Ohio
Ohio lawmakers approve nearly $700M in federal infrastructure money for highways, public transit
COLUMBUS, Ohio — State lawmakers on Wednesday handed laws approving almost $700 million in federal transportation funding given to Ohio beneath the Bipartisan Infrastructure Regulation handed earlier this 12 months.
Home Invoice 338, which handed each the Ohio Senate and Home by huge margins, additionally authorizes the state’s transportation director to award contracts of as much as $1.5 billion in design/construct contracts to renovate the functionally out of date Brent Spence Bridge in Cincinnati. It additional permits Ohio to enter into agreements with different states to implement penalties for toll violations by out-of-state drivers, amongst different issues.
Below the invoice, the Ohio Division of Transportation would get $672,598,581 in federal freeway development cash approved beneath the $1.2 trillion federal infrastructure legislation, signed by President Joe Biden final 12 months. ODOT would additionally get an extra $18.3 million from the feds for public transportation beneath the laws.
One of many few lawmakers to vote towards the measure was state Sen. Niraj Antani, a Dayton-area Republican. He urged his colleagues to vote no as a method to assist federal officers “curtail their dependancy to this tax-and-spend tradition that has brought about runaway inflation.”
The $1.5 billion approved for the Brent Spence bridge comes as ODOT needs to rent a administration workforce for Ohio and Kentucky’s $2.8 billion plan to renovate the almost 60-year-old bridge over the Ohio River. The undertaking would construct a brand new bridge alongside it and widen close by highways. Ohio and Kentucky officers mentioned they might apply for federal funding for the bridge by early subsequent week, in accordance with the Cincinnati Enterprise Courier.
HB338 states that ODOT Director Jack Marchbanks may search to award design/construct contracts that exceed $1.5 billion, however provided that he first will get permission from the Ohio Controlling Board, a panel composed mainly of state legislators that approves spending requests from state companies.
The invoice, if signed by Gov. Mike DeWine, would permit Ohio to enter into agreements with different states to assist acquire tolls owed by out-of-state residents by refusing purposes or transfers of motorized vehicle registration till the tolls receives a commission.
For instance, beneath the invoice, Ohio may enter into an settlement with Indiana that if any Indiana residents don’t pay tolls whereas driving on the Ohio Turnpike, the state of Indiana may refuse to let these residents apply for or switch their automobile registration till they pay the turnpike. The identical could be true for Ohio residents who owe tolls in Indiana beneath this hypothetical state of affairs.
“It’s typically troublesome to implement toll violations dedicated by out-of-state drivers if these drivers ignore the toll invoices and there’s no extra enforcement mechanism in place,” in accordance with an evaluation of HB338 by the non-partisan Legislative Service Fee. “Agreements between states to implement toll violations dedicated by their residents in one other state could doubtlessly cut back these violations.”
The laws would permit present and former army members to acquire a business driver’s license without having to move a data check.
HB338 would make it simpler for regional transit authorities in Ohio to borrow cash by issuing bonds. The invoice would allow any RTA within the state to problem income bonds backed by the proceeds of the RTA’s personal gross sales tax. At present, RTAs in Ohio can solely safe bonds with charges, prices, or any county sales-tax income given to the RTA.
The laws offers extra leeway for Columbus’ public-transportation system, the Central Ohio Transit Authority, relating to issues like buying property, spending sales-tax income, and constructing infrastructure regardless that it’s not thought-about a “transit facility.”
The invoice additional permits state officers to proceed spending cash in 2023 on initiatives beforehand accepted by the legislature. Such permission is required as a result of the funds legislation that comprises the cash expires this 12 months. Reappropriations beneath HB338 embody:
- $1 million to supply grants to Jewish neighborhood organizations for emergency safety upgrades
- $750,000 for grants to the Veterans of Overseas Wars Emergency Restore Program
- $500,000 for the Ohio Fee for the U.S. Semiquincentennial, which is planning to acknowledge the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence in 2026.
- $350,000 to help the Bradfield Neighborhood Heart in Lima
- $15,000 to help the Lorain Pier Planning Mission
Additionally included is the preliminary language of the invoice, which might permit a bike security and schooling program to supply a remaining expertise examination that’s totally different from the state’s examination, supplied the non-public examination meets or exceeds state necessities. It will create new charges to determine a bike security program and certify instructors.
Ohio
Cotton Bowl weather worry prompts Texas-Ohio State CFP ‘contingencies’
There is some uncertainty surrounding the Cotton Bowl entering Friday’s College Football Playoff semifinal between Texas and Ohio State at the Dallas Cowboys’ stadium, with bowl organizers preparing “contingencies” due to the weather forecast.
Arlington, Texas is under a winter storm warning from Thursday morning to Friday afternoon, with the possibility of several inches of snow.
While the stadium has a roof, the weather could create dangerous road conditions for fans traveling to the game.
A joint statement from AT&T Stadium and the Cotton Bowl Tuesday night said the game will be played as scheduled at 7:30 p.m. ET, with the two teams arriving to town Wednesday.
“We continue to monitor weather reports, and over the last 24 hours, the forecast for later this week has improved according to the National Weather Service,” the statement said. “We have been meeting routinely with city officials, the Director of Transportation for North Texas and the College Football Playoff. Should the forecast shift, we are prepared for contingencies.
“North Texas highways are already being brined and plans are in place to ensure a safe environment for everyone in and around AT&T Stadium on game day.”
More than 70,000 people are expected to attend Friday’s game, the winner of which will face the victor of the Penn State-Notre Dame Orange Bowl semifinal in the national championship game on Jan. 20.
Kevin Oden, the Dallas director of emergency management and crisis response, said staffing will be increased Wednesday in anticipation of the storm.
“We’re closely monitoring travel conditions into the city, especially as we prepare to host fans and teams for the Cotton Bowl,” Oden said. “Our priority is ensuring safe travel for the teams and their fans visiting Dallas and the metroplex.”
Ohio
See which central Ohio school districts are still closed or on delay Wednesday
Huge snowball fight breaks out in Washington, D.C. after storm
A massive snowball fight broke out at Meridian Hill Park in Washington, D.C., after at least 5 inches of snow fell.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
The lingering effects of Monday’s snowstorm has led some central Ohio school district to cancel or delay school again on Wednesday, Jan. 8.
Most area school districts were closed Monday, the first day back after winter break for many. Some still remained closed on Tuesday. Those with closures or delays on Wednesday are largely in predominantly rural counties that had Level 3 snow emergencies that barred travel going into Tuesday except for emergency personnel, and where sheriffs reduced the warning to Level 2 later in the day. That designation means travel is still tricky in some areas, often from blowing snow.
School closures (or delays) for Wednesday, January 8
As of Tuesday night, the following districts had announced closures (or delays) for Wednesday:
- Amanda-Clearcreek Local Schools
- Bloom-Carroll Local School District (Two-hour delay)
- Circleville City Schools (Two-hour delay)
- Fairfield Union Local School District
- Logan Elm School District
- Madison-Plains Local School District (Two-hour delay)
- Walnut Township Local Schools (Two-hour delay)
This list will be updated as additional information becomes available. School districts are encouraged to send an email with any delays or closures to newsroom@dispatch.com.
Check with your local school district or check back at dispatch.com to see if your school is closed or delayed on Wednesday.
smeighan@dispatch.com
@ShahidMeighan
This is a developing story and will be updated.
Ohio
At Ohio Supreme Court ceremony, Justice Joe Deters slams ‘judicial activism’
Ohio Supreme Court Justice Joe Deters was formally sworn in Tuesday as he begins the six-year term he was elected to in November.
In remarks during a public investiture ceremony, Deters, who was the longest-tenured prosecutor in Hamilton County history before being appointed to the high court in December 2022, criticized “judicial activism.” He said it’s crucial that judges as well as Supreme Court justices “stay in their lane.”
Deters said a justice’s job is to interpret laws, determine if they’re constitutional and protect the rights of individuals. It does not include, he said, “inserting ourselves and our personal beliefs into the process.”
“If you don’t care for a law, run for the legislature and change it,” he said. “Don’t ask me, or us, to do that. That is not our job.”
The ceremony was held in the Supreme Court’s grand courtroom in Columbus. It featured remarks from Deters’ close friend, WLW radio host Bill Cunningham, who said he first met Deters in 1985 after Deters lost his first race for political office, for Springfield Township trustee. The winner: John Waksmundksi.
Deters, then in his late-20s, had asked Cunningham if he could appear on the radio show. “I said, ‘Not really,’” Cunningham recalled.
He noted that two decades later, Deters was well-known enough that he won a race for county prosecutor as a write-in candidate. The two speak nearly every day, Cunningham said.
“A citizen could not have a better judge,” he said, “and a man could not have a better friend than Joe Deters.”
Mike and Fran DeWine, Justice Shanahan in attendance
Justice Megan Shanahan, a former Hamilton County judge who was elected to the Supreme Court in November along with Deters, watched the proceedings with the other justices. Also in attendance were Gov. Mike DeWine, First Lady Fran DeWine and Attorney General Dave Yost.
Chief Justice Sharon Kennedy administered the oath of office.
Deters, 67, served as county prosecutor in two separate tenures − from 1992 to 1998 and 2005 to 2023. He also was elected as Ohio Treasurer in 1998 and 2002.
In 2023, he became the first Ohio Supreme Court justice in 30 years to join the court without prior experience as a judge.
Among those in attendance were his wife, longtime WCPO news anchor Tanya O’Rourke, and his children. Two of his siblings, brother Dennis Deters and sister Nancy Slayton, spoke at the ceremony. Joe Deters is the oldest of eight children.
A graduate of St. Xavier High School, he holds a bachelor’s degree and a law degree from the University of Cincinnati. In 1982, the same year he received his law degree, he got a job with the prosecutor’s office.
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