municipal, county, or township officers or
employees by the
municipal corporation, county, or township,
including, but not limited to, such benefits as
food, temporary housing, and clothing, and the provision of
pension, retirement, disability, hospitalization, health care,
insurance, or other benefits to employees requiring the advance
payment of money other than directly to employees or other
beneficiaries, or the deposit or reservation of money for such
purpose.
(W) "General fund" means the fund referred to in division
(A) of section 5705.09 of the Revised Code.
(X) "General fund budget" means aggregate revenues
available in the general fund during the applicable fiscal year
as shown by the certificate of estimated resources.
(Y) "Mayor" means the officer of the
municipal corporation designated as such by law or the chief executive officer
under
the charter of the municipal corporation.
(Z) "Payroll" means compensation due and payable to
employees of the municipal corporation, county, or
township, other than fringe benefits.
(AA) "Revenue estimates" means the estimates of revenue
receipts to the credit of the general fund and special funds as
estimated and supplemented, modified, or amended by the
municipal corporation, county, or township,
or the county budget commission.
(BB) "Special funds" means any of the funds, other than
the general fund, referred to in sections 5705.09 and 5705.12 of
the Revised Code, and includes any fund created from the issuance
of debt obligations pursuant to Section 3 or 12 of Article XVIII,
Ohio Constitution, and any fund created in connection with the
issuance of debt obligations to provide moneys for the payment of
principal or interest, reserves therefor, or reserves or funds
for repair, maintenance, or improvements.
(CC) "Tax budget" means the tax budget provided for in
section 5705.28 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 118.08. (A) The members of the financial planning and
supervision commission
shall serve without compensation, but shall
be paid by the commission their
necessary and actual expenses
incurred while engaged in the business of the
commission.
(B) All expenses incurred for services rendered by the
financial supervisor for a period of twenty-four months shall be
paid by the commission pursuant to an appropriation made by the
general assembly for this purpose. Expenses incurred for
services
rendered by the financial supervisor beyond this period
shall be
borne by the municipal corporation, county, or township
unless the
director of budget and management waives the costs
and allows
payment in accordance with the following:
(1) If the continued performance of the financial
supervisor
is required for a period of twenty-five to thirty months, the
municipal corporation, county, or township is responsible
for
twenty per cent of the compensation due.
(2) If the continued performance of the financial
supervisor
is required for a period of thirty-one to thirty-six months, the
municipal corporation, county, or township is responsible
for
fifty per cent of the compensation due.
(3) If the continued performance of the financial
supervisor
is required for a period of thirty-seven months or more, the
municipal corporation, county, or township is responsible
for one
hundred per cent of the compensation due except as otherwise
provided in division (B)(4) of this section.
(4)
If the continued
performance
of the financial supervisor
has been required longer
than eight
fiscal years for any
municipal
corporation, county, or
township declared to be in a fiscal
emergency prior to fiscal year
1996, that municipal corporation,
county, or
township is
responsible for fifty per cent of the
compensation due in
its
ninth fiscal
year
while in fiscal
emergency and one hundred
per cent of the compensation due in
its
tenth fiscal year
and
every fiscal year thereafter while in
fiscal emergency.
(C) If the municipal
corporation, county, or township fails
to make any payment to
the financial supervisor as required by
this chapter, the
financial supervisor may certify to the county
auditor the
amount due, and that amount shall be withheld from the
municipal
corporation, county, or township from any fund or funds
in the
custody of the county auditor for distribution to the
municipal
corporation, county, or township, except for those
reserved for
payment of local government fund or local communities fund notes. Upon
receiving
the
certification from the
financial supervisor, the
county auditor
shall draw a voucher for
the amount against
those
fund or funds
in favor of the
financial supervisor.
Sec. 118.17. (A) During a fiscal emergency period and
with the approval of the financial planning and supervision
commission, a municipal corporation, county, or
township
may issue local government communities fund notes,
in anticipation of amounts to be allocated to it pursuant to
division (B) of section 5747.50 of the Revised Code or to be
apportioned to it under section 5747.51 or 5747.53 of the Revised
Code in a future year or years, for a period of no more than
eight calendar years. The principal amount of the notes and
interest on the notes due and payable in any year shall not
exceed fifty per cent of the total amount of local government fund or local communities
fund moneys so allocated or apportioned to the
municipal corporation, county, or township for
the year preceding the year in which the notes are issued. The
notes may mature in semiannual or annual
installments in such
amounts as may be fixed by the commission, and need not mature in
substantially equal semiannual or annual installments. The notes
of a municipal corporation may be authorized and issued, subject to the
approval of the
commission, in the manner provided in sections 717.15 and 717.16
of the Revised Code, except that, notwithstanding division (A)(2)
of section 717.16 of the Revised Code, the rate or rates of
interest payable on the notes shall be the prevailing market rate
or rates as determined and approved by the commission, and except
that they shall not be issued in anticipation of bonds, shall not
constitute general obligations of the municipal
corporation, and shall not
pledge the full faith and credit of the municipal
corporation.
(B) The principal and interest on the notes provided for
in this section shall be payable, as provided in this section,
solely from the portion of the local government communities fund that would
otherwise be apportioned to the municipal corporation,
county, or township and shall not be
payable from or constitute a pledge of or claim upon, or require
the levy, collection, or application of, any unvoted ad valorem
property taxes or other taxes, or in any manner occupy any
portion of the indirect debt limit.
(C) Local government communities fund notes may be issued only to the
extent needed to achieve one or more of the following objectives
of the financial plan:
(1) Satisfying any contractual or noncontractual
judgments, past due accounts payable, and all past due and
payable payroll and fringe benefits to be taken into account
under section 118.03 of the Revised Code;
(2) Restoring to construction funds or other restricted
funds any money applied from such funds to uses not within the
purposes of such funds and which could not be transferred to such
use under section 5705.14 of the Revised Code;
(3) Eliminating deficit balances in all deficit funds,
including funds that may be used to pay operating expenses.
In addition to the objectives set forth in divisions (C)(1)
to (3) of this section, local government communities fund notes may be issued
and the proceeds of those notes may be used for the purpose of
retiring or replacing other moneys used to retire current revenue
notes issued pursuant to section 118.23 of the Revised Code to
the extent that the proceeds of the current revenue notes have
been or are to be used directly or to replace other moneys used
to achieve one or more of the objectives of the financial plan
specified in divisions (C)(1) to (3) of this section. Upon
authorization of the local government communities fund notes by the
legislative authority of the municipal corporation,
county, or township, the proceeds of the local
government communities fund notes and the proceeds of any such current
revenue notes shall be deemed to be appropriated, to the extent
that the proceeds have been or are to be so used, for the
purposes for which the revenues anticipated by any such current
revenue notes are collected and appropriated within the meaning
of section 133.10 of the Revised Code.
(D) The need for an issue of local government communities fund notes
for such purposes shall be determined by taking into
consideration other money and sources of moneys available
therefor under this chapter or other provisions of law, and
calculating the respective amounts needed therefor in accordance
with section 118.03 of the Revised Code, including the deductions
or offsets therein provided, for determining that a fiscal
emergency condition exists, and by eliminating any duplication of
amounts thereunder. The respective amounts needed to achieve
such objectives and the resulting aggregate net amount shall be
determined initially by a certification of the fiscal officer as
and to the extent approved by the financial supervisor. The
principal amount of such notes shall not exceed the aggregate net
amount needed for such purposes. The aggregate amount of all
issues of such notes shall not exceed three times the average of
the allocation or apportionment to the municipal
corporation, county, or township of moneys
from the local government communities fund in each of the three fiscal years
preceding the fiscal year in which the notes are issued.
(E) The proceeds of the sale of local government communities fund
notes shall be appropriated by the municipal
corporation, county, or township for and shall be
applied only to the purposes, and in the respective amounts for
those purposes, set forth in the certification given pursuant to
division (D) of this section, as the purposes and amounts may be
modified in the approval by the commission provided for in this
section. The proceeds shall be deposited in separate accounts
with a fiscal agent designated in the resolution referred to in
division (F) of this section and released only for such
respective purposes in accordance with the procedures set forth
in division (D) of section 118.20 of the Revised Code. Any
amounts not needed for such purposes shall be deposited with the
fiscal agent designated to receive deposits for payment of the
principal of and interest due on the notes.
(F) An application for approval by the financial planning
and supervision commission of an issue of local government communities fund
notes shall be authorized by a preliminary resolution adopted by
the legislative authority. The resolution may authorize the
application as a part of the initial submission of the financial
plan for approval or as a part of any proposed amendment to an
approved financial plan or at any time after the approval of a
financial plan, or amendment to a financial plan, that proposes
the issue of such notes. The preliminary resolution shall
designate a fiscal agent for the deposit of the proceeds of the
sale of the notes, and shall contain a covenant of the
municipal corporation, county, or township to
comply with this chapter and the financial plan.
The commission shall review and evaluate the application
and supporting certification and financial supervisor action, and
shall thereupon certify its approval or disapproval, or
modification and approval, of the application.
The commission shall certify the amounts, maturities,
interest rates, and terms of issue of the local government communities fund
notes approved by the commission and the purposes to which the
proceeds of the sale of the notes will be applied in respective
amounts.
The commission shall certify a copy of its approval, of the
preliminary resolution, and of the related certification and
action of the financial supervisor to the fiscal officer, the
financial supervisor, the county budget commission, the county
auditor, the county treasurer, and the fiscal agent designated to
receive and disburse the proceeds of the sale of the notes.
(G) Upon the sale of any local government communities fund notes
issued under this section, the commission shall determine a
schedule for the deposit of local government communities fund distributions
that are pledged for the payment of the principal of and interest
on the notes with the fiscal agent or trustee designated in the
agreement between the municipal corporation, county, or
township and the holders of the notes
to receive and disburse the distributions. The amounts to be
deposited shall be adequate to provide for the payment of
principal and interest on the notes when due and to pay all other
proper charges, costs, or expenses pertaining thereto.
The amount of the local government communities fund moneys apportioned
to the municipal corporation, county, or township
that is to be so deposited in each year shall
not be included in the tax budget and
appropriation measures of the municipal corporation, county, or
township, or in certificates of estimated revenues,
for that year.
The commission shall certify the schedule to the officers
designated in division (F) of this section.
(H) Deposit of amounts with the fiscal agent or trustee
pursuant to the schedule determined by the commission shall be
made from local government communities fund distributions to or apportioned
to the municipal corporation, county, or township
as provided in this division. The
apportionment of local government communities fund moneys to the
municipal corporation, county, or township
for any year from the undivided local government communities fund shall be
determined as to the municipal corporation, county, or
township without regard to the amounts
to be deposited with the fiscal agent or trustee in that year in
accordance with division (G) of this section. After the amount
of the undivided local government communities fund apportioned to the
municipal corporation, county, or township for a
calendar year is determined, the county
auditor and the county treasurer shall withhold from each monthly
amount to be distributed to the municipal corporation,
county, or township from the undivided
local government communities fund, and transmit to the fiscal agent or
trustee for deposit, one-twelfth of the amount scheduled for
deposit in that year pursuant to division (G) of this section.
(I) If the commission approves the application, the
municipal corporation, county, or township may
proceed with the issuance of the notes as
approved by the commission.
All notes issued under authority of this section are lawful
investments for the entities enumerated in division (A)(1) of
section 133.03 of the Revised Code and are eligible as security
for the repayment of the deposit of public moneys.
Upon the issuance of any notes under this section, the
fiscal officer of the municipal corporation, county, or township
shall certify the
fact of the issuance to the county auditor and shall also certify
to the county auditor the last calendar year in which any of the
notes are scheduled to mature.
(J) After the legislative authority of the municipal
corporation, county, or township
has passed an ordinance or resolution authorizing the issuance of
local
government communities fund notes and subsequent to the commission's
preliminary or final approval of the ordinance or resolution, the director of
law, prosecuting attorney, or other chief legal officer
of the municipal corporation, county, or township
shall
certify a sample of the form and content of a note to be used to
issue the local government communities fund notes to the commission. The
commission shall determine whether the sample note is consistent
with this section and the ordinance or resolution authorizing the issuance of
the local government communities fund notes, and if the sample note is found
to be consistent with this section and the ordinance, the
commission shall approve the sample note for use by the
municipal corporation, county, or township. The
form and content of the notes to be used by
the municipal corporation, county, or township in
issuing the local government communities fund notes may
be modified at any time subsequent to the commission's approval
of the sample note upon the approval of the commission and the
director of law, prosecuting
attorney, or other chief legal officer of the municipal
corporation, county, or township. The
failure of the director of law, prosecuting attorney, or
other chief legal officer of
the municipal corporation, county, or township to
make the certification required by this
division shall not subject that legal officer to removal
pursuant to the Revised
Code or the charter of a municipal corporation.
If the director of law, prosecuting attorney, or
other chief legal officer fails or refuses to make the
certification required by this division, or if any officer of the
municipal corporation, county, or township fails or
refuses to take any action required by this
section or the ordinance or resolution authorizing the issuance or sale of
local government communities fund notes, the mayor of the municipal
corporation or the board of county commissioners or board of township
trustees may
cause the commencement of a mandamus action in the supreme court
against the director of law, prosecuting attorney, or
other chief legal officer to
secure the certification required by this division or other
action required by this section or the ordinance or resolution. If an
adjudication of the matters that could be adjudicated in
validation proceedings under section 133.70 of the Revised Code
is necessary to a determination of the mandamus action, the mayor,
the board of county commissioners, or the board of township trustees or
the mayor's or board's legal counsel shall name and cause to
be served as defendants to
the mandamus action all of the following:
(1) The director of law, prosecuting attorney, or other
chief legal officer, or
other official of the municipal corporation, county, or
township, whose failure or refusal to
act necessitated the action;
(2) The municipal corporation, through its
mayor, or the board of county commissioners or board of township
trustees;
(3) The financial planning and supervision commission,
through its chairperson;
(4) The prosecuting attorney and auditor of each county in
which the municipal corporation, county, or
township is located, in whole or in part;
(5) The auditor of state;
(6) The property owners, taxpayers, citizens of the
municipal corporation, county, or township and
others having or claiming any right, title, or
interest in any property or funds to be affected by the issuance
of the local government communities fund notes by the municipal
corporation, county, or township, or
otherwise affected in any way thereby.
Service upon all defendants described in division (J)(6) of
this section shall be by publication three times, with at least
six days between each publication, in a newspaper of general
circulation in Franklin county and a newspaper of general
circulation in the county or counties where the
municipal corporation, county, or township is
located. The publication and the notice shall indicate that the
nature of the action is in mandamus, the name of the parties to
the action, and that the action may result in the validation of
the subject local government communities fund notes. Authorization to
commence such an action by the legislative authority of the
municipal corporation, county, or township is not
required.
A copy of the complaint in the mandamus action shall be
served personally or by certified mail upon the attorney general.
If the attorney general has reason to believe that the complaint
is defective, insufficient, or untrue, or if in the attorney
general's opinion the
issuance of the local government communities fund notes is not lawful or has
not been duly authorized, defense shall be made to the complaint
as the attorney general considers proper.
(K) The action in mandamus authorized by division (J) of
this section shall take priority over all other civil cases
pending in the court, except habeas corpus, and shall be
determined with the least possible delay. The supreme court may
determine that the local government communities fund notes will be consistent
with the purpose and effects, including not occupying the
indirect debt limit, provided for in this section and will be
validly issued and acquired. Such a determination shall include
a finding of validation of the subject local government communities fund
notes if the court specifically finds that:
(1) The complaint in mandamus, or subsequent pleadings,
include appropriate allegations required by division (C) of
section 133.70 of the Revised Code, and that the proceeding is in
lieu of an action to validate under section 133.70 of the Revised
Code;
(2) All parties described in divisions (J)(1) to (6) of
this section have been duly served with notice or are otherwise
properly before the court;
(3) Notice of the action has been published as required by
division (J) of this section;
(4) The effect of validation is required to provide a
complete review and determination of the controversy in mandamus,
and to avoid duplication of litigation, danger of inconsistent
results, or inordinate delay in light of the
fiscal emergency, or that a disposition in the mandamus action
would, as a practical matter, be dispositive of any subsequent
validation proceedings under section 133.70 of the Revised Code.
(L) Any decision that includes a finding of validation has
the same effect as a validation order established by an action
under section 133.70 of the Revised Code.
(M) Divisions (J) and (K) of this section do not prevent a
municipal corporation, county, or township from
using section 133.70 of the Revised Code to
validate local government communities fund notes by the filing of a petition
for validation in the court of common pleas of the county in
which the municipal corporation, county, or
township is located, in whole or in part.
(N) It is hereby determined by the general assembly that a
validation action authorized by section 133.70 of the Revised
Code is not an adequate remedy at law with respect to a
municipal corporation, county, or township that is
a party to a mandamus action pursuant to
divisions (J) and (K) of this section and in which a fiscal
emergency condition has been determined to exist pursuant to
section 118.04 of the Revised Code because of, but not limited
to, the following reasons:
(1) It is urgently necessary for such a municipal
corporation, county, or township to
take prompt action to issue local government communities fund notes for the
purposes provided in division (C) of this section;
(2) The potentially ruinous effect upon the fiscal
condition of a municipal corporation, county, or
township by the passage of the time required
to adjudicate such a separate validation action and any appeals
thereof;
(3) The reasons stated in division (K)(4) of this section.
Sec. 118.20. Pursuant to section 118.19 of the Revised
Code:
(A) The ordinance or resolution authorizing the debt obligations may
provide for the pledge of, and covenants to levy, charge,
collect, deposit, and apply ad valorem property taxes, income
taxes, excises, utility revenues, local government communities fund receipts,
permit and license fees, and any other receipts from taxes,
permits, licenses, fines, or other sources of revenue of the
municipal corporation, county, or township; accrued
and capitalized interest and premium from
the proceeds of the sale of the debt obligations, lawfully
available for the purpose, to the payment of the debt service and
costs of issuing, carrying, redeeming, and retiring such debt
obligations; covenants in respect of the establishment,
investment, segregation, and maintenance of any funds or reserves
in connection with the debt obligations and any other funds of
the municipal corporation, county, or township. No
pledge may be made in a manner which
impairs the contract rights of the holders of any outstanding
debt obligations.
(B) The ordinance or resolution authorizing the debt obligations may
designate a fiscal agent for the debt obligations, or the fiscal
agent may be designated by other ordinance or resolution of the
legislative authority of the municipal corporation,
county, or township. The fiscal agent may
be a purchaser of such debt obligations or other debt obligations
of the municipal corporation, county, or township.
(C) The ordinance or resolution authorizing the debt obligations may
provide for immediate or periodic deposit of pledged receipts or
a portion thereof in one or more separate bank accounts, funds,
or other accounts established with the fiscal agent. Provision
may be made therein for pledged receipts that are collected by
the state, the county, the township, or any agency for the
municipal corporation, county, or township to be
transferred by the appropriate officer of the state or county or
agency having charge of the collection or distribution of such
pledged receipts directly to the fiscal agent for deposit under
the ordinance or resolution. Such officers of the state and county or
agent
shall transfer such pledged receipts in accordance with this
section and the ordinance. The fiscal agent shall disburse funds
so held for payments when due in accordance with the ordinance or resolution,
including the transfer of funds to paying agents for the debt
obligations at the times and in the amounts required. Until
needed for such purposes, the fiscal agent shall invest the funds
on behalf of the municipal corporation, county, or
township in obligations that are lawful for
the investment of public funds of the municipal
corporation, county, or township, including
provisions for such investments in a
municipal charter, in the manner
provided for in the ordinance or resolution. Funds held by the fiscal agent
and all moneys and securities therein and pledged receipts
payable thereto in accordance with the ordinance or resolution are hereby
declared to be property of the municipal corporation,
county, or township devoted to essential
governmental purposes and accordingly shall not be applied to any
purpose other than as provided herein and shall not be subject to
any order, judgment, lien, execution, attachment, setoff, or
counterclaim by any creditor of the municipal
corporation, county, or township other than a
creditor for whose benefit such fund is established and
maintained and who is entitled thereto under and pursuant to this
section.
(D) The ordinance or resolution authorizing the debt obligations shall
provide that proceeds of the debt obligations shall be deposited
with a fiscal agent in a special and separate bank account and
held in trust and expended only for the object or purpose for
which such debt obligations were issued. A copy of the ordinance
or resolution authorizing the debt obligations shall be filed with such fiscal
agent at or prior to the time the proceeds are made available to
the municipal corporation, county, or township. No
moneys shall be withdrawn from such account
unless there is filed with such fiscal agent a written
requisition of the fiscal officer of the municipal
corporation, county, or township or the fiscal officer's
authorized deputy, setting forth the item number of the
requisition or the account to be charged, the name of the person
to whom payment is due, the amount to be paid, a statement to the
effect that the obligation in the stated amount has been incurred
by the municipal corporation, county, or
township and is a proper charge against such account,
and such other information as may be required by the ordinance or
resolution.
Pending such withdrawals, the moneys shall be invested for and on
behalf of the municipal corporation, county, or
township by the fiscal agent in obligations
which are lawful for the investment of public funds of the
municipal corporation, county, or township,
including provisions for such
investments in a municipal charter, in the manner as provided for in the
ordinance or
resolution.
(E) Amounts held by fiscal agents shall be accounted for
in the appropriate special funds of the municipal
corporation, county, or township as if held
in the treasury of the municipal corporation, county,
or township, and the fiscal agents shall
provide such information to the municipal corporation,
county, or township as is necessary for
the purpose.
(F) The ordinance or resolution authorizing the debt obligations may
contain covenants of the municipal corporation, county,
or township to protect and safeguard
the security and rights of the holders of such debt obligations,
and without limiting the generality of the foregoing, such
ordinance or resolution may contain covenants as to:
(1) Establishment and maintenance of the funds to be held
by fiscal agents as provided in this section and section 118.23
of the Revised Code, the times, amounts, and levels for deposits
to such funds, and the obligations in which the proceeds of such
funds may be invested pending their use, subject to such
limitations on investment of public funds otherwise provided for
by law or pursuant to the charter of a municipal
corporation;
(2) The appointment, rights, powers, and duties of the
fiscal agent, including limiting or abrogating the right of the
holders to appoint a trustee pursuant to section 118.21 of the
Revised Code and vesting in the fiscal agent all or any of such
rights, powers, and duties, in trust;
(3) The execution of a credit agreement with the fiscal
agent for the benefit of holders of such debt obligations and for
the benefit of any other holders of other debt obligations of the
municipal corporation, county, or township then
outstanding, provided, however, that such
benefit conferred on such holders of such outstanding debt
obligations shall not be deemed to restrict, preclude, or
otherwise impair any rights that such holders otherwise may
assert;
(4) Filings, review, and correction of tax budgets,
appropriation measures, annual reports, audits, and other matters
of financial record;
(5) Compliance with the provisions of this chapter and the
financial plan and other laws applicable to the
municipal corporation, county, or township
including Chapters 133. and 5705. of the Revised Code, and with
further restrictions on the powers, rights, and duties of the
municipal corporation, county, or township
necessary, appropriate, or desirable for the proper,
provident, and efficient management of financial affairs that the
municipal corporation, county, or township, with
the approval of the commission or, when
authorized by the commission, the financial supervisor,
determines will assure prompt payment when due of its debt
obligations;
(6) Conditions that would give rise to an event of default
under the terms of such ordinance and actions and remedies that
the fiscal agent may take or assert on behalf of the holders of
such debt obligations;
(7) Restrictions on the issuance of other debt
obligations.
Sec. 118.23. (A) This section shall be applicable to
current revenue notes approved by the financial planning and
supervision commission or, when authorized by the commission, the
financial supervisor pursuant to section 118.15 of the Revised
Code and issued by a municipal corporation, county, or
township pursuant to section 133.10 of
the Revised Code and this section during a fiscal emergency
period.
(B) In the case of the issuance of such current revenue
notes in anticipation of ad valorem property taxes, the county
auditors of the counties in which the municipal
corporation, county, or township is located, at
the time of and from each distribution to the municipality of the
proceeds of the anticipated taxes, including any payments from
the state pursuant to sections 321.24 and 323.156 of the Revised
Code, whether such distribution be in the form of an advance or
settlement that would otherwise have been paid to a fund or funds
of the municipal corporation, county, or township,
shall draw a separate warrant for payment to
the county auditor for deposit in a special account to be held
and applied pursuant to this section by the county auditor as
fiscal agent and entitled "....... (insert name of
municipal corporation, county, or township)
current tax revenue note retirement account," that portion of
such distribution as provided for in the ordinance or resolution authorizing
such notes pursuant to this section.
(C) In the case of the issuance of such current revenue
notes in anticipation of revenues other than ad valorem property
taxes, the ordinance or resolution authorizing such notes shall provide for
the
times and amounts of deposits with the fiscal agent by the
municipal corporation, county, or township of
moneys from the revenues anticipated that shall
be deposited in a special account to be held and applied by the
fiscal agent pursuant to this section and entitled "..........
(insert name of municipal corporation, county, or
township) current revenue note retirement
account." Such ordinance or resolution may provide for the direct deposit to
such account by the auditor of state and the county auditor or
county auditors of the receiving counties, as appropriate, of
such portions as therein specified of local government communities fund
distribution to be made to the municipal corporation,
county, or township.
(D) The moneys in the accounts provided for in divisions
(B) and (C) of this section are pledged and shall be used, so
long as any portion of the debt service on such notes payable
from the respective account is unpaid, solely for the purpose of
paying such debt service, and for any reserves for debt service
provided for in the ordinance or resolution authorizing such debt
obligations. If accumulated payments into either account produce an amount
less than that needed to make a timely payment of debt service or
to such reserves, the full amount needed to make up any such
deficiency shall be paid, in the case of the current tax revenue
note retirement account, by the county auditor into such account
from the last distribution or distributions to the
municipal corporation, county, or township
of the proceeds of the anticipated taxes to be received prior to
the date of such payment, and in the case of the current revenue
note retirement account, by the fiscal officer from the
anticipated revenues received prior to the date of such payment.
(E) The amounts to be deposited in each respective account
pursuant to divisions (B), (C), and (D) of this section must be
sufficient, in time and amount, to pay the principal of and
interest on current notes payable from such account at their
stated payment dates and to develop and maintain the required
amounts in any such reserves.
(F) The municipal corporation, county, or township
shall not be entitled to receive from
the fiscal agent any moneys held in the current tax revenue note
retirement account or current revenue note retirement account,
except that any surplus moneys remaining in either such account
after the payment in full of the debt service on the notes
payable therefrom shall be paid to the municipal
corporation, county, or township, to be used
for any lawful purpose of the municipal corporation,
county, or township for which the
anticipated revenues themselves might have been used.
(G) Current revenue notes of a municipal corporation,
county, or township issued during
a fiscal emergency period may mature on or before the
thirty-first day of December of the calendar year in which
issued, may, when issued in anticipation of the collection of
current tax revenues, anticipate one-half of the amount that the
budget commission estimates the subdivision will receive from all
property taxes that are to be distributed to the subdivision from
all settlements of taxes that are to be made in the remainder of
that year, other than taxes to be received for the payment of
debt charges, and less all advances, and may, if issued during
the last two months of the calendar year in which the fiscal
emergency period commenced, anticipate one-half the estimated
amount of ad valorem property taxes levied in that year for the
tax budget of the following year which were authorized to be
levied by the municipal charter or otherwise
authorized
by vote of the electorate of the municipal corporation,
county, or township and may mature not
later than the thirty-first day of December of the year following
the year in which such notes are issued, notwithstanding section
133.10 of the Revised Code.
(H) Pursuant to section 118.19 of the Revised Code, the
municipal corporation, county, or township may
utilize any of the special provisions of
sections 118.20 to 118.22 of the Revised Code in connection with
such current revenue notes.
(I) Before any such current revenue notes may be
authorized, the municipal corporation, county, or
township shall submit to the commission and
the commission or, when authorized by the commission, the
financial supervisor shall approve:
(1) A schedule of projected revenues and expenses of the
municipal corporation, county, or township during
the period in which such notes would be
outstanding, demonstrating an anticipated cash flow deficit
during such period, the amount of such anticipated cash flow
deficit, and the necessity for the issuance of such current
revenue notes to avoid the occurrence of such a cash flow
deficit;
(2) The terms of the proposed notes, including the
interest rate or rates to be paid thereon;
(3) The schedule, showing times, amounts, and sources of
payment, for deposits into the account from which such notes are
to be paid;
(4) Other documents and data required under section 118.15
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 119.07. Except when a statute prescribes a notice and
the persons to whom it shall be given, in all cases in which
section 119.06 of the Revised Code requires an agency to afford
an opportunity for a hearing prior to the issuance of an order,
the agency shall give notice to the party informing him the
party of his the party's
right to a hearing. Notice shall be given by registered or certified mail,
return receipt requested, and shall include the charges or other
reasons for the proposed action, the law or rule directly
involved, and a statement informing the party that he the party
is entitled
to a hearing if he the party requests it within thirty days of
the time of
mailing the notice. The notice shall also inform the party that
at the hearing he the party may appear in person, by his
the party's attorney, or by
such other representative as is permitted to practice before the
agency, or may present his the party's position, arguments, or
contentions in
writing and that at the hearing he the party may present
evidence and
examine witnesses appearing for and against him the party. A
copy of the
notice shall be mailed to attorneys or other representatives of
record representing the party. This paragraph does not apply to
situations in which such section provides for a hearing only when
it is requested by the party.
When a statute specifically permits the suspension of a
license without a prior hearing, notice of the agency's order
shall be sent to the party by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, not later than the business day next succeeding such
order. The notice shall state the reasons for the agency's
action, cite the law or rule directly involved, and state that
the party will be afforded a hearing if he the party requests it
within
thirty days of the time of mailing the notice. A copy of the
notice shall be mailed to attorneys or other representatives of
record representing the party.
Whenever a party requests a hearing in accordance with this
section and section 119.06 of the Revised Code, the agency shall
immediately set the date, time, and place for the hearing and
forthwith notify the party thereof. The date set for the hearing
shall be within fifteen days, but not earlier than seven days,
after the party has requested a hearing, unless otherwise agreed
to by both the agency and the party.
When any notice sent by registered or certified mail, as required by
sections 119.01 to 119.13 of the Revised Code, is returned
because of failure of delivery the agency shall send the notice by ordinary mail to the party at the party's last known address and shall obtain a certificate of mailing. Service by ordinary mail is complete when the certificate of mailing is obtained. If a notice sent by ordinary mail is returned showing failure of delivery, the agency shall notify the attorneys or other representatives of record representing the party of the failure of delivery and serve a copy of the notice upon them, by ordinary or registered or certified mail; if ordinary mail is used, the agency shall obtain a certificate of mailing. Service upon the attorneys or other representatives of record is complete when the notice is mailed. If there are no attorneys or other representatives of record representing the party, the agency either shall make
personal delivery of the notice by an employee or agent of the agency or
shall cause a summary of the substantive provisions of the notice to be published once a week for three
consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the
county where the last known place of residence or business address of the
party is located. When notice is given by publication, a copy of
the newspaper a proof of publication affidavit, with the first publication of the notice marked set forth in the affidavit,
shall be mailed by ordinary mail to the party at the party's last known address and the
notice shall be deemed received as of the date of the last
publication. An employee or agent of the agency may make personal delivery of the notice upon a party at any time.
Refusal of delivery by personal service or by mail is not failure of delivery. Failure of delivery occurs only when, with reasonable diligence, a party cannot be found to make personal service of a notice, or if a mailed notice is returned by the postal authorities marked undeliverable, addressee unknown, or forwarding address unknown or expired. A party's last known address is the mailing address of the party appearing in the records of the agency.
The failure of an agency to give the notices for any
hearing required by sections 119.01 to 119.13 of the Revised Code
in the manner provided in this section shall invalidate any order
entered pursuant to the hearing.
Sec. 120.33. (A) In lieu of using a county public
defender
or joint county public defender to represent indigent
persons in
the proceedings set forth in division (A) of section
120.16 of the
Revised Code, the board of county commissioners of
any county may
adopt a resolution to pay counsel who are either
personally
selected by the indigent person or appointed by the
court. The
resolution shall include those provisions the board
of county
commissioners considers necessary to provide effective
representation of indigent persons in any proceeding for which
counsel is provided under this section. The resolution shall
include provisions for contracts with any municipal corporation
under which the municipal corporation shall reimburse the county
for counsel appointed to represent indigent persons charged with
violations of the ordinances of the municipal corporation.
(1) In a county that adopts a resolution to pay counsel,
an
indigent person shall have the right to do either of the
following:
(a) To select the person's own personal counsel to represent
the person in
any proceeding included within the provisions of the
resolution;
(b) To request the court to appoint counsel to represent
the
person in such a proceeding.
(2) The court having jurisdiction over the proceeding in a
county that adopts a resolution to pay counsel shall, after
determining that the person is indigent and entitled to legal
representation under this section, do either of the following:
(a) By signed journal entry recorded on its docket, enter
the name of the lawyer selected by the indigent person as counsel
of record;
(b) Appoint counsel for the indigent person if the person
has requested the court to appoint counsel and, by signed journal
entry recorded on its dockets, enter the name of the lawyer
appointed for the indigent person as counsel of record.
(3) The board of county commissioners shall establish a
schedule of fees by case or on an hourly basis to be paid to
counsel for legal services provided pursuant to a resolution
adopted under this section. Prior to establishing the schedule,
the board of county commissioners shall request the bar
association or associations of the county to submit a proposed
schedule. The schedule submitted shall be subject to the review,
amendment, and approval of the board of county commissioners.
(4) Counsel selected by the indigent person or appointed
by
the court at the request of an indigent person in a county
that
adopts a resolution to pay counsel, except for counsel
appointed
to represent a person charged with any violation of an
ordinance
of a municipal corporation that has not contracted with
the county
commissioners for the payment of appointed counsel,
shall be paid
by the county and shall receive the compensation
and expenses the
court approves. Each request for payment shall
be accompanied by
a financial disclosure form and an affidavit of
indigency that are
completed by the
indigent person on forms prescribed by the state
public defender.
Compensation and expenses shall not exceed the
amounts fixed by
the board of county commissioners in the schedule
adopted
pursuant to division (A)(3) of this section. No court
shall
approve compensation and expenses that exceed the amount
fixed
pursuant to division (A)(3) of this section.
The fees and expenses approved by the court shall not be
taxed as part of the costs and shall be paid by the county.
However, if the person represented has, or may reasonably be
expected to have, the means to meet some part of the cost of the
services rendered to the person, the person shall pay
the county
an
amount that the person reasonably can be expected to pay.
Pursuant to section 120.04 of the Revised Code, the county shall
pay to the
state public defender a percentage of the
payment
received from the
person in an amount
proportionate to the
percentage of the costs of the person's case
that were paid to the
county by the state public defender
pursuant to this section. The
money paid to the state public
defender shall be credited to the
client payment
fund created pursuant to division (B)(5) of section
120.04 of the
Revised Code.
The county auditor shall draw a warrant on the county
treasurer for the payment of counsel in the amount fixed by the
court, plus the expenses the court fixes and certifies to the
auditor. The county auditor shall report periodically, but not
less than annually, to the board of county commissioners and to
the Ohio state public defender commission the amounts paid out pursuant
to the approval of the court. The board of county commissioners,
after review and approval of the auditor's report, or the county auditor, with permission from and notice to the board of county commissioners, may then
certify it to the state public defender for reimbursement. If a
request for reimbursement is not accompanied by a financial
disclosure form
and an affidavit of
indigency completed by the
indigent person on forms prescribed by
the state public defender and the court does not certify by electronic signature as prescribed by the state public defender that a financial disclosure form and affidavit of indigency have been completed by the indigent person and are available for inspection,
the state public defender shall not
pay the requested
reimbursement. If a request for the
reimbursement of the cost of
counsel in any case is not received
by the state public defender
within ninety days after the end of
the calendar month in which
the case is finally disposed of by
the court, unless the county
has requested and the state public
defender has granted an
extension of the ninety-day limit, the
state public defender shall
not pay the requested reimbursement.
The state public defender
shall also review the report and, in
accordance with the
standards, guidelines, and maximums
established pursuant to
divisions (B)(7) and (8) of section
120.04 of the Revised Code,
prepare a voucher for fifty per cent
of the total cost of each
county appointed counsel system in the
period of time covered by
the certified report and a voucher for
fifty per cent of the costs
and expenses that are reimbursable
under section 120.35 of the
Revised Code, if any, or, if the
amount of money appropriated by
the general assembly to reimburse
counties for the operation of
county public defender offices,
joint county public defender
offices, and county appointed
counsel systems is not sufficient to
pay fifty per cent of the
total cost of all of the offices and
systems other than costs and
expenses that are reimbursable under
section 120.35 of the
Revised Code, for the lesser amount required
by section 120.34 of
the Revised Code.
(5) If any county appointed counsel system fails to
maintain
the standards for the conduct of the system established
by the
rules of the Ohio public defender commission pursuant to
divisions
(B) and (C) of section 120.03 or the standards
established by the
state public defender pursuant to division
(B)(7) of section
120.04 of the Revised Code, the Ohio public
defender commission
shall notify the board of county
commissioners of the county that
the county appointed counsel
system has failed to comply with its
rules or the standards of
the state public defender. Unless the
board of county
commissioners corrects the conduct of its
appointed counsel
system to comply with the rules and standards
within ninety days
after the date of the notice, the state public
defender may deny all or part
of the county's reimbursement
from
the state provided for in division (A)(4) of this section.
(B) In lieu of using a county public defender or joint
county public defender to represent indigent persons in the
proceedings set forth in division (A) of section 120.16 of the
Revised Code, and in lieu of adopting the resolution and
following
the procedure described in division (A) of this
section, the board
of county commissioners of any county may
contract with the state
public defender for the state public
defender's legal
representation of indigent persons. A contract entered into
pursuant to this division may provide for payment for the
services
provided on a per case, hourly, or fixed contract basis.
(C) If a court appoints an attorney pursuant to this section
to represent a
petitioner in a postconviction relief proceeding
under section 2953.21 of the
Revised Code, the petitioner has
received a sentence of death, and the
proceeding relates to that
sentence, the attorney who represents the petitioner in the
proceeding pursuant to the appointment shall be certified under
Rule
20 of the Rules of Superintendence for
the
Courts
of Ohio
to represent indigent
defendants charged with or
convicted of an
offense for which the
death penalty can be or has
been imposed.
Sec. 122.051. There is hereby created in the state treasury the international trade cooperative projects fund. The fund shall consist of moneys received from private and nonprofit organizations involved in cooperative agreements related to import/export and direct foreign investment activities and cash transfers from other state agencies or any state or local government to encourage, promote, and assist trade and commerce between this state and foreign nations, pursuant to section 122.05 and division (E) of section 122.04 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 122.071. There is hereby created in the state treasury the travel and tourism cooperative projects fund consisting of all grants, gifts, and contributions made to the director of development for marketing and promotion of travel and tourism within this state pursuant to division (F) of section 122.04 and section 122.07 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 122.076. There is hereby created in the state treasury the energy projects fund consisting of nonfederal revenue that is remitted to the director of development for the purpose of energy projects. Money in the fund shall be used by the department of development for energy projects and to pay the costs incurred in administering the energy projects.
Sec. 122.17. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Full-time employee" means an individual who is
employed for consideration for at least an average of thirty-five hours a week
or who renders any other standard of service generally accepted
by custom or specified by contract as full-time employment, or who is employed for consideration for such time or renders such service but is on active duty reserve or Ohio national guard service.
(2) "New employee" means one of the following:
(a) A full-time employee first employed by a taxpayer in
the project that is the subject of the agreement after the
taxpayer enters into a tax credit agreement with the tax credit
authority under this section;
(b) A full-time employee first employed by a taxpayer in
the project that is the subject of the tax credit after the tax
credit authority approves a project for a tax credit under this
section in a public meeting, as long as the taxpayer enters into
the tax credit agreement prepared by the department of
development after such meeting within sixty days after receiving
the agreement from the department. If the taxpayer fails to
enter into the agreement within sixty days, "new employee" has
the same meaning as under division (A)(2)(a) of this section. A full-time employee may be considered a "new employee" of a taxpayer, despite previously having been employed by a related member of the taxpayer, if all of the following apply:
(i) The related member is a party to the tax credit agreement at the time the employee is first employed with the taxpayer;
(ii) The related member will remain subject to the tax imposed by section 5725.18, 5729.03, 5733.06, or 5747.02 or levied under Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code for the remainder of the term of the tax credit, and the tax credit is taken against liability for that same tax through the remainder of the term of the tax credit; and
(iii) The employee was considered a new employee of the related member prior to employment with the taxpayer.
Under division (A)(2)(a) or (b) of this section, if the tax
credit authority determines it appropriate, "new employee" also
may include an employee re-hired or called back from lay-off to
work in a new facility or on a new product or service established
or produced by the taxpayer after entering into the agreement
under this section or after the tax credit authority approves the
tax credit in a public meeting. Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, "new employee" does not include
any employee of the taxpayer who was previously employed in this
state by a related member of the taxpayer and whose employment
was shifted to the taxpayer after the taxpayer entered into the
tax credit agreement or after the tax credit authority approved
the credit in a public meeting, or any employee of the taxpayer
for which the taxpayer has been granted a certificate under
division (B) of section 5709.66 of the Revised Code.
However, if the taxpayer is engaged in the enrichment and commercialization of uranium or uranium products or is engaged in research and development activities related thereto and if the tax credit authority determines it appropriate, "new employee" may include an employee of the taxpayer who was previously employed in this state by a related member of the taxpayer and whose employment was shifted to the taxpayer after the taxpayer entered into the tax credit agreement or after the tax credit authority approved the credit in a public meeting. "New employee" does not include an employee of the
taxpayer who is employed in an employment position that
was
relocated to a project from other operations of the taxpayer in
this state or from operations of a related member of the
taxpayer in this state.
In
addition, "new employee" does not include a child, grandchild,
parent, or spouse, other than a spouse who is legally separated
from the individual, of any individual who is an employee of the
taxpayer and who has a direct or indirect ownership interest of
at least five per cent in the profits, capital, or value of the
taxpayer. Such ownership interest shall be determined in
accordance with section 1563 of the Internal Revenue Code and
regulations prescribed thereunder.
(3) "New income tax revenue" means the total amount
withheld under section 5747.06 of the Revised Code by the
taxpayer during the taxable year, or during the calendar year that includes the tax period, from the compensation of new
employees for the tax levied under Chapter 5747. of the Revised
Code.
(4) "Related member" has the same meaning as under
division (A)(6) of section 5733.042 of the Revised Code without
regard to division (B) of that section.
(B) The tax credit authority may make grants under this
section to foster job creation in this state. Such a grant shall
take the form of a refundable credit allowed against the tax
imposed by section 5725.18, 5729.03, 5733.06, or
5747.02 or levied under Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code. The
credit shall be claimed for the taxable years or tax periods specified in the
taxpayer's agreement with the tax credit authority under division
(D) of this section. With respect to taxes imposed under section 5733.06 or 5747.02 or Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code, the credit shall be claimed in the order required under section 5733.98, 5747.98, or 5751.98
of the Revised Code. The amount of the credit available for a taxable year or for a calendar year that includes a tax period equals the new
income tax revenue for that year multiplied by the
percentage specified in the agreement with the tax credit
authority. Any credit granted under this section against the tax imposed by section 5733.06 or 5747.02 of the Revised Code, to the extent not fully utilized against such tax for taxable years ending prior to 2008, shall automatically be converted without any action taken by the tax credit authority to a credit against the tax levied under Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code for tax periods beginning on or after July 1, 2008, provided that the person to whom the credit was granted is subject to such tax. The converted credit shall apply to those calendar years in which the remaining taxable years specified in the agreement end.
(C) A taxpayer or potential taxpayer who proposes a
project to create new jobs in this state may apply to the tax
credit authority to enter into an agreement for a tax credit
under this section. The director of development
shall prescribe
the form of the application. After receipt of an application,
the authority may enter into an agreement with the taxpayer for a
credit under this section if it determines all of the following:
(1) The taxpayer's project will create new jobs in this
state;
(2) The taxpayer's project is economically sound and will
benefit the people of this state by increasing opportunities for
employment and strengthening the economy of this state;
(3) Receiving the tax credit is a major factor in the
taxpayer's decision to go forward with the project.
(D) An agreement under this section shall include all of
the following:
(1) A detailed description of the project that is the
subject of the agreement;
(2) The term of the tax credit, which shall not exceed fifteen
years, and the first taxable year, or first calendar year that includes a tax period, for which the credit may be
claimed;
(3) A requirement that the taxpayer shall maintain
operations at the project location for at least twice the number
of years as the term of the tax credit;
(4) The percentage, as determined by the tax credit
authority, of new income tax revenue that will be allowed as the
amount of the credit for each taxable year or for each calendar year that includes a tax period;
(5) A specific method for determining how many new
employees are employed during a taxable year or during a calendar year that includes a tax period;
(6) A requirement that the taxpayer annually shall report
to the director of development the number of new
employees, the
new income tax revenue withheld in connection with the new
employees, and any other information the director needs to
perform the director's duties under this section;
(7) A requirement that the director of
development
annually shall verify the amounts reported under division (D)(6)
of this section, and after doing so shall issue a certificate to
the taxpayer stating that the amounts have been verified;
(8)(a) A provision requiring that the
taxpayer, except as otherwise provided in division
(D)(8)(b) of this section,
shall not relocate employment positions from elsewhere in this state to the
project site that
is the subject of the agreement for the lesser of five years from the date the
agreement is entered into or the number of years the
taxpayer is entitled to claim the tax credit.
(b) The taxpayer may relocate employment positions from elsewhere
in
this state to the project site that is the subject of the agreement if the
director of development determines both of the
following:
(i) That the site from which the employment positions would be
relocated
is inadequate to meet market and industry conditions, expansion plans,
consolidation plans, or other business considerations affecting the
taxpayer;
(ii) That the legislative authority of the county,
township, or municipal corporation from which the employment positions would
be relocated has
been notified of the relocation.
For purposes of this section, the movement of an
employment position from one political subdivision to another
political subdivision shall be considered a relocation of an
employment position, but the transfer of an individual employee
from one political subdivision to another political subdivision
shall not be considered a relocation of an employment position
as long as the individual's employment position in the first
political subdivision is refilled.
(E) If a taxpayer fails to meet or comply with any
condition or requirement set forth in a tax credit agreement, the
tax credit authority may amend the agreement to reduce the
percentage or term of the tax credit. The reduction of the
percentage or term shall take effect (1) in the taxable year
immediately following the taxable year in which the authority
amends the agreement or the director of development notifies the taxpayer in writing of such failure, or (2) in the first tax period beginning in the calendar year immediately following the calendar year in which the authority amends the agreement or the director notifies the taxpayer in writing of such failure. If the taxpayer fails to annually report any of the information required by division (D)(6) of this section within the time required by the director, the reduction of the percentage or term may take effect in the current taxable year.
If the taxpayer relocates employment positions in violation of the
provision required
under division (D)(8)(a)
of this section, the taxpayer shall not claim the tax credit under section
5733.0610 of the Revised Code for any tax years
following the calendar year in which the relocation occurs, or shall not claim
the tax credit under
section 5725.32, 5729.032, or 5747.058 of the Revised Code for the taxable year in
which the relocation occurs and any subsequent taxable years, and shall not claim the tax credit under division (A) of section 5751.50 of the Revised Code for any tax period in the calendar year in which the relocation occurs and any subsequent tax periods.
(F) Projects that consist solely of
point-of-final-purchase retail facilities are not eligible for a
tax credit under this section. If a project consists of both
point-of-final-purchase retail facilities and nonretail
facilities, only the portion of the project consisting of the
nonretail facilities is eligible for a tax credit and only the
new income tax revenue from new employees of the nonretail
facilities shall be considered when computing the amount of the
tax credit. If a warehouse facility is part of a
point-of-final-purchase retail facility and supplies only that
facility, the warehouse facility is not eligible for a tax
credit. Catalog distribution centers are not considered
point-of-final-purchase retail facilities for the purposes of
this division, and are eligible for tax credits under this
section.
(G) Financial statements and other information submitted
to the department of development or the tax
credit authority by
an applicant or recipient of a tax credit under this section, and
any information taken for any purpose from such statements or
information, are not public records subject to section 149.43 of
the Revised Code. However, the chairperson of the
authority may
make use of the statements and other information for purposes of
issuing public reports or in connection with court proceedings
concerning tax credit agreements under this section. Upon the
request of the tax commissioner or, if the applicant or recipient is an insurance company, upon the request of the superintendent of insurance, the chairperson of the
authority
shall provide to the commissioner or superintendent any statement or information
submitted by an applicant or recipient of a tax credit in
connection with the credit. The commissioner or superintendent shall preserve the
confidentiality of the statement or information.
(H) A taxpayer claiming a credit under this section shall
submit to the tax commissioner or, if the taxpayer is an insurance company, to the superintendent of insurance, a copy of the director of
development's certificate of verification under division (D)(7)
of this section with the taxpayer's tax report or return for the taxable year or for the calendar year that includes the tax period. Failure to submit
a copy of the certificate with the report or return does not invalidate a claim for a
credit if the taxpayer submits a copy of the certificate to the commissioner or superintendent within sixty days after the commissioner or superintendent requests it.
(I) The director of development, after
consultation with
the tax commissioner and the superintendent of insurance and in accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code, shall adopt rules necessary to implement this
section. The rules may provide for recipients of tax credits
under this section to be charged fees to cover administrative
costs of the tax credit program. The fees collected shall be credited to the tax incentive programs operating fund created in section 122.174 of the Revised Code. At the time the director
gives public
notice under division (A) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code
of the adoption of the rules, the director shall submit copies of
the proposed rules to the chairpersons of the standing
committees on
economic development in the senate and the house of
representatives.
(J) For the purposes of this section, a taxpayer may
include a partnership, a corporation that has made an election
under subchapter S of chapter one of subtitle A of the Internal
Revenue Code, or any other business entity through which income
flows as a distributive share to its owners. A credit received
under this section by a partnership, S-corporation, or other such
business entity shall be apportioned among may elect to pass the credit received under this section through to the persons to whom
the income or profit of the partnership, S-corporation, or other
entity is distributed,. The election shall be made on the annual report required under division (D)(6) of this section. The election applies to and is irrevocable for the credit for which the report is submitted. If the election is made, the credit shall be apportioned among those persons in the same proportions as those in which
the income or profit is distributed.
(K) If the director of development determines
that a
taxpayer who has received a credit under this section is not
complying with the requirement under division (D)(3) of this
section, the director shall notify the tax credit authority
of the
noncompliance. After receiving such a notice, and after giving
the taxpayer an opportunity to explain the noncompliance, the tax
credit authority may require the taxpayer to refund to this state
a portion of the credit in accordance with the following:
(1) If the taxpayer maintained operations at the project
location for at least one and one-half times the number of years
of the term of the tax credit, an amount not exceeding
twenty-five per cent of the sum of any previously allowed credits
under this section;
(2) If the taxpayer maintained operations at the project
location for at least the number of years of the term of the tax
credit, an amount not exceeding fifty per cent of the sum of any
previously allowed credits under this section;
(3) If the taxpayer maintained operations at the project
location for less than the number of years of the term of the tax
credit, an amount not exceeding one hundred per cent of the sum
of any previously allowed credits under this section.
In determining the portion of the tax credit to be refunded
to this state, the tax credit authority shall consider the effect
of market conditions on the taxpayer's project and whether the
taxpayer continues to maintain other operations in this state.
After making the determination, the authority shall certify the
amount to be refunded to the tax commissioner or superintendent of insurance, as appropriate. If the amount is certified to the commissioner, the commissioner
shall make an assessment for that amount against the taxpayer
under Chapter 5733., 5747., or 5751. of the Revised Code. If the amount is certified to the superintendent, the superintendent shall make an assessment for that amount against the taxpayer under Chapter 5725. or 5729. of the Revised Code. The time
limitations on assessments under those chapters do not apply to an assessment under this division,
but the commissioner or superintendent, as appropriate, shall make the assessment within one year
after the date the authority certifies to the commissioner or superintendent
the amount to be
refunded.
(L) On or before the thirty-first day of March each year,
the director of development shall submit a
report to the
governor, the president of the senate, and the speaker of the
house of representatives on the tax credit program under this
section. The report shall include information on the number of
agreements that were entered into under this section during the
preceding calendar year, a description of the project that is the
subject of each such agreement, and an update on the status of
projects under agreements entered into before the preceding
calendar year.
(M) There is hereby created the tax credit authority,
which consists of the director of development
and four other
members appointed as follows: the governor, the president of the
senate, and the speaker of the house of representatives each
shall appoint one member who shall be a specialist in economic
development; the governor also shall appoint a member who is a
specialist in taxation. Of the initial appointees, the members
appointed by the governor shall serve a term of two years; the
members appointed by the president of the senate and the speaker
of the house of representatives shall serve a term of four years.
Thereafter, terms of office shall be for four years. Initial
appointments to the authority shall be made within thirty days
after January 13,
1993. Each
member shall serve on the authority until the end of the term for
which the member was appointed. Vacancies shall be filled in
the same
manner provided for original appointments. Any member appointed
to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the expiration of the term
for which the member's predecessor was appointed shall hold
office for the
remainder of that term. Members may be reappointed to the
authority. Members of the authority shall receive their
necessary and actual expenses while engaged in the business of
the authority. The director of development
shall serve as
chairperson of the authority, and the members annually
shall elect a
vice-chairperson from among themselves. Three
members of the
authority constitute a quorum to transact and vote on the
business of the authority. The majority vote of the membership
of the authority is necessary to approve any such business,
including the election of the vice-chairperson.
The director of development may appoint a
professional employee of the department of
development to serve as the director's substitute at a meeting of the
authority. The director shall
make the appointment in writing. In the absence of the director
from a meeting of the authority, the appointed substitute shall
serve as chairperson. In the absence of both the
director and the director's
substitute from a meeting, the vice-chairperson
shall serve as
chairperson.
(N) For purposes of the credits granted by this section against the taxes imposed under sections 5725.18 and 5729.03 of the Revised Code, "taxable year" means the period covered by the taxpayer's annual statement to the superintendent of insurance.
Sec. 122.171. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Capital investment project" means a plan of investment
at a project site for the acquisition, construction, renovation,
or repair of
buildings, machinery, or equipment,
or for
capitalized costs of basic research and new product development
determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles, but does not
include
any of the following:
(a) Payments made for the acquisition of personal property
through
operating leases;
(b) Project costs paid before January 1, 2002;
(c) Payments made to a related member as defined in section
5733.042 of the Revised Code or to an elected consolidated taxpayer or a combined taxpayer as defined in section 5751.01 of the Revised Code.
(2) "Eligible business" means a business with Ohio
operations
satisfying all of the following:
(a) Employed an average of at least one thousand employees
in full-time employment positions at a project site during each of
the
twelve months preceding the application for a tax credit under
this section; and
(b) On or after January 1, 2002, has made payments for the
capital investment project of
either of the following:
(i) At least two hundred million dollars in the aggregate
at the project
site during a period of three consecutive calendar
years
including the calendar year that includes a day of the
taxpayer's taxable year or tax period with respect to which the credit is
granted;
(ii) If the average wage of all full-time employment positions at the
project site is greater than four hundred per cent of the federal
minimum wage, at least one hundred million dollars in the aggregate at the project
site during a period of three consecutive calendar years including
the calendar year that includes a day of the taxpayer's taxable
year or tax period with respect to which the credit is granted.
(c)
Is engaged at the project site primarily as a
manufacturer or is providing significant corporate administrative
functions;
(d) Has had a capital investment project reviewed and
approved by the tax credit
authority as provided in divisions (C),
(D), and (E) of this
section.
(3) "Full-time employment position" means a position of
employment for consideration for at least an average of thirty-five hours a
week that has been
filled for at least
one hundred eighty days immediately preceding
the filing of an
application under this section and for at least
one hundred eighty days during each taxable year or each calendar year that includes a tax period with respect to
which the credit is
granted, or is employed in such position for consideration for such time, but is on active duty reserve or Ohio national guard service.
(4)
"Manufacturer" has the same meaning as in section
5739.011 of the Revised Code.
(5) "Project site" means an integrated complex
of facilities
in this state, as specified
by the tax credit authority under this
section, within a
fifteen-mile radius where a taxpayer
is primarily operating as an eligible business.
(6) "Applicable corporation" means a corporation satisfying all of the following:
(a)(i) For the entire taxable year immediately preceding the tax year, the corporation develops software applications primarily to provide telecommunication billing and information services through outsourcing or licensing to domestic or international customers.
(ii) Sales and licensing of software generated at least six hundred million dollars in revenue during the taxable year immediately preceding the tax year the corporation is first entitled to claim the credit provided under division (B) of this section.
(b) For the entire taxable year immediately preceding the tax year, the corporation or one or more of its related members provides customer or employee care and technical support for clients through one or more contact centers within this state, and the corporation and its related members together have a daily average, based on a three-hundred-sixty-five-day year, of at least five hundred thousand successful customer contacts through one or more of their contact centers, wherever located.
(c) The corporation is eligible for the credit under division (B) of this section for the tax year.
(7) "Related member" has the same meaning as in section 5733.042 of the Revised Code as that section existed on the effective date of its amendment by Am. Sub. H.B. 215 of the 122nd general assembly, September 29, 1997.
(8) "Successful customer contact" means a contact with an end user via telephone, including interactive voice recognition or similar means, where the contact culminates in a conversation or connection other than a busy signal or equipment busy.
(9) "Telecommunications" means all forms of telecommunications service as defined in section 5739.01 of the Revised Code, and includes services in wireless, wireline, cable, broadband, internet protocol, and satellite.
(10)(a) "Applicable difference" means the difference between the tax for the tax year under Chapter 5733. of the Revised Code applying the law in effect for that tax year, and the tax for that tax year if section 5733.042 of the Revised Code applied as that section existed on the effective date of its amendment by Am. Sub. H.B. 215 of the 122nd general assembly, September 29, 1997, subject to division (A)(10)(b) of this section.
(b) If the tax rate set forth in division (B) of section 5733.06 of the Revised Code for the tax year is less than eight and one-half per cent, the tax calculated under division (A)(10)(a) of this section shall be computed by substituting a tax rate of eight and one-half per cent for the rate set forth in division (B) of section 5733.06 of the Revised Code for the tax year.
(c) If the resulting difference is negative, the applicable tax difference for the tax year shall be zero.
(B) The tax credit authority created under section 122.17 of
the Revised Code may grant tax credits under this section for the
purpose of fostering job retention in this state. Upon
application by an eligible business and upon consideration of the
recommendation of the director of budget and management, tax
commissioner, and director of development under division (C) of
this section, the tax credit authority may grant to an eligible
business a nonrefundable credit against the tax imposed by section
5733.06 or 5747.02 of the Revised Code for a period up to fifteen
taxable years and against the tax levied by Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code for a period of up to fifteen calendar years. The credit shall be in an
amount not exceeding
seventy-five per cent of the Ohio income tax withheld
from the
employees of the eligible business occupying full-time employment
positions at the
project site during the calendar year that
includes the last day of such business' taxable year or tax period
with respect
to which the
credit is granted. The amount of the credit shall
not be based on
the Ohio income tax withheld from full-time
employees for a
calendar year prior to the calendar year in which
the
minimum investment
requirement
referred to in
division
(A)(2)(b) of this section is completed.
The
credit shall
be
claimed only for the taxable years or tax periods specified
in the
eligible
business' agreement with the tax credit authority
under division
(E) of this section, but in no event shall the
credit be claimed
for a taxable year or tax period terminating before the date
specified in the
agreement. Any credit granted under this section against the tax imposed by section 5733.06 or 5747.02 of the Revised Code, to the extent not fully utilized against such tax for taxable years ending prior to 2008, shall automatically be converted without any action taken by the tax credit authority to a credit against the tax levied under Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code for tax periods beginning on or after July 1, 2008, provided that the person to whom the credit was granted is subject to such tax. The converted credit shall apply to those calendar years in which the remaining taxable years specified in the agreement end.
The credit computed under this division is in addition to any credit allowed under division (M) of this section which the tax credit authority may also include in the agreement.
Any unused portion of a tax credit may be carried forward
for
not more than three additional years after the year for which
the
credit is granted.
(C) A taxpayer
that proposes a capital investment
project to
retain jobs in this state may apply to the tax credit
authority to
enter into an agreement for a tax credit under this
section. The
director of development shall prescribe the form of
the
application. After receipt of an application, the authority
shall
forward copies of the application to the director of budget
and
management, the tax commissioner, and the director of
development,
each of whom shall review the application to
determine the
economic impact the proposed project would have on
the state and
the affected political subdivisions and shall submit
a summary of
their determinations and recommendations to the
authority.
(D) Upon review of the determinations and recommendations
described in division (C) of this section, the tax credit
authority may enter into an agreement with the taxpayer for a
credit under this section if
the authority determines all of
the following:
(1) The taxpayer's capital investment project will result in
the retention of full-time employment positions in this state.
(2) The taxpayer is economically sound and has the ability
to complete the proposed capital investment project.
(3) The taxpayer intends to and has the ability to maintain
operations at the project site for at least twice the term of the
credit.
(4) Receiving the credit is a major factor in the taxpayer's
decision to begin, continue with, or complete the project.
(5) The political subdivisions in which the project is
located have agreed to provide substantial financial support to
the project.
(E) An agreement under this section shall include all of the
following:
(1) A detailed description of the project that is the
subject of the agreement, including the amount of the investment,
the period over which the investment has been or is being made,
and the number of full-time employment positions at the project
site.
(2) The method of calculating the number of full-time
employment positions as specified in division (A)(3) of this
section.
(3) The term and percentage of the tax credit,
and the
first
year for which the credit may be claimed.
(4) A requirement that the taxpayer maintain
operations at
the project site for at least twice the number
of years as the
term of the credit.
(5) A requirement that the taxpayer retain a specified
number of full-time employment positions at the project site and
within this state for the term of the credit, including a
requirement that the taxpayer continue to employ at least one
thousand employees in full-time employment positions at the
project
site during the entire term of any agreement, subject to
division (E)(7)
of this section.
(6) A requirement that the taxpayer annually report to the
director of development the number of full-time employment
positions subject to the credit, the amount of tax withheld from
employees in those positions, the amount of the payments made for
the capital investment project, and any other information the
director needs to perform the director's duties under this
section.
(7) A requirement that the director of development annually
review the annual reports of the taxpayer to verify the
information reported under division (E)(6) of this section and
compliance with the agreement. Upon verification, the director
shall issue a certificate to the taxpayer stating that the
information has been verified and identifying the amount of the
credit for the taxable year. Unless otherwise specified by the tax credit authority in a resolution and included as part of the agreement, the director shall not issue a
certificate for any year in which the total number of filled
full-time employment positions for each day of the calendar year
divided by three hundred sixty-five is less than ninety per cent
of the full-time employment positions specified in division (E)(5)
of this section. In determining the number of full-time
employment positions, no position shall be counted that is filled
by an employee who is included in the calculation of a tax credit
under section 122.17 of the Revised Code.
(8)(a) A provision requiring that the taxpayer, except as
otherwise provided in division (E)(8)(b) of this section, shall
not relocate employment positions from elsewhere in this state to
the project site that is the subject of the agreement for the
lesser of five years from the date the agreement is entered into
or the number of years the taxpayer is entitled to claim the
credit.
(b) The taxpayer may relocate employment positions from
elsewhere in this state to the project site that is the subject of
the agreement if the director of development determines both of
the following:
(i) That the site from which the employment positions would
be relocated is inadequate to meet market and industry conditions,
expansion plans, consolidation plans, or other business
considerations affecting the taxpayer;
(ii) That the legislative authority of the county, township,
or municipal corporation from which the employment positions would
be relocated has been notified of the relocation.
For purposes of
this section, the movement of an employment
position from one
political subdivision to another political
subdivision shall be
considered a relocation of an employment
position unless the movement is confined to the project site.
The
transfer of an individual employee from one
political
subdivision
to another political subdivision shall not
be
considered a
relocation of an employment position as long as
the
individual's
employment position in the first political
subdivision is
refilled.
(9) A waiver by the taxpayer of any limitations periods
relating to assessments or adjustments resulting from the
taxpayer's failure to comply with the agreement.
(F) If a taxpayer fails to meet or comply with any condition
or requirement set forth in a tax credit agreement, the tax credit
authority may amend the agreement to reduce the percentage or term
of the credit. The reduction of the percentage or term shall take
effect (1) in the taxable year immediately following the taxable year
in which the authority amends the agreement or the director of development notifies the taxpayer in writing of such failure, or (2) in the first tax period beginning in the calendar year immediately following the calendar year in which the authority amends the agreement or the director notifies the taxpayer in writing of such failure. If the taxpayer fails to annually report any of the information required by division (E)(6) of this section within the time required by the director, the reduction of the percentage or term may take effect in the current taxable year. If the taxpayer
relocates employment positions in violation of the provision
required under division (D)(8)(a) of this section, the taxpayer
shall not claim the tax credit under section 5733.0610 of the
Revised Code for any tax years following the calendar year in
which the relocation occurs, shall not claim the tax credit
under section 5747.058 of the Revised Code for the taxable year in
which the relocation occurs and any subsequent taxable years, and shall not claim the tax credit under division (A) of section 5751.50 of the Revised Code for the tax period in which the relocation occurs and any subsequent tax periods.
(G) Financial statements and other information submitted to
the department of development or the tax credit authority by an
applicant for or recipient of a tax credit under this section, and
any information taken for any purpose from such statements or
information, are not public records subject to section 149.43 of
the Revised Code. However, the chairperson of the authority may
make use of the statements and other information for purposes of
issuing public reports or in connection with court proceedings
concerning tax credit agreements under this section. Upon the
request of the tax commissioner, the chairperson of the authority
shall provide to the commissioner any statement or other
information submitted by an applicant for or recipient of a tax
credit in connection with the credit. The commissioner shall
preserve the confidentiality of the statement or other
information.
(H) A taxpayer claiming a tax credit under this section
shall submit to the tax commissioner a copy of the director of
development's certificate of verification under division (E)(7) of
this section with the taxpayer's tax report or return for the taxable year or for the calendar year that includes the tax period. Failure to submit a
copy of the certificate with the report or return does not invalidate a claim for a credit if the taxpayer submits a copy of the certificate to the commissioner within sixty days after the commissioner requests it.
(I) For the purposes of this section, a taxpayer may include
a partnership, a corporation that has made an election under
subchapter S of chapter one of subtitle A of the Internal Revenue
Code, or any other business entity through which income flows as a
distributive share to its owners. A tax credit received under
this section by a partnership, S-corporation, or other such
business entity shall be apportioned among may elect to pass the credit received under this section through to the persons to whom the
income or profit of the partnership, S-corporation, or other
entity is distributed,. The election shall be made on the annual report required under division (E)(6) of this section. The election applies to and is irrevocable for the credit for which the report is submitted. If the election is made, the credit shall be apportioned among those persons in the same proportions as those in which
the income or profit is distributed.
(J) If the director of development determines that a
taxpayer
that received a tax credit under this section is
not
complying with the requirement under division (E)(4) of this
section, the
director shall notify the tax credit authority of the
noncompliance. After receiving such a notice, and after giving
the taxpayer an opportunity to explain the noncompliance, the
authority may terminate the agreement and require the taxpayer to
refund to the state all or a portion of the credit claimed in
previous years, as follows:
(1) If the taxpayer maintained operations at the project
site for less than the term of the credit, the amount required to
be refunded shall not exceed the amount of any tax credits
previously allowed and received under this section.
(2) If the taxpayer maintained operations at the project
site longer than the term of the credit but less than one and
one-half times the term of the credit, the amount required to be
refunded shall not exceed fifty per cent of the sum of any tax
credits previously allowed and received under this section.
(3) If the taxpayer maintained operations at the project
site for at least one and one-half times the term of the credit
but less than twice the term of the credit, the amount required to
be refunded shall not exceed twenty-five per cent of the sum of
any tax credits previously allowed and received under this
section.
In determining the portion of the credit to be refunded to
this state, the authority shall consider the effect of market
conditions on the taxpayer's project and whether the taxpayer
continues to maintain other operations in this state. After
making the determination, the authority shall certify the amount
to be refunded to the tax commissioner. The commissioner shall
make an assessment for that amount against the taxpayer under
Chapter 5733., 5747., or 5751. of the Revised Code. The time limitations
on assessments under those chapters do
not apply to an assessment under this division, but the
commissioner shall make the assessment within one year after the
date the authority certifies to the commissioner the amount to be
refunded.
If the director of development determines that a taxpayer
that received a tax credit under this section has reduced the
number of employees agreed to under division (E)(5) of this
section by more than ten per cent, the director shall notify the
tax credit authority of the noncompliance. After receiving such
notice, and after providing the taxpayer an opportunity to explain
the noncompliance, the authority may amend the agreement to reduce
the percentage or term of the tax credit. The reduction in the
percentage or term shall take effect in the taxable year, or in the calendar year that includes the tax period, in which
the authority amends the agreement.
(K) The director of development, after consultation with the
tax commissioner and in accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code, shall adopt rules necessary to implement this
section. The rules may provide for recipients of tax credits
under this section to be charged fees to cover administrative
costs of the tax credit program. The fees collected shall be credited to the tax incentive programs operating fund created in section 122.174 of the Revised Code. At the time the director gives
public notice under division (A) of section 119.03 of the Revised
Code of the adoption of the rules, the director shall submit
copies of the proposed rules to the chairpersons of the standing
committees on economic development in the senate and the house of
representatives.
(L) On or before the thirty-first day of March of each year,
the director of development shall submit a report to the governor,
the president of the senate, and the speaker of the house of
representatives on the tax credit program under this section. The
report shall include information on the number of agreements that
were entered into under this section during the preceding calendar
year, a description of the project that is the subject of each
such agreement, and an update on the status of projects under
agreements entered into before the preceding calendar year.
(M)(1) A nonrefundable credit shall be allowed to an applicable corporation and its related members in an amount equal to the applicable difference. The credit is in addition to the credit granted to the corporation or related members under division (B) of this section. The credit is subject to divisions (B) to (E) and division (J) of this section.
(2) A person qualifying as an applicable corporation under this section for a tax year does not necessarily qualify as an applicable corporation for any other tax year. No person is entitled to the credit allowed under division (M) of this section for the tax year immediately following the taxable year during which the person fails to meet the requirements in divisions (A)(6)(a)(i) and (A)(6)(b) of this section. No person is entitled to the credit allowed under division (M) of this section for any tax year for which the person is not eligible for the credit provided under division (B) of this section.
Sec. 122.174. There is hereby created in the state treasury the tax incentive programs operating fund. Money collected pursuant to division (I) of section 121.17, division (K) of section 122.171, division (C) of section 3735.672, and division (C) of section 5709.68 of the Revised Code shall be credited to the fund. The director of development shall use money in the fund to pay expenses related to the administration of the tax credit programs authorized by sections 122.17, 122.171, 3735.672, and 5709.68 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 122.602.
(A)
There is hereby created in the
department
of
development the capital access loan program to assist
participating financial
institutions in making program loans
to
eligible businesses that face barriers in accessing working
capital and obtaining fixed asset financing. In administering the
program, the
director of development may do any of the following:
(1) Receive and accept grants, gifts, and contributions of
money,
property, labor, and other things of value to be held,
used, and
applied only for the purpose for which the grants,
gifts,
and
contributions are made, from individuals, private and
public
corporations, the United States or any agency of the
United
States, the state or any agency of the state, or any
political
subdivision of the state;
(2) Agree to repay any
contribution of money
or return any
property contributed or the
value of that property
at the times,
in the amounts, and on the
terms and conditions,
excluding the
payment of interest, that the
director consents to
at the time a
contribution is made; and
evidence obligations by
notes, bonds, or
other written
instruments;
(3) Adopt rules under Chapter 119. of the Revised Code to
carry out the
purposes of the
program specified in sections 122.60
to 122.605 of the Revised Code;
(4) Engage in all other acts, and enter into contracts and
execute
all instruments, necessary or appropriate to carry out the
purposes
specified in sections 122.60 to 122.605 of the Revised
Code.
(B) The director shall determine the eligibility of a
financial
institution to participate in the program and may set a
limit on
the number of financial institutions that may participate
in the
program.
(C) To be considered eligible by the director to participate
in
the
program, a financial institution shall enter into a
participation agreement
with the department that sets out the
terms and
conditions under which the department will deposit
moneys from the
fund into the financial institution's program
reserve account,
specifies the criteria for loan qualification
under the program, and contains
any
additional terms the director
considers necessary.
(D) After receiving the certification required under
division
(C) of section 122.603 of the Revised Code, the director
may disburse moneys from
the fund to a
participating financial
institution for deposit in its program reserve account
if the
director
determines that the capital access loan involved meets
all of the following
criteria:
(1) It will be made to an eligible business.
(2) It will be used by the eligible business for a project,
activity, or enterprise that fosters economic
development.
(3) It will not be made in order to enroll in the program
prior
debt that is not covered under the program and that is owed
or was
previously owed by an eligible business to the financial
institution.
(4) It will not be utilized for a project or development
related
to the on-site construction or purchase of residential
housing.
(5) It will not be used to finance passive real estate
ownership.
(6) It conforms to the requirements of divisions (E),
(F),
(G),
(H), and (I) of this section, and to the rules adopted by
the
director under division (A)(3) of this section.
(E) The director shall not approve a capital access loan to
an
eligible business
that exceeds two hundred fifty thousand
dollars for working capital or five
hundred thousand dollars for
the purchase of
fixed assets. An
eligible business may apply for
the maximum
amount of both working
capital and the purchase of
fixed assets in the same
capital access loan.
(F) A financial institution may apply to the director for
the
approval of a capital access loan to any business that is
owned or
operated by a person that has previously defaulted under
any state
financial assistance program.
(G) Eligible businesses that apply for a capital access loan
shall comply with section 9.66 of the Revised Code.
(H) A financial institution may apply to the director for
the
approval of a capital access loan that refinances a nonprogram
loan made by
another financial institution.
(I) The director shall not approve a capital access loan
that
refinances a
nonprogram loan made by the same financial
institution, unless the amount of
the refinanced loan exceeds the
existing debt, in
which case only the amount exceeding the
existing debt is eligible
for a loan under the program.
(J) The director shall not approve any capital access loan
made after June 30, 2007, or enter into a participation agreement
with any financial institution after that date.
Sec. 124.152. (A)(1) Except as provided in divisions (A)(2) and (3) of this section, each exempt employee shall be paid a salary or wage in accordance with schedule E-1 or schedule E-2 of division (B), (C), or (D) of this section, as applicable.
(2) Each exempt employee who holds a position in the unclassified civil service pursuant to division (A)(26) or (30) of section 124.11 of the Revised Code may be paid a salary or wage in accordance with schedule E-1, schedule E-1 for step seven only, or schedule E-2 of division (B) or, (C), (D), (E), (F), or (G) of this section, as applicable.
(3)(a) Except as provided in division (A)(3)(b) of this section, each exempt employee who was paid a salary or wage at step 7 in the employee's pay range on June 28, 2003, in accordance with the applicable schedule E-1 of former section 124.152 of the Revised Code and who continued to be so paid on June 29, 2003, shall be paid a salary or wage in the corresponding pay range in schedule E-1 for step seven only of division (C)(E), (F), or (G) of this section, as applicable, for as long as the employee remains in the position the employee held as of July 1, 2003.
(b) Except as provided in division (A)(3)(c) of this section, if an exempt employee who is being paid a salary or wage in accordance with schedule E-1 for step seven only of division (C)(E), (F), or (G) of this section, as applicable, moves to another position, the employee shall not receive a salary or wage for that position or any other position in the future in accordance with that schedule.
(c) If an exempt employee who is being paid a salary or wage in accordance with schedule E-1 for step seven only of division (C)(E), (F), or (G) of this section, as applicable, moves to another position assigned to pay range 12 or above, the appointing authority has the discretion to may assign the employee to be paid a salary or wage in the appropriate pay range for that position in accordance with the applicable schedule E-1 for step seven only, provided that the appointing authority so notifies the director of administrative services in writing at the time the employee is appointed to that position.
(B) Beginning on the first day of the pay period that
includes July 1, 2006, each exempt employee who must be paid in accordance with schedule E-1 or schedule E-2 of this section shall
be paid a salary or wage in accordance with the following schedule of
rates:
Pay Ranges and Step Values
|
|
|
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
|
|
|
Range |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
|
| 1 |
|
Hourly |
9.40 |
9.82 |
10.24 |
10.68 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
19552 |
20426 |
21299 |
22214 |
|
|
|
| 2 |
|
Hourly |
11.40 |
11.88 |
12.40 |
12.94 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
23712 |
24710 |
25792 |
26915 |
|
|
|
| 3 |
|
Hourly |
11.94 |
12.48 |
13.03 |
13.60 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
24835 |
25958 |
27102 |
28288 |
|
|
|
| 4 |
|
Hourly |
12.54 |
13.10 |
13.72 |
14.34 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
26083 |
27248 |
28538 |
29827 |
|
|
|
| 5 |
|
Hourly |
13.15 |
13.75 |
14.34 |
14.97 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
27352 |
28600 |
29827 |
31138 |
|
|
|
| 6 |
|
Hourly |
13.86 |
14.43 |
15.07 |
15.69 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
28829 |
30014 |
31346 |
32635 |
|
|
|
| 7 |
|
Hourly |
14.72 |
15.27 |
15.88 |
16.44 |
17.08 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
30618 |
31762 |
33030 |
34195 |
35526 |
|
|
| 8 |
|
Hourly |
15.56 |
16.24 |
16.95 |
17.71 |
18.46 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
32365 |
33779 |
35256 |
36837 |
38397 |
|
|
| 9 |
|
Hourly |
16.60 |
17.46 |
18.32 |
19.23 |
20.21 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
34528 |
36317 |
38106 |
39998 |
42037 |
|
|
| 10 |
|
Hourly |
17.91 |
18.89 |
19.90 |
21.05 |
22.18 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
37253 |
39291 |
41392 |
43784 |
46134 |
|
|
| 11 |
|
Hourly |
19.50 |
20.64 |
21.84 |
23.06 |
24.38 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
40560 |
42931 |
45427 |
47965 |
50710 |
|
|
| 12 |
|
Hourly |
21.51 |
22.72 |
23.94 |
25.27 |
26.68 |
28.13 |
|
|
|
Annually |
44741 |
47258 |
49795 |
52562 |
55494 |
58510 |
|
| 13 |
|
Hourly |
23.71 |
25.01 |
26.39 |
27.80 |
29.36 |
30.96 |
|
|
|
Annually |
49317 |
52021 |
54891 |
57824 |
61069 |
64397 |
|
| 14 |
|
Hourly |
26.08 |
27.55 |
29.03 |
30.62 |
32.35 |
34.15 |
|
|
|
Annually |
54246 |
57304 |
60382 |
63690 |
67288 |
71032 |
|
| 15 |
|
Hourly |
28.64 |
30.25 |
31.96 |
33.72 |
35.59 |
37.55 |
|
|
|
Annually |
59571 |
62920 |
66477 |
70138 |
74027 |
78104 |
|
| 16 |
|
Hourly |
31.58 |
33.33 |
35.17 |
37.14 |
39.19 |
41.43 |
|
|
|
Annually |
65686 |
69326 |
73154 |
77251 |
81515 |
86174 |
|
| 17 |
|
Hourly |
34.80 |
36.72 |
38.78 |
40.92 |
43.20 |
45.61 |
|
|
|
Annually |
72384 |
76378 |
80662 |
85114 |
89856 |
94869 |
|
| 18 |
|
Hourly |
38.35 |
40.47 |
42.75 |
45.10 |
47.60 |
50.26 |
|
|
|
Annually |
79768 |
84178 |
88920 |
93808 |
99008 |
104541 |
|
|
|
Range |
|
Minimum |
|
Maximum |
| 41 |
|
Hourly |
|
16.23 |
|
34.77 |
|
|
Annually |
|
33758 |
|
72322 |
| 42 |
|
Hourly |
|
17.89 |
|
38.41 |
|
|
Annually |
|
37211 |
|
79893 |
| 43 |
|
Hourly |
|
19.70 |
|
42.30 |
|
|
Annually |
|
40976 |
|
87984 |
| 44 |
|
Hourly |
|
21.73 |
|
46.21 |
|
|
Annually |
|
45198 |
|
96117 |
| 45 |
|
Hourly |
|
24.01 |
|
50.44 |
|
|
Annually |
|
49941 |
|
104915 |
| 46 |
|
Hourly |
|
26.43 |
|
55.13 |
|
|
Annually |
|
54974 |
|
114670 |
| 47 |
|
Hourly |
|
29.14 |
|
60.16 |
|
|
Annually |
|
60611 |
|
125133 |
| 48 |
|
Hourly |
|
32.14 |
|
65.65 |
|
|
Annually |
|
66851 |
|
136552 |
| 49 |
|
Hourly |
|
35.44 |
|
70.89 |
|
|
Annually |
|
73715 |
|
147451 |
(C) Beginning on the first day of the pay period that includes July 1, 2007, each exempt employee who must be paid in accordance with schedule E-1 or schedule E-2 of this section shall be paid a salary or wage in accordance with the following schedule of rates:
|
|
|
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
|
|
|
Range |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
|
| 1 |
|
Hourly |
9.73 |
10.16 |
10.60 |
11.05 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
20238 |
21133 |
22048 |
22984 |
|
|
|
| 2 |
|
Hourly |
11.80 |
12.30 |
12.83 |
13.39 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
24544 |
25584 |
26686 |
27851 |
|
|
|
| 3 |
|
Hourly |
12.36 |
12.92 |
13.49 |
14.08 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
25709 |
26874 |
28059 |
29286 |
|
|
|
| 4 |
|
Hourly |
12.98 |
13.56 |
14.20 |
14.84 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
26998 |
28205 |
29536 |
30867 |
|
|
|
| 5 |
|
Hourly |
13.61 |
14.23 |
14.84 |
15.49 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
28309 |
29598 |
30867 |
32219 |
|
|
|
| 6 |
|
Hourly |
14.35 |
14.94 |
15.60 |
16.24 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
29848 |
31075 |
32448 |
33779 |
|
|
|
| 7 |
|
Hourly |
15.24 |
15.80 |
16.44 |
17.02 |
17.68 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
31699 |
32864 |
34195 |
35402 |
36774 |
|
|
| 8 |
|
Hourly |
16.10 |
16.81 |
17.54 |
18.33 |
19.11 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
33488 |
34965 |
36483 |
38126 |
39749 |
|
|
| 9 |
|
Hourly |
17.18 |
18.07 |
18.96 |
19.90 |
20.92 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
35734 |
37586 |
39437 |
41392 |
43514 |
|
|
| 10 |
|
Hourly |
18.54 |
19.55 |
20.60 |
21.79 |
22.96 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
38563 |
40664 |
42848 |
45323 |
47757 |
|
|
| 11 |
|
Hourly |
20.18 |
21.36 |
22.60 |
23.87 |
25.23 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
41974 |
44429 |
47008 |
49650 |
52478 |
|
|
| 12 |
|
Hourly |
22.26 |
23.52 |
24.78 |
26.15 |
27.61 |
29.11 |
|
|
|
Annually |
46301 |
48922 |
51542 |
54392 |
57429 |
60549 |
|
| 13 |
|
Hourly |
24.54 |
25.89 |
27.31 |
28.77 |
30.39 |
32.04 |
|
|
|
Annually |
51043 |
53851 |
56805 |
59842 |
63211 |
66643 |
|
| 14 |
|
Hourly |
26.99 |
28.51 |
30.05 |
31.69 |
33.48 |
35.35 |
|
|
|
Annually |
56139 |
59301 |
62504 |
65915 |
69638 |
73528 |
|
| 15 |
|
Hourly |
29.64 |
31.31 |
33.08 |
34.90 |
36.84 |
38.86 |
|
|
|
Annually |
61651 |
65125 |
68806 |
72592 |
76627 |
80829 |
|
| 16 |
|
Hourly |
32.69 |
34.50 |
36.40 |
38.44 |
40.56 |
42.88 |
|
|
|
Annually |
67995 |
71760 |
75712 |
79955 |
84365 |
89190 |
|
| 17 |
|
Hourly |
36.02 |
38.01 |
40.14 |
42.35 |
44.71 |
47.21 |
|
|
|
Annually |
74922 |
79061 |
83491 |
88088 |
92997 |
98197 |
|
| 18 |
|
Hourly |
39.69 |
41.89 |
44.25 |
46.68 |
49.27 |
52.02 |
|
|
|
Annually |
82555 |
87131 |
92040 |
97094 |
102482 |
108202 |
|
|
|
Range |
|
Minimum |
|
Maximum |
| 41 |
|
Hourly |
|
16.23 |
|
35.99 |
|
|
Annually |
|
33758 |
|
74859 |
| 42 |
|
Hourly |
|
17.89 |
|
39.75 |
|
|
Annually |
|
37211 |
|
82680 |
| 43 |
|
Hourly |
|
19.70 |
|
43.78 |
|
|
Annually |
|
40976 |
|
91062 |
| 44 |
|
Hourly |
|
21.73 |
|
47.83 |
|
|
Annually |
|
45198 |
|
99486 |
| 45 |
|
Hourly |
|
24.01 |
|
52.21 |
|
|
Annually |
|
49941 |
|
108597 |
| 46 |
|
Hourly |
|
26.43 |
|
57.06 |
|
|
Annually |
|
54974 |
|
118685 |
| 47 |
|
Hourly |
|
29.14 |
|
62.27 |
|
|
Annually |
|
60611 |
|
129522 |
| 48 |
|
Hourly |
|
32.14 |
|
67.95 |
|
|
Annually |
|
66851 |
|
141336 |
| 49 |
|
Hourly |
|
35.44 |
|
73.37 |
|
|
Annually |
|
73715 |
|
152610 |
(D) Beginning on the first day of the pay period that includes July 1, 2008, each exempt employee who must be paid in accordance with schedule E-1 or schedule E-2 of this section shall be paid a salary or wage in accordance with the following schedule of rates:
|
|
|
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
Step |
|
|
|
Range |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
|
| 1 |
|
Hourly |
10.07 |
10.52 |
10.97 |
11.44 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
20946 |
21882 |
22818 |
23795 |
|
|
|
| 2 |
|
Hourly |
12.21 |
12.73 |
13.28 |
13.86 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
25397 |
26478 |
27622 |
28829 |
|
|
|
| 3 |
|
Hourly |
12.79 |
13.37 |
13.96 |
14.57 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
26603 |
27810 |
29037 |
30306 |
|
|
|
| 4 |
|
Hourly |
13.43 |
14.03 |
14.70 |
15.36 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
27934 |
29182 |
30576 |
31949 |
|
|
|
| 5 |
|
Hourly |
14.09 |
14.73 |
15.36 |
16.03 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
29307 |
30638 |
31949 |
33342 |
|
|
|
| 6 |
|
Hourly |
14.85 |
15.46 |
16.15 |
16.81 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
30888 |
32157 |
33592 |
34965 |
|
|
|
| 7 |
|
Hourly |
15.77 |
16.35 |
17.02 |
17.62 |
18.30 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
32802 |
34008 |
35402 |
36650 |
38064 |
|
|
| 8 |
|
Hourly |
16.66 |
17.40 |
18.15 |
18.97 |
19.78 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
34653 |
36192 |
37752 |
39458 |
41142 |
|
|
| 9 |
|
Hourly |
17.78 |
18.70 |
19.62 |
20.60 |
21.65 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
36982 |
38896 |
40810 |
42848 |
45032 |
|
|
| 10 |
|
Hourly |
19.19 |
20.23 |
21.32 |
22.55 |
23.76 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
39915 |
42078 |
44346 |
46904 |
49421 |
|
|
| 11 |
|
Hourly |
20.89 |
22.11 |
23.39 |
24.71 |
26.11 |
|
|
|
|
Annually |
43451 |
45989 |
48651 |
51397 |
54309 |
|
|
| 12 |
|
Hourly |
23.04 |
24.34 |
25.65 |
27.07 |
28.58 |
30.13 |
|
|
|
Annually |
47923 |
50627 |
53352 |
56306 |
59446 |
62670 |
|
| 13 |
|
Hourly |
25.40 |
26.80 |
28.27 |
29.78 |
31.45 |
33.16 |
|
|
|
Annually |
52832 |
55744 |
58802 |
61942 |
65416 |
68973 |
|
| 14 |
|
Hourly |
27.93 |
29.51 |
31.10 |
32.80 |
34.65 |
36.59 |
|
|
|
Annually |
58094 |
61381 |
64688 |
68224 |
72072 |
76107 |
|
| 15 |
|
Hourly |
30.68 |
32.41 |
34.24 |
36.12 |
38.13 |
40.22 |
|
|
|
Annually |
63814 |
67413 |
71219 |
75130 |
79310 |
83658 |
|
| 16 |
|
Hourly |
33.83 |
35.71 |
37.67 |
39.79 |
41.98 |
44.38 |
|
|
|
Annually |
70366 |
74277 |
78354 |
82763 |
87318 |
92310 |
|
| 17 |
|
Hourly |
37.28 |
39.34 |
41.54 |
43.83 |
46.27 |
48.86 |
|
|
|
Annually |
77542 |
81827 |
86403 |
91166 |
96242 |
101629 |
|
| 18 |
|
Hourly |
41.08 |
43.36 |
45.80 |
48.31 |
50.99 |
53.84 |
|
|
|
Annually |
85446 |
90189 |
95264 |
100485 |
106059 |
111987 |
|
|
|
Range |
|
Minimum |
|
Maximum |
| 41 |
|
Hourly |
|
16.23 |
|
37.25 |
|
|
Annually |
|
33758 |
|
77480 |
| 42 |
|
Hourly |
|
17.89 |
|
41.14 |
|
|
Annually |
|
37211 |
|
85571 |
| 43 |
|
Hourly |
|
19.70 |
|
45.31 |
|
|
Annually |
|
40976 |
|
94245 |
| 44 |
|
Hourly |
|
21.73 |
|
49.50 |
|
|
Annually |
|
45198 |
|
102960 |
| 45 |
|
Hourly |
|
24.01 |
|
54.04 |
|
|
Annually |
|
49941 |
|
112403 |
| 46 |
|
Hourly |
|
26.43 |
|
59.06 |
|
|
Annually |
|
54974 |
|
122845 |
| 47 |
|
Hourly |
|
29.14 |
|
64.45 |
|
|
Annually |
|
60611 |
|
134056 |
| 48 |
|
Hourly |
|
32.14 |
|
70.33 |
|
|
Annually |
|
66851 |
|
146286 |
| 49 |
|
Hourly |
|
35.44 |
|
75.94 |
|
|
Annually |
|
73715 |
|
157955 |
(E) Beginning on the first day of the pay period that includes July 1, 2006, each exempt employee who must be paid in accordance with schedule E-1 for step seven only shall be paid a salary or wage in accordance with the following schedule of rates:
Schedule E-1 for Step Seven Only
Pay Ranges and Step Seven Values
|
|
Range |
|
|
|
|
| 12 |
|
Hourly |
29.68 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
61734 |
|
|
|
| 13 |
|
Hourly |
32.66 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
67933 |
|
|
|
| 14 |
|
Hourly |
36.01 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
74901 |
|
|
|
| 15 |
|
Hourly |
39.61 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
82389 |
|
|
|
| 16 |
|
Hourly |
43.70 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
90896 |
|
|
|
| 17 |
|
Hourly |
48.13 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
100110 |
|
|
|
| 18 |
|
Hourly |
53.02 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
110282 |
|
|
|
(D)(F) Beginning on the first day of the pay period that includes July 1, 2007, each exempt employee who must be paid in accordance with schedule E-1 for step seven only shall be paid a salary or wage in accordance with the following schedule of rates:
|
|
Range |
|
|
|
|
| 12 |
|
Hourly |
30.72 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
63898 |
|
|
|
| 13 |
|
Hourly |
33.80 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
70304 |
|
|
|
| 14 |
|
Hourly |
37.27 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
77522 |
|
|
|
| 15 |
|
Hourly |
41.00 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
85280 |
|
|
|
| 16 |
|
Hourly |
45.23 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
94078 |
|
|
|
| 17 |
|
Hourly |
49.81 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
103605 |
|
|
|
| 18 |
|
Hourly |
54.88 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
114150 |
|
|
|
(G) Beginning on the first day of the pay period that includes July 1, 2008, each exempt employee who must be paid in accordance with salary schedule E-1 for step seven only shall be paid a salary or wage in accordance with the following schedule of rates:
|
|
Range |
|
|
|
|
| 12 |
|
Hourly |
31.80 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
66144 |
|
|
|
| 13 |
|
Hourly |
34.98 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
72758 |
|
|
|
| 14 |
|
Hourly |
38.57 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
80226 |
|
|
|
| 15 |
|
Hourly |
42.44 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
88275 |
|
|
|
| 16 |
|
Hourly |
46.81 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
97365 |
|
|
|
| 17 |
|
Hourly |
51.55 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
107224 |
|
|
|
| 18 |
|
Hourly |
56.80 |
|
|
|
|
|
Annually |
118144 |
|
|
|
(H) As used in this section, "exempt employee" means a
permanent full-time or permanent part-time employee paid directly
by warrant of the director of budget and management whose position is included in
the job classification plan established under division (A) of
section 124.14 of the Revised Code but who is not considered a
public employee for the purposes of Chapter 4117. of the Revised
Code. As used in this section, "exempt employee" also includes a
permanent full-time or permanent part-time employee of the
secretary of state, auditor of state, treasurer of state, or
attorney general who has not been placed in an appropriate
bargaining unit by the state employment relations board.
Sec. 125.45. The department of administrative services
shall maintain facilities to perform office reproduction services
for all boards, commissions, or departments except for the bureau
of workers' compensation. Upon written application to the
department of administrative services, permission may be granted
to a board, commission, or department to perform such services
outside the central facility and such permission shall state the
extent of the services which the department, board, or commission
shall perform.
Office reproduction services using stencils, masters, or
plates are restricted to duplicating equipment not larger than
seventeen by twenty-two inches. Not to exceed five thousand
press impressions shall be produced of any such order except that
up to one thousand production copies may be produced of any item
consisting of multiple pages and except that over five thousand, but not more
than ten thousand, press impressions may be produced if the director of
administrative services determines that there is an emergency due to the
timing of service delivery or another factor that may cause financial hardship
to the state.
Nothing in this section precludes the bureau from entering
into a contract with the department of administrative services
for the department to perform office reproduction services for
the bureau.
Neither the department nor any other No state agency, other than the department of administrative services, shall perform printing or
office reproduction services for political subdivisions.
Sec. 125.93. The state forms management program
shall do each of the following:
(A) Assist state agencies in establishing internal forms
management capabilities;
(B) Study, develop, coordinate, and initiate forms of
interagency and common administrative usage, and establish basic
design and specification criteria to standardize state forms;
(C) Assist state agencies to design economical forms;
(D)(C) Assist, train, and instruct state agencies and their
forms management representatives in forms management techniques,
and provide direct forms management assistance to new state
agencies as they are created;
(E) Maintain a central forms repository of all state forms to
facilitate standardization of the forms, eliminate redundant
forms, and provide a central source of information on forms usage
and availability.
Sec. 125.96. The director of administrative services may
adopt, amend, or rescind rules necessary to carry out the powers
and duties imposed upon the state forms management program and state agencies by sections 125.92 to 125.98 of the Revised
Code. The director shall adopt, and may amend or rescind, rules
providing each of the following:
(A) After a date to be determined by the state forms management program, no
state agency shall utilize any form, other than a form subject to
division (B) of section 125.95 of the Revised Code, the
management of which has not been delegated to the agency by the
program under division (A) of that section or been approved by the program.
(B) The notice required by section 125.97 of the Revised
Code shall appear in a standard place and a standard manner on
each form to which the notice applies, and shall include
specified indicia of approval by the state forms management program.
(C) Any form required by a state agency on an emergency
basis may be given interim approval by the state forms management program if the
form is accompanied by a letter from the director or other head
of the agency setting forth the nature of the emergency and
requesting interim approval.
Sec. 125.97. All forms, other than those forms subject to division (B) of
section 125.95 of the Revised Code, used to obtain information from private
business, agriculture, or local governments, except those forms used by the tax commissioner for administration of taxes and programs, shall contain a conspicuous notice
on the first page setting forth the authorization for the form and stating
whether providing the information sought is required or voluntary, and any
penalties that apply to failure to provide the information.
Sec. 125.98. (A) Each state agency shall appoint a forms
management representative, who may be from existing personnel. The appointee
shall cooperate with, and provide other
necessary assistance to, the director of administrative services and the
state forms management program in implementing the
program. A forms management representative shall do
all of the following:
(1) Manage the agency's forms management program and cooperate with and
provide other necessary assistance to the director of administrative services
in implementing the state forms management program;
(2) Monitor the use and reproduction of all forms to ensure that all
policies, procedures, guidelines, and standards established by the agency and
the director of administrative services are followed;
(3) Ensure that every form used by the agency is presented to the state forms
management program for registration prior to its reproduction;
(4) Maintain a master forms file history file, in numeric order, of all
agency forms;
(5) Verify and update the all historical information on all forms in the agency's central forms repository database.
(B) Any state agency, as defined in section 1.60 of the Revised
Code,
not included within the definition of a state agency in section 125.91 of the
Revised Code may elect to participate in the state forms management program. The program may provide
to any such agency any service required or authorized by sections 125.92 to
125.98 of the Revised Code to be performed for a state agency.
Sec. 126.07. No Except as provided in division (B) of section 126.21 of the Revised Code, no contract, agreement, or obligation
involving the expenditure of money chargeable to an
appropriation, nor any resolution or order for the expenditure of
money chargeable to an appropriation, shall be valid and
enforceable unless the director of budget and management first
certifies that there is a balance in the appropriation not
already obligated to pay existing obligations, in an amount at least
equal to
the portion of the contract, agreement, obligation, resolution, or order to be
performed in the current fiscal year. Any written
contract or agreement entered into by the state shall contain a
clause stating that the obligations of the state are subject to
this section.
The chief administrative officer of a state agency is responsible for the preaudit and approval of expenditures and other transactions of the agency. In order to make initiate the making of a payment from the state treasury, the person in a state
agency who requests that the payment be made shall first submit to the director chief administrative officer of the agency all invoices, claims,
vouchers, and other evidentiary matter documentation related to the payment.
If the director approves payment to be made, the director
shall draw a warrant as
provided in section 126.35 of the Revised Code. The chief administrative officer shall examine each voucher and all other documentation required to support the voucher and determine whether they meet all the requirements established by the director of budget and management for making the payment. If they do meet those requirements, the chief administrative officer shall certify to the director the approval of the chief administrative officer for payment.
Prior to drawing a warrant as provided in section 126.35 of the Revised Code, the director may review and audit the voucher, any documentation accompanying the voucher, and any other documentation related to the transaction that the director may require to determine if the transaction is in accordance with law. The director
shall not approve payment to be made if the director finds
that there is
not an unobligated balance in the appropriation for the payment,
that the payment is not for a valid claim against the state that
is legally due, or that insufficient evidentiary matter documentation has been
submitted. If the director does not approve payment, the
director shall
notify the agency of the reasons the director has not given
approval.
In approving payments to be made under this section, the
director, upon receipt of certification from the
director of job and family
services pursuant to
section 4141.231 of
the Revised Code, shall withhold from amounts otherwise payable
to a person who is the subject of the director of
jobs and family services'
certification, the amount certified to be due and unpaid to the
director of job and family
services, and shall approve for payment to
the director of job and family
services, the amount withheld.
As used in this section and in section 126.21 of the Revised Code, "chief administrative officer" means either of the following:
(A) The director of the agency or, in the case of a state agency without a director, the equivalent officer of that agency;
(B) The designee of the chief administrative officer for the purposes of such sections.
Sec. 126.08. The director of budget and management may
exercise control over the financial transactions of state
agencies, including approving, disapproving, voiding, or invalidating encumbrances or transactions, except those in the judicial and legislative branches,
by:
(A) Requiring encumbrancing documents or any other
financial information to be submitted to the director, where such
submission is prescribed by law or where the director considers
such submission necessary to evaluate the legality of a proposed an
expenditure, and by approving or disapproving any encumbrance
requested, except that the director shall not disapprove any
encumbrancing document submitted by the attorney general, auditor
of state, secretary of state, or treasurer of state unless there
is an insufficient unobligated balance in the appropriation or
the encumbrance does not meet all other legal requirements.
Those portions of an appropriation that are encumbered are not
available for expenditure for any purpose other than that
indicated on the encumbrancing document. If any requirements of
the director regarding the submission of encumbrancing documents
or other financial information are not complied with, or if any
encumbrancing document is disapproved in whole or in part, the
director shall notify the submitting agency thereof and shall not
authorize payment unless the reasons for disapproval are
corrected.
(B) Requiring the allocation and allotment of any
appropriation by quarter or by any other period of time.
(C) Reporting to the attorney general for such action,
civil or criminal, as the attorney general considers necessary,
all facts showing improper payment of public money or
misappropriation of public property;
(D) By adopting rules for carrying into effect any powers
granted by this chapter.
Sec. 126.16. (A) This section is in implementation of division
(D) of Section 17 of Article VIII, Ohio
Constitution, for purposes of issuing direct obligations of the state
subject to that section.
(B) For purposes of the computation of debt service under
Section 17 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution,
there shall be included debt service payable on bonds that are direct
obligations of the state issued under Article VIII,
Ohio Constitution, and
on those bonds anticipated by bond anticipation notes, to the extent that debt
service on those bonds is anticipated to be paid from the state general
revenue fund or net state lottery proceeds. Examples of bonds the debt
service on which is not anticipated to be paid from either of those sources
are bonds of the state issued for highway purposes pursuant to
Section 2i or 2m of Article VIII, Ohio
Constitution, which, although general obligations of the state, have
been and are anticipated to be paid from highway user receipts and not from
the general revenue fund or net state lottery proceeds.
(C) If there is no separate constitutional or statutory provision
applicable for the purpose, debt service on bonds anticipated by bond
anticipation notes shall be estimated as provided in division (C) of
this section. That amount, to be certified either by the issuing authority of
the particular notes or by the governor or the governor's designee pursuant to
division (E) of this section, shall be the estimated amount that
would have been payable on bonds maturing serially in each fiscal year after
the fiscal year of the issuance of the notes over
the maximum period of maturity for the bonds authorized in the particular
governing constitutional or statutory provision, as if those bonds had been
issued without the prior issuance of the notes, and computed on a
substantially level debt service basis applying an interest rate or rates
certified to be market rates at the time of issuance of the notes.
(D) In the case of bonds issued to refund or retire bonds, the
debt service on the new bonds shall be counted and the debt service on the
bonds being refunded or retired shall not be counted.
(E) The governor, or the governor's designee for the purpose,
shall determine and certify the fiscal year amounts required to be applied or
set aside for payment of debt service, including debt service on any variable
rate bonds, the securities to which that debt service relates, the total
office of budget and management estimated revenues of the state for the
general revenue fund and from net state lottery proceeds during the particular
fiscal year, and any other financial data necessary or appropriate for the
purpose of the computations under division (A) of Section 17 of
Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, and this
section. Those determinations and certifications shall be filed with the
director of budget and management, the treasurer of state, and the issuing
authority for the particular obligations, at or prior to the time those
securities are issued. The governor's designee for the purpose may be the
director or assistant director of budget and management, or any employee or
official of the governor's office.
(F) For purposes of this section, "securities," "interest or
interest equivalent," and "outstanding" have the same meanings as in section
133.01 of the Revised Code, and "debt service" means principal, including any
mandatory
sinking fund deposits and mandatory redemption payments, and interest or
interest equivalent payable on securities, as those payments are stated to
come due and to be payable.
(G)(1) As used in this division, "avoided obligations" means direct obligations of the state that are not issued because the capital facilities they would have financed are instead paid for with the proceeds of obligations issued under division (C) of section 183.51 of the Revised Code.
(2) For purposes of computing the limitation on issuing direct obligations of the state under this section and Section 17 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, any avoided obligations shall be considered as having been issued. The fiscal year amounts that would have been required to be applied or set aside for payment of debt service over the maximum period of maturity of the avoided obligations had the avoided obligations been issued shall be included in the computations.
Sec. 126.21. (A) The director of budget and management
shall do all
of the following:
(1) Keep all necessary accounting records;
(2) Prescribe and maintain the accounting system of the
state and establish appropriate accounting procedures and charts
of accounts;
(3) Establish procedures for the use of written,
electronic,
optical, or
other communications media for approving and reviewing payment
vouchers;
(4) Reconcile, in the case of any variation between the
amount of any appropriation and the aggregate amount of items
of
the appropriation, with the advice and assistance of
the state
agency
affected by it and the
legislative service commission,
totals so as to correspond in the
aggregate with the total
appropriation. In the case of a
conflict
between the item and the
total of which it is a part,
the item
shall be considered the
intended appropriation.
(5) Evaluate on an ongoing basis and, if necessary,
recommend improvements to the internal controls used in state
agencies;
(6) Authorize the establishment of petty cash
accounts. The
director of budget and management may withdraw approval for
any
petty cash account and require the officer in charge to
return to
the state treasury any unexpended balance shown by
the officer's
accounts to be on hand. Any officer who is issued a
warrant for
petty cash shall render a detailed account of the expenditures of
the petty cash and shall report when requested the balance
of
petty cash on hand at any time.
(7) Process orders, invoices, vouchers, claims, and
payrolls
and prepare financial reports and statements;
(8) Perform extensions, reviews, and
compliance
checks prior
to or after approving a payment as the director considers
necessary;
(9) Issue the official comprehensive annual financial
report
of the state. The report shall cover all funds
of the state
reporting entity and shall include
basic financial statements
and
required supplementary information
prepared in accordance with
generally accepted accounting
principles and other
information as
the director provides. All
state agencies,
authorities,
institutions, offices, retirement
systems, and other
component
units of the state reporting entity
as determined by
the director
shall furnish the director whatever
financial
statements and other
information the director requests
for
the report, in the form, at
the times,
covering the periods,
and with the
attestation the
director prescribes. The information
for state
institutions of
higher education, as defined in
section
3345.011 of the Revised
Code, shall be submitted to the
director chancellor
by the Ohio board of
regents. The board shall establish
a due
date by which each such
institution shall submit the
information
to the board, but no such
date shall be later than
one hundred
twenty days after the end of
the state fiscal year
unless a later
date is approved by the
director.
(B) In addition to the director's duties under division
(A)
of this section, the director of budget and management may
establish and administer one or more state payment card programs
that permit or
require state agencies to use a payment card to
purchase equipment, materials,
supplies, or services in accordance
with guidelines issued by the director. The chief administrative officer of a state agency that uses a payment card for such purposes shall ensure that purchases made with the card are made in accordance with the guidelines issued by the director and do not exceed the unexpended, unencumbered, unobligated balance in the appropriation to be charged for the purchase.
State agencies may only participate in only those state
payment card programs that the director establishes pursuant to
this section.
(C) In addition to the director's duties under divisions (A) and (B) of this section, the director may enter into any contract or agreement necessary for and incidental to the performance of the director's duties or the duties of the office of budget and management.
Sec. 126.22. The director of budget and management may:
(A) Perform accounting services for and design and implement
accounting systems with state agencies;
(B) Provide other accounting services, including the maintenance and periodic auditing of the financial records of and submission of vouchers by state agencies, provision of assistance in the analysis of the financial position of state agencies, and preparation and
submission of reports;
(C) Change any accounting code appearing in appropriations acts of the
general assembly.
Sec. 126.24. The OAKS support organization fund is hereby created in the state treasury for the purpose of paying the operating expenses of the state's enterprise resource planning system. The fund shall consist of cash transfers from the accounting and budgeting fund and the human resources services fund, and other revenues designated to support the operating costs of the Ohio administrative knowledge system. All investment earnings of the fund shall be credited to the fund.
Sec. 126.40. There is hereby created in the state treasury the forgery recovery fund. The fund shall consist of all moneys collected by the attorney general from the resolution of cases of fraud or forgery involving warrants issued by the director of the office of budget and management. The director shall use the fund to pay costs associated with the reissue of state warrants to payees whose warrants were fraudulently redeemed.
Sec. 127.14. The controlling board may, at the request of
any state agency or the director of budget and management,
authorize, with respect to the provisions of any appropriation
act:
(A) Transfers of all or part of an appropriation within
but not between state agencies, except such transfers as the
director of budget and management is authorized by law to make,
provided that no transfer shall be made by the director for the
purpose of effecting new or changed levels of program service not
authorized by the general assembly;
(B) Transfers of all or part of an appropriation from one
fiscal year to another;
(C) Transfers of all or part of an appropriation within or
between state agencies made necessary by administrative
reorganization or by the abolition of an agency or part of an
agency;
(D) Transfers of all or part of cash balances in excess of
needs from any fund of the state to the general revenue fund or
to such other fund of the state to which the money would have
been credited in the absence of the fund from which the transfers
are authorized to be made, except that the controlling board may
not authorize such transfers from the accrued leave liability
fund, auto registration distribution fund, budget stabilization
fund, development bond retirement fund, facilities establishment
fund, gasoline excise tax fund, general revenue fund, higher
education improvement fund, highway improvement bond retirement
fund, highway obligations bond retirement fund, highway capital
improvement fund, highway
operating fund, horse
racing tax fund, improvements bond retirement fund, library and
local government support libraries fund, liquor control fund, local
government communities fund, local transportation improvement program fund,
mental health facilities improvement fund, Ohio fairs fund, parks
and recreation improvement fund, public improvements bond
retirement fund, school district
income tax fund, state agency facilities improvement fund, state
and local government highway distribution fund, state highway
safety fund, state lottery fund, undivided liquor permit fund,
Vietnam conflict compensation bond retirement fund, volunteer
fire fighters' dependents fund, waterways safety fund, wildlife
fund, workers' compensation fund, or any fund not specified in
this division that the director of budget and management
determines to be a bond fund or bond retirement fund;
(E) Transfers of all or part of those appropriations
included in the emergency purposes account of the controlling
board;
(F) Temporary transfers of all or part of an appropriation
or other moneys into and between existing funds, or new funds, as
may be established by law when needed for capital outlays for
which notes or bonds will be issued;
(G) Transfer or release of all or part of an appropriation
to a state agency requiring controlling board approval of such
transfer or release as provided by law;
(H) Temporary transfer of funds included in the emergency
purposes appropriation of the controlling board. Such temporary
transfers may be made subject to conditions specified by the
controlling board at the time temporary transfers are authorized.
No transfers shall be made under this division for the purpose of
effecting new or changed levels of program service not authorized
by the general assembly.
As used in this section, "request" means an application by
a state agency or the director of budget and management seeking
some action by the controlling board.
When authorizing the transfer of all or part of an appropriation under this
section, the controlling board may authorize the transfer to an existing
appropriation item and the creation of and transfer to a new appropriation
item.
Whenever there is a transfer of all or part of funds
included in the emergency purposes appropriation by the
controlling board, pursuant to division (E) of this section, the
state agency or the director of budget and management receiving
such transfer shall keep a detailed record of the use of the
transferred funds. At the earliest scheduled meeting of the
controlling board following the accomplishment of the purposes
specified in the request originally seeking the transfer, or
following the total expenditure of the transferred funds for the
specified purposes, the state agency or the director of budget
and management shall submit a report on the expenditure of such
funds to the board. The portion of any appropriation so
transferred which is not required to accomplish the purposes
designated in the original request to the controlling board shall
be returned to the proper appropriation of the controlling board
at this time.
Notwithstanding any provisions of law providing for the
deposit of revenues received by a state agency to the credit of a
particular fund in the state treasury, whenever there is a
temporary transfer of funds included in the emergency purposes
appropriation of the controlling board pursuant to division (H)
of this section, revenues received by any state agency receiving
such a temporary transfer of funds shall, as directed by the
controlling board, be transferred back to the emergency purposes
appropriation.
The board may delegate to the director of budget and
management authority to approve transfers among items of
appropriation under division (A) of this section.
Sec. 127.16. (A) Upon the request of either a state
agency
or the director of budget and management and after the
controlling
board determines that an emergency or a sufficient
economic reason
exists, the controlling board may approve
the making of a purchase
without competitive selection as provided in
division (B) of this
section.
(B) Except as otherwise provided in this section, no state
agency, using money that has been appropriated to it directly,
shall:
(1) Make any purchase from a particular supplier, that
would
amount to fifty thousand dollars or more when combined with
both
the amount of all disbursements to the supplier during the
fiscal
year for purchases made by the agency and the amount of
all
outstanding encumbrances for purchases made by the agency
from the
supplier, unless the purchase is made by competitive
selection or
with the approval of the controlling board;
(2) Lease real estate from a particular supplier, if the
lease would amount to seventy-five thousand dollars or more when
combined with both the amount of all disbursements to the
supplier
during the fiscal year for real estate leases made by
the agency
and the amount of all outstanding encumbrances for
real estate
leases made by the agency from the supplier, unless
the lease is
made by competitive selection or with the approval
of the
controlling board.
(C) Any person who authorizes a purchase in violation of
division (B) of this section shall be liable to the state for any
state funds spent on the purchase, and the attorney general shall
collect the amount from the person.
(D) Nothing in division (B) of this section shall be
construed as:
(1) A limitation upon the authority of the director of
transportation as granted in sections 5501.17, 5517.02, and
5525.14 of the Revised Code;
(2) Applying to medicaid provider agreements under Chapter
5111. of the Revised Code
or payments or provider agreements under the disability medical assistance program established under Chapter 5115. of the Revised Code;
(3) Applying to the purchase of examinations from a sole
supplier by a state licensing board under Title XLVII of the
Revised Code;
(4) Applying to entertainment contracts for the Ohio state
fair entered into by the Ohio expositions commission, provided
that the controlling board has given its approval to the
commission to enter into such contracts and has approved a total
budget amount for such contracts as agreed upon by commission
action, and that the commission causes to be kept itemized
records
of the amounts of money spent under each contract and
annually
files those records with the clerk of the
house of representatives
and the clerk of the senate following
the close of the fair;
(5) Limiting the authority of the chief of the division of
mineral resources management to contract
for reclamation work with
an operator
mining adjacent land as provided in section 1513.27 of
the
Revised Code;
(6) Applying to investment transactions and procedures of
any state agency, except that the agency shall file with the
board
the name of any person with whom the agency contracts to
make,
broker, service, or otherwise manage its investments, as
well as
the commission, rate, or schedule of charges of such
person with
respect to any investment transactions to be
undertaken on behalf
of the agency. The filing shall be in a
form and at such times as
the board considers appropriate.
(7) Applying to purchases made with money for the per cent
for arts program established by section 3379.10 of the Revised
Code;
(8) Applying to purchases made by the rehabilitation
services commission of services, or supplies, that are provided
to
persons with disabilities, or to purchases made by the
commission
in connection with the eligibility determinations it
makes for
applicants of programs administered by the social
security
administration;
(9) Applying to payments by the department of job and
family
services under section 5111.13 of the Revised Code for group
health plan premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, and other
cost-sharing expenses;
(10) Applying to any agency of the legislative branch of
the
state government;
(11) Applying to agreements or contracts entered into under
section
5101.11, 5101.20, 5101.201, 5101.21, or 5101.214 of the Revised Code;
(12) Applying to purchases of services by the adult parole
authority under section 2967.14 of the Revised Code or by the
department of youth services under section 5139.08 of the Revised
Code;
(13) Applying to dues or fees paid for membership in an
organization or association;
(14) Applying to purchases of utility services pursuant to
section 9.30 of the Revised Code;
(15) Applying to purchases made in accordance with rules
adopted by the department of administrative services of motor
vehicle, aviation, or watercraft fuel, or emergency repairs of
such vehicles;
(16) Applying to purchases of tickets for passenger air
transportation;
(17) Applying to purchases necessary to provide public
notifications required by law or to provide notifications of job
openings;
(18) Applying to the judicial branch of state government;
(19) Applying to purchases of liquor for resale by the
division of liquor
control;
(20) Applying to purchases of motor courier and freight
services made in accordance with department of administrative
services rules;
(21) Applying to purchases from the United States postal
service and purchases of stamps and postal meter replenishment
from vendors at rates established by the United States postal
service;
(22) Applying to purchases of books, periodicals,
pamphlets,
newspapers, maintenance subscriptions, and other
published
materials;
(23) Applying to purchases from other state agencies,
including state-assisted institutions of higher education;
(24) Limiting the authority of the director of
environmental
protection to enter into contracts under division
(D) of section
3745.14 of the Revised Code to conduct compliance
reviews, as
defined in division (A) of that section;
(25) Applying to purchases from a qualified nonprofit
agency
pursuant to sections 125.60 to 125.6012 or 4115.31 to 4115.35 of the Revised
Code;
(26) Applying to payments by the department of job and
family
services to the United States department of health and
human
services for printing and mailing notices pertaining to the
tax
refund offset program of the internal revenue service of the
United States department of the treasury;
(27) Applying to contracts entered into by the department
of
mental retardation and developmental disabilities under
sections
section 5123.18, 5123.182, and 5123.199 of the Revised Code;
(28) Applying to payments made by the department of mental
health under a
physician recruitment program authorized by section
5119.101 of the Revised
Code;
(29) Applying to contracts entered into with persons by
the
director of commerce for unclaimed funds collection and
remittance
efforts as provided in division
(F) of section 169.03 of the
Revised
Code. The director shall keep
an itemized accounting of
unclaimed funds collected by those
persons and amounts paid to
them for their services.
(30) Applying to purchases made by a state institution of
higher
education
in accordance with the terms of a contract
between the vendor and an
inter-university purchasing group
comprised of purchasing officers of state
institutions of higher
education;
(31) Applying to the department of job and family
services'
purchases of health
assistance services under the children's
health insurance program part
I provided for under section 5101.50
of the Revised Code or the children's
health
insurance program
part II provided for under section 5101.51
of the Revised Code;
(32) Applying to payments by the attorney general from the
reparations fund to hospitals and other emergency medical
facilities for performing medical examinations to collect physical
evidence pursuant to section 2907.28 of the Revised Code;
(33) Applying to contracts with a contracting authority or
administrative receiver under division (B) of section 5126.056
of the Revised Code;
(34) Applying to reimbursements paid to the United States department of veterans affairs for pharmaceutical and patient supply purchases made on behalf of the Ohio veterans' home agency;
(35) Applying to agreements entered into with terminal distributors of dangerous drugs under section 5110.20 of the Revised Code.
(E) Notwithstanding division (B)(1) of this section, the
cumulative purchase threshold shall be seventy-five thousand
dollars for the departments of mental retardation and
developmental disabilities, mental health, rehabilitation and
correction, and youth services.
(F) When determining whether a state agency has reached
the
cumulative purchase thresholds established in divisions
(B)(1),
(B)(2), and (E) of this section, all of the following
purchases by
such agency shall not be considered:
(1) Purchases made through competitive selection or with
controlling board approval;
(2) Purchases listed in division (D) of this section;
(3) For the purposes of the thresholds of divisions (B)(1)
and (E) of this section only, leases of real estate.
(G) As used in this section,
"competitive selection,"
"purchase,"
"supplies," and
"services" have the same meanings as
in section 125.01 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 131.44. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Surplus revenue" means the excess, if any, of the
total fund balance over the required year-end balance.
(2) "Total fund balance" means the sum of the unencumbered
balance in the general revenue fund on the last day of the
preceding fiscal year plus the balance in the budget
stabilization fund.
(3) "Required year-end balance" means the sum of the
following:
(a) Five per cent of the general
revenue fund revenues for the preceding fiscal year;
(b) "Ending fund balance," which means
one-half of one per cent of general revenue fund revenues for
the preceding fiscal year;
(c) "Carryover balance," which means,
with respect to a fiscal biennium, the excess, if any, of the
estimated general revenue fund appropriation and transfer
requirement for the second fiscal year of the biennium over the
estimated general revenue fund revenue for that fiscal
year;
(d) "Capital appropriation reserve,"
which means the amount, if any, of general revenue fund capital
appropriations made for the current biennium that the director
of budget and management has determined will be encumbered or
disbursed;
(e) "Income tax reduction impact
reserve," which means an amount equal to the reduction projected
by the director of budget and management in income tax revenue
in the current fiscal year attributable to the previous
reduction in the income tax rate made by the tax commissioner
pursuant to division (B) of
section 5747.02 of the Revised
Code.
(4) "Estimated general revenue fund appropriation and
transfer requirement" means the most recent adjusted
appropriations made by the general assembly from the general
revenue fund and includes both of the following:
(a) Appropriations made and transfers
of appropriations from the first fiscal year to the second fiscal
year of the biennium in provisions of acts of the general
assembly signed by the governor but not yet effective;
(b) Transfers of appropriation from
the first fiscal year to the second fiscal year of the biennium
approved by the controlling board.
(5) "Estimated general revenue fund revenue" means the
most recent such estimate available to the director of budget
and management.
(B)(1) Not later than the thirty-first day
of July each year, the director of budget and
management shall determine the surplus revenue that existed on the preceding
thirtieth day of June and transfer from the general revenue fund, to the
extent of the unobligated, unencumbered balance on
the preceding thirtieth day of June
in excess of one-half of one per cent of the general
revenue fund revenues in the preceding fiscal year, the following:
(a) First, to the budget stabilization
fund, any amount necessary for the balance of the budget
stabilization fund to equal five per cent of the general revenue
fund revenues of the preceding fiscal year;
(b) Then, to the income tax reduction
fund, which is hereby created in the state treasury, an amount
equal to the surplus revenue.
(2) Not later than the thirty-first day of
July each year, the director shall determine the percentage that the balance
in the income tax reduction fund is of the amount of revenue that the
director estimates will be received
from the tax levied under
section 5747.02 of the Revised Code in the current fiscal year without regard
to any reduction under division
(B) of that section. If that percentage exceeds thirty-five one
hundredths of one per cent, the director shall certify
the percentage to the tax commissioner not later than the
thirty-first day of July.
(C) The director of budget and
management shall transfer money in the income tax reduction fund to the
general revenue fund, the local government communities fund, and the library and local
government support libraries fund, and the local government revenue assistance fund as
necessary to offset revenue reductions resulting from the
reductions in taxes required under division
(B) of section 5747.02 of the Revised Code in the respective amounts and
percentages prescribed by divisions division (A)(1), (2), and (4) of section 5747.03 and divisions (A) and (B) of section 133.51 of
the Revised Code as if the
amount transferred had been collected as taxes under Chapter 5747.
of the Revised Code. If no reductions in taxes are made under that division
that affect revenue received in the current fiscal year, the
director shall not transfer money from the income tax reduction
fund to the general revenue fund, the local government communities fund, and the
library and local government support libraries fund, and the local government revenue
assistance fund.
Sec. 131.51. (A) Beginning January 2008, on or before the fifth day of each month, the director of budget and management shall credit to the local communities fund, which is hereby created in the state treasury, three and sixty-eight one hundredths per cent of total tax revenue credited to the general revenue fund during the preceding month. In determining the total tax revenue credited to the general revenue fund during the preceding month, the director shall include amounts transferred from that fund during the preceding month pursuant to divisions (A) and (B) of this section. Money shall be distributed from the local communities fund as required under section 5747.50 of the Revised Code during the same month in which it is credited to the fund.
(B) Beginning January 2008, on or before the fifth day of each month, the director of budget and management shall credit to the local libraries fund, which is hereby created in the state treasury, two and twenty-two one hundredths per cent of the total tax revenue credited to the general revenue fund during the preceding month. In determining the total tax revenue credited to the general revenue fund during the preceding month, the director shall include amounts transferred from that fund during the preceding month pursuant to divisions (A) and (B) of this section. Money shall be distributed from the local libraries fund as required under section 5747.47 of the Revised Code during the same month in which it is credited to the fund.
(C) The director of budget and management shall develop a schedule identifying the specific tax revenue sources to be used to make the monthly transfers required under divisions (A) and (B) of this section. The director may, from time to time, revise the schedule as the director considers necessary.
Sec. 133.01. As used in this chapter, in sections 9.95,
9.96, and 2151.655
of the Revised Code, in other sections of the
Revised Code that make reference to this chapter unless the
context does not permit, and in related proceedings, unless
otherwise expressly provided:
(A) "Acquisition" as applied to real or personal property
includes, among other forms of acquisition, acquisition by
exercise of a purchase option, and acquisition of interests in
property, including, without limitation, easements and
rights-of-way, and leasehold and other lease interests initially
extending or extendable for a period of at least sixty months.
(B) "Anticipatory securities" means securities, including
notes, issued in anticipation of the issuance of other
securities.
(C) "Board of elections" means the county board of
elections
of the county in which the subdivision is located. If
the
subdivision is located in more than one county, "board of
elections" means the county board of elections of the county that
contains the largest portion of the population of the subdivision
or that otherwise has jurisdiction in practice over and
customarily handles election matters relating to the subdivision.
(D) "Bond retirement fund" means the bond retirement fund
provided for in section 5705.09 of the Revised Code, and also
means a sinking fund or any other special fund, regardless of the
name applied to it, established by or pursuant to law or the
proceedings for the payment of debt charges. Provision may be
made in the applicable proceedings for the establishment in a
bond
retirement fund of separate accounts relating to debt
charges on
particular securities, or on securities payable from
the same or
common sources, and for the application of moneys in
those
accounts only to specified debt charges on specified
securities or
categories of securities. Subject to law and any
provisions in
the applicable proceedings, moneys in a bond
retirement fund or
separate account in a bond retirement fund may
be transferred to
other funds and accounts.
(E) "Capitalized interest" means all or a portion of the
interest payable on securities from their date to a date stated
or
provided for in the applicable legislation, which interest is
to
be paid from the proceeds of the securities.
(F) "Chapter 133. securities" means securities authorized
by
or issued pursuant to or in accordance with this chapter.
(G) "County auditor" means the county auditor of the
county
in which the subdivision is located. If the subdivision
is
located in more than one county, "county auditor" means the
county
auditor of the county that contains the highest amount of
the tax
valuation of the subdivision or that otherwise has
jurisdiction in
practice over and customarily handles property
tax matters
relating to the subdivision. In the case of a county
that has
adopted a charter, "county auditor" means the officer
who
generally has the duties and functions provided in the
Revised
Code for a county auditor.
(H) "Credit enhancement facilities" means letters of
credit,
lines of credit, stand-by, contingent, or firm securities
purchase
agreements, insurance, or surety arrangements,
guarantees, and
other arrangements that provide for direct or
contingent payment
of debt charges, for security or additional
security in the event
of nonpayment or default in respect of
securities, or for making
payment of debt charges to and at the
option and on demand of
securities holders or at the option of
the issuer or upon certain
conditions occurring under put or
similar arrangements, or for
otherwise supporting the credit or
liquidity of the securities,
and includes credit, reimbursement,
marketing, remarketing,
indexing, carrying, interest rate hedge,
and subrogation
agreements, and other agreements and arrangements
for payment and
reimbursement of the person providing the credit
enhancement
facility and the security for that payment and
reimbursement.
(I) "Current operating expenses" or "current expenses"
means
the lawful expenditures of a subdivision, except those for
permanent improvements and for payments of debt charges of the
subdivision.
(J) "Debt charges" means the principal, including any
mandatory sinking fund deposits and mandatory redemption
payments,
interest, and any redemption premium, payable on
securities as
those payments come due and are payable. The use
of "debt
charges" for this purpose does not imply that any
particular
securities constitute debt within the meaning of the
Ohio
Constitution or other laws.
(K) "Financing costs" means all costs and expenses
relating
to the authorization, including any required election,
issuance,
sale, delivery, authentication, deposit, custody,
clearing,
registration, transfer, exchange, fractionalization,
replacement,
payment, and servicing of securities, including,
without
limitation, costs and expenses for or relating to
publication and
printing, postage, delivery, preliminary and
final official
statements, offering circulars, and informational
statements,
travel and transportation, underwriters, placement
agents,
investment bankers, paying agents, registrars,
authenticating
agents, remarketing agents, custodians, clearing
agencies or
corporations, securities depositories, financial
advisory
services, certifications, audits, federal or state
regulatory
agencies, accounting and computation services, legal
services and
obtaining approving legal opinions and other legal
opinions,
credit ratings, redemption premiums, and credit
enhancement
facilities. Financing costs may be paid from any
moneys available
for the purpose, including, unless otherwise
provided in the
proceedings, from the proceeds of the securities
to which they
relate and, as to future financing costs, from the
same sources
from which debt charges on the securities are paid
and as though
debt charges.
(L) "Fiscal officer" means the following, or, in the case
of
absence or vacancy in the office, a deputy or assistant
authorized
by law or charter to act in the place of the named
officer, or if
there is no such authorization then the deputy or
assistant
authorized by legislation to act in the place of the
named officer
for purposes of this chapter, in the case of the
following
subdivisions:
(1) A county, the county auditor;
(2) A municipal corporation, the city auditor or village
clerk or clerk-treasurer, or the officer who, by virtue of a
charter, has the duties and functions provided in the Revised
Code
for the city auditor or village clerk or clerk-treasurer;
(3) A school district, the treasurer of the board of
education;
(4) A regional water and sewer district, the secretary of
the board of trustees;
(5) A joint township hospital district, the treasurer of
the
district;
(6) A joint ambulance district, the clerk of the board of
trustees;
(7) A joint recreation district, the person designated
pursuant to section 755.15 of the Revised Code;
(8) A detention facility district or a district organized
under section 2151.65 of the Revised Code or a combined district
organized under sections 2152.41 and 2151.65 of the
Revised Code,
the county auditor of the county designated by law to act as the
auditor of the district;
(9) A township, a fire district organized under division (C)
of section 505.37 of the Revised Code, or a township police
district, the fiscal officer of
the township;
(10) A joint fire district, the clerk of the board of
trustees of that district;
(11) A regional or county library district, the person
responsible for the financial affairs of that district;
(12) A joint solid waste management district, the fiscal
officer appointed by the board of directors of the district under
section 343.01 of the Revised Code;
(13) A joint emergency medical services district, the person
appointed as
fiscal officer pursuant to division (D) of section
307.053 of the Revised
Code;
(14) A fire and ambulance district, the person appointed as
fiscal officer
under division (B) of section 505.375 of the
Revised Code;
(15) A subdivision described in division (MM)(17) of
this
section, the officer who is designated by law as or performs
the
functions of its chief fiscal officer.
(M) "Fiscal year" has the same meaning as in section 9.34
of
the Revised Code.
(N) "Fractionalized interests in public obligations" means
participations, certificates of participation, shares, or other
instruments or agreements, separate from the public obligations
themselves, evidencing ownership of interests in public
obligations or of rights to receive payments of, or on account
of,
principal or interest or their equivalents payable by or on
behalf
of an obligor pursuant to public obligations.
(O) "Fully registered securities" means securities in
certificated or uncertificated form, registered as to both
principal and interest in the name of the owner.
(P) "Fund" means to provide for the payment of debt
charges
and expenses related to that payment at or prior to
retirement by
purchase, call for redemption, payment at maturity,
or otherwise.
(Q) "General obligation" means securities to the payment
of
debt charges on which the full faith and credit and the
general
property taxing power, including taxes within the tax
limitation
if available to the subdivision, of the subdivision
are pledged.
(R) "Interest" or "interest equivalent" means those
payments
or portions of payments, however denominated, that
constitute or
represent consideration for forbearing the
collection of money, or
for deferring the receipt of payment of
money to a future time.
(S) "Internal Revenue Code" means the "Internal Revenue
Code
of 1986," 100 Stat. 2085, 26 U.S.C.A. 1 et seq., as amended,
and
includes any laws of the United States providing for
application
of that code.
(T) "Issuer" means any public issuer and any nonprofit
corporation authorized to issue securities for or on behalf of
any
public issuer.
(U) "Legislation" means an ordinance or resolution passed
by
a majority affirmative vote of the then members of the taxing
authority unless a different vote is required by charter
provisions governing the passage of the particular legislation by
the taxing authority.
(V) "Mandatory sinking fund redemption requirements" means
amounts required by proceedings to be deposited in a bond
retirement fund for the purpose of paying in any year or fiscal
year by mandatory redemption prior to stated maturity the
principal of securities that is due and payable, except for
mandatory prior redemption requirements as provided in those
proceedings, in a subsequent year or fiscal year.
(W) "Mandatory sinking fund requirements" means amounts
required by proceedings to be deposited in a year or fiscal year
in a bond retirement fund for the purpose of paying the principal
of securities that is due and payable in a subsequent year or
fiscal year.
(X) "Net indebtedness" has the same meaning as in division
(A) of section 133.04 of the Revised Code.
(Y) "Obligor," in the case of securities or fractionalized
interests in public obligations issued by another person the debt
charges or their equivalents on which are payable from payments
made by a public issuer, means that public issuer.
(Z) "One purpose" relating to permanent improvements means
any one permanent improvement or group or category of permanent
improvements for the same utility, enterprise, system, or
project,
development or redevelopment project, or for or devoted
to the
same general purpose, function, or use or for which
self-supporting securities, based on the same or different
sources
of revenues, may be issued or for which special
assessments may be
levied by a single ordinance or resolution.
"One purpose"
includes, but is not limited to, in any case any
off-street
parking facilities relating to another permanent
improvement, and:
(1) Any number of roads, highways, streets, bridges,
sidewalks, and viaducts;
(2) Any number of off-street parking facilities;
(3) In the case of a county, any number of permanent
improvements for courthouse, jail, county offices, and other
county buildings, and related facilities;
(4) In the case of a school district, any number of
facilities and buildings for school district purposes, and
related
facilities.
(AA) "Outstanding," referring to securities, means
securities that have been issued, delivered, and paid for, except
any of the following:
(1) Securities canceled upon surrender, exchange, or
transfer, or upon payment or redemption;
(2) Securities in replacement of which or in exchange for
which other securities have been issued;
(3) Securities for the payment, or redemption or purchase
for cancellation prior to maturity, of which sufficient moneys or
investments, in accordance with the applicable legislation or
other proceedings or any applicable law, by mandatory sinking
fund
redemption requirements, mandatory sinking fund
requirements, or
otherwise, have been deposited, and credited for
the purpose in a
bond retirement fund or with a trustee or paying
or escrow agent,
whether at or prior to their maturity or
redemption, and, in the
case of securities to be redeemed prior
to their stated maturity,
notice of redemption has been given or
satisfactory arrangements
have been made for giving notice of
that redemption, or waiver of
that notice by or on behalf of the
affected security holders has
been filed with the subdivision or
its agent for the purpose.
(BB) "Paying agent" means the one or more banks, trust
companies, or other financial institutions or qualified persons,
including an appropriate office or officer of the subdivision,
designated as a paying agent or place of payment of debt charges
on the particular securities.
(CC) "Permanent improvement" or "improvement" means any
property, asset, or improvement certified by the fiscal officer,
which certification is conclusive, as having an estimated life or
period of usefulness of five years or more, and includes, but is
not limited to, real estate, buildings, and personal property and
interests in real estate, buildings, and personal property,
equipment, furnishings, and site improvements, and
reconstruction,
rehabilitation, renovation, installation,
improvement,
enlargement, and extension of property, assets, or
improvements so
certified as having an estimated life or period
of usefulness of
five years or more. The acquisition of all the
stock ownership of
a corporation is the acquisition of a
permanent improvement to the
extent that the value of that stock
is represented by permanent
improvements. A permanent
improvement for parking, highway, road,
and street purposes
includes resurfacing, but does not include
ordinary repair.
(DD) "Person" has the same meaning as in section 1.59 of
the
Revised Code and also includes any federal, state,
interstate,
regional, or local governmental agency, any
subdivision, and any
combination of those persons.
(EE) "Proceedings" means the legislation, certifications,
notices, orders, sale proceedings, trust agreement or indenture,
mortgage, lease, lease-purchase agreement, assignment, credit
enhancement facility agreements, and other agreements,
instruments, and documents, as amended and supplemented, and any
election proceedings, authorizing, or providing for the terms and
conditions applicable to, or providing for the security or sale
or
award of, public obligations, and includes the provisions set
forth or incorporated in those public obligations and
proceedings.
(FF) "Public issuer" means any of the following that is
authorized by law to issue securities or enter into public
obligations:
(1) The state, including an agency, commission, officer,
institution, board, authority, or other instrumentality of the
state;
(2) A taxing authority, subdivision, district, or other
local public or governmental entity, and any combination or
consortium, or public division, district, commission, authority,
department, board, officer, or institution, thereof;
(3) Any other body corporate and politic, or other public
entity.
(GG) "Public obligations" means both of the following:
(2) Obligations of a public issuer to make payments under
installment sale, lease, lease purchase, or similar agreements,
which obligations bear interest or interest equivalent.
(HH) "Refund" means to fund and retire outstanding
securities, including advance refunding with or without payment
or
redemption prior to maturity.
(II) "Register" means the books kept and maintained by the
registrar for registration, exchange, and transfer of registered
securities.
(JJ) "Registrar" means the person responsible for keeping
the register for the particular registered securities, designated
by or pursuant to the proceedings.
(KK) "Securities" means bonds, notes, certificates of
indebtedness, commercial paper, and other instruments in writing,
including, unless the context does not admit, anticipatory
securities, issued by an issuer to evidence its obligation to
repay money borrowed, or to pay interest, by, or to pay at any
future time other money obligations of, the issuer of the
securities, but not including public obligations described in
division (GG)(2) of this section.
(LL) "Self-supporting securities" means securities or
portions of securities issued for the purpose of paying costs of
permanent improvements to the extent that receipts of the
subdivision, other than the proceeds of taxes levied by that
subdivision, derived from or with respect to the improvements or
the operation of the improvements being financed, or the
enterprise, system, project, or category of improvements of which
the improvements being financed are part, are estimated by the
fiscal officer to be sufficient to pay the current expenses of
that operation or of those improvements or enterprise, system,
project, or categories of improvements and the debt charges
payable from those receipts on securities issued for the purpose.
Until such time as the improvements or increases in rates and
charges have been in operation or effect for a period of at least
six months, the receipts therefrom, for purposes of this
definition, shall be those estimated by the fiscal officer,
except
that those receipts may include, without limitation,
payments made
and to be made to the subdivision under leases or
agreements in
effect at the time the estimate is made. In the
case of an
operation, improvements, or enterprise, system,
project, or
category of improvements without at least a six-month
history of
receipts, the estimate of receipts by the fiscal
officer, other
than those to be derived under leases and
agreements then in
effect, shall be confirmed by the taxing
authority.
(MM) "Subdivision" means any of the following:
(1) A county, including a county that has adopted a
charter
under Article X, Ohio Constitution;
(2) A municipal corporation, including a municipal
corporation that has adopted a charter under Article XVIII, Ohio
Constitution;
(4) A regional water and sewer district organized under
Chapter 6119. of the Revised Code;
(5) A joint township hospital district organized under
section 513.07 of the Revised Code;
(6) A joint ambulance district organized under section
505.71 of the Revised Code;
(7) A joint recreation district organized under division
(C)
of section 755.14 of the Revised Code;
(8) A detention facility district organized under section
2152.41, a district organized under section 2151.65,
or a
combined
district organized under sections 2152.41 and
2151.65 of
the
Revised Code;
(9) A township police district organized under section
505.48 of the Revised Code;
(11) A joint fire district organized under section 505.371
of the Revised Code;
(12) A county library district created under section
3375.19
or a regional library district created under section
3375.28 of
the Revised Code;
(13) A joint solid waste management district organized
under
section 343.01 or 343.012 of the Revised Code;
(14) A joint emergency medical services district organized
under section
307.052 of the Revised Code;
(15) A fire and ambulance district organized under section
505.375 of the
Revised Code;
(16)
A fire district organized under division (C) of section
505.37 of the Revised Code;
(17) Any other political subdivision or taxing district or
other local public body or agency authorized by this chapter or
other laws to issue Chapter 133. securities.
(NN) "Taxing authority" means in the case of the following
subdivisions:
(1) A county, a county library district, or a regional
library district, the board or boards of county commissioners, or
other legislative authority of a county that has adopted a
charter
under Article X, Ohio Constitution, but with respect to
such a
library district acting solely as agent for the board of
trustees
of that district;
(2) A municipal corporation, the legislative authority;
(3) A school district, the board of education;
(4) A regional water and sewer district, a joint ambulance
district, a joint recreation district, a fire and ambulance
district, or a
joint fire district,
the board of trustees of the
district;
(5) A joint township hospital district, the joint township
hospital board;
(6) A detention facility district or a district organized
under section 2151.65 of the Revised Code, a combined district
organized under sections 2152.41 and 2151.65 of the
Revised Code,
or a joint
emergency medical services district, the joint board of
county commissioners;
(7) A township, a fire district organized under division (C)
of section 505.37 of the Revised Code, or a township police
district, the board of
township trustees;
(8) A joint solid waste management district organized
under
section 343.01 or 343.012 of the Revised Code, the board of
directors of the district;
(9) A subdivision described in division (MM)(17) of this
section, the legislative or governing body or official.
(OO) "Tax limitation" means the "ten-mill limitation" as
defined in section 5705.02 of the Revised Code without diminution
by reason of section 5705.313 of the Revised Code or otherwise,
or, in the case of a municipal corporation or county with a
different charter limitation on property taxes levied to pay debt
charges on unvoted securities, that charter limitation. Those
limitations shall be respectively referred to as the "ten-mill
limitation" and the "charter tax limitation."
(PP) "Tax valuation" means the aggregate of the valuations
of property subject to ad valorem property taxation by the
subdivision on the real property, personal property, and public
utility property tax lists and duplicates most recently certified
for collection, and shall be calculated without deductions of the
valuations of otherwise taxable property exempt in whole or in
part from taxation by reason of exemptions of certain amounts of
taxable value under division (C) of section 5709.01 or, tax reductions under section
323.152 of the Revised Code, or similar laws now or in the future
in effect.
For purposes of section 133.06 of the Revised Code, "tax valuation" shall not include the valuation of tangible personal property used in business, telephone or telegraph property, interexchange telecommunications company property, or personal property owned or leased by a railroad company and used in railroad operations listed under or described in section 5711.22, division (B) or (F) of section 5727.111, or section 5727.12 of the Revised Code.
(QQ) "Year" means the calendar year.
(RR) "Administrative agent," "agent," "commercial paper,"
"floating rate interest structure," "indexing agent," "interest rate hedge," "interest
rate period," "put arrangement," and "remarketing agent" have the
same meanings as in section 9.98 of the Revised Code.
(SS) "Sales tax supported" means
obligations to the payment
of debt charges on which an
additional sales tax or additional
sales taxes have been pledged
by the taxing authority of a county
pursuant to section 133.081
of the Revised
Code.
Sec. 133.10. (A) In anticipation of the collection of
current property tax revenues in and for any fiscal year, the
taxing authority of any subdivision may issue securities, but the
aggregate principal amount of such securities shall not exceed
one-half of the amount that the budget commission estimates the
subdivision will receive from property taxes in that fiscal year
and prior to the last day of the sixth month following the month
in which the securities are issued, other than taxes to be
received for the payment of debt charges or allocated to debt
charges on securities issued pursuant to division (C) of this
section, and less all advances. When a partial, semiannual, or
final property tax settlement is delayed, securities may also be
issued in anticipation of the receipt of property taxes levied or
collected for debt charges to the extent necessary to meet such
debt charges but not in excess of such estimated receipts, less
all advances. The securities issued pursuant to this division
(A) shall mature not later than the last day of the sixth month
following the month in which the securities are issued and in any
case not later than the last day of the fiscal year in which they
are issued.
(B) In anticipation of the collection of current revenues
in and for any fiscal year from any source or combination of
sources, including distributions of any federal or state moneys,
other than the proceeds of property taxes levied by the
subdivision, the taxing authority of any subdivision may issue
securities, but the aggregate principal amount of such securities
shall not exceed one-half of the amount estimated by the fiscal
officer to be received by the subdivision from such sources
during the remainder of such fiscal year, less advances and prior
collections.
(C) In anticipation of the collection of current property
tax revenues in and for any fiscal year, the taxing authority of
a county, municipal corporation, township, or school district may
issue securities, but the aggregate principal amount of those
securities and of any securities issued pursuant to division (A)
of this section outstanding at the time of issuance shall not
exceed one-half of the amount that the budget commission
estimates the subdivision will receive from all property taxes
that are to be distributed to the subdivision from all
settlements of taxes that are to be made in the remainder of that
fiscal year, other than taxes to be received for the payment of
debt charges, and less all advances.
(D) When the tax settlement scheduled under division (B)
of section 321.24 of the Revised Code is delayed pursuant to
division (E) of that section, the taxing authority of a school
district may issue property tax anticipation securities against
the taxes to be included in that settlement, but the aggregate
principal amount of all securities outstanding against those
taxes shall not exceed ninety per cent of the amount estimated to
be received from that settlement by the budget commission, other
than taxes to be received for the payment of debt charges, and
less all advances. The securities issued pursuant to this
division (D) shall mature on or before the next ensuing
thirty-first day of August.
(E) This division applies to all securities authorized by
this section.
(1) The amounts from the sources anticipated needed to pay
debt charges and financing costs shall be considered appropriated
for that purpose, and other appropriations from those sources by
the taxing authority shall be limited to the balance available
after deducting the amount to pay those debt charges and
financing costs. The portions of those amounts as received and
to be applied to those debt charges shall be deposited and set
aside in an account for the purpose in the bond retirement fund
in the amounts and at the times required to pay those debt
charges as provided for by the authorizing legislation or
otherwise provided by law.
(2) Except as otherwise provided in division (H) of
this section, the securities shall not be issued prior to the first
day and, except as otherwise provided in divisions (A) and (D) of
this section, shall mature not later than the last day of the
fiscal year for which the revenues are anticipated.
(3) The proceeds of the principal amount of the securities
shall be used only for the purposes for which the amounts
anticipated were levied, collected, distributed, and
appropriated, and for financing costs related to those
securities.
(4) Property taxes include distributions from the state in
payment of credits against or partial exemptions from, or
reduction of, property taxes.
(5) If for any reason debt charges on securities
authorized by this section are not paid by the subdivision in the
fiscal year when due, the taxing authority of the subdivision
shall include in its next annual appropriation measure an amount
sufficient to pay those debt charges, and the county auditor and
county treasurer shall withhold, in a custodial account, amounts
due the subdivision from the sources anticipated until such
amount is accumulated by those officers and they directly pay or
provide, through the paying agent or otherwise, for the payment
of those debt charges.
(F) The authority to issue securities under divisions (A)
and (B) of this section may be exercised by any board of library
trustees of a public library, or board of park commissioners of a
township, to which the budget commission has allotted a share of
the local government communities fund under section 5747.51 of the Revised
Code or of the library and local government support libraries fund under
section 5707.051 of the Revised Code.
(G) The taxing authority of a school district issuing
securities under division (A), (C), or (D) of this section shall
in the legislation authorizing the securities affirm the levy of,
or covenant to levy, the anticipated property taxes to be
collected in the following year.
(H) The taxing authority of a school district may issue
securities authorized by this section on or after the tenth day preceding the
first day of the fiscal year for which the revenues are anticipated; provided,
that if the taxing authority of a school district issues securities authorized
by this section prior to the first day of the fiscal year for which the
revenues are anticipated:
(1) None of the proceeds received by the school district from the sale of
the securities shall be considered available for appropriation prior to the
first day of the fiscal year for which the revenues are anticipated; and
(2) None of the proceeds received by the school district from the sale of
the securities shall be expended prior to the first day of the fiscal year for
which the revenues are anticipated.
Sec. 133.25. (A) After the issuance of general obligation
securities or of securities to which section 133.24 of the
Revised Code applies, the taxing authority of the subdivision
shall include in its annual tax budget, and levy a property tax
in a sufficient amount, with any other moneys available for the
purpose, to pay the debt charges on the securities payable from
property taxes. The necessary property tax rate shall be
included in the fiscal year tax budget that is certified by the
subdivision to the county budget commission, and, if within the
ten-mill limitation, shall be without diminution by reason of
section 5705.313 of the Revised Code or any similar provisions.
(B) If the taxing authority determines it to be necessary
or appropriate, and if not prohibited by other law, legislation
relating to Chapter 133. securities may, or that legislation may
provide for proceedings that may, contain or provide for any one
or more or combination of the following:
(1) The pledge to the payment of debt charges of, and
related covenants to levy, charge, collect, deposit, and apply,
receipts of the subdivision lawfully available for the purpose,
referred to in this division (B) as pledged receipts, including,
without limitation, ad valorem property taxes as permitted by
law, income taxes, excises, utility and service revenues, local
government communities fund, school foundation, and moneys described in
Section 5a of Article XII, Ohio Constitution, and any other
receipts from taxes, excises, permits, licenses, fines, or other
sources of revenue of or of revenue distributions to the
subdivision, and covenants for the establishment, investment,
segregation, and maintenance of any funds or reserves in
connection with the securities. No pledge or covenant may be
made that impairs the express contract rights of the holders of
outstanding securities of the subdivision.
(2) Designation of a bank or trust company authorized to
exercise corporate trust powers in this state as a fiscal agent
for the securities, which fiscal agent may be a purchaser of any
securities and fiscal agent for any other securities of the
subdivision, and provision for the periodic deposit of pledged
receipts in one or more separate bank accounts, funds, or other
accounts established with the fiscal agent, including provision
for pledged receipts collected or paid by the state or another
subdivision to be transferred, by the appropriate officer of the
state or other subdivision having charge of the distribution of
the pledged receipts to the subdivision, directly to the fiscal
agent for such deposit, which officers shall transfer such
pledged receipts in accordance with this division and the
legislation. The fiscal agent shall disburse moneys so held in
accordance with the legislation, including the transfer of moneys
to paying agents or to persons providing credit enhancement
facilities at the times and in the amounts required. Until
needed for that purpose, and subject to any limitations in the
legislation, the fiscal agent shall either deposit such moneys on
behalf of the subdivision in an institution that is eligible to
become a public depository pursuant to section 135.03 of the
Revised Code or invest the moneys on behalf of the subdivision in
obligations that are under applicable law lawful for the
investment of the particular moneys. Divisions (D), (E),
and (G) of section 135.04 and sections 135.08 and 135.09
of the Revised
Code do not apply to any such deposits or investments. Amounts
so held and received by a fiscal agent shall be accounted for in
the appropriate special funds of the subdivision as if held in
the treasury of the subdivision, and the fiscal agent shall
provide such information to the subdivision and to the auditor of
state as is necessary for the purpose.
(3) Covenants of the subdivision and other provisions to
protect and safeguard the security and rights of the holders of
the securities and of the providers of any credit enhancement
facilities and provisions for defeasance, including, without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, such covenants and
provisions as to:
(a) Establishment and maintenance of the funds to be held
by a fiscal agent as provided in this division, the times,
amounts, and levels for deposit to such funds, and the
obligations in which the proceeds of such funds may be invested
pending their use, subject to limitations on investment of public
funds otherwise provided for by law or charter or by the
legislation;
(b) The appointment, rights, powers, and duties of the
fiscal agent, and vesting in the fiscal agent all or any of those
rights, powers, and duties in trust;
(c) Compliance with the provisions of this chapter and
other laws applicable to the payment of debt charges on
securities of the subdivision, including Chapter 5705. of the
Revised Code;
(d) Conditions that would give rise to an event of default
under the terms of the legislation, and actions and remedies that
any fiscal agent may take or assert on behalf of the holders of
the securities.
(4) As rights and remedies of the holders of securities,
in addition to any other rights and remedies under law, but
subject to the terms of the legislation and of any credit
enhancement facility, provision that if the subdivision defaults
in the payment of debt charges on the securities and such default
continues for a period of thirty days, or if the subdivision
fails or refuses to comply with the requirements of this chapter
or the applicable proceedings, or defaults in any contract made
with the holders of those securities, the holders of not less
than twenty-five per cent in principal amount of the outstanding
securities of that issue may appoint a trustee, who may be the
fiscal agent, to represent those holders for the purposes
provided in this division (B)(4). That trustee may, and upon
written request of the holders of not less than twenty-five per
cent in principal amount of those securities then outstanding
shall, in its own name exercise all or any of the powers of such
holders under division (B)(3) of this section and in addition
may:
(a) Bring action for payment of any debt charges then due
on the securities;
(b) By mandamus or other action or proceeding enforce all
rights of the holders of the securities, including any right to
require the subdivision to assess, levy, charge, collect, and
apply pledged receipts adequate to carry out the provisions of
the legislation and any agreement with those holders and to
perform its duties under the legislation and this chapter;
(c) Bring action upon the securities;
(d) By action, require the subdivision to account as if it
were the trustee of an express trust for the holders of the
securities;
(e) By action, enjoin any acts or things that may be
unlawful or in violation of the rights of the holders of those
securities;
(f) Except in the case of securities payable from a
property tax, declare all securities of the issue due and
payable, and if all defaults are subsequently corrected, then,
with the consent of the holders of not less than ten per cent in
principal amount of those securities then outstanding, rescind
and annul that declaration and its consequences.
In addition to the foregoing, the trustee shall have all of
the powers necessary or appropriate for the exercise of any
functions specifically set forth in this section or the
legislation or incident to the general representation of the
holders of those securities in the enforcement and protection of
their rights.
(5) Contracts or other arrangements for credit enhancement
facilities, which may be with a fiscal agent. The costs of or
under credit enhancement facilities may be paid from any moneys
of the subdivision lawfully available for the purpose. The
credit enhancement facility may be for the benefit of holders of
the particular securities and of any other securities of the
subdivision. Any such benefit conferred with respect to other
securities shall not be deemed to restrict, preclude, or
otherwise impair any rights that those holders otherwise may
assert.
(C) Unless otherwise provided in the proceedings, the
holders of not less than ten per cent in principal amount of the
particular securities at the time outstanding, whether or not
then due and payable or reduced to judgment and either on their
own behalf or on behalf of all persons similarly situated, may:
(1) By mandamus, mandatory or other injunction, or any
other order, writ, process, or decree, or by any other action or
proceeding, enforce all contractual or other rights of such
holders, including any right to require the subdivision to
assess, levy, charge, collect, and apply the pledged receipts
pledged to carry out the provisions of any agreement with such
holders and perform its duties under the legislation and this
chapter;
(2) In the case of default in payment of debt charges on
their securities, commence an action upon their securities to
require the subdivision to account as if it were the trustee of
an express trust for those holders or to enjoin any acts or
things that may be unlawful or in violation of the rights of
those holders.
(D) The state pledges to and agrees with the holders of
Chapter 133. securities that the state will not, by enacting any
law or adopting any rule, repeal, revoke, repudiate, limit,
alter, stay, suspend, or otherwise reduce, rescind, or impair the
power or duty of a subdivision to exercise, perform, carry out,
and fulfill its responsibilities or covenants under this chapter
or legislation or agreements as to its Chapter 133. securities,
including a credit enhancement facility, passed or entered into
pursuant to this chapter, or repeal, revoke, repudiate, limit,
alter, stay, suspend, or otherwise reduce, rescind, or impair the
rights and remedies of any such holders fully to enforce such
responsibilities, covenants, and agreements or to enforce the
pledge and agreement of the state contained in this division, or
otherwise exercise any sovereign power materially impairing or
materially inconsistent with the provisions of such legislation,
covenants, and agreements. The general assembly determines and
declares that the provisions of this chapter and the powers and
duties of subdivisions authorized and imposed under this chapter
are proper, reasonable, and appropriate means by which the state
can and should exercise and has exercised its duties and powers
under the Ohio Constitution, and that those provisions are
necessary and in the public interest and a proper means to better
provide for the security for, and market reception for the
purchase of, those securities. This pledge and agreement shall
be of no force and effect as to securities that are not
outstanding. This pledge and agreement by the state may be
temporarily suspended upon the declaration of martial law in the
subdivision in the event of circumstances deriving directly out
of a natural disaster, such as an earthquake or major
conflagration or flood but not a snowstorm or civil disturbance,
or out of military invasions or civil insurrections, but not
strikes or crises created by financial or economic events.
Payment for securities by the original and subsequent holders
shall be deemed conclusive evidence of valuable consideration
received by the state and subdivision for this pledge and
agreement, and any action by the state contrary to or
inconsistent with this division is void as applied to those
securities. The state hereby grants any such benefited holder
the right to sue the state and enforce this pledge and agreement,
and waives all rights of defense based on sovereign immunity or
sovereign power in such an action or suit, it being expressly
determined and declared that the continued integrity of the
contract of any such holder is essential to the continued right
of the subdivision to issue and pay debt charges on securities as
a subdivision of the state. Nothing in this division requires
the state to continue any particular level of appropriations of
moneys, or precludes the state from authorizing the subdivision
to exercise, or the subdivision from exercising, subject to
approval of the tax commissioner, any power provided by law to
seek application of laws then in effect under the bankruptcy
provisions of the United States Constitution but in any case
providing for debt charges as provided in section 133.36 of the
Revised Code, or to preclude the state from further exercise of
any of its powers and responsibilities under the Ohio
Constitution.
(E) Moneys and investments held by the subdivision or a
paying agent or a fiscal agent, and all receipts of the
subdivision, needed and allocated to payment of debt charges or
payments by the subdivision under credit enhancement facilities,
are property of the subdivision devoted to essential governmental
purposes and accordingly shall not be applied to any purpose
other than as provided in this chapter and in the legislation,
and shall not be subject to any order, judgment, lien, execution,
attachment, setoff, or counterclaim by any creditor or judgment
creditor, as a result of a tort judgment or otherwise, of the
subdivision other than the holders of the securities or the
provider of the credit enhancement facility who are entitled
thereto pursuant to this chapter and the legislation.
Sec. 135.35. (A) The investing authority shall deposit or
invest any part or all of the county's inactive moneys and shall
invest all of the money in the county library and local
government support libraries fund when required by section 135.352 of the
Revised Code. The following classifications of securities and
obligations are eligible for such deposit or investment:
(1) United States treasury bills, notes, bonds, or any other obligation or
security issued by the United States treasury, any other obligation
guaranteed as to principal or interest by the United States, or any book entry, zero-coupon United States treasury security that is a direct obligation of the United States.
Nothing in the classification of eligible securities and obligations set forth
in divisions (A)(2) to
(11) of this
section shall be construed to authorize any investment in stripped principal
or interest obligations of such eligible securities and obligations.
(2) Bonds, notes, debentures, or any other obligations or
securities issued by any federal government agency or
instrumentality, including but not limited to, the federal
national mortgage association, federal home loan bank, federal farm credit
bank, federal home loan mortgage corporation, government national mortgage
association, and student loan marketing association. All federal agency
securities shall be direct issuances of federal government agencies or
instrumentalities.
(3) Time certificates of deposit or savings or deposit
accounts, including, but not limited to, passbook accounts, in
any eligible institution mentioned in section 135.32 of the
Revised Code;
(4) Bonds and other obligations of this state or the political subdivisions
of this state, provided that such political subdivisions are located wholly or
partly within the same county as the investing authority;
(5) No-load money market mutual funds consisting
exclusively of obligations described in division (A)(1) or (2) of
this section and repurchase agreements secured by such
obligations, provided that investments in securities
described in this division are made only through eligible institutions
mentioned in section 135.32 of the Revised Code;
(6) The Ohio subdivision's fund as provided in section 135.45 of the Revised
Code;
(7) Securities lending agreements with any eligible institution
mentioned in section 135.32 of the Revised Code that is a member of the
federal reserve system or federal home loan bank or with any recognized United States government securities dealer meeting the description in division (J)(1) of this section, under the terms of which
agreements the
investing authority lends securities and the eligible institution
or dealer agrees to simultaneously exchange similar securities or cash,
equal value for equal value.
Securities and cash received as collateral for a securities lending agreement are not inactive moneys of the county or moneys of a county library and local government support libraries fund. The investment of cash collateral received pursuant to a securities lending agreement may be invested only in instruments specified by the investing authority in the written investment policy described in division (K) of this section.
(8) Up to twenty-five per cent of the county's total average portfolio in
either of the following investments:
(a) Commercial paper notes issued by an entity that is
defined in
division (D) of section 1705.01 of the Revised Code
and that has
assets exceeding five hundred million dollars, to which notes all of the
following apply:
(i) The notes are rated at the time of purchase in the highest
classification established by at least two nationally recognized standard
rating services.
(ii) The aggregate value of the notes does not exceed ten per
cent
of the aggregate value of the outstanding commercial paper of the issuing
corporation.
(iii) The notes mature not later than two hundred seventy days
after
purchase.
(b) Bankers acceptances of banks that are insured by the federal
deposit insurance corporation and to which both of the following
apply:
(i) The obligations are eligible for purchase by the federal
reserve system.
(ii) The obligations mature not later than one hundred eighty
days after purchase.
No investment shall be made pursuant to division (A)(8) of this
section unless the investing authority has completed additional training
for making the investments authorized by division (A)(8) of
this section. The type and amount of additional training shall be approved by
the auditor
of state and may be conducted by or provided under the supervision of the
auditor of state.
(9) Up to fifteen per cent of the county's total average
portfolio in notes issued by corporations that are incorporated
under the laws of the United States and that are operating within
the United States, or by depository institutions that are doing
business under authority granted by the United States or any state
and that are operating within the United States, provided both of
the following apply:
(a) The notes are rated in the second highest or higher category by at least two
nationally recognized standard rating services at the time of
purchase.
(b) The notes mature not later than two years after
purchase.
(10) No-load money market mutual funds rated in the highest category at the time of purchase by at least one nationally recognized standard rating service and consisting
exclusively of obligations described in division (A)(1), (2), or (6) of section
135.143 of the Revised Code;
(11) Debt interests rated at the time of purchase in the three highest categories by two nationally
recognized standard rating services and issued by
foreign nations
diplomatically recognized by the United States
government. All
interest and principal shall be denominated and
payable in United
States funds. The investments made under
division (A)(11) of this
section shall not exceed in the aggregate
one per cent of a
county's total average portfolio.
The investing authority shall invest under division (A)(11)
of this section in a debt interest issued by a foreign nation only
if the debt interest is backed by the full faith and credit of
that foreign nation, there is no prior history of default, and the
debt interest matures not later than five years after purchase. For purposes of division (A)(11) of this section, a debt interest is rated in the three highest categories by two nationally recognized standard rating services if either the debt interest itself or the issuer of the debt interest is rated, or is implicitly rated, at the time of purchase in the three highest categories by two nationally recognized standard rating services.
(B) Nothing in the classifications of eligible obligations and securities
set forth in divisions (A)(1) to (11) of this section shall
be
construed to authorize investment in a derivative, and no investing
authority shall invest any county inactive moneys or any moneys in
a county library and local government support libraries fund in a derivative. For
purposes of this division, "derivative" means a financial instrument or
contract or obligation whose value or return is based upon or linked to
another asset or index, or both, separate from the financial instrument,
contract, or obligation itself. Any security, obligation, trust account, or
other instrument that is created from an issue of the United
States treasury or is created from an obligation of a federal agency
or instrumentality or is created from both is considered a derivative
instrument. An eligible investment described in this section with a variable
interest rate payment, based upon a single interest payment or single index
comprised of other eligible investments provided for in division
(A)(1) or (2) of this section, is not a derivative, provided that
such variable rate investment has a maximum maturity of two years. A treasury inflation-protected security shall not be considered a
derivative, provided the security matures not later than five
years after purchase.
(C) Except as provided in division (D) of this
section, any investment made pursuant to this section must mature within
five
years from the date of settlement, unless the investment is matched to a
specific obligation or debt of the
county or to a specific obligation or debt of a political subdivision of
this state located wholly or partly within the county, and the investment
is specifically approved by the investment advisory
committee.
(D) The investing authority may also enter into a written
repurchase agreement with any eligible institution
mentioned in section 135.32 of the Revised Code or any eligible securities
dealer pursuant to division (J) of this section, under the terms of which
agreement the investing authority purchases and the eligible
institution or dealer agrees
unconditionally to repurchase any of the securities listed in
divisions (B)(1) to (5), except
letters of credit described in division (B)(2), of
section 135.18 of the Revised Code. The
market value of
securities subject to an overnight written repurchase agreement must
exceed the
principal value of the overnight written repurchase agreement by at
least two per
cent. A written repurchase agreement must exceed the
principal value of the
overnight written repurchase agreement, by at least two per cent. A
written repurchase
agreement shall not exceed thirty days, and the market
value of securities subject to a written repurchase
agreement must exceed the
principal value of the written repurchase agreement by at
least two per cent and
be marked to market daily. All securities purchased pursuant to this division
shall be delivered into the
custody of the investing authority or the qualified custodian of the investing
authority or an agent designated by the investing authority. A written
repurchase
agreement with an eligible securities dealer shall be transacted on a delivery
versus payment basis. The agreement
shall contain the requirement that for each transaction pursuant
to the agreement the participating institution shall provide all
of the following information:
(1) The par value of the securities;
(2) The type, rate, and maturity date of the securities;
(3) A numerical identifier generally accepted in the
securities industry that designates the securities.
No investing authority shall enter into a written repurchase
agreement under the terms of which the investing authority agrees to sell
securities owned by
the county to a purchaser and agrees with that purchaser to unconditionally
repurchase those securities.
(E) No investing authority shall make an investment
under this section, unless the investing authority, at the time of making the
investment, reasonably expects that the investment can
be held until its maturity. The investing authority's written investment
policy shall specify the conditions under which an investment may be redeemed
or sold prior to maturity.
(F) No investing authority shall pay a county's inactive moneys
or moneys of a county library and local government support libraries fund into a fund
established by another subdivision, treasurer, governing board, or investing
authority, if that fund was established by the subdivision, treasurer,
governing board, or investing authority for the purpose of investing or
depositing the public moneys of other subdivisions. This division does not
apply to the payment of public moneys into either of the following:
(1) The Ohio subdivision's fund pursuant to division (A)(6) of this section;
(2) A fund created solely for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, owning,
leasing, or operating municipal utilities pursuant to the authority provided
under section 715.02 of the Revised Code or Section 4 of Article XVIII, Ohio
Constitution.
For purposes of division (F) of this section, "subdivision" includes
a county.
(G) The use of leverage, in which the county uses its current
investment assets as collateral for the purpose of purchasing other assets, is
prohibited. The issuance of taxable notes for the purpose of arbitrage is
prohibited. Contracting to sell securities not owned by the county, for the
purpose of purchasing such securities on the speculation that bond prices will
decline, is prohibited.
(H) Any securities, certificates of deposit, deposit
accounts, or any other documents evidencing deposits or
investments made under authority of this section shall be issued
in the name of the county with the county treasurer or investing
authority as the designated payee. If any such deposits or
investments are registrable either as to principal or interest,
or both, they shall be registered in the name of the treasurer.
(I) The investing authority shall be responsible for the
safekeeping of all documents evidencing a deposit or investment
acquired under this section, including, but not limited to,
safekeeping receipts evidencing securities deposited with a
qualified trustee, as provided in section 135.37 of the Revised
Code, and documents confirming the purchase of securities under
any repurchase agreement under this section shall be deposited
with a qualified trustee, provided, however, that the qualified
trustee shall be required to report to the investing authority,
auditor of state, or an authorized outside auditor at any time
upon request as to the identity, market value, and location of
the document evidencing each security, and that if the
participating institution is a designated depository of the
county for the current period of designation, the securities that
are the subject of the repurchase agreement may be delivered to
the treasurer or held in trust by the participating institution
on behalf of the investing authority.
Upon the expiration of the term of office of an investing
authority or in the event of a vacancy in the office for any
reason, the officer or the officer's legal representative
shall transfer and deliver to the officer's successor all documents
mentioned in this division for which the officer has been
responsible for safekeeping. For
all such documents transferred and delivered, the officer shall
be credited with, and the officer's successor shall be
charged with, the amount of moneys evidenced by such documents.
(J)(1) All investments, except for investments in securities
described in divisions (A)(5) and (6) of this
section, shall be made only
through a member of the national association of securities
dealers, through a bank, savings bank, or savings and loan
association regulated by the
superintendent of financial institutions, or through an institution regulated
by the comptroller of the currency, federal deposit
insurance corporation, or board of governors of the federal reserve
system.
(2) Payment for investments shall be made only upon the delivery of
securities representing
such investments to the treasurer, investing authority, or
qualified trustee. If the securities transferred are not
represented by a certificate, payment shall be made only upon
receipt of confirmation of transfer from the custodian by the
treasurer, governing board, or qualified trustee.
(K)(1) Except as otherwise provided in division (K)(2) of
this section, no investing authority shall make an investment or deposit under
this section, unless there is on file with the auditor of state a written
investment policy approved by the investing authority. The policy shall
require that all entities conducting investment business with the
investing authority shall sign the investment policy of that investing authority. All
brokers, dealers, and financial institutions, described in division (J)(1) of
this section,
initiating transactions with the investing authority by giving advice or
making investment recommendations shall sign the investing authority's
investment policy thereby acknowledging their agreement to abide by the
policy's contents. All brokers, dealers, and financial institutions,
described in division (J)(1) of this section, executing transactions initiated
by the investing authority, having read the policy's contents, shall sign the
investment policy thereby acknowledging their comprehension and receipt.
(2) If a written investment policy described in division (K)(1)
of this section is not filed on behalf of the county with the auditor of
state, the investing authority of that county shall invest the county's
inactive moneys and moneys of the county library and local government support libraries
fund only in time certificates of deposits or savings or deposit accounts
pursuant to division (A)(3) of this section, no-load money market
mutual funds pursuant to division (A)(5) of this section,
or the Ohio subdivision's fund pursuant to division (A)(6) of this section.
(L)(1) The investing authority shall establish and maintain an
inventory of all obligations and securities acquired by the investing
authority pursuant to this section. The inventory shall
include a description of each obligation or security, including type, cost,
par value, maturity date, settlement date, and any coupon rate.
(2) The investing authority shall also keep a complete record of all
purchases and sales of the obligations and securities made pursuant to this
section.
(3) The investing authority shall maintain a monthly portfolio report and
issue a copy of the monthly portfolio
report describing such investments to the county
investment advisory committee, detailing the current inventory of all
obligations and securities, all transactions during the month that affected
the inventory, any income received from the obligations and securities, and
any investment expenses paid, and stating the names of any persons effecting
transactions on behalf of the investing authority.
(4) The monthly portfolio report
shall
be a public record and available for inspection
under section 149.43 of the Revised Code.
(5) The inventory and the monthly portfolio report shall be filed with
the board of county commissioners.
(M) An investing authority may enter into a
written investment or deposit agreement that includes a
provision under which the parties agree to submit to
nonbinding arbitration to settle any controversy that may arise
out of the agreement, including any controversy pertaining to
losses of public moneys resulting from investment or deposit.
The arbitration provision shall
be set forth entirely in the agreement, and the agreement shall
include a conspicuous notice to the
parties that any party to the arbitration may apply to the court of common
pleas of the county in which the arbitration was held for an order to vacate,
modify, or correct the award. Any such party may also apply to the court for
an order to change venue to a court of common pleas located more than one
hundred miles from the county in which the investing authority is located.
For purposes of this division, "investment or deposit agreement" means any
agreement between an investing authority and a person, under which agreement
the person agrees to invest, deposit, or otherwise manage, on behalf of the
investing authority, a county's inactive moneys or moneys in a county library
and local government support libraries fund, or agrees to provide investment advice to
the investing authority.
(N) An investment held in the county portfolio on September
27, 1996, that
was a legal investment under the law as it existed
before September
27, 1996, may be held until maturity, or if
the investment does not have a maturity date the investment may be held until
five years from
September 27, 1996, regardless of whether
the investment would qualify as a legal investment under the terms of this
section as amended.
Sec. 135.352. The investment authority shall invest all moneys in the county
library and local government support libraries fund that are not distributed due to an
appeal of the budget commission's allocation of such fund. Interest earned on
such investments shall be credited to the fund and distributed in accordance
with section 5747.48 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 151.08. This section applies to obligations as defined in this
section.
(A) As used in this section:
(1) "Capital facilities" or "capital improvement projects" means the
acquisition, construction, reconstruction, improvement, planning, and
equipping
of roads and bridges, waste water treatment systems, water supply systems,
solid waste disposal facilities, flood control systems, and storm water and
sanitary collection, storage, and treatment facilities, including real
property, interests in real property, facilities, and equipment related or
incidental to those facilities.
(2) "Costs of capital facilities" include related direct administrative
expenses and allocable portions of direct costs of the Ohio public
works commission and the local subdivision.
(3) "Local subdivision" means any county, municipal corporation, township,
sanitary district, or regional water and sewer district.
(4) "Obligations" means obligations as defined in section 151.01 of the
Revised Code issued to pay costs of capital facilities.
(B)(1) The issuing authority shall issue obligations to pay costs of
financing or assisting in the financing of the capital
improvement projects of local subdivisions pursuant to Section
2m of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, section 151.01 of the Revised Code, and
this section. Not more than one hundred twenty million dollars principal
amount of obligations, plus the
principal amount of obligations that in any prior fiscal years could have
been, but were not, issued within that one-hundred-twenty-million dollar
fiscal year limit, may be issued in any fiscal year. Not more than one
billion two hundred million dollars principal amount of obligations pursuant to Section 2m of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution may be
issued for the purposes of this section and division (B)(2) of
section 164.09 of the Revised Code.
(2) The issuing authority shall issue obligations to pay costs of financing or assisting in the financing of the capital improvement projects of local subdivisions pursuant to Section 2p of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, section 151.01 of the Revised Code, and this section. Not more than one hundred twenty million dollars in principal amount of such obligations may be issued in any of the first five fiscal years of issuance and not more than one hundred fifty million dollars in principal amount of such obligations may be issued in any of the next five fiscal years, plus in each case the principal amount of such obligations that in any prior fiscal year could have been but were not issued within those fiscal year limits. No obligations shall be issued for the purposes of this section pursuant to Section 2p of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, until at least one billion one hundred ninety-nine million five hundred thousand dollars aggregate principal amount of obligations have been issued pursuant to Section 2m of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution. Not more than one billion three hundred fifty million dollars principal amount of obligations may be issued pursuant to Section 2p of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution for the purposes of this section.
(C) Net proceeds of obligations shall be deposited into the state
capital improvements fund created by section 164.08 of the Revised Code.
(D) There is hereby created in the state treasury the "state
capital improvements bond service fund." All moneys received by the state and
required by the bond proceedings, consistent with this section and section
151.01 of the Revised Code, to be deposited, transferred, or credited to the bond service
fund, and all other moneys transferred or allocated to or received for
the purposes of that fund, shall be deposited and credited to the bond service
fund, subject to any applicable provisions of the bond proceedings but without
necessity for any act of appropriation. During the period beginning with the
date of the first issuance of obligations and continuing during the time that
any obligations are outstanding in accordance with their terms, so long as
moneys in the bond service fund are insufficient to pay debt service when due
on those obligations payable from that fund (except the principal amounts of
bond anticipation notes payable from the proceeds of renewal notes or bonds
anticipated) and due in the particular fiscal year, a sufficient amount of
revenues of the state is committed and, without necessity for further act of
appropriation, shall be paid to the bond service fund for the purpose of
paying that debt service when due.
Sec. 151.40. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Bond proceedings" includes any trust agreements, and
any amendments or supplements to them, as
authorized by this
section.
(2) "Costs of revitalization projects" includes related
direct administrative expenses and allocable portions of the
direct costs of those projects of the department of development or
the
environmental protection agency.
(3) "Issuing authority" means the treasurer of state.
(4) "Obligations" means obligations
as defined in section
151.01 of the Revised Code issued to pay the costs
of projects for
revitalization purposes as referred to in division
(A)(2) of
Section 2o of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution.
(5) "Pledged liquor profits" means all receipts of the
state
representing the gross profit on the sale of spirituous
liquor, as
referred to in division (B)(4) of section 4301.10 of
the Revised
Code, after paying all costs and expenses of the
division of
liquor control and providing an adequate working
capital reserve
for the division of liquor control as provided in
that division,
but excluding the sum required by the second
paragraph of section
4301.12 of the Revised Code, as it was in
effect on May 2, 1980,
to be paid into the state treasury.
(6) "Pledged receipts" means, as and to the extent provided
in bond proceedings:
(a) Pledged liquor profits. The pledge of pledged liquor
profits to obligations is subject to the priority of the pledge of
those profits to obligations issued and to be issued pursuant to Chapter 166. of the
Revised Code.
(b) Moneys accruing to the state from the lease, sale, or
other disposition or use of revitalization projects or from the
repayment, including any interest, of loans or advances made from
net proceeds;
(c) Accrued interest received from the sale of obligations;
(d) Income from the investment of the special funds;
(e) Any gifts, grants, donations, or pledges, and receipts
therefrom, available for the payment of debt service;
(f) Additional or any other specific revenues or receipts
lawfully available to be
pledged, and pledged, pursuant to further
authorization by the general assembly, to the payment of debt
service.
(B)(1) The issuing authority shall issue obligations of the
state to pay
costs of revitalization projects pursuant to division
(B)(2) of
Section 2o of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, section
151.01 of
the Revised Code as applicable to this section, and this
section. The issuing authority, upon
the certification to it by
the clean Ohio council of the amount of
moneys needed in and for
the purposes of the clean Ohio revitalization
fund created by
section 122.658 of the Revised Code, shall issue
obligations in
the
amount determined by the issuing
authority to be required for
those purposes. Not more than two hundred million dollars principal amount of obligations issued
under this section for revitalization purposes may be outstanding at any one time. Not more than fifty million dollars principal amount of obligations, plus the principal amount of obligations that in any prior fiscal year could have been, but were not issued within the fifty-million-dollar fiscal year limit, may be issued in any fiscal year.
(2) The provisions and authorizations in section
151.01 of the Revised
Code apply to the obligations and the bond
proceedings except as
otherwise provided or provided for in those
obligations and bond
proceedings.
(C) Net proceeds of obligations
shall be deposited in the
clean Ohio revitalization fund created in section 122.658 of the
Revised Code.
(D) There is hereby created the
revitalization projects
bond
service fund, which shall be in the custody of the treasurer
of
state, but shall be separate and apart from and not a part of
the
state treasury. All money received by
the state and required
by
the bond proceedings, consistent with
section 151.01 of the
Revised Code and this section, to be
deposited, transferred, or
credited to the bond service fund, and
all other money transferred
or allocated to or received for the
purposes of that fund, shall
be deposited and credited to the bond
service fund, subject to any
applicable provisions of the bond
proceedings, but without
necessity for any act of appropriation.
During the period
beginning with the date of the first issuance of
obligations and
continuing during the time that any obligations
are outstanding in
accordance with their terms, so long as moneys
in the bond service
fund are insufficient to pay debt service when
due on those
obligations payable from that fund, except the
principal amounts
of bond anticipation notes payable from the
proceeds of renewal
notes or bonds anticipated, and due in the
particular fiscal year,
a sufficient amount of pledged receipts is
committed and, without
necessity for further act of appropriation,
shall be paid to the
bond service fund for the purpose of paying
that debt service when
due.
(E) The issuing authority may pledge all, or such portion
as
the issuing authority determines, of the pledged receipts to
the
payment of the debt service charges on obligations issued
under
this section, and for the establishment and maintenance of
any
reserves, as provided in the bond proceedings, and make other
provisions in the bond proceedings with respect to pledged
receipts as authorized by this section, which provisions are
controlling notwithstanding any other provisions of law pertaining
to them.
(F) The issuing authority may covenant in the bond
proceedings, and such covenants shall be controlling
notwithstanding any other provision of law, that the state and
applicable officers and state agencies, including the general
assembly, so long as any obligations issued under this section are
outstanding, shall maintain statutory authority for and cause to
be charged and collected wholesale or retail prices for spirituous
liquor sold by the state or its agents so that the available
pledged receipts are sufficient in time and amount to meet debt
service payable from pledged liquor profits and for the
establishment and maintenance of any reserves and other
requirements provided for in the bond proceedings.
(G) Obligations
may be further secured, as determined by
the
issuing authority, by a trust agreement between
the state and
a
corporate trustee, which may be
any trust company
or bank having
its principal a place of business
within the state.
Any trust
agreement may contain the
resolution or
order authorizing the
issuance of the obligations,
any provisions
that may be contained
in any bond proceedings, and
other
provisions that are customary
or appropriate in an agreement
of that type, including, but not
limited to:
(1) Maintenance of each pledge, trust agreement, or other
instrument comprising part of the bond proceedings until
the state
has fully paid or provided for the payment of debt
service on the
obligations secured by it;
(2) In the event of default in any payments required to be
made by the bond proceedings, enforcement of those payments or
agreements by mandamus, the appointment of a receiver, suit in
equity, action at law, or any combination of them;
(3) The rights and remedies of the holders or owners of
obligations and of the trustee and provisions for protecting and
enforcing them, including limitations on rights of individual
holders and owners.
(H) The obligations shall not be
general obligations of the
state and the full faith and credit, revenue, and taxing power of
the state shall not be pledged to the payment of debt service on
them. The holders
or owners of the obligations shall have no right
to have any moneys obligated or
pledged for the payment of debt
service except as provided in
this section and in the applicable
bond proceedings. The rights
of the holders and owners to payment
of debt service are limited
to all or that portion of the pledged
receipts, and those special
funds, pledged to the payment of debt
service pursuant to the bond
proceedings in accordance with this
section, and each obligation
shall bear on its face a statement to
that effect.
Sec. 152.31. The Ohio building authority may construct and
operate capital facilities for the housing of branches and agencies of state
government, municipal corporations, counties, or other governmental entities,
in any municipal corporation when the municipal corporation and the
authority agree on a location and all of the following occur:
(A) Two or more of such agencies or governmental entities
submit to the authority an application requesting the authority
to construct and operate capital facilities and expressing their intent to
become the initial tenants of the capital facilities and to thereby occupy all
of its available office space;
(B) Any municipal corporation, county, township, or other
governmental entities joining in the
submission of an application
pursuant to division (A) of this section further submits a lease
committing it to occupy, for a period equal to the
greater of twenty
consecutive years from the date of initial occupancy or the term of any
bonds issued by the authority for the capital facilities, the capital
facilities that, through the application, it expressed its intent
to initially occupy, and obligating it to pay such rent as the
authority determines to be appropriate. Notwithstanding any
other section of the Revised Code, any governmental entity may
enter into such a lease and any such lease is legally sufficient
to obligate the governmental entity for the term stated therein. Any such
lease shall constitute an agreement described in division
(E) of section 152.24 of the Revised Code.
If rental payments required by a lease established pursuant
to this division are not paid in accordance with the provision of
such a lease, the funds which would otherwise be apportioned to
the lessees from the county undivided local government communities fund,
pursuant to sections 5747.51 to 5747.53 of the Revised Code,
shall be reduced by the amount of rent payable to the authority.
The county treasurer shall immediately pay the amount of such
reductions to the authority.
All rents charged by the authority for occupancy of such a
capital facility shall be fixed and expended pursuant
to section 152.16 of the Revised Code. Any lease with the department of
administrative services with respect to such a capital facility may
provide for rental payments that satisfy the requirements of
section 152.16 of the Revised Code, but the amount of any rentals
paid by other tenants in the capital facility pursuant to leases with the
authority shall be credited against such rental payments of the
department of administrative services. Any lease with the
department of administrative services or a using state agency may
provide for the payment
of rental payments that satisfy the requirements of section
152.16 of the Revised Code prior to initial occupancy of such
capital facility. In the process of inviting bids and awarding
contracts, the authority shall be guided by the procedures set
forth in sections 153.01 to 153.20 of the Revised Code. Any
provision of sections 152.21, 152.22, and 152.26 of the Revised
Code that applies to capital facilities described in section 152.19 of the
Revised Code also applies to the capital facilities described in this section
unless it is inconsistent with this section.
Sec. 156.02. The director of administrative services may
contract with an energy services company, contractor, architect,
professional engineer, or other person experienced in the design
and implementation of energy conservation measures for a report
containing an analysis and recommendations pertaining to the
implementation of energy conservation measures that would
significantly reduce energy consumption and operating costs in
any buildings owned by the state and, upon request of its board of trustees or managing authority, any building owned by an institution of higher education as defined in section 3345.12 of the Revised Code. The report shall include
estimates of all costs of such measures, including the costs of
design, engineering, installation, maintenance, repairs, and debt
service, and estimates of the amounts by which energy consumption
and operating costs would be reduced. The cost of each report requested by the board or managing authority of an institution of higher education shall be paid by the institution of higher education.
Sec. 164.03. For the purpose of allocating the funds made
available to finance public infrastructure capital improvement projects
of local subdivisions through the issuance of general obligations of the state
of Ohio pursuant to Section 2k or, 2m, or 2p of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, the
state is divided into the following districts:
District one. Cuyahoga county shall constitute district one.
District two. Hamilton county shall constitute district two.
District three. Franklin county shall constitute district three.
District four. Montgomery county shall constitute district four.
District five. Defiance, Erie, Fulton, Henry, Ottawa,
Paulding, Sandusky, Williams, and Wood counties shall constitute
district five.
District six. Mahoning and Trumbull counties shall
constitute district six.
District seven. Ashtabula, Geauga, Lake, and Portage
counties shall constitute district seven.
District eight. Summit county shall constitute district
eight.
District nine. Lorain, Huron, and Medina counties shall
constitute district nine.
District ten. Butler, Clermont, Clinton, and Warren
counties shall constitute district ten.
District eleven. Champaign, Clark, Darke, Greene, Madison,
Miami, Preble, and Union counties shall constitute district
eleven.
District twelve. Lucas county shall constitute district
twelve.
District thirteen. Allen, Auglaize, Hancock, Logan,
Mercer, Putnam, Shelby, and Van Wert counties shall constitute
district thirteen.
District fourteen. Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton,
Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes, Jefferson, and Tuscarawas counties
shall constitute district fourteen.
District fifteen. Adams, Brown, Fayette, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto, and Vinton counties shall
constitute district fifteen.
District sixteen. Ashland, Crawford, Hardin, Marion,
Richland, Seneca, Wayne, and Wyandot counties shall constitute
district sixteen.
District seventeen. Delaware, Fairfield, Knox, Licking,
Morrow, and Pickaway counties shall constitute district
seventeen.
District eighteen. Athens, Belmont, Hocking, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Perry, and Washington counties
shall constitute district eighteen.
District nineteen. Stark county shall constitute district
nineteen.
Sec. 164.05. (A) The director of the Ohio public works
commission shall do all of the following:
(1) Approve requests for financial assistance from
district public works integrating committees and enter into
agreements with one or more local subdivisions to provide loans,
grants, and local debt support and credit enhancements for a
capital improvement project if the director determines that:
(a) The project is an eligible project pursuant to this
chapter;
(b) The financial assistance for the project has been
properly approved and requested by the district committee of the
district which includes the recipient of the loan or grant;
(c) The amount of the financial assistance, when added to
all other financial assistance provided during the fiscal year
for projects within the district, does not exceed that district's
allocation of money from the state capital improvements fund for
that fiscal year;
(d) The district committee has provided such documentation
and other evidence as the director may require that the district
committee has satisfied the requirements of section 164.06 or
164.14 of the Revised Code;
(e) The portion of a district's annual allocation which
the director approves in the form of loans and local debt support
and credit enhancements for eligible projects is consistent with
divisions (E) and (F) of this section.
(2) Authorize payments to local subdivisions or their
contractors for costs incurred for capital improvement projects
which have been approved pursuant to this chapter. All requests
for payments shall be submitted to the director on forms and in
accordance with procedures specified in rules adopted by the
director pursuant to division (A)(4) of this section.
(3) Retain the services of or employ financial
consultants, engineers, accountants, attorneys, and such other
employees as the director determines are necessary to carry
out the director's duties
under this chapter and fix the compensation for their services;
(4) Adopt rules establishing the procedures for making
applications, reviewing, approving, and rejecting projects for
which assistance is authorized under this chapter, and any other
rules needed to implement the provisions of this chapter. Such
rules shall be adopted under Chapter 119. of the Revised Code.
(5) Provide information and other assistance to local
subdivisions and district public works integrating committees in
developing their requests for financial assistance for capital
improvements under this chapter and encourage cooperation and
coordination of requests and the development of multisubdivision
and multidistrict projects in order to maximize the benefits that
may be derived by districts from each year's allocation;
(6) Require local subdivisions, to the extent practicable,
to use Ohio products, materials, services, and labor in
connection with any capital improvement project financed in whole
or in part under this chapter;
(7) Notify the director of budget and management of all
approved projects, and supply all information necessary to track
approved projects through the state accounting system;
(8) Appoint the administrator of the Ohio small government
capital improvements commission;
(9) Do all other acts, enter into contracts, and execute
all instruments necessary or appropriate to carry out this
chapter;
(10) Develop a standardized methodology for evaluating
capital improvement needs which will be used by local
subdivisions in preparing the plans required by division (C) of
section 164.06 of the Revised Code. The director shall develop
this methodology not later than July 1, 1991.
(11) Establish a program to provide local subdivisions
with technical assistance in preparing project applications. The
program shall be designed to assist local subdivisions that lack
the financial or technical resources to prepare project
applications on their own.
(B) When the director of the Ohio public works commission
decides to conditionally approve or disapprove projects, the
director's decisions and the reasons for which they are made shall be made in
writing. These written decisions shall be conclusive for the purposes of the
validity and enforceability of such determinations.
(C) Fees, charges, rates of interest, times of payment of
interest and principal, and other terms, conditions, and
provisions of and security for financial assistance provided
pursuant to the provisions of this chapter shall be such as the
director determines to be appropriate. If any payments required
by a loan agreement entered into pursuant to this chapter are not
paid, the funds which would otherwise be apportioned to the local
subdivision from the county undivided local government communities fund,
pursuant to sections 5747.51 to 5747.53 of the Revised Code, may,
at the direction of the director of the Ohio public works
commission, be reduced by the amount payable. The county
treasurer shall, at the direction of the director, pay the amount
of such reductions to the state capital improvements revolving
loan fund. The director may renegotiate a loan repayment
schedule with a local subdivision whose payments from the county
undivided local government communities fund could be reduced pursuant to this
division, but such a renegotiation may occur only one time with
respect to any particular loan agreement.
(D) Grants approved for the repair and replacement of
existing infrastructure pursuant to this chapter shall not exceed
ninety per cent of the estimated total cost of the capital
improvement project. Grants approved for new or expanded
infrastructure shall not exceed fifty per cent of the estimated
cost of the new or expansion elements of the capital improvement
project. A local subdivision share of the estimated cost of a
capital improvement may consist of any of the following:
(1) The reasonable value, as determined by the director or
the administrator, of labor, materials, and equipment that will
be contributed by the local subdivision in performing the capital
improvement project;
(2) Moneys received by the local subdivision in any form
from an authority, commission, or agency of the United States for
use in performing the capital improvement project;
(3) Loans made to the local subdivision under this
chapter;
(4) Engineering costs incurred by the local subdivision in
performing engineering activities related to the project.
A local subdivision share of the cost of a capital
improvement shall not include any amounts awarded to it from the
local transportation improvement program fund created in section
164.14 of the Revised Code.
(E) The following portion of a district public works
integrating committee's annual allocation share pursuant to
section 164.08 of the Revised Code may be awarded to subdivisions
only in the form of interest-free, low-interest, market rate of
interest, or blended-rate loans:
|
YEAR IN WHICH |
|
PORTION USED FOR |
|
MONEYS ARE ALLOCATED |
|
LOANS |
|
Year 1 |
|
0% |
|
Year 2 |
|
0% |
|
Year 3 |
|
10% |
|
Year 4 |
|
12% |
|
Year 5 |
|
15% |
|
Year 6 |
|
20% |
|
Year 7, 8, 9, and 10 |
|
22% |
(F) The following portion of a district public works
integrating committee's annual allocation pursuant to section
164.08 of the Revised Code shall be awarded to subdivisions in
the form of local debt supported and credit enhancements:
|
|
|
PORTIONS USED FOR |
|
YEAR IN WHICH |
|
LOCAL DEBT SUPPORT |
|
MONEYS ARE ALLOCATED |
|
AND CREDIT ENHANCEMENTS |
|
Year 1 |
|
0% |
|
Year 2 |
|
0% |
|
Year 3 |
|
3% |
|
Year 4 |
|
5% |
|
Year 5 |
|
5% |
|
Year 6 |
|
7% |
|
Year 7 |
|
7% |
|
Year 8 |
|
8% |
|
Year 9 |
|
8% |
|
Year 10 |
|
8% |
(G) For the period commencing on March 29, 1988 and ending
on June 30, 1993, for the period commencing July 1, 1993,
and ending June 30, 1999, and for each five-year period thereafter,
the total amount of financial assistance
awarded under sections 164.01 to 164.08 of the Revised Code for
capital improvement projects located wholly or partially within a
county shall be equal to at least thirty per cent of the amount
of what the county would have been allocated from the obligations
authorized to be sold under this chapter during each period, if
such amounts had been allocable to each county on a per capita
basis.
(H) The amount of the annual allocations made pursuant to
divisions (B)(1) and (6) of section 164.08 of the Revised Code
which can be used for new or expanded infrastructure is limited
as follows:
|
|
|
PORTION WHICH MAY |
|
YEAR IN WHICH |
|
BE USED FOR NEW OR |
|
MONEYS ARE ALLOCATED |
|
EXPANSION INFRASTRUCTURE |
|
Year 1 |
|
5% |
|
Year 2 |
|
5% |
|
Year 3 |
|
10% |
|
Year 4 |
|
10% |
|
Year 5 |
|
10% |
|
Year 6 |
|
15% |
|
Year 7 |
|
15% |
|
Year 8 |
|
20% |
|
Year 9 |
|
20% |
|
Year 10 and each year |
|
|
|
thereafter |
|
20% |
(I) The following portion of a district public works
integrating committee's annual allocation share pursuant to section 164.08 of
the Revised Code shall be awarded to subdivisions in the
form of interest-free, low-interest, market rate of interest, or blended-rate
loans, or local debt support and credit enhancements:
|
PORTION USED FOR LOANS |
| YEAR IN WHICH |
OR LOCAL DEBT SUPPORT |
| MONEYS ARE ALLOCATED |
AND CREDIT ENHANCEMENTS |
| Year 11 and each year |
|
| thereafter |
20% |
(J) No project shall be approved under this section unless the
project is designed to have a useful life of at least seven years. In
addition, the average useful life of all projects
for which grants or loans are awarded in each district during a program year
shall not be less than twenty years.
Sec. 164.051. (A) The administrator of the Ohio small
government capital improvements commission shall review projects
submitted to him the administrator by subcommittees of district
public works integrating committees in accordance with section 164.06 of the
Revised Code. If he the administrator determines that a project
satisfies the criteria of division (B) of that section, while taking into
consideration the special needs of villages and townships, the
administrator shall recommend to the Ohio small government
capital improvements commission that the project be approved. If
he the administrator determines that a project should not be
approved or that a decision on the project should be delayed, such
determinations
and an explanation should also be sent to the Ohio small
government capital improvements commission for final resolution.
(B) With respect to projects which the Ohio small
government capital improvements commission approves, the
administrator is authorized to:
(1) Enter into agreements to provide financial assistance
in the form of loans, grants, or local debt support and credit
enhancements to villages or townships with populations in the
unincorporated areas of the township of less than five thousand;
(2) Authorize payments to such villages or townships or
their contractors for the costs incurred for capital improvement
projects which have been approved in accordance with this
chapter. All requests for payments shall be submitted to the
administrator on forms and in accordance with procedures
specified in rules adopted pursuant to division (A)(4) of section
164.05 of the Revised Code.
(3) Notify the director of budget and management of all
approved projects, and supply all information necessary to track
the approved projects through the state accounting system.
(4) Do all other acts and enter into contracts and execute
all instruments necessary or appropriate to carry out this
section.
(C) Fees, charges, rates of interest, times of payment of
interest and principal, and other terms, conditions, and
provisions of and security for financial assistance provided
pursuant to the provisions of this section shall be such as the
administrator determines to be appropriate. If any payments
required by a loan agreement entered into pursuant to this
section are not paid, the funds which would otherwise be
apportioned to the local subdivision from the county undivided
local government communities fund, pursuant to sections 5747.51 to 5747.53 of
the Revised Code, may, at the direction of the Ohio small
government capital improvements commission, be reduced by the
amount payable. The county treasurer shall, at the direction of
the commission, pay the amount of such reductions to the state
capital improvements revolving loan fund. Subject to the
approval of the Ohio small government capital improvements
commission, the administrator may renegotiate a loan repayment
schedule with a local subdivision whose payments from the county
undivided local government communities fund could be reduced pursuant to this
division, but such a renegotiation may occur only one time with
respect to any particular loan agreement.
Sec. 164.08. (A) Except as provided in sections 151.01 and 151.08 or
section 164.09 of
the Revised Code, the net proceeds of obligations issued and sold
by the treasurer of state pursuant to section 164.09 of the
Revised Code before September 30, 2000, or pursuant to sections
151.01 and 151.08 of the Revised Code, for the purpose of financing or
assisting in the financing of the cost of public infrastructure capital
improvement projects of local subdivisions, as provided for in Section 2k or,
2m, or 2p of Article VIII, Ohio
Constitution, and this chapter, shall be paid into the state
capital improvements fund, which is hereby created in the state
treasury. Investment earnings on moneys in the fund shall be
credited to the fund.
(B) Each program year the amount of obligations authorized
by the general assembly in accordance with sections 151.01 and 151.08
or section 164.09 of the
Revised Code, excluding the proceeds of refunding or renewal
obligations, shall be allocated by the director of the Ohio
public works commission as follows:
(1) First, twelve million dollars of the amount of
obligations authorized shall be allocated to provide financial
assistance to villages and to townships with populations in the
unincorporated areas of the township of less than five thousand
persons, for capital improvements in accordance with section
164.051 and division (D) of section 164.06 of the Revised Code.
As used in division (B)(1) of this section, "capital
improvements" includes resurfacing and improving roads.
(2) Following the allocation required by division (B)(1)
of this section, the director may allocate two million
five hundred thousand dollars of the
authorized obligations to provide financial assistance to local
subdivisions for capital improvement projects which in the
judgment of the director of the Ohio public works commission are
necessary for the immediate preservation of the health, safety,
and welfare of the citizens of the local subdivision requesting
assistance.
(3) For the second, third, fourth, and fifth years that
obligations are authorized and are available for allocation under
this chapter, one million dollars shall be allocated to the sewer
and water fund created in section 1525.11 of the Revised Code.
Money from this allocation shall be transferred to that fund when
needed to support specific payments from that fund.
(4) For program years twelve and fourteen that obligations are authorized
and available for allocation under this chapter, two million dollars each
program year shall be allocated to the small county capital improvement
program for use in providing financial assistance under division (F)
of section 164.02 of the Revised Code.
(5) After the allocation required by division (B)(3) of
this section is made, the director shall determine the amount of
the remaining obligations authorized to be issued and sold that
each county would receive if such amounts were allocated on a per
capita basis each year. If a county's per capita share for the
year would be less than three hundred thousand dollars, the
director shall allocate to the district in which that county is
located an amount equal to the difference between three hundred
thousand dollars and the county's per capita share.
(6) After making the allocation required by division
(B)(5) of this section, the director shall allocate the
remaining amount to each district on a per capita basis.
(C)(1) There is hereby created in the state treasury the
state capital improvements revolving loan fund, into which shall
be deposited all repayments of loans made to local subdivisions
for capital improvements pursuant to this chapter. Investment earnings on
moneys in the fund shall be credited to the fund.
(2) There may also be deposited in the state capital
improvements revolving loan fund moneys obtained from federal or
private grants, or from other sources, which are to be used for
any of the purposes authorized by this chapter. Such moneys
shall be allocated each year in accordance with division
(B)(6) of this section.
(3) Moneys deposited into the state capital
improvements revolving loan fund shall be used to
make loans for the
purpose of financing or assisting in the financing of the cost of capital
improvement projects of local subdivisions.
(4) Investment earnings credited to the state capital improvements
revolving loan fund that exceed the amounts required to meet estimated federal
arbitrage rebate requirements shall be used to pay costs incurred by the
public
works commission in administering this section. Investment earnings credited
to the state capital improvements revolving loan fund that exceed the amounts
required to pay for the administrative costs and estimated rebate requirements
shall be allocated to each district on a per capita basis.
(5) Each program year, loan repayments received and on deposit in the
state capital improvements revolving loan fund shall be allocated as follows:
(a) Each district public works integrating committee
shall be allocated an amount equal to the sum of all loan repayments made to
the state capital improvements revolving loan fund by local subdivisions that
are part of the district. Moneys not used in a program year may be used in
the next program year in the same manner and for the same purpose as
originally allocated.
(b) Loan repayments made pursuant to projects
approved under division (B)(1) of this section
shall be used to make loans in accordance with section 164.051 and division
(D) of section 164.06 of the Revised Code. Allocations for this purpose made
pursuant to division (C)(5) of this section shall be in addition to
the allocation provided in division (B)(1) of
this section.
(c) Loan repayments made pursuant to projects
approved under division (B)(2) of this section
shall be used to make loans in accordance with division
(B)(2) of this section. Allocations for this
purpose made pursuant to division (C)(5) of
this section shall be in addition to the allocation provided in division
(B)(2) of this section.
(d) Loans made from the state capital improvements
revolving loan fund shall not be limited in their usage by divisions
(E), (F), (G), (H), and (I) of section 164.05 of the Revised Code.
(D) Investment earnings credited to the state capital
improvements fund that exceed the amounts required to meet
estimated federal arbitrage rebate requirements shall be used to
pay costs incurred by the public works commission in
administering sections 164.01 to 164.12 of the Revised
Code.
(E) The director of the Ohio public works commission shall
notify the director of budget and management of the amounts
allocated pursuant to this section and such information shall be
entered into the state accounting system. The director of budget
and management shall establish appropriation line items as needed
to track these allocations.
(F) If the amount of a district's allocation in a program
year exceeds the amount of financial assistance approved for the
district by the commission for that year, the remaining portion
of the district's allocation shall be added to the district's
allocation pursuant to division (B) of this section for the next
succeeding year for use in the same manner and for the same
purposes as it was originally allocated, except that any portion
of a district's allocation which was available for use on new or
expanded infrastructure pursuant to division (H) of section
164.05 of the Revised Code shall be available in succeeding years
only for the repair and replacement of existing infrastructure.
(G) When an allocation based on population is made by the
director pursuant to division (B) of this section, the
director shall use
the most recent decennial census statistics, and shall not make
any reallocations based upon a change in a district's population.
Sec. 164.09. (A) The issuer is authorized to issue and
sell, as provided in this section and in amounts from time to
time authorized by the general assembly, general obligations of
this state for the purpose of financing or assisting in the
financing of the costs of public infrastructure capital improvements for local
subdivisions. The full faith
and credit, revenues, and taxing power of the state are and shall
be pledged to the timely payment of bond service charges on
outstanding obligations, all in accordance with Section 2k or 2m of
Article VIII, Ohio Constitution and sections 164.09 to 164.12 of
the Revised Code, excluding from that pledge fees, excises, or
taxes relating to the registration, operation, or use of vehicles
on the public highways, or to fuels used for propelling those
vehicles, and so long as such obligations are outstanding there
shall be levied and collected excises and taxes, excluding those
excepted above, in amounts sufficient to pay the bond service
charges on such obligations and costs relating to credit
facilities.
(B)(1) The total principal amount of obligations issued pursuant
to Section 2k of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution shall
not exceed one billion two hundred million dollars, and not more
than one hundred twenty million dollars in principal amount of
obligations may be issued in any calendar year, all determined as
provided in sections 164.09 to 164.12 of the Revised
Code.
(2) The total principal amount of obligations issued
for the purposes of this section pursuant to
Section 2m of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, shall not
exceed one billion two hundred million dollars. Not more than one hundred
twenty million dollars in
principal amount of such obligations, plus the principal amount of such
obligations that in any prior fiscal years could have been but were not issued
within the one-hundred-twenty-million-dollar fiscal year limit, may be issued
in any fiscal year. No obligations shall be issued for the purposes of this
section pursuant to Section 2m of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, until at
least one billion one hundred ninety-nine million five hundred thousand
dollars aggregate principal amount of obligations have been issued pursuant to
Section 2k of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution. The amounts specified under
division (B)(2) of this section shall be
determined as provided in sections 164.09 to 164.12 of
the
Revised Code.
(C) Each issue of obligations shall be authorized by order
of the issuer. The bond proceedings shall provide for the
principal amount or maximum principal amount of obligations of an
issue, and shall provide for or authorize the manner or agency
for determining the principal maturity or maturities, not
exceeding the earlier of thirty years from the date of issuance
of the particular obligations or thirty years from the date the
debt represented by the particular obligations was originally
contracted, the interest rate or rates, the date of and the dates
of payment of interest on the obligations, their denominations,
and the establishment within or without the state of a place or
places of payment of bond service charges. Sections 9.96 and
9.98 to 9.983 of the Revised Code are applicable to the
obligations. The purpose of the obligations may be stated in the
bond proceedings as "financing or assisting in the financing of
local subdivisions capital improvement projects."
(D) The proceeds of the obligations, except for any
portion to be deposited in special funds, or in escrow funds for
the purpose of refunding outstanding obligations, all as may be
provided in the bond proceedings, shall be deposited to the state
capital improvements fund established by section 164.08 of the
Revised Code.
(E) The issuer may appoint paying agents, bond registrars,
securities depositories, and transfer agents, and may retain the
services of financial advisers and accounting experts, and retain
or contract for the services of marketing, remarketing, indexing,
and administrative agents, other consultants, and independent
contractors, including printing services, as are necessary in the
issuer's judgment to carry out sections 164.01 to 164.12 of the
Revised Code. Financing costs are payable, as provided in the
bond proceedings, from the proceeds of the obligations, from
special funds, or from other moneys available for the purpose.
(F) The bond proceedings, including any trust agreement,
may contain additional provisions customary or appropriate to the
financing or to the obligations or to particular obligations,
including but not limited to:
(1) The redemption of obligations prior to maturity at the
option of the state or of the holder or upon the occurrence of
certain conditions at such price or prices and under such terms
and conditions as are provided in the bond proceedings;
(2) The form of and other terms of the obligations;
(3) The establishment, deposit, investment, and
application of special funds, and the safeguarding of moneys on
hand or on deposit, without regard to Chapter 131. or 135. of the
Revised Code, but subject to any special provisions of this
section with respect to particular funds or moneys, and provided
that any bank or trust company that acts as a depository of any
moneys in special funds may furnish such indemnifying bonds or
may pledge such securities as required by the issuer;
(4) Any or every provision of the bond proceedings binding
upon the issuer and such state agency or local subdivision,
officer, board, commission, authority, agency, department, or
other person or body as may from time to time have the authority
under law to take such actions as may be necessary to perform all
or any part of the duty required by such provision;
(5) The maintenance of each pledge, any trust agreement,
or other instrument comprising part of the bond proceedings until
the state has fully paid or provided for the payment of the bond
service charges on the obligations or met other stated
conditions;
(6) In the event of default in any payments required to be
made by the bond proceedings, or any other agreement of the
issuer made as a part of a contract under which the obligations
were issued or secured, the enforcement of such payments or
agreements by mandamus, suit in equity, action at law, or any
combination of the foregoing;
(7) The rights and remedies of the holders of obligations
and of the trustee under any trust agreement, and provisions for
protecting and enforcing them, including limitations on rights of
individual holders of obligations;
(8) The replacement of any obligations that become
mutilated or are destroyed, lost, or stolen;
(9) Provision for the funding, refunding, or advance
refunding or other provision for payment of obligations which
will then no longer be outstanding for purposes of this section
or of the bond proceedings;
(10) Any provision that may be made in bond proceedings
or a trust agreement, including provision for amendment of the
bond proceedings;
(11) Such other provisions as the issuer determines,
including limitations, conditions, or qualifications relating to
any of the foregoing;
(12) Any other or additional agreements with the holders
of the obligations relating to the obligations or the security
for the obligations.
(G) The great seal of the state or a facsimile of that
seal may be affixed to or printed on the obligations. The
obligations requiring signature by the issuer shall be signed by
or bear the facsimile signature of the issuer as provided in the
bond proceedings. Any obligations may be signed by the person
who, on the date of execution, is the authorized signer although
on the date of such obligations such person was not the issuer. In case the
person whose signature or a facsimile of whose
signature appears on any obligation ceases to be the issuer
before delivery of the obligation, such signature or facsimile is
nevertheless valid and sufficient for all purposes as if the
person had remained the member until such delivery, and in
case the
seal to be affixed to or printed on obligations has been changed after
the seal has been affixed to or a facsimile of the seal has been
printed on the obligations, that seal or facsimile seal shall
continue to be sufficient as to those obligations and obligations
issued in substitution or exchange therefor.
(H) The obligations are negotiable instruments and
securities under Chapter 1308. of the Revised Code, subject to
the provisions of the bond proceedings as to registration.
Obligations may be issued in coupon or in fully registered form,
or both, as the issuer determines. Provision may be made for the
registration of any obligations with coupons attached as to
principal alone or as to both principal and interest, their
exchange for obligations so registered, and for the conversion or
reconversion into obligations with coupons attached of any
obligations registered as to both principal and interest, and for
reasonable charges for such registration, exchange, conversion,
and reconversion. Pending preparation of definitive obligations,
the issuer may issue interim receipts or certificates which shall
be exchanged for such definitive obligations.
(I) Obligations may be sold at public sale or at private
sale, and at such price at, above, or below par, as determined by
the issuer in the bond proceedings.
(J) In the discretion of the issuer, obligations may be
secured additionally by a trust agreement between the state and a
corporate trustee which may be any trust company or bank having
its principal a place of business within the state. Any trust
agreement may contain the order authorizing the issuance of the
obligations, any provisions that may be contained in the bond
proceedings, and other provisions that are customary or
appropriate in an agreement of the type.
(K) Except to the extent that their rights are restricted
by the bond proceedings, any holder of obligations, or a trustee
under the bond proceedings, may by any suitable form of legal
proceedings protect and enforce any rights under the laws of this
state or granted by the bond proceedings. Such rights include
the right to compel the performance of all duties of the issuer
and the state. Each duty of the issuer and the issuer's
employees, and of each state agency and local public entity and
its officers, members, or employees, undertaken pursuant to the
bond proceedings, is hereby established as a duty of the issuer,
and of each such agency, local subdivision, officer, member, or
employee having authority to perform such duty, specifically
enjoined by the law and resulting from an office, trust, or
station within the meaning of section 2731.01 of the Revised
Code. The persons who are at the time the issuer, or the
issuer's employees, are not liable in their personal capacities
on any obligations or any agreements of or with the issuer
relating to obligations or under the bond proceedings.
(L) Obligations are lawful investments for banks,
societies for savings, savings and loan associations, deposit
guarantee associations, trust companies, trustees, fiduciaries,
insurance companies, including domestic for life and domestic not
for life, trustees or other officers having charge of sinking and
bond retirement or other special funds of political subdivisions
and taxing districts of this state, the commissioners of the
sinking fund, the administrator of workers' compensation, the state
teachers retirement system, the public employees retirement
system, the school employees retirement system, and the Ohio police
and fire pension fund, notwithstanding any
other provisions of the Revised Code or rules adopted pursuant
thereto by any state agency with respect to investments by them,
and are also acceptable as security for the deposit of public
moneys.
(M) Unless otherwise provided in any applicable bond
proceedings, moneys to the credit of or in the special funds
established by or pursuant to this section may be invested by or
on behalf of the issuer only in notes, bonds, or other direct
obligations of the United States or of any agency or
instrumentality of the United States,
in obligations of this state or any
political subdivision of this state, in certificates of deposit
of any national bank located in this state and any bank, as
defined in section 1101.01 of the Revised Code, subject to
inspection by the superintendent of financial institutions, in the Ohio
subdivision's fund established pursuant to section 135.45 of the
Revised Code, in no-front-end-load money market mutual funds
consisting exclusively of direct obligations of the United States
or of an agency or instrumentality of the United
States, and in repurchase
agreements, including those issued by any fiduciary, secured by
direct obligations of the United States or an agency or
instrumentality of the United States,
and in collective investment funds established in
accordance with section 1111.14 of the Revised Code and
consisting exclusively of direct obligations of the United States
or of an agency or instrumentality of the United
States, notwithstanding division (A)(1)(c) of that section. The income from
investments
shall be credited to such special funds or otherwise as the
issuer determines in the bond proceedings, and the investments
may be sold or exchanged at such times as the issuer determines
or authorizes.
(N) Unless otherwise provided in any applicable bond
proceedings, moneys to the credit of or in a special fund shall
be disbursed on the order of the issuer, provided that no such
order is required for the payment from the bond service fund or
other special fund when due of bond service charges or required
payments under credit facilities.
(O) The issuer may covenant in the bond proceedings, and
any such covenants shall be controlling notwithstanding any other
provision of law, that the state and the applicable officers and
agencies of the state, including the general assembly, so
long as any obligations are outstanding in accordance with their
terms, shall maintain statutory authority for and cause to be charged
and collected taxes, excises, and other receipts of the state so
that the receipts to the bond service fund shall be sufficient in
amounts to meet bond service charges and for the establishment
and maintenance of any reserves and other requirements, including
payment of financing costs, provided for in the bond proceedings.
(P) The obligations, and the transfer of, and the interest
and other income from, including any profit made on the sale,
transfer, or other disposition of, the obligations shall at all
times be free from taxation, direct or indirect, within the
state.
(Q) Unless a judicial action or proceeding challenging the
validity of obligations is commenced by personal service on the
treasurer of state prior to the initial delivery of an issue of
the obligations, the obligations of that issue and the bond
proceedings pertaining to that issue are incontestable and those
obligations shall be conclusively considered to be and to have
been issued, secured, payable, sold, executed, and delivered, and
the bond proceedings relating to them taken, in conformity with
law if all of the following apply to the obligations:
(1) They state that they are issued under the provisions
of this section and comply on their face with those provisions;
(2) They are issued within the limitations prescribed by
this section;
(3) Their purchase price has been paid in full;
(4) They state that all the bond proceedings were held in
compliance with law, which statement creates a conclusive
presumption that the bond proceedings were held in compliance
with all laws, including section 121.22 of the Revised Code,
where applicable, and rules.
(R) This section applies only with respect to obligations issued
and delivered before September 30, 2000.
Sec. 166.08. (A) As used in this chapter:
(1) "Bond proceedings" means the resolution, order, trust
agreement, indenture, lease, and other agreements, amendments and
supplements to the foregoing, or any one or more or combination
thereof, authorizing or providing for the terms and conditions
applicable to, or providing for the security or liquidity of,
obligations issued pursuant to this section, and the provisions
contained in such obligations.
(2) "Bond service charges" means principal, including
mandatory sinking fund requirements for retirement of
obligations,
and interest, and redemption premium, if any,
required to be paid
by the state on obligations.
(3) "Bond service fund" means the applicable fund and
accounts therein created for and pledged to the payment of bond
service charges, which may be, or may be part of, the economic
development bond service fund created by division (S) of this
section including all moneys and investments, and earnings from
investments, credited and to be credited thereto.
(4) "Issuing authority" means the treasurer of state, or
the
officer who by law performs the functions of such officer.
(5) "Obligations" means bonds, notes, or other evidence of
obligation including interest coupons pertaining thereto, issued
pursuant to this section.
(6) "Pledged receipts" means all receipts of the state
representing the gross profit on the sale of spirituous liquor,
as
referred to in division (B)(4) of section 4301.10 of the
Revised
Code, after paying all costs and expenses of the
division of
liquor control and providing an adequate working
capital reserve
for the division of liquor control as provided
in that division,
but excluding the sum required by the second
paragraph of section
4301.12 of the Revised Code, as in effect on
May 2, 1980, to be
paid into the state treasury; moneys accruing
to the state from
the lease, sale, or other disposition, or use,
of project
facilities, and from the repayment, including
interest, of loans
made from proceeds received from the sale of
obligations; accrued
interest received from the sale of
obligations; income from the
investment of the special funds; and
any gifts, grants, donations,
and pledges, and receipts
therefrom, available for the payment of
bond service charges.
(7) "Special funds" or "funds" means, except where the
context does not permit, the bond service fund, and any other
funds, including reserve funds, created under the bond
proceedings, and the economic development bond service fund
created by division (S) of this section to the extent provided in
the bond proceedings, including all moneys and investments, and
earnings from investment, credited and to be credited thereto.
(B) Subject to the limitations provided in section 166.11
of
the Revised Code, the issuing authority, upon the
certification by
the director of development to the issuing
authority of the amount
of moneys or additional moneys needed in
the facilities
establishment fund, the loan guarantee fund, the innovation
Ohio loan fund, the innovation Ohio loan guarantee fund, or the research and development loan fund for
the
purpose of paying, or making loans for, allowable costs from
the
facilities establishment fund, allowable innovation costs
from
the innovation Ohio loan fund, or allowable costs from the research and development loan fund, or needed for capitalized
interest,
for funding reserves, and for paying costs and expenses
incurred
in connection with the issuance, carrying, securing,
paying,
redeeming, or retirement of the obligations or any
obligations
refunded thereby, including payment of costs and
expenses relating
to letters of credit, lines of credit,
insurance, put agreements,
standby purchase agreements, indexing,
marketing, remarketing and
administrative arrangements, interest
swap or hedging agreements,
and any other credit enhancement,
liquidity, remarketing, renewal,
or refunding arrangements, all
of
which are authorized by this
section, or providing moneys for
the
loan guarantee fund
or the
innovation Ohio loan guarantee fund, as
provided in this chapter
or needed
for the purposes of funds
established in accordance with
or
pursuant to sections 122.35,
122.42, 122.54, 122.55, 122.56,
122.561, 122.57, and 122.80 of the
Revised Code which are within
the
authorization of Section 13 of
Article VIII, Ohio
Constitution,
shall issue obligations of the
state under this
section in the
required amount; provided that
such obligations may
be issued
to satisfy
the covenants in
contracts of
guarantee made under section 166.06
or 166.15 of the
Revised Code,
notwithstanding limitations
otherwise applicable to
the issuance
of obligations under this
section. The proceeds of
such
obligations, except for the
portion to be deposited in
special
funds, including reserve
funds, as may be provided in the
bond
proceedings, shall as
provided in the bond proceedings be
deposited by the director of
development to the facilities
establishment fund, the loan
guarantee fund, the innovation Ohio loan
guarantee fund, the innovation Ohio loan fund, or the research and development loan fund.
Bond
proceedings for project financing obligations may provide that the
proceeds derived from the issuance of such obligations shall be
deposited into
such fund or funds provided for in the bond
proceedings and, to the extent
provided for in the bond
proceedings, such proceeds shall be deemed to have
been deposited
into the facilities establishment fund and transferred to such
fund or funds. The issuing authority may appoint trustees, paying
agents, and
transfer agents and may retain the services of
financial
advisors, accounting experts, and attorneys, and retain
or
contract for the services of marketing, remarketing, indexing,
and administrative agents, other consultants, and independent
contractors, including printing services, as are necessary in the
issuing authority's judgment to carry out this section. The
costs
of such services are allowable costs payable from the
facilities
establishment fund or the research and development loan fund
or allowable innovation costs payable from the
innovation Ohio loan fund.
(C) The holders or owners of such obligations shall have
no
right to have moneys raised by taxation obligated or pledged,
and
moneys raised by taxation shall not be obligated or pledged,
for
the payment of bond service charges. Such holders or owners
shall
have no rights to payment of bond service charges from any
moneys
accruing to the state from the lease, sale, or other
disposition,
or use, of project facilities, or from payment of
the principal of
or interest on loans made, or fees charged for
guarantees made, or
from any money or property received by the
director, treasurer of
state, or the state under Chapter 122. of
the Revised Code, or
from any other use of the proceeds of the
sale of the obligations,
and no such moneys may be used for the
payment of bond service
charges, except for accrued interest,
capitalized interest, and
reserves funded from proceeds received
upon the sale of the
obligations and except as otherwise
expressly provided in the
applicable bond proceedings pursuant to
written directions by the
director. The right of such holders
and owners to payment of bond
service charges is limited to all
or that portion of the pledged
receipts and those special funds
pledged thereto pursuant to the
bond proceedings in accordance
with this section, and each such
obligation shall bear on its
face a statement to that effect.
(D) Obligations shall be authorized by resolution or order
of the issuing authority and the bond proceedings shall provide
for the purpose thereof and the principal amount or amounts, and
shall provide for or authorize the manner or agency for
determining the principal maturity or maturities, not exceeding
twenty-five years from the date of issuance, the interest rate or
rates or the maximum interest rate, the date of the obligations
and the dates of payment of interest thereon, their denomination,
and the establishment within or without the state of a place or
places of payment of bond service charges. Sections 9.98 to
9.983
of the Revised Code are applicable to obligations issued
under
this section, subject to any applicable limitation under
section
166.11 of the Revised Code. The purpose of such
obligations may
be stated in the bond proceedings in terms
describing the general
purpose or purposes to be served. The
bond proceedings also shall
provide, subject to the provisions of
any other applicable bond
proceedings, for the pledge of all, or
such part as the issuing
authority may determine, of the pledged
receipts and the
applicable special fund or funds to the payment
of bond service
charges, which pledges may be made either prior
or subordinate to
other expenses, claims, or payments, and may be
made to secure the
obligations on a parity with obligations
theretofore or thereafter
issued, if and to the extent provided
in the bond proceedings.
The
pledged receipts and special funds
so pledged and thereafter
received by the state are immediately
subject to the lien of such
pledge without any physical delivery
thereof or further act, and
the lien of any such pledges is valid
and binding against all
parties having claims of any kind against
the state or any
governmental agency of the state, irrespective
of whether such
parties have notice thereof, and shall create a
perfected security
interest for all purposes of Chapter 1309. of
the Revised Code,
without the necessity for separation or
delivery of funds or for
the filing or recording of the bond
proceedings by which such
pledge is created or any certificate,
statement or other document
with respect thereto; and the pledge
of such pledged receipts and
special funds is effective and the
money therefrom and thereof may
be applied to the purposes for
which pledged without necessity for
any act of appropriation.
Every pledge, and every covenant and
agreement made with respect
thereto, made in the bond proceedings
may therein be extended to
the benefit of the owners and holders
of obligations authorized
by this section, and to any trustee
therefor, for the further
security of the payment of the bond
service charges.
(E) The bond proceedings may contain additional provisions
as to:
(1) The redemption of obligations prior to maturity at the
option of the issuing authority at such price or prices and under
such terms and conditions as are provided in the bond
proceedings;
(2) Other terms of the obligations;
(3) Limitations on the issuance of additional obligations;
(4) The terms of any trust agreement or indenture securing
the obligations or under which the same may be issued;
(5) The deposit, investment and application of special
funds, and the safeguarding of moneys on hand or on deposit,
without regard to Chapter 131. or 135. of the Revised Code, but
subject to any special provisions of this chapter, with respect
to
particular funds or moneys, provided that any bank or trust
company which acts as depository of any moneys in the special
funds may furnish such indemnifying bonds or may pledge such
securities as required by the issuing authority;
(6) Any or every provision of the bond proceedings being
binding upon such officer, board, commission, authority, agency,
department, or other person or body as may from time to time have
the authority under law to take such actions as may be necessary
to perform all or any part of the duty required by such
provision;
(7) Any provision that may be made in a trust agreement or
indenture;
(8) Any other or additional agreements with the holders of
the obligations, or the trustee therefor, relating to the
obligations or the security therefor, including the assignment of
mortgages or other security obtained or to be obtained for loans
under section 122.43, 166.07, or 166.16 of the Revised Code.
(F) The obligations may have the great seal of the state
or
a facsimile thereof affixed thereto or printed thereon. The
obligations and any coupons pertaining to obligations shall be
signed or bear the facsimile signature of the issuing authority.
Any obligations or coupons may be executed by the person who, on
the date of execution, is the proper issuing authority although
on
the date of such bonds or coupons such person was not the
issuing
authority. If the issuing authority whose signature
or a
facsimile of whose signature appears on any such obligation
or
coupon ceases to be the issuing authority before delivery
thereof,
such signature or facsimile is nevertheless valid and
sufficient
for all purposes as if the former issuing
authority had remained
the issuing
authority until such delivery; and if the seal to be
affixed
to obligations has been changed after a facsimile of the
seal has
been imprinted on such obligations, such facsimile seal
shall
continue to be sufficient as to such obligations and
obligations
issued in substitution or exchange therefor.
(G) All obligations are negotiable instruments and
securities under Chapter 1308. of the Revised Code, subject to
the
provisions of the bond proceedings as to registration. The
obligations may be issued in coupon or in registered form, or
both, as the issuing authority determines. Provision may be made
for the registration of any obligations with coupons attached
thereto as to principal alone or as to both principal and
interest, their exchange for obligations so registered, and for
the conversion or reconversion into obligations with coupons
attached thereto of any obligations registered as to both
principal and interest, and for reasonable charges for such
registration, exchange, conversion, and reconversion.
(H) Obligations may be sold at public sale or at private
sale, as determined in the bond proceedings.
Obligations issued to provide moneys for the loan guarantee
fund
or the innovation Ohio loan guarantee fund may, as determined
by the issuing authority, be sold at
private sale, and without
publication of a notice of sale.
(I) Pending preparation of definitive obligations, the
issuing authority may issue interim receipts or certificates
which
shall be exchanged for such definitive obligations.
(J) In the discretion of the issuing authority,
obligations
may be secured additionally by a trust agreement or
indenture
between the issuing authority and a corporate trustee
which may be
any trust company or bank having its principal a place
of business
within the state. Any such agreement or indenture
may contain the
resolution or order authorizing the issuance of
the obligations,
any provisions that may be contained in any bond
proceedings, and
other provisions which are customary or
appropriate in an
agreement or indenture of such type, including,
but not limited
to:
(1) Maintenance of each pledge, trust agreement,
indenture,
or other instrument comprising part of the bond
proceedings until
the state has fully paid the bond service
charges on the
obligations secured thereby, or provision therefor
has been made;
(2) In the event of default in any payments required to be
made by the bond proceedings, or any other agreement of the
issuing authority made as a part of the contract under which the
obligations were issued, enforcement of such payments or
agreement
by mandamus, the appointment of a receiver, suit in
equity, action
at law, or any combination of the foregoing;
(3) The rights and remedies of the holders of obligations
and of the trustee, and provisions for protecting and enforcing
them, including limitations on rights of individual holders of
obligations;
(4) The replacement of any obligations that become
mutilated
or are destroyed, lost, or stolen;
(5) Such other provisions as the trustee and the issuing
authority agree upon, including limitations, conditions, or
qualifications relating to any of the foregoing.
(K) Any holders of obligations or trustees under the bond
proceedings, except to the extent that their rights are restricted
by the bond proceedings, may by any suitable form of legal
proceedings, protect and enforce any rights under the laws of
this
state or granted by such bond proceedings. Such rights
include
the right to compel the performance of all duties of the
issuing
authority, the director of development, or the division of liquor
control required by this chapter or the bond
proceedings; to
enjoin unlawful activities; and in the event of
default with
respect to the payment of any bond service charges
on any
obligations or in the performance of any covenant or
agreement on
the part of the issuing authority, the director of
development, or
the division of liquor control in the bond
proceedings, to apply
to a court having jurisdiction of the cause
to appoint a receiver
to receive and administer the pledged
receipts and special funds,
other than those in the custody of
the treasurer of state, which
are pledged to the payment of the
bond service charges on such
obligations or which are the subject
of the covenant or agreement,
with full power to pay, and to
provide for payment of bond service
charges on, such obligations,
and with such powers, subject to the
direction of the court, as
are accorded receivers in general
equity cases, excluding any
power to pledge additional revenues or
receipts or other income
or moneys of the issuing authority or the
state or governmental
agencies of the state to the payment of such
principal and
interest and excluding the power to take possession
of, mortgage,
or cause the sale or otherwise dispose of any
project facilities.
Each duty of the issuing authority and the issuing
authority's officers and employees, and of each governmental
agency and its officers, members, or employees, undertaken
pursuant to the bond proceedings or any agreement or lease,
lease-purchase agreement, or loan made under authority of this
chapter, and in every agreement by or with the issuing authority,
is hereby established as a duty of the issuing authority, and of
each such officer, member, or employee having authority to
perform
such duty, specifically enjoined by the law resulting
from an
office, trust, or station within the meaning of section
2731.01 of
the Revised Code.
The person who is at the time the issuing authority, or the
issuing authority's officers or employees, are not liable in
their
personal capacities on any obligations issued by the
issuing
authority or any agreements of or with the issuing
authority.
(L) The issuing authority may authorize and issue
obligations for the refunding, including funding and retirement,
and advance refunding with or without payment or redemption prior
to maturity, of any obligations previously issued by the issuing
authority. Such obligations may be issued in amounts sufficient
for payment of the principal amount of the prior obligations, any
redemption premiums thereon, principal maturities of any such
obligations maturing prior to the redemption of the remaining
obligations on a parity therewith, interest accrued or to accrue
to the maturity dates or dates of redemption of such obligations,
and any allowable costs including expenses incurred or to be
incurred in connection with such issuance and such refunding,
funding, and retirement. Subject to the bond proceedings
therefor, the portion of proceeds of the sale of obligations
issued under this division to be applied to bond service charges
on the prior obligations shall be credited to an appropriate
account held by the trustee for such prior or new obligations or
to the appropriate account in the bond service fund for such
obligations. Obligations authorized under this division shall be
deemed to be issued for those purposes for which such prior
obligations were issued and are subject to the provisions of this
section pertaining to other obligations, except as otherwise
provided in this section; provided that, unless otherwise
authorized by the general assembly, any limitations imposed by
the
general assembly pursuant to this section with respect to
bond
service charges applicable to the prior obligations shall be
applicable to the obligations issued under this division to
refund, fund, advance refund or retire such prior obligations.
(M) The authority to issue obligations under this section
includes authority to issue obligations in the form of bond
anticipation notes and to renew the same from time to time by the
issuance of new notes. The holders of such notes or interest
coupons pertaining thereto shall have a right to be paid solely
from the pledged receipts and special funds that may be pledged
to
the payment of the bonds anticipated, or from the proceeds of
such
bonds or renewal notes, or both, as the issuing authority
provides
in the resolution or order authorizing such notes. Such
notes may
be additionally secured by covenants of the issuing
authority to
the effect that the issuing authority and the state
will do such
or all things necessary for the issuance of such
bonds or renewal
notes in appropriate amount, and apply the
proceeds thereof to the
extent necessary, to make full payment of
the principal of and
interest on such notes at the time or times
contemplated, as
provided in such resolution or order. For such
purpose, the
issuing authority may issue bonds or renewal notes
in such
principal amount and upon such terms as may be necessary
to
provide funds to pay when required the principal of and
interest
on such notes, notwithstanding any limitations
prescribed by or
for purposes of this section. Subject to this
division, all
provisions for and references to obligations in
this section are
applicable to notes authorized under this
division.
The issuing authority in the bond proceedings authorizing
the
issuance of bond anticipation notes shall set forth for such
bonds
an estimated interest rate and a schedule of principal
payments
for such bonds and the annual maturity dates thereof,
and for
purposes of any limitation on bond service charges
prescribed
under division (A) of section 166.11 of the Revised
Code, the
amount of bond service charges on such bond
anticipation notes is
deemed to be the bond service charges for
the bonds anticipated
thereby as set forth in the bond
proceedings applicable to such
notes, but this provision does not
modify any authority in this
section to pledge receipts and
special funds to, and covenant to
issue bonds to fund, the
payment of principal of and interest and
any premium on such
notes.
(N) Obligations issued under this section are lawful
investments for banks, societies for savings, savings and loan
associations, deposit guarantee associations, trust companies,
trustees, fiduciaries, insurance companies, including domestic
for
life and domestic not for life, trustees or other officers
having
charge of sinking and bond retirement or other special
funds of
political subdivisions and taxing districts of this
state, the
commissioners of the sinking fund of the state, the
administrator
of workers' compensation, the state teachers retirement
system,
the public employees retirement system, the school
employees
retirement system, and the Ohio police and
fire pension fund,
notwithstanding any other
provisions of the Revised Code or rules
adopted pursuant thereto by any
governmental agency of the state
with respect to investments by
them, and are also acceptable as
security for the deposit of
public moneys.
(O) Unless otherwise provided in any applicable bond
proceedings, moneys to the credit of or in the special funds
established by or pursuant to this section may be invested by or
on behalf of the issuing authority only in notes, bonds, or other
obligations of the United States, or of any agency or
instrumentality of the United States, obligations guaranteed as to
principal
and interest by the United States, obligations of this
state or
any political subdivision of this state, and certificates
of deposit of
any national bank located in this state and any
bank, as defined
in section 1101.01 of the Revised Code, subject
to inspection by
the superintendent of banks. If the law or the
instrument
creating a trust pursuant to division (J) of this
section
expressly permits investment in direct obligations of the
United
States or an agency of the United States, unless expressly
prohibited by the
instrument, such moneys also may be invested in
no-front-end-load
money market mutual funds consisting exclusively
of obligations
of the United States or an agency of the United
States and in repurchase
agreements, including those issued by the
fiduciary itself,
secured by obligations of the United States or
an agency of the United States;
and in common trust funds
established in accordance with section
1111.20 of the Revised Code
and consisting exclusively of any
such securities, notwithstanding
division (A)(4) of that section.
The income from such investments
shall be credited to such funds
as the issuing authority
determines, and such investments may be
sold at such times as the
issuing authority determines or
authorizes.
(P) Provision may be made in the applicable bond
proceedings
for the establishment of separate accounts in the
bond service
fund and for the application of such accounts only
to the
specified bond service charges on obligations pertinent to
such
accounts and bond service fund and for other accounts
therein
within the general purposes of such fund. Unless
otherwise
provided in any applicable bond proceedings, moneys to
the credit
of or in the several special funds established
pursuant to this
section shall be disbursed on the order of the
treasurer of state,
provided that no such order is required for
the payment from the
bond service fund when due of bond service
charges on obligations.
(Q) The issuing authority may pledge all, or such portion
as
the issuing authority determines, of the pledged receipts to
the
payment of bond service charges on obligations issued under
this
section, and for the establishment and maintenance of any
reserves, as provided in the bond proceedings, and make other
provisions therein with respect to pledged receipts as authorized
by this chapter, which provisions are controlling notwithstanding
any other provisions of law pertaining thereto.
(R) The issuing authority may covenant in the bond
proceedings, and any such covenants are controlling
notwithstanding any other provision of law, that the state and
applicable officers and governmental agencies of the state,
including the general assembly, so long as any obligations
are
outstanding, shall:
(1) Maintain statutory authority for and cause to be
charged
and collected wholesale and retail prices for spirituous
liquor
sold by the state or its agents so that the pledged
receipts are
sufficient in amount to meet bond service charges,
and the
establishment and maintenance of any reserves and other
requirements provided for in the bond proceedings, and, as
necessary, to meet covenants contained in contracts of guarantee
made under section 166.06
of the Revised Code;
(2) Take or permit no action, by statute or otherwise,
that
would impair the exemption from federal income taxation of
the
interest on the obligations.
(S) There is hereby created the economic development bond
service fund, which shall be in the custody of the treasurer of
state but shall be separate and apart from and not a part of the
state treasury. All moneys received by or on account of the
issuing authority or state agencies and required by the
applicable
bond proceedings, consistent with this section, to be
deposited,
transferred, or credited to a bond service fund or the
economic
development bond service fund, and all other moneys
transferred or
allocated to or received for the purposes of the
fund, shall be
deposited and credited to such fund and to any
separate accounts
therein, subject to applicable provisions of
the bond proceedings,
but without necessity for any act of
appropriation. During the
period beginning with the date of the
first issuance of
obligations and continuing during such time as
any such
obligations are outstanding, and so long as moneys in
the
pertinent bond service funds are insufficient to pay all bond
services charges on such obligations becoming due in each year, a
sufficient amount of the gross profit on the sale of spirituous
liquor included in pledged receipts are committed and shall be
paid to the bond service fund or economic development bond
service
fund in each year for the purpose of paying the bond
service
charges becoming due in that year without necessity for
further
act of appropriation for such purpose and notwithstanding
anything
to the contrary in Chapter 4301. of the Revised Code.
The
economic development bond service fund is a trust fund and is
hereby pledged to the payment of bond service charges to the
extent provided in the applicable bond proceedings, and payment
thereof from such fund shall be made or provided for by the
treasurer of state in accordance with such bond proceedings
without necessity for any act of appropriation.
(T) The obligations, the transfer thereof, and the income
therefrom, including any profit made on the sale thereof, shall
at
all times be free from taxation within the state.
Sec. 173.04. (A) As used in this section, "respite care"
means short-term, temporary care or supervision provided to a
person who has Alzheimer's disease in the absence of the person
who normally provides that care or supervision.
(B) The Through the internet web site maintained by the department of aging, the director of aging shall develop and disseminate new
training materials or disseminate existing Alzheimer's disease training materials for
licensed physicians, registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, administrators of health care programs, social workers,
and other health care and social service personnel who
participate or assist in the care or treatment of persons who
have Alzheimer's disease. The training materials disseminated through the web site may be developed by the director or obtained from other sources.
(C) To the extent funds are available, the director shall
administer respite care programs and other supportive services
for persons who have Alzheimer's disease and their families or
care givers. Respite care programs shall be approved by the
director and shall be provided for the following purposes:
(1) Giving persons who normally provide care or
supervision for a person who has Alzheimer's disease relief from
the stresses and responsibilities that result from providing such
care;
(2) Preventing or reducing inappropriate institutional
care and enabling persons who have Alzheimer's disease to remain
at home as long as possible.
(D) The director may provide services under this section
to persons with Alzheimer's disease and their families regardless
of the age of the persons with Alzheimer's disease.
(E) The director shall adopt rules in accordance with
Chapter 119. of the Revised Code governing respite care programs
and other supportive services, the distribution of funds, and the
purpose for which funds may be utilized under this section.
(F) The director may create an Alzheimer's disease task
force to advise the director on the rights of persons with
Alzheimer's disease and on the development and evaluation of
education and training programs, home care programs, respite care
programs, and long-term care initiatives as they relate to
Alzheimer's disease. If a task force is created, the members
shall include representatives of the Alzheimer's disease
association and other organizations the director considers
appropriate.
Sec. 173.35. (A) As used in this section, "PASSPORT
administrative agency" means an entity under contract with the
department of aging to provide administrative services regarding
the
PASSPORT
program created under section 173.40 of the Revised
Code.
(B) The department of aging shall administer
the residential
state supplement program under which the state
supplements the
supplemental security income payments received by
aged, blind, or
disabled adults under Title XVI of the "Social
Security Act," 49
Stat. 620 (1935), 42 U.S.C.A., as amended.
Residential state
supplement payments shall be used for the
provision of
accommodations, supervision, and personal care
services to
supplemental security income recipients who the
department
determines are at risk of needing institutional care.
(C) For an individual to be eligible for
residential state
supplement
payments,
all of the following must be the case:
(1) Except as provided by division (G) of this section, the
individual must reside in one of the following:
(a) An adult foster home certified under section 173.36 of
the Revised Code;
(b) A home or facility, other than a nursing home or
nursing
home unit of a home for the aging, licensed by the
department of
health under Chapter 3721. or 3722. of
the Revised Code and certified in accordance with standards established by the director of aging under division (D)(2) of this section;
(c) A community alternative home licensed under section
3724.03 of the Revised Code and certified in accordance with standards established by the director of aging under division (D)(2) of this section;
(d) A residential facility as defined in division
(A)(1)(d)(ii) of section 5119.22 of the Revised Code licensed by
the department of mental health and certified in accordance with standards established by the director of aging under division (D)(2) of this section;
(e) An apartment or room used to provide community mental
health housing services certified by the department of mental
health under
section
5119.611 of the
Revised Code
and approved
by a board of alcohol, drug addiction,
and mental
health services
under division (A)(14) of section
340.03 of the
Revised Code and certified in accordance with standards established by the director of aging under division (D)(2) of this section.
(2) Effective July 1, 2000, a
PASSPORT
administrative agency
must have determined that the environment in which the
individual
will be living while receiving the payments is appropriate for the
individual's needs. If the individual is eligible for
supplemental security
income payments or social security
disability insurance benefits because of a
mental disability, the
PASSPORT
administrative agency shall refer the individual to a
community mental health
agency for the community mental health
agency to issue in accordance with
section 340.091 of the Revised
Code a recommendation on whether the PASSPORT
administrative
agency should determine that the environment in which the
individual will be living while receiving the payments is
appropriate for the
individual's needs. Division (C)(2) of this
section does not apply
to an individual receiving residential
state supplement payments on
June 30, 2000, until the individual's
first eligibility
redetermination after that date.
(3) The individual satisfies all eligibility requirements
established by
rules adopted under division (D) of this section.
(D)(1) The directors of aging and job
and family services shall
adopt rules in
accordance with section 111.15 of the Revised Code
as necessary to
implement the residential state supplement
program.
To the extent
permitted by Title XVI of the "Social Security
Act," and any
other provision of federal law, the director of
job
and family services shall
adopt rules establishing standards for
adjusting the eligibility requirements
concerning
the level of
impairment a person must have so that the amount appropriated for
the program by the general assembly is adequate for the number of
eligible
individuals. The rules shall not limit the eligibility
of disabled persons
solely on a basis classifying disabilities as
physical or mental. The
director of job and family
services also
shall adopt
rules that establish eligibility standards for
aged,
blind, or disabled individuals who reside in
one of the homes or
facilities specified in division (C)(1)
of
this
section but who,
because of their income, do not receive
supplemental security
income payments. The rules may provide that these
individuals may
include individuals who receive other types of benefits,
including, social security disability insurance benefits provided
under
Title II of the "Social Security
Act," 49 Stat. 620 (1935),
42 U.S.C.A. 401, as
amended. Notwithstanding division
(B) of this
section, such payments may be made if funds are
available for
them.
The director of aging shall adopt rules establishing
the
method to be used
to determine the amount an eligible individual
will receive under the program.
The amount the general assembly
appropriates for the program shall be a
factor
included in the
method that department establishes.
(2) The director of aging shall adopt rules in accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code establishing standards for certification of living facilities described in division (C)(1) of this section.
The directors of aging and mental health shall enter into an agreement to certify facilities that apply for certification and meet the standards established by the director of aging under this division.
(E) The county department of job and family services of
the
county
in which an
applicant
for the residential state supplement
program resides shall determine whether
the applicant meets income
and resource requirements for the program.
(F) The department of aging shall maintain a waiting list
of
any
individuals eligible for payments under this section but not
receiving them because moneys appropriated to the department for
the purposes of this section are insufficient to make payments to
all eligible individuals. An individual may apply to be placed
on
the waiting list even though the individual does not reside in one
of the
homes or facilities specified in division (C)(1) of this
section at
the time of application. The Individuals on the waiting list
who reside in a
community setting not required to be licensed or
certified shall have their
eligibility for the payments assessed
before other individuals on the waiting
list.
The director of aging, by
rules adopted
in
accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code,
shall specify
procedures and requirements for placing an
individual on the
waiting list. Individuals on the waiting list
who reside in a
community setting not required to be licensed or
certified shall have their
eligibility for the payments assessed
before other individuals on the waiting
list.
The director may adopt rules giving priority to individuals placed on the waiting list on or after July 1, 2006, who receive supplemental security income benefits under Title XVI of the "Social Security Act," 86 Stat. 1475 (1972), 42 U.S.C. 1381, as amended. The rules shall not affect the place on the waiting list of any person who was on the list on July 1, 2006.
(G) An individual in a licensed or certified living
arrangement receiving state supplementation on November 15, 1990,
under former section 5101.531 of the Revised Code shall not
become
ineligible for payments under this section solely by
reason of the
individual's living arrangement as long as
the individual remains
in the living arrangement in which
the individual resided on
November 15, 1990.
(H) The department of aging shall notify each person
denied
approval for payments under this section of the
person's right to
a hearing. On request, the hearing shall be provided by
the
department of job and family services in accordance
with section
5101.35
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 173.71. As used in sections 173.71 to 173.91 of the Revised Code:
(A) "Children's health insurance program" means the children's health insurance program part I and, part II, and part III established under sections 5101.50 to 5101.5110 5101.029 of the Revised Code.
(B) "Disability medical assistance program" means the program established under section 5115.10 of the Revised Code.
(C) "Medicaid program" or "medicaid" means the medical assistance program established under Chapter 5111. of the Revised Code.
(D) "National drug code number" means the number registered for a drug pursuant to the listing system established by the United States food and drug administration under the "Drug Listing Act of 1972," 86 Stat. 559, 21 U.S.C. 360, as amended.
(E) "Ohio's best Rx program participant" or "participant" means an individual determined eligible for the Ohio's best Rx program and included under an Ohio's best Rx program enrollment card.
(F) "Participating manufacturer" means a drug manufacturer participating in the Ohio's best Rx program pursuant to a manufacturer agreement entered into under section 173.81 of the Revised Code.
(G) "Participating terminal distributor" means a terminal distributor of dangerous drugs participating in the Ohio's best Rx program pursuant to an agreement entered into under section 173.79 of the Revised Code.
(H) "Political subdivision" has the same meaning as in section 9.23 of the Revised Code.
(I) "State agency" has the same meaning as in section 9.23 of the Revised Code.
(J) "Terminal distributor of dangerous drugs" has the same meaning as in section 4729.01 of the Revised Code.
(K) "Third-party payer" has the same meaning as in section 3901.38 of the Revised Code.
(L) "Trade secret" has the same meaning as in section 1333.61 of the Revised Code.
(M) "Usual and customary charge" means the amount a participating terminal distributor or the drug mail order system included in the Ohio's best Rx program pursuant to section 173.78 of the Revised Code charges when a drug included in the program is purchased by an individual who does not receive a discounted price for the drug pursuant to any drug discount program, including the Ohio's best Rx program or a pharmacy assistance program established by any person or government entity, and for whom no third-party payer or program funded in whole or part with state or federal funds is responsible for all or part of the cost of the drug.
Sec. 173.85. (A) The Ohio's best Rx program fund is hereby created. The fund shall be in the custody of the treasurer of state, but shall not be part of the state treasury. The fund shall consist of the following:
(1) Manufacturer payments made by participating manufacturers pursuant to agreements entered into under section 173.81 of the Revised Code;
(2) Administrative fees, if an administrative fee is determined by the department of aging in rules adopted under section 173.83 of the Revised Code;
(3) Any amounts donated to the fund and accepted by the department;
(4) The fund's investment earnings.
(B) Money in the Ohio's best Rx program fund shall be used to make payments under section 173.801 of the Revised Code and to make transfers to the Ohio's best Rx administration fund in accordance with section 173.86 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 173.86. (A) The Ohio's best Rx administration fund is hereby created in the state treasury. The treasurer of state director of budget and management shall transfer from the Ohio's best Rx program fund to the Ohio's best Rx administration fund amounts equal to the following:
(1) Amounts resulting from application of the program administration percentage, if a program administration percentage is determined by the department of aging in rules adopted under section 173.83 of the Revised Code;
(2) The amount of the administrative fees charged Ohio's best Rx participants, if an administrative fee is determined by the department of aging in rules adopted under section 173.83 of the Revised Code;
(3) The amount of any donations credited to the Ohio's best Rx program fund;
(4) The amount of investment earnings credited to the Ohio's best Rx program fund.
The treasurer of state director of budget and management shall make the transfers in accordance with a schedule developed by the treasurer of state director and the department of aging.
(B) The department of aging shall use money in the Ohio's best Rx administration fund to pay the administrative costs of the Ohio's best Rx program, including, but not limited to, costs associated with contracted services, staff, outreach activities, computers and network services, and the Ohio's best Rx program council. If the fund includes an amount that exceeds the amount necessary to pay the administrative costs of the program, the department may use the excess amount to pay the cost of subsidies provided to Ohio's best Rx program participants under any subsidy program established pursuant to section 173.861 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 174.03. (A) The department of development and the
Ohio
housing finance agency shall each develop programs under
which, in
accordance with rules adopted under this section, they
may make
grants, loans, loan guarantees, and loan subsidies to
counties,
municipal corporations, townships, local housing
authorities, and
nonprofit organizations and may make loans, loan
guarantees, and
loan subsidies to private developers and private
lenders to assist
in activities that provide housing
and
housing
assistance for specifically targeted low- and
moderate-income
families and individuals.
There is no
minimum housing
project size for awards under this division for
any project that
is developed for a special needs population
and that is
supported by a social service agency where the housing
project
is located. Activities for which grants, loans,
loan
guarantees, and
loan subsidies may be made
under this section
include
all of the following:
(1) Acquiring, financing, constructing, leasing,
rehabilitating, remodeling, improving, and equipping publicly or
privately owned housing;
(2) Providing supportive services related to housing and
the
homeless, including housing counseling. Not
more than twenty per
cent of the current year appropriation
authority for the low- and
moderate-income housing trust fund that remains after the award of funds made pursuant to divisions (A)(1), (A)(2), and (A)(3) of section 174.02 of the Revised Code,
shall be awarded in any fiscal
year for supportive services.
(3) Providing rental assistance payments or other project
operating subsidies that lower tenant rents.
(B)
Activities listed under division (A) of this section may include emergency shelter care programs for unaccompanied youth seventeen years of age and younger.
(C) Grants, loans, loan guarantees,
and loan
subsidies may
be
made to counties, municipal
corporations, townships, and
nonprofit
organizations for the
additional purposes of providing
technical
assistance, design and
finance services and
consultation, and
payment of pre-development
and administrative
costs related to any
of the activities listed
above.
(C)(D) In developing programs under this section, the
department and
the agency shall invite, accept, and consider
public
comment, and recommendations from the housing trust fund
advisory
committee created under section 174.06 of the Revised
Code, on
how the programs should be designed to most effectively
benefit
low- and moderate-income families and individuals. The
programs
developed under this section shall respond collectively
to
housing and housing assistance needs of low- and
moderate-income
families and individuals statewide.
(D)(E) The department and
the agency, in accordance with
Chapter
119. of the Revised Code, shall each adopt rules to administer programs developed under this
section.
The rules shall prescribe procedures and forms that
counties,
municipal corporations, townships, local housing
authorities, and
nonprofit organizations shall use in applying for
grants,
loans, loan
guarantees,
and loan subsidies and that private
developers
and private
lenders shall use in applying for loans, loan
guarantees, and loan
subsidies;
eligibility criteria for the
receipt of funds;
procedures for
reviewing and granting or denying
applications;
procedures for
paying out funds; conditions on the
use of funds;
procedures for
monitoring the use of funds; and
procedures under
which a
recipient shall be required to repay
funds that are
improperly
used. The rules shall do
both of the
following:
(1) Require each recipient of a grant
or loan made
from
the
low- and moderate-income housing trust fund for
activities
that
provide, or assist in providing, a rental
housing
project, to
reasonably ensure that the rental housing
project
will remain
affordable to those families and individuals
targeted for
the
rental housing project for the useful life of the
rental
housing
project or for thirty years, whichever is longer;
(2) Require each recipient of a grant
or loan made
from
the
low- and moderate-income housing trust fund for
activities
that
provide, or assist in providing, a housing
project to
prepare
and implement a plan to reasonably assist any
families
and
individuals displaced by the housing project in
obtaining
decent
affordable housing.
(E)(F) In prescribing eligibility criteria and conditions for
the use of funds, neither the department nor the agency is limited to
the criteria and conditions specified in this section and each
may
prescribe additional eligibility criteria and conditions that
relate to the purposes for which
grants, loans, loan guarantees,
and loan subsidies may be made. However, the
department and
agency are limited by the following specifically
targeted low-
and
moderate-income guidelines:
(1) Not less than seventy-five per cent of the money
granted
and loaned under this section in any
fiscal year shall be
for
activities that provide affordable housing and housing
assistance to families and individuals whose incomes
are equal to or less than
fifty per cent of the median
income for
the county in which they live, as determined by the department under
section
174.04 of the Revised Code.
(2) Any money
granted and loaned under
this
section in any
fiscal year that is not granted or loaned pursuant to division (E)(F)(1) of this section shall be for activities
that
provide
affordable housing and housing assistance to
families
and
individuals whose incomes are equal to or
less
than
eighty per cent of the median income for the county in which they live, as
determined by the department under section 174.04 of the Revised
Code.
(F)(G) In making
grants, loans, loan guarantees,
and loan
subsidies under this section, the department and
the
agency shall
give preference to viable projects and activities
that
benefit those families and individuals whose
incomes
are equal to or less than
thirty-five per cent of
the median
income for the county in which they live, as determined by the department
under
section 174.04 of the Revised Code.
(G)(H) The department and
the
agency
shall monitor the programs developed under this section to
ensure
that money granted and loaned under this section is not
used in a
manner that violates division (H) of section 4112.02 of
the
Revised Code or discriminates against families with children.
Sec. 174.06. (A) There is hereby created the housing trust
fund advisory committee. The committee consists of fourteen
members the governor appoints as follows to
represent organizations committed to housing and housing
assistance for low- and moderate-income persons:
(1) One member to represent lenders.
(2) One member to represent for-profit builders and
developers.
(3) One member to represent the families and
individuals included in the income groups targeted for housing
and housing assistance under divisions (E) and (F) and (G) of section
174.03 of the Revised Code.
(4) One member to represent religious, civic, or social
service organizations.
(5) One member to represent counties.
(6) One member to represent municipal corporations.
(7) One member to represent townships.
(8) One member to represent local housing authorities.
(9) One member to represent fair housing organizations.
(10) Three members to represent nonprofit organizations.
(11) One member to represent real estate brokers
licensed under Chapter 4735. of the Revised Code.
(12) One member to represent the for-profit rental
housing industry.
(B)(1) Terms of office are for four years, with each term
ending on the same day of the same month as did the term that it
succeeds. Each member shall hold office from the date of
appointment until the end of the term for which the member was appointed.
Vacancies shall be filled in the manner prescribed for the
original appointment. A member appointed to fill a vacancy
occurring prior to the expiration of a term shall hold office for the remainder of
that term. A member shall continue in office subsequent to the
expiration of a term until a successor takes office or until
a period of sixty days has elapsed, whichever occurs first.
(2) The governor may remove a member for
misfeasance, malfeasance, or willful neglect of duty.
(C)(1) The committee shall select a chairperson from among its
members. The committee shall meet at least once each calendar
year and upon the call of the chair. Members of the committee
serve without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for
reasonable and necessary expenses incurred in the discharge of
duties.
(2) The department of development shall provide the committee
with a meeting place, supplies, and staff assistance as the committee requests.
(D) The committee shall assist the department and the Ohio
housing finance agency in defining housing needs and priorities,
recommend to the department and agency at least
annually how the programs developed under section 174.02 of
the Revised Code should be designed to most effectively benefit
low- and moderate-income persons, consider an allocation of funds for projects of fifteen units or less, and advise the
director of development on whether and how to reallocate money in the low- and
moderate-income housing trust fund under division (B) of section
174.02 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 183.01. As used in this chapter:
(A) "Tobacco master settlement agreement" means the settlement
agreement (and related documents) entered into on November 23,
1998 by the state and leading United States tobacco product
manufacturers.
(B) "Net amounts credited to the tobacco master settlement
agreement fund" means all amounts credited to the tobacco master settlement
agreement fund during a fiscal year, minus all amounts
required to be transferred under section 183.02 of the Revised
Code to the education facilities trust fund, the
education facilities endowment
fund,
and the income tax reduction fund during the fiscal year.
In addition, in fiscal year
2000, "net amounts credited to the tobacco master settlement agreement
fund" does not include amounts credited to the tobacco use prevention
and cessation trust fund, law enforcement improvements trust fund, and
southern Ohio agricultural and community development trust fund
from the first payment received that year.
(C) "Southern Ohio" includes any county in this state
where tobacco has traditionally been grown.
Sec. 183.021. (A) No money from the tobacco master
settlement
agreement fund, as that fund existed prior to the repeal of section 183.02 of the Revised Code by H.B. 119 of the 127th general assembly, shall be expended to do any of the
following:
(1) Hire an executive agency lobbyist, as defined under
section
121.60 of the Revised Code, or a legislative agent, as
defined
under section 101.70 of the Revised Code;
(2) Support or oppose candidates, ballot questions,
referendums,
or ballot initiatives.
(B) Nothing in this section prohibits any of the following
from
advocating on behalf of the specific objectives of a program
funded under
this chapter:
(1) The members of the board of trustees, executive
director, or
employees of the tobacco use prevention and control
foundation;
(2) The members of the board of trustees, executive
director, or
employees of the southern Ohio agricultural and
community
development foundation;
(3) The members or employees of the
third
frontier commission or the members of the third frontier advisory
board.
Sec. 183.17. The fiscal year of the southern Ohio
agricultural
and community development foundation shall be the
same as the fiscal year
of the state.
Within ninety days after the end of each fiscal year, the
foundation shall submit to the governor and the general assembly
both of
the following:
(A) A report of the activities of the foundation during the
preceding fiscal year. The report shall also contain an
independent
evaluation of the progress being made by the
foundation in
carrying out its duties.
(B) A financial report of the foundation for the preceding
year,
which shall include both:
(1) Information on the amount and percentage of overhead and
administrative expenditures compared to programmatic expenditures;
(2) An independent auditor's report on the
basic
financial
statements
and required supplementary information
of the
foundation. Such financial
statements shall
be prepared in
conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles
prescribed for governmental entities.
On or before July 1, 2010, the foundation shall report to the
governor and the general assembly on the progress that the
foundation has made
in replacing the production of tobacco in
southern Ohio with the production of other agricultural products
and in mitigating the adverse economic impact of reduced tobacco
production in
the region.
If the
foundation concludes that a
need
for additional funding still exists, the
foundation may
request
that provision be made for a portion of the payments
credited to
the tobacco master settlement agreement fund to
continue to be
transferred to the southern Ohio agricultural and
community
development trust fund.
Sec. 183.33. No money shall be appropriated or transferred from
the general revenue fund to the tobacco master settlement agreement
fund, tobacco use prevention and cessation trust fund, tobacco use
prevention and control endowment fund, law enforcement
improvements trust fund, southern Ohio agricultural and community
development trust fund, southern Ohio agricultural and community
development foundation endowment fund, Ohio's public health
priorities trust fund, biomedical research and technology transfer
trust fund, education facilities trust fund, education facilities
endowment fund, or education technology trust fund. In addition,
no money shall be otherwise appropriated or transferred from the
general revenue fund for the use of the tobacco use prevention and
control foundation or the southern Ohio agricultural and community
development foundation.
Sec. 183.34. There is hereby created in the state treasury
the tobacco settlement oversight, administration, and enforcement
fund, to which shall be credited consist of amounts transferred under
division (I) of section 183.02 of the Revised Code prior to the repeal of that section by H.B. 119 of the 127th general assembly. The attorney
general shall use the fund to pay costs incurred in the oversight,
administration, and enforcement of the tobacco master settlement
agreement.
Sec. 183.35. There is hereby created in the state treasury
the tobacco settlement enforcement fund, to which shall be
credited consist of amounts transferred under division (J) of section 183.02
of the Revised Code prior to the repeal of that section by H.B. 119 of the 127th general assembly. The tax commissioner shall use the fund to
pay costs incurred in the enforcement of divisions (F) and (G) of
section 5743.03 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 183.51. (A) As used in this section and in the applicable bond proceedings unless otherwise provided:
(1) "Bond proceedings" means the resolutions, orders, indentures, purchase and sale and trust and other agreements including any amendments or supplements to them, and credit enhancement facilities, and amendments and supplements to them, or any one or more or combination of them, authorizing, awarding, or providing for the terms and conditions applicable to or providing for the security or liquidity of, the particular obligations, and the provisions contained in those obligations.
(2) "Bond service fund" means the bond service fund created in the bond proceedings for the obligations.
(3) "Capital facilities" means, as applicable, capital facilities or projects as referred to in sections 151.03, 151.04, 152.09, 152.33, 154.20, or 154.22 of the Revised Code.
(4) "Cost of capital facilities" has the same meaning as in section 151.01, 152.09, or 154.01 of the Revised Code, as applicable.
(5) "Credit enhancement facilities," "financing costs," and "interest" or "interest equivalent" have the same meanings as in section 133.01 of the Revised Code.
(6) "Debt service" means principal, including any mandatory sinking fund or redemption requirements for retirement of obligations, interest and other accreted amounts, interest equivalent, and any redemption premium, payable on obligations. If not prohibited by the applicable bond proceedings, "debt service" may include costs relating to credit enhancement facilities that are related to and represent, or are intended to provide a source of payment of or limitation on, other debt service.
(7) "Improvement fund" means, as applicable, the school building program assistance fund created in section 3318.25 of the Revised Code, the higher education improvement fund created in section 154.21 of the Revised Code, the mental health facilities improvement fund created in section 154.20 of the Revised Code, the parks and recreation improvement fund created in section 154.22 of the Revised Code, the administrative building fund created in section 123.10 of the Revised Code, and the adult correctional building fund referred to in section 5120.105 of the Revised Code.
(8) "Issuing authority" means the Ohio tobacco settlement financing authority created in section 183.52 of the Revised Code.
(9) "Net proceeds" means amounts received from the sale of obligations, excluding amounts used to refund or retire outstanding obligations, amounts required to be deposited into special funds pursuant to the applicable bond proceedings, and amounts to be used to pay financing costs.
(10) "Obligations" means bonds, notes, or other evidences of obligation of the issuing authority, including any appertaining interest coupons, issued by the issuing authority under this section and Section 2i of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, for the purpose of providing funds to the state, in exchange for the assignment and sale described in division (B) of this section, for the purpose of paying costs of capital facilities for: (a) housing branches and agencies of state government, including but not limited to facilities for housing state agencies, for a system of common schools throughout the state, and for use as state correctional facilities or county, multicounty, municipal-county, and multicounty-municipal jail facilities or workhouses; (b) state-supported or state-assisted institutions of higher education; (c) mental hygiene and retardation; and (d) parks and recreation.
(11) "Pledged receipts" means, as and to the extent provided for in the applicable bond proceedings:
(a) Pledged tobacco settlement receipts;
(b) Accrued interest received from the sale of obligations;
(c) Income from the investment of the special funds;
(d) Additional or any other specific revenues or receipts lawfully available to be pledged, and pledged, pursuant to the bond proceedings, including but not limited to amounts received under credit enhancement facilities, to the payment of debt service.
(12) "Pledged tobacco settlement receipts" means all amounts received by the issuing authority pursuant to division (B) of this section.
(13) "Principal amount" means the aggregate of the amount as stated or provided for in the applicable bond proceedings as the amount on which interest or interest equivalent on particular obligations is initially calculated. "Principal amount" does not include any premium paid to the issuing authority by the initial purchaser of the obligations. "Principal amount" of a capital appreciation bond, as defined in division (C) of section 3334.01 of the Revised Code, means its original face amount and not its accreted value, and "principal amount" of a zero coupon bond, as defined in division (J) of section 3334.01 of the Revised Code, means the discounted offering price at which the bond is initially sold to the public, disregarding any purchase price discount to the original purchaser, if provided in or for pursuant to the bond proceedings.
(14) "Special funds" or "funds," unless the context indicates otherwise, means the bond service fund, and any other funds, including any reserve funds, created under the bond proceedings and stated to be special funds in those proceedings, including moneys and investments, and earnings from investments, credited and to be credited to the particular fund. "Special funds" does not include any improvement fund or investment earnings on amounts in any improvement fund, or other funds created by the bond proceedings that are not stated by those proceedings to be special funds.
(B) The state may assign and sell to the issuing authority, and the issuing authority may accept and purchase, all or a portion of the amounts to be received by the state under the tobacco master settlement agreement for a purchase price payable by the issuing authority to the state consisting of the net proceeds of obligations and any residual interest, if any. Any such assignment and sale shall be irrevocable in accordance with its terms during the period any obligations secured by amounts so assigned and sold are outstanding under the applicable bond proceedings, and shall constitute a contractual obligation to the holders or owners of those obligations. Any such assignment and sale shall also be treated as an absolute transfer and true sale for all purposes, and not as a pledge or other security interest. The characterization of any such assignment and sale as a true sale and absolute transfer shall not be negated or adversely affected by only a portion of the amounts to be received under the tobacco master settlement agreement being transferred, the acquisition or retention by the state of a residual interest, the participation of any state officer or employee as a member or officer of, or providing staff support to, the issuing authority, any responsibility of an officer or employee of the state for collecting the amounts to be received under the tobacco master settlement agreement or otherwise enforcing that agreement or retaining any legal title to or interest in any portion of the amounts to be received under that agreement for the purpose of these collection activities, any characterization of the issuing authority or its obligations for purposes of accounting, taxation, or securities regulation, or by any other factors whatsoever. A true sale shall exist under this section regardless of whether the issuing authority has any recourse against the state or any other term of the bond proceedings or the treatment or characterization of the transfer as a financing for any purpose. Upon and following the assignment and sale, the state shall not have any right, title, or interest in the portion of the receipts under the tobacco master settlement agreement so assigned and sold, other than any residual interest that may be described in the applicable bond proceedings for those obligations, and that portion, if any, shall be the property of the issuing authority and not of the state, and shall be paid directly to the issuing authority, and shall be owned, received, held, and disbursed by the issuing authority and not by the state, and the state shall: (1) not agree to any amendment of the tobacco master settlement agreement that materially and adversely affects the issuing authority's ability to receive the portion of the receipts under the tobacco master settlement agreement assigned and sold to the issuing authority, (2) enforce by the attorney general in the manner and as otherwise set forth in any bond proceedings the rights of the issuing authority to receive the receipts under the tobacco master settlement agreement assigned and sold to the issuing authority to the full extent permitted by the tobacco master settlement agreement, (3) not limit or alter the rights of the issuing authority to fulfill the terms of its agreements with the holders or owners of obligations outstanding under the bond proceedings, (4) not in any way impair the rights and remedies of the holders or owners of obligations outstanding under the bond proceedings or the security for those obligations; provided, that nothing in this section shall be construed to preclude the state from regulating or permitting the regulation of smoking or from taxing and regulating the sale of cigarettes or other tobacco products; and (5) not fail to enforce Chapter 1346. of the Revised Code. Nothing in this section shall be construed as in any way modifying or limiting the responsibility and power of the attorney general to administer, protect, and discharge all duties, rights, and obligations of the state under the tobacco master settlement agreement or Chapter 1346. of the Revised Code.
The governor and the director of budget and management, in consultation with the attorney general, on behalf of the state, and any member or officer of the issuing authority as authorized by that issuing authority, on behalf of the issuing authority, may take any action and execute any documents, including any purchase and sale agreements, necessary to effect the assignment and sale and the acceptance of the assignment and title to the receipts including, providing irrevocable direction to the escrow agent acting under the tobacco master settlement agreement to transfer directly to the issuing authority the amounts to be received under that agreement that are subject to such assignment and sale. Any purchase and sale agreement or other bond proceedings may contain the terms and conditions established by the state and the issuing authority to carry out and effectuate the purposes of this section, including, without limitation, covenants binding the state in favor of the issuing authority and its assignees and the owners of the obligations. Any such purchase and sale agreement shall be sufficient to effectuate such purchase and sale without regard to any other laws governing other property sales or financial transactions by the state.
Not later than two years following the date on which there are no longer any obligations outstanding under the bond proceedings, all assets of the issuing authority shall vest in the state, the issuing authority shall execute any necessary assignments or instruments, including any assignment of any right, title, or ownership to the state for receipt of amounts under the tobacco master settlement agreement, and the issuing authority shall be dissolved.
(C) The issuing authority is authorized to issue and to sell obligations as provided in this section. The aggregate principal amount of obligations issued under this section shall not exceed six billion dollars, exclusive of obligations issued under divisions (N)(1) of this section to refund, renew, or advance refund other obligations issued or incurred. At least seventy-five per cent of the aggregate net proceeds of the obligations issued under the authority of this section, exclusive of obligations issued to refund, renew, or advance refund other obligations, shall be paid to the state for deposit into the school building program assistance fund created in section 3318.25 of the Revised Code.
(D) Each issue of obligations shall be authorized by resolution or order of the issuing authority. The bond proceedings shall provide for or authorize the manner for determining the principal amount or maximum principal amount of obligations of an issue, the principal maturity or maturities, the interest rate or rates, the date of and the dates of payment of interest on the obligations, their denominations, and the place or places of payment of debt service which may be within or outside the state. Unless otherwise provided by law, the latest principal maturity may not be later than the earlier of the thirty-first day of December of the fiftieth calendar year after the year of issuance of the particular obligations or of the fiftieth calendar year after the year in which the original obligation to pay was issued or entered into. Sections 9.96, 9.98, 9.981, 9.982, and 9.983 of the Revised Code apply to the obligations.
The purpose of the obligations may be stated in the bond proceedings in general terms, such as, as applicable, "paying costs of capital facilities for a system of common schools," "paying costs of facilities for state-supported and state-assisted institutions of higher education," "paying the cost of capital facilities for housing of branches and agencies of state government, including capital facilities for the purpose of housing personnel, equipment, or functions, or any combination thereof that the state agencies are responsible for housing," "paying costs of capital facilities for use as state correctional facilities or county, multicounty, municipal-county, and multicounty-municipal jail facilities or workhouses, or as single county or district community-based correctional facilities," "paying costs of capital facilities for mental hygiene and retardation," and "paying costs of capital facilities for parks and recreation." Unless otherwise provided in the bond proceedings, the net proceeds from the issuance of the obligations shall be paid to the state for deposit into the applicable improvement fund. Notwithstanding division (B)(4) of section 3318.38 of the Revised Code, net proceeds of obligations deposited into the school building program assistance fund created in section 3318.25 of the Revised Code may be used to pay basic project costs under section 3318.38 of the Revised Code at the times determined by the Ohio school facilities commission without regard to whether those expenditures are in proportion to the state's and the school district's respective shares of that basic project cost. As used in the preceding sentence, "Ohio school facilities commission" and "basic project costs" have the same meanings as in section 3318.01 of the Revised Code.
(E) The issuing authority may, without need for any other approval, appoint or provide for the appointment of paying agents, bond registrars, securities depositories, credit enhancement providers or counterparties, clearing corporations, and transfer agents, and retain or contract for the services of underwriters, investment bankers, financial advisers, accounting experts, marketing, remarketing, indexing, and administrative agents, other consultants, and independent contractors, including printing services, as are necessary in the judgment of the issuing authority to carry out the issuing authority's functions under this section and section 183.52 of the Revised Code. The issuing authority also may without need for any other approval retain or contract for the services of attorneys and other professionals for that purpose. Financing costs are payable, as may be provided in the bond proceedings, from the proceeds of the obligations, from special funds, or from other moneys available for the purpose, including as to future financing costs, from the pledged receipts.
(F) The issuing authority may irrevocably pledge and assign all, or such portion as the issuing authority determines, of the pledged receipts to the payment of the debt service charges on obligations issued under this section, and for the establishment and maintenance of any reserves, as provided in the bond proceedings, and make other provisions in the bond proceedings with respect to pledged receipts as authorized by this section, which provisions are controlling notwithstanding any other provisions of law pertaining to them. Any and all pledged receipts received by the issuing authority and required by the bond proceedings, consistent with this section, to be deposited, transferred, or credited to the bond service fund, and all other money transferred or allocated to or received for the purposes of that fund, shall be deposited and credited to the bond service fund created in the bond proceedings for the obligations, subject to any applicable provisions of those bond proceedings, but without necessity for any act of appropriation. Those pledged receipts shall immediately be subject to the lien of that pledge without any physical delivery thereof or further act, and shall not be subject to other court judgments. The lien of the pledge of those pledged receipts shall be valid and binding against all parties having claims of any kind against the issuing authority, irrespective of whether those parties have notice thereof. The pledge shall create a perfected security interest for all purposes of Chapter 1309. of the Revised Code and a perfected lien for purposes of any other interest, all without the necessity for separation or delivery of funds or for the filing or recording of the applicable bond proceedings by which that pledge is created or any certificate, statement, or other document with respect thereto. The pledge of the pledged receipts shall be effective and the money therefrom and thereof may be applied to the purposes for which pledged.
(G) The issuing authority may covenant in the bond proceedings, and such covenants shall be controlling, and shall be binding upon the state if and when made, notwithstanding any other provision of law, that (1) the state and applicable officers and state agencies, including the general assembly, so long as any obligations issued under this section are outstanding, shall maintain statutory authority for, and cause to be collected and paid directly to the issuing authority or its assignee, the pledged receipts for the payment of debt service on obligations and for the establishment and maintenance of any reserves and other requirements provided for in the bond proceedings, (2) the state shall enforce by the attorney general, in the manner and as otherwise set forth in any bond proceedings, the provisions of the tobacco master settlement agreement that require payment of amounts to the state that have been assigned and sold to the issuing authority, and (3) the state shall not fail to enforce Chapter 1346. of the Revised Code.
(H) Obligations may be further secured, as determined by the issuing authority, by an indenture or a trust agreement between the issuing authority and a corporate trustee, which may be any trust company or bank having a place of business within the state. Any indenture or trust agreement may contain the resolution or order authorizing the issuance of the obligations, any provisions that may be contained in any bond proceedings, and other provisions that are customary or appropriate in an agreement of that type, including, but not limited to:
(1) Maintenance of each pledge, indenture, trust agreement, or other instrument comprising part of the bond proceedings until the issuing authority has fully paid or provided for the payment of debt service on the obligations secured by it;
(2) In the event of default in any payments required to be made by the bond proceedings, enforcement of those payments or agreements by mandamus, the appointment of a receiver, suit in equity, action at law, or any combination of them;
(3) The rights and remedies of the holders or owners of obligations and of the trustee and provisions for protecting and enforcing them, including limitations on rights of individual holders and owners.
(I) The bond proceedings may contain additional provisions customary or appropriate to the financing or to the obligations or to particular obligations including, but not limited to, provisions for:
(1) The redemption of obligations prior to maturity at the option of the issuing authority or of the holder or upon the occurrence of certain conditions, and at a particular price or prices and under particular terms and conditions;
(2) The form of and other terms of the obligations;
(3) The establishment, deposit, investment, and application of special funds, and the safeguarding of moneys on hand or on deposit, in lieu of the applicability of provisions of Chapter 131. or 135. of the Revised Code, but subject to any special provisions of this section with respect to the application of particular funds or moneys. Any financial institution that acts as a depository of any moneys in special funds or other funds under the bond proceedings may furnish indemnifying bonds or pledge securities as required by the issuing authority.
(4) Any or every provision of the bond proceedings being binding upon the issuing authority and upon such governmental agency or entity, officer, board, authority, agency, department, institution, district, or other person or body as may from time to time be authorized to take actions as may be necessary to perform all or any part of the duty required by the provision;
(5) The maintenance of each pledge or instrument comprising part of the bond proceedings until the issuing authority has fully paid or provided for the payment of the debt service on the obligations or met other stated conditions;
(6) In the event of default in any payments required to be made by the bond proceedings, or by any other agreement of the issuing authority made as part of a contract under which the obligations were issued or secured, including a credit enhancement facility, the enforcement of those payments by mandamus, a suit in equity, an action at law, or any combination of those remedial actions;
(7) The rights and remedies of the holders or owners of obligations or of book-entry interests in them, and of third parties under any credit enhancement facility, and provisions for protecting and enforcing those rights and remedies, including limitations on rights of individual holders or owners;
(8) The replacement of mutilated, destroyed, lost, or stolen obligations;
(9) The funding, refunding, or advance refunding, or other provision for payment, of obligations that will then no longer be outstanding for purposes of this section or of the applicable bond proceedings;
(10) Amendment of the bond proceedings;
(11) Payment of the expenses of the enforcement activity of the attorney general and others referred to in division (G)(2) of this section from the amounts received by the state under the tobacco master settlement agreement assigned and sold to the issuing authority under division (B) of this section;
(12) Any other or additional agreements with the owners of obligations, and such other provisions as the issuing authority determines, including limitations, conditions, or qualifications, relating to any of the foregoing or the activities of the issuing authority in connection therewith.
The issuing authority shall not, and shall covenant in the bond proceedings that it shall not, be authorized to and shall not file a voluntary petition under the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. 101 et seq., as amended, or voluntarily commence any similar bankruptcy proceeding under state law including, without limitation, consenting to the appointment of a receiver or trustee or making a general or specific assignment for the benefit of creditors, and neither any public officer or any organization, entity, or other person shall authorize the issuing authority to be or become a debtor under the United States Bankruptcy Code or take any of those actions under the United States Bankruptcy Code or state law. The state hereby covenants, and the issuing authority shall covenant, with the holders or owners of the obligations, that the state shall not permit the issuing authority to file a voluntary petition under the United States Bankruptcy Code or take any of those actions under the United States Bankruptcy Code or state law during the period obligations are outstanding and for any additional period for which the issuing authority covenants in the bond proceedings, which additional period may, but need not, be a period of three hundred sixty-seven days or more.
(J) The obligations requiring execution by or for the issuing authority shall be signed as provided in the bond proceedings, and may bear the official seal of the issuing authority or a facsimile thereof. Any obligation may be signed by the individual who, on the date of execution, is the authorized signer even though, on the date of the obligations, that individual is not an authorized signer. In case the individual whose signature or facsimile signature appears on any obligation ceases to be an authorized signer before delivery of the obligation, that signature or facsimile is nevertheless valid and sufficient for all purposes as if that individual had remained the authorized signer until delivery.
(K) Obligations are investment securities under Chapter 1308. of the Revised Code. Obligations may be issued in bearer or in registered form, registrable as to principal alone or as to both principal and interest, or both, or in certificated or uncertificated form, as the issuing authority determines. Provision may be made for the exchange, conversion, or transfer of obligations and for reasonable charges for registration, exchange, conversion, and transfer. Pending preparation of final obligations, the issuing authority may provide for the issuance of interim instruments to be exchanged for the final obligations.
(L) Obligations may be sold at public sale or at private sale, in such manner, and at such price at, above, or below par, all as determined by and provided by the issuing authority in the bond proceedings.
(M) Except to the extent that rights are restricted by the bond proceedings, any owner of obligations or provider of or counterparty to a credit enhancement facility may by any suitable form of legal proceedings protect and enforce any rights relating to obligations or that facility under the laws of this state or granted by the bond proceedings. Those rights include the right to compel the performance of all applicable duties of the issuing authority and the state. Each duty of the issuing authority and that issuing authority's officers, staff, and employees, and of each state entity or agency, or using district or using institution, and its officers, members, staff, or employees, undertaken pursuant to the bond proceedings, is hereby established as a duty of the entity or individual having authority to perform that duty, specifically enjoined by law and resulting from an office, trust, or station within the meaning of section 2731.01 of the Revised Code. The individuals who are from time to time the issuing authority, members or officers of the issuing authority, or those members' designees acting pursuant to section 183.52 of the Revised Code, or the issuing authority's officers, staff, or employees, are not liable in their personal capacities on any obligations or otherwise under the bond proceedings.
(N)(1) Subject to any applicable limitations in division (C) of this section, the issuing authority may also authorize and provide for the issuance of:
(a) Obligations in the form of bond anticipation notes, and may authorize and provide for the renewal of those notes from time to time by the issuance of new notes. The holders of notes or appertaining interest coupons have the right to have debt service on those notes paid solely from the moneys and special funds, and all or any portion of the pledged receipts, that are or may be pledged to that payment, including the proceeds of bonds or renewal notes or both, as the issuing authority provides in the bond proceedings authorizing the notes. Notes may be additionally secured by covenants of the issuing authority to the effect that the issuing authority will do all things necessary for the issuance of bonds or renewal notes in such principal amount and upon such terms as may be necessary to provide moneys to pay when due the debt service on the notes, and apply their proceeds to the extent necessary, to make full and timely payment of debt service on the notes as provided in the applicable bond proceedings. In the bond proceedings authorizing the issuance of bond anticipation notes the issuing authority shall set forth for the bonds anticipated an estimated schedule of annual principal payments the latest of which shall be no later than provided in division (D) of this section. While the notes are outstanding there shall be deposited, as shall be provided in the bond proceedings for those notes, from the sources authorized for payment of debt service on the bonds, amounts sufficient to pay the principal of the bonds anticipated as set forth in that estimated schedule during the time the notes are outstanding, which amounts shall be used solely to pay the principal of those notes or of the bonds anticipated.
(b) Obligations for the refunding, including funding and retirement, and advance refunding, with or without payment or redemption prior to maturity, of any obligations previously issued under this section and any bonds or notes previously issued for the purpose of paying costs of capital facilities for: (i) state-supported or state-assisted institutions of higher education as authorized by sections 151.01 and 151.04 of the Revised Code, pursuant to Sections 2i and 2n of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution; (ii) housing branches and agencies of state government, including but not limited to facilities for housing state agencies as authorized by section 152.09 of the Revised Code, pursuant to Section 2i of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, for a system of common schools throughout the state as authorized by sections 151.01 and 151.03 of the Revised Code, pursuant to Sections 2i and 2n of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, and for use as state correctional facilities or county, multicounty, municipal-county, and multicounty-municipal jail facilities or workhouses as authorized by section 152.33 of the Revised Code, pursuant to Section 2i of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution; (iii) mental hygiene and retardation as authorized by sections 154.01 and 154.20 of the Revised Code, pursuant to Section 2i of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution; and (iv) parks and recreation as authorized by sections 154.01 and 154.22 of the Revised Code, pursuant to Section 2i of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution. Refunding obligations may be issued in amounts sufficient to pay or to provide for repayment of the principal amount, including principal amounts maturing prior to the redemption of the remaining prior obligations or bonds or notes, any redemption premium, and interest accrued or to accrue to the maturity or redemption date or dates, payable on the prior obligations or bonds or notes, and related financing costs and any expenses incurred or to be incurred in connection with that issuance and refunding. Subject to the applicable bond proceedings, the portion of the proceeds of the sale of refunding obligations issued under division (N)(1)(b) of this section to be applied to debt service on the prior obligations or bonds or notes shall be credited to an appropriate separate account in the bond service fund and held in trust for the purpose by the issuing authority or by a corporate trustee, and may be invested as provided in the bond proceedings. Obligations authorized under this division shall be considered to be issued for those purposes for which the prior obligations or bonds or notes were issued.
(2) The principal amount of refunding, advance refunding, or renewal obligations issued pursuant to division (N) of this section shall be in addition to the amount authorized in division (C) of this section.
(O) Obligations are lawful investments for banks, savings and loan associations, credit union share guaranty corporations, trust companies, trustees, fiduciaries, insurance companies, including domestic for life and domestic not for life, trustees or other officers having charge of sinking and bond retirement or other special funds of the state and political subdivisions and taxing districts of this state, notwithstanding any other provisions of the Revised Code or rules adopted pursuant to those provisions by any state agency with respect to investments by them, and are also acceptable as security for the repayment of the deposit of public moneys. The exemptions from taxation in Ohio as provided for in particular sections of the Ohio Constitution and section 5709.76 of the Revised Code apply to the obligations.
(P)(1) Unless otherwise provided or provided for in any applicable bond proceedings, moneys to the credit of or in a special fund shall be disbursed on the order of the issuing authority. No such order is required for the payment, from the bond service fund or other special fund, when due of debt service or required payments under credit enhancement facilities.
(2) Payments received by the issuing authority under interest rate hedges entered into as credit enhancement facilities under this section shall be deposited as provided in the applicable bond proceedings.
(Q) The obligations shall not be general obligations of the state and the full faith and credit, revenue, and taxing power of the state shall not be pledged to the payment of debt service on them. The holders or owners of the obligations shall have no right to have any moneys obligated or pledged for the payment of debt service except as provided in this section and in the applicable bond proceedings. The rights of the holders and owners to payment of debt service are limited to all or that portion of the pledged receipts, and those special funds, pledged to the payment of debt service pursuant to the bond proceedings in accordance with this section, and each obligation shall bear on its face a statement to that effect.
(R) Each bond service fund is a trust fund and is hereby pledged to the payment of debt service on the applicable obligations. Payment of that debt service shall be made or provided for by the issuing authority in accordance with the bond proceedings without necessity for any act of appropriation. The bond proceedings may provide for the establishment of separate accounts in the bond service fund and for the application of those accounts only to debt service on specific obligations, and for other accounts in the bond service fund within the general purposes of that fund.
(S) Subject to the bond proceedings pertaining to any obligations then outstanding in accordance with their terms, the issuing authority may in the bond proceedings pledge all, or such portion as the issuing authority determines, of the moneys in the bond service fund to the payment of debt service on particular obligations, and for the establishment and maintenance of any reserves for payment of particular debt service.
(T)(1) Unless otherwise provided in any applicable bond proceedings, moneys to the credit of special funds may be invested by or on behalf of the issuing authority only in one or more of the following:
(a) Notes, bonds, or other direct obligations of the United States or of any agency or instrumentality of the United States, or in no-front-end-load money market mutual funds consisting exclusively of those obligations, or in repurchase agreements, including those issued by any fiduciary, secured by those obligations, or in collective investment funds consisting exclusively of those obligations;
(b) Obligations of this state or any political subdivision of this state;
(c) Certificates of deposit of any national bank located in this state and any bank, as defined in section 1101.01 of the Revised Code, subject to inspection by the superintendent of financial institutions;
(d) The treasurer of state's pooled investment program under section 135.45 of the Revised Code;
(e) Other investment agreements or repurchase agreements that are consistent with the ratings on the obligations.
(2) The income from investments referred to in division (T)(1) of this section shall be credited to special funds or otherwise as the issuing authority determines in the bond proceedings. Those investments may be sold or exchanged at times as the issuing authority determines, provides for, or authorizes.
(U) The treasurer of state shall have responsibility for keeping records, making reports, and making payments, relating to any arbitrage rebate requirements under the applicable bond proceedings.
Sec. 183.52. (A) There is hereby created a body, both corporate and politic, constituting an agency and instrumentality of this state and performing essential functions of the state, to be known as the Ohio tobacco settlement financing authority, which in that name may contract and be contracted with, sue and be sued, and exercise all other authority vested in that authority by this section and section 183.51 of the Revised Code. The authority is created for the sole purpose of purchasing and receiving any assignment of the tobacco settlement receipts and issuing obligations, all as provided for in section 183.51 of the Revised Code, to provide financing of essential functions and facilities. The property of the authority and its income and operations shall be exempt from taxation involving the state or by the state and any political subdivision of the state. All income of the authority, after the payment of necessary expenses, shall accrue to the state.
(B) The authority shall consist of, in each case ex officio, the governor, the director of budget and management, the tax commissioner, the treasurer of state, the attorney general, and the auditor of state. The governor shall serve as the chair of the authority, the director of budget and management shall serve as its secretary, and the authority shall have such other officers as it determines, who may but need not be members of the authority. Four members of the authority constitute a quorum and the affirmative vote of four members is necessary for any action taken by vote of the authority. No vacancy in the membership of the authority shall impair the rights of a quorum by such vote to exercise all the rights and perform all the duties of the authority. Each of the members above identified may designate an employee or officer of their office to attend meetings of the authority when that member is absent or unable for any reason to attend and that designee, when present, shall be counted in determining whether a quorum is present at any meeting and may vote and participate in all proceedings and actions of the authority. A designee may not execute or cause a facsimile signature to be placed on any obligation. That designation shall be in writing, executed by the designating member, and be filed with the secretary of the authority. A designation may be changed from time to time by a similar written designation. The authority may delegate to such of its members, officers, employees, or staff as it determines those powers and duties as it deems appropriate. No member of the authority or designee shall, by reason of being or serving as a member of the authority, be required to abstain from action in any other capacity as an incumbent of a state office or position or from any action as a member of the authority in any matter affecting or in any way pertaining to both that office or position and the authority, or for any purpose be deemed to be disqualified from either such office or position or as a member of the authority by reason of so acting or to have violated any law by reason thereof. The authority may adopt and alter bylaws and rules for the conduct of its affairs, including provisions for meetings, and for the manner in which its powers and functions are to be exercised and embodied, and may adopt and alter at will an official seal to be affixed to official documents, provided that the failure to affix any such seal shall not affect the legality of such documents. Members of the authority shall receive no added compensation for their services as such members but may be reimbursed, as determined by the authority, for their necessary and actual expenses incurred in the conduct of the authority's business. The office of budget and management shall provide staff support to the authority.
Notwithstanding the existence of common management, the authority shall be treated and accounted for as a separate and independent legal entity with its separate purposes as set forth in this section and section 183.51 of the Revised Code. The assets, liabilities, and funds of the authority shall not be consolidated or commingled with those of the state, and contracts entered into by the authority shall be entered into in the name of the authority and not in the name of the state.
(C) In connection with the exercise of its powers pursuant to this section and section 183.51 of the Revised Code, the authority may enter into contracts and execute all instruments necessary or incidental to the performance of the issuing authority's duties and the execution of the issuing authority's powers and do all other acts necessary or proper to the fulfillment of the issuing authority's purposes and to carry out the powers expressly granted in this section and section 183.51 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 307.021. (A) It is hereby declared to be a public
purpose and function of the state, and a matter of urgent
necessity, that the state acquire, construct, or renovate capital
facilities for use as county, multicounty, municipal-county, and
multicounty-municipal jail facilities or workhouses, as
single-county or district community-based correctional facilities
authorized under section 2301.51 of the Revised Code, as minimum
security misdemeanant jails under sections 341.34 and 753.21 of
the Revised Code, and as single-county or joint-county juvenile
facilities authorized under section 2151.65 of the Revised Code
in order to comply with constitutional standards and laws for the
incarceration of alleged and convicted offenders against state
and local laws, and for use as county family court centers. For
these purposes, counties and municipal corporations are
designated as state agencies to perform duties of the state in
relation to such facilities, workhouses, jails, and centers, and
such facilities, workhouses, jails, and centers are designated as
state capital facilities. The Ohio building authority is
authorized to issue revenue obligations under sections 152.09 to
152.33 of the Revised Code to pay all or part of the cost of such
state capital facilities as are designated by law.
The office of the sheriff, due to its responsibilities
concerning alleged and convicted offenders against state laws, is
designated as the state agency having jurisdiction over such
jail, workhouse, community-based correctional, or county minimum
security misdemeanant jail capital facilities in any one county
or over any district community-based correctional facilities.
The corrections commission, due to its responsibilities in
relation to such offenders, is designated as the state agency
having jurisdiction over any such multicounty, municipal-county,
or multicounty-municipal jail, workhouse, or correctional capital
facilities. The office of the chief of police or marshal of a
municipal corporation, due to its responsibilities concerning
certain alleged and convicted criminal offenders, is designated
as the state agency having jurisdiction over any such municipal
corporation minimum security misdemeanant jail capital facilities
in the municipal corporation. The juvenile court, as defined in
section 2151.011 of the Revised Code, is designated as the branch
of state government having jurisdiction over any such family
court center or single-county or joint-county juvenile capital
facilities. It is hereby determined and declared that such
capital facilities are for the purpose of housing such state
agencies, their functions, equipment, and personnel.
(B) The capital facilities provided for in this section
may be included in capital facilities in which one or more
governmental entities are participating or in which other
facilities of the county or counties, or any municipal
corporations, are included pursuant to section 152.31 or 152.33
of the Revised Code or in an agreement between any county or
counties and any municipal corporation or municipal corporations
for participating in the joint construction, acquisition, or
improvement of public works, public buildings, or improvements
benefiting the parties in the same manner as set forth in section
153.61 of the Revised Code.
(C) A county or counties or a municipal corporation or
municipal corporations may contribute to the cost of capital
facilities authorized under this section.
(D) A county or counties, and any municipal corporations,
shall lease capital facilities described in this section that are
constructed, reconstructed, otherwise improved, or financed by
the Ohio building authority pursuant to sections 152.09 to 152.33
of the Revised Code for the use of the county or counties and any
municipal corporations, and may enter into other agreements
ancillary to the construction, reconstruction, improvement,
financing, leasing, or operation of such capital facilities,
including, but not limited to, any agreements required by the
applicable bond proceedings authorized by sections 152.09 to
152.33 of the Revised Code.
Such lease may obligate the county or counties and any
municipal corporation, as using state agencies under Chapter 152.
of the Revised Code, to occupy and operate such capital
facilities for such period of time as may be specified by law and
to pay such rent as the authority determines to be appropriate.
Notwithstanding any other section of the Revised Code, any county
or counties or municipal corporation may enter into such a lease,
and any such lease is legally sufficient to obligate the
political subdivision for the term stated in the lease. Any such
lease constitutes an agreement described in division (E) of
section 152.24 of the Revised Code.
(E) If rental payments required from the county or
counties or municipal corporation by a lease established pursuant
to this section are not paid in accordance with such lease, the
funds which otherwise would be apportioned to the lessees from
the county undivided local government communities fund, pursuant to sections
5747.51 to 5747.53 of the Revised Code, shall be reduced by the
amount of rent payable to the authority. The county treasurer
immediately shall pay the amount of such reductions to the
authority.
(F) Any lease of capital facilities authorized by this
section, the rentals of which are payable in whole or in part
from appropriations made by the general assembly, is governed by
division (D) of section 152.24 of the Revised Code. Such rentals
constitute available receipts as defined in section 152.09 of the
Revised Code and may be pledged for the payment of bond service
charges as provided in section 152.10 of the Revised Code.
(G) Any provision of section 152.21, 152.22, or 152.26 of
the Revised Code that applies to buildings and facilities
described in section 152.19 of the Revised Code also applies to
the buildings and facilities described in this section, unless it
is inconsistent with this section.
Sec. 307.37. (A)
As used in division (B)(3) of this section, "proposed
new
construction" means a proposal to erect, construct, repair, alter,
redevelop, or maintain a single-family, two-family, or
three-family dwelling or any structure that is regulated by the Ohio building code.
(B)(1)(a) The board of county commissioners may adopt local residential building regulations governing residential buildings as defined in section 3781.06 of the Revised Code, to be enforced within the unincorporated area of the county or within districts the board establishes in any part of the unincorporated area. No local residential building regulation shall differ from the state residential building code the board of building standards establishes pursuant to Chapter 3781. of the Revised Code unless the regulation addresses subject matter not addressed by the state residential building code or is adopted pursuant to section 3781.01 of the Revised Code.
(b) The board of county commissioners may, by resolution, adopt, administer, and enforce within the unincorporated area of the county, or within districts the board establishes in the unincorporated area, an existing structures code pertaining to the repair and continued maintenance of structures and the premises of those structures provided that the existing structures code governs subject matter not addressed by, and is not in conflict with, the state residential building code adopted pursuant to Chapter 3781. of the Revised Code. The board may adopt by incorporation by reference a model or standard code prepared and promulgated by the state, any agency of this state, or any private organization that publishes a recognized or standard existing structures code.
(c) The board shall assign the duties of administering and enforcing any local residential building regulations or existing structures code to a county officer or employee who is trained and qualified for those duties and shall establish by resolution the minimum qualifications necessary to perform those duties.
(2) The board may adopt regulations for
participation in the national flood insurance program as defined in section 1521.01 of the Revised Code and regulations for the
purposes of section 1506.04 or 1506.07 of the Revised Code
governing the prohibition, location, erection, construction,
redevelopment, or floodproofing of new buildings or structures,
substantial improvements to existing buildings or structures, or
other development in unincorporated territory within flood hazard
areas identified under the
"Flood Disaster Protection Act of
1973," 87 Stat. 975, 42 U.S.C.A. 4002, as amended, or within
Lake
Erie coastal erosion areas identified
under section 1506.06 of
the
Revised Code, including, but not limited to, residential,
commercial, institutional, or industrial buildings or structures
or other permanent structures, as
defined in section
1506.01 of the Revised Code. Rules adopted under division
(B)(2)
of this section shall not conflict with the state residential and nonresidential
building codes adopted pursuant to section 3781.10 of the Revised Code.
(3)(a)
A board may adopt regulations that
provide
for a review of the specific effects of a proposed new
construction on
existing surface or
subsurface drainage.
The
regulations may
require reasonable drainage mitigation and
reasonable alteration of a
proposed new construction before a
building
permit is issued in order
to prevent or
correct any
adverse
effects that the proposed new construction may
have
on
existing
surface or subsurface drainage. The regulations shall not be inconsistent with, more stringent than, or broader in scope than standards adopted by the natural resource conservation service in the United States department of agriculture concerning drainage or rules adopted by the environmental protection agency for reducing, controlling, or mitigating storm water runoff from construction sites, where applicable. The regulations shall allow a person who is registered under Chapter 4703. or 4733. of the Revised Code to prepare and submit relevant plans and other documents for review, provided that the person is authorized to prepare the plans and other documents pursuant to the person's registration.
(b) If regulations are adopted under division (B)(3) of this
section, the board shall specify in the regulations a procedure
for the review of the specific effects of a proposed
new
construction on
existing surface or subsurface drainage. The
procedure shall
include at a minimum all of the following:
(i) A meeting at which the proposed new construction shall
be
examined for those specific effects. The meeting shall be held
within
thirty days after an application for a building permit is
filed or a review is requested
unless the applicant agrees in writing to extend that time
period
or to postpone the meeting to another date, time, or place.
The
meeting shall be scheduled within five days after an
application
for a building permit is filed or a review is requested.
(ii) Written notice of the date, time, and place of that
meeting, sent by regular mail to the applicant. The written
notice shall be mailed at least seven days before the scheduled
meeting date.
(iii) Completion of the review by the board of county
commissioners not later than thirty days after the application for
a building permit is filed or a review is requested unless the applicant has agreed in
writing to extend that time period or postpone the meeting to a
later time, in which case the review shall be completed not later
than two days after the date of the meeting. A complete review
shall include the issuance of any order of the board of county
commissioners regarding necessary reasonable drainage mitigation
and
necessary reasonable alterations to the proposed
new
construction
to prevent or correct any adverse effects on existing
surface
or
subsurface drainage so long as those alterations comply with the state residential and nonresidential building codes adopted pursuant to section 3781.10 of the Revised Code. If the review is not completed
within the
thirty-day period or an extended or postponed period
that the
applicant has agreed to, the proposed new construction
shall be
deemed
to have no adverse effects on existing surface or
subsurface
drainage, and those effects shall not be a valid basis
for the denial of a
building permit.
(iv) A written statement, provided to the applicant at the
meeting or in an order for alterations to a proposed new
construction,
informing the applicant of the right to seek
appellate review of
the denial of a building permit under division
(B)(3)(b)(iii) of
this section by filing a petition in accordance
with Chapter 2506.
of the Revised Code.
(c) The regulations may authorize the board, after obtaining the advice of the county engineer, to enter into
an agreement with the county
engineer or another
qualified
person
or
entity to carry out
any necessary
inspections and make
evaluations about what, if any,
alterations
are
necessary to
prevent or correct any adverse
effects that a
proposed
new
construction may
have on existing
surface or
subsurface drainage.
(d) Regulations adopted pursuant to division (B)(3) of this
section shall not apply to any property that a platting authority has approved under section 711.05, 711.09, or 711.10 of the Revised Code and shall not govern the same subject matter as the state residential or nonresidential building codes adopted pursuant to section 3781.10 of the Revised Code.
(e) As used in division (B)(3) of this section, "subsurface
drainage" does not include a household sewage treatment disposal system as
defined in section 3709.091 of the Revised Code.
(C)(1) Any regulation, code, or amendment may be adopted under this
section only after a public hearing at not fewer than two regular or special
sessions of the board. The board shall cause notice of any public hearing to be published in
a
newspaper of general circulation in the county once a week for the two consecutive weeks immediately preceding the hearing, except that if the board posts the hearing notice on the board's internet site on the world wide web, the board need publish only one notice of the hearing in a newspaper of general circulation if that newspaper notice includes the board's internet site and a statement that the notice is also posted on the internet site. Any notice of a
public hearing shall include the time, date, and place of the hearing.
(2) Any proposed
regulation, code, or amendment shall be made available to
the public at the board office. The regulations or amendments
shall take effect on the thirty-first day following the date of
their adoption.
(D)(1) No person shall violate any regulation, code, or amendment the
board
adopts under sections 307.37 to 307.40 of the Revised Code.
(2) Each day during which an illegal location, erection,
construction, floodproofing, repair, alteration, development,
redevelopment, or maintenance continues may be considered a
separate offense.
(E) Regulations
or amendments the board adopts pursuant to this section, with the exception of an existing structures code, do
not
affect buildings or structures that exist or on
which
construction has begun on or before the date the board adopts the regulation
or
amendment.
(F)(1) The board may create a building
department and employ the
personnel
it determines
necessary to administer and enforce any local residential building regulations or existing structures code the board adopts pursuant to this section. The building department may enforce the state residential and nonresidential building codes adopted pursuant to Chapter 3781. of the Revised Code if the building department is certified pursuant to section 3781.10 of the Revised Code to enforce those codes.
(2) The board may direct the building
department, upon certification, to exercise enforcement authority and to accept and
approve plans pursuant to sections 3781.03 and 3791.04 of the
Revised Code for the class of building for which the department and personnel are certified.
Sec. 307.695. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Arena" means any structure designed and constructed for the purpose of providing a venue for public entertainment and recreation by the presentation of concerts, sporting and athletic events, and other events and exhibitions, including facilities intended to house or provide a site for one or more athletic or sports teams or activities, spectator facilities, parking facilities, walkways, and auxiliary facilities, real and personal property, property rights, easements, leasehold estates, and interests that may be appropriate for, or used in connection with, the operation of the arena.
(2) "Convention
center" means any structure expressly designed and constructed
for
the purposes of presenting conventions, public meetings, and
exhibitions and includes parking facilities that serve the center
and any personal property used in connection with any such
structure or facilities.
(3) "Eligible county" means a county having a population of at least four hundred thousand but not more than eight hundred thousand according to the 2000 federal decennial census and that directly borders the geographic boundaries of another state.
(4)
"Entity" means a nonprofit corporation, a municipal corporation, a port authority created under Chapter 4582. of the Revised Code, or a convention facilities authority created under Chapter 351. of the Revised Code.
(5) "Lodging taxes" means excise taxes levied under division (A)(1), (A)(2), or (C) of section 5739.09 of the Revised Code and the revenues arising therefrom.
(6) "Nonprofit corporation" means a nonprofit corporation that is organized under the laws of this state and that includes within the purposes for which it is incorporated the authorization to lease and operate facilities such as a convention center or an arena or a combination of an arena and convention center.
(7) "Project" means acquiring, constructing, reconstructing, renovating, rehabilitating, expanding, adding to, equipping, furnishing or otherwise improving an arena, a convention center, or a combination of an arena and convention center. For purposes of this section, a project is a permanent improvement for one purpose under Chapter 133. of the Revised Code.
(8) "Project revenues" means money received by an eligible a county with a population of four hundred thousand or more, other than money from taxes or from the proceeds of securities secured by taxes, in connection with, derived from, related to, or resulting from a project, including, but not limited to, rentals and other payments received under a lease or agreement with respect to the project, ticket charges or surcharges for admission to events at a project, charges or surcharges for parking for events at a project, charges for the use of a project or any portion of a project, including suites and seating rights, the sale of naming rights for the project or a portion of the project, unexpended proceeds of any county revenue bonds issued for the project, and any income and profit from the investment of the proceeds of any such revenue bonds or any project revenues.
(9) "Chapter 133. securities," "debt charges," "general obligation," "legislation," "one purpose," "outstanding," "permanent improvement," "person," and "securities" have the meanings given to those terms in section 133.01 of the Revised Code.
(B) A board of county commissioners may enter into an
agreement with a convention and visitors' bureau operating in the
county under which:
(1) The bureau agrees to construct and equip a convention
center in the county and to pledge and contribute from the tax
revenues received by it under division (A) of section
5739.09 of
the Revised Code, not more than such portion thereof that it is
authorized to pledge and contribute for the purpose
described in
division (C) of this section; and
(2) The board agrees to levy a tax under division (C) of
section
5739.09 of the Revised Code and pledge and
contribute
the
revenues therefrom for the purpose described in
division (C)
of
this section.
(C) The purpose of the pledges and contributions described
in divisions (B)(1) and (2) of this section is payment of
principal, interest, and premium, if any, on bonds and notes
issued by or for the benefit of the bureau to finance the
construction and equipping of a convention center. The pledges
and contributions provided for in the agreement shall be for the
period stated in the agreement.
Revenues determined from time to time by the board to be needed
to
cover the real and actual costs of administering the tax
imposed
by division (C) of section
5739.09 of the Revised Code
may not be
pledged or contributed. The agreement shall provide
that any such
bonds and notes shall be secured by a trust
agreement between the
bureau or other issuer acting for the
benefit of the bureau and a
corporate trustee that is a trust
company or bank having the
powers of a trust company within or
without the state, and the
trust agreement shall pledge or assign
to the retirement of the
bonds or notes, all moneys paid by the
county under this section.
A tax the revenues from which are
pledged under an agreement
entered into by a board of county
commissioners under this section
shall not be subject to
diminution by initiative or referendum, or
diminution by statute,
unless provision is made therein for an
adequate substitute
therefor reasonably satisfactory to the
trustee under the trust
agreement that secures the bonds and
notes.
(D) A pledge of money by a county under division (B) of this section shall
not be indebtedness of the county for purposes of Chapter 133. of
the Revised Code.
(E) If the terms of the agreement so provide, the board of
county commissioners may acquire and lease real property to the
convention bureau as the site of the convention center. The
lease
shall be
on
such terms as are set forth in the agreement. The purchase
and
lease are not subject to the limitations of sections 307.02
and
307.09 of the Revised Code.
(F) In addition to the authority granted to a board of county commissioners under divisions (B) to (E) of this section, a board of county commissioners in a county with a population of one million two hundred thousand or more, or a county with a population greater than four hundred thousand but less than five hundred thousand, may establish and provide local funding options for constructing and equipping a convention center.
(G) The board of county commissioners of an eligible a county with a population of four hundred thousand or more may undertake, finance, operate, and maintain a project. The board may lease a project to an entity on terms that the board determines to be in the best interest of the county and in furtherance of the public purpose of the project; the lease may be for a term of thirty-five years or less and may provide for an option of the entity to renew the lease for a term of thirty-five years or less. The board may enter into an agreement with an entity with respect to a project on terms that the board determines to be in the best interest of the county and in furtherance of the public purpose of the project. To the extent provided for in an agreement or a lease with an entity, the board may authorize the entity to administer on behalf of the board any contracts for the project. The board may enter into an agreement providing for the sale to a person of naming rights to a project or portion of a project, for a period, for consideration, and on other terms and conditions that the board determines to be in the best interest of the county and in furtherance of the public purpose of the project. The board may enter into an agreement with a person owning or operating a professional athletic or sports team providing for the use by that person of a project or portion of a project for that team's offices, training, practices, and home games for a period, for consideration, and on other terms and conditions that the board determines to be in the best interest of the county and in furtherance of the public purpose of the project. The board may establish ticket charges or surcharges for admission to events at a project, charges or surcharges for parking for events at a project, and charges for the use of a project or any portion of a project, including suites and seating rights, and may, as necessary, enter into agreements related thereto with persons for a period, for consideration, and on other terms and conditions that the board determines to be in the best interest of the county and in furtherance of the public purpose of the project. A lease or agreement authorized by this division is not subject to sections 307.02, 307.09, and 307.12 of the Revised Code.
(H) Notwithstanding any contrary provision in Chapter 5739. of the Revised Code, after adopting a resolution declaring it to be in the best interest of the county to undertake a project as described in division (G) of this section, the board of county commissioners of an eligible county may adopt a resolution enacting or increasing any lodging taxes within the limits specified in Chapter 5739. of the Revised Code with respect to those lodging taxes and amending any prior resolution under which any of its lodging taxes have been imposed in order to provide that those taxes, after deducting the real and actual costs of administering the taxes and any portion of the taxes returned to any municipal corporation or township as provided in division (A)(1) of section 5739.09 of the Revised Code, shall be used by the board for the purposes of undertaking, financing, operating, and maintaining the project, including paying debt charges on any securities issued by the board under division (I) of this section, or to make contributions to the convention and visitors' bureau operating within the county, or to promote, advertise, and market the region in which the county is located, all as the board may determine and make appropriations for from time to time, subject to the terms of any pledge to the payment of debt charges on outstanding general obligation securities or special obligation securities authorized under division (I) of this section. A resolution adopted under division (H) of this section shall be adopted not earlier than January 15, 2007, and not later than January 15, 2008.
A resolution adopted under division (H) of this section may direct the board of elections to submit the question of enacting or increasing lodging taxes, as the case may be, to the electors of the county at a special election held on the date specified by the board in the resolution, provided that the election occurs not less than seventy-five days after a certified copy of the resolution is transmitted to the board of elections and no later than January 15, 2008. A resolution submitted to the electors under this division shall not go into effect unless it is approved by a majority of those voting upon it. A resolution adopted under division (H) of this section that is not submitted to the electors of the county for their approval or disapproval is subject to a referendum as provided in sections 305.31 to 305.41 of the Revised Code.
A resolution adopted under division (H) of this section takes effect upon its adoption, unless the resolution is submitted to the electors of the county for their approval or disapproval, in which case the resolution takes effect on the date the board of county commissioners receives notification from the board of elections of the affirmative vote. Lodging taxes received after the effective date of the resolution may be used for the purposes described in division (H) of this section, except that lodging taxes that have been pledged to the payment of debt charges on any bonds or notes issued by or for the benefit of a convention and visitors' bureau under division (C) of this section shall be used exclusively for that purpose until such time as the bonds or notes are no longer outstanding under the trust agreement securing those bonds or notes.
(I)(1) The board of county commissioners of an eligible a county with a population of four hundred thousand or more may issue the following securities of the county for the purpose of paying costs of the project, refunding any outstanding county securities issued for that purpose, refunding any outstanding bonds or notes issued by or for the benefit of the bureau under division (C) of this section, or for any combination of those purposes:
(a) General obligation securities issued under Chapter 133. of the Revised Code. The resolution authorizing these securities may include covenants to appropriate annually from lawfully available lodging taxes, and to continue to levy and collect those lodging taxes in, amounts necessary to meet the debt charges on those securities.
(b) Special obligation securities issued under Chapter 133. of the Revised Code that are secured only by lawfully available lodging taxes and any other taxes and revenues pledged to pay the debt charges on those securities, except ad valorem property taxes. The resolution authorizing those securities shall include a pledge of and covenants to appropriate annually from lawfully available lodging taxes and any other taxes and revenues pledged for such purpose, and to continue to collect any of those revenues pledged for such purpose and to levy and collect those lodging taxes and any other taxes pledged for such purpose, in amounts necessary to meet the debt charges on those securities. The pledge is valid and binding from the time the pledge is made, and the lodging taxes so pledged and thereafter received by the county are immediately subject to the lien of the pledge without any physical delivery of the lodging taxes or further act. The lien of any pledge is valid and binding as against all parties having claims of any kind in tort, contract, or otherwise against the county, regardless of whether such parties have notice of the lien. Neither the resolution nor any trust agreement by which a pledge is created or further evidenced is required to be filed or recorded except in the records of the board. The special obligation securities shall contain a statement on their face to the effect that they are not general obligation securities, and, unless paid from other sources, are payable from the pledged lodging taxes.
(c) Revenue securities authorized under section 133.08 of the Revised Code and
issued under Chapter 133. of the Revised Code that are secured only by lawfully available project revenues pledged to pay the debt charges on those
securities.
(2) The securities described in division (I)(1) of this section are subject to Chapter 133. of the Revised Code.
(3) Section 133.34 of the Revised Code, except for division (A) of that section, applies to the issuance of any
refunding securities authorized under this division. In lieu of division (A) of section 133.34 of the Revised Code, the board of county commissioners shall establish the maturity date or dates, the interest payable on, and other terms of refunding securities as it considers necessary or appropriate for their issuance, provided that the final maturity of refunding securities shall not exceed by more than ten years the final maturity of any bonds refunded by refunding securities.
(4) The board may not repeal, rescind, or reduce all or any portion of any lodging taxes pledged to the payment of debt charges on any outstanding special obligation securities authorized under this division, and no portion of any lodging taxes that is pledged, or that the board has covenanted to levy, collect, and appropriate annually to pay debt charges on any outstanding securities authorized under this division is subject to repeal, rescission, or reduction by the electorate of the county.
Sec. 307.6910. (A) As used in this section, "contracting
subdivision" means any political subdivision or taxing district
that enters into an agreement with a board of county commissioners
as authorized by this section.
(B) A board of county commissioners may enter into an
agreement with the legislative authority of one or more political
subdivisions or taxing districts located wholly or partially
within the territorial boundaries of the county providing for both
of the following:
(1) Authorization for the board of county commissioners to
receive funds due the political subdivision or taxing district
from the county treasury, other than funds raised by taxes levied
by
the political subdivision or taxing district, including, but
not
limited to, the political subdivision's or taxing district's
share
of the undivided local government communities fund, provided those
received
funds may lawfully be applied to the purpose for which
money is
owed to the county;
(2) The crediting of the funds so received by the county
against money owed to it by the political subdivision or taxing
district.
The agreement shall be in writing and include the signature
of an authorized officer or representative of the county and of
the political subdivision or taxing district.
(C) Upon entering into an agreement, the board of county
commissioners shall cause two copies of the agreement, certified
by an authorized officer or representative of the county and of
the contracting subdivision, to be transmitted to the county
auditor. The county auditor shall forward one copy of the
agreement to the county treasurer and shall present the other copy
of the agreement to the county budget commission. The county
budget commission shall give effect to the agreement in
determining or revising the amounts to be credited to the funds of
the county and the contracting subdivision in the official or
amended official certificate of estimated resources under sections
5705.35 and 5705.36 of the Revised Code.
(D) The county auditor may rely on the certified agreement
entered into under division (B) of this section for the purpose of
making a certification under division (D) of section 5705.41 of
the Revised Code for a county contract or order of money incurred
on behalf of the contracting subdivision if the county auditor
finds that the amount credited to the county under division (B)(2)
of this section is available in the amount and at the time
necessary to meet the obligation.
(E) The county auditor and county treasurer, in carrying
out
their statutory duties regarding the crediting and
distribution of
money to the funds of the parties to
agreements
entered into under
this section, shall give effect to
any such
agreements certified
to the county auditor under this
section. A
certified agreement
shall not affect the time at which
moneys
otherwise would be
available by law to the parties to the
agreement.
(F) The terms of an agreement entered into under this
section may be enforced in the court of common pleas of the county
that is a party to the agreement in an action for a writ of
mandamus. For purposes of that action, it shall be deemed that
the legislative authority of the contracting subdivision has a
duty to allow payments to the county as specified in the
agreement, that the board of county commissioners of the county
has a duty to receive those payments in the manner specified in
the agreement, and that those duties are specifically enjoined by
law and result from an office, trust, or station.
Sec. 307.98. Boards As used in this section, "county grantee" has the same meaning as in section 5101.21 of the Revised Code.
Each board of county
commissioners may and each other county grantee of the county shall jointly enter into one or more written fiscal grant agreements with the
director of job and family services in accordance with
section 5101.21 of the Revised
Code. If a board enters into a fiscal agreement, the The board of county commissioners shall enter into the agreement on behalf of the county family services agencies, other than a county family services agency that is a county signer as defined in section 5101.21 of the Revised Code grantee.
Sec. 307.981. (A)(1) As
used in the
Revised Code:
(a) "County family services
agency" means all of the
following:
(i) A child support enforcement agency;
(ii) A county department of job and
family services;
(iii) A public children services agency.
(b) "Family services duty"
means a duty state law requires
or allows a county family services agency to
assume, including financial and general administrative duties. "Family services duty" does not include a duty funded by the United States department of labor.
(2) As used in sections
307.981 to 307.989 of the Revised Code, "private entity"
means an entity other than a government entity.
(B) To the extent permitted by federal law, including, when applicable, subpart
F of 5 C.F.R. part 900, and
subject to any limitations established by the Revised
Code, including division (H) of this section,
a board of
county commissioners may designate any private or government
entity within this state to serve as any of the following:
(1) A child support enforcement agency;
(2) A county
department of job and family services;
(3) A public children services agency;
(4) A county department of job and family services and one other of
those county family services
agencies;
(5) All three of
those county family services agencies.
(C) To the extent permitted by federal law, including, when applicable, subpart F of 5 C.F.R. part 900, and subject to any limitations of the Revised Code, including division (H) of this section, a board of county commissioners may change
the
designation it makes under division (B) of this section by
designating another private or government entity.
(D) If a
designation under division (B) or (C) of this section
constitutes
a change from the designation in a fiscal grant agreement between
the director of job and family services and the board under sections 307.98 and 5101.21 of the Revised Code, the director may
require that the director and board amend the fiscal grant agreement and that
the board provide the director written assurances that the
newly designated private or government entity will meet or exceed
all requirements of the family services duties the entity is to assume.
(E) Not
less than sixty days before a board of county commissioners designates
an entity
under division (B) or (C) of this section, the board
shall notify the director
of job and family services and publish notice in a
newspaper of general
circulation in the county of the board's intention to make the
designation and reasons for the designation.
(F) A board of county commissioners shall enter into a written
contract with each entity it designates under division (B) or
(C) of this section
specifying the entity's responsibilities and standards the
entity is required to meet.
(G) This section does not require a board of county
commissioners to abolish the child support enforcement agency,
county department of job and family services, or public
children services
agency serving the county on
October 1, 1997, and designate a different private or
government entity to serve
as the county's child support enforcement agency, county
department of job and family services, or public children
services
agency.
(H) If a county children
services board appointed under section 5153.03 of the
Revised
Code serves as a public
children services agency for a county, the board of county
commissioners may not redesignate the public children services
agency unless the board of county commissioners does all of the
following:
(1) Notifies the county children services board of its
intent to redesignate the public children services agency. In its
notification, the board of county commissioners shall provide the county
children services board a written explanation of the administrative, fiscal,
or performance considerations causing the board of county commissioners to
seek to redesignate the public children services agency.
(2) Provides the county children services board an opportunity to
comment on the proposed redesignation before the redesignation
occurs;
(3) If the county children services board, not more than
sixty days after receiving the notice under division
(H)(1) of this section,
notifies the board of county commissioners that the county
children services board has voted to oppose the redesignation,
votes unanimously to proceed with the redesignation.
Sec. 308.04. Within sixty days after a regional airport authority has been
created under section 308.03 of the Revised Code, the board of trustees for
such regional airport authority shall be appointed as provided in the
resolution creating it.
Each member of the board of trustees, before entering upon his the
member's official
duties, shall take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation that he
the member will
honestly, faithfully, and impartially perform the duties of his office,
and
that he the member will not be interested directly or indirectly
in any contract let by
the regional airport authority. Any contract let by the regional airport authority in which a member of the board of trustees is directly or indirectly interested is void and unenforceable.
After each member of the board has taken the oath as prescribed by this
section the board shall meet and organize by electing one of its members as
president and another as vice-president, who shall hold their respective
offices until the next annual meeting of the board as provided in its bylaws.
At each annual meeting thereafter the board shall elect from its membership a
president and a vice-president who shall serve for a term of one year.
The board shall appoint and fix the compensation of a secretary-treasurer, who
shall not be a member of the board and who shall serve at the pleasure of the
board.
Sec. 317.08. (A) Except as provided in
divisions
(C) and (D) of this
section, the county recorder shall keep
six
separate sets
of
records as follows:
(1) A record of deeds, in which shall be recorded all
deeds
and other instruments of writing for the absolute and
unconditional sale or conveyance of lands, tenements, and
hereditaments; all notices as provided in sections 5301.47 to
5301.56 of the Revised Code; all judgments or decrees in actions
brought under section 5303.01 of the Revised Code; all
declarations and bylaws, and all amendments to declarations and
bylaws, as provided in Chapter 5311. of the
Revised Code;
affidavits as provided
in sections 5301.252 and 5301.56 of
the Revised
Code; all certificates as provided
in section
5311.17 of the
Revised Code; all articles dedicating
archaeological preserves
accepted by the director of the Ohio
historical society under
section 149.52 of the Revised Code; all
articles dedicating nature
preserves accepted by the director of
natural resources under
section 1517.05 of the Revised Code; all
agreements for the
registration of lands as archaeological or
historic landmarks
under section 149.51 or 149.55 of the Revised
Code; all
conveyances of conservation easements and agricultural
easements
under section
5301.68 of the Revised Code; all
instruments
extinguishing agricultural
easements under section
901.21 or
5301.691 of the Revised Code or pursuant to
terms of
such an
easement granted to a charitable organization under
section
5301.68 of the Revised Code; all instruments or orders
described
in division (B)(2)(b) of section 5301.56 of the
Revised Code;
all no further action letters issued under section
122.654 or
3746.11 of the
Revised Code;
all covenants not to sue
issued under
section
3746.12 of the
Revised Code, including all
covenants
not
to sue issued pursuant to section 122.654 of the
Revised Code;
any
restrictions on the use of property contained in
a no further
action letter issued under section 122.654 of the
Revised Code,
any restrictions on the use of
property
identified
pursuant to
division (C)(3)(a) of section
3746.10 of the
Revised
Code, and any restrictions on the use of property contained in a deed or other instrument as provided in division (E) or (F) of section 3737.882 of the Revised Code; any easement executed or granted under section 3734.22, 3734.24, 3734.25, or 3734.26 of the Revised Code; any environmental covenant entered into in accordance with sections 5301.80 to 5301.92 of the Revised Code; all
memoranda of trust, as
described in division (A)
of
section
5301.255 of the Revised
Code, that describe specific
real
property; and all agreements
entered into under division (A)
of
section 1521.26 1506.44 of
the Revised Code;
(2) A record of mortgages, in which shall be recorded all
of
the following:
(a) All mortgages, including amendments, supplements,
modifications, and extensions of mortgages, or other instruments
of writing by which lands, tenements, or hereditaments are or may
be mortgaged or otherwise conditionally sold, conveyed, affected,
or encumbered;
(b) All executory installment contracts for the sale of
land
executed after September 29, 1961, that by their terms are
not
required to be fully performed by one or more of the parties
to
them within one year of the date of the contracts;
(c) All options to purchase real estate, including
supplements, modifications, and amendments of the options, but no
option of that nature shall be recorded if it does not state a
specific day and year of expiration of its validity;
(d) Any tax certificate sold under section 5721.33 of the
Revised Code,
or memorandum
of it, that is presented for
filing
of record.
(3) A record of powers of attorney, including all
memoranda
of trust, as described in division (A) of section
5301.255 of the
Revised Code, that do not describe specific real
property;
(4) A record of plats, in which shall be recorded all
plats
and maps of town lots, of the subdivision of town lots, and
of
other divisions or surveys of lands, any center line survey of
a
highway located within the county, the plat of which shall be
furnished by the director of transportation or county engineer,
and all drawings
and amendments to drawings, as provided in
Chapter 5311. of the Revised
Code;
(5) A record of leases, in which shall be recorded all
leases, memoranda of leases, and supplements, modifications, and
amendments of leases and memoranda of leases;
(6) A record of declarations
executed pursuant to section
2133.02 of the
Revised Code
and durable powers of attorney for
health care executed pursuant to section
1337.12 of the Revised
Code.
(B) All instruments or memoranda of instruments entitled to
record shall be recorded in the proper record in the order in
which they are presented for record. The recorder may index,
keep, and record in one volume unemployment compensation liens,
internal revenue tax liens and other liens in favor of the United
States as described in division (A) of section 317.09 of the
Revised Code, personal tax liens, mechanic's liens, agricultural
product liens, notices of liens, certificates of satisfaction or
partial release of estate tax liens, discharges of recognizances,
excise and franchise tax liens on corporations, broker's liens,
and liens
provided for in sections 1513.33, 1513.37, 3752.13,
5111.022, and
5311.18
of the Revised Code.
The recording of an option to purchase real estate,
including
any supplement, modification, and amendment of the
option, under
this section shall serve as notice to any purchaser
of an interest
in the real estate covered by the option only
during the period of
the validity of the option as stated in the
option.
(C) In lieu of keeping the six separate
sets of records
required in divisions (A)(1) to
(6) of this section and the
records
required in division
(D) of this section, a county
recorder may
record all the instruments required to be recorded by
this
section
in two separate sets of record books. One set shall
be
called the
"official records" and shall contain the instruments
listed in
divisions (A)(1),
(2),
(3),
(5),
and (6)
and
(D) of this section. The
second set of records shall
contain the instruments listed in
division
(A)(4) of this
section.
(D) Except as provided in division
(C)
of this
section, the
county recorder shall keep a separate set of records
containing
all corrupt activity lien notices filed with the
recorder pursuant
to section 2923.36 of the Revised Code and a
separate set of
records containing all medicaid fraud lien
notices
filed with the
recorder pursuant to section 2933.75 of
the Revised
Code.
Sec. 319.202. Before the county auditor indorses any real
property conveyance or manufactured or mobile home conveyance presented
to the auditor pursuant to section 319.20
of the Revised Code or registers any manufactured or mobile home conveyance
pursuant to section 4503.061 of the
Revised Code, the grantee or the grantee's
representative shall submit in triplicate a statement, prescribed by the tax
commissioner, and other information as the county auditor may
require, declaring the value of real property or manufactured or mobile
home conveyed, except
that when the transfer is exempt under division (F)(G)(3) of section
319.54 of the Revised Code only a statement of the reason for the
exemption shall be required. Each statement submitted under this
section shall contain the information required under divisions
(A) and (B) of this section.
(A) Each statement submitted under this section shall
either:
(1) Contain an affirmation by the grantee that the grantor
has been asked by the grantee or the grantee's
representative whether to the best of the grantor's knowledge either the
preceding or the
current year's taxes on the real property or the current or following
year's taxes on the manufactured or mobile home conveyed will be
reduced under division (A) of section 323.152 or under section
4503.065 of the Revised Code
and that the grantor indicated that to the best of the
grantor's knowledge the taxes will not be so reduced; or
(2) Be accompanied by a sworn or affirmed instrument
stating:
(a) To the best of the grantor's knowledge the real
property or the manufactured or mobile home that is the subject of the
conveyance is eligible for
and will receive a reduction in taxes for or payable in the
current year under division (A) of section 323.152 or under section
4503.065 of the Revised
Code and that the reduction or reductions will be reflected in
the grantee's taxes;
(b) The estimated amount of such reductions that will be
reflected in the grantee's taxes;
(c) That the grantor and the grantee have considered and
accounted for the total estimated amount of such reductions to
the satisfaction of both the grantee and the grantor. The
auditor shall indorse the instrument, return it to the grantee or
the grantee's representative, and provide a copy of the
indorsed instrument
to the grantor or the grantor's representative.
(B) Each statement submitted under this section shall
either:
(1) Contain an affirmation by the grantee that the grantor
has been asked by the grantee or the grantee's
representative whether to the best of the grantor's knowledge the real
property conveyed
qualified for the current agricultural use valuation under
section 5713.30 of the Revised Code either for the preceding or
the current year and that the grantor indicated that to the best
of the grantor's knowledge the property conveyed was not so
qualified; or
(2) Be accompanied by a sworn or affirmed instrument
stating:
(a) To the best of the grantor's knowledge the real
property conveyed was qualified for the current agricultural use
valuation under section 5713.30 of the Revised Code either for
the preceding or the current year;
(b) To the extent that the property will not continue to
qualify for the current agricultural use valuation either for the
current or the succeeding year, that the property will be subject
to a recoupment charge equal to the tax savings in accordance
with section 5713.34 of the Revised Code;
(c) That the grantor and the grantee have considered and
accounted for the total estimated amount of such recoupment, if
any, to the satisfaction of both the grantee and the grantor.
The auditor shall indorse the instrument, forward it to the
grantee or the grantee's representative, and provide a copy
of the indorsed
instrument to the grantor or the grantor's representative.
(C) The grantor shall pay the fee required by division
(F)(G)(3) of section 319.54 of the Revised Code; and, in the event
the board of county commissioners of the county has levied a real
property or a manufactured home transfer tax pursuant to Chapter 322.
of the Revised
Code, the amount required by the real property or manufactured home
transfer tax so levied. If the conveyance is exempt from the fee provided
for in division (F)(G)(3) of section 319.54 of the Revised Code and the
tax, if any, levied pursuant to Chapter 322. of the Revised Code,
the reason for such exemption shall be shown on the
statement. "Value" means, in the case of any deed or
certificate of title not a gift in whole or part,
the amount of the full consideration therefor, paid or to be paid
for the real estate or manufactured or mobile home described in the
deed or title,
including the amount
of any mortgage or vendor's lien thereon. If property sold under
a land installment contract is conveyed by the seller under such
contract to a third party and the contract has been of record at
least twelve months prior to the date of conveyance, "value"
means the unpaid balance owed to the seller under the contract at the
time of the conveyance, but the statement shall set forth the
amount paid under such contract prior to the date of conveyance.
In the case of a gift in whole or part, "value" means the estimated
price the real estate or manufactured or mobile home described in the
deed or certificate of title would bring in the
open market and under the then existing and prevailing market
conditions in a sale between a willing seller and a willing
buyer, both conversant with the property and with prevailing
general price levels. No person shall willfully falsify the
value of property conveyed.
(D) The auditor shall indorse each conveyance on its face
to indicate the amount of the conveyance fee and compliance with
this section. The auditor shall retain the original copy of the
statement of value, forward to the tax commissioner one copy on
which shall be noted the most recent assessed value of the
property, and furnish one copy to the grantee or the
grantee's representative.
(E) In order to achieve uniform administration and
collection of the transfer fee required by division
(F)(G)(3) of section 319.54 of the Revised Code, the tax
commissioner shall adopt and promulgate rules for the
administration and enforcement of the levy and collection of such
fee.
Sec. 319.281. The county auditor shall place on the
general
tax list and duplicate compiled in accordance with
section 319.28
of the Revised
Code the amount certified by the health
commissioner of a city or
general health district pursuant to
section 3709.091 of the Revised Code of
any unpaid
operation
permit or inspection fee for a household sewage
treatment
disposal system
or a small flow on-site sewage treatment system or any other unpaid fee levied under Chapter 3718. of the
Revised Code and any accrued late payment penalties, together with
any fee charged by the county auditor for placing the amount on
the general tax list and duplicate and for the expenses of its
collection.
The amount
placed on the general tax list and
duplicate shall be a lien
on the real property on which the
household sewage
treatment disposal system or small flow on-site sewage treatment system is located from the
date the amount was placed on the tax
list and duplicate, and
shall be charged and collected in the
same manner as taxes on the
list.
Sec. 319.54. (A) On all moneys collected by the county
treasurer on any tax duplicate of the county, other than estate
tax duplicates, and on all moneys received as advance payments of
personal property and classified property taxes, the county
auditor, on settlement with the treasurer and tax commissioner,
on or before the date prescribed by law for such settlement or
any lawful extension of such date, shall be allowed as
compensation for the county auditor's services the following
percentages:
(1) On the first one hundred thousand dollars, two and
one-half per cent;
(2) On the next two million dollars, eight thousand three
hundred eighteen ten-thousandths of one per cent;
(3) On the next two million dollars, six thousand six
hundred fifty-five ten-thousandths of one per cent;
(4) On all further sums, one thousand six hundred
sixty-three ten-thousandths of one per cent.
If any settlement is not made on or before the date
prescribed by law for such settlement or any lawful extension of
such date, the aggregate compensation allowed to the auditor
shall be reduced one per cent for each day such settlement is
delayed after the prescribed date. No penalty shall apply if the
auditor and treasurer grant all requests for advances up to
ninety per cent of the settlement pursuant to section 321.34 of
the Revised Code. The compensation allowed in accordance with
this section on settlements made before the dates prescribed by
law, or the reduced compensation allowed in accordance with this
section on settlements made after the date prescribed by law or
any lawful extension of such date, shall be apportioned ratably
by the auditor and deducted from the shares or portions of the
revenue payable to the state as well as to the county, townships,
municipal corporations, and school districts.
(B) For the purpose of compensating county auditors for the expenses associated with the increased number of applications for reductions in real property taxes under sections 323.152 and 4503.065 of the Revised Code that results from the amendment of those sections by H.B. 119 of the 127th general assembly, there shall be paid from the general revenue fund to each county auditor each year an amount equal to one per cent of the total annual amount of property tax relief reimbursement paid to that county under sections 323.156 and 4503.068 of the Revised Code.
(C) From all moneys collected by the county treasurer on
any tax duplicate of the county, other than estate tax
duplicates, and on all moneys received as advance payments of
personal property and classified property taxes, there shall be
paid into the county treasury to the credit of the real estate
assessment fund created by section 325.31 of the Revised Code, an
amount to be determined by the county auditor, which shall not
exceed the following percentages:
(1) On the first one hundred thousand dollars, three and
one-half per cent;
(2) On the next three million dollars, one and
three-eighths per cent;
(3) On the next three million dollars, one per cent;
(4) On all further sums not exceeding one hundred fifty
million dollars, three-quarters of one per cent;
(5) On amounts exceeding one hundred fifty million
dollars, six-tenths of one per cent.
Such compensation shall be apportioned ratably by the
auditor and deducted from the shares or portions of the revenue
payable to the state as well as to the county, townships,
municipal corporations, and school districts.
(C)(D) Each county auditor shall receive four per cent of the
amount of tax collected and paid into the county treasury, on
property omitted and placed by the county auditor on the tax
duplicate.
(D)(E) On all estate tax moneys collected by the county
treasurer, the county auditor, on settlement semiannually with
the tax commissioner, shall be allowed, as compensation for the
auditor's
services under Chapter 5731. of the Revised Code, the following
percentages:
(1) Four per cent on the first one hundred thousand
dollars;
(2) One-half of one per cent on all additional sums.
Such percentages shall be computed upon the amount
collected and reported at each semiannual settlement, and shall
be for the use of the general fund of the county.
(E)(F) On all cigarette license moneys collected by the
county treasurer, the county auditor, on settlement semiannually
with the treasurer, shall be allowed as compensation for the
auditor's
services in the issuing of such licenses one-half of one per cent
of such moneys, to be apportioned ratably and deducted from the
shares of the revenue payable to the county and subdivisions, for
the use of the general fund of the county.
(F)(G) The county auditor shall charge and receive fees as
follows:
(1) For deeds of land sold for taxes to be paid by the
purchaser, five dollars;
(2) For the transfer or entry of land, lot, or part of
lot, or the transfer or entry
on or after January 1, 2000, of a used manufactured home or mobile
home as defined in section 5739.0210 of the Revised Code, fifty cents for each
transfer or entry, to be paid by the person requiring it;
(3) For receiving statements of value and administering
section 319.202 of the Revised Code, one dollar, or ten cents for each one hundred dollars or fraction of one
hundred dollars, whichever is greater, of the value of
the real property transferred or, for sales occurring on or after
January 1, 2000, the value of the used manufactured home
or used mobile home, as defined in section
5739.0210 of
the Revised Code, transferred, except no fee shall
be charged when the
transfer is made:
(a) To or from the United States, this state, or any
instrumentality, agency, or political subdivision of the United
States or this state;
(b) Solely in order to provide or release security for a
debt or obligation;
(c) To confirm or correct a deed previously executed and
recorded;
(d) To evidence a gift, in trust or otherwise and whether
revocable or irrevocable, between husband and wife, or parent and
child or the spouse of either;
(e) On sale for delinquent taxes or assessments;
(f) Pursuant to court order, to the extent that such
transfer is not the result of a sale effected or completed
pursuant to such order;
(g) Pursuant to a reorganization of corporations or
unincorporated associations or pursuant to the dissolution of a
corporation, to the extent that the corporation conveys the
property to a stockholder as a distribution in kind of the
corporation's assets in exchange for the stockholder's shares in
the dissolved corporation;
(h) By a subsidiary corporation to its parent corporation
for no consideration, nominal consideration, or in sole
consideration of the cancellation or surrender of the
subsidiary's stock;
(i) By lease, whether or not it extends to mineral or
mineral rights, unless the lease is for a term of years renewable
forever;
(j) When the value of the real property or the manufactured or mobile
home or the value of the interest that
is conveyed does not exceed one hundred dollars;
(k) Of an occupied residential property, including a manufactured
or mobile home, being transferred to the builder of a new residence
or to the dealer of a new manufactured or mobile home when the former
residence is traded as part of the consideration for the new residence or
new manufactured or mobile home;
(l) To a grantee other than a dealer in real property or in manufactured
or mobile homes, solely for the purpose of, and as a step in, the prompt
sale of the real property or manufactured or mobile home to others;
(m) To or from a person when no money or other valuable
and tangible consideration readily convertible into money is paid
or to be paid for the real estate or manufactured or mobile home and
the transaction is not a
gift;
(n) Pursuant to division (B) of section 317.22 of the Revised
Code, or
section 2113.61 of the Revised Code, between spouses or to a
surviving spouse pursuant to section 5302.17 of the Revised Code
as it existed prior to April 4, 1985, between persons pursuant to
section 5302.17 or 5302.18 of the Revised Code on or after April
4, 1985, to a person who is a surviving, survivorship tenant
pursuant to section 5302.17 of the Revised Code on or after April
4, 1985, or pursuant to section 5309.45 of the Revised Code;
(o) To a trustee acting on behalf of minor children of the
deceased;
(p) Of an easement or right-of-way when the value of the
interest conveyed does not exceed one thousand dollars;
(q) Of property sold to a surviving spouse pursuant to
section 2106.16 of the Revised Code;
(r) To or from an organization exempt from federal income
taxation under section 501(c)(3) of the "Internal Revenue Code of
1986," 100 Stat. 2085, 26 U.S.C.A. 1, as amended, provided such
transfer is without consideration and is in furtherance of the
charitable or public purposes of such organization;
(s) Among the heirs at law or devisees, including a
surviving spouse, of a common decedent, when no consideration in
money is paid or to be paid for the real property or manufactured or mobile
home;
(t) To a trustee of a trust, when the grantor of the trust
has reserved an unlimited power to revoke the trust;
(u) To the grantor of a trust by a trustee of the trust,
when the transfer is made to the grantor pursuant to the exercise
of the grantor's power to revoke the trust or to withdraw trust assets;
(v) To the beneficiaries of a trust if the fee was paid on
the transfer from the grantor of the trust to the trustee or if the
transfer is made pursuant to trust provisions which became irrevocable at the
death of the grantor;
(w) To a corporation for incorporation into a sports
facility constructed pursuant to section 307.696 of the Revised
Code;
(x) Between persons pursuant to section 5302.18 of the Revised Code.
The auditor shall compute and collect the fee. The auditor
shall maintain a numbered receipt system, as prescribed by the
tax commissioner, and use such receipt system to provide a
receipt to each person paying a fee. The auditor shall deposit
the receipts of the fees on conveyances in the county treasury
daily to the credit of the general fund of the county.
The real property transfer fee provided for in division (F)(G)(3) of this section
shall be applicable to any conveyance of real
property presented to the auditor on or after January 1, 1968,
regardless of its time of execution or delivery.
The transfer fee for a used manufactured home or used mobile home shall be
computed by and paid to the county auditor of the county in which the home is
located immediately prior to the transfer.
Sec. 321.08. The county treasurer shall enter on his the
treasurer's account each day the
money received for advance payments of taxes and taxes charged on the general
and special duplicates of the current year in the following manner:
(A) Collections of estate tax to be credited to the "undivided estate tax
fund;"
(B) Collections of classified property taxes, including interest and
penalties thereon, shall be credited to the county library and local
government support libraries fund and distributed in accordance with section 5747.48 of
the Revised Code;
(C) Collections of other taxes and assessments of whatever kind to be
credited to the undivided general tax fund.
Sec. 322.01. As used in sections 322.01 to 322.07 of
the Revised Code:
(A) "Value" means, in the case of any deed not a gift in
whole or part, the amount of the full consideration therefor,
paid or to be paid for the real estate described in the deed,
including the amount of any liens thereon, with the following
exceptions:
(1) The amount owed on a debt secured by a mortgage which
has been of record at least twelve months prior to the date of
the conveyance and which is assumed by the purchaser;
(2) The difference between the full amount of
consideration and the unpaid balance owed to the seller at the
time of the conveyance of property to a third party under a land
installment contract that has been of record at least twelve
months prior to the date of conveyance.
(B) "Value" means, in
the case of a manufactured or mobile home that is not a gift in
whole or in part, the amount of the full consideration paid or
to be paid for the home, including the amounts of any liens
thereon.
(C) "Value" means, in the case of a gift in whole or part,
the estimated price
the real estate described in the deed, or the manufactured or mobile
home, would bring in the open
market and under the then existing and prevailing market
conditions in a sale between a willing seller and a willing
buyer, both conversant with the property and with prevailing
general price levels.
(D) "Deed" means any deed, instrument, or writing by which
any real property or any interest in real property is granted,
assigned, transferred, or otherwise conveyed except that it does
not include any deed, instrument, or writing which grants,
assigns, transfers, or otherwise conveys any real property or
interests in real property exempted from the fee required by
division (F)(G)(3) of section 319.54 of the Revised Code.
(E) "Manufactured home" has the same
meaning as in division (C)(4) of section 3781.06 of the Revised
Code.
(F) "Mobile home" has the same meaning as in
division (O) of section 4501.01
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 323.151. As used in sections 323.151 to 323.159
of
the
Revised Code:
(A) "Homestead" means either of the following:
(1) A dwelling, including a unit in
a multiple-unit dwelling
and a manufactured home or
mobile home taxed as real property
pursuant to division (B) of
section 4503.06 of the Revised Code,
owned and
occupied as a
home by an individual whose domicile is in
this state and who has
not acquired ownership from a person, other
than the
individual's spouse,
related by consanguinity or affinity
for the purpose of
qualifying for the real property tax reduction
provided in
section 323.152 of the Revised Code.
(2) A unit in a housing cooperative that is occupied as a
home,
but not owned, by an individual whose domicile is in this
state.
The homestead shall include
so much of the land surrounding
it, not exceeding one acre, as is
reasonably necessary for the use
of the dwelling or unit as a
home. An owner includes a holder of
one of the several
estates in fee, a vendee in possession under a
purchase
agreement or a land contract, a mortgagor, a life tenant,
one or more tenants
with a right of survivorship, tenants in
common, and a settlor of
a revocable inter vivos trust holding the
title to a homestead
occupied by the settlor as of right under the
trust. The tax
commissioner shall adopt rules for the uniform
classification and
valuation of real property or portions of real
property as
homesteads.
(B) "Sixty-five years of age or older" means a person who
has attained age sixty-four prior to the first day of January of
the year of application for reduction in real estate taxes.
(C) "Total income" means the adjusted gross income of the
owner and the owner's spouse for the year preceding the year
in
which
application for a reduction in taxes is made, as determined
under
the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986," 100 Stat. 2085, 26
U.S.C.A.
1, as amended, adjusted as follows:
(1) Subtract the amount of disability benefits included in
adjusted gross income, but not to exceed fifty-two hundred
dollars;
(2) Add old age and survivors benefits received pursuant
to
the "Social Security Act" that are not included in adjusted
gross
income;
(3) Add retirement, pension, annuity, or other retirement
payments or benefits not included in adjusted gross income;
(4) Add tier I and tier II railroad retirement benefits
received pursuant to the "Railroad Retirement Act," 50 Stat. 307,
45 U.S.C.A. 228;
(5) Add interest on federal, state, and local government
obligations;
(6) For a person who received the homestead exemption for a
prior year on
the basis of being permanently and totally disabled
and whose current
application for the exemption is made on the
basis of age, subtract the
following amount:
(a) If the person received disability benefits that were not
included in adjusted gross income in the year preceding the first
year in
which the person applied for the exemption on the basis of
age, subtract an
amount equal to the disability benefits the
person received in that preceding
year, to the extent included in
total income in the current year and not
subtracted under division
(C)(1) of this section in the current year;
(b) If the person received disability benefits that were
included
in adjusted gross income in the year preceding the first
year in which the
person applied for the exemption on the basis of
age, subtract an amount equal
to the amount of disability benefits
that were subtracted pursuant to division
(C)(1) of this section
in that preceding year, to the extent included
in total income in
the current year and not subtracted under division
(C)(1) of this
section in the current year.
Disability benefits that are paid by the department of
veterans affairs or
a
branch of the armed forces of the United
States on account
of an injury or disability shall not be included
in total income.
(D) "Old age and survivors benefits received pursuant to
the
'Social Security Act'" or "tier I railroad retirement
benefits
received pursuant to the 'Railroad Retirement Act'"
means:
(1) For those persons receiving the homestead exemption
for
the first time for tax years 1976 and earlier, old age
benefits
payable under the social security or railroad retirement
laws in
effect on December 31, 1975, except in those cases where
a change
in social security or railroad retirement benefits would
result in
a reduction in income.
(2) For those persons receiving the homestead exemption
for
the first time for tax years 1977 and thereafter, old age
benefits
payable under the social security or railroad retirement
laws in
effect on the last day of the calendar year prior to the
year for
which the homestead exemption is first received, or, if
no such
benefits are payable that year, old age benefits payable
the first
succeeding year in which old age benefits under the
social
security or railroad retirement laws are payable, except
in those
cases where a change in social security or railroad
retirement
benefits results in a reduction in income.
(a) Survivors benefits payable under the social security
or
railroad retirement laws in effect on the last day of the
calendar
year prior to the year for which the homestead exemption
is first
received, or, if no such benefits are payable that year,
survivors
benefits payable the first succeeding year in which
survivors
benefits are payable; or
(b) Old age benefits of the deceased spouse, as determined
under division (D)(1) or (2) of this section, upon which the
surviving spouse's survivors benefits are based under the social
security or railroad retirement laws, except in those cases where
a change in benefits would cause a reduction in income.
Survivors benefits are those described in division
(D)(3)(b)
of this section only if the deceased spouse received
old age
benefits in the year in which the deceased spouse died. If the
deceased spouse did not receive old age benefits in the year in
which the deceased spouse died, then survivors benefits are those
described in division (D)(3)(a) of this section.
(E) "Permanently and totally disabled" means a person who
has, on the first day of January of the year of application for
reduction in real estate taxes, some impairment in body or mind
that makes the person unable to work at any substantially
remunerative
employment that the person is reasonably able to
perform
and
that will,
with reasonable probability, continue for
an indefinite period of
at least twelve months without any present
indication of recovery
therefrom or has been certified as
permanently and totally
disabled by a state or federal agency
having the function of so
classifying persons.
(F)(D) "Housing cooperative" means a housing complex of at
least two
hundred fifty units that is owned and operated by a
nonprofit
corporation that issues a share of the corporation's
stock to an
individual, entitling the individual to live in a unit
of the complex, and
collects a monthly maintenance fee from the
individual to
maintain, operate, and pay the taxes of the complex.
Sec. 323.152. In addition to the reduction in taxes
required
under section 319.302 of the Revised Code, taxes shall
be reduced
as provided in divisions (A) and
(B) of this section.
(A)(1) Division (A) of this
section applies to any of the
following:
(a) A person who is permanently and totally disabled;
(b) A person who is sixty-five years of age or older;
(c) A person who is the surviving spouse of a deceased
person who was permanently and totally disabled or sixty-five
years of age or older and who applied and qualified for a
reduction in taxes under this division in the year of death,
provided the
surviving spouse is at least fifty-nine but not
sixty-five or more years of
age on the date the deceased spouse
dies.
(2) Real property taxes on a homestead owned and occupied,
or a
homestead in a housing cooperative occupied, by a
person to
whom division (A) of this section
applies shall be reduced for
each year for which the owner obtains a certificate of reduction
from the county auditor under section 323.154 of the Revised
Code
or for which the occupant obtains a certificate of reduction in
accordance with
section 323.159 of the Revised Code. The
reduction
shall equal the amount obtained by
multiplying the tax
rate for the tax year for which the
certificate is issued by the
reduction in taxable value shown in
the following schedule:
|
|
Reduce Taxable Value |
Total Income |
|
by the Lesser of: |
$11,900 or less |
|
$5,000 or seventy-five per cent |
More than $11,900 but not more than $17,500 |
|
$3,000 or sixty per cent |
More than $17,500 but not more than $23,000 |
|
$1,000 or twenty-five per cent |
More than $23,000 |
|
-0- |
(3) Each calendar year, the tax
commissioner shall adjust
the foregoing schedule
by completing the
following
calculations
in September of each year:
(a) Determine the percentage increase in the gross
domestic
product deflator determined by the bureau of economic
analysis of
the United
States department of commerce
from the first day of
January of
the preceding calendar year to the last day of
December of the
preceding calendar
year;
(b) Multiply that percentage increase by each of
the total
income amounts, and by each dollar amount by which taxable value
is
reduced, for the current tax year;
(c) Add the resulting product to each of the total
income
amounts, and to each of the dollar amounts by which taxable value
is
reduced, for the current tax year;
(d)(i) Except as provided in division (A)(3)(d)(ii) of this section, round the resulting sum to the nearest
multiple of one
hundred dollars;
(ii) If rounding the resulting sum to the nearest multiple of one hundred dollars under division (A)(3)(d)(i) of this section does not increase the dollar amounts by which taxable value is reduced, the resulting sum instead shall be rounded to the nearest multiple of ten dollars.
The commissioner shall certify the amounts resulting from
the
adjustment to each county auditor not later than the first
day of
December each year. The
certified amounts apply to the following
tax year. The
commissioner shall not make the adjustment in any
calendar year
in which the amounts resulting from the adjustment
would be less
than the total income amounts, or less than the
dollar amounts by which
taxable value is reduced, for the current
tax year greater of the reduction granted for tax year 2006, if the taxpayer received a reduction for tax year 2006, or the product of the following:
(a) Twenty-five thousand dollars of the true value of the property in money;
(b) The assessment percentage established by the tax commissioner under division (B) of section 5715.01 of the Revised Code, not to exceed thirty-five per cent;
(c) The effective tax rate on residential/agricultural real property, where "effective tax rate" is defined as in division (B)(3) of section 319.301 of the Revised Code, and where "residential/agricultural real property" is defined as in section 5713.041 of the Revised Code.
(B) To provide a partial exemption, real property taxes on any homestead, and manufactured
home
taxes on any manufactured or mobile home on which a
manufactured home tax is
assessed pursuant to division (D)(2) of
section 4503.06 of the
Revised Code, shall be reduced for each
year for
which the owner obtains a certificate of
reduction from
the county auditor under section 323.154 of the
Revised Code. The
amount of the reduction shall equal two and one-half per cent
of the amount of taxes to be levied on the
homestead or the
manufactured or mobile home after applying
section 319.301 of the
Revised Code.
(C) The reductions granted by this section do not apply to
special assessments or respread of assessments levied against the
homestead, and if there is a transfer of ownership subsequent to
the filing of an application for a reduction in taxes, such
reductions are not forfeited for such year by virtue of such
transfer.
(D) The reductions in taxable value referred to in this
section
shall be applied solely as a factor for the purpose of
computing
the reduction of taxes under this section and shall not
affect
the total value of property in any subdivision or taxing
district
as listed and assessed for taxation on the tax lists and
duplicates, or any direct or indirect limitations on indebtedness
of a subdivision or taxing district. If after application of
sections 5705.31 and 5705.32 of the Revised Code, including the
allocation of all levies within the ten-mill limitation to debt
charges to the extent therein provided, there would be
insufficient funds for payment of debt charges not provided for
by
levies in excess of the ten-mill limitation, the reduction of
taxes provided for in sections 323.151 to 323.159 of
the Revised
Code shall be proportionately adjusted to the extent necessary
to
provide such funds from levies within the ten-mill limitation.
(E) No reduction shall be made on the taxes due on the
homestead of any person convicted of violating division (C) or
(D)
of section 323.153 of the Revised Code for a period of three
years
following the conviction.
Sec. 323.153. (A) To obtain a reduction in real property
taxes under division (A) or (B) of section 323.152 of the Revised
Code or in manufactured home taxes under division (B) of section
323.152 of
the Revised Code, the owner shall file an application
with the county auditor
of the county in which the owner's
homestead is located.
To obtain a reduction in real property taxes under division
(A) of
section 323.152 of the Revised Code, the occupant of a
homestead
in a housing cooperative shall file an application with
the nonprofit
corporation that owns and operates the housing
cooperative, in
accordance with this paragraph. Not later than
the first day of
March each year,
the corporation shall obtain
applications from the county auditor's office
and provide one to
each
new occupant. Not later than the first day of May, any
occupant who
may be
eligible for a reduction in taxes under
division (A) of section
323.152 of the Revised Code shall submit
the completed
application
to the corporation. Not later than the
fifteenth day of May, the
corporation shall
file all completed
applications, and the information required by division
(B) of
section 323.159 of the Revised Code, with
the county
auditor of
the county in which the occupants' homesteads are located.
Continuing applications shall be furnished to an occupant in the
manner
provided in
division (C)(4) of this section.
(1) An application for reduction based upon a physical
disability shall be accompanied by a certificate signed by a
physician, and an application for reduction based upon a mental
disability shall be accompanied by a certificate signed by a
physician or psychologist licensed to practice in this state,
attesting to the fact that the applicant is permanently and
totally disabled. The certificate shall be in a form that the
tax
commissioner requires and shall include the definition of
permanently and totally disabled as set forth in section 323.151
of the Revised Code. An application for reduction based upon a
disability certified as permanent and total by a state or federal
agency having the function of so classifying persons shall be
accompanied by a certificate from that agency. Such an
An
application for a reduction under division (A) of section 323.152 of the Revised Code constitutes a continuing application for a reduction
in taxes for each year in which the dwelling is the applicant's
homestead and the amount of the reduction in taxable value to
which the applicant is entitled does not exceed either the
amount
or
percentage of the reduction to which the applicant was
entitled
for the year
in which the application was first filed.
(2) An application for a reduction in taxes under division
(B) of section 323.152 of the Revised Code shall
be filed only if
the homestead or manufactured or mobile home was transferred
in
the preceding year or did not
qualify for and receive the
reduction in taxes under that
division for the preceding tax year.
The application for homesteads transferred in the preceding year
shall be incorporated into any form used
by the county auditor to
administer the tax law in respect to the conveyance
of real
property pursuant to section 319.20 of the
Revised Code or of used
manufactured homes or used mobile homes as defined in section
5739.0210 of the Revised Code. The owner of a manufactured or
mobile home who has elected under division (D)(4) of section
4503.06 of the Revised Code to be taxed under division (D)(2) of
that section for the ensuing year may file the application at the
time of making that election. The application shall
contain a
statement that failure by
the applicant to affirm on the
application that the dwelling on the property
conveyed is the
applicant's homestead prohibits the owner from receiving
the
reduction in taxes until a proper application is filed within the
period
prescribed by division (A)(3) of this section. Such an
application
constitutes a continuing application for a reduction
in taxes for
each year in which the dwelling is the applicant's
homestead.
(3) Failure to receive a new application filed under
division (A)(1) or (2) or notification under division (C) of this
section after a certificate of reduction has been issued under
section 323.154 of the Revised Code, or failure to receive a new
application filed under division
(A)(1) or notification under
division
(C) of this section after a certificate of reduction has
been issued under section 323.159 of the Revised
Code,
is
prima-facie evidence that
the original applicant is entitled to
the reduction in taxes
calculated on the basis of the information
contained in
the original application. The original application
and any
subsequent application, including any late application,
shall be
in the form of a signed statement and shall be filed
after the
first Monday in January and not later than the first
Monday in
June. The original application and any subsequent
application for a reduction
in real property taxes shall be filed
in the year for which the reduction is
sought. The original
application and any subsequent application for a
reduction in
manufactured home taxes shall be filed in the year preceding the
year for which the reduction is sought. The statement shall be on
a form,
devised and supplied by
the tax commissioner, which shall
require no more information
than is necessary to establish the
applicant's eligibility for
the reduction in taxes and the amount
of the reduction, and, for a
certificate of reduction issued under
section 323.154 of the Revised
Code, shall
include an affirmation
by the applicant that ownership of the
homestead was not acquired
from a person, other than the applicant's
spouse, related to the
owner by consanguinity or affinity for the purpose
of qualifying
for the real property or manufactured home tax reduction
provided
for in division (A) or (B) of section 323.152 of the Revised Code.
The form shall contain a statement that conviction of willfully
falsifying information to obtain a reduction in taxes or failing
to comply with division (C) of this section results in the
revocation of the right to the reduction for a period of three
years. In the case of an application for a reduction in taxes
under division (A) of section 323.152 of the Revised Code, the
form shall contain a statement that signing the application
constitutes a delegation of authority by the applicant to the
county auditor to examine any financial records relating to
income
earned by the applicant as stated on the application for
the
purpose of determining a possible violation of division (D) or
(E)
of this section.
(B) A late application for a tax reduction for the year
preceding the year in which an original application is filed, or
for a
reduction in manufactured home taxes for the year in which
an original
application is filed, may be filed with the original
application. If the
county auditor
determines the information
contained in the late application is
correct, the auditor shall
determine the amount of the
reduction in taxes to which the
applicant would have been entitled for the
preceding tax year had
the applicant's application been timely filed and
approved in that
year.
The amount of such reduction shall be treated by the
auditor
as an overpayment of taxes by the applicant and shall be
refunded
in the manner prescribed in section 5715.22 of the
Revised Code
for making refunds of overpayments. On the first
day of July of
each year, the county auditor shall certify the
total amount of
the reductions in taxes made in the current year
under this
division to the tax commissioner, who shall treat the
full amount
thereof as a reduction in taxes for the preceding tax
year and
shall make reimbursement to the county therefor in the
manner
prescribed by section 323.156 of the Revised Code, from
money
appropriated for that purpose.
(C)(1) If, in any year after an application has been filed
under division (A)(1) or (2) of this section, the
owner does not
qualify for a reduction in taxes on the homestead or on the
manufactured or mobile home set forth on such
application, or
qualifies for a reduction in taxes that is to be
based upon a
reduction in taxable value less than either the
percentage or
amount of the reduction in taxable value to which
the owner was
entitled in the year the application was
filed, the owner shall
notify the county auditor that the
owner is not qualified for a
reduction in taxes or file a new application
under division (A)(1)
or (2) of this section.
(2) If, in any year after an application has been filed
under
division (A)(1) of this section, the occupant of a homestead
in a
housing cooperative does not qualify for a reduction in taxes
on the
homestead, the occupant shall
notify the county auditor
that the occupant is not qualified for a reduction
in taxes or
file a new
application under division (A)(1) of this section.
(3) If the county auditor or county treasurer discovers that
the owner of property not entitled to the reduction in taxes
under
division (B) of section
323.152 of the Revised Code failed to
notify the
county auditor as required by division
(C)(1) of this
section, a charge shall be
imposed against the property in the
amount by which taxes were
reduced under that division for each
tax year the county auditor ascertains
that the property was not
entitled to the reduction and was owned by
the current owner.
Interest shall accrue in the manner
prescribed by division (B) of
section 323.121
or division (G)(2) of section 4503.06 of the
Revised Code on the amount by which taxes
were
reduced for each
such tax year as if the reduction became
delinquent taxes at
the
close of the last day the second
installment of taxes for that tax
year
could be paid
without
penalty. The county auditor shall
notify the owner,
by ordinary
mail, of the charge, of the owner's
right to appeal
the charge,
and of the manner in which the owner
may appeal.
The owner may
appeal the imposition of the charge and
interest by filing an
appeal with the county board of revision not
later than the last
day prescribed for payment of real and public
utility property
taxes under section 323.12 of the
Revised Code
following receipt
of the
notice and occurring at least ninety days
after receipt of
the
notice. The appeal shall be treated in the
same manner as a
complaint relating to the valuation or assessment
of real
property
under Chapter 5715. of
the Revised Code. The
charge and any
interest shall be
collected as other delinquent
taxes.
(4) Each year during January, the county auditor shall
furnish
by ordinary mail a continuing application to each person
issued a
certificate of reduction under section 323.154 or 323.159
of
the Revised
Code with respect to a reduction in taxes under
division (A) of
section 323.152 of the Revised Code. The
continuing application
shall be used to report changes in total
income that would have
the effect of increasing or decreasing the
reduction in taxable
value to which the person is entitled,
changes in
ownership or occupancy of the
homestead, including
changes in or revocation of a revocable
inter vivos trust, changes
in disability, and other changes in
the information earlier
furnished the auditor relative to
the reduction in taxes on the
property. The continuing application
shall be returned to the
auditor not later than the first Monday
in June; provided, that if
such changes do not affect the status
of the homestead exemption
or the amount of the reduction to
which the owner is entitled
under division (A) of section 323.152
of the Revised Code or to
which the occupant is entitled under section
323.159
of
the
Revised Code, the application does not need to be
returned.
(5) Each year during February, the county auditor, except as
otherwise
provided in this paragraph, shall furnish
by ordinary
mail an original application to the owner, as of the
first day of
January of that year, of a homestead or a manufactured or mobile
home that transferred during the preceding calendar year and that
qualified
for and received a reduction in taxes under division (B)
of
section 323.152 of the Revised Code for the preceding tax year.
In order to receive the reduction under that division, the owner
shall file the application with the county auditor not later than
the first Monday in June. If the application is not timely
filed,
the auditor shall not grant a reduction in taxes for the
homestead
for the current year, and shall notify the owner that
the
reduction in taxes has not been granted, in the same manner
prescribed under section 323.154 of the Revised Code for
notification of denial of an application. Failure of an owner to
receive an application does not excuse the
failure of the owner to
file an original application.
The county auditor is not required
to furnish an
application under this paragraph for any homestead
for which
application has previously been made on a form
incorporated into
any form used by the county auditor to
administer the tax law in respect to the conveyance of real
property or of used manufactured homes or used mobile homes, and
an
owner who previously has applied on such a form
is not required
to return
an application furnished under this
paragraph.
(D) No person shall knowingly make a false statement for
the
purpose of obtaining a reduction in the person's real property or
manufactured home taxes under section 323.152 of the Revised Code.
(E) No person shall knowingly fail to notify the county
auditor of changes required by division (C) of this section that
have the effect of maintaining or securing a reduction in taxable
value of homestead property or a reduction in taxes in excess of
the reduction allowed under section 323.152 of the Revised Code.
(F) No person shall knowingly make a false statement or
certification attesting to any person's physical or mental
condition for purposes of qualifying such person for tax relief
pursuant to sections 323.151 to 323.159 of the Revised
Code.
Sec. 323.154. On or before the day the county auditor has
completed the duties imposed by sections 319.30 to 319.302 of the
Revised Code, the auditor shall issue a certificate
of reduction in taxes in triplicate for each person who has complied
with section 323.153 of the Revised Code and whose homestead, as
defined in division (A)(1) of section 323.151 of the Revised
Code, or
manufactured or mobile home the auditor finds
is entitled to a reduction in real property or manufactured home taxes
for that year
under section 323.152 of the Revised Code. Except as provided in
section 323.159 of the Revised Code, in the case of a
homestead entitled to a reduction under division (A) of that
section, the certificate shall state the taxable value of the
homestead on the first day of January of that year, the amount of
the reduction in taxable value and the total reduction in taxes
for that year under that section, the tax rate that is applicable
against such homestead for that year, and any other information
the tax commissioner requires. In the case of a homestead or a
manufactured or mobile home entitled to a reduction under division (B) of
that section, the
certificate shall state the total amount of the reduction in
taxes for that year under that section and any other information
the tax commissioner requires. The certificate for reduction in
taxes shall be on a form approved by the commissioner. Upon
issuance of such a certificate, the county auditor shall forward
one copy and the original to the county treasurer and retain one
copy. The county auditor also shall record the amount of
reduction in taxes in the appropriate column on the general tax
list and duplicate of real and public utility property and on the
manufactured home tax list.
If an application, late application, or continuing
application is not approved, or if the county auditor otherwise
determines that a homestead or a manufactured or mobile home does not
qualify for a reduction in
taxes under division (A) or (B) of section 323.152 of the Revised
Code, the auditor shall notify the applicant of the reasons for
denial not later than the first Monday in October. If an
applicant believes that the application for reduction
has been improperly
denied or that the reduction is for less than that to which the
applicant is entitled, the applicant may file an appeal
with the county board of revision
not later than the date of closing of the collection for the
first half of real and public utility property taxes or manufactured home
taxes. The appeal
shall be treated in the same manner as a complaint relating to
the valuation or assessment of real property under Chapter 5715.
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 325.31. (A) On the first business day of each month,
and at the end of the officer's term of office, each officer
named in section 325.27 of the Revised Code shall pay into the county
treasury, to the credit of the general county fund, on the
warrant of the county auditor, all fees, costs, penalties,
percentages, allowances, and perquisites collected by the
officer's office during the preceding month or part thereof for official
services, except the fees allowed the county auditor by division (B)(C) of
section 319.54 of the Revised Code, which shall be paid into the
county treasury to the credit of the real estate assessment fund
hereby created.
(B) Moneys to the credit of the real estate assessment
fund may be expended, upon appropriation by the board of county
commissioners, for the purpose of defraying one or more of the following:
(1) The cost
incurred by the county auditor in assessing real estate pursuant
to Chapter 5713. of the Revised Code and manufactured and mobile homes
pursuant to Chapter 4503. of the Revised Code;
(2) At the county
auditor's
discretion, costs and expenses incurred by the county auditor in preparing the list of real and public utility property, in administering laws related to the taxation of real property and the levying of special assessments on real property, including administering reductions under Chapters 319. and 323. and section 4503.065 of the Revised Code, and to support assessments of real property in any administrative or judicial proceeding;
(3) At the county auditor's discretion, the expenses incurred by the county board of revision under
Chapter 5715. of the Revised Code;
(4) At the county auditor's discretion, the expenses incurred by the county auditor for geographic information systems, mapping programs, and technological advances in those or similar systems or programs;
(5) At the county auditor's discretion, expenses incurred by the county auditor in compiling the general tax list of tangible personal property and administering tangible personal property taxes under Chapters 5711. and 5719. of the Revised Code;
(6) At the county auditor's discretion, costs, expenses, and fees incurred by the county auditor in the administration of estate taxes under Chapter 5731. of the Revised Code and the amounts incurred under section 5731.41 of the Revised Code.
Any expenditures made from
the real estate assessment fund shall comply with rules that the
tax commissioner adopts under division (O) of section 5703.05 of
the Revised Code. Those rules shall include a requirement that a
copy of any appraisal plans, progress of work reports, contracts,
or other documents required to be filed with the tax commissioner
shall be filed also with the board of county commissioners.
The board of county commissioners shall not transfer moneys
required to be deposited in the real estate assessment fund to
any other fund. Following an assessment of real property
pursuant to Chapter 5713. of the Revised Code, or an assessment of a
manufactured or mobile home pursuant to Chapter 4503.
of the Revised Code, any moneys not
expended for the purpose of defraying the cost incurred in
assessing real estate or manufactured or mobile homes or for the
purpose of defraying the expenses described in divisions (B)(2), (3), (4), (5), and (6) of this section, and thereby remaining to the credit of the
real estate assessment fund, shall be apportioned ratably and
distributed to those taxing authorities that contributed
to the fund. However, no such distribution shall be made if the amount
of such unexpended moneys remaining to the credit of the real
estate assessment fund does not exceed five thousand dollars.
(C) None of the officers named in section 325.27 of the
Revised Code shall collect any fees from the county. Each of
such officers shall, at the end of each calendar year, make and
file a sworn statement with the board of county commissioners of
all such fees, costs, penalties, percentages, allowances, and
perquisites which have been due in the officer's office and
unpaid for more than one year prior to the date such statement is required to
be made.
Sec. 329.04. (A) The county department of job and family
services shall
have, exercise, and perform the following powers
and duties:
(1) Perform any duties assigned by
the state department of
job and family services
regarding the provision of public family
services, including the provision of the following services
to
prevent or reduce economic or
personal dependency and to
strengthen family life:
(a) Services authorized by
a Title IV-A
program, as
defined in section 5101.80 of the Revised Code;
(b) Social services authorized by Title XX of the
"Social
Security Act" and provided for by section 5101.46 or 5101.461 of the Revised
Code;
(c) If the county department is designated as the child
support
enforcement agency, services authorized by Title IV-D of
the "Social
Security
Act" and provided for by
Chapter 3125. of
the Revised Code. The county
department
may perform the services
itself or contract with other
government entities, and, pursuant
to division
(C) of section 2301.35 and section 2301.42 of the
Revised Code, private
entities, to perform the Title IV-D
services.
(d) Duties assigned under section 5111.98 of the Revised Code.
(2) Administer disability financial assistance, as required by the state department of job and
family services under section 5115.03 of the Revised Code;
(3) Administer disability medical assistance, as required by the state department of job and family services under section 5115.13 of the Revised Code;
(4) Administer burials insofar as the administration of
burials was,
prior to September 12, 1947, imposed upon the board
of county commissioners
and if otherwise required by state law;
(5) Cooperate with state and federal authorities in any
matter
relating to family services and to act as the agent of
such
authorities;
(6) Submit an annual account of its
work and expenses to the
board of county commissioners and to the
state department of job
and family services at the
close of each fiscal year;
(7) Exercise any powers and duties
relating to family
services duties or workforce development
activities imposed upon the
county department of job and
family
services by law, by resolution
of the board of county commissioners, or by
order of the governor,
when authorized by law, to meet
emergencies during war or peace;
(8) Determine the eligibility for medical assistance of
recipients of aid under Title XVI of the "Social Security Act";
(9) If assigned by the state director of job and
family
services under section 5101.515
or 5101.525 of the Revised Code,
determine
applicants' eligibility for health assistance under the
children's
health insurance program part II or part III;
(10) Enter into a plan of cooperation with the board of
county
commissioners under section 307.983, consult with
the board
in the development of the transportation work plan developed under
section 307.985, establish with the board procedures
under section
307.986 for
providing services to children whose families relocate
frequently, and comply
with the
contracts the board enters into
under sections 307.981 and 307.982 of the
Revised Code that affect
the county department;
(11) For the purpose of complying with a fiscal grant agreement the board
of county commissioners enters into under
section sections 307.98 and 5101.21 of the Revised Code, exercise the
powers and
perform the duties the fiscal grant agreement assigns to the county
department;
(12) If the county department is designated as the workforce
development
agency, provide the workforce development activities
specified in the contract
required by section 330.05 of the
Revised Code.
(B) The powers and duties of a county department of job and
family services are, and
shall be exercised and performed, under
the control and direction of the board
of county commissioners.
The board may assign to the county department any
power or duty of
the board regarding family services duties and workforce development
activities. If the new power or duty
necessitates the state
department of job and family
services changing its federal cost
allocation plan, the county department may not implement the power
or duty
unless the United States department of health and human
services approves the
changes.
Sec. 329.05. The county department of job and family
services may
administer or assist in administering any state or
local
family services
duty in addition
to those mentioned in
section 329.04 of
the Revised Code, supported wholly or in part by
public funds
from any source provided by agreement between the
board of county
commissioners and the officer, department, board,
or agency in
which the administration of such activity is vested.
Such
officer, department, board, or agency may enter into such
agreement and confer upon the county department of job and
family
services, to the extent and in particulars specified in the
agreement, the performance of any duties and the exercise of any
powers imposed upon or vested in such officer, board, department,
or agency, with respect to the administration of such activity.
Such agreement shall be in the form of a resolution of the board
of county commissioners, accepted in writing by the other party
to
the agreement, and filed in the office of the county auditor,
and
when so filed, shall have the effect of transferring the
exercise
of the powers and duties to which the agreement relates
and shall
exempt the other party from all further responsibility
for the
exercise of the powers and duties so transferred, during
the life
of the agreement.
Such agreement shall be coordinated and not conflict with a
fiscal grant agreement entered into under section sections 307.98 and 5101.21, a
contract
entered into under section 307.981 or 307.982, a plan of
cooperation
entered
into under section 307.983, a regional plan of
cooperation entered into
under section 307.984, a transportation
work plan
developed under
section 307.985, or procedures for
providing services
to children whose
families relocate frequently
established under section
307.986 of the Revised
Code. It may be
revoked at the option of either
party, by a resolution or order of
the revoking party filed in
the office of the auditor. Such
revocation shall become
effective at the end of the fiscal year
occurring at least six
months following the filing of the
resolution or order. In the
absence of such an express revocation
so filed, the agreement
shall continue indefinitely.
This section does not permit a county department of job and
family
services to manage or control hospitals, humane societies,
detention
facilities,
jails or
probation departments of courts,
or veterans service commissions.
Sec. 329.14. (A) An
individual whose household income does not exceed one two hundred fifty per cent
of the federal poverty line is eligible to participate
in an individual development account program established by the county
department of job and family services of the county in
which the individual resides.
An eligible
individual seeking to be a participant in the program shall enter
into an agreement with the fiduciary organization administering
the program. The agreement shall specify the terms and conditions of uses of
funds deposited, financial documentation
required to be maintained by the participant, expectations and
responsibilities of the participant, and services to be provided by
the fiduciary organization.
(B) A participant may deposit
earned income, as defined in 26 U.S.C.
911(d)(2), as amended, into the account. The fiduciary
organization may deposit into the account
an amount not exceeding twice four times the amount deposited by the participant
except that a fiduciary organization may not, pursuant to
an agreement with an employer, deposit an amount into an account
held by a participant who is employed by the
employer. An account may have no more than ten thousand dollars in it at
any time.
(C) Notwithstanding eligibility requirements established in or
pursuant to Chapter 5107., 5108., or 5111. of the Revised
Code, to the extent
permitted by federal statutes and regulations, money in an
individual development account, including interest, is exempt
from consideration in determining whether the participant or a member of the
participant's assistance group is eligible for
assistance under Chapter 5107., 5108., or 5111. of the
Revised
Code and the amount of assistance the participant or assistance group
is eligible to receive.
(D)(1) Except as
provided in division (D)(2) of this section, an individual
development account program participant
may use money in the account only for the following
purposes:
(a) Postsecondary educational
expenses paid directly from the account to an eligible education
institution or vendor;
(b) Qualified
acquisition expenses of a principal residence, as defined in 26
U.S.C. 1034, as amended, paid directly from the
account to the person or government entity to which the expenses are
due;
(c) Qualified business capitalization expenses made in
accordance with a qualified business plan that has been approved by a
financial institution or by a nonprofit microenterprise program having
demonstrated business expertise and paid
directly
from the account to the person to whom the expenses are
due.
(2) A fiduciary organization shall
permit a participant to withdraw money deposited by the
participant if it is needed to deal with a personal emergency of the
participant or a member of the participant's family or household. Withdrawal
shall result in the loss of any matching
funds in an amount equal to the amount of the
withdrawal.
(3) Regardless of the reason for the withdrawal, a withdrawal from an
individual development
account may be made only with the approval of the fiduciary
organization.
Sec. 340.03. (A) Subject to rules issued by the director
of
mental health after consultation with relevant constituencies
as
required by division (A)(11) of section 5119.06 of the Revised
Code, with regard to mental health services, the board of
alcohol,
drug addiction, and mental health services shall:
(1) Serve as the community mental health planning agency
for
the county or counties under its jurisdiction, and in so
doing it
shall:
(a) Evaluate the need for
facilities and community mental
health
services;
(b)
In cooperation with other local and regional
planning
and funding bodies and with relevant ethnic
organizations,
assess
the community mental health needs, set
priorities, and
develop
plans for the operation of
facilities and
community
mental health
services;
(c) In accordance with guidelines issued by the director
of
mental health after consultation with board representatives,
develop and submit to the department of mental health, no later
than six months prior to the conclusion of the fiscal year in
which the board's current plan is scheduled to expire, a
community
mental health plan listing community mental health
needs,
including the needs of all residents of the district now
residing
in state mental institutions and severely mentally
disabled
adults, children, and adolescents; all children
subject to a
determination made pursuant to section 121.38 of the Revised
Code;
and all
the facilities and community mental health
services that
are or will be
in operation
or provided
during
the
period for
which the plan will be in operation in the
service
district to
meet such needs.
The plan shall include, but not be limited to, a statement
of
which of the services listed in section 340.09 of the Revised
Code
the board intends to make available. The board must include crisis intervention services for individuals in an emergency situation in the plan and explain how the board intends to make such services available. The plan must also include an explanation of
how
the board intends to make any payments that it may be
required to
pay under section 5119.62 of the Revised Code, a
statement of the
inpatient and community-based services the board
proposes that the
department operate, an assessment of the number
and types of
residential facilities needed, such other
information as the
department requests, and a budget for moneys
the board expects to
receive. The board shall also submit an
allocation request for
state and federal funds. Within sixty
days after the department's
determination that the plan and
allocation request are complete,
the department shall approve or
disapprove the plan and request,
in whole or in part, according
to the criteria developed pursuant
to section 5119.61 of the
Revised Code. The department's
statement of approval or
disapproval shall specify the inpatient
and the community-based
services that the department will operate
for the board. Eligibility
Eligibility for state and federal funding shall be
contingent upon an
approved plan or relevant part of a plan. The department may provide state and federal funding for services included in a plan only if the services are for individuals whose focus of treatment or prevention is a mental disorder according to the edition of the American psychiatric association's diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders that is current at the time the funding is provided. This shall include such services for individuals who have a mental disorder and a co-occurring substance use disorder, substance-induced disorder, chronic dementing organic mental disorder, mental retardation, or developmental disability. The department may not provide state or federal funding under a plan for a service for individuals whose focus of treatment or prevention is solely a substance use disorder, substance-induced disorder, chronic dementing organic mental disorder, mental retardation, or developmental disability.
If the director disapproves all or part of any plan, the
director shall inform the board of the reasons for the disapproval
and of
the criteria that must be met before the plan may be
approved.
The director shall provide the board an opportunity to
present
its case on behalf of the plan. The director shall give
the
board a reasonable time in which to meet the criteria, and
shall
offer the board technical assistance to help it meet the
criteria.
If the approval of a plan remains in dispute thirty days
prior to the conclusion of the fiscal year in which the board's
current plan is scheduled to expire, the board or the director
may
request that the dispute be submitted to a mutually agreed
upon
third-party mediator with the cost to be shared by the board
and
the department. The mediator shall issue to the board and
the
department recommendations for resolution of the dispute.
Prior to
the conclusion of the fiscal year in which the current
plan is
scheduled to expire, the director, taking into
consideration the
recommendations of the mediator, shall make a
final determination
and approve or disapprove the plan, in whole
or in part.
If a board determines that it is necessary to amend a plan
or
an allocation request that has been approved under division
(A)(1)(c) of this section, the board shall submit a proposed
amendment to the director. The director may approve or
disapprove
all or part of the amendment. If the director does
not approve
all or part of the amendment within thirty days after
it is
submitted, the amendment or part of it shall be considered
to have
been approved. The director shall inform the board of the
reasons
for
disapproval of all or part of an amendment and of the criteria
that
must be met before the
amendment may be approved. The
director shall provide the board
an opportunity to present its
case on behalf of the amendment. The director
shall give the
board a reasonable time in which to
meet the criteria, and shall
offer the board technical assistance
to help it meet the criteria.
The board shall implement the plan approved by the
department.
(d) Receive, compile, and transmit to the department of
mental health applications for state reimbursement;
(e) Promote, arrange, and implement working agreements
with
social agencies, both public and private, and with judicial
agencies.
(2) Investigate, or request another agency to investigate,
any complaint alleging abuse or neglect of any person receiving
services from a community mental health agency as defined in
section 5122.01 of the Revised Code, or from a residential
facility licensed under section 5119.22 of the Revised Code. If
the investigation substantiates the charge of abuse or neglect,
the board shall take whatever action it determines is necessary
to
correct the situation, including notification of the
appropriate
authorities. Upon request, the board shall provide
information
about such investigations to the department.
(3)
For the purpose of section 5119.611 of the
Revised Code,
cooperate with the director of mental health in
visiting and
evaluating whether the services of a community mental
health
agency satisfy the certification standards
established by
rules
adopted under that section;
(4) In accordance with criteria established under division
(G) of section 5119.61 of the Revised Code, review and evaluate
the quality, effectiveness, and
efficiency of services provided
through its
community mental
health
plan
and submit its findings
and recommendations to the department of
mental health;
(5) In accordance with section 5119.22 of the Revised
Code,
review applications for residential facility licenses and
recommend to the department of mental health approval or
disapproval of applications;
(6) Audit, in accordance with rules adopted by the auditor
of state pursuant to section 117.20 of the Revised Code, at least
annually all programs and services provided under contract with
the board. In so doing, the board may contract for or employ the
services of private auditors. A copy of the fiscal audit report
shall be provided to the director of mental health, the auditor
of
state, and the county auditor of each county in the board's
district.
(7) Recruit and promote local financial support for
mental
health programs from private and public sources;
(8)(a)
Enter
into contracts with public and private
facilities for the operation of facility services included in the
board's community mental health plan and enter into contracts with
public and private
community
mental health
agencies for the
provision of
community mental
health services that are
listed in section
340.09 of the
Revised Code and included in the
board's community
mental health
plan.
The board may not contract with a community
mental health
agency to provide community mental health services included in the board's community mental health plan unless the services are certified by the director of mental health under section 5119.611 of the
Revised Code.
Section 307.86 of the Revised Code does not apply
to
contracts
entered into under this division. In contracting
with
a
community mental health agency, a board
shall
consider the cost
effectiveness of services provided by that
agency and the quality
and continuity of care, and may review cost
elements, including
salary costs, of the services to be provided.
A utilization
review
process shall be established as part of the
contract for
services
entered into between a board and a
community mental health
agency. The board may establish
this process in a way
that is
most effective and efficient
in meeting local needs. In the case
of a
contract with a
community mental health facility, as defined in
section 5111.023 of the Revised Code, to provide
services
listed in
division (B) of that section, the contract
shall
provide for the
facility to be paid in accordance with the
contract entered into between the
departments of
job and
family
services and mental health under
section 5111.91 of the Revised Code and
any rules adopted under division (A) of section
5119.61 of the
Revised Code.
If either the board or a
facility or community mental health
agency
with
which
the board contracts
under division (A)(8)(a)
of this
section proposes not to renew the contract or proposes
substantial
changes in contract terms, the other party shall be
given written
notice at least one hundred twenty days before the
expiration date
of the contract. During the first sixty days of
this one hundred
twenty-day period, both parties shall attempt to
resolve any
dispute through good faith collaboration and
negotiation in order
to continue to provide services to persons
in
need. If the
dispute has not been resolved sixty days before
the
expiration
date of the contract, either party may notify the
department of
mental health of the unresolved dispute. The
director may require
both parties to submit the dispute to a
third
party with the cost
to be shared by the board and the
facility or
community
mental
health
agency. The third party shall issue to
the board,
the
facility or agency,
and the department
recommendations on how the
dispute
may be
resolved twenty days
prior to the expiration date
of the
contract, unless both parties
agree to a time extension.
The
director shall adopt rules
establishing the procedures of this
dispute resolution process.
(b) With the prior approval of the director of mental
health, a board may operate a
facility or provide a community
mental health service as follows, if there
is no other qualified
private or
public
facility or community
mental health agency that
is
immediately available and willing to
operate such
a facility or
provide the service:
(i) In an emergency situation, any board may operate a
facility or provide a community
mental health service in order to
provide
essential services for the duration
of the emergency;
(ii) In a service district with a population of at least
one
hundred thousand but less than five hundred thousand, a board
may
operate a
facility or provide a community mental health service
for no
longer than one year;
(iii) In a service district with a population of less than
one hundred thousand, a board may operate a
facility or provide a
community mental
health
service for no
longer than one year,
except
that such a board may operate a
facility or provide a
community mental health
service for more than one year with the
prior approval of the
director and the prior approval of the board
of county
commissioners, or of a majority of the boards of county
commissioners if the district is a joint-county district.
The director shall not give a board approval to operate
a
facility or provide a community mental health service under
division
(A)(8)(b)(ii) or (iii) of this section
unless the
director
determines that
it is not feasible to have the
department
operate the
facility or provide the service.
The director shall not give a board approval to operate
a
facility or provide a community mental health service under
division
(A)(8)(b)(iii) of this section unless
the director
determines
that the
board will
provide greater
administrative
efficiency and
more or better
services than would
be available if
the board
contracted with a
private or public
facility or
community mental
health
agency.
The director shall not give a board approval to operate
a
facility previously
operated
by
a
person or other government
entity
unless the board has
established to the director's
satisfaction
that the
person or other government entity cannot
effectively
operate the
facility or
that
the
person or other
government entity has requested
the board to take over operation
of the
facility.
The director shall not give a board approval to
provide
a community mental health service previously provided by a
community mental health agency unless the board has established to
the director's satisfaction that the agency cannot effectively
provide the service or that the agency has requested the board
take over providing the service.
The director shall review and evaluate
a board's
operation
of
a facility and provision of community mental
health service
under
division (A)(8)(b) of this section.
Nothing in division (A)(8)(b) of this section authorizes a
board to administer or direct the daily operation of any
facility
or community
mental health agency, but
a facility or agency may
contract with a
board to
receive administrative services or staff
direction from
the board
under the direction of the governing body
of the
facility or agency.
(9) Approve fee schedules and related charges or adopt a
unit cost schedule or other methods of payment for contract
services provided by community mental health agencies in
accordance with guidelines issued by the department as necessary
to comply with state and federal laws pertaining to financial
assistance;
(10) Submit to the director and the county commissioners
of
the county or counties served by the board, and make available
to
the public, an annual report of the programs under the
jurisdiction of the board, including a fiscal accounting;
(11) Establish, to the extent resources are available, a
community support system, which provides for treatment, support,
and rehabilitation services and opportunities. The essential
elements of the system include, but are not limited to, the
following components in accordance with section 5119.06 of the
Revised Code:
(a) To locate persons in need of mental health services to
inform them of available services and benefits mechanisms;
(b) Assistance for clients to obtain services necessary to
meet basic human needs for food, clothing, shelter, medical care,
personal safety, and income;
(c) Mental health care, including, but not limited to,
outpatient, partial hospitalization, and, where
appropriate,
inpatient care;
(d) Emergency services and crisis intervention;
(e) Assistance for clients to obtain vocational services
and
opportunities for jobs;
(f) The provision of services designed to develop social,
community, and personal living skills;
(g) Access to a wide range of housing and the provision of
residential treatment and support;
(h) Support, assistance, consultation, and education for
families, friends, consumers of mental health services, and
others;
(i) Recognition and encouragement of families, friends,
neighborhood networks, especially networks that include racial
and
ethnic minorities, churches, community organizations, and
meaningful employment as natural supports for consumers of mental
health services;
(j) Grievance procedures and protection of the rights of
consumers of mental health services;
(k) Case management, which includes continual
individualized
assistance and advocacy to ensure that needed
services are offered
and procured.
(12) Designate the treatment program, agency,
or
facility
for each person involuntarily committed to the board
pursuant to
Chapter 5122. of the Revised Code and authorize
payment for such
treatment. The board shall provide the least
restrictive and most
appropriate alternative that is available
for
any person
involuntarily committed to it and shall assure
that the
services
listed in section 340.09 of the Revised Code
are
available to
severely mentally disabled persons residing
within
its service
district. The board shall establish the
procedure for
authorizing
payment for services, which may include
prior
authorization in
appropriate circumstances. The board may
provide
for services
directly to a severely mentally disabled
person when
life or
safety is endangered and when no community
mental health
agency is
available to provide the service.
(13) Establish a method for evaluating
referrals for
involuntary commitment and affidavits filed pursuant
to section
5122.11 of the Revised Code in order to assist the
probate
division of the court of common pleas in determining
whether there
is probable cause that a respondent is subject to
involuntary
hospitalization and what alternative treatment is
available and
appropriate, if any;
(14) Ensure that apartments or rooms built,
subsidized,
renovated, rented, owned, or leased by the board or a
community
mental health agency have been approved as meeting
minimum fire
safety standards and that persons residing in the
rooms or
apartments are receiving appropriate and necessary
services,
including culturally relevant services, from a
community mental
health agency. This division does not apply to
residential
facilities licensed pursuant to section 5119.22 of
the Revised
Code.
(15) Establish a mechanism for involvement
of consumer
recommendation and advice on matters pertaining
to mental health
services in the alcohol, drug addiction, and
mental health service
district;
(16) Perform the duties under section 3722.18 of the
Revised
Code required by rules
adopted under section 5119.61 of
the
Revised Code
regarding referrals by the board or mental health
agencies under contract
with the board of individuals with mental
illness
or severe mental disability to adult care facilities and
effective
arrangements for ongoing mental health services for the
individuals. The
board is accountable in the manner specified in
the rules for ensuring that
the ongoing mental health services are
effectively arranged for the
individuals.
(B) The board shall establish such rules, operating
procedures, standards, and bylaws, and perform such other duties
as may be necessary or proper to carry out the purposes of this
chapter.
(C) A board of alcohol, drug addiction, and
mental health
services may receive by gift, grant, devise, or
bequest any
moneys, lands, or property for the benefit of the
purposes for
which the board is established, and may hold and
apply it
according to the terms of the gift, grant, or bequest. All money
received, including accrued interest, by gift, grant,
or bequest
shall be deposited in the treasury of the county, the
treasurer of
which is custodian of the alcohol, drug addiction,
and mental
health services funds to the credit of the board and
shall be
available for use by the board for purposes stated by
the donor or
grantor.
(D) No board member or employee of a board of alcohol,
drug
addiction, and mental health services shall be liable for
injury
or damages caused by any action or inaction taken within
the scope
of the board member's official duties or the
employee's
employment, whether or not such action or inaction is expressly
authorized by this section, section 340.033, or any other section
of the
Revised Code, unless such action or inaction constitutes
willful or wanton
misconduct. Chapter 2744. of the Revised Code
applies to any action or
inaction by a board member or employee of
a board taken within the scope of
the board member's official
duties or employee's employment. For the purposes
of this
division, the conduct of a board member or employee shall
not be
considered willful or wanton misconduct if the board
member or
employee acted in good faith and in a manner that the
board member
or employee
reasonably believed was in or was not opposed to the
best
interests of the board and, with respect to any criminal
action
or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe the
conduct was unlawful.
(E) The meetings held by any committee established by a
board of alcohol, drug addiction, and mental health services
shall
be considered to be meetings of a public body subject to
section
121.22 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 505.376. When any expenditure of a fire and ambulance
district,
other than for the compensation of district employees,
exceeds twenty-five fifty thousand
dollars, the contract for the expenditure
shall be in writing and made with
the lowest and best
bidder after
advertising for not less than two nor more than four consecutive
weeks in a newspaper of general circulation within the district.
The bids
shall be opened and shall be publicly read by the clerk
of the district, or
the clerk's designee, at the time, date, and
place specified in the
advertisement to bidders or the
specifications. The time, date, and place of
bid openings may
be
extended to a later date by the board of trustees of the district,
provided
that written or oral notice of the change shall be given
to all persons who
have received or requested specifications no
later than ninety-six hours prior
to the original time and date
fixed for the opening.
Each bid on any contract shall contain the full name of every
person
interested in the bid. If the bid is for a contract for
the construction,
demolition, alteration, repair, or
reconstruction of an improvement, it shall
meet the requirements
of section 153.54 of the Revised Code.
If the bid is for any
other contract, it shall be accompanied by a sufficient
bond or
certified check, cashier's check, or money order on a solvent bank
or
savings and loan association that, if the bid is accepted, a
contract will be
entered into and the performance of it will be
properly secured. If the bid
for work embraces both labor and
material, it shall be separately stated, with
the price of the labor and the material.
The board may reject any and all bids. The contract shall
be
between the district and the bidder, and the district shall pay
the
contract price in
cash. When a bonus is offered for
completion of a contract prior to a
specified date, the board may
exact a prorated penalty in like sum for each
day
of delay beyond
the specified date. When there is reason to believe there is
collusion or combination among bidders, the bids of those
concerned
shall be rejected.
Sec. 517.08. The proceeds arising from the sale of cemetery lots under
section 517.07 of the Revised Code shall be used in maintaining, improving, beautifying, and embellishing
such grounds, except that upon unanimous consent of the board of township
trustees, such proceeds may be used in the purchase or appropriation of
additional land for cemetery purposes in accordance with sections 517.01 and
517.13 of the Revised Code; and the board of township trustees may build and
maintain proper and secure fences around all such cemeteries, to be paid for
from the township funds.
Sec. 521.01. (A) As used in this chapter, "private sewage
collection tile" means any tile, ditch, pipe, or other
improvement
installed by a private person to receive and convey
sewage and
sewage effluent from at least five household sewage
treatment disposal systems, as those systems are defined
in rules adopted by the public health council under section
3718.01 3701.34 of
the Revised
Code.
(B) A board of township trustees may maintain and repair
private sewage collection tiles located within a township road
right-of-way in the township, where the expenditure from the
township general fund for materials to maintain and repair the
tiles does not exceed two hundred dollars for any one project. No
maintenance
or repair shall be performed that is paid for from
the
township general fund under this division until the board
adopts a
resolution authorizing the maintenance or repair. If
material
costs would exceed two hundred dollars, the board may
proceed
under
this chapter
to
maintain and repair the tiles by assessing the cost against
property based on the special benefits the property receives from
the project.
Sec. 709.191. In lieu of making any of the payments
required by section 709.19 of the Revised Code and for any
proposed annexation which does not require payments under that
section, the legislative authority of a municipal corporation
which proposes to annex unincorporated territory of a township
may enter into an agreement with the board of township trustees
of the township in which the territory to be annexed is located,
whereby the municipal corporation agrees to make an annual
payment to the township to compensate for lost tax revenues. The
agreement shall set forth the amount of the annual payment and
the number of payments to be made.
If a municipal corporation fails to make an annual payment
pursuant to an agreement entered into under this section, the
board of township trustees shall notify the county budget
commission in writing of the amount owed by the municipal
corporation to the township. The county budget commission shall
reduce the amount apportioned to the municipal corporation from
the undivided local government communities fund pursuant to section 5747.51
or 5747.53 of the Revised Code by the amount of the payment due
the township under the municipal-township agreement and shall
increase, by an amount equal to this reduction, the amount
apportioned to the township from the undivided local government communities
fund.
Sec. 711.05. (A) Upon the submission of a plat for approval,
in accordance with section 711.041 of the Revised Code, the board
of county commissioners shall certify on it the date of
the
submission. Within five days of submission of the plat, the
board shall schedule a meeting to consider the plat and send a
written notice by regular mail to
the fiscal officer of the board of township trustees of the township in
which the plat is located and the board of health of the health district in which the plat is located. The notice shall inform the trustees
and the board of health of the submission of the plat and of the date, time, and location
of any meeting at which the board of county commissioners will
consider or act upon the proposed plat. The meeting shall take
place within thirty days of submission of the plat, and no
meeting shall be held until at least seven days have passed from
the date the notice was sent by the board of county
commissioners. The approval of the board required by section
711.041 of the Revised Code or the refusal to approve shall take
place within thirty days from the date of submission or such
further time as the applying party may agree to in writing;
otherwise, the plat is deemed approved and may be recorded as if
bearing such approval.
(B) The board may adopt general rules
governing plats and subdivisions of land falling within its
jurisdiction, to secure and provide for the coordination of the
streets within the subdivision with existing streets and roads or
with existing county highways, for the proper amount of open
spaces for traffic, circulation, and utilities, and for the
avoidance of future congestion of population detrimental to the
public health, safety, or welfare, but shall not impose a greater
minimum lot area than forty-eight hundred square feet.
Before the board may amend or
adopt rules, it shall notify all the townships in the county of
the proposed amendments or rules by regular mail at least thirty
days before the public meeting at which the proposed amendments
or rules are to be considered.
The rules
may require the board county department of health to review and comment
on a plat before the board of county commissioners acts upon it
and may also require proof of compliance with any applicable
zoning resolutions, and with household sewage treatment rules adopted under section 3718.02 of the Revised Code, as a
basis for approval of a plat. Where under
section 711.101 of the Revised Code the board of county
commissioners has set up standards and specifications for the
construction of streets, utilities, and other improvements for
common use, the general rules may require the submission of
appropriate plans and specifications for approval. The board
shall not require the person submitting the plat to alter the
plat or any part of it as a condition for approval, as long as
the plat is in accordance with general rules governing plats and
subdivisions of land, adopted by the board as provided in this
section, in effect at the time the plat was submitted and the
plat is in accordance with any standards and specifications set
up under section 711.101 of the Revised Code, in effect at the
time the plat was submitted.
(C) The ground of
refusal to approve
any plat, submitted in accordance with section 711.041 of the
Revised Code, shall be stated upon the record of the board, and,
within sixty days thereafter, the person submitting any plat
that the board refuses to approve may file a petition in
the
court of common pleas of the county in which the land described
in the plat is situated to review the action of the board.
A
board of township trustees is not entitled to appeal a decision
of the board of county commissioners under this section.
Sec. 711.10. (A) Whenever a county planning commission or a
regional planning commission adopts a plan for the major streets
or highways of the county or region, no plat of a
subdivision of
land within the county or region, other than land
within a
municipal corporation or land within three miles of a
city or one
and one-half miles of a village as provided in
section 711.09 of
the Revised Code, shall be recorded until it is
approved by the
county or regional planning commission
under division (C) of this
section and the
approval is endorsed in writing on the plat.
(B)
A county or regional planning commission may require the
submission of a preliminary plan for each plat sought to be
recorded. If the
commission requires this submission, it shall
provide for a review process
for the preliminary plan. Under this
review process, the planning commission
shall give its approval,
its approval with conditions, or its disapproval of
each
preliminary plan. The commission's decision shall be in writing,
shall
be under the signature of the secretary of the commission,
and shall be issued
within thirty-five business days after the
submission of the preliminary plan to
the
commission. The
disapproval of a preliminary plan shall state the reasons for
the
disapproval. A decision of the commission under this division is
preliminary to and separate from the commission's decision to
approve,
conditionally approve, or refuse to approve a plat under
division (C)
of this section.
(C) Within five calendar days
after
the submission of a plat for
approval
under this division, the county or regional
planning
commission shall schedule a meeting to consider the plat
and send
a notice by regular mail or by electronic mail
to the fiscal officer of the
board of
township trustees of the
township in which the plat is
located and the board of health of the health district in which the plat is located. The notice
shall
inform the trustees and the board of health of the submission
of the plat and of
the date, time, and location of any meeting at
which the county
or regional planning commission will consider or
act upon the
plat. The meeting shall take place within
thirty
calendar days
after submission of the plat, and no
meeting shall be held
until at
least seven calendar days have passed from
the date the
planning commission sent the notice.
The approval of the
county or regional planning commission,
the commission's conditional approval as described in this
division,
or the refusal
of the commission to approve shall be
endorsed on the plat within
thirty
calendar days after
the submission of the plat for approval
under this division or
within such further time as the applying party may agree to in
writing; otherwise that plat is deemed approved, and the
certificate of the
commission as to the date of the
submission of the plat for approval
under this division and the
failure to take
action on it within that time shall
be sufficient
in lieu of
the written endorsement or evidence of approval
required by this
division.
A county or regional planning commission
may grant conditional approval under this division to a plat by
requiring a person submitting the plat to alter the plat or any
part of it, within a specified period after the end of the thirty
calendar days, as a condition for
final approval
under
this division.
Once all the conditions have
been met within the specified period, the
commission shall cause
its final approval under this division to be endorsed
on the plat.
No
plat shall be recorded until it is endorsed with the
commission's final or
unconditional approval under this division.
The
ground of refusal of approval of any plat submitted
under
this division, including
citation of or reference to the rule
violated by the plat, shall
be stated upon the record of the
county or regional planning commission. Within sixty calendar days
after
the refusal
under this division, the person submitting any plat
that the
commission refuses to approve
under this
division may
file a petition in the court of common pleas of the
proper county,
and the proceedings on the petition shall be
governed by
section 711.09
of the Revised Code as in the case of
the refusal of a planning
authority to approve a plat. A board of
township trustees is not
entitled to appeal a decision of the
commission under this
division.
A county or regional planning commission shall adopt
general
rules, of uniform application, governing plats and
subdivisions of
land falling within its jurisdiction, to secure
and provide for
the proper arrangement of streets or other
highways in relation to
existing or planned streets or highways
or to the county or
regional plan, for adequate and convenient
open spaces for
traffic, utilities, access of
firefighting
apparatus, recreation,
light, and air, and for the avoidance of
congestion of population.
The rules may provide for their
modification by the
commission in specific cases where unusual
topographical and
other exceptional conditions require the
modification. The
rules may require the board county department of
health to review and
comment on a plat before the
commission acts upon it and
also may
require proof of compliance
with any applicable zoning resolutions, and with household sewage treatment rules adopted under section 3718.02 of the Revised Code,
as a basis for approval of a
plat.
Before adoption of its rules or amendment of its
rules,
the
commission shall hold a public
hearing
on the
adoption or amendment. Notice of the public
hearing shall be
sent to all townships in the county or region by
regular mail or electronic
mail at least thirty business days before the
hearing. No
county or regional planning commission shall adopt
any rules
requiring actual construction of streets or other
improvements or
facilities or assurance of that construction as a
condition
precedent to the approval of a plat of a subdivision
unless
the requirements have first been adopted by the board of
county
commissioners after a public hearing.
A copy of the rules
shall be certified by the planning commission to the county
recorders
of the appropriate counties.
After a county or regional street
or highway plan has been
adopted as provided in this section, the
approval of plats and
subdivisions provided for in this section
shall be in lieu of any
approvals provided for in other sections
of the Revised Code,
insofar as the territory within the approving
jurisdiction of
the county or regional planning commission, as
provided in this
section, is concerned. Approval of a plat shall
not be an
acceptance by the public of the dedication of any
street, highway,
or other way or open space shown upon the plat.
No county or regional planning commission shall require a person submitting a plat to alter the plat or any part of it as long as the plat is in accordance with the general rules governing plats and subdivisions of land, adopted by the commission as provided in this section, in effect at the time the plat is submitted.
A county or regional planning commission and a city or
village planning commission, or platting commissioner or
legislative authority of a village, with subdivision regulation
jurisdiction over unincorporated territory within the county or
region may cooperate and agree by written agreement that the
approval of a plat by the city or village planning commission, or
platting commissioner or legislative authority of a village, as
provided in section 711.09 of the Revised Code, shall be
conditioned upon receiving advice from or approval by the county
or regional planning commission.
(D) As used in this section, "business day" means a day of the week excluding Saturday, Sunday, or a legal holiday as defined in section 1.14 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 711.131. (A) Notwithstanding
sections
711.001 to 711.13 of
the Revised Code and except as provided in division (C) of this section, unless the rules adopted under section 711.05, 711.09, or 711.10 of the Revised Code are amended pursuant to division (B) of this section, a proposed
division of a parcel of land along an
existing public street, not
involving the opening, widening, or
extension of any street or
road, and involving no more than five
lots after the original
tract has been completely subdivided, may
be submitted to the planning
authority having approving jurisdiction of
plats under
section 711.05, 711.09, or 711.10 of the Revised
Code
for approval without plat. If
the authority acting
through
a
properly designated representative
finds
that
a
proposed division is not contrary to applicable
platting,
subdividing,
zoning, health, sanitary,
or access management
regulations, or regulations adopted under division (B)(3) of section 307.37 of the Revised Code regarding existing surface or subsurface drainage, or household sewage treatment rules adopted under section 3718.02 of the Revised Code, including, but not limited to, rules governing household sewage disposal systems, it shall
approve
the proposed
division within seven business days after its submission and, on
presentation of a
conveyance of
the parcel,
shall stamp the
conveyance
"approved by (planning authority); no
plat required" and have it
signed by its clerk, secretary, or
other official as may be
designated by it.
The planning authority
may require the
submission of a sketch and
other information
that
is
pertinent
to its determination
under this division.
(B)
For a period of up to two years after the effective date
of
this amendment April 15, 2005, the rules adopted under section 711.05, 711.09,
or 711.10 of the Revised Code
may be amended within that
period to authorize the planning authority
involved to approve
proposed divisions of parcels of land without plat under
this
division. If an authority so amends its rules, it may approve no
more
than five lots without a plat from an original tract as that original tract
exists on the
effective date of the amendment to the rules. The
authority shall make the
findings and approve a proposed division
in the time and manner specified in
division (A) of this section.
(C) This section does not apply to parcels subject to section 711.133 of the Revised Code.
(D)
As used in this section:
(1),
"Business business day" means a day of the week excluding Saturday, Sunday, or a legal holiday as defined in section 1.14 of the Revised Code.
(2) "Household sewage disposal system" has the same meaning
as in section
3709.091 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 718.13. (A) Any information gained as a result of
returns, investigations, hearings, or verifications required or
authorized by this chapter or by a charter or ordinance of a
municipal corporation levying an income tax pursuant to this
chapter is confidential, and no person shall disclose such
information except in accordance with a proper judicial order or
in connection with the performance of that person's official
duties or the official business of the municipal corporation as
authorized by this chapter or the charter or ordinance
authorizing the levy. The tax administrator of the municipal
corporation may furnish copies of returns filed under this
chapter to the internal revenue service and to the tax
commissioner.
(B) This section does not prohibit the legislative authority of a municipal corporation, by ordinance or resolution, from authorizing the tax administrator to publish statistics in a form that does not disclose information with respect to particular taxpayers.
Sec. 742.301. Each employer shall promptly pay the amount
due on the accrued liability on the dates fixed by the board of
trustees of the Ohio police and fire pension fund.
Upon certification by the board that payment of an employer's
accrued liability has not been paid within thirty days following
the date a payment is due, a penalty of five per cent of the
amount due shall be assessed against such employer. If the
payment and penalty have not been paid within ninety days
following the date a payment is due, annual interest at six per
cent shall be assessed against the payment and penalty from the
date that the payment is due.
Upon certification by the board to the superintendent of liquor
control or the county auditor of an amount due from any employer
who is subject to this chapter by reason of such employer's
delinquency in making payments on the accrued liability, the
amount due shall be withheld from the employer from liquor
control permit fees to be distributed to that employer according
to Chapter 4301. of the Revised Code or from the local government communities
fund allocated for distribution to that employer by the county
budget commission in accordance with Chapter 5739. of the Revised
Code. Upon receipt of the certification from the board, the
superintendent or county auditor shall provide for payment against such
funds in favor of the Ohio police and fire pension
fund for the certified amount due and any penalty and interest
thereon.
Sec. 901.261. The director of agriculture, in conducting investigations, inquiries, or hearings, may assess the party to an action that is brought before the department of agriculture pursuant to Chapter 119. of the Revised Code the actual costs incurred by the department for depositions, investigations, issuance and service of subpoenas, witness fees, employment of a stenographer and hearing officer, and the production of books, accounts, papers, records, documents, and testimony if the applicable hearing officer determines that the party to the action has failed to comply with any chapter of the Revised Code or any rule adopted under any of those chapters that is administered by the director or if the hearing officer determines that the action was frivolous conduct by the party. Assessment of costs under this section may be appealed to a court of competent jurisdiction.
Sec. 991.08. The Ohio expositions commission shall use not less than thirty-five per cent of the revenue that it receives from lease payments and parking fees related to events held at the Columbus crew stadium, as it is named on the effective date of this section, for the purpose of improving and maintaining parking facilities that are utilized for events at the stadium.
Sec. 1503.05. (A) The chief of the division of forestry may
sell timber and other forest products from the state forest and state
forest nurseries whenever the chief considers such a sale desirable and,
with the approval of the attorney general and the director of natural
resources, may sell portions of the state forest lands when such
a sale is advantageous to the state.
(B) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a timber sale
agreement shall not be executed unless the person or governmental
entity bidding on the sale executes and files a surety bond
conditioned on completion of the timber sale in accordance with
the terms of the agreement in an amount equal to twenty-five per
cent of the highest value cutting section. All bonds shall be
given in a form prescribed by the chief and shall run to the
state as obligee.
The chief shall not approve any bond until it is personally
signed and acknowledged by both principal and surety, or as to
either by the attorney in fact thereof, with a
certified copy of the
power of attorney attached. The chief shall not approve the bond
unless there is attached a certificate of the superintendent of
insurance that the company is authorized to transact a fidelity
and surety business in this state.
In lieu of a bond, the bidder may deposit any of the
following:
(1) Cash in an amount equal to the amount of the bond;
(2) United States government securities having a par value
equal to or greater than the amount of the bond;
(3) Negotiable certificates of deposit or irrevocable
letters of credit issued by any bank organized or transacting
business in this state having a par value equal to or greater
than the amount of the bond.
The cash or securities shall be deposited on the same terms
as bonds. If one or more certificates of deposit are deposited
in lieu of a bond, the chief shall require the bank that issued
any of the certificates to pledge securities of the aggregate
market value equal to the amount of the certificate or
certificates that is in excess of the amount insured by the
federal deposit insurance corporation. The securities to be
pledged shall be those designated as eligible under section
135.18 of the Revised Code. The securities shall be security for
the repayment of the certificate or certificates of deposit.
Immediately upon a deposit of cash, securities,
certificates of deposit, or letters of credit, the chief shall
deliver them to the treasurer of state, who shall hold them in
trust for the purposes for which they have been deposited. The
treasurer of state is responsible for the safekeeping of the
deposits. A bidder making a deposit of cash, securities,
certificates of deposit, or letters of credit may withdraw and
receive from the treasurer of state, on the written order of the
chief, all or any portion of the cash, securities, certificates
of deposit, or letters of credit upon depositing with the
treasurer of state cash, other United States government
securities, or other negotiable certificates of deposit or
irrevocable letters of credit issued by any bank organized or
transacting business in this state, equal in par value to the par
value of the cash, securities, certificates of deposit, or
letters of credit withdrawn.
A bidder may demand and receive from the treasurer of state
all interest or other income from any such securities or
certificates as it becomes due. If securities so deposited with
and in the possession of the treasurer of state mature or are
called for payment by their issuer, the
treasurer of state,
at the request of the bidder who deposited them, shall convert
the proceeds of the redemption or payment of the securities into
other United States government securities, negotiable
certificates of deposit, or cash as the bidder designates.
When the chief finds that a person or governmental agency
has failed to comply with the conditions of the person's or
governmental agency's bond, the chief shall
make a finding of that fact and declare the bond, cash,
securities, certificates, or letters of credit forfeited. The
chief thereupon shall certify the total forfeiture to the
attorney general, who shall proceed to collect the amount of the
bond, cash, securities, certificates, or letters of credit.
In lieu of total forfeiture, the surety, at its option, may
cause the timber sale to be completed or pay to the treasurer of
state the cost thereof.
All moneys collected as a result of forfeitures of bonds,
cash, securities, certificates, and letters of credit under this
section shall be credited to the state forest fund created in
this section.
(C) The chief may grant easements and leases on portions of the
state forest lands and state forest nurseries under terms
that are advantageous to the
state, and the chief may grant mineral rights on a royalty
basis on those lands and nurseries, with
the approval of the attorney general and the director.
(D) All moneys received from the sale of state forest lands, or
in payment for easements or leases on or as rents from
those
lands or from state forest nurseries, shall be paid into the state
treasury to the credit of the
state forest fund, which is hereby created. In addition, all moneys received
from federal grants, payments, and reimbursements, from the sale of reforestation tree stock, from the sale of forest products, other than
standing timber, and from the sale of minerals taken from the state forest lands and state
forest nurseries,
together with royalties from mineral rights, shall be paid into
the state treasury to the credit of the state forest fund. Any other revenues derived from the operation of the state forests and related facilities or equipment also shall be paid into the state treasury to the credit of the state forest fund, as shall contributions received for the issuance of Smokey Bear license plates under section 4503.574 of the Revised Code and any other moneys required by law to be deposited in the fund.
The state forest fund shall not be expended for any purpose other than the administration, operation, maintenance, development, or utilization of the state forests, forest nurseries, and forest programs, for facilities or equipment incident to them, or for the further purchase of lands for state forest or forest nursery purposes and, in the case of contributions received pursuant to section 4503.574 of the Revised Code, for fire prevention purposes.
All moneys received from the sale of standing timber taken from state forest lands and state forest nurseries shall be deposited into the state treasury to the credit of the forestry holding account redistribution fund, which is hereby created. The moneys shall remain in the fund until they are redistributed in accordance with this division.
The redistribution shall occur at least once each year. To begin the redistribution, the chief first shall determine the
amount of all standing timber sold from state forest lands and state forest
nurseries, together with the amount of the total sale proceeds, in
each county, in each township within the county, and in each school district
within the county. The chief next shall determine the amount of the direct costs that the division of forestry incurred in association with the sale of that standing timber. The amount of the direct costs shall be subtracted from the amount of the total sale proceeds and shall be transferred from the forestry holding account redistribution fund to the state forest fund.
The remaining amount of the total sale proceeds equals the net value of the standing timber that was sold. The chief shall determine the net value of standing timber sold from state forest lands and state forest nurseries in each county, in each township within the county, and in each school district within the county and shall send to each county treasurer a copy of the determination at the time that moneys are paid to the county treasurer under this division.
Twenty-five per cent of the net value of standing timber sold from state forest lands and state forest nurseries located in a county shall be transferred from the forestry holding account redistribution fund to the state forest fund. Ten per cent of that net value shall be transferred from the forestry holding account redistribution fund to the general revenue fund. The remaining sixty-five per cent of the net value shall be transferred from the forestry holding account redistribution fund and paid to the county treasurer for the use of the general fund of that county.
The county
auditor shall do all
of the following:
(1) Retain for the use of the general fund of the county one-fourth of the
amount received by the county under division (D) of this section;
(2) Pay into the
general fund of any township located within the county and
containing such lands and nurseries one-fourth of the amount received
by the
county from standing timber sold from lands and
nurseries
located in the township;
(3) Request the board of education of any school district located within
the county and containing such lands and nurseries to identify which
fund or funds of the
district should receive the moneys available to the school district under
division (D)(3) of this section. After receiving notice from the
board, the county auditor shall pay into the fund or funds so identified
one-half of the amount received by the county from standing timber sold from lands and nurseries located in the school district,
distributed
proportionately as identified by the board.
The division of forestry shall not
supply logs, lumber, or other forest products or minerals, taken
from the state forest lands or state forest nurseries, to any other
agency or subdivision
of the state unless payment is made therefor in the amount of the
actual prevailing value thereof. This section is applicable to
the moneys so received.
Sec. 1504.02. (A) The division of real estate and land
management shall do all of the following:
(1) Except as otherwise provided in the Revised Code,
coordinate and conduct all real estate functions for the
department of natural resources, including at least acquisitions
by purchase, lease, gift, devise, bequest, appropriation, or
otherwise; grants through sales, leases, exchanges, easements,
and licenses; inventories of land; and other related general
management duties;
(2) Assist the department and its divisions by providing
department-wide planning, including at least master planning,
comprehensive planning, capital improvements planning, and
special purpose planning such as trails coordination and planning
under section 1519.03 of the Revised Code;
(3) On behalf of the director of natural resources,
administer the coastal management program established under
sections 1506.01 to 1506.03 and 1506.05 to 1506.09 of the Revised
Code and consult with and provide coordination among state
agencies, political subdivisions, the United States and agencies
of it, and interstate, regional, and areawide agencies to assist
the director in executing the director's duties and
responsibilities under
that program and to assist the department as the lead agency for
the development and implementation of the program;
(4) On behalf of the director, administer sections 1506.10
and 1506.11 and sections 1506.31 to 1506.36 of the Revised Code;
(5) Cooperate with the United States and agencies of it
and with political subdivisions in administering federal
recreation moneys under the "Land and Water Conservation Fund Act
of 1965," 78 Stat. 897, 16 U.S.C.A. 4601-8, as amended; prepare
and distribute the statewide comprehensive outdoor recreation
plan; and administer the state recreational vehicle fund created
in section 4519.11 of the Revised Code;
(6)(4)(a) Support the geographic information system needs for
the department as requested by the director, which shall include,
but not be limited to, all of the following:
(i) Assisting in the training and education of department
resource managers, administrators, and other staff in the
application and use of geographic information system
technology;
(ii) Providing technical support to the department in the
design, preparation of data, and use of appropriate geographic
information system applications in order to help solve resource
related problems and to improve the effectiveness and efficiency
of department delivered services;
(iii) Creating, maintaining, and documenting spatial
digital data bases for the division and for other divisions as
assigned by the director.
(b) Provide information to and otherwise assist government
officials, planners, and resource managers in understanding land
use planning and resource management;
(c) Provide continuing assistance to local government
officials and others in natural resource digital data base
development and in applying and utilizing the geographic
information system for land use planning, current agricultural
use value assessment, development reviews, coastal management,
and other resource management activities;
(d) Coordinate and administer the remote sensing needs of
the department, including the collection and analysis of aerial
photography, satellite data, and other data pertaining to land,
water, and other resources of the state;
(e) Prepare and publish maps and digital data relating to
the state's land use and land cover over time on a local,
regional, and statewide basis;
(f) Locate and distribute hard copy maps, digital data,
aerial photography, and other resource data and information to
government agencies and the public.
(7)(5) Prepare special studies and execute any other duties,
functions, and responsibilities requested by the director.
(B) The division may do any of the following:
(1) Coordinate such environmental matters concerning the
department and the state as are necessary to comply with the
"National Environmental Policy Act of 1969," 83 Stat. 852, 42
U.S.C.A. 4321, as amended, the "Intergovernmental Cooperation Act
of 1968," 82 Stat. 1098, 31 U.S.C.A. 6506, and the "Federal Water
Pollution Control Act," 91 Stat. 1566 (1977), 33 U.S.C.A. 1251,
as amended, and regulations adopted under those acts;
(2) With the approval of the director, coordinate and administer compensatory mitigation grant programs and other programs for streams and wetlands as approved in accordance with certifications and permits issued under sections 401 and 404 of the "Federal Water Pollution Control Act", 91 Stat. 1566(1977), 33 U.S.C.A. 1251, as amended, by the environmental protection agency and the United States army corps of engineers;
(3) Administer any state or federally funded grant program
that is related to natural resources and recreation as considered
necessary by the director.
Sec. 1506.01. As used in this chapter:
(A) "Coastal area" means the waters of Lake Erie, the
islands in the lake, and the lands under and adjacent to the
lake, including transitional areas, wetlands, and beaches. The
coastal area extends in Lake Erie to the international boundary
line between the United States and Canada and landward only to
the extent necessary to include shorelands, the uses of which
have a direct and significant impact on coastal waters as
determined by the director of natural resources.
(B) "Coastal management program" means the comprehensive
action of the state and its political subdivisions cooperatively
to preserve, protect, develop, restore, or enhance the resources
of the coastal area and to ensure wise use of the land and water
resources of the coastal area, giving attention to natural,
cultural, historic, and aesthetic values; agricultural,
recreational, energy, and economic needs; and the national
interest. "Coastal management program" includes the
establishment of objectives, policies, standards, and criteria
concerning, without limitation, protection of air, water,
wildlife, rare and endangered species, wetlands and natural
areas, and other natural resources in the coastal area;
management of coastal development and redevelopment; preservation
and restoration of historic, cultural, and aesthetic coastal
features; and public access to the coastal area for recreation
purposes.
(C) "Coastal management program document" means a
comprehensive statement consisting of, without limitation, text,
maps, and illustrations that is adopted by the director in
accordance with this chapter, describes the objectives, policies,
standards, and criteria of the coastal management program for
guiding public and private uses of lands and waters in the
coastal area, lists the governmental agencies, including, without
limitation, state agencies, involved in implementing the coastal
management program, describes their applicable policies and
programs, and cites the statutes and rules under which they may
adopt and implement those policies and programs.
(D) "Person" means any agency of this state, any political
subdivision of this state or of the United States, and any legal
entity defined as a person under section 1.59 of the Revised
Code.
(E) "Director" means the director of natural resources or
the director's designee.
(F) "Permanent structure" means any residential,
commercial, industrial, institutional, or agricultural building,
any mobile home as defined in division
(O) of section 4501.01 of the
Revised Code, any manufactured home as defined in division (C)(4)
of section 3781.06 of the Revised Code, and any septic system that receives
sewage from a single-family, two-family, or three-family dwelling, but does
not
include any recreational vehicle as defined in section 4501.01 of
the Revised Code.
(G) "State agency" or "agency of the state" has the same
meaning as "agency" as defined in section 111.15 of the Revised
Code.
(H) "Coastal flood hazard area" means any territory within
the coastal area that has been identified as a flood hazard area
under the "Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973," 87 Stat. 975,
42 U.S.C.A. 4002, as amended.
(I) "Coastal erosion area" means any
territory included in
Lake Erie coastal erosion areas
identified by the director under section 1506.06 of the Revised Code.
(J) "Conservancy district" means a conservancy district that is established under Chapter 6101. of the Revised Code.
(K) "Park board" means the board of park commissioners of a park district that is created under Chapter 1545. of the Revised Code.
(L) "Erosion control structure" means a structure that is designed solely and specifically to reduce or control erosion of the shore along or near Lake Erie, including, without limitation, revetments, seawalls, bulkheads, certain breakwaters, and similar structures.
(M) "Shore structure" includes, but is not limited to, beaches; groins; revetments; bulkheads; seawalls; breakwaters; certain dikes designated by the chief of the division of water; piers; docks; jetties; wharves; marinas; boat ramps; any associated fill or debris used as part of the construction of shore structures that may affect shore erosion, wave action, or inundation; and fill or debris that is placed along or near the shore, including bluffs, banks, or beach ridges, for the purpose of stabilizing slopes.
Sec. 1521.20 1506.38. The chief director of the
division of water
natural resources shall act as the erosion agent
of the state for the purpose of cooperating with the secretary
of the army, acting through the chief of engineers of the United
States army corps of engineers in the department of defense. The chief
director shall
cooperate with the secretary in carrying out, and may conduct,
investigations and studies of conditions along the
shorelines of Lake Erie and of the bays and projections
therefrom, and of the islands therein, within the territorial
waters of the state, with a view to devising and perfecting
economical and effective methods and works for preventing,
correcting, and controlling shore erosion and damage
therefrom and
controlling the inundation of improved property by
the waters of Lake Erie, its bays, and associated inlets.
Sec. 1521.21 1506.39. The chief director of the
division of
water natural resources, in the discharge of the
chief's
director's duties under sections
1507.20 1506.38 to 1507.30 1506.48 of the
Revised Code, may call to
the chief's director's assistance, temporarily, any engineers
or other employees in
any state department, or in the Ohio state university or other
educational institutions financed wholly or in part by the state,
for the purpose of devising the most effective and economical
methods of controlling shore erosion
and damage from it and controlling the inundation of improved
property by the waters of Lake Erie and
its bays and associated inlets.
Such engineers and employees shall not receive any
additional compensation over that which they receive from the
departments or institutions by which they are employed, but they shall be
reimbursed for their actual necessary expenses incurred while
working under the direction of the chief director on erosion and
inundation projects.
Sec. 1521.22 1506.40. No person shall construct a beach,
groin, or other structure to control erosion, wave action, or
inundation along or near the
Ohio shoreline of Lake Erie, including related islands, bays, and inlets,
without
first obtaining a
shore structure permit from
the chief of the division director of water. The natural resources.
The application for a shore structure
permit shall include detailed
plans and specifications prepared by a professional engineer registered under
Chapter 4733. of the Revised Code. An applicant shall provide
appropriate
evidence of compliance with any applicable provisions of this chapter
and Chapters 1505. and 1506. 1521. of the Revised Code, as determined by
the chief director. A temporary shore structure permit
may be issued by the chief or an authorized representative of the chief director if it
is determined necessary to safeguard life, health, or property.
Each application or reapplication for a permit under this section shall be
accompanied by a non-refundable fee as
the chief director shall prescribe by rule.
If the application is approved,
the chief director shall issue a permit to the applicant authorizing
construction of
the project. If requested in writing by the applicant
within thirty days of issuance of a notice of disapproval of the
application, the chief director shall conduct an
adjudication hearing under Chapter 119. of the Revised Code,
except sections 119.12 and 119.121 of the Revised Code. After
reviewing the record of the hearing, the chief director shall
issue a final order approving the
application, disapproving it, or approving it conditioned on the making of
specified revisions
in the plans and specifications.
The chief director, by rule, shall limit the period during which a
construction
permit issued under this section is valid and shall establish reapplication
requirements governing a construction permit that expires before construction
is completed.
In accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code, the chief
director shall
adopt, and may amend or rescind, such rules as are necessary for the
administration, implementation, and enforcement of this section.
Sec. 1521.23 1506.41. All moneys derived from the granting of
permits
and leases under section 1505.07 of the Revised Code for the
removal of sand, gravel, stone, gas, oil, and other minerals and substances
from and under the bed of Lake Erie and from applications
for shore structure permits submitted under section
1521.22 1506.40 of
the Revised Code shall be paid into the state treasury to the credit
of the permit and lease fund, which is hereby created. Notwithstanding
any section of the Revised Code relating to the distribution
or crediting of fines for violations of the Revised Code,
all fines imposed under division (A) of
section 1505.99 of the Revised Code and under division (C) of section
1521.99 1506.99 of
the Revised Code shall be paid into that fund. The fund
shall be administered by the department of natural
resources for the protection of Lake Erie shores and
waters; investigation and control of erosion; the
planning,
development, and construction of facilities for recreational
use of Lake Erie; implementation of section 1521.22
1506.40 of the Revised Code; preparation of the state shore erosion plan
under section 1521.29 1506.47 of the Revised Code; and
state administration of Lake Erie coastal erosion areas
under sections 1506.06 and 1506.07 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 1521.24 1506.42. The state, acting through the chief
director of the division of
water natural resources, subject to section
1521.28 1506.46 of the Revised Code, may enter into agreements
with
counties, townships, municipal corporations, park boards, and
conservancy districts, other political subdivisions, or any state
departments or divisions for the purpose of constructing and
maintaining projects to control
erosion
along the Ohio shoreline of Lake Erie and in any rivers and bays that are
connected with Lake Erie and any other watercourses that flow into Lake Erie.
Such
projects also may be constructed on any Lake Erie
island that is situated within the boundaries of the state.
The cost of such shore erosion projects that are for the
benefit of public littoral property shall be prorated on the
basis of two-thirds of the total cost to the state through
appropriations made to the division department of water natural resources and
one-third of the cost to the counties, townships, municipal
corporations, park boards, conservancy districts, or other political
subdivisions.
If a shore erosion emergency is declared by the governor,
the state, acting through the chief director, may spend whatever
state funds are available to alleviate shore erosion, without
participation by any political subdivision, regardless of whether
the project will benefit public or private littoral property.
A board of county commissioners, acting for the county
over which it has jurisdiction, may enter into and carry out
agreements with the chief director for the construction and
maintenance of projects to control
shore
erosion. In providing the funds for the county's proportionate
share of the cost of constructing and maintaining the projects
referred to in this section, the board shall be governed by and
may issue and refund bonds in accordance with Chapter 133. of the
Revised Code.
A municipal corporation or a township, acting through the
legislative authority or the board of township trustees, may
enter into and carry out agreements with the chief director for
the purpose of constructing and maintaining projects to control shore
erosion. In providing the funds
for
the municipal corporation's or township's proportionate share of
the cost of constructing and maintaining the projects referred to
in this section, a municipal corporation or township may issue
and refund bonds in accordance with Chapter 133. of the Revised
Code. The contract shall be executed on behalf of the municipal
corporation or township by the mayor, city manager, or other
chief executive officer who has the authority to act for the
municipal corporation or township.
Conservancy districts may enter into and carry out
agreements with the chief director, in accordance with the intent
of this section, under the powers conferred upon conservancy
districts under Chapter 6101. of the Revised Code.
Park boards may enter into and carry out agreements with
the chief director, in accordance with the intent of this
section, and issue bonds for that purpose under the powers
conferred upon park districts under Chapter 1545. of the Revised Code.
The chief director shall approve and supervise all projects
that are to be constructed in accordance with this section. The
chief director shall not proceed with the construction of any
project until all funds that are to be paid by the county, township,
municipal corporation, park board, or conservancy district, in
accordance with the terms of the agreement entered into between
the chief director and the county, township, municipal corporation,
park board, or conservancy district, are in the chief's
director's possession and
deposited in the shore erosion fund, which is hereby created in
the state treasury. If the chief director finds it to be in the
best interests of the state to construct projects as set forth in
this section by the state itself, without the financial
contribution of counties, townships, municipal corporations, park boards, or
conservancy districts, the chief director may construct the
projects.
In deciding whether to assist a county or municipal
corporation in constructing and maintaining a project under this
section, the state, acting through the chief director, shall
consider, among other factors, whether the county or municipal
corporation has adopted or is in the process of adopting a Lake
Erie coastal erosion area resolution or
ordinance under division
(D) of section 1506.07 of the Revised Code.
All projects constructed by the state in conformity with
sections 1521.20 1506.38 to 1521.28 1506.46 of
the Revised Code shall be
constructed subject to sections 153.01 to 153.20 of the Revised
Code, except that the state architect and engineer is not
required to prepare the plans and specifications for those
projects.
Sec. 1521.25 1506.43. The chief director of the
division of water natural resources may
enter into a contract with any county, township,
municipal corporation, conservancy
district, or park board that has an agreement with the state in
accordance with section 1521.24 1506.42 of the Revised Code
for the construction of a shore erosion project. No contract shall be let
until all money that is to be
paid by the political subdivision entering into the agreement has been
deposited in the shore erosion fund created in that section
1521.24 of the Revised
Code,
and no contract shall be valid until approved by the director of natural
resources.
Sec. 1521.26 1506.44. (A) A board of county
commissioners may use a loan obtained under division
(C) of this section to provide
financial assistance to any person who owns real property in a
coastal erosion area, as defined in section 1506.01 of the
Revised Code, and who has received a
permit under section 1521.22 1506.40 of the
Revised Code to construct an erosion
control structure in that coastal erosion area. The board shall enter into an
agreement with
the person that complies with all of the following
requirements:
(1) The agreement shall identify the person's real property for which the
erosion control structure is being constructed and shall include a legal
description of that property and a reference to the volume and page of the
deed record in which the title of that person to that property is recorded.
(2) In accordance with rules
adopted by the Ohio water
development authority under division
(V) of section 6121.04 of the
Revised
Code for the purposes of
division (C) of this section
and pursuant to an agreement between the board and the authority
under that division, the board shall agree to cause payments to
be made by the authority to the contractor hired by the person
to construct an erosion control structure in amounts not to
exceed the total amount specified in the agreement between the
board and the person.
(3) The person shall agree to pay to the board, or to the authority as the
assignee pursuant to division (C) of this section, the total amount
of the payments plus administrative or other costs of the board or the
authority at times, in installments, and bearing interest as specified in the
agreement.
The agreement may contain additional provisions that the board determines
necessary to safeguard the interests of the county or to comply with an
agreement entered into under division (C) of this section.
(B) Upon entering into an agreement under division
(A) of this section, the board
shall do all of the following:
(1) Cause the agreement to be recorded in the county deed records in
the office of the county recorder of the county in which the
real property is situated. Failure to record the agreement
does not affect the validity of the agreement or the collection
of any amounts due under the agreement.
(2) Establish by resolution an erosion
control repayment fund into which shall be deposited all amounts
collected under division (B)(3)
of this section. Moneys in that fund shall be used by the board
for the repayment of the loan and for administrative or other
costs of the board or the authority as specified in an agreement
entered into under division (C)
of this section. If the amount of money in the fund is inadequate to repay
the loan when due, the board of county commissioners, by resolution, may
advance money from any other fund in order to repay the loan if that use of
the money from the other fund is not in conflict with law.
If the board so advances money in order to repay the loan, the board
subsequently shall reimburse each fund from which the board advances money
with moneys from the erosion control repayment fund.
(3) Bill and collect all amounts when due
under the agreement entered into under division
(A) of this section. The board shall certify amounts
not paid when due to the county auditor, who shall enter the amounts on the
real property tax list and duplicate against the property identified under
division (A)(1) of this section. The amounts not
paid when due shall be a lien on that property from the date on which the
amounts are placed on the tax list and duplicate and shall be collected in the
same manner as other taxes.
(C) A board may apply to the authority for a loan for the purpose
of entering into agreements under division (A) of this section. The
loan shall be for an amount and on the terms established in an agreement
between the board and the authority. The board may assign any agreements
entered into under division (A) of
this section to the authority in order to provide for the repayment of the
loan and may pledge any lawfully available revenues to the repayment of the
loan, provided that no moneys raised by taxation shall be obligated or pledged
by the board for the repayment of the loan. Any agreement with the authority
pursuant to this division is not subject to Chapter 133. of the Revised Code or any
requirements or limitations established in that chapter.
(D) The authority, as
assignee of any agreement pursuant to division
(C) of this section, may
enforce and compel the board and the county auditor by mandamus
pursuant to Chapter 2731. of
the Revised Code to comply with division (B) of
this section in a timely manner.
(E) The construction of an erosion control structure by a
contractor hired by an individual homeowner, group of individual homeowners,
or homeowners association that enters into an agreement with a board under
division (A) of this section is not a public improvement, as defined
in section 4115.03 of the Revised Code, and is not subject to competitive
bidding or public
bond laws.
Sec. 1521.27 1506.45. The state, or any county, township,
municipal corporation,
conservancy district, or park board that has entered into a contract under
section 1521.25 1506.43 of the Revised Code, may acquire lands
by gift or devise,
purchase, or appropriation. In case of appropriation, the proceedings shall
be instituted in the name of the state or the political subdivision and shall
be
conducted in the manner provided for the appropriation of private property by
the state or the political subdivision insofar as those proceedings are
applicable. Either the fee or any lesser interest may be acquired as the
state or the political subdivision considers advisable.
Sec. 1521.28 1506.46. Any action taken by the chief
director of the division of
water natural resources under sections
1521.20 1506.38 to 1521.30 1506.48 of the Revised Code shall
not be deemed in conflict with certain powers and duties conferred upon and
delegated to federal agencies and to municipal corporations under Section 7 of
Article XVIII, Ohio Constitution, or as provided by sections 721.04 to 721.11
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 1521.29 1506.47. The chief director of the
division of water natural resources, in
cooperation with appropriate offices and divisions, including the division of geological survey, may
prepare a plan for
the management of shore erosion in the state along
Lake Erie, its bays, and associated inlets, revise the plan
whenever it can be made more effective, and make the plan available for public
inspection. In the preparation of the plan, the chief
director may employ
such existing plans as are available.
The chief director also may establish a program to
provide technical
assistance on shore erosion control measures to municipal corporations,
counties, townships, conservancy districts, park boards, and shoreline
property
owners.
Sec. 1521.30 1506.48. Upon application of any owner of real
property damaged or
destroyed by shore erosion, the county auditor of the county in which the
real property is situated shall cause a reappraisal to be made and shall
place the property on the tax list at its true value in money.
Whenever the county auditor finds that ninety per cent or more of the
area of any littoral parcel of land appearing upon the tax duplicate has been
eroded and lies within the natural boundaries of Lake Erie and that the
remainder of the parcel, if any, has no taxable value, the
auditor may certify that
finding to the county board of revision. Upon consideration thereof, the
board
may authorize removal of the parcel from the tax duplicate and cancellation
of all current and delinquent taxes, assessments, interest, and penalties
charged against the parcel.
Sec. 1506.99. (A) Whoever violates division (A) of section 1506.09 of the
Revised Code shall be fined not less than one hundred nor more than five
hundred dollars for each offense.
(B) Whoever violates division (K) of section 1506.32 of the Revised Code is
guilty of a misdemeanor of the third degree.
(C) Whoever violates sections 1506.38 to 1506.48 of the Revised Code shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars for each offense. Each day of violation constitutes a separate offense.
Sec. 1521.01. As used in sections 1521.01 to 1521.05, and 1521.13 to 1521.18, and 1521.20 to 1521.30 of the
Revised Code:
(A) "Consumptive use," "diversion," "Lake Erie drainage
basin," "other great lakes states and provinces," "water
resources," and "waters of the state" have the same meanings as
in section 1501.30 of the Revised Code.
(B) "Well" means any excavation, regardless of design or
method of construction, created for any of the following
purposes:
(1) Removing ground water from or recharging water into an
aquifer, excluding subsurface drainage systems installed to
enhance agricultural crop production or urban or suburban
landscape management or to control seepage in dams, dikes, and
levees;
(2) Determining the quantity, quality, level, or movement
of ground water in or the stratigraphy of an aquifer, excluding
borings for instrumentation in dams, dikes, levees, or highway
embankments;
(3) Removing or exchanging heat from ground water,
excluding horizontal trenches that are installed for water source
heat pump systems.
(C) "Aquifer" means a consolidated or unconsolidated
geologic formation or series of formations that are hydraulically
interconnected and that have the ability to receive, store, or
transmit water.
(D) "Ground water" means all water occurring in an
aquifer.
(E) "Ground water stress area" means a definable
geographic area in which ground water quantity is being affected
by human activity or natural forces to the extent that continuous
availability of supply is jeopardized by withdrawals.
(F) "Person" has the same meaning as in section 1.59 of
the Revised Code and also includes the United States, the state,
any political subdivision of the state, and any department,
division, board, commission, agency, or instrumentality of the
United States, the state, or a political subdivision of the
state.
(G) "State agency" or "agency of the state" has the same
meaning as "agency" in section 111.15 of the Revised Code.
(H) "Development" means any artificial change to
improved or
unimproved real estate, including the construction of buildings
and other structures, any substantial improvement of a structure,
mining, dredging, filling, grading, paving, excavating, and
drilling operations, and storage of equipment or materials.
(I) "Floodplain" means the area adjoining any river,
stream, watercourse, or lake that has been or may be covered by
flood water.
(J) "Floodplain management" means the implementation of an
overall program of corrective and preventive measures for
reducing flood damage, including the collection and dissemination
of flood information, construction of flood control works,
nonstructural flood damage reduction techniques, and adoption of
rules, ordinances, or resolutions governing development in
floodplains.
(K) "One-hundred-year flood" means a flood having a one
per cent chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given year.
(L) "One-hundred-year floodplain" means that portion of a
floodplain inundated by a one-hundred-year flood.
(M) "Structure" means a walled and roofed building,
including, without limitation, gas or liquid storage tanks, mobile homes, and
manufactured homes.
(N) "Substantial improvement" means any reconstruction,
rehabilitation, addition, or other improvement of a structure,
the cost of which equals or exceeds fifty per cent of the market
value of the structure before the start of construction of the
improvement. "Substantial improvement" includes repairs to
structures that have incurred substantial damage regardless of
the actual repair work performed. "Substantial improvement" does
not include either of the following:
(1) Any project for the improvement of a structure to
correct existing violations of state or local health, sanitary,
or safety code specifications that have been identified by the
state or local code enforcement official having jurisdiction and
that are the minimum necessary to ensure safe living conditions;
(2) Any alteration of an historic structure designated or
listed pursuant to federal or state law, provided that the
alteration will not preclude the structure's continued listing or
designation as an historic structure.
(O) "Shore structure" includes, but is not limited to: beaches;
groins; revetments; bulkheads; seawalls; breakwaters; certain dikes designated
by the chief of the division of water; piers; docks; jetties; wharves;
marinas; boat ramps; any associated fill or debris used as part of the
construction of shore structures that may affect shore erosion, wave action,
or inundation; and fill or debris placed along or near the shore, including
bluffs, banks, or beach ridges, for the purpose of stabilizing slopes.
(P) "Substantial damage" means damage of any origin that is sustained by a structure if the cost of restoring the structure to its condition prior to the damage would equal or exceed fifty per cent of the market value of the structure before the damage occurred.
(Q)(P) "National flood insurance program" means the national flood insurance program established in the "National Flood Insurance Act of 1968," 82 Stat. 572, 42 U.S.C. 4001, as amended, and regulations adopted under it.
(R)(Q) "Conservancy district" means a conservancy district
established under Chapter 6101. of the Revised Code.
(S) "Park board" means the board of park commissioners of a park
district created under Chapter 1545. of the Revised Code.
(T) "Erosion control structure" means anything that is designed
primarily to reduce or control erosion of the shore along or near lake erie,
including, but not limited to, revetments, seawalls, bulkheads, certain
breakwaters designated by the chief, and similar structures. "Erosion control
structure" does not include wharves, piers, docks, marinas, boat ramps, and
other similar structures.
Sec. 1521.99. (A) Whoever violates division (E)(1) of section 1521.05 or
division (E)(1) of section 1521.16 of the Revised Code is guilty of a
misdemeanor of the fourth degree.
(B) Whoever violates section 1521.06 or 1521.062 of the Revised Code shall be
fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars for
each offense. Each day of violation constitutes a separate offense.
(C) Whoever violates sections 1521.20 to 1521.30 of the
Revised Code shall be fined not less than one hundred
dollars nor more than one thousand dollars for each offense. Each day of
violation constitutes a separate offense.
Sec. 1531.06. (A) The chief of the division of wildlife,
with
the approval of the director of natural resources, may
acquire by
gift, lease, purchase, or otherwise lands or surface
rights upon
lands and waters or surface rights upon waters for
wild animals,
fish or game management, preservation, propagation,
and
protection, outdoor and nature activities, public fishing and
hunting grounds, and flora and fauna preservation. The chief,
with the approval of the director, may receive by grant, devise,
bequest, donation, or assignment evidences of indebtedness, the
proceeds of which are to be used for the purchase of such lands
or
surface rights upon lands and waters or surface rights
upon
waters.
(B)(1) The chief shall adopt rules for the protection of
state-owned
or
leased
lands and waters and property under the
division's control against
wrongful use or occupancy that will
ensure the carrying out of the
intent of this section, protect
those lands, waters, and
property from depredations, and preserve
them from
molestation, spoilation, destruction, or any improper
use or
occupancy thereof, including rules with respect
to
recreational activities and for the government and use of such
lands, waters, and property.
(2) The chief may adopt rules benefiting wild
animals, fish
or game management, preservation, propagation, and
protection,
outdoor and nature activities, public fishing and
hunting grounds,
and flora and fauna preservation, and regulating the
taking and
possession of wild animals on any lands or waters
owned or leased
or under the division's supervision and control and,
for a
specified period of years, may prohibit or recall the taking
and
possession of any wild animal on any portion of such lands or
waters. The division clearly shall define and mark the
boundaries
of the lands and waters owned or leased or under
its supervision
and control upon which the taking of any
wild animal is
prohibited.
(C) The chief, with the approval of the director, may
acquire
by gift, lease, or purchase land for the purpose of
establishing
state fish hatcheries and game farms and may erect
on
it buildings or structures that are necessary.
The title to or lease of such lands and waters shall be
taken
by the chief in the name of the state. The lease or
purchase
price of all such lands and waters may be paid from
hunting and
trapping and fishing licenses and any other funds.
(D) To provide more public recreation, stream and lake
agreements for public fishing only may be obtained under rules
adopted by the chief.
(E) The chief, with the approval of the director, may
establish
user fees for the use of special public facilities or
participation
in special activities on lands and waters
administered by the
division. The special facilities and
activities may include
hunting or fishing on special designated
public lands and waters
intensively managed or stocked with
artificially propagated game
birds or fish, field trial
facilities, wildlife nature centers,
firearm ranges, boat mooring
facilities, camping sites, and other
similar special facilities
and activities. The chief shall determine whether
the user fees
are refundable and shall ensure that that information is
provided
at the time the user fees are paid.
(F) The chief, with the
approval of the director, may enter
into lease agreements for
rental of concessions or other special
projects situated on
state-owned or leased lands or waters or
other property under
the division's control. The chief shall set
and collect the fees for
concession rentals or other special
projects; regulate through
contracts between the division and
concessionaires the sale of
tangible objects at concessions or
other special projects; and
keep a record of all such fee payments
showing the amount
received, from whom received, and for
what
purpose the
fee was collected.
(G) The chief may sell or donate
conservation-related items
or items that promote wildlife
conservation, including, but not
limited to, stamps, pins,
badges, books, bulletins, maps,
publications, calendars, and any other
educational article or
artifact pertaining to wild animals; sell
confiscated or forfeited
items; and sell surplus structures and
equipment, and timber or
crops from lands owned, administered,
leased, or controlled by the
division. The chief, with the approval of the director, also may engage in campaigns and special events that promote wildlife conservation by selling or donating wildlife-related materials, memberships, and other items of promotional value.
(H) The chief may sell, lease, or transfer minerals or
mineral rights,
with the approval of the director, when the chief
and the director determine
it to be in the best interest of the
state. Upon approval of the director,
the chief may make,
execute, and deliver contracts, including leases, to mine,
drill,
or excavate iron ore, stone, coal, petroleum, gas, salt, and other
minerals upon and under lands owned by the state and administered
by the
division to any person who complies with the terms of such
a contract. No
such contract shall be valid for more than fifty
years from its effective
date. Consideration for minerals and
mineral rights shall be by rental or
royalty basis as prescribed
by the chief and payable as prescribed by contract. Moneys
collected under
this division shall be paid into the state
treasury to the
credit of the wildlife habitat
fund created in
section 1531.33 of
the Revised Code. Contracts entered
into under
this division also
may provide for
consideration for minerals or
mineral rights in
the form of acquisition of
lands as provided
under divisions (A)
and (C) of this section.
(I) All moneys received under divisions (E), (F), and (G) of
this section
shall be paid into the state treasury to
the credit
of a fund that shall be used for the purposes
outlined in section
1533.15 of the
Revised Code and for the
management of other wild
animals for
their ecological and
nonconsumptive recreational value
or
benefit.
(J) The chief, with
the approval of the director, may barter
or sell wild animals to
other states, state or federal agencies,
and conservation or
zoological organizations. Moneys received
from the sale of wild
animals shall be deposited into the wild
animal fund created in
section 1531.34 of the Revised Code.
(K) The chief shall adopt rules establishing standards
and
guidelines for the administration of contraceptive chemicals
to
noncaptive wild animals. The rules may specify chemical
delivery
methods and devices and monitoring requirements.
The chief shall establish criteria for the issuance of
and
shall issue permits for the administration of contraceptive
chemicals to noncaptive wild animals. No person shall
administer
contraceptive chemicals to noncaptive wild animals
without a
permit issued by the chief.
(L) All fees set by the chief under this section shall be
approved by the wildlife council.
Sec. 1531.35. The wildlife boater angler fund is hereby
created in the state treasury. The fund shall consist of money
credited to the fund pursuant to section 5735.051 of the Revised
Code and other money contributed to the division of wildlife for
the purposes of the fund. The fund
shall be used for boating
access construction,
improvements,
and
maintenance, and to pay for equipment and personnel costs involved with those activities,
on lakes
on
which the operation of gasoline-powered watercraft is
permissible. However, not more than two hundred thousand dollars of the annual expenditures from the fund may be used to pay for the equipment and personnel costs.
Sec. 1548.06. (A)(1) Application for a certificate of title for a
watercraft or outboard motor shall be made upon a form prescribed
by the chief of the division of watercraft
and shall be sworn to
before a notary public or other officer empowered to administer
oaths. The application shall be filed with the clerk of
any
court of common pleas.
An application for a certificate of title
may be filed
electronically by any electronic means approved by
the chief in
any county with the clerk of the court of common
pleas of that
county.
The application shall be accompanied by
the fee
prescribed
in
section 1548.10 of the Revised Code. The
fee shall be
retained by the clerk who issues the certificate of
title and
shall be distributed in accordance with that section.
If a clerk
of a court of common pleas, other than the clerk of
the court of
common pleas of an applicant's county of residence,
issues a
certificate of title to the applicant, the clerk shall
transmit
data related to the transaction to the
automated
title
processing system.
(2) If a certificate of
title previously has been issued for the
watercraft or outboard
motor,
the application for a
certificate
of title also shall be accompanied by the certificate
of title
duly
assigned unless otherwise provided in this
chapter. If a
certificate of title previously has not been
issued for the
watercraft or outboard motor in this state, the
application,
unless otherwise provided in this chapter, shall be
accompanied
by
a manufacturer's or importer's certificate; by a
sworn
statement
of ownership if the watercraft or outboard motor
was
purchased by
the applicant on or before
October 9, 1963,
or if
the watercraft
is less than fourteen feet long with
a
permanently affixed
mechanical means of propulsion and was
purchased by the applicant
on or before
January 1,
2000;
or by
a certificate of title, bill
of sale, or
other evidence of
ownership required by the law of
another state
from which the
watercraft or outboard motor was
brought into
this state.
Evidence of ownership of a watercraft or
outboard
motor for
which an Ohio certificate of title previously
has not
been
issued and which watercraft or outboard motor does
not have
permanently affixed
to it a manufacturer's serial
number
shall
be accompanied by the certificate of assignment of a
hull
identification number assigned by
the chief as provided in
section
1548.07 of the Revised Code.
(3) The clerk shall retain the evidence
of title presented by
the
applicant and on which the certificate
of title is issued,
except that, if an application for a certificate of title is
filed
electronically, by a vendor on behalf of a purchaser of a
watercraft or outboard motor, the clerk shall retain the completed
electronic record to which the vendor converted the certificate of
title application and other required documents. The chief,
after consultation with the attorney general, shall adopt rules
that govern the location at which, and the manner in which, are
stored the actual application and all other documents relating to
the sale of a watercraft or outboard motor when a vendor files the
application for a certificate of title electronically on behalf of
a purchaser.
(B) The
clerk shall use reasonable diligence in
ascertaining
whether
the
facts in the application are true
by checking the
application and
documents accompanying it
or the electronic
record to which a vendor converted the application and
accompanying documents with
the records of
watercraft and
outboard motors in the clerk's
office. If
the
clerk is satisfied
that the
applicant is the owner of the
watercraft or
outboard
motor and
that the application is in the
proper form,
the clerk
shall issue
a
physical certificate of
title over the
clerk's
signature and sealed with
the clerk's
seal
unless the applicant
specifically requests the clerk not to
issue a physical
certificate of title and instead to issue an
electronic
certificate of title.
However, if the evidence
indicates and an
investigation
shows that one or more Ohio
titles already exist
for
the watercraft or outboard motor, the
chief may cause the
redundant title or titles to be
canceled.
(C) In the case of the sale of a watercraft or outboard motor
by
a vendor to a general purchaser or user, the certificate of
title
shall be obtained in the name of the purchaser by the
vendor upon
application signed by the purchaser. In all other
cases, the
certificate shall be obtained by the purchaser. In
all cases of
transfer of watercraft or outboard motors, the
application for
certificate of title shall be filed within thirty
days after the
later of the date of purchase or assignment of
ownership of the
watercraft or outboard motor. If the
application for certificate
of title is not filed within thirty
days after the later of the
date of purchase or assignment of
ownership of the watercraft or
outboard motor, the clerk shall
charge a late penalty fee of five
dollars in addition to the fee
prescribed by section 1548.10 of
the Revised Code. The clerk
shall retain the entire amount of
each late penalty fee.
(D) The clerk shall refuse to accept an application for
certificate of title unless the applicant either tenders with the
application payment of all taxes levied by or pursuant to Chapter
5739. or 5741. of the Revised Code
based on the applicant's county
of residence less, in the case of a sale
by a vendor, any
discount
to which the vendor is entitled under
section 5739.12
of the
Revised Code, or submits any of the
following:
(1) A receipt issued by the tax commissioner or a clerk of
courts showing payment of the tax;
(2) A copy of the unit certificate of exemption completed
by
the purchaser at the time of sale as provided in section
5739.03
of the Revised Code;
(3) An exemption certificate, in a form prescribed by the
tax commissioner, that specifies why the purchase is not subject
to the tax imposed by Chapter 5739. or 5741. of the Revised Code.
Payment of the tax shall be in accordance with rules issued
by the tax commissioner, and the clerk shall issue a receipt in
the form prescribed by the tax commissioner to any applicant who
tenders payment of the tax with the application for
the
certificate
of title.
(E)(1) For receiving and disbursing the taxes paid to the clerk
by a
resident of the clerk's county,
the
clerk may retain a poundage
fee of one
and one one-hundredth per cent of the taxes
collected,
which shall be paid
into the
certificate of title administration
fund created by section 325.33
of the Revised Code.
The clerk
shall not retain a poundage fee
from payments of taxes by persons
who do not reside in the
clerk's county.
(2) A clerk, however, may retain from the taxes paid to the
clerk
an amount equal to the poundage fees associated with
certificates
of title issued by other clerks of courts of common
pleas to
applicants who reside in the first clerk's county. The
chief of
the division of watercraft, in consultation with the tax
commissioner and the clerks of the courts of common pleas, shall
develop a report from the automated title processing system that
informs each clerk of the amount of the poundage fees that the
clerk is permitted to retain from those taxes because of
certificates of title issued by the clerks of other counties to
applicants who reside in the first clerk's county.
(F) In the case of casual sales of watercraft or outboard
motors
that are subject to the tax imposed by Chapter 5739. or
5741. of
the Revised Code, the purchase price for the purpose of
determining the tax shall be the purchase price on an affidavit
executed and filed with the clerk by the vendor on a form to be
prescribed by the chief, which
shall be prima-facie evidence of
the price for the determination
of the tax. In addition to the
information required by section
1548.08 of the Revised Code, each
certificate of title shall
contain in bold lettering the
following
notification and
statements:
"WARNING TO TRANSFEROR
AND
TRANSFEREE
(SELLER AND
BUYER). You
are required by law to
state
the true
selling price. A false statement is a
violation
of
section
2921.13 of the Revised Code and is punishable by six
months
imprisonment or a fine of up to one thousand dollars, or
both.
All
transfers are audited by the department of taxation.
The
seller
and buyer must provide any information requested by
the
department
of
taxation. The buyer may be assessed any
additional
tax found
to be due."
(G) Each county clerk of courts shall forward to the treasurer of state all sales and use tax collections resulting from sales of titled watercraft and outboard motors during a calendar week on or before the Friday following the close of that week. If, on any Friday, the offices of the clerk of courts or the state are not open for business, the tax shall be forwarded to the treasurer of state on or before the next day on which the offices are open. Every remittance of tax under this division shall be accompanied by a remittance report in such form as the tax commissioner prescribes. Upon receipt of a tax remittance and remittance report, the treasurer of state shall date stamp the report and forward it to the tax commissioner. If the tax due for any week is not remitted by a clerk of courts as required under this division, the clerk shall forfeit the poundage fees for the sales made during that week. The treasurer of state may require the clerks of courts to transmit tax collections and remittance reports electronically.
(H) For purposes
of a
transfer of a certificate of title, if the clerk is satisfied that
a
secured party has discharged a lien but has not canceled the
lien notation
with
a clerk, the clerk
may cancel
the lien
notation on the
automated title processing
system and notify the
clerk of the county of
origin.
(I) Every clerk shall have the capability to transact by
electronic means all procedures and transactions relating to the
issuance of watercraft or outboard motor certificates of title
that are described in the Revised Code as being accomplished by
electronic means.
Sec. 1555.08. (A) Subject to the limitations provided in
Section 15 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, the commissioners
of the sinking fund, upon certification by the director of the
Ohio coal development office of the amount of moneys or
additional moneys needed in the coal research and development
fund for the purpose of making grants or loans for allowable
costs, or needed for capitalized interest, for funding reserves,
and for paying costs and expenses incurred in connection with the
issuance, carrying, securing, paying, redeeming, or retirement of
the obligations or any obligations refunded thereby, including
payment of costs and expenses relating to letters of credit,
lines of credit, insurance, put agreements, standby purchase
agreements, indexing, marketing, remarketing and administrative
arrangements, interest swap or hedging agreements, and any other
credit enhancement, liquidity, remarketing, renewal, or refunding
arrangements, all of which are authorized by this section, or
providing moneys for loan guarantees, shall issue obligations of
the state under this section in amounts authorized by the general
assembly; provided that such obligations may be issued to the
extent necessary to satisfy the covenants in contracts of
guarantee made under section 1555.05 of the Revised Code to issue
obligations to meet such guarantees, notwithstanding limitations
otherwise applicable to the issuance of obligations under this
section except the one-hundred-million-dollar limitation provided
in Section 15 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution. The proceeds
of such obligations, except for the portion to be deposited in
the coal research and development bond service fund as may be
provided in the bond proceedings, shall as provided in the bond
proceedings be deposited in the coal research and development
fund. The commissioners of the sinking fund may appoint
trustees, paying agents, and transfer agents and may retain the
services of financial advisors, accounting experts, and
attorneys, and retain or contract for the services of marketing,
remarketing, indexing, and administrative agents, other
consultants, and independent contractors, including printing
services, as are necessary in their judgment to carry out this
section.
(B) The full faith and credit of the state of Ohio is
hereby pledged to obligations issued under this section. The
right of the holders and owners to payment of bond service
charges is limited to all or that portion of the moneys pledged
thereto pursuant to the bond proceedings in accordance with this
section, and each such obligation shall bear on its face a
statement to that effect.
(C) Obligations shall be authorized by resolution of the
commissioners of the sinking fund on request of the director of
the Ohio coal development office as provided in section 1555.02
of the Revised Code and the bond proceedings shall provide for
the purpose thereof and the principal amount or amounts, and
shall provide for or authorize the manner or agency for
determining the principal maturity or maturities, not exceeding
forty years from the date of issuance, the interest rate or rates
or the maximum interest rate, the date of the obligations and the
dates of payment of interest thereon, their denomination, and the
establishment within or without the state of a place or places of
payment of bond service charges. Sections 9.98 to 9.983 of the
Revised Code apply to obligations issued under this section. The purpose of
such obligations may be stated in
the bond proceedings in terms describing the general purpose or
purposes to be served. The bond proceedings shall also provide,
subject to the provisions of any other applicable bond
proceedings, for the pledge of all, or such part as the
commissioners of the sinking fund may determine, of the moneys
credited to the coal research and development bond service fund
to the payment of bond service charges, which pledges may be made
either prior or subordinate to other expenses, claims, or
payments and may be made to secure the obligations on a parity
with obligations theretofore or thereafter issued, if and to the
extent provided in the bond proceedings. The moneys so pledged
and thereafter received by the state are immediately subject to
the lien of such pledge without any physical delivery thereof or
further act, and the lien of any such pledges is valid and
binding against all parties having claims of any kind against the
state or any governmental agency of the state, irrespective of
whether such parties have notice thereof, and shall create a
perfected security interest for all purposes of Chapter 1309. of
the Revised Code, without the necessity for separation or
delivery of funds or for the filing or recording of the bond
proceedings by which such pledge is created or any certificate,
statement or other document with respect thereto; and the pledge
of such moneys is effective and the money therefrom and thereof
may be applied to the purposes for which pledged without
necessity for any act of appropriation. Every pledge, and every
covenant and agreement made with respect thereto, made in the
bond proceedings may therein be extended to the benefit of the
owners and holders of obligations authorized by this section, and
to any trustee therefor, for the further security of the payment
of the bond service charges.
(D) The bond proceedings may contain additional provisions
as to:
(1) The redemption of obligations prior to maturity at the
option of the commissioners of the sinking fund at such price or
prices and under such terms and conditions as are provided in the
bond proceedings;
(2) Other terms of the obligations;
(3) Limitations on the issuance of additional obligations;
(4) The terms of any trust agreement or indenture securing
the obligations or under which the obligations may be issued;
(5) The deposit, investment, and application of the coal
research and development bond service fund, and the safeguarding
of moneys on hand or on deposit, without regard to Chapter 131.
or 135. of the Revised Code, but subject to any special
provisions of this chapter, with respect to particular moneys;
provided, that any bank or trust company which acts as depository
of any moneys in the fund may furnish such indemnifying bonds or
may pledge such securities as required by the commissioners of
the sinking fund;
(6) Any other provision of the bond proceedings being
binding upon the commissioners of the sinking fund, or such other
body or person as may from time to time have the authority under
law to take such actions as may be necessary to perform all or
any part of the duty required by such provision;
(7) Any provision which may be made in a trust agreement
or indenture;
(8) Any other or additional agreements with the holders of
the obligations, or the trustee therefor, relating to the
obligations or the security therefor, including the assignment of
mortgages or other security obtained or to be obtained for loans
under this chapter.
(E) The obligations may have the great seal of the state
or a facsimile thereof affixed thereto or printed thereon. The
obligations shall be signed by such members of the commissioners
of the sinking fund as are designated in the resolution
authorizing the obligations or bear the facsimile signatures of
such members. Any coupons attached to the obligations shall bear
the facsimile signature of the treasurer of state. Any
obligations may be executed by the persons who, on the date of
execution, are the commissioners although on the date of such
bonds the persons were not the commissioners. Any coupons may be
executed by the person who, on the date of execution, is the
treasurer of state although on the date of such coupons the
person was not the treasurer of state. In case any officer or
commissioner whose signature or a facsimile of whose signature
appears on any such obligations or any coupons ceases to be such
officer or commissioner before delivery thereof, such signature
or facsimile is nevertheless valid and sufficient for all
purposes as if the individual had remained such officer or
commissioner until
such delivery; and in case the seal to be affixed to obligations
has been changed after a facsimile of the seal has been imprinted
on such obligations, such facsimile seal shall continue to be
sufficient as to such obligations and obligations issued in
substitution or exchange therefor.
(F) All obligations except loan guarantees are negotiable
instruments and securities under Chapter 1308. of the Revised
Code, subject to the provisions of the bond proceedings as to
registration. The obligations may be issued in coupon or in
registered form, or both, as the commissioners of the sinking
fund determine. Provision may be made for the registration of
any obligations with coupons attached thereto as to principal
alone or as to both principal and interest, their exchange for
obligations so registered, and for the conversion or reconversion
into obligations with coupons attached thereto of any obligations
registered as to both principal and interest, and for reasonable
charges for such registration, exchange, conversion, and
reconversion.
(G) Obligations may be sold at public sale or at private
sale, as determined in the bond proceedings.
(H) Pending preparation of definitive obligations, the
commissioners of the sinking fund may issue interim receipts or
certificates which shall be exchanged for such definitive
obligations.
(I) In the discretion of the commissioners of the sinking
fund, obligations may be secured additionally by a trust
agreement or indenture between the commissioners and a corporate
trustee, which may be any trust company or bank having its
principal a place of business within the state. Any such agreement
or indenture may contain the resolution authorizing the issuance
of the obligations, any provisions that may be contained in any
bond proceedings, and other provisions that are customary or
appropriate in an agreement or indenture of such type, including,
but not limited to:
(1) Maintenance of each pledge, trust agreement,
indenture, or other instrument comprising part of the bond
proceedings until the state has fully paid the bond service
charges on the obligations secured thereby, or provision therefor
has been made;
(2) In the event of default in any payments required to be
made by the bond proceedings, or any other agreement of the
commissioners of the sinking fund made as a part of the contract
under which the obligations were issued, enforcement of such
payments or agreement by mandamus, the appointment of a receiver,
suit in equity, action at law, or any combination of the
foregoing;
(3) The rights and remedies of the holders of obligations
and of the trustee, and provisions for protecting and enforcing
them, including limitations on rights of individual holders of
obligations;
(4) The replacement of any obligations that become
mutilated or are destroyed, lost, or stolen;
(5) Such other provisions as the trustee and the
commissioners of the sinking fund agree upon, including
limitations, conditions, or qualifications relating to any of the
foregoing.
(J) Any holder of obligations or a trustee under the bond
proceedings, except to the extent that the holder's rights
are restricted by the bond proceedings, may by any suitable form of legal
proceedings protect and enforce any rights under the laws of this
state or granted by such bond proceedings. Such rights include
the right to compel the performance of all duties of the
commissioners of the sinking fund, the Ohio air quality development authority, or
the Ohio coal development office required by this chapter and
Chapter 1551. of the Revised Code or the bond proceedings; to
enjoin unlawful activities; and in the event of default with
respect to the payment of any bond service charges on any
obligations or in the performance of any covenant or agreement on
the part of the commissioners, the authority, or the office in the
bond proceedings, to apply to a court having jurisdiction of the
cause to appoint a receiver to receive and administer the moneys
pledged, other than those in the custody of the treasurer of
state, that are pledged to the payment of the bond service
charges on such obligations or that are the subject of the
covenant or agreement, with full power to pay, and to provide for
payment of bond service charges on, such obligations, and with
such powers, subject to the direction of the court, as are
accorded receivers in general equity cases, excluding any power
to pledge additional revenues or receipts or other income or
moneys of the commissioners of the sinking fund or the state or
governmental agencies of the state to the payment of such
principal and interest and excluding the power to take possession
of, mortgage, or cause the sale or otherwise dispose of any
project.
Each duty of the commissioners of the sinking fund and
their employees, and of each governmental agency and its
officers, members, or employees, undertaken pursuant to the bond
proceedings or any grant, loan, or loan guarantee agreement made
under authority of this chapter, and in every agreement by or
with the commissioners, is hereby established as a duty of the
commissioners, and of each such officer, member, or employee
having authority to perform such duty, specifically enjoined by
the law resulting from an office, trust, or station within the
meaning of section 2731.01 of the Revised Code.
The persons who are at the time the commissioners of the
sinking fund, or their employees, are not liable in their
personal capacities on any obligations issued by the
commissioners or any agreements of or with the commissioners.
(K) Obligations issued under this section are lawful
investments for banks, societies for savings, savings and loan
associations, deposit guarantee associations, trust companies,
trustees, fiduciaries, insurance companies, including domestic
for life and domestic not for life, trustees or other officers
having charge of sinking and bond retirement or other special
funds of political subdivisions and taxing districts of this
state, the commissioners of the sinking fund of the state, the
administrator of workers' compensation, the state teachers retirement
system, the public employees retirement system, the school
employees retirement system, and the Ohio police and
fire pension fund, notwithstanding any other
provisions
of the Revised Code or rules adopted pursuant thereto by any
governmental agency of the state with respect to investments by
them, and are also acceptable as security for the deposit of
public moneys.
(L) If the law or the instrument creating a trust pursuant
to division (I) of this section expressly permits investment in
direct obligations of the United States or an agency of the
United States,
unless expressly prohibited by the instrument, such moneys also
may be invested in no-front-end-load money market mutual funds
consisting exclusively of obligations of the United States or an
agency of the United States and in
repurchase agreements, including those
issued by the fiduciary itself, secured by obligations of the
United States or an agency of the United
States; and in collective investment funds
established in accordance with section 1111.14 of the
Revised
Code and consisting exclusively of any such securities,
notwithstanding division (A)(1)(c) of that section. The
income from
such investments shall be credited to such funds as the
commissioners of the sinking fund determine, and such investments
may be sold at such times as the commissioners determine or
authorize.
(M) Provision may be made in the applicable bond
proceedings for the establishment of separate accounts in the
bond service fund and for the application of such accounts only
to the specified bond service charges on obligations pertinent to
such accounts and bond service fund and for other accounts
therein within the general purposes of such fund. Moneys to the
credit of the bond service fund shall be disbursed on the order
of the treasurer of state; provided, that no such order is
required for the payment from the bond service fund when due of
bond service charges on obligations.
(N) The commissioners of the sinking fund may pledge all,
or such portion as they determine, of the receipts of the bond
service fund to the payment of bond service charges on
obligations issued under this section, and for the establishment
and maintenance of any reserves, as provided in the bond
proceedings, and make other provisions therein with respect to
pledged receipts as authorized by this chapter, which provisions
control notwithstanding any other provisions of law pertaining
thereto.
(O) The commissioners of the sinking fund may covenant in
the bond proceedings, and any such covenants control
notwithstanding any other provision of law, that the state and
applicable officers and governmental agencies of the state,
including the general assembly, so long as any obligations
are outstanding, shall:
(1) Maintain statutory authority for and cause to be
levied and collected taxes so that the pledged receipts are
sufficient in amount to meet bond service charges, and the
establishment and maintenance of any reserves and other
requirements provided for in the bond proceedings, and, as
necessary, to meet covenants contained in any loan guarantees
made under this chapter;
(2) Take or permit no action, by statute or otherwise,
that would impair the exemption from federal income taxation of
the interest on the obligations.
(P) All moneys
received
by or on account of the state and required by the applicable bond
proceedings, consistent with this section, to be deposited,
transferred, or credited to the coal research and development bond
service fund, and all other
moneys transferred or allocated to or received for the purposes
of the fund, shall be credited to such fund and to any separate
accounts therein, subject to applicable provisions of the bond
proceedings, but without necessity for any act of appropriation.
During the period beginning with the date of the first issuance
of obligations and continuing during such time as any such
obligations are outstanding, and so long as moneys in the bond
service fund are insufficient to pay all bond service charges on
such obligations becoming due in each year, a sufficient amount
of moneys of the state are committed and shall be paid to the bond
service fund in each year for the purpose of paying the bond
service charges becoming due in that year without necessity for
further act of appropriation for such purpose. The bond service
fund is a trust fund and is hereby pledged to the payment of bond
service charges to the extent provided in the applicable bond
proceedings, and payment thereof from such fund shall be made or
provided for by the treasurer of state in accordance with such
bond proceedings without necessity for any act of appropriation.
All investment earnings of the fund shall be credited to the
fund.
(Q) For purposes of establishing the limitations contained
in Section 15 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, the "principal
amount" refers to the aggregate of the offering price of the
bonds or notes. "Principal amount" does not refer to the
aggregate value at maturity or redemption of the bonds or notes.
(R) This section applies only with respect to obligations issued
and delivered prior to September 30, 2000.
Sec. 1557.03. (A)(1) The commissioners of the sinking
fund are authorized to issue and sell, as provided in this
section and in amounts from time to time authorized by the
general assembly, general obligations of this state for the
purpose of financing or assisting in the financing of the costs
of projects. The full faith and credit, revenues, and taxing
power of the state are and shall be pledged to the timely payment
of debt charges on outstanding obligations, all in accordance
with Section 2l of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, and Chapter
1557. of the Revised
Code, excluding from that
pledge fees, excises, or taxes relating to the registration,
operation, or use of vehicles on the public highways, or to fuels
used for propelling those vehicles, and so long as such
obligations are outstanding there shall be levied and collected
excises and taxes, excluding those excepted above, in amount
sufficient to pay the debt charges on such obligations and
financing costs relating to credit enhancement facilities.
(2) For meetings of the commissioners of the sinking fund
pertaining to the obligations under this chapter, each of the
commissioners may designate an employee or officer of that
commissioner's office to attend meetings when that commissioner
is absent for any reason, and such designee, when present, shall
be counted in determining whether a quorum is present at any
meeting and may vote and participate in all proceedings and
actions of the commissioners at that meeting pertaining to the
obligations, provided, that such designee shall not execute or
cause a facsimile of the designee's signature to be placed
on any
obligation, or execute any trust agreement or indenture of the
commissioners. Such designation shall be in writing, executed by
the designating member, and shall be filed with the secretary of
the commissioners and such designation may be changed from time
to time by a similar written designation.
(B) The total principal amount of obligations outstanding
at any one time shall not exceed two hundred million dollars, and
not more than fifty million dollars in principal amount of
obligations to pay costs of projects may be issued in any fiscal
year, all determined as provided in
Chapter 1557. of the Revised Code.
(C) The state may participate by grants or contributions
in financing projects under this section made by local government
entities. Of the proceeds of the first two hundred million
dollars principal amount in obligations issued under this section
to pay costs of projects, at least twenty per cent shall be
allocated in accordance with section 1557.06 of the Revised Code
to grants or contributions to local government entities. The
director of budget and management shall establish and maintain
records in such manner as to show that the proceeds credited to
the Ohio parks and natural resources fund have been expended for
the purposes and in accordance with the limitations set forth
herein.
(D) Each issue of obligations shall be authorized by
resolution of the commissioners of the sinking fund. The bond
proceedings shall provide for the principal amount or maximum
principal amount of obligations of an issue, and shall provide
for or authorize the manner or agency for determining the
principal maturity or maturities, not exceeding the earlier of
twenty-five years from the date the debt represented by the
particular obligations was originally contracted, the interest
rate or rates, the date of and the dates of payment of interest
on the obligations, their denominations, and the establishment
within or without the state of a place or places of payment of
debt charges. Sections 9.96 and 9.98 to 9.983 of the Revised
Code are applicable to the obligations. The purpose of the
obligations may be stated in the bond proceedings as "financing
or assisting in the financing of projects as provided in Section
2l of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution."
(E) The proceeds of the obligations, except for any
portion to be deposited in special funds, or in escrow funds for
the purpose of refunding outstanding obligations, all as may be
provided in the bond proceedings, shall be deposited in the Ohio
parks and natural resources fund established by section 1557.02
of the Revised Code.
(F) The commissioners of the sinking fund may appoint
paying agents, bond registrars, securities depositories, and
transfer agents, and may retain the services of financial
advisers and accounting experts, and retain or contract for the
services of marketing, remarketing, indexing, and administrative
agents, other consultants, and independent contractors, including
printing services, as are necessary in the judgment of the
commissioners to carry out this
chapter of the
Revised Code. Financing costs are payable, as provided in the
bond proceedings, from the proceeds of the obligations, from
special funds, or from other moneys available for the purpose.
(G) The bond proceedings, including any trust agreement,
may contain additional provisions customary or appropriate to the
financing or to the obligations or to particular obligations,
including, but not limited to:
(1) The redemption of obligations prior to maturity at the
option of the state or of the holder or upon the occurrence of
certain conditions at such price or prices and under such terms
and conditions as are provided in the bond proceedings;
(2) The form of and other terms of the obligations;
(3) The establishment, deposit, investment, and
application of special funds, and the safeguarding of moneys on
hand or on deposit, without regard to Chapter 131. or 135. of the
Revised Code, provided that any bank or trust company that acts
as a depository of any moneys in special funds may furnish such
indemnifying bonds or may pledge such securities as required by
the commissioners of the sinking fund;
(4) Any or every provision of the bond proceedings binding
upon the commissioners of the sinking fund and such state agency
or local government entities, officer, board, commission,
authority, agency, department, or other person or body as may
from time to time have the authority under law to take such
actions as may be necessary to perform all or any part of the
duty required by such provision;
(5) The maintenance of each pledge, any trust agreement,
or other instrument composing part of the bond proceedings until
the state has fully paid or provided for the payment of the debt
charges on the obligations or met other stated conditions;
(6) In the event of default in any payments required to be
made by the bond proceedings, or any other agreement of the
commissioners of the sinking fund made as part of a contract
under which the obligations were issued or secured, the
enforcement of such payments or agreements by mandamus, suit in
equity, action at law, or any combination of the foregoing;
(7) The rights and remedies of the holders of obligations
and of the trustee under any trust agreement, and provisions for
protecting and enforcing them, including limitations on rights of
individual holders of obligations;
(8) The replacement of any obligations that become
mutilated or are destroyed, lost, or stolen;
(9) Provision for the funding, refunding, or advance
refunding or other provision for payment of obligations which
will then no longer be or be deemed to be outstanding for
purposes of this section or of the bond proceedings;
(10) Any provision that may be made in bond proceedings
or a trust agreement, including provision for amendment of the
bond proceedings;
(11) Such other provisions as the commissioners of the
sinking fund determine, including limitations, conditions, or
qualifications relating to any of the foregoing;
(12) Any other or additional agreements with the holders
of the obligations relating to the obligations or the security
for the obligations.
(H) The great seal of the state or a facsimile of that
seal may be affixed to or printed on the obligations. The
obligations shall be signed by or bear the facsimile signatures
of two or more of the commissioners of the sinking fund as
provided in the bond proceedings. Any obligations may be signed
by the person who, on the date of execution, is the authorized
signer although on the date of such obligations such person was
not a commissioner. In case the individual whose signature or a
facsimile of whose signature appears on any obligation ceases to
be a commissioner before delivery of the obligation, such
signature or facsimile is nevertheless valid and sufficient for
all purposes as if the individual had remained the member
until such
delivery, and in case the seal to be affixed to or printed on
obligations has been changed after the seal has been affixed to
or a facsimile of the seal has been printed on the obligations,
that seal or facsimile seal shall continue to be sufficient as to
those obligations and obligations issued in substitution or
exchange therefor.
(I) Obligations may be issued in coupon or in fully
registered form, or both, as the commissioners of the sinking
fund determine. Provision may be made for the registration of
any obligations with coupons attached as to principal alone or as
to both principal and interest, their exchange for obligations so
registered, and for the conversion or reconversion into
obligations with coupons attached of any obligations registered
as to both principal and interest, and for reasonable charges for
such registration, exchange, conversion, and reconversion.
Pending preparation of definitive obligations, the commissioners
of the sinking fund may issue interim receipts or certificates
which shall be exchanged for such definitive obligations.
(J) Obligations may be sold at public sale or at private
sale, and at such price at, above, or below par, as determined by
the commissioners of the sinking fund in the bond proceedings.
(K) In the discretion of the commissioners of the sinking
fund, obligations may be secured additionally by a trust
agreement between the state and a corporate trustee which may be
any trust company or bank having its principal a place of business
within the state. Any trust agreement may contain the resolution
authorizing the issuance of the obligations, any provisions that
may be contained in the bond proceedings, and other provisions
that are customary or appropriate in an agreement of the type.
(L) Except to the extent that their rights are restricted
by the bond proceedings, any holder of obligations, or a trustee
under the bond proceedings, may by any suitable form of legal
proceedings protect and enforce any rights under the laws of this
state or granted by the bond proceedings. Such rights include
the right to compel the performance of all duties of the
commissioners and the state. Each duty of the commissioners and
employees of the commissioners, and of each state agency and
local public entity and its officers, members, or employees,
undertaken pursuant to the bond proceedings, is hereby
established as a duty of the commissioners, and of each such
agency, local government entity, officer, member, or employee
having authority to perform such duty, specifically enjoined by
the law and resulting from an office, trust, or station within
the meaning of section 2731.01 of the Revised Code. The persons
who are at the time the commissioners, or employees of the
commissioners, are not liable in their personal capacities on any
obligations or any agreements of or with the commissioners
relating to obligations or under the bond proceedings.
(M) Obligations are lawful investments for banks,
societies for savings, savings and loan associations, deposit
guarantee associations, trust companies, trustees, fiduciaries,
insurance companies, including domestic for life and domestic not
for life, trustees or other officers having charge of sinking and
bond retirement or other special funds of political subdivisions
and taxing districts of this state, the commissioners of the
sinking fund, the administrator of workers' compensation, the state teachers
retirement system, the
public employees retirement system, the school employees
retirement system, and the Ohio police and fire
pension fund, notwithstanding any other provisions of the Revised
Code or rules adopted pursuant thereto by any state agency with
respect to investments by them, and are also acceptable as
security for the deposit of public moneys.
(N) Unless otherwise provided in any applicable bond
proceedings, moneys to the credit of or in the special funds
established by or pursuant to this section may be invested by or
on behalf of the commissioners of the sinking fund only in notes,
bonds, or other direct obligations of the United States or of any
agency or instrumentality of the United
States, in obligations of this state
or any political subdivision of this state, in certificates of
deposit of any national bank located in this state and any bank,
as defined in section 1101.01 of the Revised Code, subject to
inspection by the superintendent of financial
institutions, in the Ohio
subdivision's fund established pursuant to section 135.45 of the
Revised Code, in no-front-end-load money market mutual funds
consisting exclusively of direct obligations of the United States
or of an agency or instrumentality of the United
States, and in repurchase
agreements, including those issued by any fiduciary, secured by
direct obligations of the United States or an agency or
instrumentality of the United States,
and in collective investment funds established in
accordance with section 1111.14 of the Revised Code
and consisting exclusively of direct obligations of the United States
or of an agency or instrumentality of the United
States, notwithstanding
division (A)(1)(c) of that section. The income from
investments
shall be credited to such special funds or otherwise as the
commissioners of the sinking fund determine in the bond
proceedings, and the investments may be sold or exchanged at such
times as the commissioners determine or authorize.
(O) Unless otherwise provided in any applicable bond
proceedings, moneys to the credit of or in a special fund shall
be disbursed on the order of the commissioners of the sinking
fund, provided that no such order is required for the payment
from the bond service fund or other special fund when due of debt
charges or required payments under credit enhancement facilities.
(P) The commissioners of the sinking fund may covenant in
the bond proceedings, and any such covenants shall be controlling
notwithstanding any other provision of law, that the state and
the applicable officers and agencies of the state, including the
general assembly, so long as any obligations are
outstanding in accordance with their terms, shall maintain statutory
authority for and cause to be charged and collected taxes,
excises, and other receipts of the state so that the receipts to
the bond service fund shall be sufficient in amounts to meet debt
charges and for the establishment and maintenance of any reserves
and other requirements, including payment of the costs of credit
enhancement facilities, provided for in the bond proceedings.
(Q) The obligations, the transfer thereof, and the
interest, other accreted amounts, and other income therefrom,
including any profit made on the sale thereof, at all times
shall be free from taxation, direct or indirect, within the state.
(R) This section applies only with respect to obligations issued
and delivered before September 30, 2000.
Sec. 1901.34. (A) Except as provided in divisions (B) and
(D) of this section, the village solicitor, city director of law,
or similar chief legal officer for each municipal corporation
within the territory of a municipal court shall prosecute all
cases brought before the municipal court for criminal offenses
occurring within the municipal corporation for which that
person
is the
solicitor, director of law, or similar chief legal officer.
Except as provided in division (B) of this section, the village
solicitor, city director of law, or similar chief legal officer
of
the municipal corporation in which a municipal court is
located
shall prosecute all criminal cases brought before the
court
arising in the unincorporated areas within the territory of
the
municipal court.
(B) The Auglaize county,
Brown county, Clermont county, Hocking county, Holmes county,
Jackson county,
Morrow county, Ottawa county, and
Portage county
prosecuting
attorneys shall prosecute in municipal
court all
violations of
state law arising in their respective
counties. The
Carroll county, Crawford
county, Hamilton county, Madison county,
and Wayne
county
prosecuting attorneys and beginning January 1, 2008, the Erie county prosecuting attorney shall prosecute all
violations of
state law
arising within the unincorporated areas of
their
respective
counties. The Columbiana county prosecuting
attorney
shall
prosecute in the Columbiana county municipal court
all
violations
of
state law arising in the county, except for
violations arising
in the
municipal corporation of East Liverpool,
Liverpool
township, or St. Clair township. The Darke county prosecuting attorney shall prosecute in the Darke county municipal court all violations of state law arising in the county, except for violations of state law arising in the municipal corporation of Greenville and violations of state law arising in the village of Versailles. The Greene county prosecuting attorney may, with the concurrence of the Greene county board of county commissioners, prosecute in the Fairborn municipal court may provide for the prosecution of all violations of state law arising within the unincorporated areas of Bath and Beavercreek townships in Greene county and prosecute in the Xenia municipal court all violations of state law arising within the unincorporated areas of Ceasarcreek, Cedarville, Jefferson, Miami, New Jasper, Ross, Silvercreek, Spring Valley, Sugarcreek, and Xenia townships territorial jurisdiction of any municipal court located in Greene county.
The prosecuting attorney of any county given the duty of
prosecuting in municipal court violations of state law shall
receive no additional compensation for assuming these additional
duties, except that the prosecuting attorney of Hamilton,
Portage,
and Wayne counties shall receive compensation at the
rate of four
thousand eight hundred dollars per year, and the
prosecuting
attorney of Auglaize county shall receive
compensation at the rate
of one thousand eight hundred dollars
per year, each payable from
the county treasury of the respective
counties in semimonthly
installments.
(C) The village solicitor, city director of law, or
similar
chief legal officer shall perform the same duties,
insofar as they
are applicable to the village solicitor, city
director of law, or
similar chief legal officer, as are required of the
prosecuting
attorney of the county. The village solicitor, city
director of
law, similar chief legal officer or any
assistants who
may be
appointed shall receive for such services
additional compensation
to be paid from the treasury of the county as the
board of county
commissioners prescribes.
(D) The (1) Subject to division (D)(2) of this section, the prosecuting attorney of any county, other than
Auglaize,
Brown, Clermont, Hocking, Holmes, Jackson,
Morrow, Ottawa, or
Portage
county,
may enter into an agreement with any municipal
corporation
in the
county in which the prosecuting attorney serves
pursuant to
which
the prosecuting
attorney prosecutes all criminal
cases
brought
before the
municipal court that has territorial
jurisdiction over
that
municipal corporation for criminal offenses
occurring within
the
municipal corporation. The prosecuting
attorney of Auglaize,
Brown,
Clermont, Hocking, Holmes, Jackson,
Morrow,
Ottawa,
or Portage county may enter
into an agreement with any
municipal
corporation in the county in
which the prosecuting
attorney serves
pursuant to which the
respective prosecuting
attorney prosecutes
all cases brought
before the Auglaize
county,
Brown county,
Clermont
county, Hocking
county, Holmes county, Jackson
county,
Morrow county, Ottawa
county, or
Portage county municipal
court
for violations of the ordinances of
the municipal
corporation or
for criminal offenses other than
violations of
state law occurring
within the municipal
corporation. For
prosecuting these cases,
the prosecuting
attorney and the
municipal corporation may agree
upon a fee to be
paid by the
municipal corporation, which fee
shall be paid into
the county
treasury, to be used to cover
expenses of the office of
the
prosecuting attorney.
(2) Any agreement entered into by the Greene county prosecuting attorney under division (D)(1) of this section is subject to the authority under division (B) of this section of the Greene county board of county commissioners to provide for the prosecution of violations of state law in municipal courts located in Greene county.
Sec. 2151.362. (A)(1) In the manner prescribed by division (C)(1) or (2)
of section 3313.64 of the Revised Code, as applicable, the court, at the
time of
making any order that removes a child from the child's own
home or
that vests legal or permanent custody of the child in a person
other
than the child's parent
or a government agency, shall
determine the school
district that is to bear the cost of
educating the child. The
court shall make the
determination a
part of the order that provides for
the child's placement or
commitment. That school district shall bear the cost of educating the child unless and until the court modifies its order department of education determines that a different district shall be responsible for bearing that cost pursuant to division (A)(2) of this section. The court's order shall state that the determination of which school district is responsible to bear the cost of educating the child is subject to re-determination by the department pursuant to that division.
(2) If, while the child is in the custody of a person other than the child's parent or a government agency, the department of education notifies the court determines that the place of residence of the child's parent has changed since the court issued its initial order, the court department may modify its order to name a different school district to bear the cost of educating the child. The department may submit the notice to the court upon receipt, shall make this new determination, and any future determinations, based on evidence received from the school district initially ordered currently responsible to bear the cost of educating the child, of evidence acceptable to the department. If the department finds that the evidence demonstrates to its satisfaction that the residence of the child's parent has changed since the court issued its initial order. In the notice to the court, the department shall recommend to the court whether a different district should be ordered to bear the cost of educating the child and, if so, which district should be so ordered. The under division (A)(1) of this section, or since the department last made a determination under division (A)(2) of this section, the department shall recommend to the court name the district in which the child's parent currently resides or, if the parent's residence is not known, the district in which the parent's last known residence is located. If the department cannot determine any Ohio district in which the parent currently resides or has resided, the school district designated in the initial court order under division (A)(1) of this section, or in the most recent determination made by the department under division (A)(2) of this section, shall continue to bear the cost of educating the child.
The court may consider the content of a notice by the department of education under division (A)(2) of this section as conclusive evidence as to which school district should bear the cost of educating the child and may amend its order accordingly.
(B) Whenever a child is placed in a detention facility
established
under section 2152.41 of the Revised Code or a
juvenile facility
established under section 2151.65 of the Revised
Code, the child's school
district as determined by the court or the department, in the same manner as prescribed in division (A) of this section, shall
pay the cost of educating the child
based on the per capita cost
of the educational facility within the detention
home or juvenile
facility.
(C) Whenever a child is placed by the court in a private
institution, school, or residential treatment center or
any other
private facility, the state shall pay to the court a subsidy to
help defray the expense of educating the child in an amount equal
to the product of the daily per capita educational cost of the
private
facility, as determined pursuant to this section, and the
number of days the child resides at the private facility, provided
that
the subsidy shall not exceed twenty-five
hundred dollars per
year per child. The daily per capita educational cost
of a
private facility shall be determined by dividing the actual
program cost
of the private facility or twenty-five hundred
dollars, whichever is less, by
three hundred sixty-five days or by
three hundred sixty-six days for years
that include February
twenty-ninth. The
state shall pay seventy-five per cent of the
total subsidy for each year
quarterly to the court. The state may
adjust the remaining twenty-five per
cent of the
total subsidy to
be paid to the court for each year to an amount that is less
than
twenty-five per cent of the total subsidy for that year based upon
the
availability of funds appropriated to the department of
education for the
purpose of subsidizing courts that place a child
in a private institution,
school, or residential treatment center
or any other private facility and
shall pay that adjusted amount
to the court at the end of the year.
Sec. 2913.40. (A) As used in this section:
(1)
"Statement or representation" means any oral, written,
electronic, electronic impulse, or magnetic communication that is
used to identify an item of goods or a service for which
reimbursement may be made under the medical assistance program or
that states income and expense and is or may be used to determine
a rate of reimbursement under the medical assistance program.
(2)
"Medical assistance program" means the program
established by the department of job and family services
to
provide
medical assistance under section 5111.01 of the Revised
Code and
the medicaid program of Title XIX of the
"Social Security
Act,"
49 Stat. 620 (1935), 42 U.S.C. 301, as amended.
(3)
"Provider" means any person who has signed a provider
agreement with the department of job and family services
to
provide goods
or services pursuant to the medical assistance
program or any
person who has signed an agreement with a party to
such a
provider agreement under which the person agrees to provide
goods
or services that are reimbursable under the medical
assistance
program.
(4)
"Provider agreement" means an oral or written
agreement
between the department of job and family
services and a person
in
which the person agrees to provide goods or services under the
medical assistance program.
(5)
"Recipient" means any individual who receives goods or
services from a provider under the medical assistance program.
(6)
"Records" means any medical, professional, financial,
or
business records relating to the treatment or care of any
recipient, to goods or services provided to any recipient, or to
rates paid for goods or services provided to any recipient and
any
records that are required by the rules of the
director of job and
family services to be kept for
the medical
assistance program.
(B) No person shall knowingly make or cause to be made a
false or misleading statement or representation for use in
obtaining reimbursement from the medical assistance program.
(C) No person, with purpose to commit fraud or knowing
that
the person is facilitating a fraud, shall do either of the
following:
(1) Contrary to the terms of the person's provider
agreement,
charge, solicit, accept, or receive for goods or
services that the
person
provides under the medical assistance
program any property,
money, or other consideration in addition to
the amount of
reimbursement under the medical assistance program
and the person's
provider agreement for the goods or services and
any deductibles
or co-payments cost-sharing expenses authorized by
section
5111.0112 of
the Revised Code
or rules
adopted
pursuant to section 5111.01, 5111.011, or 5111.02 of the Revised Code.
(2) Solicit, offer, or receive any remuneration, other
than
any deductibles or co-payments cost-sharing expenses authorized by section 5111.0112 of the Revised Code or
rules adopted under
section
5111.01, 5111.011, or 5111.02 of
the Revised Code,
in cash or in kind, including,
but not
limited to, a
kickback or
rebate, in connection with the
furnishing of goods or
services for
which whole or partial
reimbursement is or may be
made under the
medical assistance
program.
(D) No person, having submitted a claim for or provided
goods or services under the medical assistance program, shall do
either of the following for a period of at least six years after
a
reimbursement pursuant to that claim, or a reimbursement for
those
goods or services, is received under the medical assistance
program:
(1) Knowingly alter, falsify, destroy, conceal, or remove
any records that are necessary to fully disclose the nature of
all
goods or services for which the claim was submitted, or for
which
reimbursement was received, by the person;
(2) Knowingly alter, falsify, destroy, conceal, or remove
any records that are necessary to disclose fully all income and
expenditures upon which rates of reimbursements were based for
the
person.
(E) Whoever violates this section is guilty of medicaid
fraud. Except as otherwise provided in this division,
medicaid
fraud is a
misdemeanor of the first degree. If the value of
property, services, or funds
obtained in violation of this section
is five hundred dollars or more and is
less than five thousand
dollars, medicaid fraud is a felony of the fifth
degree. If the
value of property, services, or funds obtained in violation of
this section is five thousand dollars or more and is less than one
hundred
thousand dollars, medicaid fraud is
a felony of the fourth
degree. If the value of the
property, services, or funds obtained
in violation of this
section is one hundred thousand dollars or
more, medicaid fraud is
a
felony of the third degree.
(F) Upon application of the governmental agency, office,
or
other entity that conducted the investigation and prosecution
in a
case under this section, the court shall order any person
who is
convicted of a violation of this section for receiving any
reimbursement for furnishing goods or services under the medical
assistance program to which the person is not entitled to
pay to
the
applicant its cost of investigating and prosecuting the case.
The costs of investigation and prosecution that a defendant is
ordered to pay pursuant to this division shall be in addition to
any other penalties for the receipt of that reimbursement that
are
provided in this section, section 5111.03 of the Revised
Code, or
any other provision of law.
(G) The provisions of this section are not intended to be
exclusive remedies and do not preclude the use of any other
criminal or civil remedy for any act that is in violation of this
section.
Sec. 2921.42. (A) No public official shall knowingly do
any of the following:
(1) Authorize, or employ the authority or influence of his the
public official's
office to secure authorization of any public contract in which
he the public official, a member of his the public
official's family, or any of his the public official's
business associates has
an interest;
(2) Authorize, or employ the authority or influence of his the
public official's
office to secure the investment of public funds in any share,
bond, mortgage, or other security, with respect to which he the
public official, a
member of his the public official's family, or any of his
the public official's business associates either
has an interest, is an underwriter, or receives any brokerage,
origination, or servicing fees;
(3) During his the public official's term of office or within
one year
thereafter, occupy any position of profit in the prosecution of a
public contract authorized by him the public official or by a
legislative body,
commission, or board of which he the public official was a
member at the time of
authorization, unless the contract was let by competitive bidding
to the lowest and best bidder;
(4) Have an interest in the profits or benefits of a
public contract entered into by or for the use of the political
subdivision or governmental agency or instrumentality with which
he the public official is connected;
(5) Have an interest in the profits or benefits of a
public contract that is not let by competitive bidding if
required by law and that involves more than one hundred fifty
dollars.
(B) In the absence of bribery or a purpose to defraud, a
public official, member of his a public official's family, or
any of his a public official's business
associates shall not be considered as having an interest in a
public contract or the investment of public funds, if all of the
following apply:
(1) The interest of that person is limited to owning or
controlling shares of the corporation, or being a creditor of the
corporation or other organization, that is the contractor on the
public contract involved, or that is the issuer of the security
in which public funds are invested;
(2) The shares owned or controlled by that person do not
exceed five per cent of the outstanding shares of the
corporation, and the amount due that person as creditor does not
exceed five per cent of the total indebtedness of the corporation
or other organization;
(3) That person, prior to the time the public contract is
entered into, files with the political subdivision or
governmental agency or instrumentality involved, an affidavit
giving his that person's exact status in connection with the
corporation or
other organization.
(C) This section does not apply to a public contract in
which a public official, member of his a public official's
family, or one of his a public official's
business associates has an interest, when all of the following
apply:
(1) The subject of the public contract is necessary
supplies or services for the political subdivision or
governmental agency or instrumentality involved;
(2) The supplies or services are unobtainable elsewhere
for the same or lower cost, or are being furnished to the
political subdivision or governmental agency or instrumentality
as part of a continuing course of dealing established prior to
the public official's becoming associated with the political
subdivision or governmental agency or instrumentality involved;
(3) The treatment accorded the political subdivision or
governmental agency or instrumentality is either preferential to
or the same as that accorded other customers or clients in
similar transactions;
(4) The entire transaction is conducted at arm's length,
with full knowledge by the political subdivision or governmental
agency or instrumentality involved, of the interest of the public
official, member of his the public official's family, or
business associate, and the
public official takes no part in the deliberations or decision of
the political subdivision or governmental agency or
instrumentality with respect to the public contract.
(D) Division (A)(4) of this section does not prohibit
participation by a public employee in any housing program funded
by public moneys if the public employee otherwise qualifies for
the program and does not use the authority or influence of his the
public employee's
office or employment to secure benefits from the program and if
the moneys are to be used on the primary residence of the public
employee. Such participation does not constitute an unlawful
interest in a public contract in violation of this section.
(E) Whoever violates this section is guilty of having an
unlawful interest in a public contract. Violation of division
(A)(1) or (2) of this section is a felony of the fourth degree.
Violation of division (A)(3), (4), or (5) of this section is a
misdemeanor of the first degree.
(F) It is not a violation of this section for a
prosecuting attorney to appoint assistants and employees in
accordance with sections 309.06 and 2921.421 of the Revised Code,
for a chief legal officer of a municipal corporation or an
official designated as prosecutor in a municipal corporation to
appoint assistants and employees in accordance with sections
733.621 and 2921.421 of the Revised Code, or for a township law
director appointed under section 504.15 of the Revised Code to
appoint assistants and employees in accordance with sections
504.151 and 2921.421 of the Revised Code.
(F)(G) This section does not apply to a public contract in
which a township trustee in a township with a population of five
thousand or less in its unincorporated area, a member of the
township trustee's family, or one of his the township trustee's
business associates has
an interest, if all of the following apply:
(1) The subject of the public contract is necessary
supplies or services for the township and the amount of the
contract is less than five thousand dollars per year;
(2) The supplies or services are being furnished to the
township as part of a continuing course of dealing established
before the township trustee held that office with the township;
(3) The treatment accorded the township is either
preferential to or the same as that accorded other customers or
clients in similar transactions;
(4) The entire transaction is conducted with full
knowledge by the township of the interest of the township
trustee, member of his the township trustee's family, or
his the township trustee's business associate.
(G)(H) Any public contract in which a public official, a member of the public official's family, or any of the public official's business associates has an interest in violation of this section is void and unenforceable. Any contract securing the investment of public funds in which a public official, a member of the public official's family, or any of the public official's business associates has an interest, is an underwriter, or receives any brokerage, origination, or servicing fees and that was entered into in violation of this section is void and unenforceable.
(I) As used in this section:
(1) "Public contract" means any of the following:
(a) The purchase or acquisition, or a contract for the
purchase or acquisition, of property or services by or for the
use of the state, any of its political subdivisions, or any
agency or instrumentality of either, including the employment of
an individual by the state, any of its political subdivisions, or
any agency or instrumentality of either;
(b) A contract for the design, construction, alteration,
repair, or maintenance of any public property.
(2) "Chief legal officer" has the same meaning as in
section 733.621 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 2927.023. (A) As used in this section "authorized recipient of tobacco products" means a person who is:
(1) Licensed as a cigarette wholesale dealer under section 5743.15 of the Revised Code;
(2) Licensed as a distributor of tobacco products under section 5743.61 of the Revised Code retail dealer as long as the person purchases cigarettes with the appropriate tax stamp affixed;
(3) An export warehouse proprietor as defined in section 5702 of the Internal Revenue Code;
(4) An operator of a customs bonded warehouse under 19 U.S.C. 1311 or 19 U.S.C. 1555;
(5) An officer, employee, or agent of the federal government or of this state acting in the person's official capacity;
(6) A department, agency, instrumentality, or political subdivision of the federal government or of this state;
(7) A person having a consent for consumer shipment issued by the tax commissioner under section 5743.71 of the Revised Code.
The purpose of this section is to prevent the sale of cigarettes to minors and to ensure compliance with the Master Settlement Agreement, as defined in section 1346.01 of the Revised Code.
(B)(1) No person shall cause to be shipped any cigarettes to any person in this state other than an authorized recipient of tobacco products.
(2) No common carrier, contract carrier, or other person shall knowingly transport cigarettes to any person in this state that the carrier or other person reasonably believes is not an authorized recipient of tobacco products. If cigarettes are transported to a home or residence, it shall be presumed that the common carrier, contract carrier, or other person knew that the person to whom the cigarettes were delivered was not an authorized recipient of tobacco products.
(C) No person engaged in the business of selling cigarettes who ships or causes to be shipped cigarettes to any person in this state in any container or wrapping other than the original container or wrapping of the cigarettes shall fail to plainly and visibly mark the exterior of the container or wrapping in which the cigarettes are shipped with the words "cigarettes."
(D) A court shall impose a fine of up to one thousand dollars for each violation of division (B)(1), (B)(2), or (C) of this section.
Sec. 2935.03. (A)(1) A sheriff, deputy sheriff, marshal,
deputy marshal, municipal police officer, township constable,
police officer of a township or joint township police district,
member of a police force employed by a metropolitan housing
authority under division (D) of section 3735.31 of the Revised
Code, member of a police force employed by a regional transit
authority
under division (Y) of section 306.35 of the Revised
Code, state university law enforcement officer appointed
under
section 3345.04 of the Revised Code, veterans' home
police
officer appointed under section 5907.02 of the Revised Code,
special police officer employed by a port authority under section
4582.04 or 4582.28 of the Revised Code, or a special police
officer employed by a municipal corporation at a municipal
airport, or other municipal air navigation facility, that has
scheduled operations, as defined in section 119.3 of Title 14 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, 14 C.F.R. 119.3, as amended, and
that is required to be under a security program and is governed by
aviation security rules of the transportation security
administration of the United States department of transportation
as provided in Parts 1542. and 1544. of Title 49 of the Code of
Federal Regulations, as amended, shall
arrest and detain,
until a
warrant can be obtained, a
person found violating, within
the
limits of the political
subdivision, metropolitan housing
authority housing project, regional
transit authority facilities
or areas of a municipal corporation that
have been agreed to by a
regional transit authority and a municipal
corporation located
within its territorial
jurisdiction, college,
university,
veterans' home operated under Chapter 5907. of the Revised Code,
port authority, or municipal airport or other
municipal air navigation facility, in
which the peace
officer is
appointed, employed, or elected, a law of this state,
an ordinance
of a municipal corporation, or a resolution of a
township.
(2) A peace officer
of the department of natural resources
or an individual
designated to perform law enforcement duties
under section
511.232, 1545.13, or 6101.75 of the Revised
Code
shall arrest and detain,
until a warrant can be obtained, a person
found violating,
within the limits of the peace officer's or
individual's
territorial jurisdiction, a law of this state.
(3) The house sergeant at arms if the house sergeant at arms
has
arrest authority pursuant to division (E)(1) of section
101.311 of the Revised Code
and an assistant house sergeant at
arms shall arrest and detain, until a
warrant can be obtained, a
person found violating, within the limits of the
sergeant at
arms's or assistant sergeant at
arms's territorial
jurisdiction
specified in division (D)(1)(a) of section 101.311
of
the Revised Code or
while providing security pursuant to division
(D)(1)(f)
of section 101.311 of the Revised Code, a
law of this
state, an ordinance of a municipal corporation, or a resolution of
a township.
(B)(1) When there is reasonable ground to believe that an
offense of violence, the offense of criminal child enticement as
defined in section 2905.05 of the Revised Code, the offense of
public indecency as defined in section 2907.09 of the Revised
Code, the offense of domestic violence as defined in section
2919.25 of the Revised Code, the offense of violating a protection
order as
defined in section 2919.27 of the Revised Code, the
offense of menacing by stalking
as defined in section 2903.211 of
the Revised Code, the offense
of aggravated trespass as defined in
section 2911.211 of the
Revised Code, a theft offense as defined
in section 2913.01 of
the Revised Code, or a felony drug abuse
offense as defined in
section 2925.01 of the Revised Code, has
been committed within
the limits of the political subdivision,
metropolitan housing
authority housing project,
regional
transit
authority facilities or those areas of a municipal corporation
that have
been agreed to by a regional transit authority and a
municipal corporation
located within its territorial jurisdiction,
college, university,
veterans' home operated under Chapter 5907. of the Revised Code,
port authority, or
municipal airport or other municipal air navigation facility, in
which the peace
officer is appointed, employed, or
elected or
within the limits of the territorial jurisdiction of the peace
officer, a peace officer described in division
(A) of this section
may arrest and detain until a
warrant can be obtained any person
who the peace officer
has reasonable cause to believe is guilty of
the violation.
(2) For purposes of division (B)(1) of this section, the
execution of any of the following constitutes reasonable ground
to
believe that the offense alleged in the statement was
committed
and reasonable cause to believe that the person alleged
in the
statement to have committed the offense is guilty of the
violation:
(a) A written statement by a person alleging that an
alleged
offender has committed the offense of menacing by
stalking or
aggravated trespass;
(b) A written statement by the administrator of the
interstate compact on mental health appointed under section
5119.51 of the Revised Code alleging that a person who had been
hospitalized, institutionalized, or confined in any facility
under
an order made pursuant to or under authority of section
2945.37,
2945.371, 2945.38, 2945.39, 2945.40,
2945.401, or 2945.402 of the
Revised
Code has escaped from the facility, from confinement in a
vehicle
for transportation to or from the facility, or from
supervision
by an employee of the facility that is incidental to
hospitalization, institutionalization, or confinement in the
facility and that occurs outside of the facility, in violation of
section 2921.34 of the Revised Code;
(c) A written statement by the
administrator of any facility
in which a person has been
hospitalized, institutionalized, or
confined under an order made
pursuant to or under authority of
section 2945.37, 2945.371,
2945.38, 2945.39, 2945.40, 2945.401, or
2945.402 of the Revised Code alleging that
the person has escaped
from the facility, from confinement in a
vehicle for
transportation to or from the facility, or from
supervision by an
employee of the facility that is incidental to
hospitalization,
institutionalization, or confinement in the
facility and that
occurs outside of the facility, in violation of
section 2921.34 of
the Revised Code.
(3)(a) For purposes of division (B)(1)
of this section, a
peace officer described in division
(A) of this section has
reasonable grounds to believe that the offense of domestic
violence or the offense of violating a protection order has been
committed and
reasonable cause to
believe that a particular person
is guilty of committing the
offense if any of the following
occurs:
(i) A person executes a written statement
alleging that the
person in question has committed the offense of
domestic violence
or the offense of violating a protection order
against the person
who executes the
statement or against a child of the person who
executes the
statement.
(ii) No written statement of the type described
in division
(B)(3)(a)(i) of this
section is executed, but the peace officer,
based upon the peace
officer's own knowledge and observation of
the facts and circumstances of
the alleged incident of the offense
of domestic violence or the
alleged incident of the offense of
violating a protection order
or based upon any other information,
including, but not limited to, any reasonably trustworthy
information given to the peace officer by the alleged victim
of
the alleged incident of the offense or any witness of the alleged
incident
of the offense, concludes that there are reasonable
grounds to
believe that the offense of domestic violence or the
offense of
violating a protection order has been
committed and
reasonable cause to believe that the person in
question is guilty
of committing the offense.
(iii) No written statement of the type
described in division
(B)(3)(a)(i)
of this section is executed, but the peace officer
witnessed
the person in question commit the offense of domestic
violence or
the offense of violating a protection order.
(b) If pursuant to division
(B)(3)(a) of this section a
peace officer has
reasonable grounds to believe that the offense
of domestic
violence or the offense of violating a protection
order has been committed and
reasonable cause to
believe that a
particular person is guilty of committing the
offense, it is the
preferred course of action in this state that
the officer arrest
and detain that person pursuant to division
(B)(1) of this section
until a warrant can be obtained.
If pursuant to division (B)(3)(a)
of this section a peace
officer has reasonable grounds to
believe that the offense of
domestic violence or the offense of
violating a protection order
has been
committed and reasonable cause to believe that family or
household members have committed the offense against each other,
it is the preferred course of action in this state that the
officer, pursuant to division (B)(1) of this section,
arrest and
detain until a warrant can be obtained the family or
household
member who committed the offense and whom the officer
has
reasonable cause to believe is the primary physical
aggressor.
There is no preferred course of action in this state
regarding any
other family or household member who committed the
offense and
whom the officer does not have reasonable cause to
believe is the
primary physical aggressor, but, pursuant to
division (B)(1) of
this section, the peace officer may
arrest and detain until a
warrant can be obtained any other
family or household member who
committed the offense and whom the
officer does not have
reasonable cause to believe is the primary
physical aggressor.
(c) If a peace officer described in division
(A) of this
section does not arrest and detain a
person whom the officer has
reasonable cause to believe committed
the offense of domestic
violence or the offense of violating a
protection order when it is
the preferred
course of action in this state pursuant to division
(B)(3)(b) of this section that the officer
arrest that person, the
officer shall articulate in the
written report of the incident
required by section 2935.032 of the
Revised Code a clear statement
of the officer's reasons for not
arresting and detaining that
person until a warrant can be obtained.
(d) In determining for purposes of division
(B)(3)(b) of
this section which family or
household member is the primary
physical aggressor in a situation
in which family or household
members have committed the offense
of domestic violence or the
offense of violating a protection
order against each other, a
peace officer
described in division (A) of this section, in
addition
to any other relevant circumstances, should consider all
of the
following:
(i) Any history of domestic violence or of any
other violent
acts by either person involved in the alleged
offense that the
officer reasonably can ascertain;
(ii) If violence is alleged, whether the alleged
violence
was caused by
a person acting in self-defense;
(iii) Each person's fear of physical harm, if
any, resulting
from the other person's threatened use of force
against any person
or resulting from the other person's use or
history of the use of
force against any person, and the
reasonableness of that fear;
(iv) The comparative severity of any injuries
suffered by
the persons involved in the alleged offense.
(e)(i) A peace officer described in
division (A) of this
section shall not require, as a
prerequisite to arresting or
charging a person who has committed
the offense of domestic
violence or the offense of violating a
protection order, that the
victim of the
offense specifically consent to the filing of
charges against the
person who has committed the offense or sign a
complaint against
the person who has committed the offense.
(ii) If a person is arrested for or charged
with committing
the offense of domestic violence or the offense
of violating a
protection order and if the
victim of the offense does not
cooperate with the involved law
enforcement or prosecuting
authorities in the prosecution of the
offense or, subsequent to
the arrest or the filing of the
charges, informs the involved law
enforcement or prosecuting
authorities that the victim does not
wish the prosecution of the
offense to continue or wishes to drop
charges against the alleged
offender relative to the offense, the
involved prosecuting
authorities, in determining whether to
continue with the
prosecution of the offense or whether to dismiss
charges against
the alleged offender relative to the offense and
notwithstanding
the victim's failure to cooperate or the victim's
wishes, shall
consider all facts and circumstances that are
relevant to the
offense, including, but not limited to, the
statements and
observations of the peace officers who responded to
the incident
that resulted in the arrest or filing of the charges
and of all
witnesses to that incident.
(f) In determining pursuant to divisions (B)(3)(a) to (g) of
this section
whether to arrest a person pursuant to division
(B)(1) of
this section, a peace officer described in division
(A)
of this section shall not consider as a factor any
possible
shortage of cell space at the detention facility to
which the
person will be taken subsequent to the person's
arrest or any
possibility that the person's arrest might cause, contribute to,
or exacerbate overcrowding at that detention facility or at any
other
detention facility.
(g) If a peace officer described in division (A) of
this
section intends
pursuant to
divisions (B)(3)(a) to (g) of this
section to arrest a person pursuant to
division (B)(1) of this
section and if the officer is
unable to
do so because the person
is not present, the officer promptly shall seek a
warrant for the
arrest of the person.
(h) If a peace officer described in division
(A) of this
section responds to a report of an alleged
incident of the offense
of domestic violence or an alleged
incident of the offense of
violating a
protection order and if the circumstances
of the
incident
involved the use or threatened use of a deadly weapon or
any
person involved in the incident brandished a deadly weapon
during
or in relation to the incident, the deadly weapon that was
used,
threatened to be used, or brandished constitutes contraband,
and,
to the extent possible, the officer shall seize the deadly
weapon
as contraband pursuant to Chapter 2981. of the Revised
Code. Upon the seizure of a deadly weapon pursuant to
division
(B)(3)(h) of this section, section 2981.12 of the Revised
Code
shall apply regarding the treatment and disposition
of the deadly
weapon. For purposes of that section, the
"underlying criminal
offense" that was the basis of the
seizure of a deadly weapon
under division (B)(3)(h) of
this section and to which the
deadly
weapon had a relationship is any of the following that is
applicable:
(i) The alleged incident of the offense of
domestic violence
or the alleged incident of the offense of
violating a protection
order to which the
officer who seized the deadly weapon responded;
(ii) Any offense that arose out of the same
facts and
circumstances as the report of the alleged incident of
the offense
of domestic violence or the alleged incident of the
offense of
violating a protection order to
which the officer who seized the
deadly weapon responded.
(4) If, in the circumstances described in divisions
(B)(3)(a) to (g) of
this section, a peace officer described in
division
(A) of this section arrests and detains a person
pursuant
to division (B)(1) of this section, or if,
pursuant to division
(B)(3)(h) of this
section, a peace officer described in division
(A) of
this section seizes a deadly weapon, the officer, to the
extent
described in and in accordance with section 9.86 or 2744.03
of
the Revised Code, is immune in any civil action
for damages for
injury, death, or loss to person or property that
arises from or
is related to the arrest and detention or the
seizure.
(C) When there is reasonable ground to believe that a
violation of division (A)(1), (2), (3), (4), or (5) of section 4506.15 or a
violation of section 4511.19 of the Revised Code has been
committed by a person operating a motor vehicle subject to
regulation by the public utilities commission of Ohio under Title
XLIX of the Revised Code, a peace officer with authority to
enforce that provision of law may stop or detain the person whom
the officer has reasonable cause to believe was operating the
motor vehicle in violation of the division or section and, after
investigating the circumstances surrounding the operation of the
vehicle, may arrest and detain the person.
(D) If a sheriff, deputy sheriff, marshal, deputy marshal,
municipal police officer, member of a police force employed by a
metropolitan housing authority under division (D) of section
3735.31 of the Revised Code, member of a police force employed by
a
regional transit authority under division (Y) of section 306.35
of the Revised
Code, special police officer employed by a port
authority under section
4582.04 or 4582.28 of the Revised Code,
special police officer employed by a municipal corporation at a
municipal airport or other municipal air navigation facility
described in division (A) of this section, township constable,
police officer of a
township or joint township
police district,
state university
law enforcement officer
appointed under section
3345.04 of the
Revised Code, peace officer
of the department of
natural
resources, individual designated to
perform law
enforcement duties
under
section 511.232, 1545.13, or
6101.75 of
the Revised Code, the house
sergeant at arms if the
house sergeant
at arms has arrest authority pursuant
to division
(E)(1) of
section 101.311 of the Revised Code, or an assistant
house
sergeant at arms is authorized by
division (A) or
(B) of
this
section
to arrest and detain, within the limits of the
political
subdivision, metropolitan housing authority housing
project,
regional
transit authority facilities or those areas of a
municipal
corporation that have been agreed to by a regional
transit authority and a
municipal corporation located within its
territorial jurisdiction,
port authority,
municipal airport or
other municipal air navigation facility, college, or university
in
which the officer is
appointed,
employed, or elected or within
the
limits of the territorial jurisdiction
of the peace officer, a
person until a warrant can be obtained, the peace
officer, outside
the limits of that
territory, may pursue, arrest, and detain that
person until a warrant
can be
obtained if all of the following
apply:
(1) The pursuit takes place without unreasonable delay
after
the offense is committed;
(2) The pursuit is initiated within the limits of the
political subdivision, metropolitan housing authority housing
project, regional transit authority facilities or those areas of a
municipal corporation that have been agreed to by a regional
transit authority
and a municipal corporation located within its
territorial
jurisdiction, port authority,
municipal airport or
other municipal air navigation facility, college, or university
in
which
the peace officer is
appointed, employed, or elected or
within the limits of the
territorial jurisdiction of the peace
officer;
(3) The offense involved is a felony, a misdemeanor of the
first degree or a substantially equivalent municipal ordinance, a
misdemeanor of the second degree or a substantially equivalent
municipal ordinance, or any offense for which points are
chargeable pursuant to section 4510.036 of the
Revised Code.
(E) In addition to the authority granted under division
(A)
or (B) of this section:
(1) A sheriff or deputy sheriff may arrest and detain,
until
a warrant can be obtained, any person found violating
section
4503.11, 4503.21, or 4549.01, sections 4549.08 to
4549.12, section
4549.62, or Chapter 4511. or 4513. of the
Revised Code on the
portion of any street or highway that is
located immediately
adjacent to the boundaries of the county in
which the sheriff or
deputy sheriff is elected or appointed.
(2) A member of the police force of a township police
district created under section 505.48 of the Revised Code, a
member of the police force of a joint township police district
created under section 505.481 of the Revised Code, or a
township
constable appointed in accordance with section 509.01 of the
Revised Code, who has received a certificate from the Ohio peace
officer training commission under section 109.75 of the Revised
Code,
may arrest and detain, until a warrant can be obtained, any
person found violating any section or chapter of the Revised Code
listed in division (E)(1) of this section, other than sections
4513.33 and 4513.34 of the Revised Code, on the portion of any
street or highway that is located immediately adjacent to the
boundaries of the township police district or joint township
police district, in the case of a member of a township police
district or joint township police district police force, or the
unincorporated territory of the township, in the case of a
township constable. However, if the population of the township
that created the township police district served by the member's
police force, or the townships that created the joint township
police district served by the member's police force, or the
township that is served by the township constable, is sixty
thousand or less, the member of the township police district or
joint police district police force or the township constable may
not make an arrest under division (E)(2) of this
section on a
state highway that is
included as part of the interstate system.
(3) A police officer or village marshal appointed,
elected,
or employed by a municipal corporation may arrest and
detain,
until a warrant can be obtained, any person found
violating any
section or chapter of the Revised Code listed in
division (E)(1)
of this section on the portion of any street or
highway that is
located immediately adjacent to the boundaries of
the municipal
corporation in which the police officer or village
marshal is
appointed, elected, or employed.
(4) A peace
officer of the department of natural resources
or an individual
designated to perform law enforcement duties
under section
511.232, 1545.13, or 6101.75 of the
Revised Code may
arrest and detain,
until a warrant can be obtained, any person
found violating any
section or chapter of the Revised
Code listed
in division
(E)(1) of this section, other
than sections 4513.33
and 4513.34 of the
Revised
Code, on the portion of any
street or
highway that is located immediately adjacent to the
boundaries of
the lands and waters that constitute the
territorial jurisdiction
of the peace officer.
(F)(1) A department of mental health special police officer
or
a department of mental retardation and developmental
disabilities
special police officer may arrest without a warrant
and detain until a
warrant can be obtained any person found
committing on the
premises of any institution under the
jurisdiction of the
particular department a misdemeanor under a
law of the state.
A department of mental health special police officer or a
department of mental retardation and developmental disabilities
special police officer may arrest without a warrant and detain
until a
warrant can be obtained any person who has been
hospitalized,
institutionalized, or confined in an institution
under the
jurisdiction of the particular department pursuant to or
under
authority of section 2945.37, 2945.371, 2945.38, 2945.39,
2945.40, 2945.401, or 2945.402 of the Revised
Code and who is
found committing on the
premises of any institution under the
jurisdiction of the
particular department a violation of section
2921.34 of the
Revised Code that involves an escape from the
premises of the
institution.
(2)(a) If a department of mental health special police
officer
or a department of mental retardation and developmental
disabilities special police officer finds any person who has been
hospitalized, institutionalized, or confined in an institution
under the jurisdiction of the particular department pursuant to
or
under authority of section 2945.37, 2945.371, 2945.38,
2945.39,
2945.40, 2945.401, or
2945.402 of the Revised Code committing a
violation of
section 2921.34 of the Revised Code that involves an
escape from
the premises of the institution, or if there is
reasonable ground
to believe that a violation of section 2921.34
of the Revised
Code has been committed that involves an escape
from the premises
of an institution under the jurisdiction of the
department of
mental health or the department of mental
retardation and
developmental disabilities and if a department of
mental health
special police officer or a department of mental
retardation and
developmental disabilities special police officer
has reasonable cause
to believe that a particular person who has
been hospitalized,
institutionalized, or confined in the
institution pursuant to or
under authority of section 2945.37,
2945.371, 2945.38, 2945.39,
2945.40, 2945.401, or 2945.402 of
the
Revised Code is guilty of the violation, the
special police
officer, outside of the premises of the institution,
may pursue,
arrest, and detain that person for that violation of
section
2921.34 of the Revised Code, until a warrant can be
obtained, if
both of the following apply:
(i) The pursuit takes place without unreasonable delay
after
the offense is committed;
(ii) The pursuit is initiated within the premises of the
institution from which the violation of section 2921.34 of the
Revised Code occurred.
(b) For purposes of division (F)(2)(a) of this section,
the
execution of a written statement by the administrator of the
institution in which a person had been hospitalized,
institutionalized, or confined pursuant to or under authority of
section 2945.37, 2945.371, 2945.38, 2945.39, 2945.40,
2945.401, or
2945.402 of the
Revised Code alleging that the person has escaped
from the
premises of the institution in violation of section
2921.34 of
the Revised Code constitutes reasonable ground to
believe that the violation was committed and reasonable cause to
believe that the person alleged in the statement to have
committed
the offense is guilty of the violation.
(G) As used in this section:
(1) A "department of mental health special police officer"
means a special police officer of the department of mental health
designated under section 5119.14 of the Revised Code who is
certified by the Ohio peace officer training commission under
section 109.77 of the Revised Code as having successfully
completed an approved peace officer basic training program.
(2) A "department of mental retardation and developmental
disabilities special police officer" means a special
police
officer of the
department of mental retardation and developmental
disabilities
designated under section 5123.13 of the Revised Code
who is
certified by the Ohio peace officer training council under
section 109.77 of the Revised Code as having successfully
completed an approved peace officer basic training program.
(3) "Deadly weapon" has the same meaning as in section
2923.11 of the Revised
Code.
(4) "Family or household member" has the same meaning as in
section 2919.25
of the Revised Code.
(5) "Street" or "highway" has the same meaning as in
section
4511.01 of the Revised Code.
(6) "Interstate system" has the same meaning as in section
5516.01 of the Revised Code.
(7) "Peace officer of the department of
natural resources"
means an employee of the
department of natural resources who is
a
natural resources law enforcement staff officer designated
pursuant to
section 1501.013 of the Revised Code, a forest officer designated
pursuant
to section 1503.29 of the Revised Code, a preserve officer designated
pursuant to
section 1517.10 of the Revised Code, a wildlife officer designated
pursuant to section
1531.13 of the Revised Code, a park officer designated pursuant to section
1541.10 of the Revised Code, or
a state watercraft officer
designated pursuant to section 1547.521
of the
Revised Code.
(8) "Portion of any street or highway" means all lanes of the street or highway irrespective of direction of travel, including designated turn lanes, and any berm, median, or shoulder.
Sec. 3109.04. (A) In any divorce, legal separation, or
annulment proceeding and in any proceeding pertaining to the
allocation of parental rights and responsibilities for the care
of
a child, upon hearing the testimony of either or both parents
and
considering any mediation report filed pursuant to section
3109.052 of the Revised Code and in accordance with sections
3127.01 to 3127.53 of the Revised Code, the court shall allocate
the parental rights and responsibilities for the care of the
minor
children of the marriage. Subject to division (D)(2) of
this
section, the court may allocate the parental rights and
responsibilities for the care of the children in either of the
following ways:
(1) If neither parent files a pleading or motion in
accordance with division (G) of this section, if at least one
parent files a pleading or motion under that division but no
parent who filed a pleading or motion under that division also
files a plan for shared parenting, or if at least one parent
files
both a pleading or motion and a shared parenting plan under
that
division but no plan for shared parenting is in the best
interest
of the children, the court, in a manner consistent with
the best
interest of the children, shall allocate the parental
rights and
responsibilities for the care of the children
primarily to one of
the parents, designate that parent as the
residential parent and
the legal custodian of the child, and
divide between the parents
the other rights and responsibilities
for the care of the
children, including, but not limited to, the
responsibility to
provide support for the children and the right
of the parent who
is not the residential parent to have
continuing contact with the
children.
(2) If at least one parent files a pleading or motion in
accordance with division (G) of this section and a plan for
shared
parenting pursuant to that division and if a plan for
shared
parenting is in the best interest of the children and is
approved
by the court in accordance with division (D)(1) of this
section,
the court may allocate the parental rights and
responsibilities
for the care of the children to both parents and
issue a shared
parenting order requiring the parents to share all
or some of the
aspects of the physical and legal care of the
children in
accordance with the approved plan for shared
parenting. If the
court issues a shared parenting order under
this division and it
is necessary for the purpose of receiving
public assistance, the
court shall designate which one of the
parents' residences is to
serve as the child's home. The child
support obligations of the
parents under a shared parenting order
issued under this division
shall be determined in accordance with
Chapters 3119., 3121.,
3123.,
and 3125. of the Revised Code.
(B)(1) When making the allocation of the parental rights
and
responsibilities for the care of the children under this
section
in an original proceeding or in any proceeding for
modification of
a prior order of the court making the allocation,
the court shall
take into account that which would be in the best
interest of the
children. In determining the child's best
interest for purposes
of making its allocation of the parental
rights and
responsibilities for the care of the child and for
purposes of
resolving any issues related to the making of that
allocation, the
court, in its discretion, may and, upon the
request of either
party, shall interview in chambers any or all
of the involved
children regarding their wishes and concerns with
respect to the
allocation.
(2) If the court interviews any child pursuant to division
(B)(1) of this section, all of the following apply:
(a) The court, in its discretion, may and, upon the motion
of either parent, shall appoint a guardian ad litem for the
child.
(b) The court first shall determine the reasoning ability
of
the child. If the court determines that the child does not
have
sufficient reasoning ability to express the child's
wishes and
concern with respect to the allocation of parental rights and
responsibilities for the care of the child, it shall not
determine
the child's wishes and concerns with respect to the
allocation.
If the court determines that the child has
sufficient reasoning
ability to express the child's wishes
or concerns
with respect to
the allocation, it then shall determine whether,
because of
special circumstances, it would not be in the best
interest of the
child to determine the child's wishes and
concerns with respect to
the allocation. If the court determines
that, because of special
circumstances, it would not be in the
best interest of the child
to determine the child's wishes and
concerns with respect to the
allocation, it shall not determine
the child's wishes and concerns
with respect to the allocation
and shall enter its written
findings of fact and opinion in the
journal. If the court
determines that it would be in the best
interests of the child to
determine the child's wishes and
concerns with respect to the
allocation, it shall proceed to make
that determination.
(c) The interview shall be conducted in chambers, and no
person other than the child, the child's attorney, the judge, any
necessary court personnel, and, in the judge's discretion, the
attorney of each parent shall be permitted to be present in the
chambers during the interview.
(3) No person shall obtain or attempt to obtain from a
child
a written or recorded statement or affidavit setting forth
the
child's wishes and concerns regarding the allocation of
parental
rights and responsibilities concerning the child. No
court, in
determining the child's best interest for purposes of
making its
allocation of the parental rights and responsibilities
for the
care of the child or for purposes of resolving any issues
related
to the making of that allocation, shall accept or
consider a
written or recorded statement or affidavit that
purports to set
forth the child's wishes and concerns regarding
those matters.
(C) Prior to trial, the court may cause an investigation
to
be made as to the character, family relations, past conduct,
earning ability, and financial worth of each parent and may order
the parents and their minor children to submit to medical,
psychological, and psychiatric examinations. The report of the
investigation and examinations shall be made available to either
parent or the parent's counsel of record not less than five
days
before
trial, upon written request. The report shall be signed by
the
investigator, and the investigator shall be subject to
cross-examination by either parent concerning the contents of the
report. The court may tax as costs all or any part of the
expenses for each investigation.
If the court determines that either parent previously has
been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any criminal offense
involving any act that resulted in a child being a neglected
child, that either parent previously has been determined to be
the
perpetrator of the neglectful act that is the basis of an
adjudication that a child is a neglected child, or that there is
reason to believe that either parent has acted in a manner
resulting in a child being a neglected child, the court shall
consider that fact against naming that parent the residential
parent and against granting a shared parenting decree. When the
court allocates parental rights and responsibilities for the care
of children or determines whether to grant shared parenting in
any
proceeding, it shall consider whether either parent or any member of the household of either parent has been
convicted of or pleaded guilty to a violation of section 2919.25
of the Revised Code or a sexually oriented offense involving a victim who at the time of the
commission of the offense was a member of the family or household
that is the subject of the proceeding, has been convicted of or
pleaded guilty to any sexually oriented offense or other offense involving a victim who at the
time of the commission of the offense was a member of the family
or household that is the subject of the proceeding and caused
physical harm to the victim in the commission of the offense, or
has been determined to be the perpetrator of the abusive act that
is the basis of an adjudication that a child is an abused child.
If the court determines that either parent has been convicted of
or pleaded guilty to a violation of section 2919.25 of the
Revised
Code or a sexually oriented offense involving a victim who at the time of the commission
of the
offense was a member of the family or household that is
the
subject of the proceeding, has been convicted of or pleaded
guilty
to any sexually oriented offense or other offense involving a victim who at the time of
the
commission of the offense was a member of the family or
household
that is the subject of the proceeding and caused
physical harm to
the victim in the commission of the offense, or
has been
determined to be the perpetrator of the abusive act that
is the
basis of an adjudication that a child is an abused child,
it may
designate that parent as the residential parent and may
issue a
shared parenting decree or order only if it determines
that it is
in the best interest of the child to name that parent
the
residential parent or to issue a shared parenting decree or
order
and it makes specific written findings of fact to support
its
determination.
(D)(1)(a) Upon the filing of a pleading or motion by
either
parent or both parents, in accordance with division (G) of
this
section, requesting shared parenting and the filing of a
shared
parenting plan in accordance with that division, the court
shall
comply with division (D)(1)(a)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this
section,
whichever is applicable:
(i) If both parents jointly make the request in their
pleadings or jointly file the motion and also jointly file the
plan, the court shall review the parents' plan to determine if it
is in the best interest of the children. If the court determines
that the plan is in the best interest of the children, the court
shall approve it. If the court determines that the plan or any
part of the plan is not in the best interest of the children, the
court shall require the parents to make appropriate changes to
the
plan to meet the court's objections to it. If changes to the
plan
are made to meet the court's objections, and if the new plan
is in
the best interest of the children, the court shall approve
the
plan. If changes to the plan are not made to meet the
court's
objections, or if the parents attempt to make changes to
the plan
to meet the court's objections, but the court determines
that the
new plan or any part of the new plan still is not in the
best
interest of the children, the court may reject the portion
of the
parents' pleadings or deny their motion requesting shared
parenting of the children and proceed as if the request in the
pleadings or the motion had not been made. The court shall not
approve a plan under this division unless it determines that the
plan is in the best interest of the children.
(ii) If each parent makes a request in the parent's
pleadings or
files a motion and each also files a separate plan,
the
court shall review each plan filed to determine if either is
in
the best interest of the children. If the court determines
that
one of the filed plans is in the best interest of the
children,
the court may approve the plan. If the court determines
that
neither filed plan is in the best interest of the children,
the
court may order each parent to submit appropriate changes to
the parent's plan or both of the filed plans to meet the court's
objections, or may select one of the filed plans and order each
parent to submit appropriate changes to the selected plan to meet
the court's objections. If changes to the plan or plans are
submitted to meet the court's objections, and if any of the filed
plans with the changes is in the best interest of the children,
the court may approve the plan with the changes. If changes to
the plan or plans are not submitted to meet the court's
objections, or if the parents submit changes to the plan or plans
to meet the court's objections but the court determines that none
of the filed plans with the submitted changes is in the best
interest of the children, the court may reject the portion of the
parents' pleadings or deny their motions requesting shared
parenting of the children and proceed as if the requests in the
pleadings or the motions had not been made. If the court
approves
a plan under this division, either as originally filed
or with
submitted changes, or if the court rejects the portion of
the
parents' pleadings or denies their motions requesting shared
parenting under this division and proceeds as if the requests in
the pleadings or the motions had not been made, the court shall
enter in the record of the case findings of fact and conclusions
of law as to the reasons for the approval or the rejection or
denial. Division (D)(1)(b) of this section applies in relation
to
the approval or disapproval of a plan under this division.
(iii) If each parent makes a request in the parent's
pleadings or
files a motion but only one parent files a plan, or
if
only
one parent makes a request in the parent's pleadings or
files a motion and
also files a plan, the court in the best
interest of the children
may order the other parent to file a plan
for shared parenting in
accordance with division (G) of this
section. The court shall
review each plan filed to determine if
any plan is in the best
interest of the children. If the court
determines that one of
the filed plans is in the best interest of
the children, the
court may approve the plan. If the court
determines that no
filed plan is in the best interest of the
children, the court may
order each parent to submit appropriate
changes to the
parent's plan
or both of the filed plans to meet
the court's objections or may
select one filed plan and order each
parent to submit appropriate
changes to the selected plan to meet
the court's objections. If
changes to the plan or plans are
submitted to meet the court's
objections, and if any of the filed
plans with the changes is in
the best interest of the children,
the court may approve the plan
with the changes. If changes to
the plan or plans are not
submitted to meet the court's
objections, or if the parents
submit changes to the plan or plans
to meet the court's
objections but the court determines that none
of the filed plans
with the submitted changes is in the best
interest of the
children, the court may reject the portion of the
parents'
pleadings or deny the parents' motion or reject the
portion of
the parents' pleadings or deny their motions requesting
shared
parenting of the children and proceed as if the request or
requests or the motion or motions had not been made. If the
court
approves a plan under this division, either as originally
filed or
with submitted changes, or if the court rejects the
portion of the
pleadings or denies the motion or motions
requesting shared
parenting under this division and proceeds as
if the request or
requests or the motion or motions had not been
made, the court
shall enter in the record of the case findings of
fact and
conclusions of law as to the reasons for the approval or
the
rejection or denial. Division (D)(1)(b) of this section
applies
in relation to the approval or disapproval of a plan
under this
division.
(b) The approval of a plan under division (D)(1)(a)(ii) or
(iii) of this section is discretionary with the court. The court
shall not approve more than one plan under either division and
shall not approve a plan under either division unless it
determines that the plan is in the best interest of the children.
If the court, under either division, does not determine that any
filed plan or any filed plan with submitted changes is in the
best
interest of the children, the court shall not approve any
plan.
(c) Whenever possible, the court shall require that a
shared
parenting plan approved under division (D)(1)(a)(i), (ii),
or
(iii) of this section ensure the opportunity for both parents
to
have frequent and continuing contact with the child, unless
frequent and continuing contact with any parent would not be in
the best interest of the child.
(d) If a court approves a shared parenting plan under
division (D)(1)(a)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this section, the
approved plan shall be incorporated into a final shared parenting
decree granting the parents the shared parenting of the children.
Any final shared parenting decree shall be issued at the same
time
as and shall be appended to the final decree of dissolution,
divorce, annulment, or legal separation arising out of the action
out of which the question of the allocation of parental rights
and
responsibilities for the care of the children arose.
No provisional shared parenting decree shall be issued in
relation to any shared parenting plan approved under division
(D)(1)(a)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this section. A final shared
parenting decree issued under this division has immediate effect
as a final decree on the date of its issuance, subject to
modification or termination as authorized by this section.
(2) If the court finds, with respect to any child under
eighteen years of age, that it is in the best interest of the
child for neither parent to be designated the residential parent
and legal custodian of the child, it may commit the child to a
relative of the child or certify a copy of its findings, together
with as much of the record and the further information, in
narrative form or otherwise, that it considers necessary or as
the
juvenile court requests, to the juvenile court for further
proceedings, and, upon the certification, the juvenile court has
exclusive jurisdiction.
(E)(1)(a) The court shall not modify a prior decree
allocating parental rights and responsibilities for the care of
children unless it finds, based on facts that have arisen since
the prior decree or that were unknown to the court at the time of
the prior decree, that a change has occurred in the circumstances
of the child, the child's residential parent, or either of
the
parents
subject to a shared parenting decree, and that the
modification
is necessary to serve the best interest of the child.
In
applying these standards, the court shall retain the
residential
parent designated by the prior decree or the prior
shared
parenting decree, unless a modification is in the best
interest
of the child and one of the following applies:
(i) The residential parent agrees to a change in the
residential parent or both parents under a shared parenting
decree
agree to a change in the designation of residential parent.
(ii) The child, with the consent of the residential parent
or of both parents under a shared parenting decree, has been
integrated into the family of the person seeking to become the
residential parent.
(iii) The harm likely to be caused by a change of
environment is outweighed by the advantages of the change of
environment to the child.
(b) One or both of the parents under a prior decree
allocating parental rights and responsibilities for the care of
children that is not a shared parenting decree may file a motion
requesting that the prior decree be modified to give both parents
shared rights and responsibilities for the care of the children.
The motion shall include both a request for modification of the
prior decree and a request for a shared parenting order that
complies with division (G) of this section. Upon the filing of
the motion, if the court determines that a modification of the
prior decree is authorized under division (E)(1)(a) of this
section, the court may modify the prior decree to grant a shared
parenting order, provided that the court shall not modify the
prior decree to grant a shared parenting order unless the court
complies with divisions (A) and (D)(1) of this section and, in
accordance with those divisions, approves the submitted shared
parenting plan and determines that shared parenting would be in
the best interest of the children.
(2) In addition to a modification authorized under
division
(E)(1) of this section:
(a) Both parents under a shared parenting decree jointly
may
modify the terms of the plan for shared parenting approved by
the
court and incorporated by it into the shared parenting
decree.
Modifications under this division may be made
at any time. The
modifications to the plan shall be filed
jointly by both parents
with the court, and the court shall
include them in the plan,
unless they are not in the best
interest of the children. If the
modifications are not in the best interests
of the children, the
court, in its discretion, may reject the
modifications or make
modifications to the proposed modifications or the plan
that are
in the best interest of the children. Modifications jointly
submitted by both parents under a shared parenting decree shall be
effective,
either as originally filed
or as modified by the court,
upon their
inclusion by the court in the plan. Modifications to
the plan made by the
court shall be effective upon their inclusion
by the court in the plan.
(b) The court may modify the terms of the plan for shared
parenting approved by the court and incorporated by it into the
shared parenting decree upon its own motion at any time if the
court
determines that the modifications are in the best interest
of the children or
upon the request of one or both of the
parents
under the decree. Modifications under this division may
be made
at any time. The court shall not make any
modification to the
plan under this division, unless the
modification is in the best
interest of the children.
(c) The court may terminate a prior final shared parenting
decree that includes a shared parenting plan approved under
division (D)(1)(a)(i) of this section upon the request of one or
both of the parents or whenever it determines that shared
parenting is not in the best interest of the children. The court
may terminate a prior final shared parenting decree that includes
a shared parenting plan approved under division (D)(1)(a)(ii) or
(iii) of this section if it determines, upon its own motion or
upon the request of one or both parents, that shared parenting is
not in the best interest of the children. If modification of the
terms of the plan for shared parenting approved by the court and
incorporated by it into the final shared parenting decree is
attempted under division (E)(2)(a) of this section and the court
rejects the modifications, it may terminate the final shared
parenting decree if it determines that shared parenting is not in
the best interest of the children.
(d) Upon the termination of a prior final shared
parenting
decree under division (E)(2)(c) of this section,
the court shall
proceed and issue a modified decree for the
allocation of parental
rights and responsibilities for the care
of the children under the
standards applicable under divisions
(A), (B), and (C) of this
section as if no decree for shared
parenting had been granted and
as if no request for shared
parenting ever had been made.
(F)(1) In determining the best interest of a child
pursuant
to this section, whether on an original decree
allocating parental
rights and responsibilities for the care of
children or a
modification of a decree allocating those rights
and
responsibilities, the court shall consider all relevant
factors,
including, but not limited to:
(a) The wishes of the child's parents regarding the child's
care;
(b) If the court has interviewed the child in chambers
pursuant to division (B) of this section regarding the child's
wishes and concerns as to the allocation of parental rights and
responsibilities concerning the child, the wishes and concerns of
the child, as expressed to the court;
(c) The child's interaction and interrelationship with the
child's parents, siblings, and any other person who may
significantly
affect the child's best interest;
(d) The child's adjustment to the child's home, school, and
community;
(e) The mental and physical health of all persons involved
in the situation;
(f) The parent more likely to honor and facilitate
court-approved parenting time rights or
visitation and
companionship rights;
(g) Whether either parent has failed to make all child
support payments, including all arrearages, that are required of
that parent pursuant to a child support order under which that
parent is an obligor;
(h) Whether either parent or any member of the household of either parent previously has been convicted of
or pleaded guilty to any criminal offense involving any act that
resulted in a child being an abused child or a neglected child;
whether either parent, in a case in which a child has been
adjudicated an abused child or a neglected child, previously has
been determined to be the perpetrator of the abusive or
neglectful
act that is the basis of an adjudication; whether
either parent or any member of the household of either parent
previously has been convicted of or pleaded guilty
to a violation
of section 2919.25 of the Revised Code or a sexually oriented offense involving a
victim who at
the time of the commission of the offense was a
member of the
family or household that is the subject of the
current proceeding;
whether either parent or any member of the household of either parent previously has been
convicted of or pleaded
guilty to any offense involving a victim
who at the time of the
commission of the offense was a member of
the family or household
that is the subject of the current
proceeding and caused physical
harm to the victim in the
commission of the offense; and whether
there is reason to believe
that either parent has acted in a
manner resulting in a child
being an abused child or a neglected
child;
(i) Whether the residential parent or one of the parents
subject to a shared parenting decree has continuously and
willfully denied the other parent's right to
parenting time
in
accordance with an order of the court;
(j) Whether either parent has established a residence, or
is
planning to establish a residence, outside this state.
(2) In determining whether shared parenting is in the best
interest of the children, the court shall consider all relevant
factors, including, but not limited to, the factors enumerated in
division (F)(1) of this section, the factors enumerated in
section
3119.23
of the Revised Code, and all
of the following
factors:
(a) The ability of the parents to cooperate and make
decisions jointly, with respect to the children;
(b) The ability of each parent to encourage the sharing of
love, affection, and contact between the child and the other
parent;
(c) Any history of, or potential for, child abuse, spouse
abuse, other domestic violence, or parental kidnapping by either
parent;
(d) The geographic proximity of the parents to each other,
as the proximity relates to the practical considerations of
shared
parenting;
(e) The recommendation of the guardian ad litem of the
child, if the child has a guardian ad litem.
(3) When allocating parental rights and responsibilities
for
the care of children, the court shall not give preference to
a
parent because of that parent's financial status or condition.
(G) Either parent or both parents of any children may file
a
pleading or motion with the court requesting the court to grant
both parents shared parental rights and responsibilities for the
care of the children in a proceeding held pursuant to division
(A)
of this section. If a pleading or motion requesting shared
parenting is filed, the parent or parents filing the pleading or
motion also shall file with the court a plan for the exercise of
shared parenting by both parents. If each parent files a
pleading
or motion requesting shared parenting but only one
parent files a
plan or if only one parent files a
pleading
or motion requesting
shared parenting and also files a plan, the
other parent as
ordered by the court shall file with the court a
plan for the
exercise of shared parenting by both parents. The
plan for shared
parenting shall be filed with the petition for
dissolution of
marriage, if the question of parental rights and
responsibilities
for the care of the children arises out of an
action for
dissolution of marriage, or, in other cases, at a time
at least
thirty days prior to the hearing on the issue of the
parental
rights and responsibilities for the care of the
children. A plan
for shared parenting shall include provisions
covering all factors
that are relevant to the care of the
children, including, but not
limited to, provisions covering
factors such as physical living
arrangements, child support
obligations, provision for the
children's medical and dental
care, school placement, and the
parent with which the children will be
physically located during
legal holidays, school holidays, and other days of
special
importance.
(H) If an appeal is taken from a decision of a court that
grants or modifies a decree allocating parental rights and
responsibilities for the care of children, the court of appeals
shall give the case calendar priority and handle it
expeditiously.
(I) Upon receipt of an order to active military service in the uniformed services, a parent who is subject to an order allocating parental rights and responsibilities or in relation to whom an action to allocate parental rights and responsibilities is pending and who is ordered to active military service shall notify the other parent who is subject to the order or in relation to whom the case is pending of the order to active military service. Either parent may apply to the court for a hearing to expedite an allocation or modification proceeding. The application shall include the date on which the active military service begins.
The court shall schedule a hearing upon receipt of the application and hold the hearing not later than thirty days after receipt of the application, except that the court shall give the case calendar priority and handle the case expeditiously if exigent circumstances exist in the case.
The court shall not modify a prior decree allocating parental rights and responsibilities unless the court determines by clear and convincing evidence that there has been a change in circumstances of the child, the child's residential parent, or either of the parents subject to a shared parenting decree, and that modification is necessary to serve the best interest of the child. The court shall not consider active military service in the uniformed services in determining whether a change in circumstances exists under this section.
Nothing in this division shall prevent a court from issuing a temporary order allocating or modifying parental rights and responsibilities for the duration of the parent's active military service.
(J) As used in this section:
(1) "Abused child" has the same
meaning as in section 2151.031 of the Revised Code, and
"neglected.
(2) "Active military service" means the performance of active military duty by a member of the uniformed services for a period of more than thirty days.
(3) "Neglected
child" has the same meaning as in section 2151.03 of
the Revised
Code.
(2)(4) "Sexually oriented offense" has the same meaning as in section 2950.01 of the Revised Code.
(5) "Uniformed services" means the United States armed forces, army national guard and air national guard when engaged in active duty for training, or the commissioned corps of the United States public health service.
(J)(K) As used in the Revised Code, "shared parenting" means
that the parents share, in the manner set forth in the plan for
shared parenting that is approved by the court under division
(D)(1) and described in division (K)(L)(6) of this section, all or
some of the
aspects of physical
and legal care of their children.
(K)(L) For purposes of the Revised Code:
(1) A parent who is granted the care, custody, and control
of a child under an order that was issued pursuant to this
section
prior to April 11, 1991, and that does not provide for
shared
parenting has "custody of the child" and "care, custody,
and
control of the child" under the order, and is the
"residential
parent," the "residential parent and legal
custodian," or the
"custodial parent" of the child under the
order.
(2) A parent who primarily is allocated the parental
rights
and responsibilities for the care of a child and who is
designated
as the residential parent and legal custodian of the
child under
an order that is issued pursuant to this section on
or after April
11, 1991, and that does not provide for shared
parenting has
"custody of the child" and "care, custody, and
control of the
child" under the order, and is the "residential
parent," the
"residential parent and legal custodian," or the
"custodial
parent" of the child under the order.
(3) A parent who is not granted custody of a child under
an
order that was issued pursuant to this section prior to April
11,
1991, and that does not provide for shared parenting is the
"parent who is not the residential parent," the "parent who is
not
the residential parent and legal custodian," or the
"noncustodial
parent" of the child under the order.
(4) A parent who is not primarily allocated the parental
rights and responsibilities for the care of a child and who is
not
designated as the residential parent and legal custodian of
the
child under an order that is issued pursuant to this section
on or
after April 11, 1991, and that does not provide for shared
parenting is the "parent who is not the residential parent," the
"parent who is not the residential parent and legal custodian,"
or
the "noncustodial parent" of the child under the order.
(5) Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, if an
order is issued by a court pursuant to this section and the order
provides for shared parenting of a child, both parents have
"custody of the child" or "care, custody, and control of the
child" under the order, to the extent and in the manner specified
in the order.
(6) Unless the context clearly requires otherwise and
except
as otherwise provided in the order, if an order is issued
by a
court pursuant to this section and the order provides for
shared
parenting of a child, each parent, regardless of where the child
is
physically located or with whom the child is residing at a
particular point in
time, as specified in the order,
is the
"residential parent," the "residential parent and legal
custodian," or the "custodial parent" of the child.
(7) Unless the context clearly requires otherwise and
except
as otherwise provided in the order, a designation in the order of
a
parent as the residential parent for the purpose of determining
the school the
child attends, as the custodial parent for purposes
of claiming the child as a
dependent pursuant to section 152(e) of
the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986,"
100 Stat. 2085, 26 U.S.C.A.
1, as amended, or as the residential parent for
purposes of
receiving public assistance pursuant to division (A)(2) of this
section, does not affect the designation pursuant to division
(K)(L)(6) of this
section of each parent as the "residential parent,"
the "residential parent
and legal custodian," or the "custodial
parent" of the child.
(L)(M) The court shall require each parent of a child to file an affidavit attesting as to whether the parent, and the members of the parent's household, have been convicted of or pleaded guilty to any of the offenses identified in divisions (C) and (F)(1)(h) of this section.
Sec. 3109.041. (A) Parties to any custody decree issued
pursuant to section 3109.04 of the Revised Code prior to the
effective date of this amendment April 11, 1991, may
file a
motion with the court that issued the decree requesting the
issuance of a shared parenting decree in accordance with division
(G) of section 3109.04 of the Revised Code. Upon the filing of
the motion, the court shall determine whether to grant the
parents shared rights and responsibilities for the care of the
children in accordance with divisions (A), (D)(1), and (E)(1), and (I) of
section 3109.04 of the Revised Code.
(B) A custody decree issued pursuant to section 3109.04 of
the Revised Code prior to the effective date of this amendment
April 11, 1991, that granted joint care, custody, and
control of the
children to the parents shall not be affected or invalidated by,
and shall not be construed as being affected or invalidated by,
the provisions of section 3109.04 of the Revised Code relative to
the granting of a shared parenting decree or a decree allocating
parental rights and responsibilities for the care of children on
and after the effective date of this amendment April 11,
1991.
The decree issued prior to the effective date of this amendment
April 11, 1991 shall remain in full force and effect,
subject to
modification or termination pursuant to section 3109.04 of the
Revised Code as that section exists on and after the effective
date of this amendment April 11, 1991.
(C) As used in this section, "joint custody" and "joint
care, custody, and control" have the same meaning as "shared
parenting."
Sec. 3119.022. When a court or child support enforcement
agency
calculates the amount of child support to
be paid pursuant
to a child support order
in a proceeding in which one parent is
the
residential parent and legal custodian of all of the children
who
are the subject of the child support order or in which the
court issues a
shared parenting order, the court or
agency shall
use a worksheet identical in content and
form to the following:
CHILD SUPPORT COMPUTATION WORKSHEETSOLE RESIDENTIAL PARENT OR SHARED PARENTING ORDER
Name of parties ................................................
Case No. .......................................................
Number of minor children .......................................
The following parent was designated as residential parent and
legal
custodian: ...... mother ...... father ...... shared
|
|
Column I |
|
Column II |
|
Column III |
|
|
Father |
|
Mother |
|
Combined |
| INCOME: |
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|
| 1.a. |
Annual gross income from |
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|
employment or, when |
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|
|
determined appropriate |
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|
|
by the court or agency, |
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|
|
average annual gross income |
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|
|
|
from employment over a |
|
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|
|
|
|
reasonable period of years. |
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|
|
(Exclude overtime, bonuses, |
|
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|
|
|
|
self-employment income, or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
commissions)............... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| b. |
Amount of overtime, |
|
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|
|
|
bonuses, and commissions |
|
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|
|
|
(year 1 representing the |
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|
most recent year) |
|
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|
| Father |
|
Mother |
| Yr. 3 $.......... |
|
Yr. 3 $.......... |
| (Three years ago) |
|
(Three years ago) |
| Yr. 2 $.......... |
|
Yr. 2 $.......... |
| (Two years ago) |
|
(Two years ago) |
| Yr. 1 $.......... |
|
Yr. 1 $.......... |
| (Last calendar year) |
|
(Last calendar year) |
| Average $......... |
|
Average $......... |
|
(Include in Col. I and/or |
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|
|
Col. II the average of the |
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three years or the year 1 |
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amount, whichever is less, |
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if there exists a reasonable |
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|
|
expectation that the total |
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earnings from overtime and/or |
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|
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|
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bonuses during the current |
|
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|
|
|
|
calendar year will meet or |
|
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|
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|
exceed the amount that is |
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the lower of the average |
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|
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of the three years or the |
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|
year 1 amount. If, however, |
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there exists a reasonable |
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expectation that the total |
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earnings from overtime/ |
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|
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bonuses during the current |
|
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|
|
|
|
calendar year will be less |
|
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|
|
|
|
than the lower of the average |
|
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|
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of the 3 years or the year 1 |
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|
amount, include only the |
|
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|
|
|
amount reasonably expected |
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|
|
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to be earned this year.)... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
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| 2. |
For self-employment income: |
|
|
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| a. |
Gross receipts from |
|
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|
|
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business................... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| b. |
Ordinary and necessary |
|
|
|
|
|
|
business expenses.......... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| c. |
5.6% of adjusted gross |
|
|
|
|
|
|
income or the actual |
|
|
|
|
|
|
marginal difference between |
|
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|
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the actual rate paid by the |
|
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|
|
|
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self-employed individual |
|
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|
|
|
and the F.I.C.A. rate ..... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| d. |
Adjusted gross income from |
|
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|
|
|
|
self-employment (subtract |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the sum of 2b and 2c from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2a)........................ |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 3. |
Annual income from interest |
|
|
|
|
|
|
and dividends (whether or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
not taxable)............... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 4. |
Annual income from
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
unemployment compensation... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 5. |
Annual income from workers' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
compensation, disability |
|
|
|
|
|
|
insurance benefits, or social |
|
|
|
|
|
|
security disability/ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
retirement benefits........ |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 6. |
Other annual income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(identify)................. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 7.a. |
Total annual gross income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(add lines 1a, 1b, 2d, and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
3-6)....................... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
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| b. |
Health care maximum (multiply |
|
|
|
|
|
|
line 7a by 5%) |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
| ADJUSTMENTS TO INCOME: |
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| 8. |
Adjustment for minor children |
|
|
|
|
|
|
born to or adopted by either |
|
|
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|
|
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parent and another parent who |
|
|
|
|
|
|
are living with this parent; |
|
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|
|
|
adjustment does not apply |
|
|
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|
|
|
to stepchildren (number of |
|
|
|
|
|
|
children times federal income |
|
|
|
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|
|
tax exemption less child
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
support received, not to |
|
|
|
|
|
|
exceed the federal tax |
|
|
|
|
|
|
exemption)................. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 9. |
Annual court-ordered support |
|
|
|
|
|
|
paid for other children.... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 10. |
Annual court-ordered spousal |
|
|
|
|
|
|
support paid to any spouse |
|
|
|
|
|
|
or former spouse........... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 11. |
Amount of local income taxes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
actually paid or estimated |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to be paid................. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 12. |
Mandatory work-related |
|
|
|
|
|
|
deductions such as union |
|
|
|
|
|
|
dues, uniform fees, etc. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(not including taxes, social |
|
|
|
|
|
|
security, or retirement)... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 13. |
Total gross income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
adjustments (add lines
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8 through 12).............. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 14. |
Adjusted annual gross |
|
|
|
|
|
|
income (subtract line 13 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
from line 7a).............. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 15. |
Combined annual income that |
|
|
|
|
|
|
is basis for child support |
|
|
|
|
|
|
order (add line 14, Col. I |
|
|
|
|
|
|
and Col. II)................ |
|
|
|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 16. |
Percentage of parent's |
|
|
|
|
|
|
income to total income |
|
|
|
|
|
| a. |
Father (divide line 14, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. I, by line 15, Col. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
III).......................% |
|
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Mother (divide line 14, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. II, by line 15, Col. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
III).......................% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 17. |
Basic combined child
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
support obligation (refer |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to schedule, first column, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
locate the amount nearest |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to the amount on line 15, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. III, then refer to |
|
|
|
|
|
|
column for number of |
|
|
|
|
|
|
children in this family. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
If the income of the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
parents is more than one |
|
|
|
|
|
|
sum but less than another, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
you may calculate the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
difference.)............... |
|
|
|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 18. |
Annual support obligation per parent |
|
|
|
|
| a. |
Father (multiply line 17, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. III, by line 16a)..... |
$...... |
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Mother (multiply line 17, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. III, by line 16b)..... |
|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 19. |
Annual child care expenses |
|
|
|
|
|
|
for children who are the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
subject of this order that |
|
|
|
|
|
|
are work-, employment |
|
|
|
|
|
|
training-, or education- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
related, as approved by |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the court or agency |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(deduct tax credit from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
annual cost, whether or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
not claimed).............. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 20. |
Marginal, out-of-pocket |
|
|
|
|
|
|
costs, necessary to provide |
|
|
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|
|
for health insurance for |
|
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|
|
the children who are the |
|
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|
|
subject of this order |
|
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|
|
Actual out-of-pocket |
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|
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health insurance cost |
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to parent for the children |
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|
who are the subject of |
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|
|
this order, if the parent |
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|
|
is ordered to provide |
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|
|
health insurance ........ |
$...... |
|
$...... |
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| 21. |
ADJUSTMENTS TO CHILD SUPPORT WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED: |
|
|
Father (only if obligor |
|
|
Mother (only if obligor |
|
|
or shared parenting) |
|
|
or shared parenting) |
|
a. |
Additions: line 16a |
|
b. |
Additions: line 16b |
|
|
times sum of amounts |
|
|
times sum of amounts |
|
|
shown on line 19, Col. II |
|
|
shown on line 19, Col. I |
|
|
and line 20, Col. II |
|
|
and line 20, Col. I |
|
|
$...................... |
|
|
$...................... |
|
c. |
Subtractions: line 16b |
|
d. |
Subtractions: line 16a |
|
|
times sum of amounts |
|
|
times sum of amounts |
|
|
shown on line 19, Col. I |
|
|
shown on line 19, Col. II |
|
|
and line 20, Col. I |
|
|
and line 20, Col. II |
|
|
$....................... |
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|
$....................... |
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| 22. |
OBLIGATION AFTER ADJUSTMENTS TO CHILD SUPPORT WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED: |
| a. |
Father: line 18a plus
or |
|
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|
|
minus the difference between |
|
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|
|
line 21a minus line 21c
|
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|
$...... |
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| b. |
Mother: line 18b plus
or |
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|
minus the difference between |
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line 21b minus line 21d
|
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|
$...... |
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|
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| 23. |
ACTUAL ANNUAL OBLIGATION WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED: |
| a. |
(Line 22a or
22b, whichever |
|
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|
|
line corresponds to the |
|
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|
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|
|
parent who is the obligor). |
$...... |
|
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| b. |
Any non-means-tested |
|
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|
|
|
benefits, including social |
|
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|
|
security and veterans' |
|
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|
|
benefits, paid to and |
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|
|
received by a child or a |
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|
|
person on behalf of the |
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|
|
child due to death, |
|
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|
|
|
disability, or retirement |
|
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|
|
|
of the parent............... |
$...... |
|
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|
|
| c. |
Actual annual obligation |
|
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|
|
(subtract line 23b from |
|
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|
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|
|
line 23a)................... |
$...... |
|
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|
|
| 24. |
ADJUSTMENTS TO CHILD SUPPORT WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED: |
|
|
Father (only if obligor |
|
|
Mother (only if obligor |
|
|
or shared parenting) |
|
|
or shared parenting) |
|
a. |
Additions: line 16a times |
|
b. |
Additions: line 16b times |
|
|
amount shown on line 19, |
|
|
amount shown on line 19, |
|
|
Col. II |
|
|
Col. I |
|
|
$...................... |
|
|
$...................... |
|
c. |
Subtractions: line 16b |
|
d. |
Subtractions: line 16a |
|
|
times amount shown on |
|
|
times amount shown on |
|
|
line 19, Col. I |
|
|
line 19, Col. II |
|
|
$....................... |
|
|
$....................... |
|
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|
|
|
|
| 25. |
OBLIGATION AFTER ADJUSTMENTS TO CHILD SUPPORT |
|
WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED: |
| a. |
Father: line 18a plus or minus the difference between line 24a minus line 24c |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Mother: line 18b plus or minus the difference between line 24b and 24d |
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
| 26. |
ACTUAL ANNUAL OBLIGATION WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED: |
| a. |
(Line 25a or 25b, whichever line corresponds to the parent who is the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
obligor) |
$...... |
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Any non-means-tested benefits, including social security and veterans' benefits, paid to and received by a child or a person on behalf of the child due to death, disability, or retirement of the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
parent |
$...... |
|
|
|
|
| c. |
Actual annual obligation (subtract line 26b from line |
|
|
|
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|
|
26a |
$...... |
|
|
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|
|
|
| 27.a. |
Deviation from sole residential parent support amount shown
|
|
on line 23c if amount would be unjust or inappropriate: (see |
|
section 3119.23 of the Revised Code.) (Specific facts and |
|
monetary value must be stated.) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Deviation from shared parenting order: (see sections 3119.23 |
|
and 3119.24 of the Revised Code.) (Specific facts including |
|
amount of time children spend with each parent, ability of |
|
each parent to maintain adequate housing for children, and
|
|
each parent's expenses for children must be stated to justify |
|
deviation.) |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED |
|
WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED |
|
|
25 28. |
FINAL CHILD SUPPORT FIGURE: (This amount reflects final annual child support obligation; in Col. I, enter line 23c plus or minus any amounts indicated in line 24a 27a or 24b 27b; in Col. II, enter line 26c plus or minus any amounts indicated in line 27a or 27b) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
Father/Mother, OBLIGOR |
|
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|
|
26 29. |
FOR DECREE: Child support per month (divide obligor's annual share, line 25 28, by 12) plus any processing charge |
|
|
|
|
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|
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
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|
|
| 30. |
FINAL CASH MEDICAL SUPPORT FIGURE: (this amount reflects the final, annual cash medical support to be paid by the obligor when neither parent provides health insurance coverage for the child; enter obligor's child support amount from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
line 7b |
|
|
$...... |
|
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|
|
| 31. |
FOR DECREE: Cash medical support per month (divide |
|
|
|
|
|
|
line 30 by 12) |
|
|
$...... |
|
|
| Prepared by: |
|
|
| Counsel: .................... |
|
Pro se: ................. |
| (For mother/father) |
|
|
| CSEA: ....................... |
|
Other: .................. |
Worksheet Has Been Reviewed and Agreed To:
| ........................... |
|
........................... |
| Mother |
|
Date |
| ........................... |
|
........................... |
| Father |
|
Date |
Sec. 3119.023. When a court or child support enforcement
agency
calculates the amount of child support to
be paid pursuant
to a court child support order in a proceeding in
which the
parents have split parental rights and
responsibilities with
respect to the children who are the subject
of the child support
order, the court or child support
enforcement agency shall use a
worksheet that is identical in
content and form to the following:
CHILD SUPPORT COMPUTATION WORKSHEETSPLIT PARENTAL RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
Name of parties ................................................
Case No. .......................................................
Number of minor children .......................................
Number of minor children with mother .......... father .........
|
|
Column I |
|
Column II |
|
Column III |
|
|
Father |
|
Mother |
|
Combined |
| INCOME: |
|
|
|
|
|
| 1.a. |
Annual gross income from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
employment or, when |
|
|
|
|
|
|
determined appropriate |
|
|
|
|
|
|
by the court or agency, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
average annual gross income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
from employment over a |
|
|
|
|
|
|
reasonable period of years. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Exclude overtime, bonuses, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
self-employment income, or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
commissions)............... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| b. |
Amount of overtime, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
bonuses, and commissions |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(year 1 representing the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
most recent year) |
|
|
|
|
|
| Father |
|
Mother |
| Yr. 3 $.......... |
|
Yr. 3 $.......... |
| (Three years ago) |
|
(Three years ago) |
| Yr. 2 $.......... |
|
Yr. 2 $.......... |
| (Two years ago) |
|
(Two years ago) |
| Yr. 1 $.......... |
|
Yr. 1 $.......... |
| (Last calendar year) |
|
(Last calendar year) |
| Average $.......... |
|
$............ |
|
(Include in Col. I and/or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. II the average of the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
three years or the year 1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
amount, whichever is less, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
if there exists a reasonable |
|
|
|
|
|
|
expectation that the total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
earnings from overtime and/or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
bonuses during the current |
|
|
|
|
|
|
calendar year will meet or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
exceed the amount that is |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the lower of the average |
|
|
|
|
|
|
of the three years or the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
year 1 amount. If, however, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
there exists a reasonable |
|
|
|
|
|
|
expectation that the total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
earnings from overtime/ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
bonuses during the current |
|
|
|
|
|
|
calendar year will be less |
|
|
|
|
|
|
than the lower of the average |
|
|
|
|
|
|
of the 3 years or the year 1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
amount, include only the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
amount reasonably expected |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to be earned this year.)... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 2. |
For self-employment income |
|
|
|
|
|
| a. |
Gross receipts from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
business................... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| b. |
Ordinary and necessary |
|
|
|
|
|
|
business expenses.......... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| c. |
5.6% of adjusted gross |
|
|
|
|
|
|
income or the actual |
|
|
|
|
|
|
marginal difference between |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the actual rate paid by the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
self-employed individual |
|
|
|
|
|
|
and the F.I.C.A. rate ..... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| d. |
Adjusted gross income from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
self-employment (subtract |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the sum of 2b and 2c from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2a)........................ |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 3. |
Annual income from interest |
|
|
|
|
|
|
and dividends (whether or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
not taxable)............... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 4. |
Annual income from
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
unemployment compensation... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 5. |
Annual income from workers' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
compensation, disability |
|
|
|
|
|
|
insurance benefits or social |
|
|
|
|
|
|
security disability |
|
|
|
|
|
|
retirement benefits........ |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 6. |
Other annual income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(identify)................. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 7.a. |
Total annual gross income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(add lines 1a, 1b, 2d, and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
3-6)....................... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
| b. |
Health care maximum |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(multiply line 7a |
|
|
|
|
|
|
by 5%) |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ADJUSTMENTS TO INCOME: |
|
|
|
|
|
| 8. |
Adjustment for minor children |
|
|
|
|
|
|
born to or adopted by either |
|
|
|
|
|
|
parent and another parent who |
|
|
|
|
|
|
are living with this parent; |
|
|
|
|
|
|
adjustment does not apply |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to stepchildren (number of |
|
|
|
|
|
|
children times federal income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
tax exemption less child
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
support received, not to |
|
|
|
|
|
|
exceed the federal tax |
|
|
|
|
|
|
exemption)................. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 9. |
Annual court-ordered support |
|
|
|
|
|
|
paid for other children.... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 10. |
Annual court-ordered spousal |
|
|
|
|
|
|
support paid to any spouse |
|
|
|
|
|
|
or former spouse........... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 11. |
Amount of local income taxes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
actually paid or estimated |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to be paid................. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 12. |
Mandatory work-related |
|
|
|
|
|
|
deductions such as union |
|
|
|
|
|
|
dues, uniform fees, etc. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(not including taxes, social |
|
|
|
|
|
|
security, or retirement)... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 13. |
Total gross income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
adjustments (add lines
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8 through 12).............. |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 14. |
Adjusted annual gross |
|
|
|
|
|
|
income (subtract line 13 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
from 7a).................... |
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 15. |
Combined annual income that |
|
|
|
|
|
|
is basis for child support |
|
|
|
|
|
|
order (add line 14, Col. I |
|
|
|
|
|
|
and Col. II)................ |
|
|
|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 16. |
Percentage of parent's |
|
|
|
|
|
|
income to total income |
|
|
|
|
|
| a. |
Father (divide line 14, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. I, by line 15, Col. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
III).......................% |
|
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Mother (divide line 14, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. II, by line 15, Col. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
III).......................% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 17. |
Basic combined child
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
support obligation (refer |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to schedule, first column, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
locate the amount nearest |
|
|
|
|
|
|
to the amount on line 15, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Col. III, then refer to |
|
|
|
|
|
|
column for number of |
|
|
|
|
|
|
children with this parent. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
If the income of the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
parents is more than one |
|
|
|
|
|
|
sum but less than another, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
you may calculate the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
difference)................ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For children |
|
For children |
|
for whom the |
|
for whom the |
|
mother is the |
|
father is the |
|
residential |
|
residential |
|
parent and |
|
parent and |
|
legal custodian |
|
legal custodian |
|
$............ |
|
$............ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 18. |
Annual support obligation per parent |
|
|
|
|
| a. |
Of father for children for |
|
|
|
|
|
|
whom mother is the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
residential parent and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
legal custodian (multiply |
|
|
|
|
|
|
line 17, Col. I, by line |
|
|
|
|
|
|
16a)....................... |
$...... |
|
|
|
|
| b. |
Of mother for children for |
|
|
|
|
|
|
whom the father is the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
residential parent and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
legal custodian (multiply |
|
|
|
|
|
|
line 17, Col. II, by line |
|
|
|
|
|
|
16b)....................... |
|
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 19. |
Annual child care expenses |
|
|
|
|
|
|
for children who are the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
subject of this order that |
|
|
|
|
|
|
are work-, employment |
|
|
|
|
|
|
training-, or education- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
related, as approved by |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the court or agency |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(deduct tax credit from |
|
|
|
|
|
|
annual cost whether or |
|
|
|
|
|
|
not claimed)............... |
Paid by |
|
Paid by |
|
|
|
|
father |
|
mother |
|
|
|
|
$...... |
|
$...... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 20. |
Marginal, out-of-pocket |
|
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costs, necessary to provide |
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for health insurance for |
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the children who are the |
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subject of this order........ |
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Actual out-of-pocket health insurance cost to parent for children who are the subject of this order, if the parent is ordered to provide health |
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insurance |
Paid by |
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Paid by |
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father |
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mother |
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$...... |
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$...... |
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| 21. |
ADJUSTMENTS TO CHILD SUPPORT WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED: |
|
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Father |
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Mother |
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a. |
Additions: line 16a |
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b. |
Additions: line 16b |
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times sum of amounts |
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times sum of amounts |
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shown on line 19, Col. II |
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shown on line 19, Col. I |
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and line 20, Col. II |
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and line 20, Col. I |
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$...................... |
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$...................... |
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c. |
Subtractions: line 16b |
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d. |
Subtractions: line 16a |
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times sum of amounts |
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times sum of amounts |
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shown on line 19, Col. I |
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shown on line 19, Col. II |
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and line 20, Col. I |
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and line 20, Col. II |
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$....................... |
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$....................... |
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| 22. |
ACTUAL ANNUAL OBLIGATION WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED: |
| a. |
Father: line 18a plus line |
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21a minus line 21c (if the |
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amount on line 21c is |
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greater than or equal to |
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the amount on line 21a-- |
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enter the number on line |
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18a in Col. I).............. |
$...... |
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| b. |
Any non-means-tested |
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benefits, including social |
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security and veterans' |
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benefits, paid to and |
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received by children for |
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whom the mother is the |
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residential parent and
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legal custodian or a person |
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on behalf of those children |
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due to death, disability, |
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or retirement of the |
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father..................... |
$...... |
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| c. |
Actual annual obligation of |
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father (subtract line 22b |
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from line 22a)............. |
$...... |
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| d. |
Mother: line 18b plus line |
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21b minus line 21d (if the |
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amount on line 21d is |
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greater than or equal to |
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the amount on line |
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21b--enter the number on |
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line 18b in Col. II)....... |
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$...... |
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| e. |
Any non-means-tested |
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benefits, including social |
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security and veterans' |
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benefits, paid to and |
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received by children for |
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whom the father is the |
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residential parent and |
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legal custodian or a person |
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on behalf of those children |
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due to death, disability, |
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or retirement of the |
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mother...................... |
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$...... |
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| f. |
Actual annual obligation |
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of mother (subtract line 22e |
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from line 22d).............. |
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$...... |
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| g. |
Actual annual obligation |
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payable (subtract lesser |
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actual annual obligation |
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from greater actual annual |
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obligation using amounts in |
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lines 22c and 22f to |
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determine net child support |
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payable).................... |
$...... |
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$...... |
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| 23. |
ADJUSTMENTS TO CHILD SUPPORT WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED: |
|
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Father |
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Mother |
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a. |
Additions: line 16a times amount shown on line 19, Col. II |
|
b. |
Additions: line 16b times amount shown on line 19, Col. I |
|
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$.......... |
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$.......... |
|
c. |
Subtractions: line 16b times amount shown on line 19, Col. I |
|
d. |
Subtractions: line 16a times amount shown on line 19, Col. II |
|
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$.......... |
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$.......... |
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| 24. |
ACTUAL ANNUAL OBLIGATION WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED: |
| a. |
Father: line 18a plus line 23a minus line 23c (if the amount on line 23c is greater than or equal to the amount on line 23a, enter the number on line 18a in |
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Col. I) |
$...... |
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| b. |
Any non-means-tested benefits, including social security and veterans' benefits, paid to and received by a child for whom the mother is the residential parent and legal custodian, or a person on behalf of the child, due to death, disability, or |
|
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retirement of the father |
$...... |
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| c. |
Actual annual obligation of the father (subtract line 24b |
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from line 24a) |
$...... |
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| d. |
Mother: line 18b plus line 23b minus 23d (if the amount on line 23d is greater than or equal to the amount on line 23b, enter the number on line 18b in Col. II) |
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$...... |
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| e. |
Any non-means-tested benefits, including social security and veterans' benefits, paid to and received by a child for whom the father is the residential parent and legal custodian, or a person on behalf of the child, due to death, disability, or retirement of the mother |
|
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$...... |
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| f. |
Actual annual obligation of the mother (subtract line 24e |
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from line 24d) |
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$...... |
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| g. |
Actual annual obligation payable (subtract lesser actual annual obligation from greater annual obligation of parents using amounts in lines 24c and 24f to determine net child support payable) |
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$...... |
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$...... |
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| h. |
Add line 7b, Col. I, to line 24g, Col. I, when father is the obligor or line 7b, Col. II, to line 24g, Col. II, when mother is obligor |
|
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$...... |
|
$...... |
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| 25. |
Deviation from split residential parent guideline amount shown on line 22c or 22f, 22f, 24c, or 24f if amount would be unjust or inappropriate: (see section 3119.23 of the Revised Code.) (Specific facts and monetary value must be stated.) |
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WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS PROVIDED |
|
WHEN HEALTH INSURANCE IS NOT PROVIDED |
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24 26. |
FINAL CHILD SUPPORT FIGURE: (This amount reflects final annual child support obligation; in Col. I enter line 22g plus or minus any amounts indicated in line 23 25, or in Col. II enter line 24h plus or minus any amounts indicated on line 25.) |
|
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$...... |
|
$...... |
|
Father/Mother, OBLIGOR |
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25 27. |
FOR DECREE: Child support per month (divide obligor's annual share, line 24 26, by 12) plus any processing charge |
|
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$...... |
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$...... |
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| 28. |
FINAL CASH MEDICAL SUPPORT FIGURE: (this amount reflects the final, annual cash medical support to be paid by the obligor when neither parent provides health insurance coverage for the child; enter obligor's child support from line 7b) |
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$...... |
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| 29. |
FOR DECREE: Cash medical support per month (divide line 28 by 12) |
|
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$...... |
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| Prepared by: |
|
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| Counsel: .................... |
|
Pro se: ................. |
| (For mother/father) |
|
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| CSEA: ....................... |
|
Other: .................. |
Worksheet Has Been Reviewed and Agreed To:
| ........................... |
|
........................... |
| Mother |
|
Date |
| ........................... |
|
........................... |
| Father |
|
Date |
Sec. 3119.27. (A) A court that issues
or
modifies a court
support order, or an administrative agency
that issues or modifies
an administrative child support order,
shall impose on the obligor
under the support order a
processing charge that is the greater of
two
per cent of the support payment to be collected under a
support
order or one dollar per month. No court or
agency may
call the charge a poundage fee.
(B) In each child support case that is a Title IV-D case, the department of job and family services shall claim twenty-five dollars from the processing charge described in division (A) of this section for federal reporting purposes if the obligee has never received assistance under Title IV-A and the department has collected at least five hundred dollars of child support for the obligee. The director of job and family services shall adopt rules under Chapter 119. of the Revised Code to implement this division, and the department shall implement this division not later than March 31, 2008.
(C) As used in this section:
(1) "Annual" means the period as defined in regulations issued by the United States secretary of health and human services to implement the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171).
(2) "Title IV-A" has the same meaning as in section 5107.02 of the Revised Code.
(3) "Title IV-D case" has the same meaning as in section 3125.01 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3119.29. (A) As used in this section and sections 3119.30
to 3119.56 of the Revised Code:
(A)(1) "Cash medical support" means an amount ordered to be paid in a child support order toward the cost of health insurance provided by a public entity, another parent, or person with whom the child resides, through employment or otherwise, or for other medical cost not covered by insurance.
(2) "Federal poverty line" has the same meaning as defined in section 5104.01 of the Revised Code.
(3) "Health care" means such medical support that includes coverage under a health insurance plan, payment of costs of premiums, co-payments, and deductibles, or payment for medical expenses incurred on behalf of the child.
(4) "Health insurance coverage" means accessible health insurance that provides primary care services within either thirty miles or thirty minutes driving time from the residence of the child subject to the child support order.
(5) "Health plan administrator" means any entity authorized
under Title XXXIX of the Revised Code to engage in the business of
insurance in this state, any health insuring corporation, any
legal entity that is self-insured and provides benefits to its
employees or members, and the administrator of any such entity or
corporation.
(B)(6) "National medical support notice" means a form required
by the "Child Support Performance and Incentive Act of 1998," P.L.
105-200, 112 Stat. 659, 42 U.S.C. 666(a)(19), as amended, and
jointly developed and promulgated by the secretary of health and
human services and the secretary of labor in federal regulations
adopted under that act as modified by the department of job and
family services under section 3119.291 of the Revised Code.
(C)(7) "Person required to provide health insurance coverage"
means the obligor, obligee, or both, required by the court under a
court child
support order or by the child support enforcement
agency under an
administrative child support order to provide
health insurance
coverage pursuant to section 3119.30 of the
Revised Code.
(8) Subject to division (B) of this section, "reasonable cost" means the cost of private family health insurance that does not exceed an amount equal to five per cent of the annual gross income of the person responsible for the health care of the children subject to the child support order.
(9) "Title XIX" has the same meaning as defined in section 5111.20 of the Revised Code.
(B) If the United States secretary of health and human services issues a regulation defining "reasonable cost" or a similar term or phrase relevant to the provisions in child support orders relating to the provision of health care for children subject to the orders, and if that definition is substantively different from the meaning of "reasonable cost" as defined in division (A) of this section, "reasonable cost" as used in this section shall have the meaning as defined by the United States secretary of health and human services.
Sec. 3119.30. (A) In any action or proceeding in which a child
support
order is issued or modified, the
court, with respect to
court child support orders, and the child support
enforcement
agency, with respect to administrative child support
orders, shall
determine the
person responsible for the health care
of the
children subject to the child support order. The
determination shall be based on information provided to the
court
or to the child support enforcement agency under section
3119.31
of the Revised Code. The order shall include
one of
the following:
(A) A requirement that the obligor under the child support
order obtain health insurance coverage for the children if
coverage is available at a reasonable cost through a group
policy,
contract, or plan offered
by the obligor's employer or through any
other group
policy, contract, or plan available to
the obligor and
is
not available for a more reasonable cost through a group
policy, contract, or plan available to
the obligee;
(B)(1) A requirement that the obligee
obtain health insurance
coverage for the children if
coverage is available through a group
policy, contract, or plan offered by the obligee's
employer or
through any other group
policy, contract, or plan available to the
obligee and
is available at a more reasonable cost than
coverage
is available to
the obligor;
(C)(2) A requirement that the obligor under the child support order obtain health insurance coverage for the children if coverage is available at a reasonable cost through any group policy, contract, or plan available to the obligor and, in the alternative, if the court or child support enforcement agency determines that health insurance coverage is not available at a reasonable cost to the obligee or obligor, and that the gross income of the obligor is over one hundred fifty per cent of the federal poverty line, pay cash medical support that is five per cent of the obligor's annual gross income to either the office of child support in the department of job and family services to defray the cost of expenditures under Title XIX to provide health care for the children, or the obligee if the children are not receiving assistance under Title XIX;
(3) If health insurance coverage for the children is not
available at
a reasonable cost
through a group policy, contract,
or plan offered by the obligor's or obligee's employer or through
any
other
group policy, contract, or plan
available to the obligor
or the obligee, a requirement that the obligor
and the obligee
share liability for the cost of the medical and
health care needs
of the children, under an equitable formula established by
the
court,
with respect to a court child support order, or the child
support enforcement agency, with respect to an administrative
child support order, with appropriate offset of the amount of any cash medical payment ordered pursuant to division (A)(2) of this section, and a
requirement that if, after the issuance
of the order,
health
insurance coverage for the children becomes
available at a
reasonable cost
through a group
policy, contract,
or plan offered
by the obligor's or obligee's employer or through
any other group
policy, contract, or plan
available to the obligor
or obligee, the
obligor or obligee to
whom the coverage becomes
available
immediately inform the court, with respect to a court
child support order, or the child support enforcement agency, with
respect to an administrative child support order;
(D)(4) A requirement that both the
obligor and the obligee
obtain health insurance coverage for
the children if
coverage is
available for the children at a
reasonable cost to both the
obligor and the obligee and
dual coverage
would
provide for coordination of
medical benefits without unnecessary
duplication of coverage.
(B) The court, with respect to court child support orders, and the child support enforcement agency, with respect to administrative child support orders, may determine and include in an order issued under division (A) of this section that longer travel times are permissible if residents in part or all of the service area customarily travel distances farther than thirty miles or thirty minutes driving time or that primary care services are accessible only by public transportation.
Sec. 3123.23. (A) The director of job and family services shall adopt rules under Chapter 119. of the Revised Code to implement a program to collect arrearages owed under child support orders from insurance claims, settlements, awards, and payments based on information obtained pursuant to Title IV-D of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 652.
(B) Any insurer and any director, agent, or employee authorized to act on behalf of an insurer, that releases information or makes a disclosure in accordance with rules adopted pursuant to this section shall be immune from liability in a civil action for harm resulting from the disclosure.
(C) As used in this section, "insurer" has the same meaning as in section 3901.32 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3125.12. Each child
support enforcement agency shall enter into a plan
of cooperation with the board of county commissioners under section 307.983
of the Revised Code and comply with
each fiscal grant agreement the board enters
into under section sections 307.98 and 5101.21 and contracts the board enters into under sections
307.981 and 307.982 of the Revised Code that affect the
agency.
Sec. 3301.0711. (A) The department of education shall:
(1) Annually furnish
to, grade, and score all tests required
by
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code to
be administered by
city,
local,
exempted
village, and joint vocational school
districts, except that each district shall score any test administered pursuant to division (B)(10) of this section. Each test so furnished shall include the data verification code of the student to whom the test will be administered, as assigned pursuant to division (D)(2) of section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code. In furnishing the practice versions of Ohio graduation tests prescribed by division (F) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code, the department shall make the tests available on its web site for reproduction by districts. In awarding contracts for grading tests, the
department shall give preference to Ohio-based entities employing
Ohio residents.
(2) Adopt rules for the ethical use of tests and
prescribing
the manner in which the tests prescribed by section
3301.0710 of
the Revised Code shall be administered to students.
(B) Except as provided in divisions (C) and (J) of this
section, the board of education of each city, local, and exempted
village school district shall, in accordance with rules adopted
under division (A) of this section:
(1) Administer the reading test prescribed under division (A)(1)(a)
of
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code twice annually to
all
students in the
third grade who have not attained the score
designated for that test under division (A)(2)(c) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised
Code.
(2) Administer the mathematics test prescribed under division (A)(1)(a) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once annually to all students in the third grade.
(3) Administer the tests prescribed under division (A)(1)(b)
of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code
at least once
annually
to all students in the fourth grade.
(4) Administer the tests prescribed
under division
(A)(1)(c)
of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least
once annually
to
all students in the
fifth grade.
(5) Administer the tests prescribed under division (A)(1)(d) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once annually to all students in the sixth grade.
(6) Administer
the tests prescribed under division
(A)(1)(e)
of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least
once
annually
to
all students in the
seventh
grade.
(7)
Administer
the tests prescribed under division (A)(1)(f)
of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once annually to
all students in the eighth grade.
(8) Except as provided in division (B)(9) of this
section,
administer any test prescribed under division (B) of
section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code as follows:
(a) At least once annually to all tenth grade students and
at
least twice annually
to all students in eleventh or twelfth
grade who have not yet attained the score on that test designated
under that division;
(b) To any person who has successfully completed the
curriculum in any high school or the individualized education
program developed for the person by any high school pursuant to
section 3323.08 of the Revised Code but has not received a high
school diploma and who requests to take such test, at any time
such test is administered in the district.
(9) In lieu of the board of education of any city, local, or
exempted village school district in which the student is also
enrolled, the board of a joint vocational school district shall
administer any test prescribed under division (B) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least twice annually to any student enrolled in the joint vocational school district who has
not yet attained the score on that test designated under that
division. A board of a joint vocational school district may also
administer such a test to any student described in division
(B)(8)(b) of this section.
(10) If the district has been declared to be under an academic watch or in a state of academic emergency pursuant to section 3302.03 of the Revised Code or has a three-year average graduation rate of not more than seventy-five per cent, administer each test prescribed by division (F) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code in September to all ninth grade students, beginning in the school year that starts July 1, 2005.
(C)(1)(a) Any student receiving special education services
under
Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code
may be excused from
taking
any particular test required to be administered under this
section if the individualized education program developed for the
student pursuant to section 3323.08 of the Revised Code excuses
the student from taking that test
and
instead specifies an
alternate assessment method approved by the
department of
education as conforming to requirements of federal
law for receipt
of federal funds for disadvantaged pupils. To the
extent
possible, the individualized education program shall not
excuse
the student from taking a test unless no reasonable
accommodation
can be made to enable the student to take the test.
(b) Any alternate assessment approved by the department
for
a student under this division shall produce measurable results
comparable to those produced by the tests which the alternate
assessments are replacing in order to allow for the student's
assessment results to be included in the data compiled for a
school district or building under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code.
(c) Any
student
enrolled in a chartered
nonpublic school
who has been identified,
based on an evaluation conducted in
accordance with section
3323.03 of the Revised Code or section 504
of the
"Rehabilitation
Act of 1973," 87 Stat. 355, 29 U.S.C.A.
794, as amended, as a
child with a disability shall be excused
from taking any
particular test
required to be administered under
this section if
a plan developed for the
student pursuant to rules
adopted by the
state board excuses the student from
taking that
test. In the
case of any student so excused from taking a test,
the chartered
nonpublic school shall not prohibit the student from
taking the
test.
(2) A district board may, for medical reasons or other
good
cause, excuse a student from taking a test administered
under this
section on the date scheduled, but any such test shall
be
administered to such excused student not later than
nine days
following the scheduled date. The board shall annually
report the
number of students who have not taken one or more of
the tests
required by this section to the state board of
education not later
than the thirtieth day of
June.
(3) As used in this division, "limited English proficient student"
has the same meaning as in 20 U.S.C. 7801.
No school district board shall excuse any limited English proficient student from taking any particular test required to be administered under this section, except that any limited English proficient student who has been enrolled in United States schools for less than one full school year shall not be required to take any such reading or writing test. However, no board shall prohibit a limited English proficient student who is not required to take a test under this division from taking the test. A board may permit any limited English proficient student to take any test required to be administered under this section with appropriate accommodations, as determined by the department. For each limited English proficient student, each
school district shall annually assess that student's progress
in learning
English, in accordance with procedures approved by the
department.
The
governing authority of a
chartered
nonpublic school may excuse a limited English proficient student from taking any test administered under this section. However, no governing authority shall prohibit
a limited English proficient student
from
taking the test.
(D)(1) In the school year next succeeding
the school year in
which the tests prescribed by division (A)(1) or (B) of
section
3301.0710
of the Revised Code
or former division (A)(1), (A)(2), or (B) of
section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code as it existed prior to
September 11, 2001, are administered to any
student,
the board
of education of any school district in which
the
student
is
enrolled in that year shall provide
to the student intervention
services
commensurate with the student's test
performance,
including any intensive intervention required under
section
3313.608 of the Revised Code, in any skill in which the
student
failed
to demonstrate at least
a score at the proficient
level
on the test.
(2) Following any administration of the tests prescribed by division (F) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code to ninth grade students, each school district that has a three-year average graduation rate of not more than seventy-five per cent shall determine for each high school in the district whether the school shall be required to provide intervention services to any students who took the tests. In determining which high schools shall provide intervention services based on the resources available, the district shall consider each school's graduation rate and scores on the practice tests. The district also shall consider the scores received by ninth grade students on the reading and mathematics tests prescribed under division (A)(1)(f) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code in the eighth grade in determining which high schools shall provide intervention services.
Each high school selected to provide intervention services under this division shall provide intervention services to any student whose test results indicate that the student is failing to make satisfactory progress toward being able to attain scores at the proficient level on the Ohio graduation tests. Intervention services shall be provided in any skill in which a student demonstrates unsatisfactory progress and shall be commensurate with the student's test performance. Schools shall provide the intervention services prior to the end of the school year, during the summer following the ninth grade, in the next succeeding school year, or at any combination of those times.
(E) Except as provided in section 3313.608 of the Revised
Code and division
(M) of this section,
no school district board of
education shall
utilize any
student's failure to
attain a
specified score on
any test administered under this
section
as a
factor in any decision to deny the student promotion
to a higher
grade level. However, a district board may
choose not
to promote
to
the next grade level any student who does not take
any
test
administered under this section or make up
such test as
provided
by division (C)(2) of this section and who is not exempt from the requirement to take the test under division (C)(3) of this section.
(F) No person shall be charged a fee for taking any test
administered under this section.
(G)(1) Each school district board shall submit designate one location for the collection of tests administered in the spring under division (B)(1) of this section and the tests administered under divisions (B)(2) to (7) of this section. Each district board shall submit the tests to the entity with which the department contracts for the scoring of the tests as follows:
(a) If the district's total enrollment in grades kindergarten through twelve during the first full school week of October was less than two thousand five hundred, not later than the Friday after the tests are administered, except that;
(b) If the district's total enrollment in grades kindergarten through twelve during the first full school week of October was two thousand five hundred or more, but less than seven thousand, not later than the Monday after the tests are administered;
(c) If the district's total enrollment in grades kindergarten through twelve during the first full school week of October was seven thousand or more, not later than the Tuesday after the tests are administered.
However, any such test that a student takes during the make-up period described in division (C)(2) of this section shall be submitted not later than the Friday following the day the student takes the test.
(2)
The
department or an entity with which the department contracts for the scoring of the test shall send to each school district board a list of the
individual test scores of all persons taking any test prescribed by division (A)(1) or (B) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code within sixty days after its administration, but in no case shall the scores be returned later than the fifteenth day of June following the administration. For any
tests administered under this section by a joint vocational school
district, the department or entity shall also send to each city, local, or
exempted village school district a list of the individual test
scores of any students of such city, local, or exempted village
school district who are attending school in the joint vocational
school district.
(H) Individual test scores on any tests administered under
this section shall be released by a district board only in
accordance with section 3319.321 of the Revised Code and the
rules
adopted under division (A) of this section. No district
board or
its employees shall utilize individual or aggregate test
results
in any manner that conflicts with rules for the ethical
use of
tests adopted pursuant to division (A) of this section.
(I) Except as provided in division (G) of this section,
the
department or an entity with which the department contracts for the scoring of the test shall not release any individual test scores on
any
test administered under this section. The state board of education shall adopt rules to
ensure the protection of student confidentiality at all times. The rules may require the use of the data verification codes assigned to students pursuant to division (D)(2) of section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code to protect the confidentiality of student test scores.
(J) Notwithstanding
division (D) of section 3311.52 of the
Revised Code, this section
does not apply to the board of
education of any
cooperative education school district except as
provided under
rules adopted pursuant to this division.
(1) In accordance with rules that the state board of
education shall adopt, the board of education of any city,
exempted village, or local school district with territory in a
cooperative education
school
district established pursuant to
divisions (A) to (C) of
section
3311.52 of the Revised Code may
enter into an agreement
with the
board of education of the
cooperative
education school district for administering any test
prescribed
under this section to students of the city, exempted
village, or
local school district who are attending school in the
cooperative education school district.
(2) In accordance with rules that the state board of
education shall adopt, the board of education of any city,
exempted village, or local school district with territory in a
cooperative education school district established pursuant to
section 3311.521 of the Revised Code shall enter into an
agreement
with the cooperative district that provides for the
administration
of any test prescribed under this section to both
of the
following:
(a) Students who are attending school in the cooperative
district and who, if the cooperative district were not
established, would be entitled to attend school in the city,
local, or exempted village school district pursuant to section
3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code;
(b) Persons described in division (B)(8)(b) of this
section.
Any testing of students pursuant to such an agreement shall
be in lieu of any testing of such students or persons pursuant to
this section.
(K)(1) Any chartered nonpublic school may participate in
the
testing program by administering any of the tests prescribed
by
section 3301.0710 or 3301.0712 of the Revised Code if the chief
administrator
of the school specifies which tests the school
wishes to
administer. Such specification shall be made in
writing to the
superintendent of public instruction prior to the
first day of
August of any school year in which tests are
administered and
shall include a pledge that the nonpublic school
will administer
the specified tests in the same manner as public
schools are
required to do under this section and rules adopted
by the
department.
(2) The department of education shall furnish the tests
prescribed by section 3301.0710 or 3301.0712 of the Revised Code to any
chartered nonpublic school electing to participate under this
division.
(L)(1)
The superintendent of the state school for the blind
and
the
superintendent of the state school for the deaf shall
administer
the tests described by section 3301.0710 of the
Revised
Code.
Each
superintendent shall administer the tests in
the same
manner
as
district boards are required to do under this
section
and rules
adopted by the department of education
and in conformity
with
division (C)(1)(a) of this section.
(2) The department of education shall furnish the tests
described by section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code to each
superintendent.
(M) Notwithstanding division (E) of this section,
a school
district may
use a student's failure to attain a score in at
least the basic range on the mathematics test described by division (A)(1)(a) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code or on any of the
tests
described by division
(A)(1)(b), (c), (d), (e), or (f) of
section 3301.0710 of the
Revised
Code
as a factor in retaining that student in the current
grade
level.
(N)(1) In the manner specified in divisions (N)(3) to (5) of this section, the
tests required by section
3301.0710
of the
Revised Code shall become public records pursuant to
section
149.43 of the Revised Code on
the first day of July
following the
school year that the test was
administered.
(2) The department may field test proposed
test
questions
with
samples of students to determine the validity,
reliability,
or appropriateness
of test questions for possible
inclusion in a
future year's
test. The department also may use anchor questions on tests to ensure that different versions of the same test are of comparable difficulty.
Field test questions and anchor questions shall not be considered in computing
test scores for
individual students. Field test questions and anchor questions may be
included
as part of the administration of any
test
required by
section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(3) Any field test question or anchor question administered under division
(N)(2) of
this section shall not be a public record. Such field
test questions and anchor questions shall be
redacted from any
tests which
are
released as a public record pursuant to division (N)(1) of
this
section.
(4) This division applies to the tests prescribed by division (A) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(a) The first administration of each test, as specified in section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code, shall be a public record.
(b) For subsequent administrations of each test, not less than forty per cent of the questions on the test that are used to compute a student's score shall be a public record. The department shall determine which questions will be needed for reuse on a future test and those questions shall not be public records and shall be redacted from the test prior to its release as a public record.
(5) Each test prescribed by division (B) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code that is administered in the spring shall be a public record. Each test prescribed by that division that is administered in the fall or summer shall not be a public record.
(O) As used in this section:
(1) "Three-year average" means the average of the most recent consecutive three school years of data.
(2) "Dropout" means a student who withdraws from school before completing course requirements for graduation and who is not enrolled in an education program approved by the state board of education or an education program outside the state. "Dropout" does not include a student who has departed the country.
(3) "Graduation rate" means the ratio of students receiving a diploma to the number of students who entered ninth grade four years earlier. Students who transfer into the district are added to the calculation. Students who transfer out of the district for reasons other than dropout are subtracted from the calculation. If a student who was a dropout in any previous year returns to the same school district, that student shall be entered into the calculation as if the student had entered ninth grade four years before the graduation year of the graduating class that the student joins.
Sec. 3301.0714. (A) The state board of education shall
adopt rules for a statewide education management information
system. The rules shall require the state board to
establish
guidelines for the establishment and maintenance of the system in
accordance with this section and the rules adopted under this
section. The guidelines shall include:
(1) Standards identifying and defining the types of data
in
the system in accordance with divisions (B) and (C) of this
section;
(2) Procedures for annually collecting and reporting the
data to the state board in accordance with division
(D) of this
section;
(3) Procedures for annually compiling the data in
accordance
with division (G) of this section;
(4) Procedures for annually reporting the data to the
public
in accordance with division (H) of this section.
(B) The guidelines adopted under this section shall
require
the data maintained in the education management
information system
to include at least the following:
(1) Student participation and performance data, for each
grade in each school district as a whole and for each grade in
each school building in each school district, that
includes:
(a) The numbers of students receiving each category of
instructional service offered by the school district, such as
regular education instruction, vocational education instruction,
specialized instruction programs or enrichment instruction that
is
part of the educational curriculum, instruction for gifted
students, instruction for handicapped students, and remedial
instruction. The guidelines shall require instructional services
under this division to be divided into discrete categories if an
instructional service is limited to a specific subject, a
specific
type of student, or both, such as regular instructional
services
in mathematics, remedial reading instructional services,
instructional services specifically for students gifted in
mathematics or some other subject area, or instructional services
for students with a specific type of handicap. The categories of
instructional services required by the guidelines under this
division shall be the same as the categories of instructional
services used in determining cost units pursuant to division
(C)(3) of this section.
(b) The numbers of students receiving support or
extracurricular services for each of the support services or
extracurricular programs offered by the school district, such as
counseling services, health services, and extracurricular sports
and fine arts programs. The categories of services required by
the guidelines under this division shall be the same as the
categories of services used in determining cost units pursuant to
division (C)(4)(a) of this section.
(c) Average student grades in each subject in grades nine
through twelve;
(d) Academic achievement levels as assessed by the testing
of student
achievement under sections 3301.0710 and
3301.0711 of
the Revised Code;
(e) The number of students designated as having a
handicapping condition pursuant to division (C)(1) of section
3301.0711 of the Revised Code;
(f) The numbers of students reported to the state board
pursuant to division (C)(2) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised
Code;
(g) Attendance rates and the average daily attendance for
the year. For purposes of this division, a student shall be
counted as present for any field trip that is approved by the
school administration.
(j) The percentage of students receiving corporal
punishment;
(l) Rates of retention in grade;
(m) For pupils in grades nine through twelve, the average
number of carnegie units, as calculated in accordance with state
board of education rules;
(n) Graduation rates, to be calculated in a manner
specified
by the department of education that reflects the rate
at
which
students who were in the ninth grade three years prior
to
the
current year complete school and that is consistent with
nationally accepted reporting requirements;
(o) Results of diagnostic assessments administered to
kindergarten students as required under section 3301.0715 of the
Revised Code to permit a comparison of the academic readiness of
kindergarten students. However, no district shall be required to
report to the department the results of any diagnostic assessment
administered to a kindergarten student if the parent of that
student requests the district not to report those results.
(2) Personnel and classroom enrollment data for each
school
district, including:
(a) The total numbers of licensed employees and
nonlicensed
employees and the numbers of full-time
equivalent licensed
employees and nonlicensed employees providing
each category of
instructional service, instructional support
service, and
administrative support service used pursuant to
division (C)(3) of
this section. The guidelines adopted under
this section shall
require these categories of data to be
maintained for the school
district as a whole and, wherever
applicable, for each grade in
the school district as a whole, for
each school building as a
whole, and for each grade in each
school building.
(b) The total number of employees and the number of
full-time equivalent employees providing each category of service
used pursuant to divisions (C)(4)(a) and (b) of this section, and
the total numbers of licensed employees and nonlicensed
employees
and the numbers of full-time equivalent licensed
employees and
nonlicensed employees providing each category
used pursuant to
division (C)(4)(c) of this section. The
guidelines adopted under
this section shall require these
categories of data to be
maintained for the school district as a
whole and, wherever
applicable, for each grade in the school
district as a whole, for
each school building as a whole, and for
each grade in each school
building.
(c) The total number of regular classroom teachers
teaching
classes of regular education and the average number of
pupils
enrolled in each such class, in each of grades
kindergarten
through five in the district as a whole and in each
school
building in the school district.
(d) The number of master teachers employed by each school district and each school building, once a definition of master teacher has been developed by the educator standards board pursuant to section 3319.61 of the Revised Code.
(3)(a) Student demographic data for each school district,
including information regarding the gender ratio of the school
district's pupils, the racial make-up of the school district's
pupils, the number of limited English proficient students in the district, and an appropriate measure of the number of the school
district's pupils who reside in economically disadvantaged
households. The demographic data shall be collected in a manner
to allow correlation with data collected under division (B)(1) of
this section. Categories for data collected pursuant to division
(B)(3) of this section shall conform, where appropriate, to
standard practices of agencies of the federal government.
(b) With respect to each student entering kindergarten,
whether
the student previously participated in a public preschool
program, a private
preschool program, or a head start program, and
the number of years the
student participated in each of these
programs.
(4) Any data required to be collected pursuant to federal law.
(C) The education management information system shall
include cost accounting data for each district as a whole and for
each school building in each school district. The guidelines
adopted under this section shall require the cost data for each
school district to be maintained in a system of mutually
exclusive
cost units and shall require all of the costs of each
school
district to be divided among the cost units. The
guidelines shall
require the system of mutually exclusive cost
units to include at
least the following:
(1) Administrative costs for the school district as a
whole.
The guidelines shall require the cost units under this
division
(C)(1) to be designed so that each of them may be
compiled and
reported in terms of average expenditure per pupil
in formula ADM
in the school
district, as determined pursuant to section 3317.03
of the Revised Code.
(2) Administrative costs for each school building in the
school district. The guidelines shall require the cost units
under this division (C)(2) to be designed so that each of them
may
be compiled and reported in terms of average expenditure per
full-time equivalent pupil receiving instructional or support
services in each building.
(3) Instructional services costs for each category of
instructional service provided directly to students and required
by guidelines adopted pursuant to division (B)(1)(a) of this
section. The guidelines shall require the cost units under
division (C)(3) of this section to be designed so that each of
them may be compiled and reported in terms of average expenditure
per pupil receiving the service in the school district as a whole
and average expenditure per pupil receiving the service in each
building in the school district and in terms of a total cost for
each category of service and, as a breakdown of the total cost, a
cost for each of the following components:
(a) The cost of each instructional services category
required by guidelines adopted under division (B)(1)(a) of this
section that is provided directly to students by a classroom
teacher;
(b) The cost of the instructional support services, such
as
services provided by a speech-language pathologist, classroom
aide, multimedia aide, or librarian, provided directly to
students
in conjunction with each instructional services
category;
(c) The cost of the administrative support services
related
to each instructional services category, such as the cost
of
personnel that develop the curriculum for the instructional
services category and the cost of personnel supervising or
coordinating the delivery of the instructional services category.
(4) Support or extracurricular services costs for each
category of service directly provided to students and required by
guidelines adopted pursuant to division (B)(1)(b) of this
section.
The guidelines shall require the cost units under
division (C)(4)
of this section to be designed so that each of
them may be
compiled and reported in terms of average expenditure
per pupil
receiving the service in the school district as a whole
and
average expenditure per pupil receiving the service in each
building in the school district and in terms of a total cost for
each category of service and, as a breakdown of the total cost, a
cost for each of the following components:
(a) The cost of each support or extracurricular services
category required by guidelines adopted under division (B)(1)(b)
of this section that is provided directly to students by a
licensed employee, such as services provided by a guidance
counselor or any services provided by a licensed employee
under a
supplemental contract;
(b) The cost of each such services category provided
directly to students by a nonlicensed employee, such as
janitorial
services, cafeteria services, or services of a sports
trainer;
(c) The cost of the administrative services related to
each
services category in division (C)(4)(a) or (b) of this
section,
such as the cost of any licensed or nonlicensed
employees that
develop, supervise, coordinate, or otherwise are
involved in
administering or aiding the delivery of each services
category.
(D)(1) The guidelines adopted under this section
shall
require
school districts to collect information about individual
students, staff members, or both in connection with any data
required by division (B) or (C) of this section or other
reporting
requirements established in the Revised Code. The
guidelines may
also require school districts to report
information about
individual staff members in connection with any
data required by
division (B) or (C) of this section or other
reporting
requirements established in the Revised Code. The
guidelines
shall not
authorize school districts to request social
security
numbers of
individual students.
The guidelines shall prohibit
the
reporting
under this
section of
a student's
name,
address,
and
social security number to the state board of
education or the
department of
education. The guidelines shall
also prohibit the
reporting
under
this section of any personally
identifiable
information
about any
student, except for the purpose
of assigning
the data
verification
code required by division
(D)(2) of this
section, to
any
other
person
unless such person
is
employed by
the
school
district or
the
information technology center operated under
section
3301.075 of the
Revised Code
and is
authorized
by the
district or
technology center to have
access to
such
information or is employed by an entity with which the department contracts for the scoring of tests administered under section 3301.0711 or 3301.0712 of the Revised Code.
The
guidelines may
require
school
districts to
provide the social
security numbers
of
individual
staff members.
(2) The guidelines shall provide for each school district or
community school to assign a data verification code
that is unique
on a statewide basis over time to each
student whose
initial Ohio
enrollment is in that district or
school and to report
all
required individual student data for that
student utilizing such
code. The guidelines shall also provide
for assigning
data
verification codes to all students enrolled in
districts or
community
schools on the
effective date of the
guidelines
established under this section.
Individual student data shall be reported to the department
through the
information technology centers utilizing the code but, except as provided in section 3310.11 of the Revised Code, at no
time shall
the state board
or the department have access to
information
that would enable any
data verification code to be
matched to personally
identifiable
student data.
Each school district shall ensure that the data verification
code is
included in the student's records reported to any
subsequent school district
or community school in which the
student enrolls. Any such subsequent
district or
school shall utilize the same identifier in its reporting of data
under this section.
The director of health shall request and receive, pursuant to sections 3301.0723 and 3701.62 of the Revised Code, a data verification code for a child who is receiving services under division (A)(2) of section 3701.61 of the Revised Code.
A school district or community school shall submit to the eTech Ohio commission the data verification code for each of its enrolled students who is also enrolled in a course offered through the clearinghouse established under section 3353.21 of the Revised Code.
(E) The guidelines adopted under this section may require
school districts to collect and report data, information, or
reports other than that described in divisions (A), (B), and (C)
of this section for the purpose of complying with other reporting
requirements established in the Revised Code. The other data,
information, or reports may be maintained in the education
management information system but are not required to be compiled
as part of the profile formats required under division (G) of
this
section or the annual statewide report required under
division (H)
of this section.
(F) Beginning with the school year that begins July 1,
1991,
the board of education of each school district shall
annually
collect and report to the state board, in
accordance
with the
guidelines established by the board, the data
required
pursuant to
this section. A school district may collect and
report these data
notwithstanding section 2151.357 or 3319.321 of
the Revised Code.
(G) The state board shall, in accordance with the
procedures
it adopts, annually compile the data reported by each
school
district pursuant to division (D) of this section. The
state
board shall design formats for profiling each
school
district as a
whole and each school building within each district
and shall
compile the data in accordance with these formats. These profile
formats shall:
(1) Include all of the data gathered under this section in
a
manner that facilitates comparison among school districts and
among school buildings within each school district;
(2) Present the data on academic achievement levels as
assessed by the testing of student
achievement
maintained
pursuant to division (B)(1)(d) of this section.
(H)(1) The state board shall, in accordance with the
procedures it adopts, annually prepare a statewide report for all
school districts and the general public that includes the profile
of each of the school districts developed pursuant to division
(G)
of this section. Copies of the report shall be sent to each
school district.
(2) The state board shall, in accordance with the
procedures
it adopts, annually prepare an individual report for
each school
district and the general public that includes the
profiles of each
of the school buildings in that school district
developed pursuant
to division (G) of this section. Copies of
the report shall be
sent to the superintendent of the district
and to each member of
the district board of education.
(3) Copies of the reports received from the state board
under divisions
(H)(1) and (2) of this section shall be made
available to the general public at each school district's
offices.
Each district board of education shall make copies of
each report
available to any person upon request and payment of a
reasonable
fee for the cost of reproducing the report. The board
shall
annually publish in a newspaper of general circulation in
the
school district, at least twice during the two weeks prior to
the
week in which the reports will first be available, a notice
containing the address where the reports are available and the
date on which the reports will be available.
(I) Any data that is collected or maintained pursuant to
this section and that identifies an individual pupil is not a
public record for the purposes of section 149.43 of the Revised
Code.
(J) As used in this section:
(1) "School district" means any city, local, exempted
village, or joint vocational school district.
(2) "Cost", "cost" means any expenditure for operating expenses
made
by a school district excluding any expenditures for debt
retirement except for payments made to any commercial lending
institution for any loan approved pursuant to section 3313.483 of
the Revised Code.
(K) Any person who removes data from the information
system
established under this section for the purpose of
releasing it to
any person not entitled under law to have access
to such
information is subject to section 2913.42 of the Revised
Code
prohibiting tampering with data.
(L) Any time the department of education determines that a
school district
has taken any of the actions described under
division
(L)(1), (2), or (3) of this section, it shall make a
report of the actions of the district, send a copy of the report
to the superintendent of such school district, and maintain a
copy
of the report in its files:
(1) The school district fails to meet any deadline
established pursuant to this section for the reporting of any
data
to the education management information system;
(2) The school district fails to meet any deadline
established pursuant to this section for the correction of any
data reported to the education management information
system;
(3) The school district reports data to the education
management
information system in a condition, as determined by
the
department, that indicates that the district did not make a good
faith effort in reporting the data to the system.
Any report made under this division shall include
recommendations
for corrective action by the school district.
Upon making a report for the first time
in a fiscal year, the
department shall
withhold ten per cent of the total amount due
during that fiscal
year under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code to
the school district to which
the report applies. Upon making a
second
report in a fiscal year, the department shall withhold
an
additional twenty per cent of such total amount due during
that
fiscal year to the school district to which the report
applies.
The department shall not release such funds
unless it determines
that the district has taken corrective action.
However, no such
release of funds shall occur if the district
fails to take
corrective action within
forty-five days of the date
upon
which the
report was made by the department.
(1) In accordance with division (L)(2) of this section, the department of education may sanction any school district that reports incomplete or inaccurate data, reports data that does not conform to data requirements and descriptions published by the department, fails to report data in a timely manner, or otherwise does not make a good faith effort to report data as required by this section.
(2) If the department decides to sanction a school district under this division, the department shall take the following sequential actions:
(a) Notify the district in writing that the department has determined that data has not been reported as required under this section and require the district to review its data submission and submit corrected data by a deadline established by the department. The department also may require the district to develop a corrective action plan, which shall include provisions for the district to provide mandatory staff training on data reporting procedures.
(b) Withhold up to ten per cent of the total amount due to the district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code for the current fiscal year and, if not previously required under division (L)(2)(a) of this section, require the district to develop a corrective action plan in accordance with that division;
(c) Withhold an additional amount of up to twenty per cent of the total amount due to the district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code for the current fiscal year;
(d) Direct department staff or an outside entity to investigate the district's data reporting practices and make recommendations for subsequent actions. The recommendations may include one or more of the following actions:
(i) Arrange for an audit of the district's data reporting practices by department staff or an outside entity;
(ii) Conduct a site visit and evaluation of the district;
(iii) Withhold an additional amount of up to thirty per cent of the total amount due to the district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code for the current fiscal year;
(iv) Continue monitoring the district's data reporting;
(v) Assign department staff to supervise the district's data management system;
(vi) Conduct an investigation to determine whether to suspend or revoke the license of any district employee in accordance with division (N) of this section;
(vii) Indicate on the report card issued for the district under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code that the district has been sanctioned for failing to report data as required by this section;
(viii) If incomplete or inaccurate data submitted by the district likely caused the district to receive a higher performance rating than it deserved under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code, issue a revised report card for the district;
(ix) Any other action designed to correct the district's data reporting problems.
(3) Any time the department takes an action against a school district under division (L)(2) of this section, the department shall make a report of the circumstances that prompted the action. The department shall send a copy of the report to the district superintendent and maintain a copy of the report in its files.
(4) If any action taken under division (L)(2) of this section resolves a school district's data reporting problems to the department's satisfaction, the department shall not take any further actions described by that division. If the department withheld funds from the district under that division, the department may release those funds to the district, except that if the department withheld funding under division (L)(2)(c) of this section, the department shall not release the funds withheld under division (L)(2)(b) of this section and, if the department withheld funding under division (L)(2)(d) of this section, the department shall not release the funds withheld under division (L)(2)(b) or (c) of this section.
(5) Notwithstanding anything in this section to the contrary, the department may use its own staff or an outside entity to conduct an audit of a school district's data reporting practices any time the department has reason to believe the district has not made a good faith effort to report data as required by this section. If any audit conducted by an outside entity under division (L)(2)(d)(i) or (5) of this section confirms that a district has not made a good faith effort to report data as required by this section, the district shall reimburse the department for the full cost of the audit. The department may withhold funds due to the district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code for this purpose.
(6) Prior to issuing a revised report card for a school district under division (L)(2)(d)(viii) of this section, the department may hold a hearing to provide the district with an opportunity to demonstrate that it made a good faith effort to report data as required by this section. The hearing shall be conducted by a referee appointed by the department. Based on the information provided in the hearing, the referee shall recommend whether the department should issue a revised report card for the district. If the referee affirms the department's contention that the district did not make a good faith effort to report data as required by this section, the district shall bear the full cost of conducting the hearing and of issuing any revised report card.
(7) If the department determines that any inaccurate data reported under this section caused a school district to receive excess funds under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code in any fiscal year, the district shall reimburse the department an amount equal to the excess funds, in accordance with a payment schedule determined by the department. The department may withhold funds due to the district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code for this purpose.
(8) Any school district that has funds withheld under division (L)(2) of this section may appeal the withholding in accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code.
(9) In all cases of a disagreement between the department and a school district regarding the appropriateness of an action taken under division (L)(2) of this section, the burden of proof shall be on the district to demonstrate that it made a good faith effort to report data as required by this section.
(M) No information technology center or school district shall acquire, change, or update its student administration software package to manage and report data required to be reported to the department unless it converts to a student software package that is certified by the department.
(N) The state board of education, in accordance with
sections 3319.31 and
3319.311 of the Revised Code, may suspend or
revoke a license as defined under
division (A) of section 3319.31
of the Revised Code that has been issued to
any school district
employee found to have willfully reported
erroneous, inaccurate,
or incomplete data to the education
management information system.
(O) No person shall release or maintain any information
about any
student in violation of this section. Whoever violates
this division is
guilty of a misdemeanor of the fourth degree.
(P) The department shall disaggregate the data collected
under
division (B)(1)(o) of this section according to the race and
socioeconomic status of the students assessed. No data collected
under that division shall be included on the report cards required
by section 3302.03 of the Revised Code.
(Q) If the department cannot compile any of the information
required by division (C)(5) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code
based upon the data collected under this section, the department
shall develop a plan and a reasonable timeline for the collection
of any data necessary to comply with that division.
Sec. 3301.162. (A) If the governing authority of a chartered nonpublic school intends to close the school, the governing authority shall notify all of the following of that intent prior to closing the school:
(1) The department of education;
(2) The school district that receives auxiliary services funding under division (I) of section 3317.024 of the Revised Code on behalf of the students enrolled in the school;
(3) The accrediting association that most recently accredited the school for purposes of chartering the school in accordance with the rules of the state board of education, if applicable.
The notice shall include the school year and, if possible, the actual date the school will close.
(B) The chief administrator of each
chartered nonpublic school that closes shall deposit the school's records with the school district that received auxiliary services funding under division (I) of section 3317.024 of the Revised Code on behalf of the students enrolled in the school.
The school district that receives the records may charge for and receive a one-time reimbursement from auxiliary services funding under division (I) of section 3317.024 of the Revised Code for costs the district incurred to store the records.
Sec. 3301.53. (A) Not later than July 1, 1988, the The state
board of education, in consultation with the director of job and
family
services, shall formulate and prescribe by rule adopted
under
Chapter 119. of the Revised Code minimum standards to be
applied
to preschool programs operated by school district boards
of
education, county MR/DD boards, or eligible nonpublic
schools. The rules
shall include the following:
(1) Standards ensuring that the preschool program is
located
in a safe and convenient facility that accommodates the
enrollment
of the program, is of the quality to support the
growth and
development of the children according to the program
objectives,
and meets the requirements of section 3301.55 of the
Revised Code;
(2) Standards ensuring that supervision, discipline, and
programs will be administered according to established objectives
and procedures;
(3) Standards ensuring that preschool staff members and
nonteaching employees are recruited, employed, assigned,
evaluated, and provided inservice education without
discrimination
on the basis of age, color, national origin, race,
or sex; and
that preschool staff members and nonteaching
employees are
assigned responsibilities in accordance with
written position
descriptions commensurate with their training
and experience;
(4) A requirement that boards of education intending to
establish a preschool program on or after March 17, 1989,
demonstrate a need for a preschool program that is not being met
by any existing program providing child care, prior to
establishing the program;
(5) Requirements that children participating in preschool
programs have been immunized to the extent considered appropriate
by the state board to prevent the spread of communicable disease;
(6) Requirements that the parents of preschool children
complete the emergency medical authorization form specified in
section 3313.712 of the Revised Code.
(B) The state board of education in consultation with the
director of job and family services shall ensure that the rules
adopted
by
the state board under sections 3301.52 to 3301.58 of
the Revised
Code are consistent with and meet or exceed the
requirements of
Chapter 5104. of the Revised Code with regard to
child day-care
centers. The state board and the director of job
and family services
shall review all such rules at least once
every five years.
(C) On or before January 1, 1992, the The state board of
education, in consultation with the director of
job and family
services,
shall adopt rules for school child programs that are
consistent
with and meet or exceed the requirements of the rules
adopted for
school child day-care centers under Chapter 5104. of
the Revised
Code.
Sec. 3302.03. (A)
Annually the
department
of
education
shall
report for each
school district
and each school building in a district all of the following:
(1) The extent to which the school district or building
meets each of the applicable
performance indicators
created by the
state
board of
education under
section 3302.02 of the Revised Code and
the
number of
applicable performance
indicators that have been
achieved;
(2) The performance index score of the school district or building;
(3) Whether the school district or building has made adequate yearly progress;
(4) Whether the school district or building is
excellent,
effective,
needs
continuous improvement, is
under an
academic
watch, or is in
a
state of academic emergency.
(B) Except as otherwise provided in division divisions (B)(6) and (7) of this section:
(1) A school district or building shall be declared
excellent if it fulfills one of the following requirements:
(a) It makes adequate yearly progress and either meets at least ninety-four per cent of the applicable state
performance indicators or has a performance index score established by the department.
(b) It has failed to make adequate yearly progress for not more than two consecutive years and either meets at least ninety-four per cent of the applicable state performance indicators or has a performance index score established by the department.
(2)
A school district
or building shall be declared
effective
if it fulfills one of the following requirements:
(a) It makes adequate yearly progress and either meets
at least seventy-five per cent but less than ninety-four per cent of
the
applicable
state performance
indicators or has a performance index score established by the department.
(b) It does not make adequate yearly progress and either meets at least seventy-five per cent of the applicable state performance indicators or has a performance index score established by the department, except that if it does not make adequate yearly progress for three consecutive years, it shall be declared in need of continuous improvement.
(3) A school district
or building shall be declared to be
in
need of
continuous improvement if it fulfills one of the following requirements:
(a) It makes adequate yearly progress, meets less than seventy-five per cent of the
applicable state
performance
indicators, and has a performance index score established by the department.
(b) It does not make adequate yearly progress and either meets at least fifty per cent but less than seventy-five per cent of the applicable state performance indicators or has a performance index score established by the department.
(4) A school district
or building shall be declared to be
under an
academic watch if it does not make adequate yearly progress and either meets at least thirty-one per cent but less than fifty per cent of the
applicable
state
performance
indicators or has a performance index score established by the department.
(5) A school district
or building shall be declared to be
in
a state
of academic emergency if it does not make adequate yearly progress, does not meet at least thirty-one per cent
of the
applicable state performance
indicators, and has a performance index score established by the department.
(6) When designating performance ratings for school districts and buildings under divisions (B)(1) to (5) of this section, the department shall not assign a school district or building a lower designation from its previous year's designation based solely on one subgroup not making adequate yearly progress.
(7) Division (B)(7) of this section does not apply to any community school established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code in which a majority of the students are enrolled in a dropout prevention and recovery program.
A school district or building shall not be assigned a higher performance rating than in need of continuous improvement if at least ten per cent but not more than fifteen per cent of the enrolled students do not take all achievement tests prescribed for their grade level under section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code from which they are not excused pursuant to division (C)(1) or (3) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code. A school district or building shall not be assigned a higher performance rating than under an academic watch if more than fifteen per cent but not more than twenty per cent of the enrolled students do not take all achievement tests prescribed for their grade level under section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code from which they are not excused pursuant to division (C)(1) or (3) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code. A school district or building shall not be assigned a higher performance rating than in a state of academic emergency if more than twenty per cent of the enrolled students do not take all achievement tests prescribed for their grade level under section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code from which they are not excused pursuant to division (C)(1) or (3) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code.
(C)(1) The department shall issue annual report cards for
each school
district, each building within each district, and for
the state as a whole
reflecting performance on the
indicators
created by the state board under section 3302.02 of the
Revised
Code, the performance index score, and adequate yearly progress.
(2) The department shall include on the report card for each
district information pertaining to any change
from the previous
year made by the school district or school
buildings within the
district on any performance indicator.
(3) When reporting data on student performance, the
department shall disaggregate that data according to the following
categories:
(a) Performance of students by age group;
(b) Performance of students by race and ethnic group;
(c) Performance of students by gender;
(d) Performance of students grouped by those who have been
enrolled in a district or school for three or more years;
(e) Performance of students grouped by those who have been
enrolled in a district or school for more than one year and less
than three years;
(f) Performance of students grouped by those who have been
enrolled in a district or school for one year or less;
(g) Performance of students grouped by those who are
economically disadvantaged;
(h) Performance of students grouped by those who are enrolled
in a conversion community school established under Chapter 3314.
of the Revised Code;
(i) Performance of students grouped by those who are classified as limited English proficient;
(j) Performance of students grouped by those who have disabilities;
(k) Performance of students grouped by those who are classified as migrants;
(l) Performance of students grouped by those who are identified as gifted pursuant to Chapter 3324. of the Revised Code.
The department may disaggregate data on student performance
according to other categories that the department determines are
appropriate. To the extent possible, the department shall disaggregate data on student performance according to any combinations of two or more of the categories listed in divisions (C)(3)(a) to (l) of this section that it deems relevant.
In reporting data pursuant to division (C)(3) of this
section, the
department shall not include in the report cards any
data statistical in nature that is statistically unreliable or
that could result in the identification of individual students. For this purpose, the department shall not report student performance data for any group identified in division (C)(3) of this section that contains less than ten students.
(4) The department may include with the report cards any
additional education and fiscal
performance data
it deems
valuable.
(5) The department shall include on each report card a list
of additional information collected by the department that is
available regarding the district or building for which the report
card is issued. When available, such additional information shall
include student mobility data disaggregated by race and
socioeconomic status, college enrollment data, and the reports
prepared under section 3302.031 of the Revised Code.
The department shall maintain a site on the world wide web.
The report card shall include the address of the site and shall
specify that such additional information is available to the
public at that site. The department shall also provide a copy of
each item on the list to the superintendent of each school
district. The district superintendent shall provide a copy of any
item on the list to anyone who requests it.
(6)(a) This division does not apply to conversion community schools that primarily enroll students between sixteen and twenty-two years of age who dropped out of high school or are at risk of dropping out of high school due to poor attendance, disciplinary problems, or suspensions.
For any district that sponsors a conversion community
school under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code, the department
shall combine data regarding the academic performance of students
enrolled in the community school with comparable data from the
schools of the district for the purpose of calculating the
performance of the district as a whole on the report card issued
for the district.
(b) Any district that leases a building to a community school located in the district or that enters into an agreement with a community school located in the district whereby the district and the school endorse each other's programs may elect to have data regarding the academic performance of students enrolled in the community school combined with comparable data from the schools of the district for the purpose of calculating the performance of the district as a whole on the district report card. Any district that so elects shall annually file a copy of the lease or agreement with the department.
(7) The department shall include on each report card the percentage of teachers in the district or building who are highly qualified, as defined by the "No Child Left Behind Act of 2001," and a comparison of that percentage with the percentages of such teachers in similar districts and buildings.
(8) The department shall include on the report card the number of master teachers employed by each district and each building once the data is available from the education management information system established under section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code.
(D)(1) In calculating
reading, writing, mathematics, social
studies, or science proficiency
or achievement test
passage rates
used to determine school district or building performance under
this
section,
the department shall include all
students
taking a test with
accommodation
or to
whom an
alternate assessment is administered
pursuant to
division
(C)(1) or (3)
of section 3301.0711 of the
Revised
Code.
(2) In calculating performance index scores, rates of achievement on the performance indicators established by the state board under section 3302.02 of the Revised Code, and adequate yearly progress for school districts and buildings under this section, the department shall do all of the following:
(a) Include for each district or building only those students who are included in the ADM certified for the first full school week of October and are continuously enrolled in the district or building through the time of the spring administration of any test prescribed by section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code that is administered to the student's grade level;
(b) Include cumulative totals from both the fall and spring administrations of the third grade reading achievement test;
(c) Except as required by the "No Child Left Behind Act of 2001" for the calculation of adequate yearly progress, exclude for each district or building any limited English proficient student who has been enrolled in United States schools for less than one full school year.
Sec. 3302.10. (A) Beginning July 1, 2007, the superintendent of public instruction shall may establish an academic distress commission for each any school district that has been declared to be in a state of academic emergency pursuant to section 3302.03 of the Revised Code and has failed to make adequate yearly progress for four or more consecutive school years. Each commission shall assist the district for which it was established in improving the district's academic performance.
Each commission is a body both corporate and politic, constituting an agency and instrumentality of the state and performing essential governmental functions of the state. A commission shall be known as the "academic distress commission for ............... (name of school district)," and, in that name, may exercise all authority vested in such a commission by this section. A separate commission shall be established for each school district designated by the superintendent of public instruction.
(B) Each academic distress commission shall consist of five voting members, three of whom shall be appointed by the superintendent of public instruction and two of whom shall be residents of the applicable school district appointed by the president of the district board of education of the applicable school district. When a school district becomes subject to this section, the superintendent of public instruction shall provide written notification of that fact to the district board of education and shall request the president of the district board to submit to the superintendent of public instruction, in writing, the names of the president's appointees to the commission. The superintendent of public instruction and the president of the district board shall make appointments to the commission within thirty days after the district is notified that it is subject to this section.
Members of the commission shall serve at the pleasure of their appointing authority during the life of the commission. In the event of the death, resignation, incapacity, removal, or ineligibility to serve of a member, the appointing authority shall appoint a successor within fifteen days after the vacancy occurs. Members shall serve without compensation, but shall be paid by the commission their necessary and actual expenses incurred while engaged in the business of the commission.
(C) Immediately after appointment of the initial members of an academic distress commission, the superintendent of public instruction shall call the first meeting of the commission and shall cause written notice of the time, date, and place of that meeting to be given to each member of the commission at least forty-eight hours in advance of the meeting. The first meeting shall include an overview of the commission's roles and responsibilities, the requirements of section 2921.42 and Chapter 102. of the Revised Code as they pertain to commission members, the requirements of section 121.22 of the Revised Code, and the provisions of division (F) of this section. At its first meeting, the commission shall adopt temporary bylaws in accordance with division (D) of this section to govern its operations until the adoption of permanent bylaws.
The superintendent of public instruction shall designate a chairperson for the commission from among the members appointed by the superintendent. The chairperson shall call and conduct meetings, set meeting agendas, and serve as a liaison between the commission and the district board of education. The chairperson also shall appoint a secretary, who shall not be a member of the commission.
The department of education shall provide administrative support for the commission, provide data requested by the commission, and inform the commission of available state resources that could assist the commission in its work.
(D) Each academic distress commission may adopt and alter bylaws and rules, which shall not be subject to section 111.15 or Chapter 119. of the Revised Code, for the conduct of its affairs and for the manner, subject to this section, in which its powers and functions shall be exercised and embodied.
(E) Three members of an academic distress commission constitute a quorum of the commission. The affirmative vote of three members of the commission is necessary for any action taken by vote of the commission. No vacancy in the membership of the commission shall impair the rights of a quorum by such vote to exercise all the rights and perform all the duties of the commission. Members of the commission are not disqualified from voting by reason of the functions of any other office they hold and are not disqualified from exercising the functions of the other office with respect to the school district, its officers, or the commission.
(F) The members of an academic distress commission, the superintendent of public instruction, and any person authorized to act on behalf of or assist them shall not be personally liable or subject to any suit, judgment, or claim for damages resulting from the exercise of or failure to exercise the powers, duties, and functions granted to them in regard to their functioning under this section, but the commission, superintendent of public instruction, and such other persons shall be subject to mandamus proceedings to compel performance of their duties under this section.
(G) The members of an academic distress commission are not subject to section 102.02 of the Revised Code, except that a member who is subject to that section by virtue of holding another office or position shall comply with that section with respect to that other office or position. However, each member of the commission shall file with the Ohio ethics commission a signed written statement setting forth the general nature of sales of goods, property, or services or of loans to the applicable school district, in which the commission member has a pecuniary interest or in which any member of the commission member's immediate family, as defined in section 102.01 of the Revised Code, or any corporation, partnership, or enterprise of which the commission member is an officer, director, or partner, or of which the commission member or a member of the commission member's immediate family owns more than a five per cent interest, has a pecuniary interest, and of which sale, loan, or interest the commission member has knowledge. The statement shall be supplemented from time to time to reflect changes in the general nature of any such sales or loans.
(H) Meetings of each academic distress commission shall be subject to section 121.22 of the Revised Code.
(I)(1) Within one hundred twenty days after the first meeting of an academic distress commission, the commission shall adopt an academic recovery plan to improve academic performance in the school district. The plan shall address academic problems at both the district and school levels. The plan shall include the following:
(a) Short-term and long-term actions to be taken to improve the district's academic performance, including any actions required by section 3302.04 of the Revised Code;
(b) The sequence and timing of the actions described in division (I)(1)(a) of this section and the persons responsible for implementing the actions;
(c) Resources that will be applied toward improvement efforts;
(d) Procedures for monitoring and evaluating improvement efforts;
(e) Requirements for reporting to the commission and the district board of education on the status of improvement efforts.
(2) The commission may amend the academic recovery plan subsequent to adoption. The commission shall update the plan at least annually.
(3) The commission shall submit the academic recovery plan it adopts or updates to the superintendent of public instruction for approval immediately following its adoption or updating. The superintendent shall evaluate the plan and either approve or disapprove it within thirty days after its submission. If the plan is disapproved, the superintendent shall recommend modifications that will render it acceptable. No academic distress commission shall implement an academic recovery plan unless the superintendent has approved it.
(4) County, state, and school district officers and employees shall assist the commission diligently and promptly in the implementation of the academic recovery plan.
(J) Each academic distress commission shall seek input from the district board of education regarding ways to improve the district's academic performance, but any decision of the commission related to any authority granted to the commission under this section shall be final.
The commission may do any of the following:
(1) Appoint school building administrators and reassign administrative personnel;
(2) Terminate the contracts of administrators or administrative personnel. The commission shall not be required to comply with section 3319.16 of the Revised Code with respect to any contract terminated under this division.
(3) Contract with a private entity to perform school or district management functions;
(4) Establish a budget for the district and approve district appropriations and expenditures, unless a financial planning and supervision commission has been established for the district pursuant to section 3316.05 of the Revised Code.
(D)(K) If the board of education of a district for which an academic distress commission has been established under this section renews any collective bargaining agreement under Chapter 4117. of the Revised Code during the existence of the commission, the district board shall not enter into any agreement that would render any decision of the commission unenforceable. Section 3302.08 of the Revised Code does not apply to this division.
Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in Chapter 4117. of the Revised Code, if the board of education has entered into a collective bargaining agreement after the effective date of this section September 29, 2005, that contains stipulations relinquishing one or more of the rights or responsibilities listed in division (C) of section 4117.08 of the Revised Code, those stipulations are not enforceable and the district board shall resume holding those rights or responsibilities as if it had not relinquished them in that agreement until such time as both the academic distress commission ceases to exist and the district board agrees to relinquish those rights or responsibilities in a new collective bargaining agreement. The provisions of this paragraph apply to a collective bargaining agreement entered into after the effective date of this section September 29, 2005, and those provisions are deemed to be part of that agreement regardless of whether the district satisfied the conditions prescribed in division (A) of this section at the time the district entered into that agreement.
(E)(L) An academic distress commission shall cease to exist when the district for which it was established receives a performance rating under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code of in need of continuous improvement or better for two out of the three prior school years; however, the superintendent of public instruction may dissolve the commission earlier if the superintendent determines that the district can perform adequately without the supervision of the commission. Upon termination of the commission, the department of education shall compile a final report of the commission's activities to assist other academic distress commissions in the conduct of their functions.
Sec. 3310.51. As used in sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code:
(A) "Alternative public provider" means either of the following providers that agrees to enroll a child in the provider's special education program to implement the child's individualized education program and to which the eligible applicant owes fees for the services provided to the child:
(1) A school district that is not the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school or the child's school district of residence, if different;
(2) A public entity other than a school district.
(B) "Applicable special education weight" means the multiple specified in section 3317.013 of the Revised Code for a handicap described in that section.
(C) "Category one through six special education ADM" means the respective categories prescribed in divisions (F)(1) to (6) of section 3317.02 of the Revised Code.
(D) "Eligible applicant" means any of the following:
(1) Either of the natural or adoptive parents of a qualified special education child, except as otherwise specified in this division. When the marriage of the natural or adoptive parents of the student has been terminated by a divorce, dissolution of marriage, or annulment, or when the natural or adoptive parents of the student are living separate and apart under a legal separation decree, and a court has issued an order allocating the parental rights and responsibilities with respect to the child, "eligible applicant" means the residential parent as designated by the court. If the court issues a shared parenting decree, "eligible applicant" means either parent. "Eligible applicant" does not mean a parent whose custodial rights have been terminated.
(2) The custodian of a qualified special education child, when a court has granted temporary, legal, or permanent custody of the child to an individual other than either of the natural or adoptive parents of the child or to a government agency;
(3) The guardian of a qualified special education child, when a court has appointed a guardian for the child;
(4) The grandparent of a qualified special education child, when the grandparent is the child's attorney in fact under a power of attorney executed under sections 3109.51 to 3109.62 of the Revised Code or when the grandparent has executed a caregiver authorization affidavit under sections 3109.65 to 3109.73 of the Revised Code;
(5) The surrogate parent appointed for a qualified special education child pursuant to division (B) of section 3323.05 and section 3323.051 of the Revised Code;
(6) A qualified special education child, if the child does not have a custodian or guardian and the child is at least eighteen years of age.
(E) "Entitled to attend school" means entitled to attend school in a school district under sections 3313.64 and 3313.65 of the Revised Code.
(F) "Formula ADM" and "formula amount" have the same meanings as in section 3317.02 of the Revised Code.
(G) "Handicapped child," "individualized education program," and "special education program" have the same meanings as in section 3323.01 of the Revised Code.
(H) "Qualified special education child" is a child for whom all of the following conditions apply:
(1) The child is at least five years of age and less than twenty-two years of age;
(2) The school district in which the child is entitled to attend school, or the child's school district of residence if different, has identified the child as a handicapped child;
(3) The school district in which the child is entitled to attend school, or the child's school district of residence if different, has developed an individualized education program under Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code for the child;
(a) Was enrolled in the schools of the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school in any grade from kindergarten through twelve in the school year prior to the school year in which a scholarship is first sought for the child;
(b) Is eligible to enter school in any grade kindergarten through twelve in the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school in the school year in which a scholarship is first sought for the child.
(I) "Registered private provider" means a nonpublic school or other nonpublic entity that has been registered by the superintendent of public instruction under section 3310.58 of the Revised Code.
(J) "Scholarship" means a scholarship awarded under the special education scholarship pilot program pursuant to sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code.
(K) "School district of residence" has the same meaning as in section 3323.01 of the Revised Code. A community school established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code is not a "school district of residence" for purposes of sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code.
(L) "School year" has the same meaning as in section 3313.62 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3310.52. (A) The special education scholarship pilot program is hereby established. Under the program, in fiscal years 2008 through 2013, subject to division (B) of this section, the department of education annually shall pay a scholarship to an alternative public provider or a registered private provider on behalf of an eligible applicant for services provided for a qualified special education child. The scholarship shall be used only to pay all or part of the fees for the child to attend the special education program operated by the alternative public provider or registered private provider to implement the child's individualized education program in lieu of the child's attending the special education program operated by the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school.
(B) The number of scholarships awarded under the pilot program in any fiscal year shall not exceed three per cent of the total number of students residing in the state identified as handicapped children during the previous fiscal year.
Sec. 3310.53. (A) Except for development of the child's individualized education program, as specified in division (B) of this section, the school district in which a qualified special education child is entitled to attend school and the child's school district of residence, if different, are not obligated to provide the child with a free appropriate public education under Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code for as long as the child continues to attend the special education program operated by either an alternative public provider or a registered private provider for which a scholarship is awarded under the special education scholarship pilot program. If at any time, the eligible applicant for the child decides no longer to accept scholarship payments and enrolls the child in the special education program of the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school, that district shall provide the child with a free appropriate public education under Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code.
(B) Each eligible applicant and each qualified special education child have a continuing right to the development of an individualized education program for the child that complies with Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code, 20 U.S.C. 1400 et seq., and administrative rules or guidelines adopted by the Ohio department of education or the United States department of education. The school district in which a qualified special education child is entitled to attend school, or the child's school district of residence if different, shall develop each individualized education program for the child in accordance with those provisions.
(C)
Each school district shall notify an eligible applicant of the applicant's and qualified special education child's rights under sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code by providing to each eligible applicant the comparison document prescribed in section 3323.052 of the Revised Code. An eligible applicant's receipt of that document, as acknowledged in a format prescribed by the department of education, shall constitute notice that the eligible applicant has been informed of those rights. Upon receipt of that document, subsequent acceptance of a scholarship constitutes the eligible applicant's informed consent to the provisions of sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3310.54. As prescribed in divisions (A)(2)(h), (B)(3)(g), and (B)(5) to (10) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code, a qualified special education child in any of grades kindergarten through twelve for whom a scholarship is awarded under the special education scholarship pilot program shall be counted in the formula ADM and category one through six special education ADM, as appropriate, of the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school. A qualified special education child shall not be counted in the formula ADM or category one through six special education ADM of any other school district.
Sec. 3310.55. The department of education shall deduct from the amounts paid to each school district under Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code, and, if necessary, sections 321.24 and 323.156 of the Revised Code, the aggregate amount of scholarships paid under section 3310.57 of the Revised Code for qualified special education children included in the formula ADM and the category one through six special education ADM of that school district.
Sec. 3310.56. The amount of the scholarship awarded and paid on behalf of an eligible applicant for services for a qualified special education child under the special education scholarship pilot program in each school year shall be the lesser of the following:
(A) The amount of fees charged for that school year by the alternative public provider or registered private provider;
(B) The sum of the amounts calculated under divisions (B)(1) and (2) of this section:
(1) The sum of the formula amount plus the per pupil amount of the base funding supplements specified in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code.
(2) The formula amount times the applicable special education weight for the child's disability.
Sec. 3310.57. The department of education shall make periodic payments to an alternative public provider or a registered private provider on behalf of an eligible applicant for services for each qualified special education child for whom a scholarship has been awarded. The total of all payments made on behalf of an applicant in each school year shall not exceed the amount calculated for the child under section 3310.56 of the Revised Code.
The scholarship amount shall be proportionately reduced in the case of a child who is not enrolled in the special education program of an alternative public provider or a registered private provider for the entire school year.
In accordance with division (A) of section 3310.62 of the Revised Code, the department shall make no payments on behalf of an applicant for a first-time scholarship for a qualified special education child while any administrative or judicial mediation or proceedings with respect to the content of the child's individualized education program are pending.
Sec. 3310.58. No nonpublic school or entity shall receive payments for services for a qualified special education child under the special education scholarship pilot program until the school or entity registers with the superintendent of public instruction. The superintendent shall register and designate as a registered private provider any nonpublic school or entity that meets the following requirements:
(A) The special education program operated by the school or entity meets the minimum education standards established by the state board of education.
(B) The school or entity does not discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sex, disability, age, or ancestry.
(C) If the school or entity is not chartered by the state board under section 3301.16 of the Revised Code, the school or entity agrees to comply with section 3319.39 of the Revised Code as if it were a school district.
(D) The teaching and nonteaching professionals employed by the school or entity, or employed by any subcontractors of the school or entity, hold credentials determined by the state board to be appropriate for the qualified special education children enrolled in the special education program it operates.
(E) The school or entity meets applicable health and safety standards established by law for school buildings.
(F) The school or entity agrees to retain on file documentation as required by the department of education.
(G) The school or entity demonstrates fiscal soundness to the satisfaction of the department.
(H) The school or entity agrees to meet other requirements established by rule of the state board under section 3310.63 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3310.59. The superintendent of public instruction shall revoke the registration of any school or entity if, after a hearing, the superintendent determines that the school or entity is in violation of any provision of section 3310.58 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3310.60. A qualified special education child attending a special education program at an alternative public provider or a registered private provider with a scholarship shall be entitled to transportation to and from that program in the manner prescribed by law for any handicapped child attending a nonpublic special education program.
Sec. 3310.61. An eligible applicant on behalf of a child who currently attends a public special education program under a contract, compact, or other bilateral agreement, or on behalf of a child who currently attends a community school, shall not be prohibited from applying for and accepting a scholarship so that the applicant may withdraw the child from that program or community school and use the scholarship for the child to attend a special education program operated by an alternative public provider or a registered private provider.
Sec. 3310.62. (A) A scholarship under the special education scholarship pilot program shall not be awarded for the first time to an eligible applicant on behalf of a qualified special education child while the child's individualized education program is being developed by the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school, or by the child's school district of residence if different, or while any administrative or judicial mediation or proceedings with respect to the content of that individualized education program are pending.
(B) Development of individualized education programs subsequent to the one developed for the child the first time a scholarship was awarded on behalf of the child and the prosecuting, by the eligible applicant on behalf of the child, of administrative or judicial mediation or proceedings with respect to any of those subsequent individualized education programs do not affect the applicant's and the child's continued eligibility for scholarship payments.
(C)
In the case of any child for whom a scholarship has been awarded, if the school district in which the child is entitled to attend school has agreed to provide some services for the child under an agreement entered into with the eligible applicant or with the alternative public provider or registered private provider implementing the child's individualized education program, or if the district is required by law to provide some services for the child, including transportation services under sections 3310.60 and 3327.01 of the Revised Code, the district shall not discontinue the services it is providing pending completion of any administrative proceedings regarding those services. The prosecuting, by the eligible applicant on behalf of the child, of administrative proceedings regarding the services provided by the district does not affect the applicant's and the child's continued eligibility for scholarship payments.
(D) The department of education shall continue to make payments to the alternative public provider or registered private provider on behalf of the eligible applicant under section 3310.57 of the Revised Code while either of the following are pending:
(1) Administrative or judicial mediation or proceedings with respect to a subsequent individualized education program for the child referred to in division (B) of this section;
(2) Administrative
proceedings regarding services provided by the district under division (C) of this section.
Sec. 3310.63. The state board of education shall adopt rules in accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code prescribing procedures necessary to implement sections 3310.51 to 3310.62 of the Revised Code including, but not limited to, procedures and deadlines for parents to apply for scholarships, standards for registered private providers, and procedures for registration of private providers.
Sec. 3311.24. (A)(1) Except as provided in division (B) of
this section, if the board of education of a city, exempted
village, or local school district
deems it advisable shall file with the state board of education a proposal to
transfer territory from such district to an adjoining city,
exempted village, or local school district,
or if a in any of the following circumstances:
(a) The district board deems the transfer advisable;
(b) A petition, signed by seventy-five per cent of the
qualified electors residing within that portion of a city,
exempted village, or local school district proposed to be
transferred
voting at the last general election, requests such a transfer,
the;
(c) If no qualified electors reside in that portion of the district proposed to be transferred, a petition, signed by seventy-five per cent of the owners of parcels of real property on the tax duplicate within that portion of the district, requests such a transfer.
(2) The board of education of the district in which such proposal
originates shall file such proposal, together with a map showing
the boundaries of the territory proposed to be transferred, with
the state board of education prior to the first day of April in
any even-numbered year. The state board of education may, if it
is advisable, provide for a hearing in any suitable place in any
of the school districts affected by such proposed transfer of
territory. The state board of education or its representatives
shall preside at any such hearing.
(3) A board of education of a city, exempted village, or local school district that receives a petition of transfer signed by electors of the district under this division (A)(1)(b) of this section shall cause the board of elections to check the sufficiency of signatures on the petition. A board of education of a city, exempted village, or local school district that receives a petition of transfer signed by owners of parcels of real property under division (A)(1)(c) of this section shall cause the county auditor to check the sufficiency of signatures on the petition.
(4) Not later than the first day of September the state board
of education shall either approve or disapprove a proposed
transfer of territory filed with it as provided by this section
and shall notify, in writing, the boards of education of the
districts affected by such proposed transfer of territory of its
decision.
If the decision of the state board of education is an
approval of the proposed transfer of territory then the board of
education of the district in which the territory is located
shall, within thirty days after receiving the state board of
education's decision, adopt a resolution transferring the
territory and shall forthwith submit a copy of such resolution to
the treasurer of the board of education of the city, exempted
village, or local school district to
which the territory is
transferred. Such transfer shall not be complete however, until:
(1)(a) A resolution accepting the transfer has been passed by
a majority vote of the full membership of the board of education
of the city, exempted village, or local school
district to which
the territory is transferred;
(2)(b) An equitable division of the funds and indebtedness
between the districts involved has been
made
by the board of
education making the transfer;
(3)(c) A map showing the boundaries of the territory
transferred has been filed, by the board of education accepting
the transfer, with the county auditor of each county affected by
the transfer.
When such transfer is complete the legal title of the
school property in the territory transferred shall be vested in
the board of education or governing board of the school district to which the
territory is transferred.
(B) Whenever the transfer of territory pursuant to this
section is initiated by a board of education, the board shall,
before filing a proposal for transfer with the state board of
education under this section, make a good faith effort to
negotiate the terms of transfer with any other school district
whose territory would be affected by the transfer. Before the
state board may hold a hearing on the transfer, or approve or
disapprove any such transfer, it must receive the following:
(1) A resolution requesting approval of the transfer,
passed by the school district submitting the proposal;
(2) Evidence determined to be sufficient by the state
board to show that good faith negotiations have taken place or
that the district requesting the transfer has made a good faith
effort to hold such negotiations;
(3) If any negotiations took place, a statement signed by
all boards that participated in the negotiations,
listing
the
terms agreed on and the points on which no agreement could be
reached.
Negotiations held pursuant to this section shall be
governed by the rules adopted by the state board under division
(D) of section 3311.06 of the Revised Code. Districts involved
in a transfer under division (B) of this section may agree to
share revenues from the property included in the territory to be
transferred, establish cooperative programs between the
participating districts, and establish mechanisms for the
settlement of any future boundary disputes.
Sec. 3313.41. (A) Except as provided in divisions (C),
(D), (F), and (G) of this section, when a board of education
decides to
dispose of real or personal property that it owns in
its corporate
capacity and that exceeds in value ten thousand
dollars, it
shall
sell the property at public auction, after
giving at least
thirty
days' notice of the auction by publication
in a newspaper
of
general circulation or by posting notices in
five of the most
public places in the school district in which the
property, if it
is real property, is situated, or, if it is
personal property, in
the school district of the board of
education that owns the
property. The board may offer real
property for sale as an
entire
tract or in parcels.
(B) When the board of education has offered real or
personal
property for sale at public auction at least once pursuant to
division
(A) of this section, and the property has not been sold,
the
board may sell it at a private sale. Regardless of how it was
offered at public auction, at a private sale, the board shall, as
it considers best, sell real property as an entire tract or in
parcels, and personal property in a single lot or in several
lots.
(C) If a board of education decides to dispose of real or
personal property that it owns in its corporate capacity and that
exceeds in value ten thousand dollars, it may sell the property
to
the adjutant general; to any subdivision or taxing authority as
respectively defined in divisions (A) and (C) of section 5705.01
of the
Revised Code, township park district, board of park
commissioners
established under Chapter 755. of the Revised Code,
or park
district established under Chapter 1545. of the Revised
Code; to
a wholly or partially tax-supported university,
university
branch, or college; or to the board of
trustees of a
school district library, upon such terms as are
agreed upon. The
sale of real or personal property to the board
of trustees of a
school district library is limited, in the case
of real property,
to a school district library within whose
boundaries the real
property is situated, or, in the case of
personal property, to a
school district library whose boundaries
lie in whole or in part
within the school district of the selling
board of education.
(D) When a board of education decides to trade as a part
or
an entire consideration, an item of personal property on the
purchase price of an item of similar personal property, it may
trade the same upon such terms as are agreed upon by the parties
to the trade.
(E) The president and the treasurer of the board of
education shall execute and deliver deeds or other necessary
instruments of conveyance to complete any sale or trade under
this
section.
(F) When a board of education has identified a parcel of
real
property that it determines is needed for school purposes,
the
board may, upon a majority vote of the members of the board,
acquire that property by exchanging real property that the board
owns in its corporate capacity for the identified real property or
by using real property that the board owns in its corporate
capacity as part or an entire consideration for the purchase price
of the
identified real property. Any exchange or acquisition made
pursuant to this
division shall be made by a conveyance executed
by the president and the
treasurer of the board.
(G)(1) When a school district board of education decides to
dispose of real property suitable for use as classroom space,
prior to disposing of that property under divisions (A) to (F)
of this section, it shall first offer that property for sale to
the governing authorities of the start-up community schools
established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code located
within the territory of the school district, at a price that is
not higher than the appraised fair
market value of that property.
If more than one community school
governing authority accepts the
offer made by the school district
board,
the board shall sell the
property to the governing authority that accepted the offer first
in time. If no
community school governing authority accepts
the
offer within sixty days after the offer is made by the school
district board, the board may dispose of the property in the
applicable manner prescribed under divisions (A) to (F) of this
section.
(2) When a school district board of education has not used real property at least seventy-five per cent of a building suitable for classroom space for academic instruction, administration, storage, or any other educational purpose for one full at least seventy-five per cent of a school year and has not adopted a resolution outlining a plan for using at least seventy-five per cent of that property building for any of those purposes within academic instruction for at least seventy-five per cent of the next three school years year, it shall offer that property building for sale to the governing authorities of the start-up community schools established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code located within the territory of the school district, at a price that is not higher than the appraised fair market value of that property. If more than one community school governing authority accepts the offer made by the school district board, the board shall sell the property to the governing authority that accepted the offer first in time.
(H) When a school district board of education has property that the board, by resolution, finds is not needed for school district use, is obsolete, or is unfit for the use for which it was acquired, the board may donate that property in accordance with this division if the fair market value of the property is, in the opinion of the board, two thousand five hundred dollars or less.
The property may be donated to an eligible nonprofit organization that is located in this state and is exempt from federal income taxation pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 501(a) and (c)(3). Before donating any property under this
division, the board shall adopt a resolution expressing its intent
to make unneeded, obsolete, or unfit-for-use school district property
available to these organizations. The resolution shall include
guidelines and procedures the board considers to be necessary to
implement the donation program and shall indicate whether the
school district will conduct the donation program or the board will
contract with a representative to conduct it. If a representative
is known when the resolution is adopted, the resolution shall
provide contact information such as the representative's name,
address, and telephone number.
The resolution shall include within its procedures a
requirement that any nonprofit organization desiring to obtain
donated property under this division shall submit a written notice
to the board or its representative. The written notice shall
include evidence that the organization is a nonprofit organization that is located in this state and is
exempt from federal income taxation pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 501(a)
and (c)(3); a description of the organization's primary purpose; a
description of the type or types of property the organization
needs; and the name, address, and telephone number of a person
designated by the organization's governing board to receive
donated property and to serve as its agent.
After adoption of the resolution, the board shall publish, in
a newspaper of general circulation in the school district, notice of its
intent to donate unneeded, obsolete, or unfit-for-use school district
property to eligible nonprofit organizations. The notice shall
include a summary of the information provided in the resolution
and shall be published at least twice. The second and any
subsequent notice shall be published not less than ten nor more
than twenty days after the previous notice. A similar notice also
shall be posted continually in the board's office, and, if the
school district maintains a web site on the internet, the notice shall be
posted continually at that web site.
The board or its representatives shall maintain a list of all
nonprofit organizations that notify the board or its
representative of their desire to obtain donated property under
this division and that the board or its representative determines
to be eligible, in accordance with the requirements set forth in this section and in
the donation program's guidelines and procedures, to receive
donated property.
The board or its representative also shall maintain a list of
all school district property the board finds to be unneeded, obsolete, or
unfit for use and to be available for donation under this
division. The list shall be posted continually in a conspicuous
location in the board's office, and, if the school district maintains a
web site on the internet, the list shall be posted continually at
that web site. An item of property on the list shall be donated
to the eligible nonprofit organization that first declares to the
board or its representative its desire to obtain the item unless
the board previously has established, by resolution, a list of
eligible nonprofit organizations that shall be given priority with
respect to the item's donation. Priority may be given on the
basis that the purposes of a nonprofit organization have a direct
relationship to specific school district purposes of programs provided or
administered by the board. A resolution giving priority to
certain nonprofit organizations with respect to the donation of an
item of property shall specify the reasons why the organizations
are given that priority.
Members of the board shall consult with the Ohio ethics commission, and comply with Chapters 102. and 2921. of the Revised Code, with respect to any donation under this division to a nonprofit organization of which a board member, any member of a board member's family, or any business associate of a board member is a trustee, officer, board member, or employee.
Sec. 3313.615. This section shall apply to diplomas awarded
after September 15, 2006, to students who are required to take the
five Ohio graduation tests prescribed by division (B) of
section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(A) As an alternative to the requirement that a person
attain the scores designated under division (B) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code on all the tests required under that
division in order to be eligible for a high school diploma or an
honors diploma under sections 3313.61, 3313.612, or 3325.08 of the
Revised Code or for a diploma of adult education under section
3313.611 of the Revised Code, a person who has attained at least
the applicable scores designated under division (B) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code on all but one of the tests required
by that division and from which the person was not excused or
exempted, pursuant to division (H) or (L) of section 3313.61,
division (B)(1) of section 3313.612, or section 3313.532 of the
Revised Code, may be awarded a diploma or honors diploma if the
person has satisfied all of the following conditions:
(1) On the one test required under division (B) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code for which the person failed to
attain the designated score, the person missed that score by ten
points or less;
(2) Has a ninety-seven per cent school attendance rate in
each of the last four school years, excluding any excused
absences;
(3) Has not been expelled from school under
section
3313.66
of the Revised Code in any of the last four school
years;
(4) Has a grade point average of at least 2.5 out of 4.0,
or
its equivalent as designated in rules adopted by the state
board
of education, in the subject area of the test required under
division (B) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code for which
the person failed to attain the designated score;
(5) Has completed the high school curriculum requirements
prescribed in section 3313.603 of the Revised Code or has qualified under division (D) or (F) of that section;
(6) Has taken advantage of any intervention programs
provided by the school district or school in the subject area
described in division (A)(4) of this section and has a
ninety-seven per cent attendance rate, excluding any excused
absences, in any of those programs that are provided at times
beyond the normal school day, school week, or school year or has
received comparable intervention services from a source other than
the school district or school;
(7) Holds a letter recommending graduation from each of the
person's high school teachers in the subject area described in
division (A)(4) of this section and from the person's high school
principal.
(B) The state board of education shall establish rules
designating grade point averages equivalent to the average
specified in division (A)(4) of this section for use by school
districts and schools with different grading systems.
(C) Any student who is exempt from attaining the applicable score designated under division (B) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code on the Ohio graduation test in social studies pursuant to division (H) of section 3313.61 or division (B)(2) of section 3313.612 of the Revised Code shall not qualify for a high school diploma under this section, unless, notwithstanding the exemption, the student attains the applicable score on that test. If the student attains the applicable score on that test, the student may qualify for a diploma under this section in the same manner as any other student who is required to take the five Ohio graduation tests prescribed by division (B) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3313.64. (A) As used in this section and in section
3313.65 of the Revised Code:
(1)(a) Except as provided in division (A)(1)(b) of this section, "parent" means either parent, unless the parents are
separated or divorced or their marriage has been dissolved or
annulled, in which case
"parent" means the parent who is the
residential parent and legal custodian of the child. When a
child
is in the legal custody of a government agency or a person
other
than the child's natural or adoptive parent,
"parent" means
the
parent with residual parental rights, privileges, and
responsibilities. When a child is in the permanent custody of a
government agency or a person other than the child's natural or
adoptive parent,
"parent" means the parent who was divested of
parental
rights and responsibilities for the care of the child and
the
right to have the child live with the parent and be the legal
custodian
of the child and all residual parental rights,
privileges, and
responsibilities.
(b) When a child is the subject of a power of attorney
executed under sections 3109.51 to 3109.62 of the Revised Code,
"parent" means the grandparent designated as attorney in fact under the power of attorney.
When a child is the subject of a caretaker authorization affidavit
executed under sections 3109.64 to 3109.73 of the Revised Code,
"parent" means the grandparent that executed the affidavit.
(2)
"Legal custody,"
"permanent custody," and
"residual
parental rights, privileges, and responsibilities" have the same
meanings as in section 2151.011 of the Revised Code.
(3)
"School district" or
"district" means a city, local,
or
exempted village school district and excludes any school
operated
in an institution maintained by the department of youth
services.
(4) Except as used in division (C)(2) of this section,
"home" means a home, institution, foster home, group home,
or
other residential facility in this state that receives and
cares
for children, to which any of the following applies:
(a) The home is licensed, certified, or approved for such
purpose by the state or is maintained by the department of youth
services.
(b) The home is operated by a person who is licensed,
certified, or approved by the state to operate the home for such
purpose.
(c) The home accepted the child through a placement by a
person licensed, certified, or approved to place a child in such
a
home by the state.
(d) The home is a children's home created under section
5153.21 or 5153.36 of the Revised Code.
(5)
"Agency" means all of the following:
(a) A public children services agency;
(b) An organization that holds a certificate issued by the
Ohio department of job and family services in accordance
with the
requirements of section 5103.03 of the Revised Code and assumes
temporary or permanent custody of children through commitment,
agreement, or surrender, and places children in family homes for
the purpose of adoption;
(c) Comparable agencies of other states or countries that
have complied with applicable requirements of section 2151.39, or
sections 5103.20 to 5103.22 of the Revised Code.
(6) A child is placed for adoption if either of the
following occurs:
(a) An agency to which the child has been permanently
committed or surrendered enters into an agreement with a person
pursuant to section 5103.16 of the Revised Code for
the care and
adoption of the child.
(b) The child's natural parent places the child pursuant
to
section 5103.16 of the Revised Code with a person who will
care
for and adopt the child.
(7)
"Handicapped preschool child" means a handicapped
child,
as defined by division (A) of section 3323.01 of the
Revised Code,
who is at least three years of age but is not of
compulsory school
age, as defined in section 3321.01 of the
Revised Code, and who is
not currently enrolled in kindergarten.
(8)
"Child," unless otherwise indicated, includes
handicapped
preschool children.
(9) "Active duty" means active duty pursuant to an executive order of the president of the United States, an act of the congress of the United States, or section 5919.29 or 5923.21 of the Revised Code.
(B) Except as otherwise provided in section 3321.01 of the
Revised Code for admittance to kindergarten and first grade, a
child who is at least five but under twenty-two years of age and
any handicapped preschool child shall be admitted to school as
provided in this division.
(1) A child shall be admitted to the schools of the school
district in which the child's parent resides.
(2) A child who does not reside in the district where
the
child's parent resides shall be admitted to the schools of the
district
in which the child resides if any of the following
applies:
(a) The child is in the legal or permanent custody of a
government agency or a person other than the child's natural
or
adoptive
parent.
(b) The child resides in a home.
(c) The child requires special education.
(3) A child who is not entitled under division (B)(2) of
this section to be admitted to the schools of the district where
the child resides and who is residing with a resident of this
state with
whom the child has been placed for adoption shall be
admitted
to the
schools of the district where the child resides
unless either of
the following applies:
(a) The placement for adoption has been terminated.
(b) Another school district is required to admit the child
under division (B)(1) of this section.
Division (B) of this section does not prohibit the board of
education of a school district from placing a handicapped child
who resides in the district in a special education program
outside
of the district or its schools in compliance with Chapter
3323. of
the Revised Code.
(C) A district shall not charge tuition for children
admitted under division (B)(1) or (3) of this section. If the
district admits a child under division (B)(2) of this section,
tuition shall be paid to the district that admits the child as
follows:
(1) If the child receives special education in accordance
with Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code, the school district of residence, as defined in section 3323.01 of the Revised Code, shall pay tuition for the child in
accordance with section 3323.091, 3323.13, 3323.14, or 3323.141
of
the Revised Code regardless of who has custody of the child or
whether the child resides in a home.
(2) For a child that does not receive special education in accordance with Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code, except as otherwise provided in division (C)(2)(d) of
this section, if the child is in the permanent or legal custody
of
a government agency or person other than the child's parent,
tuition shall be paid by:
(a) The district in which the child's parent resided at
the
time the court removed the child from home or at the time
the
court vested legal or permanent custody of the child in the
person
or government agency, whichever occurred first;
(b) If the parent's residence at the time the court
removed
the child from home or placed the child in the
legal or permanent
custody of the person or government agency is unknown,
tuition
shall be paid by the district in which the child resided
at the
time the child was removed from home or placed in
legal or
permanent custody, whichever occurred first;
(c) If a school district cannot be established under
division (C)(2)(a) or (b) of this section, tuition shall be paid
by the district determined as required by section 2151.362 of the
Revised Code by the court at the time it vests custody of the
child in the person or government agency;
(d) If at the time the court removed the child from
home or
vested legal or permanent custody of the child in the
person or
government agency, whichever occurred first, one parent
was in a
residential or correctional facility or a juvenile
residential
placement and the other parent, if living and not in
such a
facility or placement, was not known to reside in this
state,
tuition shall be paid by the district determined under
division
(D) of section 3313.65 of the Revised Code as the
district
required to pay any tuition while the parent was in such
facility
or placement;
(e) If the court has modified its order as to which district department of education has determined, pursuant to division (A)(2) of section 2151.362 of the Revised Code, that a school district other than the one named in the court's initial order, or in a prior determination of the department, is responsible to bear the cost of educating the child pursuant to division (A)(2) of section 2151.362 of the Revised Code, the district so determined to shall be responsible for that cost in the order so modified.
(3) If the child is not in the permanent or legal custody
of
a government agency or person other than the child's
parent and
the child
resides in a home, tuition shall be paid by one of the
following:
(a) The school district in which the child's parent
resides;
(b) If the child's parent is not a resident of this state,
the home in which the child resides.
(D) Tuition required to be paid under divisions (C)(2) and
(3)(a) of this section shall be computed in accordance with
section 3317.08 of the Revised Code. Tuition required to be paid
under division (C)(3)(b) of this section shall be computed in
accordance with section 3317.081 of the Revised Code. If a home
fails to pay the tuition required by division (C)(3)(b) of this
section, the board of education providing the education may
recover in a civil action the tuition and the expenses incurred
in
prosecuting the action, including court costs and reasonable
attorney's fees. If the prosecuting attorney or city director of
law represents the board in such action, costs and reasonable
attorney's fees awarded by the court, based upon the prosecuting
attorney's, director's, or one of their designee's time
spent
preparing
and presenting the case, shall be deposited in the
county or city
general fund.
(E) A board of education may enroll a child free of any
tuition obligation for a period not to exceed sixty days, on the
sworn statement of an adult resident of the district that the
resident has
initiated legal proceedings for custody of the child.
(F) In the case of any individual entitled to attend
school
under this division, no tuition shall be charged by the
school
district of attendance and no other school district shall
be
required to pay tuition for the individual's attendance.
Notwithstanding division (B), (C), or (E) of this section:
(1) All persons at least eighteen but under twenty-two
years
of age who live apart from their parents, support
themselves by
their own labor, and have not successfully
completed the high
school curriculum or the individualized
education program
developed for the person by the high school
pursuant to section
3323.08 of the Revised Code, are entitled to
attend school in the
district in which they reside.
(2) Any child under eighteen years of age who is married
is
entitled to attend school in the child's district of
residence.
(3) A child is entitled to attend school in the district
in
which either of the child's parents is employed if the
child has a
medical condition that may require emergency medical attention.
The parent of
a child entitled to attend school under division
(F)(3) of this section shall submit to the board of education of
the district in which the parent is employed a statement from the
child's physician certifying that the child's medical condition
may require emergency medical attention. The statement shall be
supported by such other evidence as the board may require.
(4) Any child residing with a person other than the child's
parent
is entitled, for a period not to exceed twelve months, to
attend
school in the district in which that person resides if the
child's parent files an affidavit with the superintendent of the
district in which the person with whom the child is living
resides
stating all of the following:
(a) That the parent is serving outside of the state in the
armed services of the United States;
(b) That the parent intends to reside in the district upon
returning to this state;
(c) The name and address of the person with whom the child
is living while the parent is outside the state.
(5) Any child under the age of twenty-two years who, after
the
death of a parent, resides in a school district other than the
district in which the child attended school at the time of the
parent's death is entitled to continue to attend school in the
district in which the child attended school at the time of the
parent's death for the remainder of the school year, subject to
approval of that district board.
(6) A child under the age of twenty-two years who resides
with a parent who is having a new house built in a school
district
outside the district where the parent is residing is
entitled to
attend school for a period of time in the district
where the new
house is being built. In order to be entitled to
such attendance,
the parent shall provide the district
superintendent with the
following:
(a) A sworn statement explaining the situation, revealing
the location of the house being built, and stating the parent's
intention to reside there upon its completion;
(b) A statement from the builder confirming that a new
house
is being built for the parent and that the house is at the
location indicated in the parent's statement.
(7) A child under the age of twenty-two years residing with
a
parent who has a contract to purchase a house in a school
district outside the district where the parent is residing and
who
is waiting upon the date of closing of the mortgage loan for
the
purchase of such house is entitled to attend school for a
period
of time in the district where the house is being
purchased. In
order to be entitled to such attendance, the
parent shall provide
the district superintendent with the
following:
(a) A sworn statement explaining the situation, revealing
the location of the house being purchased, and stating the
parent's intent to reside there;
(b) A statement from a real estate broker or bank officer
confirming that the parent has a contract to purchase the house,
that the parent is waiting upon the date of closing of the
mortgage loan, and that the house is at the location indicated in
the parent's statement.
The district superintendent shall establish a period of
time
not to exceed ninety days during which the child entitled to
attend school under division (F)(6) or (7) of this section may
attend without tuition obligation. A student attending a school
under division (F)(6) or (7) of this section shall be eligible to
participate in interscholastic athletics under the auspices of
that school, provided the board of education of the school
district where the student's parent resides, by a formal action,
releases the student to participate in interscholastic athletics
at the school where the student is attending, and provided the
student receives any authorization required by a public agency or
private organization of which the school district is a member
exercising authority over interscholastic sports.
(8) A child whose parent is a full-time employee of a
city,
local, or exempted village school district, or of an
educational
service center, may be admitted
to the schools of the district
where the child's parent is
employed, or in the case of a child
whose parent is employed by an
educational service center, in the
district that serves the location where
the parent's job is
primarily located,
provided the district board of education
establishes such an admission
policy by resolution adopted by a
majority of its members. Any
such policy shall take effect on the
first day of the school year
and the effective date of any
amendment or repeal may not be
prior to the first day of the
subsequent school year. The policy
shall be uniformly applied to
all such children and shall provide
for the admission of any such
child upon request of the parent. No child may
be admitted under
this policy after the first day of
classes of any school year.
(9) A child who is with the child's parent under the care
of
a
shelter for victims of domestic violence, as defined in section
3113.33 of the Revised Code, is entitled to attend school free in
the district in which the child is with the child's parent,
and no
other school
district shall be required to pay tuition for the
child's
attendance in
that school district.
The enrollment of a child in a school district under this
division shall not be denied due to a delay in the school
district's receipt of any records required under section 3313.672
of the Revised Code or any other records required for enrollment.
Any days of attendance and any credits earned by a child while
enrolled in a school district under this division shall be
transferred to and accepted by any school district in which the
child subsequently enrolls. The state board of education shall
adopt rules to ensure compliance with this division.
(10) Any child under the age of twenty-two years whose
parent
has moved out of the school district after the commencement
of
classes in the child's senior year of high school is entitled,
subject to the approval of that district board, to attend school
in the district in which the child attended school at the
time of
the parental move for the remainder of the school year and
for one
additional semester or equivalent term. A district board may
also
adopt a policy specifying extenuating circumstances under
which a
student may continue to attend school under division
(F)(10) of
this section for an additional period of time in order
to
successfully complete the high school curriculum for the
individualized education program developed for the student by the
high school pursuant to section 3323.08 of the Revised Code.
(11) As used in this division,
"grandparent" means a
parent
of a parent of a child. A child under the age of
twenty-two years
who is in the custody of the child's
parent, resides
with a
grandparent, and does not require special education is
entitled to
attend the schools of the district in which the
child's
grandparent resides, provided that, prior to such attendance in
any school year, the board of education of the school district in
which the child's grandparent resides and the board of
education
of the
school district in which the child's parent resides enter
into a written
agreement specifying that good cause exists for
such attendance,
describing the nature of this good cause, and
consenting to such
attendance.
In lieu of a consent form signed by a parent, a board of
education may request the grandparent of a child attending school
in the district in which the grandparent resides pursuant to
division (F)(11) of this section to complete any consent form
required by the district, including any authorization required by
sections 3313.712, 3313.713, 3313.716, and 3313.718 of the Revised Code.
Upon
request, the grandparent shall complete any consent form
required
by the district. A school district shall not incur any
liability
solely because of its receipt of a consent form from a
grandparent in lieu of a parent.
Division (F)(11) of this section does not
create, and shall
not be construed
as creating, a new cause of action or substantive
legal right
against a school district, a member of a board of
education, or
an employee of a school district. This section does
not affect,
and shall not be construed as affecting, any
immunities from
defenses to tort liability created or recognized
by Chapter 2744.
of the Revised Code for a school district,
member, or employee.
(12) A child under the age of twenty-two years is
entitled
to attend school in a school district other than the district in
which the
child is entitled to attend school under division (B),
(C),
or (E) of this section
provided that, prior to such
attendance in any school year, both of the
following occur:
(a) The superintendent of the district in which the child is
entitled to attend school under division (B),
(C), or (E)
of this
section contacts the superintendent of another district for
purposes
of
this division;
(b) The superintendents of both districts enter into
a
written agreement that consents to the attendance and specifies
that the
purpose of such attendance is to
protect the student's
physical or mental well-being or to deal with other
extenuating
circumstances deemed appropriate by the superintendents.
While an agreement is in effect under this division for a
student who is
not receiving special education under Chapter 3323.
of the Revised Code and
notwithstanding Chapter 3327. of the
Revised Code,
the board of education of neither school district
involved in the agreement is
required to provide transportation
for the student to and from the school
where the student attends.
A student attending a school of a district pursuant to this
division
shall be allowed to participate in all student
activities, including
interscholastic athletics, at the school
where the student is attending on the
same basis as any student
who has always attended the schools of that district
while of
compulsory school age.
(13) All school districts shall comply with the
"McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act," 42 U.S.C.A. 11431 et
seq., for the education of homeless children. Each city, local,
and exempted village school district shall comply with the
requirements of that act governing the provision of a free,
appropriate public education, including public preschool, to each
homeless child.
When a child loses permanent housing and becomes a homeless
person, as defined in 42 U.S.C.A. 11481(5), or when a child who is
such a homeless person changes temporary living arrangements, the
child's parent or guardian shall have the option of enrolling the
child in either of the following:
(a) The child's school of origin, as defined in 42 U.S.C.A.
11432(g)(3)(C);
(b) The school that is operated by the school district in
which the shelter where the child currently resides is located and
that serves the geographic area in which the shelter is located.
(14) A child under the age of twenty-two years who resides with a person other than the child's parent is entitled to attend school in the school district in which that person resides if both of the following apply:
(a) That person has been appointed, through a military power of attorney executed under section 574(a) of the "National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994," 107 Stat. 1674 (1993), 10 U.S.C. 1044b, or through a comparable document necessary to complete a family care plan, as the parent's agent for the care, custody, and control of the child while the parent is on active duty as a member of the national guard or a reserve unit of the armed forces of the United States or because the parent is a member of the armed forces of the United States and is on a duty assignment away from the parent's residence.
(b) The military power of attorney or comparable document includes at least the authority to enroll the child in school.
The entitlement to attend school in the district in which the parent's agent under the military power of attorney or comparable document resides applies until the end of the school year in which the military power of attorney or comparable document expires.
(G) A board of education, after approving admission, may
waive tuition for students who will temporarily reside in the
district and who are either of the following:
(1) Residents or domiciliaries of a foreign nation who
request admission as foreign exchange students;
(2) Residents or domiciliaries of the United States but
not
of Ohio who request admission as participants in an exchange
program operated by a student exchange organization.
(H) Pursuant to sections 3311.211, 3313.90, 3319.01,
3323.04, 3327.04, and 3327.06 of the Revised Code, a child may
attend school or participate in a special education program in a
school district other than in the district where the child is
entitled to attend school under division (B) of this section.
(I)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this section or section 3313.65 of the Revised Code, a child under twenty-two years of age may attend school in the school district in which the child, at the end of the first full week of October of the school year, was entitled to attend school as otherwise provided under this section or section 3313.65 of the Revised Code, if at that time the child was enrolled in the schools of the district but since that time the child or the child's parent has relocated to a new address located outside of that school district and within the same county as the child's or parent's address immediately prior to the relocation. The child may continue to attend school in the district, and at the school to which the child was assigned at the end of the first full week of October of the current school year, for the balance of the school year. Division (I)(1) of this section applies only if both of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The board of education of the school district in which the child was entitled to attend school at the end of the first full week in October and of the district to which the child or child's parent has relocated each has adopted a policy to enroll children described in division (I)(1) of this section.
(b) The child's parent provides written notification of the relocation outside of the school district to the superintendent of each of the two school districts.
(2) At the beginning of the school year following the school year in which the child or the child's parent relocated outside of the school district as described in division (I)(1) of this section, the child is not entitled to attend school in the school district under that division.
(3) Any person or entity owing tuition to the school district on behalf of the child at the end of the first full week in October, as provided in division (C) of this section, shall continue to owe such tuition to the district for the child's attendance under division (I)(1) of this section for the lesser of the balance of the school year or the balance of the time that the child attends school in the district under division (I)(1) of this section.
(4) A pupil who may attend school in the district under division (I)(1) of this section shall be entitled to transportation services pursuant to an agreement between the district and the district in which the child or child's parent has relocated unless the districts have not entered into such agreement, in which case the child shall be entitled to transportation services in the same manner as a pupil attending school in the district under interdistrict open enrollment as described in division (H) of section 3313.981 of the Revised Code, regardless of whether the district has adopted an open enrollment policy as described in division (B)(1)(b) or (c) of section 3313.98 of the Revised Code.
(J) This division does not apply to a child receiving
special education.
A school district required to pay tuition pursuant to
division (C)(2) or (3) of this section or section 3313.65 of the
Revised Code shall have an amount deducted under division
(F) of
section 3317.023 of the Revised Code equal to its own tuition
rate
for the same period of attendance. A school district
entitled to
receive tuition pursuant to division (C)(2) or (3) of
this section
or section 3313.65 of the Revised Code shall have an
amount
credited under division (F) of section 3317.023 of
the
Revised
Code equal to its own tuition rate for the same period of
attendance. If the tuition rate credited to the district of
attendance exceeds the rate deducted from the district required
to
pay tuition, the department of education shall pay the
district of
attendance the difference from amounts deducted from
all
districts' payments under division (F) of section
3317.023 of
the
Revised Code but not credited to other school districts under
such
division and from appropriations made for such purpose. The
treasurer of each school district shall, by the fifteenth day of
January and July, furnish the superintendent of public
instruction
a report of the names of each child who attended the
district's
schools under divisions (C)(2) and (3) of this section
or section
3313.65 of the Revised Code during the preceding six
calendar
months, the duration of the attendance of those
children, the
school district responsible for tuition on behalf
of the child,
and any other information that the superintendent
requires.
Upon receipt of the report the superintendent, pursuant to
division (F) of section 3317.023 of the Revised Code, shall
deduct
each district's tuition obligations under divisions (C)(2)
and (3)
of this section or section 3313.65 of the Revised Code
and pay to
the district of attendance that amount plus any amount
required to
be paid by the state.
(K) In the event of a disagreement, the superintendent of
public instruction shall determine the school district in which
the parent resides.
(L) Nothing in this section requires or authorizes, or
shall
be construed to require or authorize, the admission to a
public
school in this state of a pupil who has been permanently
excluded
from public school attendance by the superintendent of
public
instruction pursuant to sections 3301.121 and 3313.662 of
the
Revised Code.
(M) In accordance with division (B)(1) of this section, a child whose parent is a member of the national guard or a reserve unit of the armed forces of the United States and is called to active duty, or a child whose parent is a member of the armed forces of the United States and is ordered to a temporary duty assignment outside of the district, may continue to attend school in the district in which the child's parent lived before being called to active duty or ordered to a temporary duty assignment outside of the district, as long as the child's parent continues to be a resident of that district, and regardless of where the child lives as a result of the parent's active duty status or temporary duty assignment. However, the district is not responsible for providing transportation for the child if the child lives outside of the district as a result of the parent's active duty status or temporary duty assignment.
Sec. 3313.646. (A) The board of education of a school
district, except a cooperative education district established
pursuant to section 3311.521 of the Revised Code, may establish
and operate a preschool program except that no such program shall
be established after March 17, 1989, unless both of the following
apply at the time the program is established:
(1) The, provided the board has demonstrated a need for the program.
(2) Unless it is a cooperative education district
established pursuant to divisions (A) to (C) of section 3311.52
of the Revised Code, the school district is eligible for moneys
distributed by the department of education pursuant to section
3317.029 of the Revised Code. A board may use
school funds in support of preschool programs. The board shall
maintain, operate, and admit children to any such program
pursuant to rules adopted by such board and the rules of the
state board of education adopted under sections 3301.52 to
3301.57 of the Revised Code.
A board of education may establish fees or tuition, which
may be graduated in proportion to family income, for
participation in a preschool program. In cases where payment of
fees or tuition would create a hardship for the child's parent or
guardian, the board may waive any such fees or tuition.
(B) No board of education that is not receiving funds
under the "Head Start Act," 95 Stat. 489 (1981), 42 U.S.C.A.
9831, on March 17, 1989, shall compete for funds under the "Head
Start Act" with any grantee receiving funds under that act.
(C) A board of education may contract with any of the
following preschool providers to provide preschool programs,
other than programs for units described by divisions
(B) and (C) of
section 3317.05 of the Revised Code, for children of the school
district:
(1) Any organization receiving funds under the "Head Start
Act";
(2) Any nonsectarian eligible nonpublic school as defined
in division (H) of section 3301.52 of the Revised Code;
(3) Any child care provider licensed under Chapter
5104. of the Revised Code.
Boards may contract to provide preschool programs only with
such organizations whose staff meet the requirements of rules
adopted under section 3301.53 of the Revised Code or those of the
child development associate credential established by the
national association for the education of young children.
(D) A contract entered into under division (C) of this
section may provide for the board of education to lease school
facilities to the preschool provider or to furnish
transportation, utilities, or staff for the preschool program.
(E) The treasurer of any board of education operating a
preschool program pursuant to this section shall keep an account
of all funds used to operate the program in the same manner as he
the treasurer would any other funds of the district pursuant to this chapter.
Sec. 3313.66. (A) Except as provided under division
(B)(2)
of this section, the superintendent of schools of a
city, exempted
village, or local school district, or the
principal of a public
school may suspend a pupil from school for
not more than ten
school days. The board of
education of a city, exempted village,
or local school district
may adopt a policy granting assistant
principals and other
administrators the authority to suspend a
pupil from school for
a period of time as specified in the policy
of the board of
education, not to exceed ten school days. If at
the time a
suspension is
imposed there are fewer than ten school
days remaining in the
school year in which the incident that gives
rise to the
suspension takes place, the superintendent may apply
any
remaining part or all of the period of the suspension to the
following school year. Except in the case of a pupil given an
in-school suspension, no pupil shall be suspended unless prior
to
the suspension such superintendent or principal does both of
the
following:
(1) Gives the pupil written notice of the intention to
suspend the pupil and the reasons for the intended
suspension and,
if
the proposed suspension is based on a violation listed in
division (A) of section 3313.662 of the Revised Code and if the
pupil is sixteen years of age or older, includes in the notice a
statement that the superintendent may seek to permanently exclude
the pupil if the pupil is convicted of or adjudicated a
delinquent
child
for that violation;
(2) Provides the pupil an opportunity to appear at an
informal hearing before the principal, assistant principal,
superintendent, or superintendent's designee and challenge the
reason for the intended suspension or otherwise to explain the
pupil's actions.
(B)(1) Except as provided under division (B)(2), (3),
or (4)
of this section, the
superintendent of schools of a city, exempted
village, or local school
district may expel a pupil from school
for a period not to exceed the greater of eighty school days or
the number of school days remaining in the semester or term in
which the incident that gives rise to the expulsion takes place,
unless the expulsion is extended pursuant to division (F) of this
section. If at the time an expulsion is imposed there are fewer
than eighty school days remaining in the school year in which the
incident that gives rise to the expulsion takes place, the
superintendent may apply any remaining part or all of the period
of the expulsion to the following school year.
(2)(a) Unless a pupil is permanently excluded pursuant to
section
3313.662 of the Revised Code, the superintendent of
schools of a city,
exempted village, or
local school district
shall expel a pupil from school for a period of one year
for
bringing a firearm to a school operated by the board of education
of the
district or onto any other property owned or
controlled by
the
board, except
that the superintendent may reduce this
requirement on a case-by-case basis in
accordance with the policy
adopted by the board under section 3313.661 of the
Revised Code.
(b) The superintendent of schools of a city, exempted
village, or
local school district may expel a pupil from school
for a period of one year
for bringing a firearm to
an
interscholastic competition, an extracurricular event, or any
other school program or activity
that is not located in a school
or on
property that is owned or controlled by the district. The
superintendent may
reduce this disciplinary action on a
case-by-case basis in accordance with the
policy adopted by the
board under section 3313.661 of the Revised Code.
(c) Any expulsion pursuant to division (B)(2) of
this
section shall extend, as necessary, into the
school year
following
the school year in which the incident that gives rise to the
expulsion takes
place. As used in this division, "firearm" has
the same meaning as provided
pursuant to the "Gun-Free Schools Act
of
1994," 108 115 Stat. 270 1762, 20 U.S.C.
8001(a)(2) 7151.
(3) The board of education of
a city, exempted village, or
local school district may adopt a
resolution authorizing the
superintendent of schools to expel a
pupil from school for a
period not to exceed one year for
bringing a knife to a school
operated by the board, onto any
other property owned or controlled
by the board,
or to an interscholastic competition, an
extracurricular event, or any
other program or activity sponsored
by the school district or in which
the district is a participant,
or for possessing a
firearm
or knife at a school, on any other
property owned or
controlled by the board, or at
an
interscholastic competition, an extracurricular event, or any
other school program or activity,
which firearm or knife was
initially brought onto school board property by
another person.
The resolution
may authorize the superintendent to extend such an
expulsion, as
necessary, into the school year following the school
year in
which the incident that gives rise to the expulsion takes
place.
(4) The board of education of
a city, exempted village, or
local school district may adopt a
resolution establishing a policy
under section 3313.661 of the
Revised Code that authorizes the
superintendent of schools
to expel a
pupil from school for a
period not to exceed one year for
committing an act that is a
criminal offense when committed by
an adult and that results in
serious physical harm to persons as
defined in division (A)(5) of
section 2901.01 of the Revised
Code or serious physical harm
to
property as defined in division
(A)(6) of section 2901.01 of
the
Revised
Code while the pupil is at
school, on any other property
owned or controlled by the
board, or at
an interscholastic
competition, an extracurricular event, or any
other school program
or activity. Any
expulsion under this division shall extend,
as
necessary, into the school year following the
school year in which
the incident that gives rise to the
expulsion takes place.
(5) The board of education of any city, exempted village, or
local school
district may adopt a resolution establishing a policy
under section 3313.661
of the Revised Code that authorizes the
superintendent of schools to expel a pupil from
school for a
period not to exceed one year for making a bomb threat to a
school
building or to any premises at which a school activity is
occurring at
the time of the threat. Any expulsion under this
division shall extend, as
necessary, into the school year
following the school year in which the
incident that gives rise to
the expulsion takes place.
(6) No pupil shall be expelled under division (B)(1), (2),
(3), (4), or (5)
of this section unless, prior to the pupil's
expulsion, the
superintendent does both of the following:
(a) Gives the pupil and the pupil's parent, guardian, or
custodian
written notice of the intention to expel the pupil;
(b) Provides the pupil and the pupil's parent, guardian,
custodian, or representative an opportunity to appear in person
before the superintendent or the superintendent's designee
to
challenge the reasons for the intended expulsion or otherwise to
explain
the pupil's actions.
The notice required in this division shall include the
reasons for the intended expulsion, notification of the
opportunity of the pupil and the pupil's parent, guardian,
custodian, or
representative to appear before the superintendent
or the
superintendent's designee to challenge the reasons for the
intended
expulsion or
otherwise to explain the pupil's action, and
notification of the
time and place to appear. The time to appear
shall not be
earlier than three nor later than five school days
after the
notice is given, unless the superintendent grants an
extension of
time at the request of the pupil or the pupil's
parent,
guardian, custodian, or representative. If an extension
is granted after
giving the original notice, the superintendent
shall notify the
pupil and the pupil's parent, guardian,
custodian, or
representative of
the new time and place to appear.
If the proposed expulsion is
based on a violation listed in
division (A) of section 3313.662
of the Revised Code and if the
pupil is sixteen years of age or
older, the notice shall include a
statement that the
superintendent may seek to permanently exclude
the pupil if the
pupil is convicted of or adjudicated a delinquent
child for that
violation.
(7) A superintendent of schools of a city, exempted
village,
or
local school district shall initiate expulsion proceedings
pursuant to this
section with respect to any pupil who has
committed an act warranting
expulsion under the district's policy
regarding expulsion even if the pupil
has
withdrawn from school
for any reason after the incident that gives rise to the
hearing
but prior to the hearing or decision to impose the expulsion. If,
following the hearing, the pupil would have been expelled for a
period of time
had the pupil still been enrolled in the school,
the expulsion shall be
imposed
for the same length of time as on a
pupil who has not withdrawn from the
school.
(C) If a pupil's presence poses a continuing danger to
persons or property or an ongoing threat of disrupting the
academic process taking place either within a classroom or
elsewhere on the school premises, the superintendent or a
principal or assistant principal may remove a pupil from
curricular activities or from the school
premises, and a teacher
may remove a pupil from curricular activities under
the teacher's
supervision,
without the notice and hearing requirements of
division (A) or (B) of this
section. As soon as practicable after
making such a removal, the
teacher shall submit in writing to the
principal the reasons for
such removal.
If a pupil is removed under this division from a curricular
activity or from the school premises, written
notice of the
hearing and of the reason for the removal shall be
given to the
pupil as soon as practicable prior to the hearing,
which shall be
held within three school days from the time the
initial removal is
ordered. The hearing shall be held in
accordance with division
(A) of this section unless it is
probable that the pupil may be
subject to expulsion, in which
case a hearing in accordance with
division (B) of this section
shall be held, except that the
hearing shall be held within three
school days of the initial
removal. The individual who ordered,
caused, or requested the
removal to be made shall be present at
the hearing.
If the superintendent or the principal reinstates a pupil
in
a curricular activity under the teacher's
supervision prior to the
hearing following a removal under this
division, the teacher, upon
request, shall be given in writing
the reasons for such
reinstatement.
(D) The superintendent or principal, within one school day
after the time of a pupil's expulsion or suspension, shall notify
in writing the parent, guardian, or custodian of the pupil and
the
treasurer of the board of education of the expulsion or
suspension. The notice shall include the reasons for the
expulsion or suspension, notification of the right of the pupil
or
the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian to appeal the
expulsion
or suspension to the board of education or to its designee, to be
represented in all appeal proceedings, to be granted a hearing
before the board or its designee in order to be heard against the
suspension or expulsion, and to request that the hearing be held
in executive session, notification that the expulsion may be
subject to extension pursuant to division (F) of this section if
the pupil is sixteen years of age or older, and notification that
the superintendent may seek the pupil's permanent exclusion if
the
suspension or expulsion was based on a violation listed in
division (A) of section 3313.662 of the Revised Code that was
committed when the child was sixteen years of age or older and if
the pupil is convicted of or adjudicated a delinquent child for
that violation.
In accordance with the policy adopted by the board of education under section 3313.661 of the Revised Code, the notice provided under this division shall specify the manner and date by which the pupil or the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian shall notify the board of the pupil's, parent's, guardian's, or custodian's intent to appeal the expulsion or suspension to the board or its designee.
Any superintendent expelling a pupil under this section for
more than twenty school days or for any period of time if the
expulsion will extend into the following semester or school year
shall, in the notice required under this division, provide the
pupil and the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian with
information
about services or programs offered by public and
private agencies
that work toward improving those aspects of the
pupil's attitudes
and behavior that contributed to the incident
that gave rise to
the pupil's expulsion. The information shall
include the names,
addresses, and phone numbers of the appropriate
public and
private agencies.
(E) A pupil or the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian
may appeal the pupil's expulsion by a superintendent
or suspension
by a
superintendent,
principal, assistant principal, or other
administrator to the
board of education or to its designee. If the pupil or the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian intends to appeal the expulsion or suspension to the board or its designee, the pupil or the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian shall notify the board in the manner and by the date specified in the notice provided under division (D) of this section. The
pupil or the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian may be
represented in
all appeal proceedings and shall be granted a
hearing before the
board or its designee in order to be heard
against the suspension
or expulsion. At the request of the pupil
or of the pupil's
parent, guardian, custodian, or attorney, the
board or its designee may
hold the hearing in executive session
but shall act upon the
suspension or expulsion only at a public
meeting. The board, by
a majority vote of its full membership or
by the action of its
designee, may affirm the order of suspension
or expulsion,
reinstate the pupil, or otherwise reverse, vacate,
or modify the
order of suspension or expulsion.
The board or its designee shall make a verbatim record of
hearings held under this division. The decisions of the board or
its designee may be appealed under Chapter 2506. of the Revised
Code.
This section shall not be construed to require notice and
hearing in accordance with division (A), (B), or (C) of this
section in the case of normal disciplinary procedures in which a
pupil is removed from a curricular activity
for a period of less
than one school day and is not subject to
suspension or expulsion.
(F)(1) If a pupil is expelled pursuant to division (B) of
this section for committing any violation listed in division (A)
of section 3313.662 of the Revised Code and the pupil was
sixteen
years of age or older at the time of
committing the violation, if
a complaint, indictment, or information is filed alleging that the
pupil is a delinquent child based upon the
commission of the
violation or the pupil is prosecuted as an
adult
for the
commission of the violation, and if the resultant
juvenile
court
or criminal proceeding is pending at the time that
the
expulsion
terminates, the superintendent of schools that
expelled
the pupil
may file a motion with the court in which the
proceeding
is
pending requesting an order extending the expulsion
for the
lesser
of an additional eighty days or the number of
school days
remaining in the school year. Upon the filing of the
motion, the
court immediately shall schedule a hearing and give
written notice
of the time, date, and location of the hearing to
the
superintendent and to the pupil and the pupil's parent,
guardian,
or
custodian. At the hearing, the court shall determine whether
there is reasonable cause to believe that the pupil committed the
alleged violation that is the basis of the expulsion and, upon
determining that reasonable cause to believe the pupil
committed
the violation does exist, shall grant the requested extension.
(2) If a pupil has been convicted of or adjudicated a
delinquent child for a violation listed in division (A) of
section
3313.662 of the Revised Code for an act that was
committed when
the child was sixteen years of age or older, if
the pupil has been
expelled pursuant to division (B) of this
section for that
violation, and if the board of education of the
school district of
the school from which the pupil was
expelled has adopted a
resolution seeking the pupil's
permanent exclusion, the
superintendent may file a motion with the court that
convicted
the
pupil or adjudicated the pupil a delinquent child requesting
an
order to extend the expulsion until an adjudication order or
other
determination regarding permanent exclusion is issued by
the
superintendent of public instruction pursuant to section
3301.121
and division (D) of section 3313.662 of the Revised
Code. Upon
the filing of the motion, the court immediately shall
schedule a
hearing and give written notice of the time, date, and
location of
the hearing to the superintendent of the school
district, the
pupil, and the pupil's parent, guardian, or
custodian. At the
hearing, the court shall determine whether there is
reasonable
cause to believe the pupil's continued attendance in
the public
school system may endanger the health and safety of
other pupils
or school employees and, upon making that
determination, shall
grant the requested extension.
(G) The failure of the superintendent or the board of
education to provide the information regarding the possibility of
permanent exclusion in the notice required by divisions (A), (B),
and (D) of this section is not jurisdictional, and the failure
shall not affect the validity of any suspension or expulsion
procedure that is conducted in accordance with this section or
the
validity of a permanent exclusion procedure that is conducted
in
accordance with sections 3301.121 and 3313.662 of the Revised
Code.
(H) With regard to suspensions and expulsions pursuant to
divisions (A) and (B) of this section by the board of education
of
any city, exempted village, or local school district, this
section
shall apply to any student, whether or not the student is
enrolled
in the district, attending or otherwise participating in
any
curricular program provided in a school operated by the board
or
provided on any other property owned or controlled by the
board.
(I) Whenever a student is expelled under this section, the
expulsion shall
result in removal of the student from the
student's regular school setting.
However, during the period of
the expulsion, the board of education of the
school district that
expelled the student or any board of education admitting
the
student during that expulsion period may provide educational
services to
the student in an alternative setting.
(J)(1) Notwithstanding
sections 3109.51 to 3109.80,
3313.64, and 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code, any
school district,
after offering an opportunity
for a hearing, may temporarily deny
admittance
to any pupil if one
of the following applies:
(a) The pupil has been suspended from the schools of another
district under division (A) of this section and the period of
suspension, as established under that division, has not expired;
(b) The pupil has been expelled from the schools of another
district under division (B) of this section and the period of the
expulsion, as established under that division or as extended under
division
(F) of this section, has not expired.
If a pupil is temporarily
denied admission under this
division, the pupil shall be admitted to school in
accordance with
sections 3109.51 to 3109.80, 3313.64, or 3313.65 of the
Revised Code no later than
upon
expiration
of the suspension or
expulsion period, as
applicable.
(2) Notwithstanding
sections 3109.51 to 3109.80,
3313.64, and 3313.65 of the
Revised Code,
any school district,
after offering an opportunity
for a hearing, may
temporarily deny
admittance to any pupil if the
pupil has been expelled or
otherwise removed for disciplinary
purposes from a public school
in another
state and the period of
expulsion or removal has not
expired. If a pupil is
temporarily
denied admission under this
division, the pupil shall be admitted
to school in accordance with
sections 3109.51 to 3109.80, 3313.64, or 3313.65 of the
Revised Code
no later than the earlier of the following:
(a) Upon expiration of the expulsion or removal period
imposed by
the out-of-state school;
(b) Upon expiration of a period established by the district,
beginning with the date of expulsion or removal from the
out-of-state school,
that is no greater than the period of
expulsion that
the pupil would have received under the policy
adopted by the district under
section 3313.661 of the Revised
Code
had the offense that gave rise to the
expulsion or removal by the
out-of-state school been committed while the pupil
was enrolled in
the district.
(K) As used in this section:
(1) "Permanently exclude"
and "permanent exclusion" have the
same meanings as in section
3313.662 of the Revised Code.
(2) "In-school suspension" means the pupil will serve all of
the
suspension in a school setting.
Sec. 3313.661. (A) The board of education of each city,
exempted village, and local school district shall adopt a
policy
regarding suspension, expulsion, removal, and permanent
exclusion
that specifies the types of misconduct for which a
pupil may be
suspended, expelled, or removed. The types of misconduct may
include misconduct by a pupil that occurs off of property owned or
controlled
by the district but that is connected to activities or
incidents
that have occurred on property owned or controlled by
that
district and misconduct by a pupil that, regardless of where
it occurs, is
directed at a district official or employee, or the
property of such official
or employee. The policy shall specify
the
reasons for which the superintendent of the district may
reduce the expulsion
requirement in division (B)(2) of section
3313.66 of the Revised Code. If a
board
of education adopts a
resolution pursuant to division
(B)(3) of section 3313.66 of the
Revised Code, the
policy shall define the term "knife" or
"firearm," as
applicable, for purposes of expulsion under that
resolution and shall specify any reasons for which the
superintendent of the
district may reduce any required expulsion
period on a case-by-case
basis. If a board of education adopts a
resolution pursuant to division
(B)(4) or (5) of section 3313.66
of the Revised Code, the
policy shall specify any reasons for
which the superintendent of the district
may reduce any required
expulsion period on a case-by-case
basis. The policy also
shall
set forth the acts listed in section 3313.662 of the
Revised Code
for which a pupil may be permanently excluded.
The policy adopted under this division shall specify the date and manner by which a pupil or a pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian may notify the board of the pupil's, parent's, guardian's, or custodian's intent to appeal an expulsion or suspension to the board or its designee pursuant to division (E) of section 3313.66 of the Revised Code. In the case of any expulsion, the policy shall not specify a date that is less than fourteen days after the date of the notice provided to the pupil or the pupil's parent, guardian, or custodian under division (D) of that section.
A copy of the policy shall be posted in a central location in
the
school and made available to pupils upon request. No pupil
shall
be suspended, expelled, or removed except in accordance with
the
policy adopted by the board of education of the school
district
in which the pupil attends school, and no pupil shall be
permanently excluded except in accordance with sections 3301.121
and 3313.662 of the Revised Code.
(B) A board of education may establish a program and adopt
guidelines under which a superintendent may require a pupil to
perform community service in conjunction with a
suspension or
expulsion imposed under section 3313.66 of the
Revised Code or in
place of a suspension or expulsion imposed under section
3313.66
of the Revised Code except for an
expulsion imposed pursuant to
division
(B)(2) of that section. If a board adopts guidelines
under this
division,
they shall permit, except with regard to an
expulsion pursuant to
division (B)(2) of section 3313.66 of the
Revised Code, a superintendent
to impose a community service
requirement beyond the end of the school year in lieu of applying
the suspension or expulsion into the following school year. Any
guidelines adopted shall be included in the policy adopted under
this section.
(C) The written policy of each board of education that is
adopted pursuant to section 3313.20 of the Revised Code shall be
posted in a central location in each school that is subject to
the
policy and shall be made available to pupils upon request.
(D) Any policy, program, or guideline adopted by a board
of
education under this section with regard to suspensions or
expulsions pursuant to division (A) or (B) of section
3313.66 of
the Revised Code shall apply to any student, whether or not the
student is enrolled in the district, attending or otherwise
participating in any curricular program provided in a school
operated by the board or provided on any other property owned or
controlled by the board.
(E) As used in this section, "permanently exclude" and
"permanent exclusion" have the same meanings as in section
3313.662 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3313.98. Notwithstanding division (D) of section
3311.19 and division (D) of section 3311.52 of the Revised Code,
the provisions of this section and sections 3313.981 to 3313.983
of the Revised Code that apply to a city school district do not
apply to a joint vocational or cooperative education school
district unless expressly specified.
(A) As used in this section and sections 3313.981 to
3313.983 of the Revised Code:
(1) "Parent" means either of the natural or adoptive
parents of a student, except under the following conditions:
(a) When the marriage of the natural or adoptive parents
of the student has been terminated by a divorce, dissolution of
marriage, or annulment or the natural or adoptive parents of the
student are living separate and apart under a legal separation
decree and the court has issued an order allocating the parental
rights and responsibilities with respect to the student, "parent"
means the residential parent as designated by the court except
that "parent" means either parent when the court issues a shared
parenting decree.
(b) When a court has granted temporary or permanent
custody of the student to an individual or agency other than
either of the natural or adoptive parents of the student,
"parent" means the legal custodian of the child.
(c) When a court has appointed a guardian for the student,
"parent" means the guardian of the student.
(2) "Native student" means a student entitled under
section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code to attend school
in a district adopting a resolution under this section.
(3) "Adjacent district" means a city, exempted village,
or local school district having territory that abuts the
territory of a district adopting a resolution under this section.
(4) "Adjacent district student" means a student entitled
under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code to attend
school in an adjacent district.
(5) "Adjacent district joint vocational student" means
an adjacent district student who enrolls in a city, exempted
village, or local school district pursuant to this section and
who also enrolls in a joint vocational school district that does
not contain the territory of the district for which that student
is a native student and does contain the territory of the city,
exempted village, or local district in which the student enrolls.
(6) "Formula amount" has the same meaning as in section 3317.02
of the Revised Code.
(7) "Adjusted formula amount" means the greater of the following:
(a) The fiscal year 2005 formula
amount multiplied by the fiscal year 2005
cost-of-doing-business factor for a
district defined in the version of section 3317.02 of the
Revised Code in effect that year;
(b) The sum of (the current formula amount times the current cost-of-doing-business factor as defined in section 3317.02 of the Revised Code) plus the per pupil amount of the base funding supplements specified in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code.
(8) "Poverty line" means the poverty line established by
the director of the United States office of management and budget
as revised by the director of the office of community services in
accordance with section 673(2) of the "Community Services Block
Grant Act," 95 Stat. 1609, 42 U.S.C.A. 9902, as amended.
(9) "IEP" means an individualized education
program
defined by division (E) of section 3323.01 of the Revised Code.
(10) "Other district" means a city,
exempted village, or local school district having territory
outside of the territory of a district adopting a resolution
under this section.
(11) "Other district student" means a student entitled
under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code to attend school in an
other district.
(12) "Other district joint vocational student" means a
student who is enrolled in any city, exempted village, or local
school district and who also enrolls in a joint vocational
school district that does not contain the territory of the
district for which that student is a native student in
accordance with a policy adopted under section 3313.983 of the
Revised Code.
(B)(1) The board of education of each city, local, and
exempted village school district shall adopt a resolution
establishing for the school district one of the following policies:
(a) A policy that entirely
prohibits the enrollment of students from adjacent districts or
other districts, other than students for whom
tuition is
paid in accordance with section 3317.08 of the Revised Code;
(b) A policy that permits
enrollment of students from all adjacent
districts in accordance with policy statements contained in
the resolution;
(c) A policy that permits enrollment of
students from all other districts in accordance with policy
statements contained in the resolution.
(2) A policy permitting enrollment of students from adjacent
or from other districts, as applicable, shall
provide for all of the following:
(a) Application procedures, including deadlines for
application and for notification of students and the
superintendent of
the applicable district whenever an adjacent or other
district student's application is
approved.
(b) Procedures for admitting adjacent or other district applicants free of
any tuition obligation to the district's schools,
including, but not limited to:
(i) The establishment of district capacity limits by grade
level, school building, and education program;
(ii) A requirement that all native students wishing to be
enrolled in the district will be enrolled and that any adjacent
or other district students previously
enrolled in the district shall
receive preference over first-time applicants;
(iii) Procedures to ensure that an appropriate racial
balance is maintained in the district schools.
(C) Except as provided in section 3313.982 of the Revised
Code, the procedures for admitting adjacent or other district
students, as applicable, shall not include:
(1) Any requirement of academic ability, or any level of
athletic, artistic, or other extracurricular skills;
(2) Limitations on admitting applicants because of
handicapping conditions, except that a board may refuse to admit
a student receiving services under Chapter
3323. of the Revised Code, if the services described in the
student's IEP are not available in the district's schools;
(3) A requirement that the student be proficient in the
English language;
(4) Rejection of any applicant because the student has
been subject to disciplinary proceedings, except that if an
applicant has been suspended or expelled by the
student's district
for ten consecutive days or more in the term for which admission
is sought or in the term immediately preceding the term for which
admission is sought, the procedures may include a provision
denying admission of such applicant.
(D)(1) Each school board permitting only enrollment of adjacent
district students shall provide information about the
policy adopted under this section, including the application
procedures and deadlines, to the superintendent and the board of
education of each adjacent district and, upon request, to the
parent of any adjacent district student.
(2) Each school board permitting enrollment of other
district students shall provide information about the policy
adopted under this section, including the application procedures
and deadlines, upon request, to the board of education of any
other school district or to the parent of any student
anywhere in the state.
(E) Any school board shall accept all credits toward
graduation earned in adjacent or other district schools by an
adjacent or other district student or a native student.
(F)(1) No board of education may adopt a policy
discouraging or prohibiting its native students from applying to
enroll in the schools of an adjacent or any other district that has
adopted a policy permitting such enrollment, except that:
(a) A district may object to the enrollment of a native
student in an adjacent or other district in order to maintain an
appropriate racial balance.
(b) The board of education of a district receiving funds
under 64 Stat. 1100 (1950), 20 U.S.C.A. 236 et seq., as amended,
may adopt a resolution objecting to the enrollment of its native
students in adjacent or other districts if at least ten per cent of
its students are included in the determination of the United States secretary
of education made under section 20 U.S.C.A. 238(a).
(2) If a board objects to enrollment of native students
under this division, any adjacent or other district shall refuse to
enroll
such native students unless tuition is paid for the students in
accordance with section 3317.08 of the Revised Code. An adjacent
or other district enrolling such students may not receive funding for
those students in accordance with section 3313.981 of the Revised
Code.
(G) The state board of education shall monitor school
districts to ensure compliance with this section and the
districts' policies. The board may adopt rules requiring uniform
application procedures, deadlines for application, notification
procedures, and record-keeping requirements for all school boards
that adopt policies permitting the enrollment of adjacent or other
district students, as applicable. If
the state board adopts such rules, no
school board shall adopt a policy that conflicts with those
rules.
(H) A resolution adopted by a board of education under
this section that entirely prohibits the enrollment of students
from adjacent and from other school districts does not abrogate any
agreement
entered into under section 3313.841 or 3313.92 of the Revised
Code or any contract entered into under section 3313.90 of the
Revised Code between the board of education adopting the
resolution and the board of education of any adjacent or other
district or prohibit these boards of education from entering into any such
agreement or contract.
(I) Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit
or require the board of education of a city, exempted village, or
local school district to exclude any native student of the
district from enrolling in the district.
Sec. 3314.015. (A) The department of education shall be
responsible for the oversight of sponsors of the community schools
established
under this chapter and shall provide technical
assistance to schools and sponsors in their compliance with
applicable laws and the terms of the contracts entered into under
section 3314.03 of the Revised Code and in the development and
start-up activities of those schools. In carrying out its duties
under this section, the department shall do all of the following:
(1) In providing technical assistance to proposing parties,
governing authorities, and sponsors, conduct training sessions and
distribute informational materials;
(2) Approve entities to be sponsors of community schools and
monitor the effectiveness of those sponsors in their oversight of
the schools with which they have contracted;
(3) By December thirty-first of each year, issue a report
to the governor, the speaker of
the house of representatives, the
president of the senate, and the
chairpersons of the house and
senate committees principally
responsible for education matters
regarding the effectiveness of
academic programs, operations, and
legal compliance and of the financial condition of all
community
schools established under this chapter;
(4) From time to time, make legislative recommendations to
the general assembly designed to enhance the operation and
performance of community schools.
(B)(1) No entity listed in division (C)(1) of section
3314.02 of the Revised Code shall enter into a preliminary
agreement under division (C)(2) of section 3314.02 of the Revised
Code until it has received approval from the department of
education to sponsor community schools under this chapter and has
entered into a written agreement with the department regarding the
manner in which the entity will conduct such sponsorship. The
department shall adopt in accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code rules containing criteria, procedures, and
deadlines
for
processing applications for such approval, for oversight of
sponsors, for revocation of the approval of sponsors, and for
entering into written agreements with sponsors. The
rules shall
require an entity to submit evidence of the entity's
ability and
willingness to comply with the provisions of division
(D) of
section 3314.03 of the Revised Code. The rules also shall require entities approved as sponsors on and after June 30, 2005, to demonstrate a record of financial responsibility and successful implementation of educational programs. If an entity seeking approval on or after June 30, 2005, to sponsor community schools in this state sponsors or operates schools in another state, at least one of the schools sponsored or operated by the entity must be comparable to or better than the performance of Ohio schools in a state of academic watch need of continuous improvement under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code, as determined by the department.
An entity that sponsors community schools may
enter into preliminary agreements and sponsor schools as follows, provided each school and the contract for
sponsorship meets the requirements of this chapter:
(a) An entity that sponsored fifty or fewer schools that were open for operation as of May 1, 2005, may sponsor not more than fifty schools.
(b) An entity that sponsored more than fifty but not more than seventy-five schools that were open for operation as of May 1, 2005, may sponsor not more than the number of schools the entity sponsored that were open for operation as of May 1, 2005.
(c) Until June 30, 2006, an entity that sponsored more than seventy-five schools that were open for operation as of May 1, 2005, may sponsor not more than the number of schools the entity sponsored that were open for operation as of May 1, 2005. After June 30, 2006, such an entity may sponsor not more than seventy-five schools.
Upon approval of an entity to be a sponsor under this division, the department shall notify the entity of the number of schools the entity may sponsor.
The limit imposed on an entity to which division (B)(1) of this section applies shall be decreased by one for each school sponsored by the entity that permanently closes.
If at any time an entity exceeds the number of schools it may sponsor under this division, the department shall assist the schools in excess of the entity's limit in securing new sponsors. If a school is unable to secure a new sponsor, the department shall assume sponsorship of the school in accordance with division (C) of this section. Those schools for which another sponsor or the department assumes sponsorship shall be the schools that most recently entered into contracts with the entity under section 3314.03 of the Revised Code.
(2) The department of education shall determine, pursuant to
criteria adopted by rule of the department, whether the mission
proposed to be specified in the contract of a community school to
be sponsored by a state university board of trustees or the
board's designee under division (C)(1)(e) of section 3314.02 of
the Revised Code complies with the requirements of that division.
Such determination of the department is final.
(3) The department of education shall determine, pursuant to
criteria adopted by rule of the department, if any tax-exempt
entity under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code that
is proposed to be a sponsor of a community school is an
education-oriented entity for purpose of satisfying the condition
prescribed in division (C)(1)(f)(iii) of section 3314.02 of the
Revised Code. Such determination of the department is final.
(C) If at any time the state board of education
finds that a
sponsor is not in compliance or is no longer willing
to comply
with its contract with any community school or with the
department's rules for sponsorship, the
state board or designee
shall conduct a hearing in accordance with Chapter
119. of the
Revised Code on that matter. If after the hearing,
the state
board or designee has confirmed the original finding, the
department of education may revoke the sponsor's approval to
sponsor
community schools and may assume the sponsorship of any
schools
with which the sponsor has contracted until the earlier of
the
expiration of two school years or until a new sponsor as
described
in division (C)(1) of section 3314.02 of the Revised
Code is
secured by the school's governing authority. The
department may
extend the term of the contract in the case of a
school for which
it has assumed sponsorship under this division as
necessary to
accommodate the term of the department's
authorization to sponsor
the school specified in this division.
(D) The decision of the department to disapprove an entity
for sponsorship of a community school or to revoke approval for
such sponsorship, as provided in division (C) of this section, may
be appealed by the entity in accordance with section 119.12 of the
Revised Code.
(E) The department shall adopt procedures for use by a community school governing authority and sponsor when the school permanently closes and ceases operation, which shall include at least procedures for data reporting to the department, handling of student records, distribution of assets in accordance with section 3314.074 of the Revised Code, and other matters related to ceasing operation of the school.
(F) In carrying out its duties under this chapter, the
department shall not impose requirements on community schools or
their sponsors that are not permitted by law or duly adopted
rules.
Sec. 3314.016. (A) After June 30, 2007, a new community school may be established under this chapter only if the school's governing authority enters into a contract with an operator that manages other schools in the United States that perform at a level higher than academic watch. The governing authority of the community school may sign a contract with an operator only if the operator has fewer contracts with the governing authorities of community schools established under this chapter after June 30, 2007, than the number of schools managed by the operator in the United States that perform at a level higher than academic watch, as determined by the department of education.
(B) Notwithstanding division (A) of this section, the governing authority of a start-up school sponsored by an entity described in divisions (C)(1)(b) to (f) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code may establish one additional school serving the same grade levels and providing the same educational program as the current start-up school and may open that additional school in the 2007-2008 school year, if both of the following conditions are met:
(1) The governing authority entered into another contract with the same sponsor or a different sponsor described in divisions (C)(1)(b) to (f) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code and filed a copy of that contract with the superintendent of public instruction prior to March 15, 2006.
(2) The governing authority's current school satisfies all of the following conditions:
(a) The school currently is rated as excellent or effective pursuant to section 3302.03 of the Revised Code.
(b) The school made adequate yearly progress, as defined in section 3302.01 of the Revised Code, for the previous school year.
(c) The school has been in operation for at least four school years.
(d) The school is not managed by an operator.
Sec. 3314.02. (A) As used in this chapter:
(1)
"Sponsor" means
an entity listed in division
(C)(1)
of
this
section, which has been approved by the department
of education to sponsor community schools and
with which the
governing
authority of the
proposed
community school enters into a
contract pursuant to this
section.
(2)
"Pilot project area" means
the school districts
included
in the territory of the former community
school pilot project
established by former Section 50.52 of Am. Sub. H.B. No. 215
of
the 122nd general assembly.
(3)
"Challenged school district"
means any of the following:
(a) A school district that is part of the pilot project
area;
(b) A school district that is
either in a state of academic
emergency
or in a state of academic watch under section 3302.03 of
the Revised
Code;
(c) A big eight school district.
(4)
"Big eight school district" means
a school district that
for fiscal year 1997 had
both of the following:
(a) A percentage of children residing in the
district and
participating in the predecessor of
Ohio works first greater than
thirty per cent, as reported pursuant to section 3317.10 of the
Revised
Code;
(b) An average daily membership greater than
twelve
thousand, as reported pursuant to former division
(A) of section
3317.03 of the
Revised Code.
(5)
"New start-up school" means a community school other
than
one created
by converting all or part of an existing public
school, as designated in the
school's contract pursuant to
division (A)(17) of section 3314.03
of the Revised Code.
(6)
"Urban school district" means one of the state's
twenty-one
urban school districts as defined in division (O) of
section 3317.02
of the Revised Code as that section existed prior
to July 1, 1998.
(7) "Internet- or
computer-based community school" means a
community school
established under this chapter in which the
enrolled students work primarily from their residences on
assignments in nonclassroom-based learning opportunities provided via an internet- or other computer-based
instructional method that does not rely on regular classroom
instruction or via comprehensive instructional methods that include internet-based, other computer-based, and noncomputer-based learning opportunities.
(B) Any person or group of
individuals may initially propose
under this
division the conversion of all or a portion of a public
school to a community
school.
The proposal
shall be made to the
board of education of
the city, local, or
exempted village school
district
in
which the public school is
proposed to be converted.
Upon receipt of a
proposal, a board may
enter into a preliminary
agreement with the person or
group
proposing the conversion of the
public school, indicating the
intention of the board of education
to
support the conversion to a
community school. A proposing
person or group
that has a
preliminary
agreement under this
division may proceed to finalize
plans for the school,
establish a
governing authority for the
school, and negotiate a contract with
the board of education.
Provided the proposing person or group
adheres to the
preliminary
agreement and all provisions of this
chapter, the board of
education shall negotiate in good faith to
enter into a contract
in accordance
with section 3314.03 of the
Revised Code and
division (C) of this section.
(C)(1) Any person or group of
individuals may propose under
this division the
establishment of a new start-up school to be
located in
a challenged
school district. The proposal may be
made
to
any of the following
entities:
(a) The board of education of the
district in which the
school is proposed to be
located;
(b) The board of education of any joint
vocational school
district with territory in the county in which is
located the
majority
of the territory of the district in which the
school is
proposed to be located;
(c) The board of education of any other
city, local, or
exempted village school district having
territory in the same
county where the
district in which the school is proposed to be
located has the major
portion of its territory;
(d) The
governing
board of
any educational service
center, as long as the proposed school will be located in a county within the territory of the service center or in a county contiguous to such county;
(e) A
sponsoring
authority designated by the
board
of
trustees of
any of the thirteen state universities listed in section
3345.011 of the Revised Code
or the board of
trustees itself
as
long as a mission of the proposed school to be specified in the
contract under division (A)(2) of section 3314.03 of the Revised
Code and as approved by the department of education under division
(B)(2) of section 3314.015 of the Revised Code will be the
practical demonstration of teaching methods,
educational
technology, or other teaching practices that are
included in the
curriculum of the university's teacher preparation
program
approved by the state board of education;
(f) Any qualified tax-exempt entity under section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code as long as all of the
following conditions are satisfied:
(i) The entity has been in operation for at least five
years prior to applying to be a community school sponsor.
(ii) The entity has assets of at least five hundred
thousand dollars and a demonstrated record of financial responsibility.
(iii) The department of education has determined that the
entity is an education-oriented entity under division (B)(3) of
section 3314.015 of the Revised Code and the entity has a demonstrated record of successful implementation of educational programs.
(iv) The entity is not a community school.
Any entity
described in division (C)(1) of this
section may enter
into a
preliminary agreement
pursuant
to
division (C)(2) of this
section with the proposing
person or
group.
(2) A preliminary agreement indicates the
intention of
an entity described in division (C)(1)
of this section
to
sponsor the community school. A proposing person or
group that
has such a preliminary agreement may proceed to
finalize plans for
the school, establish a governing authority
as described in
division (E) of this section
for the school, and
negotiate a
contract with the
entity. Provided the
proposing person or
group adheres to the
preliminary agreement and
all provisions of
this chapter, the
entity shall negotiate
in good faith to
enter into a
contract in accordance with section
3314.03 of the
Revised
Code.
(3) A new start-up school that is established in a school
district while that district is
either in a state of academic
emergency
or in a state of academic watch under section
3302.03 of
the Revised Code may
continue in
existence once the school
district is no longer
in a
state of
academic emergency
or academic
watch, provided there is a valid
contract between
the
school and a
sponsor.
(4) A copy of every preliminary agreement entered into under
this
division shall be filed with the superintendent of public
instruction.
(D) A majority vote of
the board of a sponsoring
entity
and a
majority vote of the members of the
governing authority of a
community school shall be required to
adopt a contract and
convert
the public school to a community
school or establish the new
start-up school. Beginning September 29, 2005, adoption of the contract shall occur not later than the fifteenth day of March, and signing of the contract shall occur not later than the fifteenth day of May, prior to the school year in which the school will open. The governing authority shall notify the department of education when the contract has been signed. Subject to sections 3314.013 and, 3314.014, and 3314.016 of the Revised
Code, an unlimited number
of
community schools
may be
established
in any school district
provided that a contract is
entered into
for each community school
pursuant to
this chapter.
(E)(1) As used in this division, "immediate relatives" are
limited to spouses, children, parents, grandparents, siblings, and
in-laws.
Each new start-up community school established under
this
chapter shall be under the direction of a governing authority
which shall consist of a board of not less than five individuals
.
No person shall serve on the governing authority or
operate the community school under contract with the governing
authority so long as the person owes the state any money or is in
a dispute over whether the person owes the state any money
concerning the operation of a community school that has closed.
(2) No person shall serve on the governing authorities of more than two start-up community schools at the same time.
(3) No present or former member, or immediate relative of a present or former member, of the governing authority of any community school established under this chapter shall be an owner, employee, or consultant of any nonprofit or for-profit operator of a community school, as defined in section 3314.014 of the Revised Code, unless at least one year has elapsed since the conclusion of the person's membership.
(F) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to permit the
establishment of a community school in more than one school
district under the same contract.
(G)(1) A new start-up school that is established prior to August 15, 2003, in an urban school district that is not also a big-eight school district may continue to operate after that date and the contract between the school's governing authority and the school's sponsor may be renewed, as provided under this chapter, after that date, but no additional new start-up schools may be established in such a district unless the district is a challenged school district as defined in this section as it exists on and after that date.
(2) A community school that was established prior to June 29, 1999, and is located in a county contiguous to the pilot project area and in a school district that is not a challenged school district may continue to operate after that date, provided the school complies with all provisions of this chapter. The contract between the school's governing authority and the school's sponsor may be renewed, but no additional start-up community school may be established in that district unless the district is a challenged school district.
(3) Any educational service center that, on the effective date of this amendment, sponsors a community school that is not located in a county within the territory of the service center or in a county contiguous to such county may continue to sponsor that community school only until the expiration of the contract between the service center and the school's governing authority. The community school may continue to operate after the expiration of that contract, provided the school secures a new sponsor, as described in division (C)(1) of this section as it exists on and after the effective date of this amendment, and the school's governing authority enters into a contract with the new sponsor.
Sec. 3314.03.
A copy of every contract entered into
under this section shall be filed with the superintendent of
public instruction.
(A) Each contract entered into
between a sponsor and the governing
authority of a
community school shall specify the following:
(1) That the school shall
be established as
either of the
following:
(a) A nonprofit
corporation established
under Chapter 1702.
of the Revised Code,
if established prior to April 8, 2003;
(b) A public benefit corporation established under Chapter
1702. of the Revised Code, if established after April 8, 2003;
(2) The education program of the school, including the
school's mission,
the characteristics of the students the school
is expected to attract, the ages and grades of students, and the
focus of the
curriculum;
(3) The academic goals to be achieved and the method of
measurement that
will be used to determine progress toward those
goals, which shall include the statewide
achievement
tests;
(4) Performance standards by which the success of the
school
will be evaluated by the sponsor;
(5) The admission standards of section 3314.06 of the
Revised Code and, if applicable, section 3314.061 of the Revised Code;
(6)(a) Dismissal procedures;
(b) A requirement that the governing authority adopt an
attendance policy that includes a procedure for automatically
withdrawing a student from the school if the student without a
legitimate excuse fails to participate in one hundred five consecutive hours of the learning opportunities offered to the
student.
(7) The ways by which the school will achieve racial and
ethnic balance
reflective of the community it serves;
(8) Requirements
for
financial audits by the
auditor of state. The contract shall require
financial records of
the school to be maintained in
the same manner as are financial
records of school districts, pursuant to
rules of the auditor of
state, and the audits shall be conducted in
accordance with
section 117.10 of the Revised Code.
(9) The facilities to be used and
their locations;
(10) Qualifications of teachers,
including a requirement
that the school's
classroom teachers be licensed in accordance
with sections 3319.22 to
3319.31 of the Revised Code, except that
a community school may engage
noncertificated persons to teach up
to twelve
hours per week pursuant to section 3319.301 of the
Revised Code;
(11) That the school will comply with the following
requirements:
(a) The school will provide learning opportunities to a
minimum
of twenty-five students for a minimum of nine hundred
twenty hours per school year;
(b) The governing authority will
purchase liability
insurance, or otherwise provide for the
potential liability of the
school;
(c) The school will be
nonsectarian in its programs,
admission policies,
employment practices, and all other
operations, and will not be
operated by a sectarian school or
religious institution;
(d) The school will comply with
sections 9.90, 9.91, 109.65,
121.22,
149.43, 2151.357, 2151.421, 2313.18,
3301.0710, 3301.0711,
3301.0712,
3301.0715, 3313.472,
3313.50, 3313.536,
3313.608, 3313.6012, 3313.6013, 3313.6014,
3313.643,
3313.648, 3313.66, 3313.661,
3313.662, 3313.666, 3313.667,
3313.67,
3313.671,
3313.672,
3313.673, 3313.69, 3313.71, 3313.716, 3313.718,
3313.80,
3313.96,
3319.073, 3319.313, 3319.314, 3319.315, 3319.321, 3319.39, 3321.01,
3321.13, 3321.14,
3321.17,
3321.18, 3321.19, 3321.191, 3327.10, 4111.17,
4113.52, and
5705.391
and
Chapters 117., 1347.,
2744., 3365.,
3742., 4112., 4123.,
4141., and
4167. of
the Revised Code
as if it were a
school
district
and will comply with section
3301.0714 of the
Revised
Code in the manner specified in section
3314.17 of the
Revised
Code;
(e) The school shall comply with Chapter 102. and section 2921.42 of
the
Revised Code;
(f) The school will comply with sections 3313.61,
3313.611,
and 3313.614 of the Revised Code, except that for students who enter ninth grade for the first time before July 1, 2010, the
requirement in
sections
3313.61 and 3313.611 of the Revised
Code that a person
must successfully
complete the curriculum
in
any high school prior
to receiving a
high school diploma may be
met by completing the
curriculum adopted by the
governing
authority of the community
school
rather than the curriculum
specified in Title XXXIII of the
Revised Code or any rules of the
state board of education. Beginning with students who enter ninth grade for the first time on or after July 1, 2010, the requirement in sections 3313.61 and 3313.611 of the Revised Code that a person must successfully complete the curriculum of a high school prior to receiving a high school diploma shall be met by completing the Ohio core curriculum prescribed in division (C) of section 3313.603 of the Revised Code, unless the person qualifies under division (D) or (F) of that section. Each school shall comply with the plan for awarding high school credit based on demonstration of subject area competency, adopted by the state board of education under division (J) of section 3313.603 of the Revised Code.
(g) The school governing authority will submit
within four months after the end of each school year a
report
of
its activities and progress in meeting the goals and
standards of
divisions
(A)(3) and (4) of this section and its
financial status
to the
sponsor and the parents of all students
enrolled in the
school.
(h) The school, unless it is an internet- or computer-based community school, will comply with section 3313.801 of the Revised Code as if it were a school district.
(12) Arrangements for providing health and other benefits
to
employees;
(13) The length of the contract, which shall begin at the
beginning of an
academic year. No contract shall
exceed
five years
unless such contract has been renewed pursuant to
division (E) of this section.
(14) The governing authority of the school, which shall be
responsible for carrying out the provisions of the contract;
(15) A financial plan detailing an estimated school budget
for each year
of the period of the contract and specifying the
total estimated per pupil
expenditure amount for each such year.
The plan shall specify for
each year the base formula amount
that
will be used for purposes of funding calculations under section
3314.08
of the Revised Code. This base formula amount for any
year shall not exceed
the formula amount defined under section
3317.02
of the Revised Code. The plan may also
specify for any
year a percentage figure to be used for reducing the per pupil
amount of the subsidy calculated pursuant to
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code the school is to
receive that
year under section 3314.08 of the Revised Code.
(16) Requirements and procedures regarding the disposition
of
employees of the school in the event the contract is terminated
or not renewed pursuant to section 3314.07 of the Revised Code;
(17) Whether the school is to be created by
converting all
or part of an existing public school or is to be a new start-up
school, and if it is a converted public school, specification of
any duties or
responsibilities of an employer that the board of
education that operated the
school before conversion is delegating
to the governing board of the community
school with respect to all
or any specified group of employees provided the
delegation is not
prohibited by a collective bargaining agreement applicable
to such
employees;
(18) Provisions establishing procedures for resolving
disputes or
differences of opinion between the sponsor and the
governing authority of the
community school;
(19) A provision requiring the governing authority to adopt
a policy
regarding
the admission of students who reside outside
the district in which the school
is located. That policy shall
comply with the admissions procedures specified
in sections 3314.06 and 3314.061
of the Revised Code and, at the sole
discretion of the authority,
shall do one of the following:
(a) Prohibit the enrollment of students who reside outside
the
district in which the school is located;
(b) Permit the enrollment of students who reside in
districts
adjacent to the district in which the school is located;
(c) Permit the enrollment of students who reside in any
other
district in the state.
(20) A provision recognizing the authority of the department
of education to take over the sponsorship of the school in
accordance with the provisions of division (C) of section 3314.015
of the Revised Code;
(21) A provision recognizing the sponsor's authority to
assume the operation of a school under the conditions specified in
division (B) of section 3314.073 of the Revised Code;
(22) A provision recognizing both of the following:
(a) The authority of public health and safety officials to
inspect the facilities of the school and to order the facilities
closed if those officials find that the facilities are not in
compliance with health and safety laws and regulations;
(b) The authority of the
department of education as the
community school oversight body to
suspend the operation of the
school under section 3314.072 of the
Revised Code if the
department has evidence of conditions or
violations of law at the
school that pose an imminent danger to
the health and safety of
the school's students and employees and
the sponsor refuses to
take such action;
(23) A description of the learning opportunities that will
be offered to students including both classroom-based and
non-classroom-based learning opportunities that is in compliance
with criteria for student participation established by the
department under division (L)(2) of section 3314.08 of the Revised
Code;
(24) The school will comply with section 3302.04 of the Revised Code, including division (E) of that section to the extent possible, except that any action required to be taken by a school district pursuant to that section shall be taken by the sponsor of the school. However, the sponsor shall not be required to take any action described in division (F) of that section.
(25) Beginning in the 2006-2007 school year, the school will open for operation not later than the thirtieth day of September each school year, unless the mission of the school as specified under division (A)(2) of this section is solely to serve dropouts. In its initial year of operation, if the school fails to open by the thirtieth day of September, or within one year after the adoption of the contract pursuant to division (D) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code if the mission of the school is solely to serve dropouts, the contract shall be void.
(B) The community school shall also submit to the sponsor a
comprehensive plan for the
school. The plan shall specify the
following:
(1) The process by which the governing authority of the
school will be
selected in the future;
(2) The management and administration of the school;
(3) If the community school is a currently existing
public
school, alternative arrangements
for current public school
students who choose
not to attend the school and teachers who
choose not to teach in
the school after conversion;
(4) The instructional program and educational philosophy of
the
school;
(5) Internal financial controls.
(C) A contract entered into under section 3314.02 of the
Revised
Code between a sponsor and the governing
authority of a
community school may provide for the community school governing
authority to make payments to the sponsor, which is hereby
authorized to
receive such payments as set forth in the contract
between the governing
authority and the sponsor.
The total amount
of such payments for oversight and monitoring of the school shall
not exceed three per cent of the total
amount of payments for
operating expenses that the school receives
from the state.
(D) The contract shall specify the duties of the sponsor
which shall be in accordance with the written agreement entered
into with the department of education under division (B) of
section 3314.015 of the Revised Code and shall include the
following:
(1) Monitor the community school's compliance with all laws
applicable to the school and with the terms of the contract;
(2) Monitor and evaluate the academic and fiscal
performance and the organization and operation of the community
school on at least an annual basis;
(3) Report on an annual basis the results of the evaluation
conducted under division (D)(2) of this section to the department
of education and to the parents of students enrolled in the
community school;
(4) Provide technical assistance to the community school
in complying with laws applicable to the school and terms of the
contract;
(5) Take steps to intervene in the school's operation to
correct problems in the school's overall
performance, declare the
school to be on probationary status
pursuant to section 3314.073
of the Revised Code, suspend the
operation of the school pursuant
to section 3314.072 of the
Revised Code, or terminate the contract
of the school pursuant to
section 3314.07 of the Revised Code as
determined necessary by the
sponsor;
(6) Have in place a plan of action to be undertaken in the
event the community school experiences financial difficulties or
closes prior to the end of a school year.
(E) Upon the expiration of a
contract entered into under
this section, the sponsor of a
community school may, with the
approval of the governing authority
of the school, renew that
contract for
a period of time determined by the sponsor, but not
ending earlier
than the end of any school year, if the sponsor
finds that the
school's compliance with applicable laws and terms
of the contract
and the school's progress in meeting the academic
goals prescribed
in the contract have been satisfactory. Any
contract that is renewed
under this division remains subject to
the provisions of sections
3314.07, 3314.072, and 3314.073 of the
Revised Code.
(F) If a community school fails to open for operation within one year after the contract entered into under this section is adopted pursuant to division (D) of section 3314.02 of the Revised Code or permanently closes prior to the expiration of the contract, the contract shall be void and the school shall not enter into a contract with any other sponsor. A school shall not be considered permanently closed because the operations of the school have been suspended pursuant to section 3314.072 of the Revised Code. Any contract that becomes void under this division shall not count toward any statewide limit on the number of such contracts prescribed by section 3314.013 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.074. Divisions (A) and (B) of this section apply
only to the extent permitted under Chapter 1702. of the Revised
Code.
(A) If any community school established under this
chapter
permanently closes and ceases its operation as a community
school,
the assets of that school shall be distributed first to
the
retirement
funds of employees of the school, employees of the
school, and private creditors who are owed
compensation, and
then
any remaining funds shall be paid to the
state treasury to
the
credit of the general revenue fund department of education for redistribution to the school districts in which the students who were enrolled in the school at the time it ceased operation were entitled to attend school under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code. The amount distributed to each school district shall be proportional to the district's share of the total enrollment in the community school.
(B) If a community school closes and ceases to operate as a
community school and the school has received computer hardware or
software from the former Ohio SchoolNet commission or the eTech Ohio commission, such hardware or
software shall be returned to the eTech Ohio commission, and the eTech Ohio commission shall redistribute the hardware and software, to the extent such
redistribution is possible, to school districts in conformance
with the provisions of the programs operated and administered by
the eTech Ohio commission.
(C) If the assets of the school
are insufficient to pay all
persons or entities to whom
compensation is owed, the
prioritization of the distribution of
the assets to individual
persons or entities within each class of
payees may be determined
by decree of a court in accordance with
this section and Chapter
1702. of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.08. (A) As used in this section:
(1)
"Base formula amount" means the
amount specified as such
in a community school's financial plan for a school
year pursuant
to division (A)(15) of section 3314.03 of the
Revised Code.
(2)
"Cost-of-doing-business factor" has the same meaning as
in section
3317.02 of the Revised Code.
(3)
"IEP" means an
individualized education program as
defined in section 3323.01 of
the Revised Code.
(4)(3)
"Applicable
special education weight" means the
multiple
specified in section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code for a handicap
described
in that
section.
(5)(4)
"Applicable vocational education weight" means:
(a) For a student enrolled in vocational education programs
or
classes described in division (A) of section 3317.014 of the
Revised Code, the
multiple specified in that division;
(b) For a student enrolled in vocational education programs
or
classes described in division (B) of section 3317.014 of the
Revised Code, the
multiple specified in that division.
(6)(5)
"Entitled to attend school" means entitled to attend
school
in a district under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code.
(7)(6)
A community school student
is "included in the
poverty student count" of a school district if
the student is entitled to
attend school in the district and the
student's family receives assistance under the Ohio works first
program.
(8)(7) "Poverty-based assistance reduction factor" means the
percentage figure,
if
any, for reducing the per pupil amount
of
poverty-based assistance a community school is entitled to receive pursuant to
divisions (D)(5) and
(6) to (9) of this
section in any year,
as
specified
in the school's financial plan for the year pursuant to
division
(A)(15) of section 3314.03 of the Revised Code.
(9)(8)
"All-day kindergarten" has the same meaning as in
section
3317.029 of the Revised Code.
(10) "SF-3 payment" means the sum of the payments to a school district in a fiscal year under divisions (A), (C)(1), (C)(4), (D), (E), and (F) of section 3317.022, divisions (G), (L), and (N) of section 3317.024, and sections 3317.029, 3317.0216, 3317.0217, 3317.04, 3317.05, 3317.052, and 3317.053 of the Revised Code after making the adjustments required by sections 3313.981 and 3313.979, divisions (B), (C), (D), (E), (K), (L), (M), (N), and (O) of section 3317.023, and division (C) of section 3317.20 (9) "State education aid" has the same meaning as in section 5751.20 of the Revised Code.
(B) The state board of education shall adopt rules requiring
both
of the following:
(1) The board of education of each city, exempted village,
and local school district to annually report the number of
students entitled to attend school in the district who are
enrolled in grades
one through
twelve in a
community school
established under this chapter, the number of
students entitled to
attend school in the district who are enrolled in
kindergarten in
a community school,
the number of those
kindergartners who are
enrolled in all-day kindergarten in their
community school,
and
for each child,
the
community school in which the child is
enrolled.
(2) The governing authority of each community school
established under this chapter to annually report all of the
following:
(a) The number of
students enrolled in grades one through
twelve and the number
of
students enrolled in kindergarten in the
school
who are not receiving special education and
related
services pursuant to an IEP;
(b) The number of enrolled students in grades one through
twelve and the number of enrolled students in
kindergarten,
who
are receiving special
education and related services
pursuant to
an IEP;
(c) The number of students reported under division
(B)(2)(b)
of
this section receiving special education and related services
pursuant to
an IEP for a handicap described in each of divisions
(A)
to (F)
of section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code;
(d)
The full-time equivalent number of students reported
under divisions
(B)(2)(a) and (b) of this section who are
enrolled
in vocational education programs or classes described in each of
divisions (A) and (B) of section 3317.014 of the Revised Code that
are
provided by the community school;
(e)
Twenty per cent of the number of students reported under
divisions (B)(2)(a) and (b) of this section who are not reported
under division (B)(2)(d) of this section but who are enrolled in
vocational education programs or classes described in each of
divisions (A) and (B) of section 3317.014 of the Revised Code at a
joint vocational school district under a contract between the
community school and the joint vocational school district and are
entitled to attend school in a city, local, or exempted village
school district whose territory is part of the territory of the
joint vocational district;
(f) The number of
enrolled preschool handicapped students
receiving special education
services in a state-funded unit;
(g) The community
school's base formula amount;
(h) For each student, the
city, exempted village, or
local
school district in which the
student is
entitled to attend
school;
(i) Any poverty-based assistance reduction factor that applies to a
school
year.
(C) From the SF-3 payment made to state education aid calculated for a city, exempted village, or
local
school district and,
if necessary, from the payment made to the district under
sections 321.24 and 323.156 of the Revised Code, the
department of education
shall annually subtract the sum of the
amounts described in divisions (C)(1) to (9) of this section. However, when deducting payments on behalf of students enrolled in internet- or computer-based community schools, the department shall deduct only those amounts described in divisions (C)(1) and (2) of this section. Furthermore, the aggregate amount deducted under this division shall not exceed the sum of the district's SF-3 payment state education aid and its payment under sections 321.24 and 323.156 of the Revised Code.
(1) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when,
for each
community school where the district's students are
enrolled, the number of the
district's students reported under
divisions
(B)(2)(a), (b), and (e) of this section who are
enrolled in
grades one through twelve, and one-half the number of
students
reported under those divisions who are enrolled in
kindergarten,
in that community school
is multiplied by
the greater of the following:
(a) The fiscal year 2005 base
formula amount
of that community school
as adjusted by the school
district's fiscal year 2005 cost-of-doing-business factor;
(b) The sum of (the current base formula amount of that community school times the school district's current cost-of-doing-business factor) plus the per pupil amount of the base funding supplements specified in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code.
(2) The
sum of the
amounts calculated under divisions
(C)(2)(a)
and
(b) of this
section:
(a) For each of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(c) of this section as enrolled in a community
school in
grades one through twelve and receiving special
education and related services
pursuant to an IEP for a handicap
described in section 3317.013 of
the Revised Code, the product of
the applicable special education weight
times
the
community
school's base formula
amount;
(b) For each of the district's students reported under
division (B)(2)(c) of this section as enrolled in kindergarten
in
a
community school and receiving special education and related
services
pursuant to
an IEP for a handicap described in section
3317.013 of the
Revised
Code, one-half of the amount calculated as
prescribed in division
(C)(2)(a) of this section.
(3)
For each of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(d) of this section for whom payment is made under
division (D)(4) of this section, the amount of that payment;
(4) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when,
for each
community school where the district's students are
enrolled, the number of the
district's students enrolled in that
community school
who are included in the district's poverty student
count
is multiplied by the per pupil amount of
poverty-based assistance the school district receives that
year pursuant
to
division (B) or (C) of section 3317.029 of
the
Revised
Code, as
adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of that
community
school.
If
the district receives
poverty-based assistance under
division (B) of that section,
the per pupil
amount of that aid is
the quotient of the amount the district
received under that
division divided by the
district's poverty student count,
as defined
in that section.
If
the
district receives
poverty-based assistance under division
(C) of section
3317.029 of the Revised
Code, the The
per pupil
amount
of that aid for the
district
shall be calculated by the department.
(5) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained
when,
for
each community school where the district's students are
enrolled, the
district's per pupil amount of aid received under
division (E) of
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted
by any
poverty-based assistance reduction factor of the community school, is
multiplied by the sum of the
following:
(a) The number of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(a) of this section who are enrolled in grades one
to
three in
that community school and who are not receiving
special education and related
services pursuant to
an IEP;
(b) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day or any other kindergarten class in that community school
and who are
not receiving special education and related
services
pursuant to an IEP;
(c) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day kindergarten in that community school and who are not
receiving
special education and related services pursuant to an
IEP.
The district's per pupil amount of aid under division (E) of
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code is the quotient of the
amount
the district received under that division divided by the
district's
kindergarten through third grade ADM, as defined in
that
section.
(6) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each community school where the district's students are enrolled, the district's per pupil amount received under division (F) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of that community school, is multiplied by the number of the district's students enrolled in the community school who are identified as limited-English proficient.
(7) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each community school where the district's students are enrolled, the district's per pupil amount received under division (G) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of that community school, is multiplied by the sum of the following:
(a) The number of the district's students enrolled in grades one through twelve in that community school;
(b) One-half of the number of the district's students enrolled in kindergarten in that community school.
The district's per pupil amount under division (G) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code is the district's amount per teacher calculated under division (G)(1) or (2) of that section divided by 17, times a multiple of 0.40 in fiscal year 2006 and 0.70 in fiscal year 2007.
(8) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each community school where the district's students are enrolled, the district's per pupil amount received under divisions (H) and (I) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of that community school, is multiplied by the sum of the following:
(a) The number of the district's students enrolled in grades one through twelve in that community school;
(b) One-half of the number of the district's students enrolled in kindergarten in that community school.
The district's per pupil amount under divisions (H) and (I) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code is the amount calculated under each division divided by the district's formula ADM, as defined in section 3317.02 of the Revised Code.
(9) An amount equal to the per pupil state parity aid funding calculated for the school district under either division (C) or (D) of section 3317.0217 of the Revised Code multiplied by the sum of the number of students in grades one through twelve, and one-half of the number of students in kindergarten, who are entitled to attend school in the district and are enrolled in a community school as reported under division (B)(1) of this section.
(D) The department shall annually pay to a community school
established under
this chapter the sum of the amounts described in divisions (D)(1) to (10) of this section. However, the department shall calculate and pay to each internet- or computer-based community school only the amounts described in divisions (D)(1) to (3) of this section. Furthermore, the sum of the payments to all community schools under divisions (D)(1), (2), and (4) to (10) of this section for the students entitled to attend school in any particular school district shall not exceed the sum of that district's SF-3 payment state education aid and its payment under sections 321.24 and 323.156 of the Revised Code. If the sum of the payments calculated under those divisions for the students entitled to attend school in a particular school district exceeds the sum of that district's SF-3 payment state education aid and its payment under sections 321.24 and 323.156 of the Revised Code, the department shall calculate and apply a proration factor to the payments to all community schools under those divisions for the students entitled to attend school in that district.
(1) Subject to section 3314.085 of the Revised Code, an amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when
the number of students enrolled in grades one through twelve, plus
one-half of the kindergarten students in the school,
reported
under
divisions (B)(2)(a), (b), and (e) of
this
section who
are not
receiving special education and related services pursuant
to an
IEP for a handicap described in
section
3317.013
of the
Revised
Code
is
multiplied by the greater of the following:
(a) The community school's fiscal year 2005 base formula
amount,
as
adjusted by the fiscal year 2005 cost-of-doing-business factor of the
school
district in which the student is
entitled to attend school;
(b) The sum of (the community school's current base formula amount times the current cost-of-doing-business factor of the school district in which the student is entitled to attend school) plus the per pupil amount of the base funding supplements specified in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code.
(2) Prior to fiscal year 2007, the greater of the amount calculated under division (D)(2)(a) or (b) of this section, and in fiscal year 2007 and thereafter, the amount calculated under division (D)(2)(b) of this section:
(a) The aggregate amount that the department paid to the
community school in fiscal year 1999 for students receiving
special education
and related services
pursuant to IEPs, excluding
federal funds and state
disadvantaged
pupil impact aid funds;
(b) The sum of the amounts calculated under divisions
(D)(2)(b)(i) and (ii) of
this section:
(i) For
each student reported under division (B)(2)(c)
of
this section as enrolled in the school in
grades one through
twelve and receiving special education
and related services
pursuant to an IEP
for a handicap described in
section
3317.013
of the
Revised
Code, the following amount:
the greater of (the community school's fiscal year 2005 base formula amount X the fiscal year 2005 cost-of-doing-business factor of the district where the student is entitled to attend school) or [(the school's current base formula amount times the current cost-of-doing-business factor of the school district where the student is entitled to attend school) plus the per pupil amount of the base funding supplements specified in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code])+ (the applicable
special education
weight X the community school's base formula amount);
(ii) For each student reported under division
(B)(2)(c)
of
this section as enrolled in kindergarten and receiving special
education and related services pursuant to an IEP for a
handicap
described in
section
3317.013
of the Revised
Code, one-half
of
the
amount calculated under the formula prescribed in division
(D)(2)(b)(i) of this section.
(3) An amount received from federal
funds to provide special
education and related services to students in the
community
school, as
determined by the superintendent of
public instruction.
(4)
For each student reported under division (B)(2)(d)
of
this section as enrolled in vocational education programs or
classes that
are described in section 3317.014 of the Revised
Code, are provided by the community school,
and are comparable as
determined by the superintendent of public instruction to
school
district vocational education programs and classes eligible for
state
weighted funding under section 3317.014 of the Revised Code,
an amount equal to the applicable
vocational education weight
times the community school's base formula amount
times the
percentage of time the student spends in the vocational education
programs or classes.
(5) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained
when,
for each
school district where the community school's students are
entitled to attend
school,
the number of that district's students
enrolled in the community
school
who are included in the
district's poverty student count is
multiplied by the per pupil
amount of poverty-based assistance that school district
receives that year pursuant to
division
(B) or (C) of
section
3317.029 of the Revised Code, as
adjusted by
any poverty-based assistance reduction
factor of the community school.
The
per pupil
amount of
aid shall
be determined as described in
division
(C)(4) of this
section.
(6) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained
when,
for
each school district where the community school's
students are
entitled to attend school, the district's per pupil
amount of aid
received under division (E) of section 3317.029 of
the
Revised
Code, as adjusted by any
poverty-based assistance reduction factor of the
community
school, is multiplied by the sum of the
following:
(a) The number of the district's students reported under
division
(B)(2)(a) of this section who are enrolled in grades one
to
three in
that community school and who are not receiving
special education and related
services pursuant to
an IEP;
(b) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day or any other kindergarten class in that community school
and who are
not receiving special education and related
services
pursuant to an IEP;
(c) One-half of the district's students who are enrolled in
all-day kindergarten in that community school and who are not
receiving
special education and related services pursuant to an
IEP.
The district's per pupil amount of aid under division (E) of
section 3317.029 of the Revised Code shall be determined as
described in division (C)(5) of this section.
(7) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each school district where the community school's students are entitled to attend school, the number of that district's students enrolled in the community school who are identified as limited-English proficient is multiplied by the district's per pupil amount received under division (F) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of the community school.
(8) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each school district where the community school's students are entitled to attend school, the district's per pupil amount received under division (G) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of the community school, is multiplied by the sum of the following:
(a) The number of the district's students enrolled in grades one through twelve in that community school;
(b) One-half of the number of the district's students enrolled in kindergarten in that community school.
The district's per pupil amount under division (G) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code shall be determined as described in division (C)(7) of this section.
(9) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each school district where the community school's students are entitled to attend school, the district's per pupil amount received under divisions (H) and (I) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code, as adjusted by any poverty-based assistance reduction factor of the community school, is multiplied by the sum of the following:
(a) The number of the district's students enrolled in grades one through twelve in that community school;
(b) One-half of the number of the district's students enrolled in kindergarten in that community school.
The district's per pupil amount under divisions (H) and (I) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code shall be determined as described in division (C)(8) of this section.
(10) An amount equal to the sum of the amounts obtained when, for each school district where the community school's students are entitled to attend school, the district's per pupil amount of state parity aid funding calculated under either division (C) or (D) of section 3317.0217 of the Revised Code is multiplied by the sum of the number of that district's students enrolled in grades one through twelve, and one-half of the number of that district's students enrolled in kindergarten, in the community school as reported under division (B)(2)(a) and (b) of this section.
(E)(1) If a community school's costs for a fiscal year for a
student
receiving special education and related services pursuant
to an
IEP for a handicap
described in
divisions (B) to
(F) of
section
3317.013 of the
Revised
Code
exceed the threshold
catastrophic cost for serving the student as specified in division
(C)(3)(b) of section 3317.022 of the Revised Code, the school may
submit
to the
superintendent of
public instruction documentation,
as
prescribed
by the
superintendent, of all its costs for that
student. Upon
submission of documentation for a student of the
type and in the
manner prescribed, the department shall pay to the
community
school an amount equal to the school's costs
for the
student in
excess of
the threshold catastrophic costs.
(2) The community school shall only report
under division
(E)(1) of this section, and the department
shall
only pay
for, the
costs of educational expenses and the
related
services
provided to
the student in accordance with the
student's
individualized
education program. Any legal fees, court
costs, or
other costs
associated with any cause of action relating
to the
student may
not be included in the amount.
(F) A community school may apply to the department of
education for
preschool handicapped or gifted unit funding the
school would receive if it were a school district. Upon request
of its
governing authority, a community school that received
unit
funding as a school district-operated school before it became a
community
school shall retain any units awarded to it as a school
district-operated
school provided the school continues to meet
eligibility standards for the
unit.
A community school shall be considered a school district
and
its governing authority shall be considered a board of
education
for the purpose of applying to any state or federal
agency for
grants that a school district may receive under
federal or state
law or any appropriations act of the general
assembly. The
governing authority of a community school may apply to any
private
entity for additional funds.
(G) A board of education sponsoring a community school may
utilize local funds to make enhancement grants to the school or
may agree,
either as part of the contract or separately, to
provide any specific services
to the community school at no cost
to the school.
(H) A community school may not levy taxes or issue bonds
secured by tax revenues.
(I) No community school shall charge tuition for the
enrollment of any student.
(J)(1)(a) A community school may borrow money to pay any
necessary
and actual
expenses of the school in anticipation of the
receipt
of any portion of the
payments to be received by the
school
pursuant to division (D) of this
section. The school may
issue
notes to evidence such borrowing. The
proceeds
of the notes shall be used only for the purposes for
which the
anticipated receipts may be lawfully expended by the
school.
(b) A school may also borrow money for a term not to
exceed
fifteen years for the purpose of acquiring facilities.
(2) Except for any amount guaranteed under section 3318.50 of
the Revised Code, the state is not liable for debt incurred by the
governing authority of a community school.
(K) For purposes of determining the
number of students for
which divisions
(D)(5) and
(6) of this section applies in
any
school year, a community school may submit to
the department
of
job and family services, no
later than the first day of
March,
a
list of the students enrolled in the
school. For each student
on
the list, the community school shall indicate the
student's
name,
address, and date of birth and the school district where the
student is entitled to attend school. Upon receipt of a list
under this
division, the department
of
job and family services
shall determine,
for each school district where one or more
students on the list is entitled
to attend school,
the
number
of
students residing in that school district who were included in the
department's report
under section 3317.10 of the Revised Code.
The
department shall make this
determination on the basis of
information readily available to it. Upon
making this
determination
and no later than ninety days after submission of
the list by the community
school, the department shall report to
the state department of education the
number of students on the
list who reside in each school
district who were included in the
department's report
under section 3317.10 of the Revised Code. In
complying with this division,
the department of job and family
services shall not report
to the state department of
education any
personally identifiable information on any student.
(L) The department
of education shall adjust the amounts
subtracted and paid under divisions (C) and (D) of this
section to
reflect any enrollment of students in community schools for less
than the equivalent of a full school year. The state board of
education within ninety
days after April 8, 2003, shall adopt in
accordance with Chapter 119. of the
Revised Code rules governing
the payments to community schools
under this section including
initial payments in a school year and
adjustments and reductions
made in subsequent periodic payments to
community schools and
corresponding deductions from school
district accounts as provided
under divisions (C) and (D) of this
section. For
purposes of this
section:
(1) A
student shall be considered enrolled in the community
school for any portion
of the school year the student is
participating at a college under
Chapter 3365. of the Revised
Code.
(2) A student shall be considered to be enrolled in a
community school during a school year for the period of time
beginning on the later of the date on which the school both has received
documentation of the student's enrollment from a parent and the student has
commenced participation in learning opportunities as defined in
the contract with the sponsor, or thirty days prior to the date on which the student is entered into the education management information system established under section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code. For purposes of
applying this
division to a community school student, "learning
opportunities"
shall be defined in the contract, which shall
describe both
classroom-based and non-classroom-based learning
opportunities and
shall be in compliance with criteria and
documentation
requirements for student participation which shall
be established
by the department. Any student's instruction time
in
non-classroom-based learning opportunities shall be certified
by
an employee of the community school. A student's enrollment
shall
be considered to cease on the date on which any of the following
occur:
(a) The community school receives documentation from a
parent terminating enrollment of the student.
(b) The community school is provided documentation of a
student's enrollment in another public or private school.
(c) The community school ceases to offer learning
opportunities to the student pursuant to the terms of the contract
with the sponsor or the operation of any provision of this
chapter.
(3) A student's percentage of full-time equivalency shall
be considered to be the percentage the hours of learning
opportunity offered to that student is of nine hundred and twenty
hours. However, no internet- or computer-based community school shall be credited for any time a student spends participating in learning opportunities beyond ten hours within any period of twenty-four consecutive hours.
(M) The department of education shall reduce the amounts
paid
under division (D) of this section to reflect payments made
to
colleges under division (B) of section 3365.07 of the Revised
Code.
(N)(1)
No student shall be considered enrolled in any
internet-
or computer-based community school or, if applicable to the student, in any community school that is required to provide the student with a computer pursuant to division (C) of section 3314.22 of the Revised Code, unless both of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The student
possesses or
has been provided with all required hardware and
software
materials and all such materials are operational so that the student is capable of fully participating in the learning opportunities specified in the contract between the school and the school's sponsor as required by division (A)(23) of section 3314.03 of the Revised Code;
(b) The
school is in compliance with division (A) of section
3314.22 of the Revised Code, relative to such student.
(2) In
accordance with policies adopted jointly by the
superintendent
of
public instruction
and the auditor of state,
the
department
shall
reduce the amounts otherwise payable
under
division (D) of
this
section to any
community
school that
includes in its program the
provision of
computer
hardware and
software materials to
any student, if such
hardware
and software
materials have not been
delivered,
installed, and
activated for
each such student in a timely manner or
other educational
materials or
services have not been provided
according to the
contract between
the individual community school
and its sponsor.
The superintendent of public instruction
and the auditor of
state shall jointly
establish a method for auditing any community
school to which this
division pertains to ensure compliance with
this section.
The superintendent, auditor of state, and the governor shall
jointly
make recommendations to the general assembly for
legislative
changes that may be required to assure fiscal and
academic
accountability for such
schools.
(O)(1) The department shall not withhold payments to a community school based on a challenge brought by a school district concerning the community school's enrollment and student residency reports submitted to the department without first providing the governing authority of the community school written notice stating the specific grounds for the challenge and requiring the school district to submit evidence supporting its claim that a particular student should not be included in the community school's enrollment or that payment for that student otherwise should be denied. The department also shall permit the governing authority to submit documentation the governing authority believes confirms or corrects its earlier reports that are subject to challenge. The school district bears the burden of proof. The department shall set a reasonable deadline for the school district and community school to submit documentation regarding the challenge. The department shall not withhold payments pending that deadline. The department immediately shall dismiss any challenge regarding a particular student if the department finds that the school district has not timely submitted evidence as required under this division or otherwise has not met its burden of proof or that the documentation submitted by the governing authority confirms or corrects its earlier reports regarding that student.
(2) If the department finds that the school district has timely submitted evidence and has met its burden of proof and, accordingly, that the particular student for which the district brought the challenge should not be included in the community school's enrollment or that payment otherwise should be denied for that student, the department shall withhold payments to the community school for that student.
If the governing authority of the community school subsequently submits documentation that the department finds confirms or corrects the earlier reports regarding that student, the department shall resume payments to the community school for that student and, if appropriate, shall include payment for the prior months that were withheld.
(3) The department shall not withhold any other payments from a community school without first providing to the governing authority of the community school written notice stating the amount to be withheld, reasons for withholding, and offering an opportunity for a hearing in accordance with division (P)(2) of this section.
(P)(1) If the department determines that a review of a
community school's enrollment is necessary, such review shall be
completed and written notice of the findings shall be provided to
the governing authority of the community school and its sponsor
within ninety days of the end of the community school's fiscal
year, unless extended for a period not to exceed thirty additional
days for one of the following reasons:
(a) The department and the community school mutually agree
to the extension.
(b) Delays in data submission caused by either a community
school or its sponsor.
(2) If the review results in a finding that additional
funding is owed to the school, such payment shall be made within
thirty days of the written notice. If the review results in a
finding that the community school owes moneys to the state, the
following procedure shall apply:
(a) Within ten business days of the receipt of the notice of
findings, the community school may appeal the department's
determination to the state board of education or its designee.
(b) The board or its designee shall conduct an informal
hearing on the matter within thirty days of receipt of such an
appeal and shall issue a decision within fifteen days of the
conclusion of the hearing.
(c) If the board has enlisted a designee to conduct the
hearing, the designee shall certify its decision to the board.
The
board may accept the decision of the designee or may reject
the
decision of the designee and issue its own decision on the
matter.
(d) Any decision made by the board under this division is
final.
(3) If it is decided that the community school owes moneys
to the state, the department shall deduct such amount from the
school's future payments in accordance with guidelines issued by
the superintendent of public instruction.
(P)(Q) The department shall not subtract from a school district's state aid account under division (C) of this section and shall not pay to a community school under division (D) of this section any amount for any of the following:
(1) Any student who has graduated from the twelfth grade of a public or nonpublic high school;
(2) Any student who is not a resident of the state;
(3) Any student who was enrolled in the community school during the previous school year when tests were administered under section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code but did not take one or more of the tests required by that section and was not excused pursuant to division (C)(1) or (3) of that section, unless the superintendent of public instruction grants the student a waiver from the requirement to take the test and a parent is not paying tuition for the student pursuant to section 3314.26 of the Revised Code. The superintendent may grant a waiver only for good cause in accordance with rules adopted by the state board of education.
(4) Any student who has attained the age of twenty-two years, except for veterans of the armed services whose attendance was interrupted before completing the recognized twelve-year course of the public schools by reason of induction or enlistment in the armed forces and who apply for enrollment in a community school not later than four years after termination of war or their honorable discharge. If, however, any such veteran elects to enroll in special courses organized for veterans for whom tuition is paid under federal law, or otherwise, the department shall not subtract from a school district's state aid account under division (C) of this section and shall not pay to a community school under division (D) of this section any amount for that veteran.
Sec. 3314.086. If the department of education is required to pay an amount under section 3353.25 of the Revised Code to a school district delivering a course included in the clearinghouse established under section 3353.21 of the Revised Code for a student enrolled in a community school established under this chapter, the department shall deduct the amount of that payment from the amount calculated for payment to the community school under section 3314.08 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.087. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Career-technical program" means vocational programs or classes described in division (A) or (B) of section 3317.014 of the Revised Code in which a student is enrolled.
(2) "Formula ADM," "category one or two vocational education ADM," and "FTE basis" have the same meanings as in section 3317.02 of the Revised Code.
(3) "Resident school district" means the city, exempted village, or local school district in which a student is entitled to attend school under section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code.
(B) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this chapter or Chapter 3317. of the Revised Code, a student enrolled in a community school may simultaneously enroll in the career-technical program operated by the student's resident school district. On an FTE basis, the student's resident school district shall count the student in the category one or two vocational education ADM for the proportion of the time the student is enrolled in the district's career-technical program and, accordingly, the department of education shall calculate funds under Chapter 3317. for the district attributable to the student for the proportion of time the student attends the career-technical program. The community school shall count the student in its enrollment report under section 3314.08 of the Revised Code and shall report to the department the proportion of time that the student attends classes at the community school. The department shall pay the community school and deduct from the student's resident school district the amount computed for the student under section 3314.08 of the Revised Code in proportion to the fraction of the time on an FTE basis that the student attends classes at the community school. "Full-time equivalency" for a community school student, as defined in division (L) of section 3314.08 of the Revised Code, does not apply to the student.
Sec. 3314.19. The sponsor of each community school annually shall provide the following assurances in writing to the department of education not later than ten business days prior to the opening of the school:
(A) That a current copy of the contract between the sponsor and the governing authority of the school entered into under section 3314.03 of the Revised Code has been filed with the state office of community schools established under section 3314.11 of the Revised Code and that any subsequent modifications to that contract will be filed with the office;
(B) That the school has submitted to the sponsor a plan for providing special education and related services to students with disabilities and has demonstrated the capacity to provide those services in accordance with Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code and federal law;
(C) That the school has a plan and procedures for administering the achievement tests and diagnostic assessments prescribed by sections 3301.0710 and 3301.0715 of the Revised Code;
(D) That school personnel have the necessary training, knowledge, and resources to properly use and submit information to all databases maintained by the department for the collection of education data, including the education management information system established under section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code in accordance with methods and timelines established under section 3314.17 of the Revised Code;
(E) That all required information about the school has been submitted to the Ohio education directory system or any successor system;
(F) That the school will enroll at least the minimum number of students required by division (A)(11)(a) of section 3314.03 of the Revised Code in the school year for which the assurances are provided;
(G) That all classroom teachers are licensed in accordance with sections 3319.22 to 3319.31 of the Revised Code, except for noncertificated persons engaged to teach up to twelve hours per week pursuant to section 3319.301 of the Revised Code;
(H) That the school's fiscal officer is in compliance with section 3314.011 of the Revised Code;
(I) That the school has complied with section 3319.39 of the Revised Code with respect to all employees who are responsible for the care, custody, or control of a child and that the school has conducted a criminal records check of each of its governing authority members;
(J) That the school holds all of the following:
(1) Proof of property ownership or a lease for the facilities used by the school;
(2) A certificate of occupancy;
(3) Liability insurance for the school, as required by division (A)(11)(b) of section 3314.03 of the Revised Code, that the sponsor considers sufficient to indemnify the school's facilities, staff, and governing authority against risk;
(4) A satisfactory health and safety inspection;
(5) A satisfactory fire inspection;
(6) A valid food permit, if applicable.
(K) That the sponsor has conducted a pre-opening site visit to the school for the school year for which the assurances are provided;
(L) That the school has designated a date it will open for the school year for which the assurances are provided that is in compliance with division (A)(25) of section 3314.03 of the Revised Code;
(M) That the school has met all of the sponsor's requirements for opening and any other requirements of the sponsor.
Sec. 3314.26. (A) Each internet- or computer-based community school shall withdraw from the school any student who, for two consecutive school years, has failed to participate in the spring administration of any test prescribed under section 3301.0710 or 3301.0712 of the Revised Code for the student's grade level and was not excused from the test pursuant to division (C)(1) or (3) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code, regardless of whether a waiver was granted for the student under division (P)(Q)(3) of section 3314.08 of the Revised Code. The school shall report any such student's data verification code, as assigned pursuant to section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code, to the department of education. The department shall maintain a list of all data verification codes reported under this division and section 3313.6410 of the Revised Code and provide that list to each internet- or computer-based community school and to each school to which section 3313.6410 of the Revised Code applies.
(B) No internet- or computer-based community school shall receive any state funds under this chapter for any enrolled student whose data verification code appears on the list maintained by the department under division (A) of this section.
Notwithstanding any provision of the Revised Code to the contrary, the parent of any such student shall pay tuition to the internet- or computer-based community school in an amount equal to the state funds the school otherwise would receive for that student, as determined by the department. An internet- or computer-based community school may withdraw any student for whom the parent does not pay tuition as required by this division.
Sec. 3317.01. As used in this section and section 3317.011
of the Revised Code,
"school district," unless otherwise
specified, means any city, local, exempted village, joint
vocational, or cooperative education school district and
any
educational service center.
This chapter shall be administered by the state board of
education. The superintendent of public instruction shall
calculate the amounts payable to each school district and shall
certify the amounts payable to each eligible district to the
treasurer of the district as provided by this chapter. As soon as possible after such amounts are calculated, the superintendent shall certify to the treasurer of each school district the district's adjusted charge-off increase, as defined in section 5705.211 of the Revised Code. No moneys
shall be distributed pursuant to this chapter without the
approval
of the controlling board.
The state board of education shall, in accordance with
appropriations made by the general assembly, meet the financial
obligations of this chapter.
Annually, the department of education shall calculate and
report to each
school district the district's total state and
local funds for providing an
adequate basic education to the
district's nonhandicapped students, utilizing
the determination in
section 3317.012 of the Revised Code. In addition, the
department
shall
calculate and report separately for each school district the
district's total
state and local funds for providing an adequate
education for its handicapped
students, utilizing the
determinations in both sections 3317.012 and 3317.013
of the
Revised Code.
Not later than the thirty-first day of August of each fiscal
year,
the department of education shall provide to each school
district and
county MR/DD board a preliminary estimate of the
amount of funding
that the department calculates the district will
receive under each of
divisions (C)(1) and
(4) of section
3317.022
of the Revised Code. No later
than the first day of
December of
each fiscal year, the department shall
update that
preliminary
estimate.
Moneys distributed pursuant to this chapter shall be
calculated and paid on a fiscal year basis, beginning with the
first day of July and extending through the thirtieth day of
June.
The moneys appropriated for each fiscal year shall be
distributed
at least monthly to each school district unless
otherwise provided
for. The state board shall submit a yearly
distribution plan to
the controlling board at its
first meeting in July. The state
board shall submit any proposed midyear
revision of the plan to
the controlling
board in January. Any year-end revision of the
plan shall be submitted to
the controlling board in June. If
moneys appropriated for each
fiscal year are distributed other
than monthly, such distribution
shall be on the same basis for
each school district.
The total amounts paid each month shall constitute, as
nearly
as possible, one-twelfth of the total amount payable for
the
entire year.
Until fiscal year 2007, payments Payments made during the first six months of
the
fiscal year may be based on an estimate of the amounts
payable for
the entire year. Payments made in the last six
months shall be
based on the final calculation of the amounts
payable to each
school district for that fiscal year. Payments
made in the last
six months may be adjusted, if necessary, to
correct the amounts
distributed in the first six months, and to
reflect enrollment
increases when such are at least three per
cent.
Beginning in fiscal year 2007, payments shall be calculated to reflect the biannual reporting of average daily membership. In fiscal year 2007 and in each fiscal year thereafter, annualized periodic payments for each school district shall be based on the district's student counts certified pursuant to section 3317.03 of the Revised Code as follows:
the sum of one-half of the number of students reportedfor the first full week in October plus one-half of theaverage of the numbers reported for the first full weekin October and for the first full week in February
Except as
otherwise provided, payments under this chapter
shall be made only
to those school districts in which:
(A) The school district, except for any
educational service
center and any joint
vocational or cooperative education school
district, levies for
current operating expenses at least twenty
mills.
Levies for
joint vocational or cooperative education
school districts or
county school financing districts, limited to
or to the extent
apportioned to current expenses, shall be
included in this
qualification requirement. School district
income tax levies
under Chapter 5748. of the Revised Code, limited
to or to the
extent apportioned to current operating expenses,
shall be
included in this qualification requirement to the extent
determined by the tax commissioner under division (D) of
section
3317.021 of the Revised Code.
(B) The school year next preceding the fiscal year for
which
such payments are authorized meets the requirement of
section
3313.48 or 3313.481 of the Revised Code, with regard to
the
minimum number of days or hours school must be open for
instruction with pupils in attendance, for individualized
parent-teacher conference and reporting periods, and for
professional meetings of teachers. This requirement shall be
waived by the superintendent of public instruction if it had been
necessary for a school to be closed because of disease epidemic,
hazardous weather conditions, inoperability of school buses or
other equipment
necessary to the school's operation, damage to a
school building, or
other temporary circumstances due to utility
failure rendering
the school building unfit for school use,
provided that for those
school districts operating pursuant to
section 3313.48 of the
Revised Code the number of days the school
was actually open for
instruction with pupils in attendance and
for individualized
parent-teacher conference and reporting periods
is not less than
one hundred seventy-five, or for those school
districts operating
on a trimester plan the number of days the
school was actually
open for instruction with pupils in attendance
not less than
seventy-nine days in any trimester, for those school
districts
operating on a quarterly plan the number of days the
school was
actually open for instruction with pupils in attendance
not less
than fifty-nine days in any quarter, or for those school
districts operating on a pentamester plan the number of days the
school was actually open for instruction with pupils in
attendance
not less than forty-four days in any pentamester.
A school district shall not be considered to have failed to
comply with this division or section 3313.481 of the Revised Code
because schools were open for instruction but either twelfth
grade
students were excused from attendance for up to three days
or only
a portion of the kindergarten students were in attendance
for up
to three days in order to allow for the gradual
orientation to
school of such students.
The superintendent of public instruction shall waive the
requirements of this section with reference to the minimum number
of days or hours school must be in session with pupils in
attendance for the school year succeeding the school year in
which
a board of education initiates a plan of operation pursuant
to
section 3313.481 of the Revised Code. The minimum
requirements of
this section shall again be applicable to such a
district
beginning with the school year commencing the second
July
succeeding the initiation of one such plan, and for each
school
year thereafter.
A school district shall not be considered to have failed to
comply with
this division or section 3313.48 or 3313.481 of the
Revised Code because
schools were open for instruction but the
length of the regularly scheduled
school day, for any number of
days during the school year, was reduced by not
more than two
hours due to hazardous weather conditions.
(C) The school district has on file, and is paying in
accordance with, a teachers' salary schedule
which complies with
section 3317.13 of the Revised Code.
A board of education or governing board of an educational
service center which
has not conformed with other law
and the
rules pursuant thereto, shall not participate in the
distribution
of funds authorized by sections 3317.022 to
3317.0211, 3317.11,
3317.16, 3317.17, and 3317.19 of the Revised
Code, except for good
and sufficient reason established to the
satisfaction of the state
board of education and the state
controlling board.
All funds allocated to school districts under this chapter,
except those specifically allocated for other purposes, shall be
used to pay current operating expenses only.
Sec. 3317.012. (A) The general assembly, having deliberated on the model with which to calculate the base cost of an adequate education per pupil, has made a policy decision to calculate that amount as consisting of the following building blocks:
(1) Base classroom teachers;
(2) Other personnel support, which includes additional teachers, such as music, arts, and physical education teachers funded by state, local, or federal funds or other funds that are above the base cost funding level, and other school personnel including administrators;
(3) Nonpersonnel support.
This model reflects policy decisions made by the general assembly concerning the cost of base classroom teachers, which decisions entail two policy variables: the number of students per base classroom teacher necessary for an adequate education and the average compensation for a base classroom teacher necessary for an adequate education. The model requires the general assembly to decide the amount of other personnel support necessary for an adequate education, and increase that amount from year to year by the same percentage as it increases the average compensation for base classroom teachers. The model finally requires the general assembly to decide the nonpersonnel costs necessary for an adequate education and to inflate the nonpersonnel costs from year to year using the projected inflationary measure for the gross domestic product deflator (all items) prepared by the bureau of labor statistics of the United States department of labor.
(B)(1) For fiscal year 2006 2008, the general assembly has resolved that a ratio of one base classroom teacher per twenty students is necessary for an adequate education. The general assembly has made a policy decision that the average compensation for base classroom teachers is $53,680 $56,754 for fiscal year 2006 2008, which includes an amount for the value of fringe benefits. For fiscal year 2007 2009, the general assembly has resolved that a ratio of one base classroom teacher per twenty students is necessary for an adequate education. The general assembly has made a policy decision that the average compensation for base classroom teachers is $54,941 $58,621 for fiscal year 2009, which includes an amount for the value of fringe benefits. Based on a ratio of twenty students per base classroom teacher, these amounts equal $2,684 $2,838 per pupil in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $2,747 $2,931 per pupil in fiscal year 2007 2009.
(2) The general assembly has made a policy decision that the per pupil cost of salary and benefits of other personnel support is $1,807 $1,905 in fiscal year 2006 2008. Based on the percentage increase for the average compensation of base classroom teachers per pupil cost of salary and benefits of other personnel support from fiscal year 2006 2007 to fiscal year 2007 2008, the per pupil cost of other personnel support is $1,850 $1,962 in fiscal year 2007 2009.
(3) The general assembly has made a policy decision that the per pupil cost of nonpersonnel support is $792 $822 in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $806 $839 in fiscal year 2007 2009. The amount for fiscal year 2007 2009 reflects the projected inflationary measure for the gross domestic product deflator (all items) of 1.80% 2.00%.
(4) Based on the determinations specified in divisions (B)(1) to (3) of this section, the per-pupil base cost is $5,283 $5,565 in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $5,403 $5,732 in fiscal year 2007 2009.
(C) In addition to the per-pupil base cost as determined under divisions (A) and (B) of this section, the general assembly determines that the following base funding supplements shall be paid to each school district:
(1) Base funding for large-group academic intervention for all students, based on 25 hours per group of students per year at an hourly rate of $20.00 $21.01 in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $20.40 $21.64 in fiscal year 2007 2009, as follows:
large-group intervention units X 25 hours X hourly rate
(a) "Large-group intervention units" equals the district's formula ADM divided by 20;
(b) "Hourly rate" equals $20.00 $21.01 in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $20.40 $21.64 in fiscal year 2007 2009.
(2) Base funding for professional development, phased in according to the following formula:
district's teacher factor X 0.045 X
formula amount X phase-in percentage
(a) For each school district, the district's "teacher factor" is the district's formula ADM divided by 17;
(b) "Phase-in percentage" equals 0.25 in fiscal year 2006 and 0.75 in fiscal year 2007.
(3) Base funding for data-based decision making, calculated according to the following formula:
0.001 X formula amount X formula ADM
(4) Base funding for professional development regarding data-based decision making, calculated according to the following formula:
(0.20 X the district's teacher factor X 0.08 X formula amount) + (the district's principal factor X
0.08 X formula amount)
(a) For each school district, the district's "teacher factor" is the district's formula ADM divided by 17;
(b) For each school district, the district's "principal factor" is the district's formula ADM divided by 340.
(D) The general assembly intends that school districts spend the state funds calculated and paid for each component of the building blocks methodology described in divisions (B)(1) to (3) and (C)(1) to (4) of this section according to the purposes described in those divisions.
Sec. 3317.013. Except for a handicapped preschool child for whom a scholarship has been awarded under section 3310.41 of the Revised Code, this section does not apply to
handicapped
preschool students.
Analysis of special education cost data has resulted in a
finding that the average special education additional
cost per
pupil, including
the costs of related services, can be expressed
as a multiple of the base cost
per pupil
calculated under section
3317.012 of the Revised Code. The
multiples for the following
categories of special education
programs, as these programs are
defined for purposes of Chapter
3323. of the Revised Code,
and
adjusted as provided in this section, are as
follows:
(A)
A multiple of 0.2892 for students whose primary or only
identified handicap is a speech and language handicap, as this
term is defined pursuant to Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code;
(B) A multiple of
0.3691 for students identified as
specific
learning disabled or
developmentally
handicapped, as
these terms are defined pursuant
to Chapter 3323.
of
the Revised
Code, or other health
handicapped-minor;
(C) A multiple of
1.7695 for students identified as
hearing
handicapped,
vision
impaired,
or severe behavior handicapped, as
these
terms
are defined pursuant to
Chapter 3323. of the Revised
Code;
(D) A multiple of 2.3646 for students identified as
orthopedically handicapped, as this
term is defined pursuant to
Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code or other health handicapped -
major;
(E) A multiple of 3.1129 for students identified as
multihandicapped, as
this term is defined pursuant to Chapter
3323. of the Revised
Code;
(F) A multiple of 4.7342 for students identified as
autistic,
having traumatic brain injuries, or as both visually
and hearing disabled, as these terms are
defined
pursuant to
Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code.
In fiscal year 2004 years 2008 and 2009, the multiples specified in divisions (A)
to (F) of this section shall be adjusted by multiplying them by
0.88. In fiscal years 2005, 2006, and 2007, the multiples specified in those
divisions shall be adjusted by multiplying them by 0.90.
Not later than the thirtieth day of May December in 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007, 2008, and 2009, the department of education shall submit to the office of budget and management a report that specifies for each city, local, exempted village, and joint vocational school district the fiscal year allocation of the state and local shares of special education and related services additional weighted funding and federal special education funds passed through to the district.
Not later than January 31, 2009, and the thirty-first day of January of each odd-numbered year thereafter, the department shall prepare an analysis of whether the multiples specified in this section continue to accurately reflect the cost of providing special education, including the costs of related services, for students in each of the respective categories of programs specified in this section.
Sec. 3317.014. The average vocational education additional
cost per pupil can be expressed as a multiple of the base cost per
pupil calculated under section 3317.012 of the Revised Code. the The
multiples for the following categories of vocational education
programs
are as follows:
(A) A multiple of
0.57 for students enrolled in
vocational
education job-training and workforce development
programs approved
by the
department of education in accordance
with rules
adopted
under section 3313.90 of the Revised Code.
(B) A multiple of
0.28 for students enrolled in
vocational
education classes other than job-training and workforce
development
programs.
Vocational education associated services costs can be
expressed as
a multiple of 0.05 of the base cost per pupil
calculated under section
3317.012 of the Revised Code.
The general assembly has adjusted the multiples specified in
this section for calculating payments beginning in fiscal year
2002 in recognition that its policy change regarding the
application of the cost-of-doing-business factor produces a higher
base cost amount than would exist if no change were made to its
application. The adjustment maintains the same weighted costs as
would exist if no change were made to the application of the
cost-of-doing-business factor.
The By the thirtieth day of each December, the department of education shall annually report to the governor office of budget and management and the general assembly the amount of weighted funding for vocational education and associated services that is was spent by each city, local, exempted village, and joint vocational school district specifically for vocational educational and associated services during the previous fiscal year.
Sec. 3317.015. (A) In addition to the information certified to
the department of education and the office of budget and management under division (A) of section 3317.021
of the Revised Code, the tax commissioner shall, at the same time, certify the
following information to the department and the office of budget and management for each city, exempted village, and local school
district to be used for the same purposes as described under that division:
(1) The taxable value of the school district's carryover property, as defined in section
319.301 of the Revised Code, for the preceding tax year;
(2) The increase in such carryover value, if any, between
the second preceding tax year and the preceding tax year as used in
calculating the percentage reduction under section 319.301 of the Revised Code.
(B) For each fiscal year the department of education shall
calculate each school district's recognized valuation in the following
manner:
(1) For a school district located in a county in which a reappraisal or
triennial update occurred in the preceding tax year, the recognized valuation
equals the district's total taxable value for the preceding tax year minus
two-thirds times the increase in the carryover value from the second preceding
tax year to the preceding tax year.
(2) For a school district located in a county in which a reappraisal or
triennial update occurred in the second preceding tax year, the recognized
valuation equals the district's total taxable value for the preceding tax year
minus one-third times the increase in the carryover value from the third
preceding tax year to the second preceding tax year.
(3) For a school district located in a county in which a reappraisal or
triennial update occurred in the third preceding tax year, the recognized
valuation equals the district's total taxable value for the preceding tax
year.
Sec. 3317.016. In addition to its form SF-3, or any successor to that form, the department of education shall publish on its web site a spreadsheet for each school district that specifies the constituent components of the district's "building blocks" funds, as follows:
(A) For compensation of base classroom teachers, as described in division (B)(1) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code, each spreadsheet shall specify the district's aggregate and per pupil amounts of state funds and of combined state and local funds, the average compensation decided by the general assembly for base classroom teachers, as specified in that division, and the number of base classroom teachers attributable to the district based on the student-teacher ratio decided by the general assembly, as specified in that division.
(B) Each spreadsheet shall specify the district's aggregate and per pupil amounts of state funds and of combined state and local funds for each of the following:
(1) Other personnel support, as described in division (B)(2) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code;
(2) Nonpersonnel support, as described in division (B)(3) of that section;
(3) Academic intervention services, as described in division (C)(1) of that section;
(4) Professional development, as described in division (C)(2) of that section;
(5) Data-based decision making, as described in division (C)(3) of that section;
(6) Professional development for data-based decision making, as described in division (C)(4) of that section.
(C) Each spreadsheet shall separately specify the district's aggregate and per pupil state funds for each of the following components of poverty-based assistance under section 3317.029 of the Revised Code:
(1) Poverty-based assistance guarantee payment under division (B) of that section;
(2) Academic intervention funding under division (C) of that section;
(3)(2) All-day kindergarten under division (D) of that section;
(4) Class-size reduction (3) Increased classroom learning opportunities under division (E) of that section;
(5)(4) Services to limited English proficient students under division (F) of that section;
(6)(5) Professional development, under division (G) of that section;
(7)(6) Dropout prevention under division (H) of that section;
(8)(7) Community outreach under division (I) of that section;
(8) Assistance in closing the achievement gap under division (J) of that section.
Sec. 3317.017. (A) Not later than July 1, 2006, the superintendent of public instruction shall adopt a rule under which the superintendent may issue an order with respect to the spending, by a school district declared to be under an academic watch or in a state of academic emergency under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code, of the following state building block funds intended to pay instructional-related costs:
(1) State funds for compensation of base classroom teachers, as described in division (B)(1) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code;
(2) State funds for academic intervention services under division (C)(1) of section 3317.012 and division (C) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(3) State funds for professional development under divisions (C)(2) and (4) of section 3317.012 and division (G) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(4) State funds for data based decision making under division (C)(3) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code;
(5) The poverty-based assistance guarantee payment under division (B) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(6) State funds for all-day kindergarten under division (D) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(7)(6) State funds for class-size reduction increased classroom learning opportunities under division (E) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(8)(7) State funds for services to limited English proficient students under division (F) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(9)(8) State funds for dropout prevention under division (H) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(10)(9) State funds for community outreach under division (I) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code;
(10) State funds for assistance in closing the achievement gap under division (J) of section 3317.029 of the Revised Code.
(B) The rule shall authorize the superintendent of public instruction to issue an order that does one or a combination of the following:
(1) Requires the school district to periodically report to the superintendent of public instruction on its spending of the state funds paid for each building blocks component described in divisions (A)(1) to (10) of this section;
(2) Requires the district to establish a separate account for each of the building blocks components described in divisions (A)(1) to (10) of this section to which the district shall credit the state funds paid for each;
(3) Directs the district's spending of any or all of the state funds paid for the components described in divisions (A)(1) to (10) of this section in accordance with the descriptions and requirements of sections 3317.012 and 3317.029 of the Revised Code.
(C) The rule shall specify situations in which the superintendent may issue an order and the types of orders the superintendent will issue for each of those situations. The rule, however, shall authorize the superintendent to issue orders in situations that are not enumerated or described in the rule.
(D) The board of education of each school district to which the superintendent of public instruction issues an order pursuant to the rule adopted under this section shall comply with that order.
Sec. 3317.02. As used in this chapter:
(A) Unless otherwise specified,
"school district" means
city,
local, and exempted village school districts.
(B)
"Formula amount" means the base cost for the fiscal year
specified in division (B)(4) of section 3317.012 of the
Revised Code.
(C)
"FTE basis" means a
count of students based on full-time
equivalency, in accordance
with rules adopted by the department of
education pursuant to
section 3317.03 of the Revised Code. In
adopting its rules under this
division, the department shall
provide for
counting any student in category one, two,
three,
four, five, or six
special
education ADM or in category one or two
vocational
education
ADM in the same proportion the student is
counted in
formula ADM.
(D)
"Formula
ADM" means, for a city, local, or exempted
village school
district, the final number verified by the superintendent of public instruction, based on the number reported pursuant to
division
(A) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code, and as adjusted, if so ordered, under division (K) of that section. "Formula ADM" means, for a joint
vocational school district, the final number verified by the superintendent of public instruction, based on the number reported pursuant to
division
(D) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, for payments in which formula ADM is a factor, the formula ADM for each school district for the fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year, as adjusted, if so ordered, under division (K) of that section.
(E)
"Three-year average formula ADM" means the average of
formula ADMs for the
current and preceding two three fiscal years.
(F)(1)
"Category one
special education ADM" means
the
average
daily membership of handicapped children receiving
special
education services for
the handicap
specified in
division (A)
of
section 3317.013 of the
Revised Code and reported
under
division
(B)(5) or
(D)(2)(b) of section 3317.03 of the
Revised
Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category one special education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(2)
"Category two
special education ADM" means
the average
daily membership of handicapped children receiving
special
education services for those handicaps specified in
division (B)
of section 3317.013 of the Revised Code and reported under
division (B)(6) or (D)(2)(c) of section 3317.03 of
the Revised
Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category two special education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(3)
"Category three special education ADM" means
the average
daily membership of students receiving special
education services
for
those handicaps specified in division (C) of section 3317.013
of the Revised Code, and
reported
under division
(B)(7) or
(D)(2)(d) of section 3317.03 of
the
Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category three special education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(4)
"Category four special
education ADM" means the average
daily membership of students
receiving special education services
for those handicaps specified
in division (D) of section 3317.013
of the Revised Code and
reported under division (B)(8) or
(D)(2)(e) of section 3317.03 of
the Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category four special education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(5) "Category five special education ADM" means the average
daily membership of students receiving special education services
for the handicap specified in division (E) of section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code and reported under division (B)(9) or
(D)(2)(f)
of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category five special education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(6) "Category six special education ADM" means the average
daily membership of students receiving special education services
for the handicap specified in division (F) of section 3317.013
of
the Revised Code and reported under division (B)(10) or
(D)(2)(g)
of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category six special education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(7) "Category one vocational education ADM"
means the
average
daily membership of students receiving vocational
education
services described in division (A) of section 3317.014
of the
Revised Code and reported under division (B)(11) or
(D)(2)(h)
of
section 3317.03 of the Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category one vocational education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(8)
"Category two vocational education ADM" means the
average
daily membership of students receiving vocational
education
services
described in division (B) of section 3317.014
of the
Revised Code and reported
under division (B)(12) or
(D)(2)(i) of
section
3317.03 of the Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, the district's category two vocational education ADM for a fiscal year is the sum of one-half of the number reported for October of that fiscal year plus one-half of the average of the numbers reported for October and February of that fiscal year.
(G)
"Handicapped preschool child" means a
handicapped child,
as defined in section 3323.01 of the
Revised Code, who is at least
age three
but is not of compulsory school age, as defined in
section
3321.01 of the Revised Code, and who is not currently
enrolled in
kindergarten.
(H)
"County MR/DD board" means a county
board of mental
retardation and developmental
disabilities.
(I)
"Recognized valuation" means the
amount calculated for a
school district pursuant to section
3317.015 of the Revised Code.
(J)
"Transportation ADM" means the number of
children
reported under division
(B)(13) of section 3317.03 of the
Revised
Code.
(K)
"Average efficient transportation use cost per
student"
means a statistical representation of
transportation costs as
calculated under division (D)(2) of section 3317.022 of the
Revised Code.
(L)
"Taxes charged and payable" means the taxes charged
and
payable against real and public utility property after making
the
reduction required by section 319.301 of the Revised Code,
plus
the taxes levied against tangible personal property.
(M)(K)
"Total taxable value" means the sum
of the amounts
certified for a city, local, exempted village, or
joint vocational
school district under divisions (A)(1) and (2)
of section 3317.021
of the Revised Code.
(N)
"Cost-of-doing-business factor" means the amount
indicated in division (N)(1) or (2) of this section for the county in which a city,
local,
exempted village, or joint vocational school district is located.
If a
city, local, or exempted village school
district is located
in
more than one county,
the factor is the amount indicated for
the
county to which the
district is assigned by the state
department
of education. If a joint
vocational school district is
located in
more than one county, the factor is
the amount
indicated for the
county in which the joint vocational school with
the greatest
formula ADM operated by the district is
located.
(1) In fiscal year 2006, the cost-of-doing-business factor for each county is:
|
|
COST-OF-DOING-BUSINESS |
|
COUNTY |
FACTOR AMOUNT |
|
Adams |
1.00233 |
|
Allen |
1.01373 |
|
Ashland |
1.01980 |
|
Ashtabula |
1.02647 |
|
Athens |
1.00093 |
|
Auglaize |
1.01647 |
|
Belmont |
1.00427 |
|
Brown |
1.01180 |
|
Butler |
1.04307 |
|
Carroll |
1.00913 |
|
Champaign |
1.02973 |
|
Clark |
1.02980 |
|
Clermont |
1.03607 |
|
Clinton |
1.02193 |
|
Columbiana |
1.01427 |
|
Coshocton |
1.01153 |
|
Crawford |
1.01093 |
|
Cuyahoga |
1.04173 |
|
Darke |
1.02253 |
|
Defiance |
1.00973 |
|
Delaware |
1.03520 |
|
Erie |
1.02587 |
|
Fairfield |
1.02440 |
|
Fayette |
1.02127 |
|
Franklin |
1.04053 |
|
Fulton |
1.0220 |
|
Gallia |
1.00000 |
|
Geauga |
1.03340 |
|
Greene |
1.02960 |
|
Guernsey |
1.00440 |
|
Hamilton |
1.05000 |
|
Hancock |
1.01433 |
|
Hardin |
1.02373 |
|
Harrison |
1.00493 |
|
Henry |
1.02120 |
|
Highland |
1.00987 |
|
Hocking |
1.01253 |
|
Holmes |
1.01187 |
|
Huron |
1.01953 |
|
Jackson |
1.00920 |
|
Jefferson |
1.00487 |
|
Knox |
1.01860 |
|
Lake |
1.03493 |
|
Lawrence |
1.00540 |
|
Licking |
1.02540 |
|
Logan |
1.02567 |
|
Lorain |
1.03433 |
|
Lucas |
1.02600 |
|
Madison |
1.03253 |
|
Mahoning |
1.02307 |
|
Marion |
1.02040 |
|
Medina |
1.03573 |
|
Meigs |
1.00173 |
|
Mercer |
1.01353 |
|
Miami |
1.02740 |
|
Monroe |
1.00333 |
|
Montgomery |
1.03020 |
|
Morgan |
1.00593 |
|
Morrow |
1.02007 |
|
Muskingum |
1.00847 |
|
Noble |
1.00487 |
|
Ottawa |
1.03240 |
|
Paulding |
1.00767 |
|
Perry |
1.01067 |
|
Pickaway |
1.02607 |
|
Pike |
1.00687 |
|
Portage |
1.03147 |
|
Preble |
1.02947 |
|
Putnam |
1.01440 |
|
Richland |
1.01327 |
|
Ross |
1.01007 |
|
Sandusky |
1.02140 |
|
Scioto |
1.00080 |
|
Seneca |
1.01487 |
|
Shelby |
1.01853 |
|
Stark |
1.01700 |
|
Summit |
1.03613 |
|
Trumbull |
1.02340 |
|
Tuscarawas |
1.00593 |
|
Union |
1.03333 |
|
Van Wert |
1.00887 |
|
Vinton |
1.00633 |
|
Warren |
1.04387 |
|
Washington |
1.00400 |
|
Wayne |
1.02320 |
|
Williams |
1.01520 |
|
Wood |
1.02400 |
|
Wyandot |
1.01140 |
(2) In fiscal year 2007, the cost-of-doing-business factor for each county is:
|
|
COST-OF-DOING-BUSINESS |
|
COUNTY |
FACTOR AMOUNT |
|
Adams |
1.00117 |
|
Allen |
1.00687 |
|
Ashland |
1.00990 |
|
Ashtabula |
1.01323 |
|
Athens |
1.00047 |
|
Auglaize |
1.00823 |
|
Belmont |
1.00213 |
|
Brown |
1.00590 |
|
Butler |
1.02153 |
|
Carroll |
1.00457 |
|
Champaign |
1.01487 |
|
Clark |
1.01490 |
|
Clermont |
1.01803 |
|
Clinton |
1.01097 |
|
Columbiana |
1.00713 |
|
Coshocton |
1.00577 |
|
Crawford |
1.00547 |
|
Cuyahoga |
1.02087 |
|
Darke |
1.01127 |
|
Defiance |
1.00487 |
|
Delaware |
1.01760 |
|
Erie |
1.01293 |
|
Fairfield |
1.01220 |
|
Fayette |
1.01063 |
|
Franklin |
1.02027 |
|
Fulton |
1.01100 |
|
Gallia |
1.00000 |
|
Geauga |
1.01670 |
|
Greene |
1.01480 |
|
Guernsey |
1.00220 |
|
Hamilton |
1.02500 |
|
Hancock |
1.00717 |
|
Hardin |
1.01187 |
|
Harrison |
1.00247 |
|
Henry |
1.01060 |
|
Highland |
1.00493 |
|
Hocking |
1.00627 |
|
Holmes |
1.00593 |
|
Huron |
1.00977 |
|
Jackson |
1.00460 |
|
Jefferson |
1.00243 |
|
Knox |
1.00930 |
|
Lake |
1.01747 |
|
Lawrence |
1.00270 |
|
Licking |
1.01270 |
|
Logan |
1.01283 |
|
Lorain |
1.01717 |
|
Lucas |
1.01300 |
|
Madison |
1.01627 |
|
Mahoning |
1.01153 |
|
Marion |
1.01020 |
|
Medina |
1.01787 |
|
Meigs |
1.00087 |
|
Mercer |
1.00677 |
|
Miami |
1.01370 |
|
Monroe |
1.00167 |
|
Montgomery |
1.01510 |
|
Morgan |
1.00297 |
|
Morrow |
1.01003 |
|
Muskingum |
1.00423 |
|
Noble |
1.00243 |
|
Ottawa |
1.01620 |
|
Paulding |
1.00383 |
|
Perry |
1.00533 |
|
Pickaway |
1.01303 |
|
Pike |
1.00343 |
|
Portage |
1.01573 |
|
Preble |
1.01473 |
|
Putnam |
1.00720 |
|
Richland |
1.00663 |
|
Ross |
1.00503 |
|
Sandusky |
1.01070 |
|
Scioto |
1.00040 |
|
Seneca |
1.00743 |
|
Shelby |
1.00927 |
|
Stark |
1.00850 |
|
Summit |
1.01807 |
|
Trumbull |
1.01170 |
|
Tuscarawas |
1.00297 |
|
Union |
1.01667 |
|
Van Wert |
1.00443 |
|
Vinton |
1.00317 |
|
Warren |
1.02193 |
|
Washington |
1.00200 |
|
Wayne |
1.01160 |
|
Williams |
1.00760 |
|
Wood |
1.01200 |
|
Wyandot |
1.00570 |
(O)(L)
"Tax exempt value" of a school district means the
amount
certified for a school district under division (A)(4) of
section
3317.021 of the Revised Code.
(P)(M)
"Potential value" of a school district means the
recognized valuation of a school district plus
the tax
exempt
value
of
the district.
(Q)(N)
"District median income" means the median Ohio
adjusted
gross income certified for a school district. On or before the
first
day of July of each year, the tax commissioner shall certify
to the
department of education and the office of budget and management for each city, exempted village,
and local school
district the median Ohio adjusted gross income of
the residents of
the school district determined on the basis of
tax returns filed for the
second preceding tax year by the
residents of the district.
(R)(O)
"Statewide median income" means the median district
median
income of all city, exempted village, and local school
districts in the state.
(S)(P)
"Income factor" for a city, exempted village, or local
school
district means the quotient obtained by dividing that
district's median income
by the statewide median income.
(T)(Q)
"Medically fragile
child" means a child to whom all of
the following apply:
(1) The child requires the services of a doctor of medicine
or osteopathic medicine at least once a week due to the
instability of the child's medical condition.
(2) The child requires the services of a registered nurse
on
a daily basis.
(3) The child is at risk of institutionalization in a
hospital, skilled nursing facility, or intermediate care facility
for the mentally retarded.
(U)(R) A child may be identified as "other health
handicapped-major" if the child's condition meets the definition
of "other health impaired" established in rules adopted by the
state board of education prior to
July 1, 2001, and if either of the following apply:
(1) The child is identified as having a medical condition
that is among those listed by the superintendent of public
instruction as conditions where a substantial majority of cases
fall within the definition of "medically fragile child." The
superintendent of public instruction shall issue an initial list
no later than September 1, 2001.
(2) The child is determined by the superintendent of public
instruction to be a medically fragile child. A school district
superintendent may petition the superintendent of public
instruction for a determination that a child is a medically
fragile child.
(V)(S) A child may be identified as "other health
handicapped-minor" if the child's condition meets the definition
of "other health impaired" established in rules adopted by the
state board of education prior to
July 1, 2001, but the child's condition does not meet
either of the
conditions specified in division (U)(R)(1) or (2) of
this section.
(W) "SF-3 payment" means the sum of the payments to a school district in a fiscal year under divisions (A), (C)(1), (C)(4), (D), (E), and (F) of section 3317.022, divisions (G), (L), and (N) of section 3317.024, and sections 3317.029, 3317.0216, 3317.0217, 3317.04, 3317.05, 3317.052, and 3317.053 of the Revised Code after making the adjustments required by sections 3313.981 and 3313.979 of the Revised Code, divisions (B), (C), (D), (E), (K), (L), (M), (N), and (O) of section 3317.023, and division (C) of section 3317.20 (T) "State education aid" has the same meaning as in section 5751.20 of the Revised Code.
(X)(U) "Property exemption value" means zero in fiscal year 2006, and in fiscal year 2007 and each fiscal year thereafter, the amount certified for a school district under divisions (A)(6) and (7) of section 3317.021 of the Revised Code.
(V) "Internet- or computer-based community school" has the same meaning as in section 3314.02 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3317.021. (A) On or before the first day of June of
each year, the tax commissioner shall certify to the department
of
education and the office of budget and management the information described in divisions (A)(1) to (8) of this section for each city, exempted
village, and local school district, and the information required
by divisions (A)(1) and (2) of this section for each joint
vocational school district, and it shall be used, along with the
information certified under division (B) of this section, in
making the computations for the district under
sections
3317.022, 3317.0216,
and 3317.0217 or
section 3317.16 of the Revised Code.
(1) The taxable value of real and public utility real
property in the school district subject to taxation in the
preceding tax year, by class and by county of location.
(2) The taxable value of tangible personal property,
including public utility personal property, subject to taxation
by
the district for the preceding tax year.
(3)(a) The total property tax rate and total taxes charged
and payable for the current expenses for the preceding tax year
and the total property tax rate and the total taxes charged and
payable to a joint vocational district for the preceding tax year
that are limited to or to the extent apportioned to current
expenses.
(b) The portion of the amount of taxes charged and payable
reported for each city, local, and exempted village school
district under
division (A)(3)(a) of this section attributable to
a
joint vocational school district.
(4) The value of all real and public utility real property
in the school district exempted from taxation minus both of the
following:
(a) The value of real and public utility real property in
the district owned by the United States government and used
exclusively for a public purpose;
(b) The value of real and public utility real property in
the district exempted from taxation under Chapter 725. or 1728. or
section
3735.67, 5709.40, 5709.41, 5709.62, 5709.63, 5709.632,
5709.73, or 5709.78 of
the Revised Code.
(5) The total
federal adjusted gross income of the
residents
of the school
district, based on tax returns filed by
the
residents of the
district, for the most recent year for which
this
information is
available.
(6) The sum of the school district compensation value as indicated on the list of exempted property for the preceding tax year under section 5713.08 of the Revised Code as if such property had been assessed for taxation that year and the other compensation value for the school district, minus the amounts described in divisions (A)(6)(c) to (i) of this section. The portion of school district compensation value or other compensation value attributable to an incentive district exemption may be subtracted only once even if that incentive district satisfies more than one of the criteria in divisions (A)(6)(c) to (i) of this section.
(a) "School district compensation value" means the aggregate value of real property in the school district exempted from taxation pursuant to an ordinance or resolution adopted under division (C) of section 5709.40, division (C) of section 5709.73, or division (B) of section 5709.78 of the Revised Code to the extent that the exempted value results in the charging of payments in lieu of taxes required to be paid to the school district under division (D)(1) or (2) of section 5709.40, division (D) of section 5709.73, or division (C) of section 5709.78 of the Revised Code.
(b) "Other compensation value" means the quotient that results from dividing (i) the dollar value of compensation received by the school district during the preceding tax year pursuant to division (B), (C), or (D) of section 5709.82 of the Revised Code and the amounts received pursuant to an agreement as specified in division (D)(2) of section 5709.40, division (D) of section 5709.73, or division (C) of section 5709.78 of the Revised Code to the extent those amounts were not previously reported or included in division (A)(6)(a) of this section, and so that any such amount is reported only once under division (A)(6)(b) of this section, in relation to exemptions from taxation granted pursuant to an ordinance or resolution adopted under division (C) of section 5709.40, division (C) of section 5709.73, or division (B) of section 5709.78 of the Revised Code, by (ii) the real property tax rate in effect for the preceding tax year for nonresidential/agricultural real property after making the reductions required by section 319.301 of the Revised Code.
(c) The portion of school district compensation value or other compensation value that was exempted from taxation pursuant to such an ordinance or resolution for the preceding tax year, if the ordinance or resolution is adopted prior to January 1, 2006, and the legislative authority or board of township trustees or county commissioners, prior to January 1, 2006, executes a contract or agreement with a developer, whether for-profit or not-for-profit, with respect to the development of a project undertaken or to be undertaken and identified in the ordinance or resolution, and upon which parcels such project is being, or will be, undertaken;
(d) The portion of school district compensation value that was exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year and for which payments in lieu of taxes for the preceding tax year were provided to the school district under division (D)(1) of section 5709.40 of the Revised Code.
(e) The portion of school district compensation value that was exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year pursuant to such an ordinance or resolution, if and to the extent that, on or before April 1, 2006, the fiscal officer of the municipal corporation that adopted the ordinance, or of the township or county that adopted the resolution, certifies and provides appropriate supporting documentation to the tax commissioner and the director of development that, based on hold-harmless provisions in any agreement between the school district and the legislative authority of the municipal corporation, board of township trustees, or board of county commissioners that was entered into on or before June 1, 2005, the ability or obligation of the municipal corporation, township, or county to repay bonds, notes, or other financial obligations issued or entered into prior to January 1, 2006, will be impaired, including obligations to or of any other body corporate and politic with whom the legislative authority of the municipal corporation or board of township trustees or county commissioners has entered into an agreement pertaining to the use of service payments derived from the improvements exempted;
(f) The portion of school district compensation value that was exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year pursuant to such an ordinance or resolution, if the ordinance or resolution is adopted prior to January 1, 2006, in a municipal corporation with a population that exceeds one hundred thousand, as shown by the most recent federal decennial census, that includes a major employment center and that is adjacent to historically distressed neighborhoods, if the legislative authority of the municipal corporation that exempted the property prepares an economic analysis that demonstrates that all taxes generated within the incentive district accruing to the state by reason of improvements constructed within the district during its existence exceed the amount the state pays the school district under section 3317.022 of the Revised Code attributable to such property exemption from the school district's recognized valuation. The analysis shall be submitted to and approved by the department of development prior to January 1, 2006, and the department shall not unreasonably withhold approval.
(g) The portion of school district compensation value that was exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year under such an ordinance or resolution, if the ordinance or resolution is adopted prior to January 1, 2006, and if service payments have been pledged to be used for mixed-use riverfront entertainment development in any county with a population that exceeds six hundred thousand, as shown by the most recent federal decennial census;
(h) The portion of school district compensation value that was exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year under such an ordinance or resolution, if, prior to January 1, 2006, the legislative authority of a municipal corporation, board of township trustees, or board of county commissioners has pledged service payments for a designated transportation capacity project approved by the transportation review advisory council under Chapter 5512. of the Revised Code;
(i) The portion of school district compensation value that was exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year under such an ordinance or resolution if the legislative authority of a municipal corporation, board of township trustees, or board of county commissioners have, by January 1, 2006, pledged proceeds for designated transportation improvement projects that involve federal funds for which the proceeds are used to meet a local share match requirement for such funding.
As used in division (A)(6) of this section, "project" has the same meaning as in section 5709.40 of the Revised Code.
(7) The aggregate value of real property in the school district for which an exemption from taxation is granted by an ordinance or resolution adopted on or after January 1, 2006, under Chapter 725. or 1728., sections 3735.65 to 3735.70, or section 5709.62, 5709.63, 5709.632, 5709.84, or 5709.88 of the Revised Code, as indicated on the list of exempted property for the preceding tax year under section 5713.08 of the Revised Code and as if such property had been assessed for taxation that year, minus the product determined by multiplying (a) the aggregate value of the real property in the school district exempted from taxation for the preceding tax year under any of the chapters or sections specified in this division, by (b) a fraction, the numerator of which is the difference between (i) the amount of anticipated revenue such school district would have received for the preceding tax year if the real property exempted from taxation had not been exempted from taxation and (ii) the aggregate amount of payments in lieu of taxes on the exempt real property for the preceding tax year and other compensation received for the preceding tax year by the school district pursuant to any agreements entered into on or after January 1, 2006, under section 5709.82 of the Revised Code between the school district and the legislative authority of a political subdivision that acted under the authority of a chapter or statute specified in this division, that were entered into in relation to such exemption, and the denominator of which is the amount of anticipated revenue such school district would have received in the preceding fiscal year if the real property exempted from taxation had not been exempted.
(8) For each school district receiving payments under division (B) or (C) of section 3317.0216 of the Revised Code during the current fiscal year, as included on the most recent list of such districts sent to the tax commissioner under division (F) of that section, the following:
(a) The portion of the total amount of taxes charged and payable for current expenses certified under division (A)(3)(a) of this section that is attributable to each new levy approved and charged in the preceding tax year and the respective tax rate of each of those new levies;
(b) The portion of the total taxes collected for current expenses under a school district income tax adopted pursuant to section 5748.03 or 5748.08 of the Revised Code, as certified under division (A)(2) of section 3317.08 of the Revised Code, that is attributable to each new school district income tax first effective in the current taxable year or in the preceding taxable year.
(B) On or before the first day of May each year, the tax
commissioner shall certify to the department of education and the office of budget and management the
total taxable real property value of railroads and, separately,
the total taxable tangible personal property value of all public
utilities for the preceding tax year, by school district and by
county of location.
(C) If a public utility has properly and timely filed a
petition for
reassessment under section 5727.47 of the Revised
Code with respect to an assessment issued
under section 5727.23 of
the Revised Code affecting taxable property
apportioned by the tax
commissioner to a school district, the taxable value of public
utility
tangible personal property
included in the certification
under divisions (A)(2) and (B)
of
this section for the school
district shall include only the amount of taxable
value on the
basis of
which the public utility paid tax for the preceding year
as provided in
division (B)(1) or (2)
of section 5727.47 of the
Revised Code.
(D) If on the basis of the information certified under
division (A) of this section, the department determines that any
district fails in any year to meet the qualification requirement
specified in division (A) of section 3317.01 of the Revised Code,
the department shall immediately request the tax commissioner to
determine the extent to which any school district income tax
levied by the district under Chapter 5748. of the Revised Code
shall be included in meeting that requirement. Within five days
of receiving such a request from the department, the tax
commissioner shall make the determination required by this
division and report the quotient obtained under division
(D)(3)
of
this section to the department and the office of budget and management. This quotient represents the
number of mills that the department shall include in determining
whether the district meets the qualification requirement of
division (A) of section 3317.01 of the Revised Code.
The tax commissioner shall make the determination required
by
this division as follows:
(1) Multiply one mill times the total taxable value of the
district as determined in divisions (A)(1) and (2) of this
section;
(2) Estimate the total amount of tax liability for the
current tax year under taxes levied by Chapter 5748. of the
Revised Code that are apportioned to current operating expenses
of
the district;
(3) Divide the amount estimated under division (D)(2) of
this section by the product obtained under division (D)(1)
of
this
section.
(E)(1) On or before June 1, 2006, and the first day of April of each year thereafter, the director of development shall report to the department of education and, the tax commissioner, and the director of budget and management the total amounts of payments received by each city, local, exempted village, or joint vocational school district for the preceding tax year pursuant to division (D) of section 5709.40, division (D) of section 5709.73, division (C) of section 5709.78, or division (B)(1), (B)(2), (C), or (D) of section 5709.82 of the Revised Code in relation to exemptions from taxation granted pursuant to an ordinance adopted by the legislative authority of a municipal corporation under division (C) of section 5709.40 of the Revised Code, or a resolution adopted by a board of township trustees or board of county commissioners under division (C) of section 5709.73 or division (B) of section 5709.78 of the Revised Code, respectively. On or before April 1, 2006, and the first day of March of each year thereafter, the treasurer of each city, local, exempted village, or joint vocational school district that has entered into such an agreement shall report to the director of development the total amounts of such payments the district received for the preceding tax year as provided in this section. The state board of education, in accordance with sections 3319.31 and 3319.311 of the Revised Code, may suspend or revoke the license of a treasurer found to have willfully reported erroneous, inaccurate, or incomplete data under this division.
(2) On or before April 1, 2007, and the first day of April of each year thereafter, the director of development shall report to the department of education and to, the tax commissioner, and the director of budget and management the total amounts of payments received by each city, local, exempted village, or joint vocational school district for the preceding tax year pursuant to divisions (B), (C), and (D) of section 5709.82 of the Revised Code in relation to exemptions from taxation granted pursuant to ordinances or resolutions adopted on or after January 1, 2006, under Chapter 725. or 1728., sections 3735.65 to 3735.70, or section 5709.62, 5709.63, 5709.632, 5709.84, or 5709.88 of the Revised Code. On or before March 1, 2007, and the first day of March of each year thereafter, the treasurer of each city, local, exempted village, or joint vocational school district that has entered into such an agreement shall report to the director of development the total amounts of such payments the district received for the preceding tax year as provided by this section. The state board of education, in accordance with sections 3319.31 and 3319.311 of the Revised Code, may suspend or revoke the license of a treasurer found to have willfully reported erroneous, inaccurate, or incomplete data under this division.
Sec. 3317.022. (A)(1) The department of education shall
compute
and distribute state base cost funding to
each eligible school
district for the fiscal year
using
the
information obtained
under section
3317.021 of the Revised
Code in
the calendar year in
which the
fiscal year begins.
(1) Compute the following for each eligible district formula:
{[cost-of-doing-business factor Xthe formula amount X (formula ADM + preschool scholarship ADM)] + the sum of the base funding supplements prescribed in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code} -[.023 x (the sum of recognized valuation and property exemption value)] +
the amounts calculated for the district undersections 3317.029 and 3317.0217 of the Revised Code
If the difference obtained is a negative number, the
district's computation shall be zero.
(2) Compute both of the following for each school district:
(a) The difference of (i) the district's fiscal year 2005 base cost payment under the version of division (A)(1) of this section in effect in fiscal year 2005, minus (ii) the amount computed for the district for the current fiscal year under current division (A)(1) of this section;
(b) The following amount:
[(fiscal year 2005 base cost payment/fiscal year 2005 formula ADM) X (current year formula ADM + preschool scholarship ADM)] minus the amount computed for the district under current division (A)(1) of this section
If one of the amounts computed under division (A)(2)(a) or (b) of this section is a positive amount, the department shall pay the district that amount in addition to the amount calculated under division (A)(1) of this section. If both amounts are positive amounts, the department shall pay the district the lesser of the two amounts in addition to the amount calculated under division (A)(1) of this section.
(3)(a) For each school district for which the tax exempt
value of the district equals or exceeds twenty-five per cent of
the potential value of the district, the department of education
shall calculate the difference between the district's tax exempt
value and twenty-five per cent of the district's potential value.
(b) For each school district to which division
(A)(3)(2)(a) of
this section applies, the
department
shall adjust the recognized
valuation used in
the
calculation
under
division (A)(1) of this
section
by subtracting
from it the amount
calculated under
division (A)(3)(2)(a) of this section.
(B) As used in this section:
(1) The "total special education weight" for a district
means the sum of the following amounts:
(a) The district's category one special education ADM
multiplied by the
multiple specified
in division
(A) of
section
3317.013 of the Revised Code;
(b) The
district's category two
special education
ADM
multiplied by the
multiple
specified
in division
(B) of section
3317.013 of the Revised
Code;
(c) The district's category three special education ADM
multiplied by the multiple specified in division (C) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code;
(d) The district's category four special education ADM
multiplied by the multiple specified in division (D) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code;
(e) The district's category five special education ADM
multiplied by the multiple specified in division (E) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code;
(f) The district's category six special education ADM
multiplied by the multiple specified in division (F) of section
3317.013 of the Revised Code.
(2) "State share percentage" means the percentage calculated
for a
district as follows:
(a) Calculate the state base cost funding amount for
the
district for
the fiscal year under division (A) of this section.
If
the district would not receive any state base cost
funding for
that year
under that division, the district's state share
percentage is zero.
(b) If the district would receive state base cost
funding
under that
division, divide that amount by an amount equal to the
following:
(Cost-of-doing-business factor X the formula amount X formula ADM) + the sum of the base funding supplementsprescribed in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code +the sum of the amounts calculated for the district undersections 3317.029 and 3317.0217 of the Revised Code
The resultant number is the district's state share
percentage.
(3)
"Related services" includes:
(a) Child study, special education supervisors and
coordinators, speech and hearing services, adaptive physical
development services, occupational or physical therapy,
teacher
assistants for handicapped children whose
handicaps are described
in division
(B) of section 3317.013 or division (F)(3) of section
3317.02 of the Revised Code, behavioral intervention,
interpreter
services, work study, nursing services, and
specialized
integrative services as those terms are defined by the department;
(b) Speech and language services provided to any
student
with a handicap, including any student whose primary or
only
handicap is a speech and language handicap;
(c) Any related service not specifically covered
by other
state funds but specified in federal law, including but
not
limited to, audiology and school psychological services;
(d) Any service included in units funded under
former
division (O)(1) of
section 3317.023 3317.024 of the Revised Code;
(e) Any other related service needed by
handicapped children
in accordance with their individualized
education plans.
(4) The "total vocational education weight" for a district
means
the sum of the following amounts:
(a) The district's category one vocational education ADM
multiplied by the multiple specified in division (A) of section
3317.014 of the Revised Code;
(b) The district's category two vocational education ADM
multiplied by the multiple specified in division (B) of section
3317.014 of the Revised Code.
(5) "Preschool scholarship ADM" means the number of handicapped preschool children reported under division (B)(3)(h) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code.
(C)(1) The department shall compute and distribute state
special education and related services additional weighted costs
funds
to each school district in accordance with the following
formula:
The district's state share percentage Xthe formula amount for the year for whichthe aid is calculated X the district'stotal special education weight
(2)
The
attributed local share of special education and
related services additional
weighted costs equals:
(1 - the district's state share percentage) X the district'stotal special education weight X the formula amount
(3)(a) The department shall compute and
pay in accordance
with
this division additional state aid to
school districts for
students in
categories two through six special
education ADM. If
a district's
costs for the fiscal year for a
student in its
categories two through six
special
education ADM
exceed the
threshold catastrophic cost for serving the student,
the
district
may submit to
the superintendent of public
instruction
documentation, as
prescribed by the superintendent, of
all its
costs for that
student. Upon submission of documentation
for a
student of the
type and in the manner prescribed, the
department
shall pay to
the district an amount equal to the
sum of the
following:
(i) One-half of the district's costs for the student in
excess of the threshold catastrophic cost;
(ii) The product of one-half of the
district's costs for the
student in excess of
the threshold catastrophic cost multiplied
by
the district's state share percentage.
(b) For purposes of division (C)(3)(a) of this section, the
threshold catastrophic cost for serving a student equals:
(i) For a student in the school district's category two,
three, four, or five special education ADM, twenty-five thousand
dollars in fiscal year 2002, twenty-five thousand seven hundred
dollars in fiscal years 2003, 2004, and 2005, and twenty-six thousand five hundred dollars in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 twenty-seven thousand three hundred seventy-five dollars in fiscal years 2008 and 2009;
(ii) For a student in the district's category six special
education ADM, thirty thousand dollars in fiscal year 2002,
thirty thousand eight hundred forty dollars in fiscal years 2003, 2004, and 2005, and thirty-one thousand eight hundred dollars in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 thirty-two thousand eight hundred fifty dollars in fiscal years 2008 and 2009.
(c) The district shall only report
under division (C)(3)(a)
of this section, and the department shall only
pay
for, the
costs
of educational expenses and the related
services provided
to
the
student in accordance with the student's
individualized
education
program. Any legal fees, court costs, or
other costs
associated
with any cause of action relating to the
student may
not be
included in the amount.
(4)(a) As used in this division, the "personnel
allowance"
means
thirty
thousand dollars
in fiscal
years 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007 2008 and 2009.
(b) For the provision of speech language pathology services to students,
including students
who do
not have
individualized education
programs prepared for
them under
Chapter
3323. of the Revised
Code, and for
no
other purpose, the department of education shall
pay each
school district an
amount calculated under the following
formula:
(formula ADM divided by 2000) X
the personnel allowance X the state share percentage
(5) In any fiscal year, a school district
shall spend
for
purposes that the department designates as approved for
special
education
and related services
expenses
at least the amount
calculated
as follows:
(cost-of-doing-business factor Xformula amount X
the sum of categoriesone through six special education ADM) +(total special education weight X formula amount)
The purposes approved by the department for special education
expenses shall include, but shall not be limited to,
identification of handicapped children, compliance with state
rules governing the education of handicapped children and
prescribing the continuum of program options for handicapped
children, provision of speech language pathology services, and the portion of the school district's overall
administrative and overhead costs that are attributable to the
district's special education student population.
The scholarships deducted from the school district's account under section 3310.41 or 3310.55 of the Revised Code shall be considered to be an approved special education and related services expense for the purpose of the school district's compliance with division (C)(5) of this section.
The department shall require school districts to report data
annually to allow for monitoring compliance with division (C)(5)
of this section. The department shall annually report to the
governor and the general assembly the amount of money spent by
each school district for special education and related services.
(6) In any fiscal year, a school district shall spend for the provision of speech language pathology services not less than the sum of the amount calculated under division (C)(1) of this section for the students in the district's category one special education ADM and the amount calculated under division (C)(4) of this section.
The scholarships deducted from the school district's account under section 3310.55 of the Revised Code for students counted in the district's category one special education ADM shall be considered to be an approved speech language pathology services expense for the purpose of the school district's compliance with division (C)(6) of this section.
(D)(1) As used in this division:
(a) "Daily bus miles per student" equals the number of bus
miles
traveled per day, divided by transportation base.
(b) "Transportation base" equals total student count as
defined
in section 3301.011 of the Revised Code, minus the number
of
students enrolled in preschool handicapped units, plus the
number
of nonpublic school students included in transportation
ADM.
(c) "Transported student percentage" equals transportation
ADM divided by transportation base.
(d) "Transportation cost per student" equals total operating
costs for board-owned or contractor-operated school buses divided
by
transportation base.
(2) Analysis of student transportation cost data has
resulted in a
finding that an average efficient transportation use
cost per student
can be calculated by means of a regression
formula that has as its two
independent variables the number of
daily bus miles per student
and the transported student
percentage. For fiscal
year 1998 transportation cost data, the
average efficient
transportation use cost per student is expressed
as follows:
51.79027 + (139.62626 X daily bus miles per student) +
(116.25573 X transported student percentage)
The department of education shall annually determine the
average
efficient transportation use cost per student in
accordance with the
principles stated in division (D)(2) of this
section, updating the
intercept and regression coefficients of the
regression formula
modeled in this division, based on an annual
statewide analysis of
each school district's daily bus miles per
student, transported
student percentage, and transportation cost
per student data. The
department shall conduct the annual update
using data, including
daily bus miles per student, transported
student percentage, and
transportation cost per student data, from
the prior fiscal year.
The department shall notify the office of
budget and management of
such update by the fifteenth day of
February of each year.
(3) In addition to funds paid under divisions (A), (C), and
(E) of this
section, each
district with a transported student
percentage greater than
zero shall receive a payment equal to a
percentage of the product of the district's transportation
base
from the prior fiscal year times the annually
updated average
efficient transportation use cost per student,
times an inflation
factor
of two and eight tenths per cent to account for the
one-year difference
between the data used in updating the
formula
and calculating the payment and the year in which the payment is
made. The percentage shall be the following percentage of that
product
specified for the corresponding fiscal year:
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FISCAL YEAR |
|
PERCENTAGE |
|
2000 |
|
52.5% |
|
2001 |
|
55% |
|
2002 |
|
57.5% |
|
2003 and thereafter |
|
The greater of 60%
or the district's state share percentage |
The payments made under division (D)(3) of this section each
year
shall be calculated based on all of the same prior year's
data used to update
the formula.
(4) In addition to funds paid under divisions (D)(2)
and (3)
of this section, a school district shall receive a
rough road
subsidy if
both of the following apply:
(a) Its county rough road percentage is higher than the
statewide
rough road percentage, as those terms are defined in
division
(D)(5) of this section;
(b) Its district student density is
lower than the statewide
student density, as those terms are defined in
that division.
(5) The rough road subsidy paid to each district meeting
the
qualifications of division (D)(4) of this section shall
be
calculated in accordance with the following formula:
(per rough mile subsidy X total rough road miles) X density multiplier
(a) "Per rough mile subsidy" equals the amount calculated in
accordance with the following formula:
0.75 - {0.75 X [(maximum rough road
percentage -county rough road percentage)/(maximum rough road
percentage - statewide rough road percentage)]}
(i) "Maximum rough road percentage" means the highest county
rough road percentage in the state.
(ii) "County rough road percentage" equals the percentage of
the mileage of state, municipal, county, and township roads that
is rated by
the department of transportation as
type A, B, C, E2,
or F in the
county in which the school district is located
or, if
the district is located in more than one county, the county
to
which it is assigned for purposes of determining its
cost-of-doing-business factor.
(iii) "Statewide rough road percentage" means the percentage
of
the statewide total mileage of state, municipal, county, and
township roads
that is rated as type A, B, C, E2, or
F by the
department of transportation.
(b) "Total rough road miles" means a school district's total
bus
miles traveled in one year times its county rough road
percentage.
(c) "Density multiplier" means a figure calculated in
accordance
with the following formula:
1 - [(minimum student density - district student
density)/(minimum student density -
statewide student density)]
(i) "Minimum student density" means the lowest district
student
density in the state.
(ii) "District student density" means a school district's
transportation base divided by the number of square miles in the
district.
(iii) "Statewide student density" means the sum of the
transportation bases for all school districts divided by the sum
of the square
miles in all school districts.
(6)(a) "Total cost of transportation" is equal to the cost of transporting qualifying riders using the following types of transportation:
(i) Board-owned, leased, and operated school buses;
(ii) School bus service contracted from another school, including transportation in a consortium arrangement on buses managed and reported by another district or entity;
(iii) Contractor-owned, leased, and operated school buses.
(b) "Qualifying riders" are students transported living over one mile from school in grades kindergarten through twelve, including students with dual enrollment in a joint vocational or cooperative education district, nonpublic school students, and community school students. Only students eligible for a transportation payment under section 3327.01 of the Revised Code shall be included in this count. This count shall be determined as the average number of students transported during the first full week of October, and reported as required by the department of education. Adjustments to this count may be made only in accordance with rules adopted by the department.
(c) "Nontraditional riders" are those qualifying riders being educated in a community school or a nonpublic school.
(d) "Total miles" is the total miles driven for all types of transportation as listed under division (D)(1)(a) of this section.
(e) "Transportation state share percentage" is the district's state share percentage, as defined in division (B)(2) of this section, as determined by the department for the district's second June state education aid payment of the previous fiscal year.
(f) "Assigned bus" means a bus used for transporting regular education qualifying riders.
(2) For each school district, the department shall determine the statewide average cost per student as follows:
(a) Determine the district's cost per student by dividing the total costs of transportation in the previous fiscal year by total qualifying riders in the previous fiscal year for each district.
(b) Exclude from the determination under division (D)(2)(a) of this section the ten districts with the highest cost per student and the ten districts with the lowest cost per student.
(c) After excluding the districts as prescribed in division (D)(2)(b) of this section, determine the statewide average cost per student by dividing the aggregate statewide total costs of transportation by the aggregate statewide total qualifying riders.
(3) For each school district, the department shall determine the statewide average cost per mile as follows:
(a) Determine the district's cost per mile by dividing the total costs of transportation in the previous fiscal year by the total miles in the previous fiscal year for each district.
(b) Exclude from the determination made under division (D)(3)(a) of this section, the ten districts with the highest cost per mile and the ten districts with the lowest cost per mile.
(c) After excluding the districts as prescribed in division (D)(3)(b) of this section, determine the statewide average cost per mile by dividing the aggregate statewide total miles for all districts by the aggregate statewide total qualifying riders.
(4) For each school district, the department shall determine each district's base calculation as follows:
(a) Determine the per student base by multiplying the state average cost per student as determined under division (D)(2)(a) of this section by the district's current year total qualifying riders.
(b) Determine the per mile base by multiplying the state average cost per mile as determined under division (D)(3)(a) of this section by the district's current year total miles.
(c) Determine the current year base by multiplying the greater of the amount determined under division (D)(4)(a) or (b) of this section by the greater of sixty per cent or the district's transportation state share percentage as defined under division (D)(1) of this section.
(5) For each school district, the department calculate the district's nontraditional student adjustment as follows:
(a) Determine the district's nontraditional student ratio by dividing total nontraditional riders by total qualifying riders.
(b) Multiply the ratio determined under division (D)(5)(a) of this section by 0.1.
(c) Multiply the product calculated under division (D)(5)(b) of this section by the district's current year base.
(6) If a district provides any of the types of transportation listed in division (D)(1)(a) of this section to all of its high school students, the department shall multiply the district's current year base by 0.025.
(7) If a district provides any of the types of transportation listed in division (D)(1)(a) of this section to students in grades kindergarten to eight living less than two miles from school but greater than one mile from school, the district's current year base shall be multiplied by 0.025.
(8) For each school district, the department shall calculate an adjustment based upon efficiency. "Efficiency" means the ability to exceed a target number of riders per assigned bus. The target value shall be recalculated each year based upon current year data, and based upon the median riders per assigned bus.
(a) Each district's efficiency target shall be adjusted based upon its ridership density, using a formula that compares its ridership density with other districts, and adjusts the ridership target based upon that relative density.
(b) The efficiency index for each district shall be determined by dividing each district's current year qualifying riders per assigned bus by its target riders per assigned bus.
(c) The efficiency adjustment for each district shall be as follows:
(i) If the district's efficiency index is greater than or equal to 1.5, the efficiency adjustment is ten per cent times the current year base.
(ii) If the district's efficiency index is less than 1.5 but greater than or equal to 1.0, the district's efficiency adjustment is as follows:
[(the district's efficiency index minus one) divided by five] times the current year base.
(iii) If the district's efficiency index is less than 1.0, the district's efficiency adjustment is zero.
(d) The department shall publish on its web site the efficiency index for each district and the details of how the index was calculated.
(9) Each district shall be paid the lesser of the amount described in division (D)(9)(a) or (b) of this section:
(a) The sum of the amounts determined under divisions (D)(4)(c), (5)(c), (6), (7), and (8)(c) of this section;
(b) The district's total actual cost from the prior fiscal year.
(10) In addition to funds paid under divisions
(D)(2) to (5) division (D)(9)
of this section, each district
shall receive in accordance with
rules adopted by the state board of education
a payment for
students transported by
means other than board-owned or
contractor-operated buses and whose
transportation is not funded
under division (G) of section 3317.024
of the Revised Code. The
rules shall include
provisions for school district reporting of
such students.
(E)(1) The department shall compute and distribute state
vocational
education additional weighted costs funds to each
school district in
accordance with the following formula:
state share percentage X
the formula amount X
total vocational education weight
In any fiscal year, a school district receiving funds under
division (E)(1) of this section shall spend those funds only for
the purposes that the department designates as approved for
vocational
education expenses. Vocational educational expenses approved by the department shall include only expenses connected to the delivery of career-technical programming to career-technical students. The department shall require the school district to report data annually so that the department may monitor the district's compliance with the requirements regarding the manner in which funding received under division (E)(1) of this section may be spent.
(2) The department shall compute for each school
district
state funds for vocational education associated services in
accordance with the following formula:
state share percentage X .05 X the formula amount X
the sum of categories one and two vocational education ADM
In any fiscal year, a school district receiving funds under
division (E)(2) of this section, or through a transfer of funds
pursuant to division (L) of section 3317.023 of the Revised Code,
shall spend
those funds only for
the purposes that the department
designates as approved for vocational
education associated
services expenses, which may
include such purposes as
apprenticeship coordinators, coordinators for other
vocational
education services, vocational
evaluation, and other purposes
designated by the department. The
department may deny payment
under division (E)(2) of this section to
any district that the
department determines is not operating those services or
is using
funds paid under
division (E)(2) of this section, or through a
transfer of funds
pursuant to division (L) of section 3317.023 of
the Revised Code, for other
purposes.
(F) The actual local share in
any fiscal year for the
combination of special education and
related services additional
weighted costs funding calculated
under division (C)(1) of this
section, transportation funding
calculated under divisions (D)(2)
and (3) of this section, and
vocational education and associated
services additional weighted
costs funding calculated under
divisions (E)(1) and (2) of this
section shall not exceed for any
school district the product of
three and three-tenths mills times the district's
recognized valuation. The department annually shall pay
each
school
district as an excess cost supplement any amount by
which
the sum
of the district's attributed local shares for that
funding
exceeds
that product. For purposes of calculating the
excess cost
supplement:
(1) The attributed local share for special education and
related services additional weighted costs funding is the amount
specified in division (C)(2) of this section.
(2) The attributed local share of transportation funding
equals the difference of the total amount calculated for the
district using the formula developed under division (D)(2) of this
section minus the actual amount paid to the district after
applying the percentage specified in division (D)(3) of this
section one hundred one per cent of the district's local share of transportation funding calculated by the department for the previous fiscal year.
(3) The attributed local share of vocational education and
associated services additional weighted costs funding is the
amount determined as follows:
(1 - state share percentage) X [(total vocational education weight X the formula amount) + the payment under division (E)(2) of this section]
Sec. 3317.023. (A) Notwithstanding section 3317.022 of
the
Revised Code, the amounts required to be paid to a district
under
this chapter shall be adjusted by the amount
of the computations
made under divisions (B) to
(O)(P) of this
section.
(1)
"Classroom teacher" means a licensed employee who
provides direct instruction to pupils, excluding teachers funded
from money paid to the district from federal sources; educational
service personnel; and vocational and special education teachers.
(2)
"Educational service personnel" shall not include such
specialists funded from money paid to the district from federal
sources or assigned full-time to vocational or special education
students and classes and may only include those persons employed
in the eight specialist areas in a pattern approved by the
department of education under guidelines established by the state
board of education.
(3)
"Annual salary" means the annual base salary stated in
the state minimum salary schedule for the performance of the
teacher's regular teaching duties that the teacher earns for
services rendered for the first full week of October of the
fiscal
year for which the adjustment is made under division
(C) of this
section. It shall not include any salary payments for
supplemental teachers contracts.
(4)
"Regular student population" means the formula ADM
plus
the number of students reported as enrolled in the district
pursuant
to division (A)(1) of section 3313.981 of the Revised
Code;
minus the number of students reported under
division (A)(2)
of section 3317.03 of the Revised
Code; minus the FTE of students
reported under
division (B)(6), (7), (8),
(9), (10), (11),
or (12) of
that
section who are enrolled
in a vocational education
class or
receiving special education;
and minus twenty per cent of the
students
enrolled concurrently in a joint
vocational school
district.
(5)
"State share percentage"
has the same
meaning
as in
section
3317.022
of the Revised Code.
(6)
"VEPD" means a school district or group of school
districts
designated by the department of education as being
responsible for the
planning for and provision of vocational
education
services to students within the district or group.
(7)
"Lead district" means a school district, including a
joint
vocational school district, designated by the department as
a
VEPD, or designated to provide primary vocational education
leadership within a VEPD composed of a group of districts.
(B) If the district employs less than one full-time
equivalent classroom teacher for each twenty-five pupils in
the
regular student population in any school district, deduct the sum
of the amounts obtained
from the following computations:
(1) Divide the number of the district's full-time
equivalent
classroom teachers employed by one twenty-fifth;
(2) Subtract the quotient in (1) from the district's
regular
student population;
(3) Multiply the difference in (2) by seven hundred
fifty-two dollars.
(C) If a positive amount, add one-half of the amount
obtained by multiplying the number of full-time equivalent
classroom teachers by:
(1) The mean annual salary of all full-time equivalent
classroom teachers employed by the district at their respective
training and experience levels minus;
(2) The mean annual salary of all such teachers at their
respective levels in all school districts receiving payments
under
this section.
The number of full-time equivalent classroom teachers used
in
this computation shall not exceed one twenty-fifth of the
district's regular student population. In calculating
the
district's mean salary under
this division, those full-time
equivalent classroom teachers with
the highest training level
shall be counted first, those with the
next highest training level
second, and so on, in descending
order. Within the respective
training levels, teachers with the
highest years of service shall
be counted first, the next highest
years of service second, and so
on, in descending order.
(D) This division does not apply to a school district that
has entered into an agreement under division (A) of section
3313.42 of the Revised Code. Deduct the amount obtained from the
following computations if the district employs fewer than five
full-time equivalent educational service personnel, including
elementary school art, music, and physical education teachers,
counselors, librarians, visiting teachers, school social workers,
and school nurses for each one thousand pupils in the
regular
student population:
(1) Divide the number of full-time equivalent educational
service personnel employed by the district by five
one-thousandths;
(2) Subtract the quotient in (1) from the district's
regular
student population;
(3) Multiply the difference in (2) by ninety-four dollars.
(E) If a local school district, or a city or exempted
village school district to which a governing board of
an
educational service center provides services
pursuant to section
3313.843 of the Revised
Code, deduct the amount of the payment
required for the
reimbursement of the governing board under
section 3317.11 of the Revised
Code.
(F)(1) If the district is required to pay to or entitled
to
receive tuition from another school district under division
(C)(2)
or (3) of section 3313.64 or section 3313.65 of the
Revised Code,
or if the superintendent of public instruction is
required to
determine the correct amount of tuition and make a
deduction or
credit under section 3317.08 of the Revised Code,
deduct and
credit such amounts as provided in division (J) of
section 3313.64
or section 3317.08 of the Revised Code.
(2) For each child for whom the district is responsible
for
tuition or payment under division (A)(1) of section 3317.082 or
section 3323.091 of the Revised Code, deduct
the amount of tuition
or payment for which the district is responsible.
(G) If the district has been certified by the
superintendent
of public instruction under section 3313.90 of the
Revised Code as
not in compliance with the requirements of that
section, deduct an
amount equal to ten per cent of the amount
computed for the
district under section 3317.022 of the Revised
Code.
(H) If the district has received a loan from a
commercial
lending institution for which payments are made by the
superintendent of public instruction pursuant to division (E)(3)
of section 3313.483 of the Revised Code, deduct an amount equal
to
such payments.
(I)(1) If the district is a party to an agreement entered
into under division (D), (E), or (F) of section 3311.06 or
division (B) of section 3311.24 of the Revised Code and is
obligated to make payments to another district under such an
agreement, deduct an amount equal to such payments if the
district
school board notifies the department in writing that it
wishes to
have such payments deducted.
(2) If the district is entitled to receive payments from
another district that has notified the department to deduct such
payments under division (I)(1) of this section, add the
amount of
such payments.
(J) If the district is required to pay an amount of funds
to
a cooperative education district pursuant to a provision
described
by division (B)(4) of section 3311.52 or division
(B)(8) of
section 3311.521 of the Revised Code, deduct such
amounts as
provided under that provision and credit those amounts
to the
cooperative education district for payment to the district
under
division (B)(1) of section 3317.19 of the Revised Code.
(K)(1) If a district is educating a student entitled to
attend
school in another district pursuant to a shared education
contract, compact,
or cooperative education agreement other than
an agreement entered into
pursuant to section 3313.842 of the
Revised Code, credit to
that educating district on an FTE basis both of the following:
(a) An amount equal to the greater of the following:
(i) The fiscal year 2005 formula amount times the fiscal year 2005 cost of
doing
business factor of the school district where the student is
entitled to attend
school pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65
of the Revised
Code;
(ii) The sum of (the current formula amount times the current cost-of-doing-business factor of the school district when the student is entitled to attend school pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code) plus the per pupil amount of the base funding supplements specified in divisions (C)(1) to (4) of section 3317.012 of the Revised Code.
(b) An amount equal to the current formula amount times the state
share
percentage times any multiple applicable to the student
pursuant to section
3317.013 or 3317.014 of the Revised Code.
(2) Deduct any amount credited pursuant to division (K)(1)
of
this section from amounts paid to the school district in which
the student is
entitled to attend school pursuant to section
3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised Code.
(3) If the district is required by a shared education
contract, compact,
or cooperative education agreement to make
payments to an educational service
center, deduct the amounts from
payments to the district and add them to the
amounts paid to the
service center pursuant to section 3317.11 of the Revised
Code.
(L)(1) If a district, including a joint vocational school
district, is a lead district of a VEPD, credit to that district
the amounts calculated for all the school districts within that
VEPD pursuant to division (E)(2) of section
3317.022 of the
Revised Code.
(2) Deduct from each appropriate district that is not a lead
district, the amount attributable to that district that is
credited to a
lead district under division (L)(1) of this section.
(M) If the department pays a joint vocational school district under division (G)(4) of section 3317.16 of the Revised Code for excess costs of providing special education and related services to a handicapped student, as calculated under division (G)(2) of that section, the department shall deduct the amount of that payment from the city, local, or exempted village school district that is responsible as specified in that section for the excess costs.
(N)(1) If the district reports an amount of excess cost for special education services for a child under division (C) of section 3323.14 of the Revised Code, the department shall pay that amount to the district.
(2) If the district reports an amount of excess cost for special education services for a child under division (C) of section 3323.14 of the Revised Code, the department shall deduct that amount from the district of residence of that child.
(O) If the department of job and family services presents to the department of education a payment request through an intrastate transfer voucher for the nonfederal share of reimbursements made to a school district for medicaid services provided by the district, the department of education shall pay the amount of that request to the department of job and family services and shall deduct the amount of that payment from the district.
(P) If the department is required to pay an amount under section 3353.25 of the Revised Code to a school district delivering a course included in the clearinghouse established under section 3353.21 of the Revised Code for a student enrolled in a school district, the department shall deduct that amount from the school district in which the student is enrolled.
Sec. 3317.024. In addition to the moneys paid to eligible
school districts pursuant to section
3317.022 of the Revised Code,
moneys
appropriated for the education programs in divisions (A) to
(I),
(K), (L), and (N) of this
section shall be
distributed to school districts meeting
the requirements of
section 3317.01 of the Revised Code;
in the case of divisions (G)
and (L) of this
section, to educational service centers as
provided in section
3317.11 of the Revised Code; in the case of
divisions (D) and (J) of this section, to
county MR/DD
boards; in the case of division (N)
of this section,
to joint
vocational school districts; in the
case of division (H) of this
section, to
cooperative education school districts; and in the
case of division (M) of
this section, to the institutions defined
under section 3317.082 of the
Revised Code providing elementary or
secondary education programs to children
other than children
receiving special education under section 3323.091 of the
Revised
Code. The following shall be distributed monthly, quarterly, or
annually as may be determined by the state board of education:
(A) An amount for each island school district and each
joint
state school district for the operation of each high school
and
each elementary school maintained within such district and
for
capital improvements for such schools. Such amounts shall be
determined on the basis of standards adopted by the state board
of
education.
(B) An amount for each school district operating classes
for
children of migrant workers who are unable to be in
attendance in
an Ohio school during the entire regular school
year. The amounts
shall be determined on the basis of standards
adopted by the state
board of education, except that payment
shall be made only for
subjects regularly offered by the school
district providing the
classes.
(C) An amount for each school district with guidance,
testing, and counseling programs approved by the state board of
education. The amount shall be determined on the basis of
standards adopted by the state board of education.
(D) An amount for the emergency purchase of school buses
as
provided for in section 3317.07 of the Revised Code;
(E) An amount for each school district required to pay
tuition for a child in an institution maintained by the
department
of youth services pursuant to section 3317.082 of the
Revised
Code, provided the child was
not included in the calculation of
the district's average daily
membership for the preceding school
year.
(F) An amount for adult basic literacy education for each
district participating in programs approved by the state board of
education. The amount shall be determined on the basis of
standards adopted by the state board of education.
(G) An amount for the approved cost of transporting
eligible pupils with disabilities attending a special education program approved by the department of education whom it is impossible or
impractical to transport by regular school bus in the course of
regular route transportation provided by the district or service
center. No district or service center is eligible to receive a
payment under this division for
the cost of transporting any pupil
whom it transports by regular
school bus and who is included in
the district's transportation
ADM. The state board of education
shall establish
standards and guidelines for use by the department
of education
in determining the approved cost of such
transportation for each
district or service center.
(H) An amount to each school district, including each
cooperative education school district, pursuant to section
3313.81
of the Revised Code to assist in providing free lunches
to needy
children and an amount to assist needy school districts
in
purchasing necessary equipment for food preparation. The
amounts
shall be determined on the basis of rules adopted by the
state
board of education.
(I) An amount to each school district, for each pupil
attending a chartered nonpublic elementary or high school within
the district. The amount shall equal the amount appropriated for
the implementation of section 3317.06 of the Revised Code divided
by the average daily membership in grades kindergarten through
twelve in nonpublic elementary and high schools within the state
as determined during the first full week in October of each
school
year.
(J) An amount for each county MR/DD board,
distributed on
the basis of standards adopted by the state board of education,
for the approved cost of transportation required for children
attending special education programs operated by the county MR/DD
board under section 3323.09 of the Revised Code;
(K) An amount for each school district that establishes a
mentor teacher program that complies with rules of the state
board
of education. No school district shall be required to establish
or
maintain such a program in any year unless sufficient funds are
appropriated
to cover the district's total costs for the program.
(L) An amount to each school district or educational service
center for the total number of gifted units approved pursuant to
section 3317.05 of the Revised Code. The amount for each such
unit shall be the sum of the minimum salary for the teacher of
the
unit, calculated on the basis of the teacher's training
level and
years of experience pursuant to
the salary schedule prescribed in
the version of section 3317.13 of the Revised Code
in effect prior
to
July 1, 2001,
plus fifteen
per cent of
that minimum salary
amount, plus two thousand six
hundred
seventy-eight
dollars.
(M) An amount to each
institution defined under section
3317.082 of the
Revised Code providing elementary or
secondary
education to children other than children receiving
special
education under section 3323.091 of the
Revised Code. This amount
for any
institution in any fiscal year shall equal the total of
all
tuition amounts required to be paid to the institution under
division (A)(1) of section
3317.082 of the Revised Code.
(N) A grant to each school district and joint vocational
school
district that operates a "graduation, reality, and
dual-role skills"
(GRADS) program for pregnant and parenting
students that is
approved by the department. The amount of the
payment shall be the district's
state share
percentage, as defined
in section 3317.022 or 3317.16 of the
Revised Code, times the
GRADS
personnel allowance times the full-time-equivalent number of
GRADS
teachers approved by the department. The GRADS personnel
allowance is
$47,555 in fiscal
years 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007 2008 and 2009.
The state board of education or any other board of
education
or governing board may provide for any resident of a district
or
educational service center territory any
educational service for
which funds are made available to the
board by the United States
under the authority of public law,
whether such funds come
directly or indirectly from the United
States or any agency or
department thereof or through the state
or any agency, department,
or political subdivision thereof.
Sec. 3317.025. On or before the first day of June of each
year, the tax commissioner shall certify the following
information
to the department of education and the office of budget and management, for each school
district in which
the value of the property described under
division (A) of this
section exceeds one per cent of the taxable
value of all real and
tangible personal property in the district
or in which is located
tangible personal property designed for
use or used in strip
mining operations, whose taxable value
exceeds five million
dollars, and the taxes upon which the
district is precluded from
collecting by virtue of legal
proceedings to determine the value
of such property:
(A) The total taxable value of all property in the
district
owned by a public utility or railroad that has filed a
petition
for reorganization under the "Bankruptcy Act," 47 Stat.
1474
(1898), 11 U.S.C. 205, as amended, and all tangible personal
property in the district designed for use or used in strip mining
operations whose taxable value exceeds five million dollars upon
which have not been paid in full on or before the first day of
April of that calendar year all real and tangible personal
property taxes levied for the preceding calendar year and which
the district was precluded from collecting by virtue of
proceedings under section 205 of said act or by virtue of legal
proceedings to determine the tax liability of such strip mining
equipment;
(B) The percentage of the total operating taxes charged
and
payable for school district purposes levied against such
valuation
for the preceding calendar year
that have not been
paid by
such
date;
(C) The product obtained by multiplying the value
certified
under division (A) of this section by the percentage
certified
under
division (B) of this section. If the value certified under
division (A) of this section includes taxable property owned by a
public utility or railroad that has filed a petition for
reorganization under the bankruptcy act, the amount used in
making
the calculation under this division shall be reduced by
one per
cent of the total value of all real and tangible personal
property
in the district or the value of the utility's
or railroad's
property, whichever is less.
Upon receipt of the certification, the department shall
recompute the payments required under section 3317.022
of the
Revised Code in the manner the payments would
have been computed
if:
(1) The amount certified under division (C) of this
section
was not subject to taxation by the district and was not
included
in the certification made under division (A)(1), (A)(2), or
(D) of
section 3317.021 of the Revised Code.
(2) The amount of taxes charged and payable and unpaid and
used to make the computation under division (B) of this section
had not been levied and had not been used in the computation
required by division (B) of section 3317.021 of the Revised Code.
The department shall pay the district that amount in the ensuing
fiscal year in lieu of the amounts computed under
section
3317.022
of the Revised Code.
If a school district received a grant from the catastrophic
expenditures account pursuant to division (C) of section 3316.20
of the Revised Code on the basis of the same circumstances for
which a recomputation is made under this section, the amount of
the recomputation shall be reduced and transferred in accordance
with division (C) of section 3316.20 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3317.026. (A) As used in this section,
"refunded
taxes" means taxes charged and payable from
real and tangible
personal property, including public utility
property, that have
been found to have been overpaid as the
result of reductions in
the taxable value of such property and that
have been refunded,
including any interest or penalty refunded
with those taxes. If
taxes are refunded over a period of time pursuant to
division
(B)(2), (3), or (4) of section 319.36 or division (C) of
section
5727.471 of the Revised Code,
the total amount of taxes required
to be refunded, excluding any interest
accruing after the day the
undertaking is entered into, shall be considered to
have been
refunded on the day the first portion of the overpayment is paid
or
credited.
(B) Not later than the last day of February each year,
each
county auditor shall certify to the tax commissioner, for
each
school district in the county, the amount of refunded taxes
refunded
in the preceding calendar year and the reductions in
taxable value that
resulted in those refunds, except for
reductions in taxable value that
previously have been reported to
the tax commissioner on an
abstract. If the tax commissioner
determines that
the amount of refunded taxes certified for a
school district
exceeds three per cent of the total taxes charged
and payable for current
expenses of the school district for the
calendar year in which those taxes
were refunded, the tax
commissioner shall certify the
reductions in taxable value that
resulted in those refunds on or before the
first day of June to
the department of education and the office of budget and management. Upon receiving the
certification by
the tax commissioner, the department of
education shall reduce the
total taxable value of the school
district, as defined in section
3317.02 of the
Revised Code, by the total amount of the
reductions
in taxable value that resulted in those refunds for the purpose of
computing the SF-3 payment state education aid for
the school district for the current
fiscal year. The
increase in the
amount of such aid resulting from the adjustment
required by
this section shall be paid to the school district on
or before
the thirty-first day of July of
the following fiscal year. The payment date shall be determined by the director of budget and management. The director shall select a payment date that is not earlier than the first day of June of the current fiscal year and not later than the thirty-first day of July of the following fiscal year. The department of education shall not pay the district under this section prior to approval by the director of budget and management to make that payment.
If an adjustment is
made under this
division in
the
amount
of state aid paid to a
school district, the tax value
reductions
from which that
adjustment results shall not be used in
recomputing aid to a
school district under section 3317.027 of the
Revised Code.
(C) If a school district received a grant from the
catastrophic expenditures account pursuant to division (C) of
section 3316.20 of the Revised Code on the basis of the same
circumstances for which an adjustment is made under this section,
the amount of the adjustment shall be reduced and transferred in
accordance with division (C) of section 3316.20 of the Revised
Code.
(D) Not later than the first day of June each year, the tax
commissioner shall certify to the department of education and the office of budget and management for
each
school district the total of the increases in taxable value
above
the amount of taxable value on which tax was paid, as
provided in
division (B)(1) or (2) of section 5727.47 of the
Revised Code, as
determined by the commissioner, and for which a
notification was
sent pursuant to section 5727.471 of the Revised
Code, in the
preceding calendar year.
Upon receiving the
certification, the
department shall increase
the total taxable
value, as defined in
section 3317.02 of the
Revised Code, of the
school district by the
total amount of the
increase in taxable
value certified by the
commissioner for
the
school district for
the purpose of computing
the school
district's
SF-3 payment state education aid for the
following fiscal year.
Sec. 3317.027. On or before the fifteenth day of May of
each
year, the tax commissioner shall certify to the department
of
education and the office of budget and management:
(A) The amount by which applications filed under section
5713.38 of the Revised Code or complaints filed under section
5715.19 of the Revised Code resulted in a reduction in the second
preceding year's taxable value in each school district in which
such a reduction occurred, and the amount by which such reduction
reduced the district's taxes charged and payable for such year;
and
(B) The taxes charged and payable for the second preceding
tax year that were remitted under section 5713.081 of the Revised
Code and the taxable value against which such taxes were imposed.
Upon receipt of such certifications, the department shall
recompute the district's SF-3 payment state education aid and determine the amount that the SF-3 payment state education aid
would have
been paid had the taxable value not been used in the
computation
made under division (A)(1) of section 3317.021 of the
Revised Code
and
had the taxes charged and payable not been included
in the
certification made under division (A)(3) of such section. The
department shall calculate the amount that the remainder of the fiscal year's
payments should have been for the fiscal year
including the amount of the SF-3 payment state education aid as recomputed. The increase or decrease in the amount of aid resulting from the adjustment required under this section shall be paid to the school district on or before the thirty-first day of July of the following fiscal year. The payment date shall be determined by the director of budget and management. The director shall select a payment date that is not earlier than the first day of June of the current fiscal year and not later than the thirty-first day of July of the following fiscal year. The department of education shall not pay the district under this section prior to approval by the director of budget and management to make that payment.
If a school district received a grant from the catastrophic
expenditures account pursuant to division (C) of section 3316.20
of the Revised Code on the basis of the same circumstances for
which a recomputation is made under this section, the amount of
the recomputation shall be reduced and transferred in accordance
with division (C) of section 3316.20 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3317.028. (A) On or before the fifteenth day of May in
each calendar year prior to calendar year 2007, the tax commissioner shall determine for each
school district whether the taxable value of all tangible
personal
property, including utility tangible personal property,
subject to
taxation by the district in the preceding tax year was
less or
greater than the taxable value of such property during
the second
preceding tax year. If any such decrease exceeds five
per cent of
the district's tangible personal property taxable
value included
in the total taxable value used in computing the district's
SF-3 payment state education aid for the fiscal year that ends in the
current calendar
year, or if any such increase exceeds five per
cent of the
district's total taxable value used in computing the district's
SF-3 payment state education aid for the fiscal year that ends in the
current calendar
year, the tax commissioner shall certify both of the
following to
the
department of education and the office of budget and management:
(1) The taxable value of the tangible personal property
increase or decrease, including utility tangible personal
property
increase or decrease, which shall be considered a change
in
valuation;
(2) The decrease or increase in taxes charged and payable
on
such change in taxable value calculated in the same manner as
in
division (A)(3) of section 3317.021 of the Revised Code.
(B) On or before May 15, 2007, and the fifteenth day of May in each calendar year thereafter, the tax commissioner shall determine for each school district whether the taxable value of all utility tangible personal property subject to taxation by the district in the preceding tax year was less or greater than the taxable value of such property during the second preceding tax year. If any decrease exceeds five per cent of the district's tangible personal property taxable value included in the total taxable value used in the district's state aid computation for the fiscal year that ends in the current calendar year, or if any increase exceeds five per cent of the district's total taxable value used in the district's state education aid computation for the fiscal year that ends in the current calendar year, the tax commissioner shall certify both of the following to the department of education and the office of budget and management:
(1) The taxable value of the utility tangible personal property increase or decrease, which shall be considered a change in valuation;
(2) The decrease or increase in taxes charged and payable on such change in taxable value calculated in the same manner as in division (A)(3) of section 3317.021 of the Revised Code.
(C) Upon receipt of a certification specified in this section, the department of
education shall reduce or increase by the respective amounts
certified and the taxable value and the taxes charged and payable
that were used in computing the district's SF-3 payment state education aid for the fiscal
year that ends
in the current calendar year and shall recompute
the SF-3 payment state education aid for
such fiscal year. The department shall pay the district a sum
equal to one-half of
the recomputed payments in lieu of the
payments otherwise required
under that section on or before the thirty-first day of July of the following fiscal year to or deduct from the district an amount equal to one-half of the difference between the district's state education aid prior to the recomputation under this section and the district's recomputed state education aid. The payment date shall be determined by the director of budget and management. The director shall select a payment date that is not earlier than the first day of June of the current fiscal year and not later than the thirty-first day of July of the following fiscal year. The department of education shall not pay the district under this section prior to approval by the director of budget and management to make that payment.
(D) If a school district received a grant from the
catastrophic expenditures account pursuant to division (C) of
section 3316.20 of the Revised Code on the basis of the same
circumstances for which a recomputation is made under this
section, the amount of the recomputation shall be reduced and
transferred in accordance with division (C) of section 3316.20 of
the Revised Code.
Sec. 3317.029. (A) As used in this section:
(1)
"Poverty percentage" means the quotient
obtained by
dividing
the five-year average number of children
ages
five to
seventeen
residing in the school district and
living in a
family
receiving
assistance
under the Ohio works first
program or
an antecedent program known as TANF or ADC for the preceding five years, as
certified or
adjusted
under
section 3317.10
of the Revised Code,
by the
district's
three-year
average formula
ADM.
(2)
"Statewide
poverty percentage" means the five-year
average
of the total number of
children ages five to seventeen
years
residing in the state and
receiving
assistance
under
the
Ohio works first program or an antecedent program known as
TANF or
ADC for the preceding five years, divided by
the
sum of the three-year average formula
ADMs
for
all school
districts in the state.
(3)
"Poverty index"
means the quotient obtained by dividing the
school district's poverty percentage
by the statewide
poverty percentage.
(4) "Poverty student count" means the
five-year
average number of children ages five to seventeen
residing in the
school district and living in a family receiving
assistance under
the Ohio works first program or an antecedent
program known as
TANF or ADC for the preceding five years, as certified under section 3317.10
of the Revised
Code.
(5) "Kindergarten ADM" means the number of
students reported
under section 3317.03 of the Revised Code as enrolled in
kindergarten, excluding any kindergarten students reported under division (B)(3)(e), (f), or (g) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code.
(6)
"Kindergarten through third grade
ADM" means the
amount
calculated as follows:
(a) Multiply the kindergarten
ADM by the sum of one plus the
all-day
kindergarten percentage;
(b) Add the number of students in grades one through three;
(c) Subtract from the sum calculated under division
(A)(6)(b) of this section the
number of special education students
in grades kindergarten
through three.
"Kindergarten through third grade ADM" shall not include any students reported under division (B)(3)(e), (f), or (g) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code.
(7)
"All-day kindergarten" means a
kindergarten class
that
is
in session five days per week for not
less than the same
number
of
clock hours each day as for pupils
in grades one through
six.
(8)
"All-day kindergarten percentage" means the
percentage
of
a
district's actual total number of students
enrolled in
kindergarten who are
enrolled in all-day kindergarten.
(9) "All-day kindergarten ADM" means the number of students reported under section 3317.03 of the Revised Code as enrolled in all-day kindergarten, excluding any kindergarten students reported under division (B)(3)(e), (f), or (g) of that section.
(10) "Academic distress percentage" means the quotient of the number of district-operated buildings in the school district designated under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code as in a state of academic watch or academic emergency, divided by the total number of buildings in the district that were open for instruction during the same school year to which the ratings apply.
(11) "Statewide academic distress percentage" means the quotient of the statewide number of school district buildings and community schools designated under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code as in a state of academic watch or academic emergency, divided by the statewide total number of school district buildings and community schools that were open for instruction during the same school year to which the ratings apply.
(12) "Academic distress index" means the quotient of the school district's academic distress percentage, divided by the statewide academic distress percentage.
(13)
"Buildings with the highest concentration of need"
means
the school
buildings in a district with that meet either of the following criteria:
(a) Are in school improvement status pursuant to the "No Child Left Behind Act of 2001," as defined in section 3302.01 of the Revised Code;
(b) Have percentages of
students
in grades
kindergarten
through three
receiving
assistance under Ohio works
first
at least as high as the
district-wide percentage of
students
receiving
such
assistance. However, the district shall give priority to any of those buildings that have been declared to be in a state of academic watch or academic emergency under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code.
If, in any fiscal year, the
information
provided by the
department of
job and family services
under
section 3317.10 of the
Revised
Code is insufficient to
determine
the
Ohio works first percentage in each building,
"buildings with
the
highest concentration of need" has the
meaning
given in rules
that
the department of education shall
adopt. The
rules shall
base the
definition of
"buildings with
the highest
concentration
of need"
on family income of students in
grades
kindergarten
through three
in a manner that, to the extent
possible
with
available data,
approximates the intent of this
division
and
division (K) of this
section to designate buildings
where the
Ohio works first
percentage in those grades equals or
exceeds the
district-wide
Ohio works first percentage.
(B) In addition to the
amounts required to be paid to a
school district under section
3317.022 of the Revised Code,
the The department of education shall compute and distribute to for each school district for poverty-based assistance the greater of the following:
(1) The amount the
district received in fiscal
year 2005 for disadvantaged pupil impact aid pursuant to Section 41.10 of Am. Sub. H.B. 95 of the 125th general assembly, as amended, minus the amount deducted from the district under Section 16 of Am. Sub. S.B. 2 of the 125th general assembly that year for payments to internet- and computer-based community schools;
(2) The sum of the
computations made under divisions (C) to (I)(J) of
this section and shall pay that sum to the district in accordance with division (A) of section 3317.022 of the Revised Code.
(C) A payment for academic intervention
programs,
if the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 0.25, calculated as follows:
(1) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 0.25, calculate the district's level one amount for large-group academic intervention for all students as follows:
(a) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 0.25 but less than 0.75:
large-group intervention units X hourly rate X
level one hours X [(poverty index – 0.25)/0.5]
X phase-in percentage
(i) "Large-group intervention units" equals the district's formula ADM divided by 20;
(ii) "Hourly rate" equals $20.00 $21.01 in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $20.40 $21.64 in fiscal year 2007 2009;
(iii) "Level one hours" equals 25 hours;
(iv) "Phase-in percentage" equals 0.60 in fiscal year 2006 and 1.00 in fiscal year 2007.
(b) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 0.75:
large-group intervention units X hourly rate X level one hours
X phase-in percentage
Where "large-group intervention units," "hourly rate," and "level one hours," and "phase-in percentage" have the same meanings as in division (C)(1)(a) of this section.
(2) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 0.75, calculate the district's level two amount for medium-group academic intervention for all students as follows:
(a) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 0.75 but less than 1.50:
medium-group intervention units X hourly rate X
{level one hours + [25 hours X ((poverty index – 0.75)/0.75)]}X phase-in percentage
(i) "Medium group intervention units" equals the district's formula ADM divided by 15;
(ii) "Hourly rate," and "level one hours," and "phase-in percentage" have the same meanings as in division (C)(1)(a) of this section.
(b) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.50:
medium-group intervention units X hourly rate X level two hours X phase-in percentage
(i) "Medium group intervention units" has the same meaning as in division (C)(2)(a)(i) of this section;
(ii) "Hourly rate" and "phase-in percentage" have has the same meanings meaning as in division (C)(1)(a) of this section;
(iii) "Level two hours" equals 50 hours.
(3) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.50, calculate the district's level three amount for small-group academic intervention for impoverished students as follows:
(a) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.50 but less than 2.50:
small group intervention units X hourly rate X
{level one hours + [level three hours X (poverty index – 1.50)]} X phase-in percentage
(i) "Small group intervention units" equals the quotient of (the district's poverty student count times 3) divided by 10;
(ii) "Hourly rate," and "level one hours," and "phase-in percentage" have the same meanings as in division (C)(1)(a) of this section;
(iii) "Level three hours" equals 135 hours.
(b) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 2.50:
small group intervention units X hourly rate X level three hours X phase-in percentage
(i) "Small group intervention units" has the same meaning as in division (C)(3)(a)(i) of this section;
(ii) "Hourly rate" and "phase-in percentage" have has the same meanings meaning as in division (C)(1)(a) of this section;
(iii) "Level three hours" equals 160 hours.
Any district that receives funds under division (C)(2) or (3) of this section annually shall submit to the department of education by a date established by the department a plan describing how the district will deploy those funds. The deployment measures described in that plan shall comply with any applicable spending requirements prescribed in division (J)(6) of this section or with any order issued by the superintendent of public instruction under section 3317.017 of the Revised Code.
(D) A payment for all-day kindergarten if the
poverty index of
the school district is greater
than or equal to
1.0 or if the
district's three-year average formula ADM exceeded
seventeen
thousand five hundred. In addition, the department shall make a payment under this division to any school district that, in a prior fiscal year, qualified for this payment and provided all-day kindergarten, regardless of changes to the district's poverty index. The department shall calculate the payment under this division by
multiplying the all-day
kindergarten percentage
by the
kindergarten ADM and multiplying
that product by the formula
amount.
(E) A class-size
reduction payment for increased classroom learning opportunities based on calculating the
number of new
teachers necessary to achieve a lower
student-teacher
ratio, as follows:
(1) Determine or calculate a formula number of teachers per
one
thousand students based on the
poverty index of the school
district as follows:
(a) If the
poverty index of the school district is less than
1.0, the
formula number of teachers is 50.0, which is the
number of
teachers per one thousand students at a student-teacher
ratio
of twenty to one;
(b) If the poverty index of the school
district is greater than
or equal to 1.0, but less than
1.5, the
formula number of teachers is calculated as
follows:
50.0 + {[(poverty index – 1.0)/0.5] X 16.667}
Where 50.0 is the number of teachers per one thousand
students at a student-teacher ratio of twenty to one;
0.5 is
the interval from a
poverty index of 1.0 to a
poverty index of
1.5; and 16.667 is the difference in the number of
teachers per one thousand students at a student-teacher ratio of
fifteen to one and the number of teachers per one thousand
students at a student-teacher ratio of twenty to
one.
(c) If the
poverty index of the school district is greater than
or equal to
1.5, the formula number of teachers is
66.667,
which is the number of teachers per one thousand students
at a
student-teacher ratio of fifteen to one.
(2) Multiply the formula number of teachers determined or
calculated in
division (E)(1) of this section by the
kindergarten
through third grade ADM for the district and divide that
product
by one thousand;
(3) Calculate the number of new teachers as follows:
(a) Multiply the kindergarten through third grade ADM
by
50.0, which is the
number of teachers per one thousand students
at a student-teacher ratio of
twenty to one, and divide that
product by one thousand;
(b) Subtract the quotient obtained in
division (E)(3)(a) of
this section
from the product in division (E)(2) of this section.
(4) Multiply the greater of the difference obtained under
division (E)(3) of this section
or zero by the statewide average
teachers compensation. For this purpose, the "statewide average teacher compensation" is $53,680 $56,754 in fiscal year 2006 2008 and $54,941 $58,621 in fiscal year 2007 2009, which includes an amount for the value of fringe benefits.
(F) A payment for services to limited English proficient students, if the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.0 and the proportion of its students who are limited English proficient, as reported in 2003 on its school district report issued under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code for the 2002-2003 school year, is greater than or equal to 2.0%, calculated as follows:
(1) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.0, but less than 1.75, determine the amount per limited English proficient student as follows:
{0.125 + [0.125 X ((poverty index - 1.0)/0.75)]} X formula amount
(2) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.75, the amount per limited English proficient student equals:
0.25 X formula amount
(3) Multiply the per student amount determined for the district under division (F)(1) or (2) of this section by the number of the district's limited English proficient students, times a phase-in percentage of 0.40 in fiscal year 2006 and 0.70 in fiscal year 2007 years 2008 and 2009. For purposes of this calculation, the number of limited English proficient students for each district shall be the number determined by the department when it calculated the district's percentage of limited English proficient students for its school district report card issued in 2003 for the 2002-2003 school year.
Not later than December 31, 2006, the department of education shall recommend to the general assembly and the director of budget and management a method of identifying the number of limited English proficient students for purposes of calculating payments under this division after fiscal year 2007.
(G) A payment for professional development of teachers, if the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.0, calculated as follows:
(1) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.0, but less than 1.75, determine the amount per teacher as follows:
[(poverty index – 1.0)/0.75] X 0.045 X formula amount
(2) If the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.75, the amount per teacher equals:
0.045 X formula amount
(3) Determine the number of teachers, as follows:
(formula ADM/17)
(4) Multiply the per teacher amount determined for the district under division (G)(1) or (2) of this section by the number of teachers determined under division (G)(3) of this section, times a phase-in percentage of 0.40 in fiscal year 2006 and 0.70 in fiscal year 2007.
(H) A payment for dropout prevention, if the district is a big eight school district as defined in section 3314.02 of the Revised Code, calculated as follows:
0.005 X formula amount X poverty indexX formula ADM X phase-in percentage
Where "phase-in percentage" equals 0.40 in fiscal year 2006 and 0.70 in fiscal year 2007.
(I) An amount for community outreach, if the district is an urban school district as defined in section 3314.02 of the Revised Code, calculated as follows:
0.005 X formula amount X poverty index X formula ADM X phase-in percentage
Where "phase-in percentage" equals 0.40 in fiscal year 2006 and 0.70 in fiscal year 2007.
(J) A payment for assistance in closing the achievement gap, if the district's poverty index is greater than or equal to 1.0 and its academic distress index is greater than or equal to 1.0, as determined based on the most recent report card issued under section 3302.03 of the Revised Code prior to the beginning of the fiscal year, calculated as follows:
poverty index X academic distress index X (0.0015 X formula amount) X formula ADM
(a) If the district's academic distress percentage is less than its academic distress percentage used for the prior fiscal year:
poverty index X academic distress index X (0.0015 X formula amount) X formula ADM X 1.035
(b) If the district's academic distress percentage is greater than or equal to its academic distress percentage used for the prior fiscal year:
poverty index X academic distress index X (0.0015 X formula amount) X formula ADM
(K) This division applies only to school districts whose
poverty index is 1.0 or greater. that receive more than ten thousand dollars under this section. Except as provided in division (L) of this section with respect to funds paid under division (J)(2)(b) of this section, in division (M)(2) of this section with respect to funds paid under division (D) of this section, and in division (O) of this section, each such district shall use funds paid under this section only for one or more of the following purposes:
(1) Each school district subject to this division shall
first utilize
funds received under this section so that, when
combined with other funds
of the district, sufficient funds exist
to To provide all-day
kindergarten to at least the number of children
in the district's all-day
kindergarten percentage. To satisfy this requirement, a district may use funds paid under division (C), (F), (G), (H), or (I) of this section to provide all-day kindergarten in addition to the all-day kindergarten payment under division (D) of this section. ADM;
(2) Except as permitted under division (J)(1) of this section, each school district shall use its payment under division (F) of this section for To provide services to students with limited English proficiency through one or more of the following purposes activities:
(a) To hire Hiring teachers for limited English proficient students or other personnel to provide intervention services for those students;
(b) To contract Contracting for intervention services for those students;
(c) To provide Providing other services to assist those students in passing the third-grade reading achievement test, and to provide for those students the intervention services required by section 3313.608 of the Revised Code.
(3) Except as permitted under division (J)(1) of this section, each school district shall use its payment under division (G) of this section for To provide professional development of teachers or other licensed personnel providing educational services to students only in one or more of the following areas:
(a) Data-based decision making;
(b) Standards-based curriculum models;
(c) Job-embedded High quality professional development activities that are research-based, as defined in federal law by state standards developed under section 3319.61 of the Revised Code;
(d) Professional learning communities.
In addition, each district that elects to use funds paid under this section for professional development shall use the payment only to implement programs identified on a list of eligible professional development programs provided by the department of education. The department annually shall provide the list to each district receiving a payment under division (G) of this section. However, a district may apply to the department for a waiver to implement an alternative professional development program in one or more of the areas specified in divisions (J)(3)(a) to (c) of this section. If the department grants the waiver, the district may use its payment under division (G) of this section to implement the alternative program.
(4) Except as permitted under division (J)(1) of this section, each big eight school district shall use its payment under division (H) of this section either for For preventing at-risk students from dropping out of school, for safety and security measures described in division (J)(5)(b) of this section, for academic intervention services described in division (J)(6) of this section, or for a combination of those purposes. Not later than September 1, 2005 2007, the department of education shall provide each big eight school district receiving a payment under this section with a list of dropout prevention programs that it has determined are successful. The department subsequently may update the list. Each district that elects to use its payment under division (H) of this section for dropout prevention shall use the payment only to implement a dropout prevention program specified on the department's list. However, a district may apply to the department for a waiver to implement an alternative dropout prevention program. If the department grants the waiver, the district may use its payment under division (H) of this section to implement the alternative program.
(5) Except as permitted under division (J)(1) of this section, each urban school district that has a poverty index greater than or equal to 1.0 shall use its payment under division (I) of this section for For one or a combination both of the following purposes:
(a) To hire or contract for community liaison officers, attendance or truant officers, or safety and security personnel;
(b) To implement programs designed to ensure that schools are free of drugs and violence and have a disciplined environment conducive to learning;
(c) To implement academic intervention services
described in division (J)(6) of this section.
(6) Except as permitted under division (J)(1) of this section, each school district with a poverty index greater than or equal to 1.0 shall use the amount of its payment under division (C) of this section, and may use any amount of its payment under division (H) or (I) of this section, for For academic intervention services for students who have
failed or are in
danger of failing any of the tests
administered
pursuant to
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code, including intervention services required by section
3313.608 of the Revised Code. Except as permitted under division (J)(1) of this section, no district shall spend any portion of its payment under division (C) of this section for any other purpose. Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in Chapter 4117. of the Revised Code, no collective bargaining agreement entered into after June 30, 2005, shall require use of the payment for any other purpose.
(7) Except as otherwise required by division (K) or
permitted under division (O) of this section,
all remaining funds
distributed under this section to districts with a poverty index greater than or equal to 1.0 shall be utilized for the purpose of
the third grade
guarantee. The third grade guarantee consists
of For increased classroom learning opportunities by increasing the
amount of
instructional attention received per pupil in
kindergarten
through third grade, either by reducing the ratio of
students to
instructional personnel or by increasing the amount of
instruction and curriculum-related activities by extending the
length of the school day or the school year.
School districts may implement a reduction of the ratio of
students to instructional personnel through any or all of the
following methods:
(a) Reducing the number of students in a
classroom taught by
a single teacher;
(b) Employing full-time educational aides or
educational
paraprofessionals issued a permit or license under
section
3319.088 of the Revised Code;
(c) Instituting a team-teaching method
that will result in a
lower student-teacher ratio in a classroom.
Districts may extend the school day either by increasing
the
amount of time allocated for each class, increasing the
number of
classes provided per day, offering optional academic-related
after-school programs, providing curriculum-related
extra
curricular activities, or establishing tutoring or
remedial
services for students who have demonstrated an
educational need.
In accordance with section 3319.089 of the Revised Code, a
district
extending the school day pursuant to this division may
utilize a participant
of the work experience program who has a
child enrolled in a public school in
that district and who is
fulfilling the work requirements of that program by
volunteering
or working in that public school. If the work experience program
participant is compensated, the school district may use the funds
distributed
under this section for all or part of the
compensation.
Districts may extend the school year either through adding
regular days of instruction to the school calendar or by
providing
summer programs.
(K) Each district
shall not expend any funds
received under division (E) of this
section in
any school buildings that are not buildings with the
highest concentration of
need, unless there is a ratio of
instructional personnel to students of no
more than fifteen to one
in each kindergarten and first grade class in all
buildings with
the highest concentration of need.
This division does not require
that the funds used in
buildings with the highest concentration of
need be spent solely
to reduce the ratio of instructional
personnel to students in
kindergarten and first grade. A school
district may spend the
funds in those buildings in any manner
permitted by division
(J)(7) of this section, but may
not spend
the money in other buildings unless the fifteen-to-one ratio
required by this division is attained.
(L)(1) By the first day of August of each fiscal year, each (8) For early childhood programs or early learning programs, as defined by the department of education, for children age three or four who are not eligible for kindergarten;
(9) To furnish, free of charge, materials used in courses of instruction, except for the necessary textbooks or electronic textbooks required to be furnished without charge pursuant to section 3329.06 of the Revised Code, to pupils living in families participating in Ohio works first in accordance with section 3313.642 of the Revised Code;
(10) For programs designed to reduce nonacademic barriers to learning, in accordance with guidelines developed by the department of education;
(11) For school nutrition programs provided pursuant to section 3313.813 of the Revised Code.
However, a school district may apply to the department, in the form and manner prescribed by the department, for a waiver to spend funds paid under this section for programs not described in divisions (K)(1) to (11) of this section. The waiver application shall specify the rationale for the alternative expenditure and the intended benefits for disadvantaged students. If the department grants the waiver, the district may use funds paid under this section to implement the alternative program.
(L) This division applies only to funds paid under division (J)(2)(b) of this section.
(1) If applicable, each school district shall use the funds for any necessary expenses for the continued operation of a school district academic distress commission appointed under section 3302.10 of the Revised Code.
(2) After satisfying the requirement of division (L)(1) of this section, each district shall spend the remaining funds only for one or more of the following purposes and only in buildings with the highest concentration of need:
(a) Assistance in improving student performance;
(b) Professional development for teachers and administrators;
(c) Assistance in recruiting and retaining teachers and administrators.
(M)(1) Each
school district wishing to receive any funds under division (D)
of
this section shall submit to the department of
education an
estimate of its the number of students attending
all-day kindergarten percentage when reporting formula ADM under section 3317.03 of the Revised Code.
Each district
shall update its estimate throughout the
fiscal year in the form
and manner required by the department,
and the department shall
adjust payments under this section to
reflect the updates.
(2) Annually by the end of December, the department of
education, utilizing data from the information system
established
under section 3301.0714
of the Revised Code, shall
determine for each school district subject to division (J) of
this
section whether in the preceding fiscal year the
district's ratio
of instructional personnel to students and its number
of
kindergarten students receiving all-day kindergarten appear
reasonable, given the amounts of money the district
received for
that fiscal year pursuant to divisions (D) and (E) of
this
section. If the department is unable to verify from the
data
available that students are receiving reasonable amounts of
instructional attention and all-day kindergarten, given the funds
the district
has received under this section
and that class-size
reduction
funds are being used in school buildings with the
highest concentration of
need as required by division (K) of this
section, the
department shall conduct a more intensive
investigation to
ensure that funds have been expended as required
by this
section. The department shall file an annual report of
its findings under
this division with the chairpersons of the
committees in each house of the
general assembly dealing with
finance and education.
(M)(1)(2) Each school district with a poverty index less than
1.0 that receives a payment under division (D) of this section shall first utilize funds received
under this section so that ,
when combined with other funds of the
district,
sufficient
funds
exist division to provide all-day kindergarten to at least the
number
of
children in the district's all-day
kindergarten
percentage.
To satisfy this requirement, a district may use funds paid under division (C) or (I) of this section to provide all-day kindergarten in addition to the all-day kindergarten payment under division (D) of this section.
(2) Except as permitted under division (M)(1) of this section, each school district with a poverty index less than 1.0 that receives a payment under division (C) of this section shall use its payment under that division in accordance with all requirements of division (J)(6) of this section.
(3) Except as permitted under division (M)(1) of this section, each school district with a poverty index less than 1.0 that receives a payment under division (I) of this section shall use its payment under that division for one or a combination of the following purposes:
(a) To hire or contract for community liaison officers, attendance or truant officers, or safety and security personnel;
(b) To implement programs designed to ensure that schools are free of drugs and violence and have a disciplined environment conducive to learning;
(c) To implement academic intervention services
described in division (J)(6) of this section.
(4) Each school district to which division (M)(1), (2), or (3) of this section applies shall expend the
remaining
funds received under this
section, and
any other
district with a
poverty index less than
1.0 shall expend
all funds received
under this
section, for any
of the following
purposes:
(a) The purchase of technology for
instructional purposes for remediation;
(b) All-day kindergarten;
(c) Reduction of class sizes in grades kindergarten through three, as described in division (J)(7) of this section;
(d) Summer school remediation;
(e) Dropout prevention programs approved by the department of education under division (J)(4) of this section;
(f) Guaranteeing that all third graders are
ready to
progress to more advanced work;
(g) Summer education and work programs;
(h) Adolescent pregnancy programs;
(i) Head start, preschool, early childhood education, or early learning programs;
(j) Reading improvement and remediation programs described
by the
department of education;
(k) Programs designed to ensure that schools
are free of
drugs and violence and have a disciplined
environment conducive to
learning;
(l) Furnishing, free of charge, materials used in
courses
of instruction, except for the necessary textbooks
or electronic
textbooks required to be furnished without charge pursuant to
section 3329.06 of the Revised Code, to pupils living in families
participating in Ohio works first in accordance with section
3313.642 of the Revised Code;
(m) School breakfasts provided pursuant to section
3313.813
of the Revised Code.
(N) If at any time the superintendent of public instruction
determines that a school district receiving funds
under division
(D) of this section has enrolled less fewer than the number of all-day
kindergarten
percentage students reported for that fiscal year, the
superintendent
shall withhold from the funds otherwise due the
district under
this section a proportional amount as determined by
the difference in the
certified all-day
kindergarten percentage ADM
and the percentage actually enrolled in actual
all-day kindergarten ADM.
The superintendent shall also withhold an appropriate amount
of funds
otherwise due a district for any other misuse of funds
not in accordance with
this section.
(O)(1) A district may use a portion of the funds calculated
for
it paid under division (D) of this section to modify or purchase
classroom space to provide all-day kindergarten, if both of the
following
conditions are met:
(a) The district certifies to the department, in a manner
acceptable to the department, that it has a shortage of space for
providing all-day kindergarten.
(b) The district provides all-day kindergarten to the number
of children in
the all-day kindergarten percentage it certified
under this section.
(2) A district may use a portion of the funds described in
division (J)(7) of paid under this section to modify or purchase classroom
space to enable it to further reduce class size in grades
kindergarten through two with a goal of attaining class sizes of
fifteen students per licensed teacher. To do so, the district
must certify its need for additional space to the department, in a
manner satisfactory to the department.
(P) Not later than the thirtieth day of September each year, each school district paid under this section shall report to the department, in the form and manner prescribed by the department, how the district deployed funds received under this section in the prior fiscal year. If a school district does not meet adequate progress standards as defined by the department, the department shall make recommendations to the district for deploying funds under this section in a more effective manner.
Sec. 3317.0216. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Total taxes charged and payable for current
expenses"
means the sum of the taxes charged and payable as
certified under
division (A)(3)(a) of section 3317.021 of the
Revised Code less
any amounts reported under division (A)(3)(b) of that
section,
and
the tax distribution for the preceding year under any school
district income tax levied by the district pursuant to
Chapter
5748. of the Revised Code to the extent the
revenue from the
income tax is allocated or apportioned to current
expenses.
(2)
"Charge-off amount" means two and three-tenths per cent multiplied by (the sum of recognized
valuation and property exemption value).
(3) Until fiscal year 2003, the "actual local share of
special education,
transportation, and vocational education
funding" for any school
district means the sum of the district's
attributed local shares
described in divisions (F)(1) to (3) of
section 3317.022 of the
Revised Code. Beginning in fiscal year
2003, the "actual local share of special education,
transportation, and vocational education funding" means that sum
minus the amount of any excess cost supplement
payment calculated
for the district under division (F) of
section 3317.022 of the
Revised Code.
(4) "Current expense revenues from the tangible property tax replacement fund" means payments received from the school district tangible property tax replacement fund or the general revenue fund under section 5751.21 of the Revised Code for fixed-rate levies for current expenses and for fixed-sum levies for current expenses, including school district emergency levies under sections 5705.194 to 5705.197 of the Revised Code.
(B) Upon receiving the certifications under section 3317.021
of
the Revised Code, the department of education shall determine
for each city,
local, and exempted village school district whether
the
district's charge-off amount is greater than the sum of the district's
total
taxes charged and payable for current
expenses and current expense revenues from the tangible property tax replacement fund, and if
the charge-off amount is greater,
shall pay the district the amount of the
difference. A
payment shall not be
made to any school district
for which the
computation under division
(A) of section 3317.022
of the Revised
Code
equals zero.
(C)(1) If a district's charge-off amount is equal to or
greater
than the sum of its total
taxes charged and
payable for current
expenses and current expense revenues from the tangible property tax replacement fund, the
department shall, in addition to
the payment
required under
division (B) of this section, pay the
district the
amount of
its actual local share of special
education,
transportation, and
vocational
education
funding.
(2) If a district's charge-off amount is less than the sum of its
total
taxes charged and payable for current expenses and current expense revenues from the tangible property tax replacement fund,
the department
shall pay the district any amount by
which
its
actual local share
of
special education,
transportation, and vocational education
funding exceeds the sum of its
total
taxes charged and payable for current
expenses and current expense revenues from the tangible property tax replacement fund minus its
charge-off amount.
(D) If a school district that received a payment under division (B) or (C) of this section in the prior fiscal year is ineligible for payment under those divisions in the current fiscal year, the department shall determine if the ineligibility is the result of a property tax or income tax levy approved by the district's voters to take effect in tax year 2005 or thereafter. If the department determines that is the case, and calculates that the levy causing the ineligibility exceeded by at least one mill the equivalent millage of the prior year's payment under divisions (B) and (C) of this section, the department shall make a payment to the district for the first three years that the district loses eligibility for payment under divisions (B) and (C) of this section, as follows:
(1) In the first year of ineligibility, the department shall pay the district seventy-five per cent of the amount it last paid the district under divisions (B) and (C) of this section.
(2) In the second year of ineligibility, the department shall pay the district fifty per cent of the amount it last paid the district under those divisions.
(3) In the third year of ineligibility, the department shall pay the district twenty-five per cent of the amount it last paid the district under those divisions.
(E) A district that receives payment under division (D) of this section and subsequently qualifies for payment under division (B) or (C) of this section is ineligible for future payments under division (D) of this section.
(F) To enable the department of education to make the determinations and to calculate payments under division (D) of this section, on the effective date of this amendment March 30, 2006, and on or before the first day of March of each year thereafter, the department shall send to the tax commissioner a list of school districts receiving payments under division (B) or (C) of this section for the current fiscal year. On or before the first day of the following June, the tax commissioner shall certify to the department of education for those school districts the information required by division (A)(8) of section 3317.021 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3317.0217. The Payment of the amount calculated for a school district under this section shall be made under division (A) of section 3317.022 of the Revised Code.
The department of education shall annually compute and pay state parity aid to school districts, as follows:
(A) Calculate the local wealth per pupil of each school
district, which equals the following sum:
(1) Two-thirds times the quotient of (a) the district's
recognized valuation divided by (b) its formula ADM; plus
(2) One-third times the quotient of (a) the average of the
total federal adjusted gross income of the school district's
residents for the three years most recently reported under section
3317.021 of the Revised Code divided by (b) its formula ADM.
(B) Rank all school districts in order of local wealth per
pupil, from the district with the lowest local wealth per pupil to
the district with the highest local wealth per pupil.
(C) Compute the per pupil state parity aid funding for each eligible
school
district in accordance with the following formula:
(threshold local wealthper pupil - the
district's localwealth per pupil) X 0.0075 parity millage
(1) Seven and one-half mills (0.0075) is an adjustment to the original parity aid standard of nine and one-half mills, to account for the general assembly's policy decision to phase-out use of the cost-of-doing-business factor in the base cost formula In fiscal year 2008, an "eligible school district" means a school district with a local wealth per pupil less than that of the school district with the four-hundred-eleventh lowest local wealth per pupil. In fiscal year 2009, an "eligible school district" means a school district with a local wealth per pupil less than that of the school district with the three-hundred-sixty-eighth lowest local wealth per pupil.
(2) The "threshold local wealth per pupil" is the local
wealth per pupil of the school district with the
four-hundred-ninetieth lowest local wealth per pupil.
(3) "Parity millage," in fiscal year 2008, equals 0.0080 and, in fiscal year 2009, equals 0.0085.
If the result of the calculation for a school district under
division (C) of this section is less than zero, the district's per
pupil parity aid shall be zero.
(D) Compute the per pupil alternative parity aid for each
school district that has a combination of an income factor of 1.0
or less, a poverty index of 1.0 or greater, and a fiscal year 2005
cost-of-doing-business factor of 1.0375 or greater, in accordance
with the following formula:
Payment percentage X $60,000 X(1 - income factor) X 4/15 X 0.023
(1) "Poverty index" has the same meaning as in section 3317.029
of the Revised Code.
(2) "Payment percentage," for purposes of division (D) of
this section, equals 50% in fiscal year 2002 and 100% after fiscal
year 2002.
(3) "Fiscal year 2005 cost-of-doing-business factor" means the cost-of-doing-business factor in effect for fiscal year 2005 designated under former division (N) of section 3317.02 of the Revised Code as that division existed in fiscal year 2005.
(E) Pay each district that has a combination of an income
factor of 1.0 or less, a poverty index of 1.0 or greater, and a fiscal year 2005
cost-of-doing-business factor of 1.0375 or greater, the greater of
the following:
(1) The product of the district's per pupil parity aid
calculated under division (C) of this section times its net formula
ADM;
(2) The product of its per pupil alternative parity aid
calculated under division (D) of this section times its net formula
ADM.
(F) Pay every other district the product of its per pupil
parity aid calculated under division (C) of this section times its net
formula ADM.
(G) As used in divisions (E) and (F) of this section, "net formula ADM" means formula ADM minus the number of internet- and computer-based community school students and scholarship students reported under divisions (B)(3)(e), (f), and (g) of section 3317.03 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3317.03. Notwithstanding divisions
(A)(1), (B)(1), and
(C) of this section, except as provided in division (A)(2)(h) of this section, any
student enrolled in kindergarten more
than half time shall be reported as
one-half student under this
section.
(A) The superintendent of each city and exempted
village
school district and of each educational service center shall,
for
the schools under the superintendent's supervision,
certify to the
state board of
education on or before the fifteenth day of October
in each year for
the first full school week in October the formula
ADM. Beginning in fiscal year 2007, each superintendent also shall certify to the state board, for the schools under the superintendent's supervision, the formula ADM for the first full week in February. If a school under the superintendent's supervision is closed for one or more days during that week due to hazardous weather conditions or other circumstances described in the first paragraph of division (B) of section 3317.01 of the Revised Code, the superintendent may apply to the superintendent of public instruction for a waiver, under which the superintendent of public instruction may exempt the district superintendent from certifying the formula ADM for that school for that week and specify an alternate week for certifying the formula ADM of that school.
The formula ADM shall consist of the average daily membership during
such week of the
sum of the following:
(1) On an FTE basis, the number of
students in grades
kindergarten through twelve receiving any educational
services
from the district,
except that the following categories of
students shall not be
included in the determination:
(a) Students enrolled in adult education classes;
(b) Adjacent or other district students enrolled in the
district under an open enrollment policy pursuant to section
3313.98 of the Revised Code;
(c) Students receiving services in the district pursuant to
a compact,
cooperative education agreement, or a contract, but who
are entitled to attend
school in another district pursuant to
section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised Code;
(d) Students for whom tuition is
payable pursuant to
sections 3317.081 and 3323.141 of the
Revised Code;
(e) Students receiving services in the district through a scholarship awarded under either section 3310.41 or sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code.
(2) On an FTE basis, except as provided in division (A)(2)(h) of this section, the number of
students entitled to
attend school in the district pursuant to
section 3313.64 or
3313.65 of the
Revised Code, but receiving educational
services in
grades kindergarten through twelve from one or more of the
following entities:
(a) A community school pursuant to Chapter
3314. of the
Revised Code, including any participation in a college
pursuant to
Chapter 3365. of the Revised Code while enrolled in such community
school;
(b) An alternative school pursuant to sections 3313.974 to
3313.979 of the Revised Code as described in division
(I)(2)(a) or
(b) of this section;
(c) A college pursuant to Chapter 3365. of the Revised Code,
except
when the student is enrolled in the college while also
enrolled in a community
school pursuant to Chapter 3314. of the
Revised Code;
(d) An adjacent or other
school district under an open
enrollment policy adopted pursuant
to section 3313.98 of the
Revised Code;
(e) An educational service
center or cooperative education
district;
(f) Another school district
under a cooperative education
agreement, compact, or contract;
(g) A chartered nonpublic school with a scholarship paid under section 3310.08 of the Revised Code;
(h) An alternative public provider or a registered private provider with a scholarship awarded under either section 3310.41 or sections 3310.51 to 3310.63 of the Revised Code. Each such scholarship student who is enrolled in kindergarten shall be counted as one full-time-equivalent student.
As used in this section, "alternative public provider" and "registered private provider" have the same meanings as in section 3310.41 or 3310.51 of the Revised Code, as applicable.
(3) Twenty per cent of the number of students enrolled in a joint
vocational school district or under a vocational education
compact,
excluding any students
entitled to attend school in the
district under section 3313.64 or
3313.65 of the Revised Code who
are enrolled in another
school district through an open enrollment
policy as reported under
division (A)(2)(d) of this section and
then enroll in
a joint vocational school district or under a
vocational education
compact;
(4) The number of handicapped children, other than
handicapped preschool children, entitled to attend school in the
district pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code who are placed by the district with a
county MR/DD board, minus the
number of
such children placed with a county
MR/DD board in fiscal year
1998. If this calculation produces a negative number, the
number
reported under division
(A)(4) of this section shall be
zero.
(5) Beginning in fiscal year 2007, in the case of the report submitted for the first full week in February, or the alternative week if specified by the superintendent of public instruction, the number of students reported under division (A)(1) or (2) of this section for the first full week of the preceding October but who since that week have received high school diplomas.
(B) To enable the
department of education to obtain the data
needed to complete
the calculation of payments pursuant to this
chapter, in
addition to the formula ADM, each
superintendent shall
report separately the following student
counts for the same week for which formula ADM is certified:
(1) The total average daily membership in regular day
classes included in the report under division (A)(1) or (2) of
this
section for kindergarten, and each of grades one through
twelve in
schools under the
superintendent's supervision;
(2) The number of all handicapped
preschool
children
enrolled as of the first day of
December in classes in the
district that are eligible for approval
under division (B) of section 3317.05 of the Revised
Code
and the number of those classes, which shall be reported not
later than the
fifteenth day of December, in accordance with rules
adopted under
that section;
(3) The number of children entitled to attend school in
the
district pursuant to section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the
Revised
Code who are:
(a) Participating in a
pilot project scholarship program
established under sections
3313.974 to 3313.979 of the Revised
Code as described in division
(I)(2)(a) or (b) of this section;
(b) Enrolled in a college under Chapter
3365. of the Revised Code,
except when the
student is enrolled in the college while also
enrolled in a community school
pursuant to Chapter 3314. of the
Revised Code;
(c) Enrolled in an adjacent or
other school district
under section 3313.98 of the Revised Code;
(d) Enrolled in a
community school
established under Chapter 3314.
of the Revised
Code that is not an internet- or computer-based community school as defined in section 3314.02 of the Revis