As Reported by the House State Government and Elections Committee

129th General Assembly
Regular Session
2011-2012
Sub. H. B. No. 396


Representatives McGregor, Murray 



A BILL
To amend sections 101.35, 103.0511, 107.54, 111.15, 1
117.20, 119.01, 119.03, 119.04, 121.39, 121.73, 2
121.74, 121.81, 121.82, 121.83, 127.18, 1531.08, 3
3319.22, 3319.221, 3333.021, 3333.048, 3737.88, 4
3746.04, 4117.02, 4141.14, 5103.0325, 5117.02, 5
5703.14, 6111.31, and 6111.51; to enact sections 6
106.01, 106.02, 106.021, 106.022, 106.023, 106.03, 7
106.031, 106.032, 106.04, 106.041, and 106.042; 8
and to repeal sections 119.031 and 119.032 of the 9
Revised Code to revise rule-making and rule review 10
procedures and to declare an emergency.11


BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:

       Section 1.  That sections 101.35, 103.0511, 107.54, 111.15, 12
117.20, 119.01, 119.03, 119.04, 121.39, 121.73, 121.74, 121.81, 13
121.82, 121.83, 127.18, 1531.08, 3319.22, 3319.221, 3333.021, 14
3333.048, 3737.88, 3746.04, 4117.02, 4141.14, 5103.0325, 5117.02, 15
5703.14, 6111.31, and 6111.51 be amended and that sections 106.01, 16
106.02, 106.021, 106.022, 106.023, 106.03, 106.031, 106.032, 17
106.04, 106.041, and 106.042 of the Revised Code be enacted to 18
read as follows:19

       Sec. 101.35.  There is hereby created in the general assembly 20
the joint committee on agency rule review. The committee shall 21
consist of five members of the house of representatives and five 22
members of the senate. Within fifteen days after the commencement 23
of the first regular session of each general assembly, the speaker 24
of the house of representatives shall appoint the members of the 25
committee from the house of representatives, and the president of 26
the senate shall appoint the members of the committee from the 27
senate. Not more than three of the members from each house shall 28
be of the same political party. In the first regular session of a 29
general assembly, the chairperson of the committee shall be 30
appointed by the speaker of the house from among the house members 31
of the committee, and the vice-chairperson shall be appointed by 32
the president of the senate from among the senate members of the 33
committee. In the second regular session of a general assembly, 34
the chairperson shall be appointed by the president of the senate 35
from among the senate members of the committee, and the 36
vice-chairperson shall be appointed by the speaker of the house 37
from among the house members of the committee. The chairperson, 38
vice-chairperson, and members of the committee shall serve until 39
their respective successors are appointed or until they are no 40
longer members of the general assembly. When a vacancy occurs 41
among the officers or members of the committee, it shall be filled 42
in the same manner as the original appointment.43

       Notwithstanding section 101.26 of the Revised Code, the 44
members, when engaged in their duties as members of the committee 45
on days when there is not a voting session of the member's house 46
of the general assembly, shall be paid at the per diem rate of one 47
hundred fifty dollars, and their necessary traveling expenses, 48
which shall be paid from the funds appropriated for the payment of 49
expenses of legislative committees.50

       The committee has the same powers as other standing or select 51
committees of the general assembly. Six members constitute a 52
quorum, and the concurrence of six members is required for the 53
recommendation of a concurrent resolution invalidatingto 54
recommend enactment of a bill invalidating a proposed or effective55
existing rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof, or for the 56
suspension of a rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof,57
under division (I) of section 119.03106.021 or section 119.03158
106.031 of the Revised Code.59

       When a member of the committee is absent, the president or 60
speaker, as the case may be, may designate a substitute from the 61
same house and political party as the absent member. The 62
substitute shall serve on the committee in the member's absence, 63
and is entitled to perform the duties of a member of the 64
committee. For serving on the committee, the substitute shall be 65
paid the same per diem and necessary traveling expenses as the 66
substitute would be entitled to receive if the substitute were a 67
member of the committee.68

       The president or speaker shall inform the executive director 69
of the committee of a substitution. If the executive director 70
learns of a substitution sufficiently in advance of the meeting of 71
the committee the substitute is to attend, the executive director 72
shall publish notice of the substitution on the internet, make 73
reasonable effort to inform of the substitution persons who are 74
known to the executive director to be interested in rules that are 75
scheduled for review at the meeting, and inform of the 76
substitution persons who inquire of the executive director 77
concerning the meeting.78

       The committee may meet during periods in which the general 79
assembly has adjourned. At80

       At meetings of the committee, the committee may request a 81
rule-makingan agency, as defined in section 119.01106.01 of the 82
Revised Code, to provide information relative to the agency's 83
implementation of its statutory authority.84

       A member of the committee, and the executive director and 85
staff of the committee, are entitled in their official capacities 86
to attend, but not in their official capacities to participate in, 87
a public hearing conducted by a rule-makingan agency on a 88
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission.89

       Sec. 103.0511.  The director of the legislative service 90
commission shall establish and maintain, and enhance and improve, 91
an electronic rule-filing system connecting:92

       (A) The legislative service commission, the joint committee 93
on agency rule review, and the secretary of state;94

       (B) The governor, the senate and house of representatives, 95
and the clerks of the senate and house of representatives;96

       (C) Each agency that files rules and other rule-making and 97
rule-related documents with the legislative service commission, 98
the joint committee on agency rule review, the department of 99
aging, the governor, the common sense initiative office, the 100
secretary of state, the general assembly, or a committee of the 101
senate or house of representatives under section 106.02, 106.022, 102
106.031, 107.54, 111.15, 117.20, 119.03, 119.031, 119.032,103
119.0311, 119.04, 121.24, 121.39, 121.82, 127.18, 4141.14,104
173.01, or 5117.02, or 5703.14 of the Revised Code or any other 105
statute;106

       (D) The several publishers of the Administrative Code; and107

       (E) The common sense initiative office; and108

       (F) Any other person or governmental officer or entity whose 109
inclusion in the system is required for the system to be a 110
complete electronic rule-filing system.111

       The electronic rule-filing system is to enable rules and 112
rule-making and rule-related documents to be filed, and official 113
responses to these filings to be made, exclusively by electronic 114
means.115

       Sec. 106.01. As used in sections 106.01 to 106.042 of the 116
Revised Code, as the case may be:117

       (A) "Agency" means an agency as defined in sections 111.15 118
and 119.01 of the Revised Code.119

       (B) "Review date" means the review date assigned to a rule by 120
an agency under section 111.15 or 119.04 of the Revised Code.121

       (C) "Rule" means (1) a proposed new rule, or a proposed 122
amendment or rescission of an existing rule, that has been filed 123
with the joint committee on agency rule review under division (D) 124
of section 111.15 of the Revised Code or division (C) of section 125
119.03 of the Revised Code or (2) an existing rule that is subject 126
to review under sections 106.03 and 106.031 of the Revised Code. 127
"Rule" includes an appendix to a rule.128

       "Proposed rule" refers to the original and a revised version 129
of a proposed rule.130

       "Proposed rule" does not include a proposed rule that has 131
been adopted and is being filed in final form.132

       In sections 106.03 and 106.031 of the Revised Code, "rule" 133
does not include a rule adopted, amended, or rescinded by the 134
department of taxation under section 5703.14 of the Revised Code, 135
a rule of a state college or university, community college 136
district, technical college district, or state community college, 137
or a rule that is consistent with and equivalent to the form 138
required by a federal law and that does not exceed the minimum 139
scope and intent of that federal law.140

       Sec. 106.02. When an agency files a proposed rule and rule 141
summary and fiscal analysis with the joint committee on agency 142
rule review, the joint committee shall review the proposed rule 143
and rule summary and fiscal analysis not later than the 144
sixty-fifth day after the day on which the proposed rule was filed 145
with the joint committee. If, after filing the original version of 146
a proposed rule, the agency makes a revision in the proposed rule, 147
the agency shall file the revised proposed rule and a revised rule 148
summary and fiscal analysis with the joint committee. If the 149
revised proposed rule is filed thirty-five or fewer days after the 150
original version of the proposed rule was filed, the joint 151
committee shall review the revised proposed rule and revised rule 152
summary and fiscal analysis not later than the sixty-fifth day 153
after the original version of the proposed rule was filed. If, 154
however, the revised proposed rule is filed more than thirty-five 155
days after the original version of the proposed rule was filed, 156
the joint committee shall review the revised proposed rule and 157
revised rule summary and fiscal analysis not later than the 158
thirtieth day after the revised proposed rule was filed with the 159
joint committee.160

        When the original version of a proposed rule and rule summary 161
and fiscal analysis is filed with the joint committee in December, 162
the joint committee shall review the proposed rule and rule 163
summary and fiscal analysis as if the proposed rule and rule 164
summary and fiscal analysis had been filed with the joint 165
committee on the first day of the legislative session in the 166
following January. When a revised proposed rule and revised rule 167
summary and fiscal analysis is filed with the joint committee in 168
December, the joint committee shall review the revised proposed 169
rule and revised rule summary and fiscal analysis not later than 170
the thirtieth day after the first day of the legislative session 171
in the following January.172

       A revised proposed rule supersedes each earlier version of 173
the same proposed rule.174

       The joint committee shall not hold its public hearing on a 175
proposed rule earlier than the forty-first day after the proposed 176
rule was filed with the joint committee.177

       Sec. 106.021. If, upon reviewing a proposed rule or revised 178
proposed rule, the joint committee on agency rule review makes any 179
of the following findings with regard to the proposed rule or 180
revised proposed rule, the joint committee may recommend to the 181
senate and house of representatives the enactment of a bill to 182
invalidate the proposed rule or revised proposed rule or a part 183
thereof:184

       (A) The proposed rule or revised proposed rule exceeds the 185
scope of its statutory authority.186

       (B) The proposed rule or revised proposed rule conflicts with 187
the legislative intent of the statute under which it was proposed. 188

       (C) The proposed rule or revised proposed rule conflicts with 189
another proposed or existing rule.190

       (D) The proposed rule or revised proposed rule incorporates a 191
text or other material by reference and either the agency has 192
failed to file the text or other material incorporated by 193
reference as required by section 121.73 of the Revised Code or the 194
incorporation by reference fails to meet the standards stated in 195
section 121.72, 121.75, or 121.76 of the Revised Code.196

       (E) The agency has failed to demonstrate through the business 197
impact analysis, recommendations from the common sense initiative 198
office, and the memorandum of response that the regulatory intent 199
of the proposed rule or revised proposed rule justifies its 200
adverse impact on businesses in this state.201

       (F) The agency has failed to prepare a complete and accurate 202
rule summary and fiscal analysis of the proposed rule or revised 203
proposed rule as required by section 127.18 of the Revised Code.204

       Sec. 106.022.  As an alternative to recommending the 205
enactment of a bill to invalidate a proposed rule because an 206
agency has not prepared a complete and accurate rule summary and 207
fiscal analysis addressing the fiscal effect of the proposed rule 208
on counties, townships, municipal corporations, or school 209
districts, the joint committee on agency rule review may issue a 210
finding that the rule summary and fiscal analysis is incomplete or 211
inaccurate as to that fiscal effect, and order the agency to 212
refile the proposed rule with a revised rule summary and fiscal 213
analysis that addresses that fiscal effect completely and 214
accurately. The joint committee shall transmit the finding and 215
order electronically to the agency, the secretary of state, the 216
director of the legislative service commission, and, if the 217
proposed rule is to replace an emergency rule, the governor.218

       Upon receiving the finding and order, the agency may revise 219
the rule summary and fiscal analysis completely and accurately to 220
address the fiscal effect of the proposed rule on counties, 221
townships, municipal corporations, or school districts, and then 222
refile the proposed rule and revised rule summary and fiscal 223
analysis electronically with the joint committee.224

       If the joint committee finds that the revised rule summary 225
and fiscal analysis continues incompletely or inaccurately to 226
address the fiscal effect of the proposed rule on counties, 227
townships, municipal corporations, or school districts, the joint 228
committee may recommend the enactment of a bill to invalidate the 229
proposed rule under division (F) of section 106.021 of the Revised 230
Code. The joint committee may make only one finding and order with 231
regard to the same proposed rule.232

       If the proposed rule that is the subject of a finding and 233
order is to replace an emergency rule, the governor may issue an 234
order extending the emergency rule for an additional sixty-five 235
days after the day on which the emergency rule otherwise would 236
become invalid. The governor shall transmit the order 237
electronically to the agency, the joint committee, and the 238
director of the legislative service commission.239

       Sec. 106.023. An agency may not adopt a proposed rule or 240
revised proposed rule or file it in final form unless the proposed 241
rule has been filed with the joint committee on agency rule review 242
under division (D) of section 111.15 or division (C) of section 243
119.03 of the Revised Code and the time for the joint committee to 244
review the proposed rule has expired without recommendation of a 245
bill to invalidate the proposed rule.246

        If, before the time for its review of a proposed rule or 247
revised proposed rule expires, the joint committee recommends 248
enactment of a bill invalidating the proposed rule or revised 249
proposed rule, the rule-making proceedings pertaining to the 250
proposed rule or revised proposed rule are suspended, and the 251
proposed rule or revised proposed rule may not be adopted or filed 252
in final form during the suspension. The suspension begins when 253
the joint committee votes to recommend invalidation of the 254
proposed rule. The suspension expires on the earlier of the day 255
that is six months after the day the vote was taken or the day 256
both houses have adjourned sine die.257

        Upon expiration of the suspension, the rule-making 258
proceedings may resume. If, however, during the suspension, or at 259
any time thereafter, an act invalidating the proposed rule or 260
revised proposed rule takes effect, the rule, whether then 261
existing or still proposed, is invalid as provided in the act.262

       Sec. 106.03. Prior to the review date of an existing rule, 263
the agency that adopted the rule shall do both of the following:264

       (A) Review the rule to determine all of the following:265

       (1) Whether the rule should be continued without amendment, 266
be amended, or be rescinded, taking into consideration the 267
purpose, scope, and intent of the statute under which the rule was 268
adopted;269

       (2) Whether the rule needs amendment or rescission to give 270
more flexibility at the local level;271

       (3) Whether the rule needs amendment or rescission to 272
eliminate unnecessary paperwork;273

       (4) Whether the rule incorporates a text or other material by 274
reference and, if so, whether the text or other material 275
incorporated by reference is deposited or displayed as required by 276
section 121.74 of the Revised Code and whether the incorporation 277
by reference meets the standards stated in sections 121.72, 278
121.75, and 121.76 of the Revised Code;279

       (5) Whether the rule duplicates, overlaps with, or conflicts 280
with other rules;281

       (6) Whether the rule has an adverse impact on businesses, as 282
determined under section 107.52 of the Revised Code, and whether 283
any such adverse impact has been eliminated or reduced as required 284
under section 121.82 of the Revised Code.285

        In making its review, the agency shall consider the continued 286
need for the rule, the nature of any complaints or comments 287
received concerning the rule, and any relevant factors that have 288
changed in the subject matter area affected by the rule.289

       (B) On the basis of its review of the existing rule, the 290
agency shall determine whether the existing rule needs to be 291
amended or rescinded.292

       (1) If the existing rule needs to be amended or rescinded, 293
the agency, on or before the review date of the existing rule, 294
shall commence the process of amending or rescinding the existing 295
rule in accordance with its review of the rule.296

       (2) If the existing rule does not need to be amended or 297
rescinded, proceedings shall be had under section 106.031 of the 298
Revised Code.299

       Upon the request of the agency that adopted an existing rule, 300
the joint committee on agency rule review may extend the review 301
date of the rule to a date that is not later than one hundred 302
eighty days after the review date assigned to the rule by the 303
agency. The joint committee may further extend a review date that 304
has been extended only if doing so is appropriate under the 305
circumstances.306

       The agency that adopted an existing rule that is exempt from 307
review under this section because of the fourth paragraph in 308
division (C) of section 106.01 of the Revised Code nevertheless 309
shall file a copy of the existing rule with the joint committee. 310
The joint committee, after a hearing on the matter, and by a vote 311
of two-thirds of its members present, may determine that the rule 312
is not entitled to the exemption. Thereafter, the rule is subject 313
to review under this section.314

       Sec. 106.031. If an agency, on the basis of its review of a 315
rule under section 106.03 of the Revised Code, determines that the 316
rule does not need to be amended or rescinded, proceedings shall 317
be had as follows:318

       (A)(1) If, considering only the standard of review specified 319
in division (A)(6) of section 106.03 of the Revised Code, the rule 320
has an adverse impact on businesses that has not been eliminated 321
or reduced, the agency shall prepare a business impact analysis 322
that describes its review of the rule under that division and that 323
explains why the rule is not being amended or rescinded to reduce 324
or eliminate its adverse impact on businesses. If the rule does 325
not have an adverse impact on businesses, the agency may proceed 326
under division (B) of this section.327

       (2) The agency shall transmit a copy of the full text of the 328
rule and the business impact analysis electronically to the common 329
sense initiative office. The office shall make the rule and 330
analysis available to the public on its web site under section 331
107.62 of the Revised Code.332

       (3) The agency shall consider any recommendations made by the 333
office.334

       (4) Not earlier than the sixteenth business day after 335
transmitting the rule and analysis to the office, the agency shall 336
either (a) proceed under division (B) of this section or (b) 337
commence, under division (B)(1) of section 106.03 of the Revised 338
Code, the process of rescinding the rule or of amending the rule 339
to incorporate into the rule features the recommendations suggest 340
will eliminate or reduce the adverse impact the rule has on 341
businesses. If the agency determines to amend or rescind the rule, 342
the agency is not subject to the time limit specified in division 343
(B)(1) of section 106.03 of the Revised Code.344

       (5) If the agency receives recommendations from the office, 345
and determines not to amend or rescind the rule, the agency shall 346
prepare a memorandum of response that explains why the rule is not 347
being rescinded or why the recommendations are not being 348
incorporated into the rule. 349

       (B) The agency shall assign a new review date to the rule. 350
The review date assigned shall be not later than five years after 351
the immediately preceding review date pertaining to the rule. If 352
the agency assigns a review date that exceeds the five-year 353
maximum, the review date is five years after the immediately 354
preceding review date.355

       (C)(1) The agency shall file all the following, in electronic 356
form, with the joint committee on agency rule review, the 357
secretary of state, and the director of the legislative service 358
commission: a copy of the rule specifying its new review date, a 359
complete and accurate rule summary and fiscal analysis, and, if 360
relevant, a business impact analysis of the rule, any comments 361
received from the common sense initiative office, and any 362
memorandum of response. An agency may comply with the requirement 363
to file a complete and accurate rule summary and fiscal analysis 364
by filing a previously prepared rule summary and fiscal analysis, 365
so long as the previous rule summary and fiscal analysis was 366
complete and accurate at the time it was prepared, continues to be 367
such a complete and accurate explanation of the rule, and the 368
conditions described in division (B)(4), (5), (6), (8), (9), or 369
(10) of section 127.18 of the Revised Code, as they relate to the 370
rule, have not appreciably changed since the previous rule summary 371
and fiscal analysis was prepared.372

       (2) The joint committee does not have jurisdiction to review, 373
and shall reject, the filing of a rule under division (C)(1) of 374
this section if, at any time while the rule is in its possession, 375
it discovers that the rule has an adverse impact on businesses and 376
the agency has not complied with division (A) of this section. The 377
joint committee shall electronically return a rule that is 378
rejected to the agency, together with any documents that were part 379
of the filing. Such a rejection does not preclude the agency from 380
refiling the rule under division (C)(1) of this section after 381
complying with division (A) of this section. When the filing of a 382
rule is rejected under this division, it is as if the filing had 383
not been made.384

       (D) The joint committee shall publish notice of the agency's 385
determination not to amend or rescind the rule in the register of 386
Ohio for four consecutive weeks after the rule is filed under 387
division (C) of this section.388

       (E) During the ninety-day period after a rule is filed under 389
division (C) of this section, but after the four-week notice 390
period required by division (D) of this section has ended, the 391
joint committee, by a two-thirds vote of members present, may 392
recommend to the senate and house of representatives the enactment 393
of a bill invalidating the rule if the joint committee finds any 394
of the following:395

       (1) The agency improperly applied the standards in division 396
(A) of section 106.03 of the Revised Code in reviewing the rule 397
and in determining that the rule did not need amendment or 398
rescission.399

       (2) The rule has an adverse impact on businesses, and the 400
agency has failed to demonstrate through a business impact 401
analysis, recommendations from the common sense initiative office, 402
and a memorandum of response that the regulatory intent of the 403
rule justifies its adverse impact on businesses.404

       (3) If the rule incorporates a text or other material by 405
reference, the agency failed to file, or to deposit or display, 406
the text or other material incorporated by reference as required 407
by section 121.73 or 121.74 of the Revised Code or the 408
incorporation by reference fails to meet the standards stated in 409
section 121.72, 121.75, or 121.76 of the Revised Code.410

       (4) The agency otherwise failed to comply with section 106.03 411
or 106.031 of the Revised Code.412

       If the joint committee does not recommend enactment of a bill 413
to invalidate the rule, the rule continues in effect without 414
amendment, and shall be next reviewed by the joint committee with 415
reference to the new review date assigned to the rule.416

       Sec. 106.032.  If the joint committee on agency rule review 417
recommends invalidation of an existing rule, operation of the 418
existing rule is suspended. The suspension begins when the joint 419
committee votes to recommend invalidation of the existing rule. 420
The suspension expires on the earlier of the day that is six 421
months after the day the vote was taken or the day both houses 422
have adjourned sine die. Upon expiration of the suspension, 423
operation of the existing rule resumes. If, however, during the 424
suspension, or at any time thereafter, an act invalidating the 425
existing rule takes effect, the existing rule is invalid as 426
provided in the act.427

       Sec. 106.04. When the joint committee on agency rule review 428
recommends invalidation of a proposed or existing rule under 429
section 106.021 or 106.031 of the Revised Code, the chairperson of 430
the joint committee, or another member of the joint committee 431
designated by the chairperson, shall prepare the recommendation of 432
invalidation in writing. The recommendation shall identify the 433
proposed or existing rule, the agency that proposed or submitted 434
the proposed or existing rule, and the finding that caused the 435
joint committee to make the recommendation. The recommendation 436
briefly shall explain the finding.437

       The chairperson of the joint committee shall request the 438
legislative service commission to prepare a bill to invalidate the 439
proposed or existing rule according to the recommendation. The 440
bill shall state the finding that caused the joint committee to 441
recommend invalidation of the rule.442

       Sec. 106.041. The chairperson of the joint committee on 443
agency rule review, or another member of the joint committee 444
designated by the chairperson, shall submit a bill to invalidate a 445
proposed or existing rule to the clerk of either house of the 446
general assembly. The recommendation of invalidation and a copy of 447
the proposed or existing rule also shall be submitted to the clerk 448
along with the bill.449

       A bill recommended by the joint committee on agency rule 450
review to invalidate a proposed or existing rule shall not be 451
referred to any committee other than the committee having 452
authority to set the calendar of bills for third consideration.453

       Sections 106.021 and 106.031 of the Revised Code do not 454
preclude a member of the general assembly, on the member's own 455
initiative, from drafting a bill that proposes to invalidate a 456
proposed or existing rule and filing the bill for introduction, 457
and do not preclude the house of representatives or senate from 458
proceeding to consider such a bill. When such a bill is filed for 459
introduction, section 106.023 or 106.032 of the Revised Code does 460
not operate to suspend the existing rule.461

       Sec. 106.042. The failure of the general assembly to enact a 462
bill invalidating a proposed or existing rule is not a 463
ratification of the lawfulness or reasonableness of the proposed 464
or existing rule or of the validity of the procedure by which the 465
rule was proposed or adopted.466

       Sec. 107.54. (A)(1) When the common sense initiative office 467
receives a draft rule and business impact analysis from an agency, 468
the office shall evaluate the draft rule and analysis against the 469
business impact analysis instrument and any other relevant 470
criteria, and may prepare and transmit recommendations to the 471
agency on how the draft rule might be revised to eliminate or 472
reduce any adverse impact the draft rule might have on businesses.473

       (2) When the office receives a rule and business impact 474
analysis from an agency under division (A)(2) of section 106.031 475
of the Revised Code, the office shall evaluate the rule and 476
analysis against the business impact analysis instrument and any 477
other relevant criteria, and may prepare and transmit 478
recommendations to the agency on how the rule might be amended or 479
rescinded to eliminate or reduce any adverse impact the rule has 480
on businesses.481

       (B) The office shall transmit any such recommendations 482
electronically to the agency. If the office fails to make such a 483
transmission after receiving the draft rule and business impact 484
analysis, it is as if the office had elected not to make any 485
recommendations.486

       Sec. 111.15.  (A) As used in this section:487

       (1) "Rule" includes any rule, regulation, bylaw, or standard 488
having a general and uniform operation adopted by an agency under 489
the authority of the laws governing the agency; any appendix to a 490
rule; and any internal management rule. "Rule" does not include 491
any guideline adopted pursuant to section 3301.0714 of the Revised 492
Code, any order respecting the duties of employees, any finding, 493
any determination of a question of law or fact in a matter 494
presented to an agency, or any rule promulgated pursuant to 495
Chapter 119., section 4141.14,or division (C)(1) or (2) of 496
section 5117.02, or section 5703.14 of the Revised Code. "Rule" 497
includes any amendment or rescission of a rule.498

       (2) "Agency" means any governmental entity of the state and 499
includes, but is not limited to, any board, department, division, 500
commission, bureau, society, council, institution, state college 501
or university, community college district, technical college 502
district, or state community college. "Agency" does not include 503
the general assembly, the controlling board, the adjutant 504
general's department, or any court.505

       (3) "Internal management rule" means any rule, regulation, 506
bylaw, or standard governing the day-to-day staff procedures and 507
operations within an agency.508

       (4) "Substantive revision" has the same meaning as in 509
division (J) of section 119.01 of the Revised Code.510

       (B)(1) Any rule, other than a rule of an emergency nature, 511
adopted by any agency pursuant to this section shall be effective 512
on the tenth day after the day on which the rule in final form and 513
in compliance with division (B)(3) of this section is filed as 514
follows:515

       (a) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with both the 516
secretary of state and the director of the legislative service 517
commission;518

       (b) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with the joint 519
committee on agency rule review. Division (B)(1)(b) of this 520
section does not apply to any rule to which division (D) of this 521
section does not apply.522

       An agency that adopts or amends a rule that is subject to 523
division (D) of this section shall assign a review date to the 524
rule that is not later than five years after its effective date. 525
If no review date is assigned to a rule, or if a review date 526
assigned to a rule exceeds the five-year maximum, the review date 527
for the rule is five years after its effective date. A rule with a 528
review date is subject to review under section 119.032106.03 of 529
the Revised Code. This paragraph does not apply to a rule of a 530
state college or university, community college district, technical 531
college district, or state community college.532

       If all filings are not completed on the same day, the rule 533
shall be effective on the tenth day after the day on which the 534
latest filing is completed. If an agency in adopting a rule 535
designates an effective date that is later than the effective date 536
provided for by division (B)(1) of this section, the rule if filed 537
as required by such division shall become effective on the later 538
date designated by the agency.539

       Any rule that is required to be filed under division (B)(1) 540
of this section is also subject to division (D) of this section if 541
not exempted by that division (D)(1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), 542
(7), or (8) of this section.543

       If a rule incorporates a text or other material by reference, 544
the agency shall comply with sections 121.71 to 121.76 of the 545
Revised Code.546

       (2) A rule of an emergency nature necessary for the immediate 547
preservation of the public peace, health, or safety shall state 548
the reasons for the necessity. The emergency rule, in final form 549
and in compliance with division (B)(3) of this section, shall be 550
filed in electronic form with the secretary of state, the director 551
of the legislative service commission, and the joint committee on 552
agency rule review. The emergency rule is effective immediately 553
upon completion of the latest filing, except that if the agency in 554
adopting the emergency rule designates an effective date, or date 555
and time of day, that is later than the effective date and time 556
provided for by division (B)(2) of this section, the emergency 557
rule, if filed as required by such division, shall become 558
effective at the later date, or later date and time of day, 559
designated by the agency.560

       An emergency rule becomes invalid at the end of the ninetieth561
one hundred twentieth day it is in effect. Prior to that date, the 562
agency may file the emergency rule as a nonemergency rule in 563
compliance with division (B)(1) of this section. The agency may 564
not refile the emergency rule in compliance with division (B)(2) 565
of this section so that, upon the emergency rule becoming invalid 566
under such division, the emergency rule will continue in effect 567
without interruption for another ninety-dayone hundred twenty-day568
period.569

       (3) An agency shall file a rule under division (B)(1) or (2) 570
of this section in compliance with the following standards and 571
procedures:572

       (a) The rule shall be numbered in accordance with the 573
numbering system devised by the director for the Ohio 574
administrative code.575

       (b) The rule shall be prepared and submitted in compliance 576
with the rules of the legislative service commission.577

       (c) The rule shall clearly state the date on which it is to 578
be effective and the date on which it will expire, if known.579

       (d) Each rule that amends or rescinds another rule shall 580
clearly refer to the rule that is amended or rescinded. Each 581
amendment shall fully restate the rule as amended.582

       If the director of the legislative service commission or the 583
director's designee gives an agency notice pursuant to section 584
103.05 of the Revised Code that a rule filed by the agency is not 585
in compliance with the rules of the legislative service 586
commission, the agency shall within thirty days after receipt of 587
the notice conform the rule to the rules of the commission as 588
directed in the notice.589

       (C) All rules filed pursuant to divisions (B)(1)(a) and (2) 590
of this section shall be recorded by the secretary of state and 591
the director under the title of the agency adopting the rule and 592
shall be numbered according to the numbering system devised by the 593
director. The secretary of state and the director shall preserve 594
the rules in an accessible manner. Each such rule shall be a 595
public record open to public inspection and may be transmitted to 596
any law publishing company that wishes to reproduce it.597

       (D) At least sixty-five days before a board, commission, 598
department, division, or bureau of the government of the state 599
files a rule under division (B)(1) of this section, it shall file 600
the full text of the proposed rule in electronic form with the 601
joint committee on agency rule review, and the proposed rule is 602
subject to legislative review and invalidation under division (I) 603
of section 119.03106.021 of the Revised Code. If a state board, 604
commission, department, division, or bureau makes a substantive605
revision in a proposed rule after it is filed with the joint 606
committee, the state board, commission, department, division, or 607
bureau shall promptly file the full text of the proposed rule in 608
its revised form in electronic form with the joint committee. The 609
latest version of a proposed rule as filed with the joint 610
committee supersedes each earlier version of the text of the same 611
proposed rule. Except as provided in division (F) of this section, 612
aA state board, commission, department, division, or bureau shall 613
also file the rule summary and fiscal analysis prepared under 614
section 127.18 of the Revised Code in electronic form along with a 615
proposed rule, and along with a proposed rule in revised form, 616
that is filed under this division. If a proposed rule has an 617
adverse impact on businesses, the state board, commission, 618
department, division, or bureau also shall file the business 619
impact analysis, any recommendations received from the common 620
sense initiative office, and the associated memorandum of 621
response, if any, in electronic form along with the proposed rule, 622
or the proposed rule in revised form, that is filed under this 623
division.624

       A proposed rule that is subject to legislative review under 625
this division may not be adopted and filed in final form under 626
division (B)(1) of this section unless the proposed rule has been 627
filed with the joint committee on agency rule review under this 628
division and the time for the joint committee to review the 629
proposed rule has expired without recommendation of a bill to 630
invalidate the proposed rule.631

       As used in this division, "commission" includes the public 632
utilities commission when adopting rules under a federal or state 633
statute.634

       This division does not apply to any of the following:635

       (1) A proposed rule of an emergency nature;636

       (2) A rule proposed under section 1121.05, 1121.06, 1155.18, 637
1163.22, 1349.33, 1707.201, 1733.412, 4123.29, 4123.34, 4123.341, 638
4123.342, 4123.40, 4123.411, 4123.44, or 4123.442 of the Revised 639
Code;640

       (3) A rule proposed by an agency other than a board, 641
commission, department, division, or bureau of the government of 642
the state;643

       (4) A proposed internal management rule of a board, 644
commission, department, division, or bureau of the government of 645
the state;646

       (5) Any proposed rule that must be adopted verbatim by an 647
agency pursuant to federal law or rule, to become effective within 648
sixty days of adoption, in order to continue the operation of a 649
federally reimbursed program in this state, so long as the 650
proposed rule contains both of the following:651

       (a) A statement that it is proposed for the purpose of 652
complying with a federal law or rule;653

       (b) A citation to the federal law or rule that requires 654
verbatim compliance.655

       (6) An initial rule proposed by the director of health to 656
impose safety standards and quality-of-care standards with respect 657
to a health service specified in section 3702.11 of the Revised 658
Code, or an initial rule proposed by the director to impose 659
quality standards on a facility listed in division (A)(4) of 660
section 3702.30 of the Revised Code, if section 3702.12 of the 661
Revised Code requires that the rule be adopted under this section;662

       (7) A rule of the state lottery commission pertaining to 663
instant game rules.664

       If a rule is exempt from legislative review under division 665
(D)(5) of this section, and if the federal law or rule pursuant to 666
which the rule was adopted expires, is repealed or rescinded, or 667
otherwise terminates, the rule is thereafter subject to 668
legislative review under division (D) of this section.669

       (E) Whenever a state board, commission, department, division, 670
or bureau files a proposed rule or a proposed rule in revised form 671
under division (D) of this section, it shall also file the full 672
text of the same proposed rule or proposed rule in revised form in 673
electronic form with the secretary of state and the director of 674
the legislative service commission. Except as provided in division 675
(F) of this section, aA state board, commission, department, 676
division, or bureau shall file the rule summary and fiscal 677
analysis prepared under section 127.18 of the Revised Code in 678
electronic form along with a proposed rule or proposed rule in 679
revised form that is filed with the secretary of state or the 680
director of the legislative service commission.681

       (F) Except as otherwise provided in this division, the 682
auditor of state or the auditor of state's designee is not 683
required to file a rule summary and fiscal analysis along with a 684
proposed rule, or proposed rule in revised form, that the auditor 685
of state proposes under section 117.12, 117.19, 117.38, or 117.43 686
of the Revised Code and files under division (D) or (E) of this 687
section.688

       Sec. 117.20.  (A) In adopting rules pursuant to Chapter 117. 689
of the Revised Code, the auditor of state or the auditor of 690
state's designee shall do both of the following:691

       (1) Before adopting any such rule, except a rule of an 692
emergency nature, do each of the following:693

       (a) At least thirty-five days before any public hearing on 694
the proposed rule-making action, mail or send by electronic mail695
notice of the hearing to each public office and to each statewide 696
organization that the auditor of state or designee determines will 697
be affected or represents persons who will be affected by the 698
proposed rule-making action;699

       (b) Mail or send by electronic mail a copy of the proposed 700
rule to any person or organization that requests a copy within 701
five days after receipt of the request;702

       (c) Consult with appropriate state and local government 703
agencies, or with persons representative of their interests, 704
including statewide organizations of local government officials, 705
and consult with accounting professionals and other interested 706
persons;707

       (d) Conduct, on the date and at the time and place designated 708
in the notice, a public hearing at which any person affected by 709
the proposed rule, including statewide organizations of local 710
government officials, may appear and be heard in person, by 711
attorney, or both, and may present the person's or organization's 712
position or contentions orally or in writing.713

       (2) Except as otherwise provided in division (A)(2) of this 714
section, complyComply with divisions (B) to (E) of section 111.15 715
of the Revised Code. The auditor of state is not required to file 716
a rule summary and fiscal analysis along with any copy of a 717
proposed rule, or proposed rule in revised form, that is filed 718
with the joint committee on agency rule review, the secretary of 719
state, or the director of the legislative service commission under 720
division (D) or (E) of section 111.15 of the Revised Code.721

       (B) The auditor of state shall diligently discharge the 722
duties imposed by divisions (A)(1)(a), (b), and (c) of this 723
section, but failure to mail or send by electronic mail any notice 724
or copy of a proposed rule, or to consult with any person or 725
organization, shall not invalidate any rule.726

       (C) Notwithstanding any contrary provision of the Revised 727
Code, the auditor of state may prepare and disseminate, to public 728
offices and other interested persons and organizations, advisory 729
bulletins, directives, and instructions relating to accounting and 730
financial reporting systems, budgeting procedures, fiscal 731
controls, and the constructions by the auditor of state of 732
constitutional and statutory provisions, court decisions, and 733
opinions of the attorney general. The bulletins, directives, and 734
instructions shall be of an advisory nature only.735

       (D) As used in this section, "rule" includes the adoption, 736
amendment, or rescission of a rule.737

       Sec. 119.01.  As used in sections 119.01 to 119.13 of the 738
Revised Code:739

       (A)(1) "Agency" means, except as limited by this division, 740
any official, board, or commission having authority to promulgate 741
rules or make adjudications in the civil service commission, the 742
division of liquor control, the department of taxation, the 743
industrial commission, the bureau of workers' compensation, the 744
functions of any administrative or executive officer, department, 745
division, bureau, board, or commission of the government of the 746
state specifically made subject to sections 119.01 to 119.13 of 747
the Revised Code, and the licensing functions of any 748
administrative or executive officer, department, division, bureau, 749
board, or commission of the government of the state having the 750
authority or responsibility of issuing, suspending, revoking, or 751
canceling licenses.752

       Except as otherwise provided in division (I) of this section, 753
sectionsSections 119.01 to 119.13 of the Revised Code do not 754
apply to the public utilities commission. Sections 119.01 to 755
119.13 of the Revised Code do not apply to the utility 756
radiological safety board; to the controlling board; to actions of 757
the superintendent of financial institutions and the 758
superintendent of insurance in the taking possession of, and 759
rehabilitation or liquidation of, the business and property of 760
banks, savings and loan associations, savings banks, credit 761
unions, insurance companies, associations, reciprocal fraternal 762
benefit societies, and bond investment companies; to any action 763
taken by the division of securities under section 1707.201 of the 764
Revised Code; or to any action that may be taken by the 765
superintendent of financial institutions under section 1113.03, 766
1121.06, 1121.10, 1125.09, 1125.12, 1125.18, 1157.09, 1157.12, 767
1157.18, 1165.09, 1165.12, 1165.18, 1349.33, 1733.35, 1733.361, 768
1733.37, or 1761.03 of the Revised Code.769

       Sections 119.01 to 119.13 of the Revised Code do not apply to 770
actions of the industrial commission or the bureau of workers' 771
compensation under sections 4123.01 to 4123.94 of the Revised Code 772
with respect to all matters of adjudication, or to the actions of 773
the industrial commission, bureau of workers' compensation board 774
of directors, and bureau of workers' compensation under division 775
(D) of section 4121.32, sections 4123.29, 4123.34, 4123.341, 776
4123.342, 4123.40, 4123.411, 4123.44, 4123.442, 4127.07, divisions 777
(B), (C), and (E) of section 4131.04, and divisions (B), (C), and 778
(E) of section 4131.14 of the Revised Code with respect to all 779
matters concerning the establishment of premium, contribution, and 780
assessment rates.781

       (2) "Agency" also means any official or work unit having 782
authority to promulgate rules or make adjudications in the 783
department of job and family services, but only with respect to 784
both of the following:785

       (a) The adoption, amendment, or rescission of rules that 786
section 5101.09 of the Revised Code requires be adopted in 787
accordance with this chapter;788

       (b) The issuance, suspension, revocation, or cancellation of 789
licenses.790

       (B) "License" means any license, permit, certificate, 791
commission, or charter issued by any agency. "License" does not 792
include any arrangement whereby a person, institution, or entity 793
furnishes medicaid services under a provider agreement with the 794
department of job and family services pursuant to Title XIX of the 795
"Social Security Act," 49 Stat. 620 (1935), 42 U.S.C. 301, as 796
amended.797

       (C) "Rule" means any rule, regulation, or standard, having a 798
general and uniform operation, adopted, promulgated, and enforced 799
by any agency under the authority of the laws governing such 800
agency, and includes any appendix to a rule. "Rule" does not 801
include any internal management rule of an agency unless the 802
internal management rule affects private rights and does not 803
include any guideline adopted pursuant to section 3301.0714 of the 804
Revised Code.805

       (D) "Adjudication" means the determination by the highest or 806
ultimate authority of an agency of the rights, duties, privileges, 807
benefits, or legal relationships of a specified person, but does 808
not include the issuance of a license in response to an 809
application with respect to which no question is raised, nor other 810
acts of a ministerial nature.811

       (E) "Hearing" means a public hearing by any agency in 812
compliance with procedural safeguards afforded by sections 119.01 813
to 119.13 of the Revised Code.814

       (F) "Person" means a person, firm, corporation, association, 815
or partnership.816

       (G) "Party" means the person whose interests are the subject 817
of an adjudication by an agency.818

       (H) "Appeal" means the procedure by which a person, aggrieved 819
by a finding, decision, order, or adjudication of any agency, 820
invokes the jurisdiction of a court.821

       (I) "Rule-making agency" means any board, commission, 822
department, division, or bureau of the government of the state 823
that is required to file proposed rules, amendments, or 824
rescissions under division (D) of section 111.15 of the Revised 825
Code and any agency that is required to file proposed rules, 826
amendments, or rescissions under divisions (B) and (H) of section 827
119.03 of the Revised Code. "Rule-making agency" includes the 828
public utilities commission. "Rule-making agency" does not include 829
any state-supported college or university.830

       (J) "Substantive revision" means any addition to, elimination 831
from, or other change in a rule, an amendment of a rule, or a 832
rescission of a rule, whether of a substantive or procedural 833
nature, that changes any of the following:834

       (1) That which the rule, amendment, or rescission permits, 835
authorizes, regulates, requires, prohibits, penalizes, rewards, or 836
otherwise affects;837

       (2) The scope or application of the rule, amendment, or 838
rescission.839

       (K) "Internal management rule" means any rule, regulation, or 840
standard governing the day-to-day staff procedures and operations 841
within an agency.842

       Sec. 119.03.  In the adoption, amendment, or rescission of 843
any rule, an agency shall comply with the following procedure:844

       (A) Reasonable public notice shall be given in the register 845
of Ohio at least thirty days prior to the date set for a hearing, 846
in the form the agency determines. The agency shall file copies of 847
the public notice under division (B) of this section. (The agency 848
gives public notice in the register of Ohio when the public notice 849
is published in the register under that division.)850

       The public notice shall include:851

       (1) A statement of the agency's intention to consider 852
adopting, amending, or rescinding a rule;853

       (2) A synopsis of the proposed rule, amendment, or rule to be 854
rescinded or a general statement of the subject matter to which 855
the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission relates;856

       (3) A statement of the reason or purpose for adopting, 857
amending, or rescinding the rule;858

       (4) The date, time, and place of a hearing on the proposed 859
action, which shall be not earlier than the thirty-first nor later 860
than the fortieth day after the proposed rule, amendment, or 861
rescission is filed under division (B) of this section.862

       In addition to public notice given in the register of Ohio, 863
the agency may give whatever other notice it reasonably considers 864
necessary to ensure notice constructively is given to all persons 865
who are subject to or affected by the proposed rule, amendment, or 866
rescission.867

       The agency shall provide a copy of the public notice required 868
under division (A) of this section to any person who requests it 869
and pays a reasonable fee, not to exceed the cost of copying and 870
mailing.871

       (B) The full text of the proposed rule, amendment, or rule to 872
be rescinded, accompanied by the public notice required under 873
division (A) of this section, shall be filed in electronic form 874
with the secretary of state and with the director of the 875
legislative service commission. (If in compliance with this 876
division an agency files more than one proposed rule, amendment, 877
or rescission at the same time, and has prepared a public notice 878
under division (A) of this section that applies to more than one 879
of the proposed rules, amendments, or rescissions, the agency 880
shall file only one notice with the secretary of state and with 881
the director for all of the proposed rules, amendments, or 882
rescissions to which the notice applies.) The proposed rule, 883
amendment, or rescission and public notice shall be filed as 884
required by this division at least sixty-five days prior to the 885
date on which the agency, in accordance with division (D)(E) of 886
this section, issues an order adopting the proposed rule, 887
amendment, or rescission.888

       If the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission incorporates a 889
text or other material by reference, the agency shall comply with 890
sections 121.71 to 121.76 of the Revised Code.891

       The proposed rule, amendment, or rescission shall be 892
available for at least thirty days prior to the date of the 893
hearing at the office of the agency in printed or other legible 894
form without charge to any person affected by the proposal. 895
Failure to furnish such text to any person requesting it shall not 896
invalidate any action of the agency in connection therewith.897

       If the agency files a substantive revision in the text of the 898
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission under division (H) of this 899
section, it shall also promptly file the full text of the proposed 900
rule, amendment, or rescission in its revised form in electronic 901
form with the secretary of state and with the director of the 902
legislative service commission.903

       The agency shall file the rule summary and fiscal analysis 904
prepared under section 127.18 of the Revised Code in electronic 905
form along with a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission or 906
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission in revised form that is 907
filed with the secretary of state or the director of the 908
legislative service commission.909

       The director of the legislative service commission shall 910
publish in the register of Ohio the full text of the original and 911
each revised version of a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission; 912
the full text of a public notice; and the full text of a rule 913
summary and fiscal analysis that is filed with the director under 914
this division.915

       (C) When an agency files a proposed rule, amendment, or 916
rescission under division (B) of this section, it also shall file 917
in electronic form with the joint committee on agency rule review 918
the full text of the proposed rule, amendment, or rule to be 919
rescinded in the same form and the public notice required under 920
division (A) of this section. (If in compliance with this division 921
an agency files more than one proposed rule, amendment, or 922
rescission at the same time, and has given a public notice under 923
division (A) of this section that applies to more than one of the 924
proposed rules, amendments, or rescissions, the agency shall file 925
only one notice with the joint committee for all of the proposed 926
rules, amendments, or rescissions to which the notice applies.) 927
The proposed rule, amendment, or rescission is subject to 928
legislative review and invalidation under section 106.021 of the 929
Revised Code. If the agency makes a revision in a proposed rule, 930
amendment, or rescission after it is filed with the joint 931
committee, the agency promptly shall file the full text of the 932
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission in its revised form in 933
electronic form with the joint committee. An agency shall file the 934
rule summary and fiscal analysis prepared under section 127.18 of 935
the Revised Code in electronic form along with a proposed rule, 936
amendment, or rescission, and along with a proposed rule, 937
amendment, or rescission in revised form, that is filed under this 938
division. If a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission has an 939
adverse impact on businesses, the agency also shall file the 940
business impact analysis, any recommendations received from the 941
common sense initiative office, and the agency's memorandum of 942
response, if any, in electronic form along with the proposed rule, 943
amendment, or rescission, or along with the proposed rule, 944
amendment, or rescission in revised form, that is filed under this 945
division.946

       This division does not apply to:947

       (1) An emergency rule, amendment, or rescission;948

       (2) A proposed rule, amendment, or rescission that must be 949
adopted verbatim by an agency pursuant to federal law or rule, to 950
become effective within sixty days of adoption, in order to 951
continue the operation of a federally reimbursed program in this 952
state, so long as the proposed rule contains both of the 953
following:954

       (a) A statement that it is proposed for the purpose of 955
complying with a federal law or rule;956

       (b) A citation to the federal law or rule that requires 957
verbatim compliance.958

       If a rule or amendment is exempt from legislative review 959
under division (C)(2) of this section, and if the federal law or 960
rule pursuant to which the rule or amendment was adopted expires, 961
is repealed or rescinded, or otherwise terminates, the rule or 962
amendment, or its rescission, is thereafter subject to legislative 963
review under division (C) of this section.964

       (D) On the date and at the time and place designated in the 965
notice, the agency shall conduct a public hearing at which any 966
person affected by the proposed action of the agency may appear 967
and be heard in person, by the person's attorney, or both, may 968
present the person's position, arguments, or contentions, orally 969
or in writing, offer and examine witnesses, and present evidence 970
tending to show that the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission, 971
if adopted or effectuated, will be unreasonable or unlawful. An 972
agency may permit persons affected by the proposed rule, 973
amendment, or rescission to present their positions, arguments, or 974
contentions in writing, not only at the hearing, but also for a 975
reasonable period before, after, or both before and after the 976
hearing. A person who presents a position or arguments or 977
contentions in writing before or after the hearing is not required 978
to appear at the hearing.979

       At the hearing, the testimony shall be recorded. Such record 980
shall be made at the expense of the agency. The agency is required 981
to transcribe a record that is not sight readable only if a person 982
requests transcription of all or part of the record and agrees to 983
reimburse the agency for the costs of the transcription. An agency 984
may require the person to pay in advance all or part of the cost 985
of the transcription.986

       In any hearing under this section the agency may administer 987
oaths or affirmations.988

       (D)(E) After complying with divisions (A), (B), (C), and 989
(H)(D) of this section have been complied with, and when the time 990
for legislative review and invalidation under division (I) of this 991
sectionsections 106.02, 106.022, and 106.023 of the Revised Code992
has expired without recommendation of a bill to invalidate the 993
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission, the agency may issue an 994
order adopting the proposed rule or the proposed amendment or 995
rescission of the rule, consistent with the synopsis or general 996
statement included in the public notice. At that time the agency 997
shall designate the effective date of the rule, amendment, or 998
rescission, which shall not be earlier than the tenth day after 999
the rule, amendment, or rescission has been filed in its final 1000
form as provided in section 119.04 of the Revised Code.1001

       (E)(F) Prior to the effective date of a rule, amendment, or 1002
rescission, the agency shall make a reasonable effort to inform 1003
those affected by the rule, amendment, or rescission and to have 1004
available for distribution to those requesting it the full text of 1005
the rule as adopted or as amended.1006

       (F)(G) If the governor, upon the request of an agency, 1007
determines that an emergency requires the immediate adoption, 1008
amendment, or rescission of a rule, the governor shall issue an 1009
order, the text of which shall be filed in electronic form with 1010
the agency, the secretary of state, the director of the 1011
legislative service commission, and the joint committee on agency 1012
rule review, that the procedure prescribed by this section with 1013
respect to the adoption, amendment, or rescission of a specified 1014
rule is suspended. The agency may then adopt immediately the 1015
emergency rule, amendment, or rescission and it becomes effective 1016
on the date the rule, amendment, or rescission, in final form and 1017
in compliance with division (A)(2) of section 119.04 of the 1018
Revised Code, is filed in electronic form with the secretary of 1019
state, the director of the legislative service commission, and the 1020
joint committee on agency rule review. If all filings are not 1021
completed on the same day, the emergency rule, amendment, or 1022
rescission shall be effective on the day on which the latest 1023
filing is completed. The director shall publish the full text of 1024
the emergency rule, amendment, or rescission in the register of 1025
Ohio.1026

       The emergency rule, amendment, or rescission shall become 1027
invalid at the end of the ninetiethone hundred twentieth day it 1028
is in effect. Prior to that date the agency may adopt the 1029
emergency rule, amendment, or rescission as a nonemergency rule, 1030
amendment, or rescission by complying with the procedure 1031
prescribed by this section for the adoption, amendment, and 1032
rescission of nonemergency rules. The agency shall not use the 1033
procedure of this division to readopt the emergency rule, 1034
amendment, or rescission so that, upon the emergency rule, 1035
amendment, or rescission becoming invalid under this division, the 1036
emergency rule, amendment, or rescission will continue in effect 1037
without interruption for another ninety-dayone hundred twenty-day1038
period, except when division (I)(2)(a) of this section 106.02 of 1039
the Revised Code prevents the agency from adopting the emergency 1040
rule, amendment, or rescission as a nonemergency rule, amendment, 1041
or rescission within the ninety-dayone hundred twenty-day period.1042

       This division does not apply to the adoption of any emergency 1043
rule, amendment, or rescission by the tax commissioner under 1044
division (C)(2) of section 5117.02 of the Revised Code.1045

       (G)(H) Rules adopted by an authority within the department of 1046
job and family services for the administration or enforcement of 1047
Chapter 4141. of the Revised Code or of the department of taxation 1048
shall be effective without a hearing as provided by this section 1049
if the statutes pertaining to such agency specifically give a 1050
right of appeal to the board of tax appeals or to a higher 1051
authority within the agency or to a court, and also give the 1052
appellant a right to a hearing on such appeal. This division does 1053
not apply to the adoption of any rule, amendment, or rescission by 1054
the tax commissioner under division (C)(1) or (2) of section 1055
5117.02 of the Revised Code, or deny the right to file an action 1056
for declaratory judgment as provided in Chapter 2721. of the 1057
Revised Code from the decision of the board of tax appeals or of 1058
the higher authority within such agency.1059

       (H) When any agency files a proposed rule, amendment, or 1060
rescission under division (B) of this section, it shall also file 1061
in electronic form with the joint committee on agency rule review 1062
the full text of the proposed rule, amendment, or rule to be 1063
rescinded in the same form and the public notice required under 1064
division (A) of this section. (If in compliance with this division 1065
an agency files more than one proposed rule, amendment, or 1066
rescission at the same time, and has given a public notice under 1067
division (A) of this section that applies to more than one of the 1068
proposed rules, amendments, or rescissions, the agency shall file 1069
only one notice with the joint committee for all of the proposed 1070
rules, amendments, or rescissions to which the notice applies.) If 1071
the agency makes a substantive revision in a proposed rule, 1072
amendment, or rescission after it is filed with the joint 1073
committee, the agency shall promptly file the full text of the 1074
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission in its revised form in 1075
electronic form with the joint committee. The latest version of a 1076
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission as filed with the joint 1077
committee supersedes each earlier version of the text of the same 1078
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission. An agency shall file the 1079
rule summary and fiscal analysis prepared under section 127.18 of 1080
the Revised Code in electronic form along with a proposed rule, 1081
amendment, or rescission, and along with a proposed rule, 1082
amendment, or rescission in revised form, that is filed under this 1083
division. If a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission has an 1084
adverse impact on businesses, the agency also shall file the 1085
business impact analysis, any recommendations received from the 1086
common sense initiative office, and the agency's memorandum of 1087
response, if any, in electronic form along with the proposed rule, 1088
amendment, or rescission, or along with the proposed rule, 1089
amendment, or rescission in revised form, that is filed under this 1090
division.1091

       This division does not apply to:1092

       (1) An emergency rule, amendment, or rescission;1093

       (2) Any proposed rule, amendment, or rescission that must be 1094
adopted verbatim by an agency pursuant to federal law or rule, to 1095
become effective within sixty days of adoption, in order to 1096
continue the operation of a federally reimbursed program in this 1097
state, so long as the proposed rule contains both of the 1098
following:1099

       (a) A statement that it is proposed for the purpose of 1100
complying with a federal law or rule;1101

       (b) A citation to the federal law or rule that requires 1102
verbatim compliance.1103

       If a rule or amendment is exempt from legislative review 1104
under division (H)(2) of this section, and if the federal law or 1105
rule pursuant to which the rule or amendment was adopted expires, 1106
is repealed or rescinded, or otherwise terminates, the rule or 1107
amendment, or its rescission, is thereafter subject to legislative 1108
review under division (H) of this section.1109

       (I)(1) The joint committee on agency rule review may 1110
recommend the adoption of a concurrent resolution invalidating a 1111
proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof if it finds 1112
any of the following:1113

       (a) That the rule-making agency has exceeded the scope of its 1114
statutory authority in proposing the rule, amendment, or 1115
rescission;1116

       (b) That the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission 1117
conflicts with another rule, amendment, or rescission adopted by 1118
the same or a different rule-making agency;1119

       (c) That the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission 1120
conflicts with the legislative intent in enacting the statute 1121
under which the rule-making agency proposed the rule, amendment, 1122
or rescission;1123

       (d) That the rule-making agency has failed to prepare a 1124
complete and accurate rule summary and fiscal analysis of the 1125
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission as required by section 1126
127.18 of the Revised Code;1127

       (e) That the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission 1128
incorporates a text or other material by reference and either the 1129
rule-making agency has failed to file the text or other material 1130
incorporated by reference as required by section 121.73 of the 1131
Revised Code or, in the case of a proposed rule or amendment, the 1132
incorporation by reference fails to meet the standards stated in 1133
section 121.72, 121.75, or 121.76 of the Revised Code;1134

       (f) That the rule-making agency has failed to demonstrate 1135
through the business impact analysis, recommendations from the 1136
common sense initiative office, and the memorandum of response the 1137
agency has filed under division (H) of this section that the 1138
regulatory intent of the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission 1139
justifies its adverse impact on businesses in this state.1140

       The joint committee shall not hold its public hearing on a 1141
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission earlier than the 1142
forty-first day after the original version of the proposed rule, 1143
amendment, or rescission was filed with the joint committee.1144

       The house of representatives and senate may adopt a 1145
concurrent resolution invalidating a proposed rule, amendment, 1146
rescission, or part thereof. The concurrent resolution shall state 1147
which of the specific rules, amendments, rescissions, or parts 1148
thereof are invalidated. A concurrent resolution invalidating a 1149
proposed rule, amendment, or rescission shall be adopted not later 1150
than the sixty-fifth day after the original version of the text of 1151
the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission is filed with the 1152
joint committee, except that if more than thirty-five days after 1153
the original version is filed the rule-making agency either files 1154
a revised version of the text of the proposed rule, amendment, or 1155
rescission, or revises the rule summary and fiscal analysis in 1156
accordance with division (I)(4) of this section, a concurrent 1157
resolution invalidating the proposed rule, amendment, or 1158
rescission shall be adopted not later than the thirtieth day after 1159
the revised version of the proposed rule or rule summary and 1160
fiscal analysis is filed. If, after the joint committee on agency 1161
rule review recommends the adoption of a concurrent resolution 1162
invalidating a proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or part 1163
thereof, the house of representatives or senate does not, within 1164
the time remaining for adoption of the concurrent resolution, hold 1165
five floor sessions at which its journal records a roll call vote 1166
disclosing a sufficient number of members in attendance to pass a 1167
bill, the time within which that house may adopt the concurrent 1168
resolution is extended until it has held five such floor sessions.1169

       Within five days after the adoption of a concurrent 1170
resolution invalidating a proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or 1171
part thereof, the clerk of the senate shall send the rule-making 1172
agency, the secretary of state, and the director of the 1173
legislative service commission in electronic form a certified text 1174
of the resolution together with a certification stating the date 1175
on which the resolution takes effect. The secretary of state and 1176
the director of the legislative service commission shall each note 1177
the invalidity of the proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or 1178
part thereof, and shall each remove the invalid proposed rule, 1179
amendment, rescission, or part thereof from the file of proposed 1180
rules. The rule-making agency shall not proceed to adopt in 1181
accordance with division (D) of this section, or to file in 1182
accordance with division (B)(1) of section 111.15 of the Revised 1183
Code, any version of a proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or 1184
part thereof that has been invalidated by concurrent resolution.1185

       Unless the house of representatives and senate adopt a 1186
concurrent resolution invalidating a proposed rule, amendment, 1187
rescission, or part thereof within the time specified by this 1188
division, the rule-making agency may proceed to adopt in 1189
accordance with division (D) of this section, or to file in 1190
accordance with division (B)(1) of section 111.15 of the Revised 1191
Code, the latest version of the proposed rule, amendment, or 1192
rescission as filed with the joint committee. If by concurrent 1193
resolution certain of the rules, amendments, rescissions, or parts 1194
thereof are specifically invalidated, the rule-making agency may 1195
proceed to adopt, in accordance with division (D) of this section, 1196
or to file in accordance with division (B)(1) of section 111.15 of 1197
the Revised Code, the latest version of the proposed rules, 1198
amendments, rescissions, or parts thereof as filed with the joint 1199
committee that are not specifically invalidated. The rule-making 1200
agency may not revise or amend any proposed rule, amendment, 1201
rescission, or part thereof that has not been invalidated except 1202
as provided in this chapter or in section 111.15 of the Revised 1203
Code.1204

       (2)(a) A proposed rule, amendment, or rescission that is 1205
filed with the joint committee under division (H) of this section 1206
or division (D) of section 111.15 of the Revised Code shall be 1207
carried over for legislative review to the next succeeding regular 1208
session of the general assembly if the original or any revised 1209
version of the proposed rule, amendment, or rescission is filed 1210
with the joint committee on or after the first day of December of 1211
any year.1212

       (b) The latest version of any proposed rule, amendment, or 1213
rescission that is subject to division (I)(2)(a) of this section, 1214
as filed with the joint committee, is subject to legislative 1215
review and invalidation in the next succeeding regular session of 1216
the general assembly in the same manner as if it were the original 1217
version of a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission that had been 1218
filed with the joint committee for the first time on the first day 1219
of the session. A rule-making agency shall not adopt in accordance 1220
with division (D) of this section, or file in accordance with 1221
division (B)(1) of section 111.15 of the Revised Code, any version 1222
of a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission that is subject to 1223
division (I)(2)(a) of this section until the time for legislative 1224
review and invalidation, as contemplated by division (I)(2)(b) of 1225
this section, has expired.1226

       (3) Invalidation of any version of a proposed rule, 1227
amendment, rescission, or part thereof by concurrent resolution 1228
shall prevent the rule-making agency from instituting or 1229
continuing proceedings to adopt any version of the same proposed 1230
rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof for the duration of 1231
the general assembly that invalidated the proposed rule, 1232
amendment, rescission, or part thereof unless the same general 1233
assembly adopts a concurrent resolution permitting the rule-making 1234
agency to institute or continue such proceedings.1235

       The failure of the general assembly to invalidate a proposed 1236
rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof under this section 1237
shall not be construed as a ratification of the lawfulness or 1238
reasonableness of the proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or any 1239
part thereof or of the validity of the procedure by which the 1240
proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or any part thereof was 1241
proposed or adopted.1242

       (4) In lieu of recommending a concurrent resolution to 1243
invalidate a proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof 1244
because the rule-making agency has failed to prepare a complete 1245
and accurate fiscal analysis, the joint committee on agency rule 1246
review may issue, on a one-time basis, for rules, amendments, 1247
rescissions, or parts thereof that have a fiscal effect on school 1248
districts, counties, townships, or municipal corporations, a 1249
finding that the rule summary and fiscal analysis is incomplete or 1250
inaccurate and order the rule-making agency to revise the rule 1251
summary and fiscal analysis and refile it with the proposed rule, 1252
amendment, rescission, or part thereof. If an emergency rule is 1253
filed as a nonemergency rule before the end of the ninetieth day 1254
of the emergency rule's effectiveness, and the joint committee 1255
issues a finding and orders the rule-making agency to refile under 1256
division (I)(4) of this section, the governor may also issue an 1257
order stating that the emergency rule shall remain in effect for 1258
an additional sixty days after the ninetieth day of the emergency 1259
rule's effectiveness. The governor's orders shall be filed in 1260
accordance with division (F) of this section. The joint committee 1261
shall send in electronic form to the rule-making agency, the 1262
secretary of state, and the director of the legislative service 1263
commission a certified text of the finding and order to revise the 1264
rule summary and fiscal analysis, which shall take immediate 1265
effect.1266

       An order issued under division (I)(4) of this section shall 1267
prevent the rule-making agency from instituting or continuing 1268
proceedings to adopt any version of the proposed rule, amendment, 1269
rescission, or part thereof until the rule-making agency revises 1270
the rule summary and fiscal analysis and refiles it in electronic 1271
form with the joint committee along with the proposed rule, 1272
amendment, rescission, or part thereof. If the joint committee 1273
finds the rule summary and fiscal analysis to be complete and 1274
accurate, the joint committee shall issue a new order noting that 1275
the rule-making agency has revised and refiled a complete and 1276
accurate rule summary and fiscal analysis. The joint committee 1277
shall send in electronic form to the rule-making agency, the 1278
secretary of state, and the director of the legislative service 1279
commission a certified text of this new order. The secretary of 1280
state and the director of the legislative service commission shall 1281
each link this order to the proposed rule, amendment, rescission, 1282
or part thereof. The rule-making agency may then proceed to adopt 1283
in accordance with division (D) of this section, or to file in 1284
accordance with division (B)(1) of section 111.15 of the Revised 1285
Code, the proposed rule, amendment, rescission, or part thereof 1286
that was subject to the finding and order under division (I)(4) of 1287
this section. If the joint committee determines that the revised 1288
rule summary and fiscal analysis is still inaccurate or 1289
incomplete, the joint committee shall recommend the adoption of a 1290
concurrent resolution in accordance with division (I)(1) of this 1291
section.1292

       Sec. 119.04.  (A)(1) Any rule adopted by any agency shall be 1293
effective on the tenth day after the day on which the rule in 1294
final form and in compliance with division (A)(2) of this section 1295
is filed as follows:1296

       (a) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with both the 1297
secretary of state and the director of the legislative service 1298
commission;1299

       (b) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with the joint 1300
committee on agency rule review. Division (A)(1)(b) of this 1301
section does not apply to any rule to which division (H)(C) of 1302
section 119.03 of the Revised Code does not apply.1303

       If all filings are not completed on the same day, the rule 1304
shall be effective on the tenth day after the day on which the 1305
latest filing is completed. If an agency in adopting a rule 1306
designates an effective date that is later than the effective date 1307
provided for by this division, the rule if filed as required by 1308
this division shall become effective on the later date designated 1309
by the agency.1310

       An agency that adopts or amends a rule that is subject to1311
division (H) of section 119.03106.03 of the Revised Code shall 1312
assign a review date to the rule that is not later than five years 1313
after its effective date. If no review date is assigned to a rule, 1314
or if a review date assigned to a rule exceeds the five-year 1315
maximum, the review date for the rule is five years after its 1316
effective date. A rule with a review date is subject to review 1317
under section 119.032106.03 of the Revised Code. This paragraph 1318
does not apply to the department of taxation.1319

       (2) The agency shall file the rule in compliance with the 1320
following standards and procedures:1321

       (a) The rule shall be numbered in accordance with the 1322
numbering system devised by the director for the Ohio 1323
administrative code.1324

       (b) The rule shall be prepared and submitted in compliance 1325
with the rules of the legislative service commission.1326

       (c) The rule shall clearly state the date on which it is to 1327
be effective and the date on which it will expire, if known.1328

       (d) Each rule that amends or rescinds another rule shall 1329
clearly refer to the rule that is amended or rescinded. Each 1330
amendment shall fully restate the rule as amended.1331

       If the director of the legislative service commission or the 1332
director's designee gives an agency notice pursuant to section 1333
103.05 of the Revised Code that a rule filed by the agency is not 1334
in compliance with the rules of the commission, the agency shall 1335
within thirty days after receipt of the notice conform the rule to 1336
the rules of the commission as directed in the notice.1337

       (3) As used in this section, "rule" includes an amendment or 1338
rescission of a rule.1339

       (B) The secretary of state and the director shall preserve 1340
the rules filed under division (A)(1)(a) of this section in an 1341
accessible manner. Each such rule shall be a public record open to 1342
public inspection and may be transmitted to any law publishing 1343
company that wishes to reproduce it.1344

       Any rule that has been adopted in compliance with section 1345
119.03 of the Revised Code and that is in effect before January 1, 1346
1977, may be divided into sections, numbered, provided with a 1347
subject heading, and filed with the secretary of state and the 1348
director to comply with the provisions of this section without 1349
carrying out the adoption procedure required by section 119.03 of 1350
the Revised Code. The codification of existing rules to comply 1351
with this section shall not constitute adoption, amendment, or 1352
rescission.1353

       Sec. 121.39.  (A) As used in this section, "environmental 1354
protection" means any of the following:1355

       (1) Protection of human health or safety, biological 1356
resources, or natural resources by preventing, reducing, or 1357
remediating the pollution or degradation of air, land, or water 1358
resources or by preventing or limiting the exposure of humans, 1359
animals, or plants to pollution;1360

       (2) Appropriation or regulation of privately owned property 1361
to preserve air, land, or water resources in a natural state or to 1362
wholly or partially restore them to a natural state;1363

       (3) Regulation of the collection, management, treatment, 1364
reduction, storage, or disposal of solid, hazardous, radioactive, 1365
or other wastes;1366

       (4) Plans or programs to promote or regulate the 1367
conservation, recycling, or reuse of energy, materials, or wastes.1368

       (B) Except as otherwise provided in division (E) of this 1369
section, when proposed legislation dealing with environmental 1370
protection or containing a component dealing with environmental 1371
protection is referred to a committee of the general assembly, 1372
other than a committee on rules or reference, the sponsor of the 1373
legislation, at the time of the first hearing of the legislation 1374
before the committee, shall submit to the members of the committee 1375
a written statement identifying either the documentation that is 1376
the basis of the legislation or the federal requirement or 1377
requirements with which the legislation is intended to comply. If 1378
the legislation is not based on documentation or has not been 1379
introduced to comply with a federal requirement or requirements, 1380
the written statement from the sponsor shall so indicate.1381

       Also at the time of the first hearing of the legislation 1382
before the committee, a statewide organization that represents 1383
businesses in this state and that elects its board of directors 1384
may submit to the members of the committee a written estimate of 1385
the costs to the regulated community in this state of complying 1386
with the legislation if it is enacted.1387

       At any hearing of the legislation before the committee, a 1388
representative of any state agency, environmental advocacy 1389
organization, or consumer advocacy organization or any private 1390
citizen may present documentation containing an estimate of the 1391
monetary and other costs to public health and safety and the 1392
environment and to consumers and residential utility customers, 1393
and the effects on property values, if the legislation is not 1394
enacted.1395

       (C) Until such time as the statement required under division 1396
(B) of this section is submitted to the committee to which 1397
proposed legislation dealing with environmental protection or 1398
containing a component dealing with environmental protection was 1399
referred, the legislation shall not be reported by that committee. 1400
This requirement does not apply if the component dealing with 1401
environmental protection is removed from the legislation or if 1402
two-thirds of the members of the committee vote in favor of a 1403
motion to report the proposed legislation.1404

       (D) Except as otherwise provided in division (E) of this 1405
section, prior to adopting a rule or an amendment proposed to a 1406
rule dealing with environmental protection or containing a 1407
component dealing with environmental protection, a state agency 1408
shall do all of the following:1409

       (1) Consult with organizations that represent political 1410
subdivisions, environmental interests, business interests, and 1411
other persons affected by the proposed rule or amendment;1412

       (2) Consider documentation relevant to the need for, the 1413
environmental benefits or consequences of, other benefits of, and 1414
the technological feasibility of the proposed rule or amendment;1415

       (3) Specifically identify whether the proposed rule or 1416
amendment is being adopted or amended to enable the state to 1417
obtain or maintain approval to administer and enforce a federal 1418
environmental law or to participate in a federal environmental 1419
program, whether the proposed rule or amendment is more stringent 1420
than its federal counterpart, and, if the proposed rule or 1421
amendment is more stringent, the rationale for not incorporating 1422
its federal counterpart;1423

       (4) Include with the proposed rule or amendment and the rule 1424
summary and fiscal analysis required under section 127.18 of the 1425
Revised Code, when they are filed with the joint committee on 1426
agency rule review in accordance with division (D) of section 1427
111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, 1428
one of the following in electronic form, as applicable:1429

       (a) The information identified under division (D)(3) of this 1430
section and, if the proposed rule or amendment is more stringent 1431
than its federal counterpart, as identified in that division, the 1432
documentation considered under division (D)(2) of this section;1433

       (b) If an amendment proposed to a rule is being adopted or 1434
amended under a state statute that establishes standards with 1435
which the amendment shall comply, and the proposed amendment is 1436
more stringent than the rule that it is proposing to amend, the 1437
documentation considered under division (D)(2) of this section;1438

       (c) If division (D)(4)(a) or (b) of this section is not 1439
applicable, the documentation considered under division (D)(2) of 1440
this section.1441

       If the agency subsequently files a revision of such a 1442
proposed rule or amendment in accordance with division (D) of 1443
section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised 1444
Code, the revision shall be accompanied in electronic form by the 1445
applicable information or documentation.1446

       Division (D) of this section does not apply to any emergency 1447
rule adopted under division (B)(2) of section 111.15 or division 1448
(F)(G) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, but does apply to 1449
any such rule that subsequently is adopted as a nonemergency rule 1450
under either of those divisions.1451

       The information or documentation submitted under division 1452
(D)(4) of this section may be in the form of a summary or index of 1453
available knowledge or information and shall consist of or be 1454
based upon the best available generally accepted knowledge or 1455
information in the appropriate fields, as determined by the agency 1456
that prepared the documentation.1457

       (E) The statement required under division (B) and the 1458
information or documentation required under division (D) of this 1459
section need not be prepared or submitted with regard to a 1460
proposed statute or rule, or an amendment to a rule, if the 1461
statute, rule, or amendment is procedural or budgetary in nature, 1462
or governs the organization or operation of a state agency, and 1463
will not affect the substantive rights or obligations of any 1464
person other than a state agency or an employee or contractor of a 1465
state agency.1466

       (F) The insufficiency, incompleteness, or inadequacy of a 1467
statement, information, documentation, or a summary of information 1468
or documentation provided in accordance with division (B) or (D) 1469
of this section shall not be grounds for invalidation of any 1470
statute, rule, or amendment to a rule.1471

       (G) This section applies only to the following:1472

       (1) Legislation and components of legislation dealing with 1473
environmental protection that are introduced in the general 1474
assembly after March 5, 1996;1475

       (2) Rules and rule amendments dealing with environmental 1476
protection that are filed with the joint committee on agency rule 1477
review in accordance with division (D) of section 111.15 or 1478
division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code after March 1479
5, 1996.1480

       Sec. 121.73.  As used in this section, "rule" has the same 1481
meaning as in section 121.71 of the Revised Code and also includes 1482
the rescission of an existing rule.1483

       (A) When an agency files the original or a revised version of 1484
a rule in proposed form under division (D) of section 111.15 or 1485
division (H)(C) of section 119.03, or a rule for review under 1486
section 119.032106.03 of the Revised Code, that incorporates a 1487
text or other material by reference, the agency also shall file in 1488
electronic form, one complete and accurate copy of the text or 1489
other material incorporated by reference with the joint committee 1490
on agency rule review. An agency is not, however, required to file 1491
a text or other material incorporated by reference with the joint 1492
committee if the agency revises a rule in proposed form that 1493
incorporates a text or other material by reference and the 1494
incorporation by reference in the revised version of the rule is 1495
identical to the incorporation by reference in the preceding 1496
version of the rule.1497

       If it is infeasible for the agency to file a text or other 1498
material incorporated by reference electronically, the agency, as 1499
soon as possible, but not later than three days after completing 1500
the electronic filing, shall deliver one complete and accurate 1501
copy of the text or other material incorporated by reference to 1502
the joint committee, and shall attach a memorandum to the text or 1503
other material identifying the filing to which it relates.1504

       An agency is not required to file a text or other material 1505
incorporated by reference into a rule that is proposed for 1506
rescission if it is infeasible for the agency to do so.1507

       An agency shall not file a copy of a text or other material 1508
incorporated by reference with the secretary of state or with the 1509
director of the legislative service commission.1510

       (B) Upon completing its review of a rule in proposed form, or 1511
its review of a rule, that incorporates a text or other material 1512
by reference, the joint committee shall forward its copy of the 1513
text or other material incorporated by reference to the director 1514
of the legislative service commission. The director shall maintain 1515
a file of texts and other materials that are or were incorporated 1516
by reference into rules.1517

       Sec. 121.74. As used in this section, "rule" has the same 1518
meaning as in section 121.71 of the Revised Code and also includes 1519
the rescission of an existing rule.1520

       When an agency files a rule in final form under division 1521
(B)(1) of section 111.15,or division (A)(1) of section 119.04, 1522
division (B)(1) of section 4141.14, or division (A) of section 1523
5703.14 of the Revised Code that incorporates or incorporated a 1524
text or other material by reference, the agency, prior to the 1525
effective date of the rule, shall either:1526

       (A) Deposit one complete and accurate copy of the text or 1527
other material incorporated by reference in each of the five 1528
depository libraries designated by the state library board; or1529

       (B) Display a complete and accurate copy of the text or other 1530
material incorporated by reference on a web site maintained or 1531
made available by the agency.1532

       An agency is not required to comply with this section if the 1533
text or other material incorporated by reference is identical to a 1534
text or other material the agency, at the time compliance with 1535
this section otherwise would be required, already is depositing or 1536
displaying under this section.1537

       Sec. 121.81. As used in sections 121.81 to 121.83 of the 1538
Revised Code:1539

       (A) "Agency" means a state agency that is required to file 1540
proposed rules for legislative review under division (D) of 1541
section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised 1542
Code. "Agency" does not include the offices of governor, 1543
lieutenant governor, auditor of state, secretary of state, 1544
treasurer of state, or attorney general.1545

       (B) "Draft rule" means any newly proposed rule and any 1546
proposed amendment, adoption, or rescission of a rule prior to the 1547
filing of that rule for legislative review under division (D) of 1548
section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised 1549
Code and includes a proposed amendment, adoption, or rescission of 1550
a rule in both its original and any revised form. "Draft rule" 1551
does not include an emergency rule adopted under division (B)(2) 1552
of section 111.15 or division (F)(G) of section 119.03 of the 1553
Revised Code, but does include a rule that is proposed to replace 1554
an emergency rule that expires under those divisions.1555

       Sections 121.81 to 121.83 and 121.91 of the Revised Code are 1556
complementary to sections 107.51 to 107.55 and 107.61 to 107.63 of 1557
the Revised Code.1558

       Sec. 121.82.  In the course of developing a draft rule that 1559
is intended to be proposed under division (D) of section 111.15 or 1560
division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, an agency 1561
shall:1562

       (A) Evaluate the draft rule against the business impact 1563
analysis instrument. If, based on that evaluation, the draft rule 1564
will not have an adverse impact on businesses, the agency may 1565
proceed with the rule-filing process. If the evaluation determines 1566
that the draft rule will have an adverse impact on businesses, the 1567
agency shall incorporate features into the draft rule that will 1568
eliminate or adequately reduce any adverse impact the draft rule 1569
might have on businesses;1570

       (B) Prepare a business impact analysis that describes its 1571
evaluation of the draft rule against the business impact analysis 1572
instrument, that identifies any features that were incorporated 1573
into the draft rule as a result of the evaluation, and that 1574
explains how those features, if there were any, eliminate or 1575
adequately reduce any adverse impact the draft rule might have on 1576
businesses;1577

       (C) Transmit a copy of the full text of the draft rule and 1578
the business impact analysis electronically to the common sense 1579
initiative office, which information shall be made available to 1580
the public on the office's web site in accordance with section 1581
107.62 of the Revised Code;1582

       (D) Consider any recommendations made by the common sense 1583
initiative office with regard to the draft rule, and either 1584
incorporate into the draft rule features the recommendations 1585
suggest will eliminate or reduce any adverse impact the draft rule 1586
might have on businesses or document, in writing, the reasons 1587
those recommendations are not being incorporated into the draft 1588
rule; and1589

       (E) Prepare a memorandum of response identifying features 1590
suggested by any recommendations that were incorporated into the 1591
draft rule and features suggested by any recommendations that were 1592
not incorporated into the draft rule, explaining how the features 1593
that were incorporated into the draft rule eliminate or reduce any 1594
adverse impact the draft rule might have on businesses, and 1595
explaining why the features that were not incorporated into the 1596
draft rule were not incorporated.1597

       An agency may not file a proposed rule for legislative review 1598
under division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 1599
119.03 of the Revised Code earlier than the sixteenth business day 1600
after electronically transmitting the draft rule to the common 1601
sense initiative office.1602

       Sec. 121.83.  (A) When an agency files a proposed rule for 1603
legislative review under division (D) of section 111.15 of the 1604
Revised Code or division (H) of section 119.03 of the Revised 1605
Code, the agency electronically shall file one copy of the 1606
business impact analysis, any recommendations received from the 1607
common sense initiative office, and the agency's memorandum of 1608
response, if any, along with the proposed rule.1609

       (B)(1) The joint committee on agency rule review does not 1610
have jurisdiction to review, and shall reject, the filing of a 1611
proposed rule if, at any time while the proposed rule is in its 1612
possession, it discovers that the proposed rule might have an 1613
adverse impact on businesses and the agency has not included with 1614
the filing a business impact analysis or has included a business 1615
impact analysis that is inadequately prepared. The joint committee 1616
electronically shall return a filing that is rejected to the 1617
agency. Such a rejection does not preclude the agency from 1618
refiling the proposed rule after complying with section 121.82 of 1619
the Revised Code. When a filing is rejected under this division, 1620
it is as if the filing had not been made.1621

       (2) If the last previously filed version of a proposed rule, 1622
the filing of a later version of which has been rejected by the 1623
joint committee, remains in the possession of the joint committee, 1624
and if the time for legislative review of that previously filed 1625
version has expired, or if fewer than thirty days remain before 1626
the time for legislative review of that previously filed version 1627
expires, then the time for legislative review of that previously 1628
filed version is revived or extended, and recommendation of a bill 1629
to invalidate that previously filed version may be adopted not 1630
later than the sixty-fifth day after the day on which the filing 1631
of the later version of the proposed rule was rejected. This 1632
deadline is subject to extension under section 106.02 of the 1633
Revised Code.1634

       Sec. 127.18.  (A) As used in this section:1635

       (1) "Rule-making agencyAgency" has the same meaning as1636
defined in division (I) of section 119.01106.01 of the Revised 1637
Code.1638

       (2) "Rule" includes the adoption, amendment, or rescission of 1639
a rule.1640

       (3) "Proposed rule" means the original version of a proposed 1641
rule, and each revised version of the same proposed rule, that is 1642
filed with the joint committee on agency rule review under 1643
division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 1644
119.03 of the Revised Code.1645

       (B) A rule-makingAn agency shall prepare, in the form 1646
prescribed by the joint committee on agency rule review under 1647
division (E) of this section, a complete and accurate rule summary 1648
and fiscal analysis of each proposed rule that it files under 1649
division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 1650
119.03 of the Revised Code. The rule summary and fiscal analysis 1651
shall include all of the following information:1652

       (1) The name, address, and telephone number of the 1653
rule-making agency, and the name and, telephone number, and 1654
electronic mail address of an individual or office within the 1655
agency designated by that agency to be responsible for 1656
coordinating and making available information in the possession of 1657
the agency regarding the proposed rule;1658

       (2) The Ohio Administrative Code rule number of the proposed 1659
rule;1660

       (3) A brief summary of, and the legal basis for, the proposed 1661
rule, including citations identifying the statute that prescribes 1662
the procedure in accordance with which the rule-making agency is 1663
required to adopt the proposed rule, the statute that authorizes 1664
the agency to adopt the proposed rule, and the statute that the 1665
agency intends to amplify or implement by adopting the proposed 1666
rule;1667

       (4) An estimate, in dollars, of the amount by which the 1668
proposed rule would increase or decrease revenues or expenditures 1669
during the current biennium;1670

       (5) A citation identifying the appropriation that authorizes 1671
each expenditure that would be necessitated by the proposed rule;1672

       (6) A summary of the estimated cost of compliance with the 1673
rule to all directly affected persons;1674

       (7) The reasons why the rule is being proposed;1675

       (8) If the rule has a fiscal effect on school districts, 1676
counties, townships, or municipal corporations, an estimate in 1677
dollars of the cost of compliance with the rule, or, if dollar 1678
amounts cannot be determined, a written explanation of why it was 1679
not possible to ascertain dollar amounts;1680

       (9) If the rule has a fiscal effect on school districts, 1681
counties, townships, or municipal corporations and is the result 1682
of a federal requirement, a clear explanation that the proposed 1683
state rule does not exceed the scope and intent of the 1684
requirement, or, if the state rule does exceed the minimum 1685
necessary federal requirement, a justification of the excess cost, 1686
and an estimate of the costs, including those costs for local 1687
governments, exceeding the federal requirement;1688

       (10) If the rule has a fiscal effect on school districts, 1689
counties, townships, or municipal corporations, a comprehensive 1690
cost estimate that includes the procedure and method of 1691
calculating the costs of compliance and identifies major cost 1692
categories including personnel costs, new equipment or other 1693
capital costs, operating costs, and indirect central service costs 1694
related to the rule. The fiscal analysis shall also include a 1695
written explanation of the agency's and the affected local 1696
government's ability to pay for the new requirements and a 1697
statement of any impact the rule will have on economic 1698
development.1699

       (11) If the rule incorporates a text or other material by 1700
reference, and the agency claims the incorporation by reference is 1701
exempt from compliance with sections 121.71 to 121.74 of the 1702
Revised Code because the text or other material is generally 1703
available to persons who reasonably can be expected to be affected 1704
by the rule, an explanation of how the text or other material is 1705
generally available to those persons;1706

       (12) If the rule incorporates a text or other material by 1707
reference, and it was infeasible for the agency to file the text 1708
or other material electronically, an explanation of why filing the 1709
text or other material electronically was infeasible;1710

       (13) If the rule is being rescinded and incorporates a text 1711
or other material by reference, and it was infeasible for the 1712
agency to file the text or other material, an explanation of why 1713
filing the text or other material was infeasible;1714

       (14) Any other information the joint committee on agency rule 1715
review considers necessary to make the proposed rule or the fiscal 1716
effect of the proposed rule fully understandable.1717

       (C) The rule-making agency shall file the rule summary and 1718
fiscal analysis in electronic form along with the proposed rule 1719
that it files under divisionsdivision (D) and (E) of section 1720
111.15 or divisions (B) and (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the 1721
Revised Code. The joint committee on agency rule review shall not 1722
accept any proposed rule for filing unless a copy of the rule 1723
summary and fiscal analysis of the proposed rule, completely and 1724
accurately prepared, is filed along with the proposed rule.1725

       (D) The joint committee on agency rule review shall review 1726
the fiscal effect of each proposed rule that is filed under 1727
division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H)(C) of section 1728
119.03 of the Revised Code.1729

       (E) The joint committee on agency rule review shall prescribe 1730
the form in which each rule-making agency shall prepare its rule 1731
summary and fiscal analysis of a proposed rule.1732

       (F) This section does not require the auditor of state or the 1733
auditor of state's designee to prepare or attach a rule summary 1734
and fiscal analysis to any copy of a rule proposed under section 1735
117.12, 117.19, 117.38, or 117.43 of the Revised Code.1736

       Sec. 1531.08.  In conformity with Section 36 of Article II, 1737
Ohio Constitution, providing for the passage of laws for the 1738
conservation of the natural resources of the state, including 1739
streams, lakes, submerged lands, and swamplands, and in conformity 1740
with this chapter and Chapter 1533. of the Revised Code, the chief 1741
of the division of wildlife has authority and control in all 1742
matters pertaining to the protection, preservation, propagation, 1743
possession, and management of wild animals and may adopt rules 1744
under section 1531.10 of the Revised Code for the management of 1745
wild animals. Notwithstanding division (B) of section 119.03 of 1746
the Revised Code, such rules in proposed form shall be filed under 1747
this section. Each year there shall be a public fish hearing and 1748
public game hearing. The results of the investigation and public 1749
hearing shall be filed in the office of the chief and shall be 1750
kept open for public inspection during all regular office hours. 1751
Modifying or rescinding such rules does not require a public 1752
hearing.1753

       The chief may adopt, amend, rescind, and enforce rules 1754
throughout the state or in any part or waters thereof as provided 1755
by sections 1531.08 to 1531.12 and other sections of the Revised 1756
Code. The rules shall be filed in proposed form and available at 1757
the central wildlife office and at each of the wildlife district 1758
offices, including the Lake Erie unit located at Sandusky, at 1759
least thirty days prior to the date of the hearing required by 1760
division (C)(D) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code. The rules 1761
shall be based upon a public hearing and investigation of the best 1762
available biological information derived from professionally 1763
accepted practices in wildlife and fisheries management.1764

       Each rule adopted under this section shall clearly and 1765
distinctly describe and set forth the waters or area or part 1766
thereof affected by the rule and whether the rule is applicable to 1767
all wild animals or only to certain kinds of species designated 1768
therein.1769

       The chief may regulate any of the following:1770

       (A) Taking and possessing wild animals, at any time and place 1771
or in any number, quantity, or length, and in any manner, and with 1772
such devices as hethe chief prescribes;1773

       (B) Transportation of such animals or any part thereof;1774

       (C) Buying, selling, offering for sale, or exposing for sale 1775
any such animal or part thereof;1776

       (D) Taking, possessing, transporting, buying, selling, 1777
offering for sale, and exposing for sale commercial fish or any 1778
part thereof, including species taken, length, weight, method of 1779
taking, mesh sizes, specifications of nets and other fishing 1780
devices, seasons, and time and place of taking.1781

       When the chief increases the size of a fish named in section 1782
1533.63 of the Revised Code, any fish that were legally taken, 1783
caught, or possessed prior to the increase may be possessed after 1784
the increase if the possession of the fish has been reported to 1785
the chief prior to the increase, but on or after the date of the 1786
increase the fish may not be sold to a buyer in this state.1787

       Sec. 3319.22.  (A)(1) The state board of education shall 1788
issue the following educator licenses:1789

       (a) A resident educator license, which shall be valid for 1790
four years, except that the state board, on a case-by-case basis, 1791
may extend the license's duration as necessary to enable the 1792
license holder to complete the Ohio teacher residency program 1793
established under section 3319.223 of the Revised Code;1794

       (b) A professional educator license, which shall be valid for 1795
five years and shall be renewable;1796

       (c) A senior professional educator license, which shall be 1797
valid for five years and shall be renewable;1798

       (d) A lead professional educator license, which shall be 1799
valid for five years and shall be renewable.1800

       (2) The state board may issue any additional educator 1801
licenses of categories, types, and levels the board elects to 1802
provide. 1803

       (3) The state board shall adopt rules establishing the 1804
standards and requirements for obtaining each educator license 1805
issued under this section.1806

       (B) The rules adopted under this section shall require at 1807
least the following standards and qualifications for the educator 1808
licenses described in division (A)(1) of this section:1809

       (1) An applicant for a resident educator license shall hold 1810
at least a bachelor's degree from an accredited teacher 1811
preparation program or be a participant in the teach for America 1812
program and meet the qualifications required under section 1813
3319.227 of the Revised Code.1814

       (2) An applicant for a professional educator license shall:1815

       (a) Hold at least a bachelor's degree from an institution of 1816
higher education accredited by a regional accrediting 1817
organization;1818

       (b) Have successfully completed the Ohio teacher residency 1819
program established under section 3319.223 of the Revised Code, if 1820
the applicant's current or most recently issued license is a 1821
resident educator license issued under this section or an 1822
alternative resident educator license issued under section 3319.26 1823
of the Revised Code.1824

       (3) An applicant for a senior professional educator license 1825
shall:1826

       (a) Hold at least a master's degree from an institution of 1827
higher education accredited by a regional accrediting 1828
organization;1829

       (b) Have previously held a professional educator license 1830
issued under this section or section 3319.222 or under former 1831
section 3319.22 of the Revised Code;1832

       (c) Meet the criteria for the accomplished or distinguished 1833
level of performance, as described in the standards for teachers 1834
adopted by the state board under section 3319.61 of the Revised 1835
Code.1836

       (4) An applicant for a lead professional educator license 1837
shall:1838

       (a) Hold at least a master's degree from an institution of 1839
higher education accredited by a regional accrediting 1840
organization;1841

       (b) Have previously held a professional educator license or a 1842
senior professional educator license issued under this section or 1843
a professional educator license issued under section 3319.222 or 1844
former section 3319.22 of the Revised Code;1845

       (c) Meet the criteria for the distinguished level of 1846
performance, as described in the standards for teachers adopted by 1847
the state board under section 3319.61 of the Revised Code;1848

       (d) Either hold a valid certificate issued by the national 1849
board for professional teaching standards or meet the criteria for 1850
a master teacher or other criteria for a lead teacher adopted by 1851
the educator standards board under division (F)(4) or (5) of 1852
section 3319.61 of the Revised Code.1853

       (C) The state board shall align the standards and 1854
qualifications for obtaining a principal license with the 1855
standards for principals adopted by the state board under section 1856
3319.61 of the Revised Code. 1857

       (D) If the state board requires any examinations for educator 1858
licensure, the department of education shall provide the results 1859
of such examinations received by the department to the chancellor 1860
of the Ohio board of regents, in the manner and to the extent 1861
permitted by state and federal law.1862

       (E) Any rules the state board of education adopts, amends, or 1863
rescinds for educator licenses under this section, division (D) of 1864
section 3301.07 of the Revised Code, or any other law shall be 1865
adopted, amended, or rescinded under Chapter 119. of the Revised 1866
Code except as follows:1867

       (1) Notwithstanding division (D)(E) of section 119.03 and 1868
division (A)(1) of section 119.04 of the Revised Code, in the case 1869
of the adoption of any rule or the amendment or rescission of any 1870
rule that necessitates institutions' offering preparation programs 1871
for educators and other school personnel that are approved by the 1872
chancellor of the Ohio board of regents under section 3333.048 of 1873
the Revised Code to revise the curriculum of those programs, the 1874
effective date shall not be as prescribed in division (D)(E) of 1875
section 119.03 and division (A)(1) of section 119.04 of the 1876
Revised Code. Instead, the effective date of such rules, or the 1877
amendment or rescission of such rules, shall be the date 1878
prescribed by section 3333.048 of the Revised Code.1879

       (2) Notwithstanding the authority to adopt, amend, or rescind 1880
emergency rules in division (F)(G) of section 119.03 of the 1881
Revised Code, this authority shall not apply to the state board of 1882
education with regard to rules for educator licenses.1883

       (F)(1) The rules adopted under this section establishing 1884
standards requiring additional coursework for the renewal of any 1885
educator license shall require a school district and a chartered 1886
nonpublic school to establish local professional development 1887
committees. In a nonpublic school, the chief administrative 1888
officer shall establish the committees in any manner acceptable to 1889
such officer. The committees established under this division shall 1890
determine whether coursework that a district or chartered 1891
nonpublic school teacher proposes to complete meets the 1892
requirement of the rules. The department of education shall 1893
provide technical assistance and support to committees as the 1894
committees incorporate the professional development standards 1895
adopted by the state board of education pursuant to section 1896
3319.61 of the Revised Code into their review of coursework that 1897
is appropriate for license renewal. The rules shall establish a 1898
procedure by which a teacher may appeal the decision of a local 1899
professional development committee.1900

       (2) In any school district in which there is no exclusive 1901
representative established under Chapter 4117. of the Revised 1902
Code, the professional development committees shall be established 1903
as described in division (F)(2) of this section.1904

       Not later than the effective date of the rules adopted under 1905
this section, the board of education of each school district shall 1906
establish the structure for one or more local professional 1907
development committees to be operated by such school district. The 1908
committee structure so established by a district board shall 1909
remain in effect unless within thirty days prior to an anniversary 1910
of the date upon which the current committee structure was 1911
established, the board provides notice to all affected district 1912
employees that the committee structure is to be modified. 1913
Professional development committees may have a district-level or 1914
building-level scope of operations, and may be established with 1915
regard to particular grade or age levels for which an educator 1916
license is designated.1917

       Each professional development committee shall consist of at 1918
least three classroom teachers employed by the district, one 1919
principal employed by the district, and one other employee of the 1920
district appointed by the district superintendent. For committees 1921
with a building-level scope, the teacher and principal members 1922
shall be assigned to that building, and the teacher members shall 1923
be elected by majority vote of the classroom teachers assigned to 1924
that building. For committees with a district-level scope, the 1925
teacher members shall be elected by majority vote of the classroom 1926
teachers of the district, and the principal member shall be 1927
elected by a majority vote of the principals of the district, 1928
unless there are two or fewer principals employed by the district, 1929
in which case the one or two principals employed shall serve on 1930
the committee. If a committee has a particular grade or age level 1931
scope, the teacher members shall be licensed to teach such grade 1932
or age levels, and shall be elected by majority vote of the 1933
classroom teachers holding such a license and the principal shall 1934
be elected by all principals serving in buildings where any such 1935
teachers serve. The district superintendent shall appoint a 1936
replacement to fill any vacancy that occurs on a professional 1937
development committee, except in the case of vacancies among the 1938
elected classroom teacher members, which shall be filled by vote 1939
of the remaining members of the committee so selected.1940

       Terms of office on professional development committees shall 1941
be prescribed by the district board establishing the committees. 1942
The conduct of elections for members of professional development 1943
committees shall be prescribed by the district board establishing 1944
the committees. A professional development committee may include 1945
additional members, except that the majority of members on each 1946
such committee shall be classroom teachers employed by the 1947
district. Any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring prior 1948
to the expiration date of the term for which a predecessor was 1949
appointed shall hold office as a member for the remainder of that 1950
term.1951

       The initial meeting of any professional development 1952
committee, upon election and appointment of all committee members, 1953
shall be called by a member designated by the district 1954
superintendent. At this initial meeting, the committee shall 1955
select a chairperson and such other officers the committee deems 1956
necessary, and shall adopt rules for the conduct of its meetings. 1957
Thereafter, the committee shall meet at the call of the 1958
chairperson or upon the filing of a petition with the district 1959
superintendent signed by a majority of the committee members 1960
calling for the committee to meet.1961

       (3) In the case of a school district in which an exclusive 1962
representative has been established pursuant to Chapter 4117. of 1963
the Revised Code, professional development committees shall be 1964
established in accordance with any collective bargaining agreement 1965
in effect in the district that includes provisions for such 1966
committees.1967

       If the collective bargaining agreement does not specify a 1968
different method for the selection of teacher members of the 1969
committees, the exclusive representative of the district's 1970
teachers shall select the teacher members.1971

       If the collective bargaining agreement does not specify a 1972
different structure for the committees, the board of education of 1973
the school district shall establish the structure, including the 1974
number of committees and the number of teacher and administrative 1975
members on each committee; the specific administrative members to 1976
be part of each committee; whether the scope of the committees 1977
will be district levels, building levels, or by type of grade or 1978
age levels for which educator licenses are designated; the lengths 1979
of terms for members; the manner of filling vacancies on the 1980
committees; and the frequency and time and place of meetings. 1981
However, in all cases, except as provided in division (F)(4) of 1982
this section, there shall be a majority of teacher members of any 1983
professional development committee, there shall be at least five 1984
total members of any professional development committee, and the 1985
exclusive representative shall designate replacement members in 1986
the case of vacancies among teacher members, unless the collective 1987
bargaining agreement specifies a different method of selecting 1988
such replacements.1989

       (4) Whenever an administrator's coursework plan is being 1990
discussed or voted upon, the local professional development 1991
committee shall, at the request of one of its administrative 1992
members, cause a majority of the committee to consist of 1993
administrative members by reducing the number of teacher members 1994
voting on the plan.1995

       (G)(1) The department of education, educational service 1996
centers, county boards of developmental disabilities, regional 1997
professional development centers, special education regional 1998
resource centers, college and university departments of education, 1999
head start programs, the eTech Ohio commission, and the Ohio 2000
education computer network may establish local professional 2001
development committees to determine whether the coursework 2002
proposed by their employees who are licensed or certificated under 2003
this section or section 3319.222 of the Revised Code, or under the 2004
former version of either section as it existed prior to October 2005
16, 2009, meet the requirements of the rules adopted under this 2006
section. They may establish local professional development 2007
committees on their own or in collaboration with a school district 2008
or other agency having authority to establish them.2009

       Local professional development committees established by 2010
county boards of developmental disabilities shall be structured in 2011
a manner comparable to the structures prescribed for school 2012
districts in divisions (F)(2) and (3) of this section, as shall 2013
the committees established by any other entity specified in 2014
division (G)(1) of this section that provides educational services 2015
by employing or contracting for services of classroom teachers 2016
licensed or certificated under this section or section 3319.222 of 2017
the Revised Code, or under the former version of either section as 2018
it existed prior to October 16, 2009. All other entities specified 2019
in division (G)(1) of this section shall structure their 2020
committees in accordance with guidelines which shall be issued by 2021
the state board.2022

       (2) Any public agency that is not specified in division 2023
(G)(1) of this section but provides educational services and 2024
employs or contracts for services of classroom teachers licensed 2025
or certificated under this section or section 3319.222 of the 2026
Revised Code, or under the former version of either section as it 2027
existed prior to October 16, 2009, may establish a local 2028
professional development committee, subject to the approval of the 2029
department of education. The committee shall be structured in 2030
accordance with guidelines issued by the state board.2031

       Sec. 3319.221.  (A) The state board of education shall adopt 2032
rules establishing the standards and requirements for obtaining a 2033
school nurse license and a school nurse wellness coordinator 2034
license. At a minimum, the rules shall require that an applicant 2035
for a school nurse license be licensed as a registered nurse under 2036
Chapter 4723. of the Revised Code.2037

       (B) If the state board requires any examinations for 2038
licensure under this section, the department of education shall 2039
provide the examination results received by the department to the 2040
chancellor of the Ohio board of regents, in the manner and to the 2041
extent permitted by state and federal law.2042

       (C) Any rules for licenses described in this section that the 2043
state board adopts, amends, or rescinds under this section, 2044
division (D) of section 3301.07 of the Revised Code, or any other 2045
law shall be adopted, amended, or rescinded under Chapter 119. of 2046
the Revised Code, except that the authority to adopt, amend, or 2047
rescind emergency rules under division (F)(G) of section 119.03 of 2048
the Revised Code shall not apply to the state board with respect 2049
to rules for licenses described in this section.2050

       (D) Any registered nurse employed by a school district in the 2051
capacity of school nurse on January 1, 1973, or any registered 2052
nurse employed by a city or general health district on January 1, 2053
1973, to serve full-time in the capacity of school nurse in one or 2054
more school districts, shall be considered to have fulfilled the 2055
requirements for the issuance of a school nurse license under this 2056
section.2057

       Sec. 3333.021.  As used in this section, "university" means 2058
any college or university that receives a state appropriation.2059

       (A) This division does not apply to proposed rules, 2060
amendments, or rescissions subject to legislative review under 2061
division (I) of section 119.03106.02 of the Revised Code. No 2062
action taken by the chancellor of the Ohio board of regents that 2063
could reasonably be expected to have an effect on the revenue or 2064
expenditures of any university shall take effect unless at least 2065
two weeks prior to the date on which the action is taken, the 2066
chancellor has filed with the speaker of the house of 2067
representatives, the president of the senate, the legislative 2068
budget office of the legislative service commission, and the 2069
director of budget and management a fiscal analysis of the 2070
proposed action. The analysis shall include an estimate of the 2071
amount by which, during the current and ensuing fiscal biennium, 2072
the action would increase or decrease the university's revenues or 2073
expenditures and increase or decrease any state expenditures and 2074
any other information the chancellor considers necessary to 2075
explain the action's fiscal effect.2076

       (B) Within three days of the date the chancellor files with 2077
the clerk of the senate a proposed rule, amendment, or rescission 2078
that is subject to legislative review and invalidation under2079
division (I) of section 119.03106.02 of the Revised Code, the 2080
chancellor shall file with the speaker of the house of 2081
representatives, the president of the senate, the legislative 2082
budget office of the legislative service commission, and the 2083
director of budget and management a fiscal analysis of the 2084
proposed rule. The analysis shall include an estimate of the 2085
amount by which, during the current and ensuing fiscal biennium, 2086
the action would increase or decrease any university's revenues or 2087
expenditures and increase or decrease state revenues or 2088
expenditures and any other information the chancellor considers 2089
necessary to explain the fiscal effect of the rule, amendment, or 2090
rescission. No rule, amendment, or rescission shall take effect 2091
unless the chancellor has complied with this division.2092

       Sec. 3333.048.  (A) Not later than one year after the 2093
effective date of this sectionOctober 16, 2009, the chancellor of 2094
the Ohio board of regents and the superintendent of public 2095
instruction jointly shall do the following:2096

       (1) In accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code, 2097
establish metrics and educator preparation programs for the 2098
preparation of educators and other school personnel and the 2099
institutions of higher education that are engaged in their 2100
preparation. The metrics and educator preparation programs shall 2101
be aligned with the standards and qualifications for educator 2102
licenses adopted by the state board of education under section 2103
3319.22 of the Revised Code and the requirements of the Ohio 2104
teacher residency program established under section 3319.223 of 2105
the Revised Code. The metrics and educator preparation programs 2106
also shall ensure that educators and other school personnel are 2107
adequately prepared to use the value-added progress dimension 2108
prescribed by section 3302.021 of the Revised Code.2109

       (2) Provide for the inspection of institutions of higher 2110
education desiring to prepare educators and other school 2111
personnel.2112

       (B) Not later than one year after the effective date of this 2113
sectionOctober 16, 2009, the chancellor shall approve 2114
institutions of higher education engaged in the preparation of 2115
educators and other school personnel that maintain satisfactory 2116
training procedures and records of performance, as determined by 2117
the chancellor.2118

       (C) If the metrics established under division (A)(1) of this 2119
section require an institution of higher education that prepares 2120
teachers to satisfy the standards of an independent accreditation 2121
organization, the chancellor shall permit each institution to 2122
satisfy the standards of either the national council for 2123
accreditation of teacher education or the teacher education 2124
accreditation council.2125

       (D) The metrics and educator preparation programs established 2126
under division (A)(1) of this section may require an institution 2127
of higher education, as a condition of approval by the chancellor, 2128
to make changes in the curricula of its preparation programs for 2129
educators and other school personnel.2130

       Notwithstanding division (D)(E) of section 119.03 and 2131
division (A)(1) of section 119.04 of the Revised Code, any 2132
metrics, educator preparation programs, rules, and regulations, or 2133
any amendment or rescission of such metrics, educator preparation 2134
programs, rules, and regulations, adopted under this section that 2135
necessitate institutions offering preparation programs for 2136
educators and other school personnel approved by the chancellor to 2137
revise the curricula of those programs shall not be effective for 2138
at least one year after the first day of January next succeeding 2139
the publication of the said change.2140

       Each institution shall allocate money from its existing 2141
appropriations to pay the cost of making the curricular changes.2142

       (E) The chancellor shall notify the state board of the 2143
metrics and educator preparation programs established under 2144
division (A)(1) of this section and the institutions of higher 2145
education approved under division (B) of this section. The state 2146
board shall publish the metrics, educator preparation programs, 2147
and approved institutions with the standards and qualifications 2148
for each type of educator license.2149

       (F) The graduates of institutions of higher education 2150
approved by the chancellor shall be licensed by the state board in 2151
accordance with the standards and qualifications adopted under 2152
section 3319.22 of the Revised Code.2153

       Sec. 3737.88.  (A)(1) The fire marshal shall have 2154
responsibility for implementation of the underground storage tank 2155
program and corrective action program for releases of petroleum 2156
from underground storage tanks established by the "Resource 2157
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976," 90 Stat. 2795, 42 U.S.C.A. 2158
6901, as amended. To implement the programs, the fire marshal may 2159
adopt, amend, and rescind such rules, conduct such inspections, 2160
require annual registration of underground storage tanks, issue 2161
such citations and orders to enforce those rules, enter into 2162
environmental covenants in accordance with sections 5301.80 to 2163
5301.92 of the Revised Code, and perform such other duties, as are 2164
consistent with those programs. The fire marshal, by rule, may 2165
delegate the authority to conduct inspections of underground 2166
storage tanks to certified fire safety inspectors.2167

       (2) In the place of any rules regarding release containment 2168
and release detection for underground storage tanks adopted under 2169
division (A)(1) of this section, the fire marshal, by rule, shall 2170
designate areas as being sensitive for the protection of human 2171
health and the environment and adopt alternative rules regarding 2172
release containment and release detection methods for new and 2173
upgraded underground storage tank systems located in those areas. 2174
In designating such areas, the fire marshal shall take into 2175
consideration such factors as soil conditions, hydrogeology, water 2176
use, and the location of public and private water supplies. Not 2177
later than July 11, 1990, the fire marshal shall file the rules 2178
required under this division with the secretary of state, director 2179
of the legislative service commission, and joint committee on 2180
agency rule review in accordance with divisions (B) and (H)(C) of 2181
section 119.03 of the Revised Code.2182

       (3) Notwithstanding sections 3737.87 to 3737.89 of the 2183
Revised Code, a person who is not a responsible person may conduct 2184
a voluntary action in accordance with Chapter 3746. of the Revised 2185
Code and rules adopted under it for a class C release. The 2186
director of environmental protection, pursuant to section 3746.12 2187
of the Revised Code, may issue a covenant not to sue to any person 2188
who properly completes a voluntary action with respect to a class 2189
C release in accordance with Chapter 3746. of the Revised Code and 2190
rules adopted under it.2191

       (B) Before adopting any rule under this section or section 2192
3737.881 or 3737.882 of the Revised Code, the fire marshal shall 2193
file written notice of the proposed rule with the chairperson of 2194
the state fire council, and, within sixty days after notice is 2195
filed, the council may file responses to or comments on and may 2196
recommend alternative or supplementary rules to the fire marshal. 2197
At the end of the sixty-day period or upon the filing of 2198
responses, comments, or recommendations by the council, the fire 2199
marshal may adopt the rule filed with the council or any 2200
alternative or supplementary rule recommended by the council.2201

       (C) The state fire council may recommend courses of action to 2202
be taken by the fire marshal in carrying out the fire marshal's 2203
duties under this section. The council shall file its 2204
recommendations in the office of the fire marshal, and, within 2205
sixty days after the recommendations are filed, the fire marshal 2206
shall file with the chairperson of the council comments on, and 2207
proposed action in response to, the recommendations.2208

       (D) For the purpose of sections 3737.87 to 3737.89 of the 2209
Revised Code, the fire marshal shall adopt, and may amend and 2210
rescind, rules identifying or listing hazardous substances. The 2211
rules shall be consistent with and equivalent in scope, coverage, 2212
and content to regulations identifying or listing hazardous 2213
substances adopted under the "Comprehensive Environmental 2214
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980," 94 Stat. 2779, 2215
42 U.S.C.A. 9602, as amended, except that the fire marshal shall 2216
not identify or list as a hazardous substance any hazardous waste 2217
identified or listed in rules adopted under division (A) of 2218
section 3734.12 of the Revised Code.2219

       (E) Except as provided in division (A)(3) of this section, 2220
the fire marshal shall have exclusive jurisdiction to regulate the 2221
storage, treatment, and disposal of petroleum contaminated soil 2222
generated from corrective actions undertaken in response to 2223
releases of petroleum from underground storage tank systems. The 2224
fire marshal may adopt, amend, or rescind such rules as the fire 2225
marshal considers to be necessary or appropriate to regulate the 2226
storage, treatment, or disposal of petroleum contaminated soil so 2227
generated.2228

       (F) The fire marshal shall adopt, amend, and rescind rules 2229
under sections 3737.88 to 3737.882 of the Revised Code in 2230
accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code.2231

       Sec. 3746.04.  Within one year after September 28, 1994, the 2232
director of environmental protection, in accordance with Chapter 2233
119. of the Revised Code and with the advice of the 2234
multidisciplinary council appointed under section 3746.03 of the 2235
Revised Code, shall adopt, and subsequently may amend, suspend, or 2236
rescind, rules that do both of the following:2237

       (A) Revise the rules adopted under Chapters 3704., 3714., 2238
3734., 6109., and 6111. of the Revised Code to incorporate the 2239
provisions necessary to conform those rules to the requirements of 2240
this chapter. The amended rules adopted under this division also 2241
shall establish response times for all submittals to the 2242
environmental protection agency required under this chapter or 2243
rules adopted under it.2244

       (B) Establish requirements and procedures that are reasonably 2245
necessary for the implementation and administration of this 2246
chapter, including, without limitation, all of the following:2247

       (1) Appropriate generic numerical clean-up standards for the 2248
treatment or removal of soils, sediments, and water media for 2249
hazardous substances and petroleum. The rules shall establish 2250
separate generic numerical clean-up standards based upon the 2251
intended use of properties after the completion of voluntary 2252
actions, including industrial, commercial, and residential uses 2253
and such other categories of land use as the director considers to 2254
be appropriate. The generic numerical clean-up standards 2255
established for each category of land use shall be the 2256
concentration of each contaminant that may be present on a 2257
property that shall ensure protection of public health and safety 2258
and the environment for the reasonable exposure for that category 2259
of land use. When developing the standards, the director shall 2260
consider such factors as all of the following:2261

       (a) Scientific information, including, without limitation, 2262
toxicological information and realistic assumptions regarding 2263
human and environmental exposure to hazardous substances or 2264
petroleum;2265

       (b) Climatic factors;2266

       (c) Human activity patterns;2267

       (d) Current statistical techniques;2268

       (e) For petroleum at industrial property, alternatives to the 2269
use of total petroleum hydrocarbons.2270

       The generic numerical clean-up standards established in the 2271
rules adopted under division (B)(1) of this section shall be 2272
consistent with and equivalent in scope, content, and coverage to 2273
any applicable standard established by federal environmental laws 2274
and regulations adopted under them, including, without limitation, 2275
the "Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972," 86 2276
Stat. 886, 33 U.S.C.A. 1251, as amended; the "Resource 2277
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976," 90 Stat. 2806, 42 U.S.C.A. 2278
6921, as amended; the "Toxic Substances Control Act," 90 Stat. 2279
2003 (1976), 15 U.S.C.A. 2601, as amended; the "Comprehensive 2280
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980," 2281
94 Stat. 2779, 42 U.S.C.A. 9601, as amended; and the "Safe 2282
Drinking Water Act," 88 Stat. 1660 (1974), 42 U.S.C.A. 300f, as 2283
amended.2284

       In order for the rules adopted under division (B)(1) of this 2285
section to require that any such federal environmental standard 2286
apply to a property, the property shall meet the requirements of 2287
the particular federal statute or regulation involved in the 2288
manner specified by the statute or regulation.2289

       The generic numerical clean-up standards for petroleum at 2290
commercial or residential property shall be the standards 2291
established in rules adopted under division (B) of section 2292
3737.882 of the Revised Code.2293

       (2)(a) Procedures for performing property-specific risk 2294
assessments that would be performed at a property to demonstrate 2295
that the remedy evaluated in a risk assessment results in 2296
protection of public health and safety and the environment instead 2297
of complying with the generic numerical clean-up standards 2298
established in the rules adopted under division (B)(1) of this 2299
section. The risk assessment procedures shall describe a 2300
methodology to establish, on a property-specific basis, allowable 2301
levels of contamination to remain at a property to ensure 2302
protection of public health and safety and the environment on the 2303
property and off the property when the contamination is emanating 2304
off the property, taking into account all of the following:2305

       (i) The implementation of treatment, storage, or disposal, or 2306
a combination thereof, of hazardous substances or petroleum;2307

       (ii) The existence of institutional controls or activity and 2308
use limitations that eliminate or mitigate exposure to hazardous 2309
substances or petroleum through the restriction of access to 2310
hazardous substances or petroleum;2311

       (iii) The existence of engineering controls that eliminate or 2312
mitigate exposure to hazardous substances or petroleum through 2313
containment of, control of, or restrictions of access to hazardous 2314
substances or petroleum, including, without limitation, fences, 2315
cap systems, cover systems, and landscaping.2316

       (b) The risk assessment procedures and levels of acceptable 2317
risk set forth in the rules adopted under division (B)(2) of this 2318
section shall be based upon all of the following:2319

       (i) Scientific information, including, without limitation, 2320
toxicological information and actual or proposed human and 2321
environmental exposure;2322

       (ii) Locational and climatic factors;2323

       (iii) Surrounding land use and human activities;2324

       (iv) Differing levels of remediation that may be required 2325
when an existing land use is continued compared to when a 2326
different land use follows the remediation.2327

       (c) Any standards established pursuant to rules adopted under 2328
division (B)(2) of this section shall be no more stringent than 2329
standards established under the environmental statutes of this 2330
state and rules adopted under them for the same contaminant in the 2331
same environmental medium that are in effect at the time the risk 2332
assessment is conducted.2333

       (3) Minimum standards for phase I property assessments. The 2334
standards shall specify the information needed to demonstrate that 2335
there is no reason to believe that contamination exists on a 2336
property. The rules adopted under division (B)(3) of this section, 2337
at a minimum, shall require that a phase I property assessment 2338
include all of the following:2339

       (a) A review and analysis of deeds, mortgages, easements of 2340
record, and similar documents relating to the chain of title to 2341
the property that are publicly available or that are known to and 2342
reasonably available to the owner or operator;2343

       (b) A review and analysis of any previous environmental 2344
assessments, property assessments, environmental studies, or 2345
geologic studies of the property and any land within two thousand 2346
feet of the boundaries of the property that are publicly available 2347
or that are known to and reasonably available to the owner or 2348
operator;2349

       (c) A review of current and past environmental compliance 2350
histories of persons who owned or operated the property;2351

       (d) A review of aerial photographs of the property that 2352
indicate prior uses of the property;2353

       (e) Interviews with managers of activities conducted at the 2354
property who have knowledge of environmental conditions at the 2355
property;2356

       (f) Conducting an inspection of the property consisting of a 2357
walkover;2358

       (g) Identifying the current and past uses of the property, 2359
adjoining tracts of land, and the area surrounding the property, 2360
including, without limitation, interviews with persons who reside 2361
or have resided, or who are or were employed, within the area 2362
surrounding the property regarding the current and past uses of 2363
the property and adjacent tracts of land.2364

       The rules adopted under division (B)(3) of this section shall 2365
establish criteria to determine when a phase II property 2366
assessment shall be conducted when a phase I property assessment 2367
reveals facts that establish a reason to believe that hazardous 2368
substances or petroleum have been treated, stored, managed, or 2369
disposed of on the property if the person undertaking the phase I 2370
property assessment wishes to obtain a covenant not to sue under 2371
section 3746.12 of the Revised Code.2372

       (4) Minimum standards for phase II property assessments. The 2373
standards shall specify the information needed to demonstrate that 2374
any contamination present at the property does not exceed 2375
applicable standards or that the remedial activities conducted at 2376
the property have achieved compliance with applicable standards. 2377
The rules adopted under division (B)(4) of this section, at a 2378
minimum, shall require that a phase II property assessment include 2379
all of the following:2380

       (a) A review and analysis of all documentation prepared in 2381
connection with a phase I property assessment conducted within the 2382
one hundred eighty days before the phase II property assessment 2383
begins. The rules adopted under division (B)(4)(a) of this section 2384
shall require that if a period of more than one hundred eighty 2385
days has passed between the time that the phase I assessment of 2386
the property was completed and the phase II assessment begins, the 2387
phase II assessment shall include a reasonable inquiry into the 2388
change in the environmental condition of the property during the 2389
intervening period.2390

       (b) Quality assurance objectives for measurements taken in 2391
connection with a phase II assessment;2392

       (c) Sampling procedures to ensure the representative sampling 2393
of potentially contaminated environmental media;2394

       (d) Quality assurance and quality control requirements for 2395
samples collected in connection with phase II assessments;2396

       (e) Analytical and data assessment procedures;2397

       (f) Data objectives to ensure that samples collected in 2398
connection with phase II assessments are biased toward areas where 2399
information indicates that contamination by hazardous substances 2400
or petroleum is likely to exist.2401

       (5) Standards governing the conduct of certified 2402
professionals, criteria and procedures for the certification of 2403
professionals to issue no further action letters under section 2404
3746.11 of the Revised Code, and criteria for the suspension and 2405
revocation of those certifications. The director shall take an 2406
action regarding a certification as a final action. The issuance, 2407
denial, renewal, suspension, and revocation of those 2408
certifications are subject to Chapter 3745. of the Revised Code, 2409
except that, in lieu of publishing an action regarding a 2410
certification in a newspaper of general circulation as required in 2411
section 3745.07 of the Revised Code, such an action shall be 2412
published on the environmental protection agency's web site and in 2413
the agency's weekly review not later than fifteen days after the 2414
date of the issuance, denial, renewal, suspension, or revocation 2415
of the certification and not later than thirty days before a 2416
hearing or public meeting concerning the action.2417

       The rules adopted under division (B)(5) of this section shall 2418
do all of the following:2419

       (a) Provide for the certification of environmental 2420
professionals to issue no further action letters pertaining to 2421
investigations and remedies in accordance with the criteria and 2422
procedures set forth in the rules. The rules adopted under 2423
division (B)(5)(a) of this section shall do at least all of the 2424
following:2425

       (i) Authorize the director to consider such factors as an 2426
environmental professional's previous performance record regarding 2427
such investigations and remedies and the environmental 2428
professional's environmental compliance history when determining 2429
whether to certify the environmental professional;2430

       (ii) Ensure that an application for certification is reviewed 2431
in a timely manner;2432

       (iii) Require the director to certify any environmental 2433
professional who the director determines complies with those 2434
criteria;2435

       (iv) Require the director to deny certification for any 2436
environmental professional who does not comply with those 2437
criteria.2438

       (b) Establish an annual fee to be paid by environmental 2439
professionals certified pursuant to the rules adopted under 2440
division (B)(5)(a) of this section. The fee shall be established 2441
at an amount calculated to defray the costs to the agency for the 2442
required reviews of the qualifications of environmental 2443
professionals for certification and for the issuance of the 2444
certifications.2445

       (c) Develop a schedule for and establish requirements 2446
governing the review by the director of the credentials of 2447
environmental professionals who were deemed to be certified 2448
professionals under division (D) of section 3746.07 of the Revised 2449
Code in order to determine if they comply with the criteria 2450
established in rules adopted under division (B)(5) of this 2451
section. The rules adopted under division (B)(5)(c) of this 2452
section shall do at least all of the following:2453

       (i) Ensure that the review is conducted in a timely fashion;2454

       (ii) Require the director to certify any such environmental 2455
professional who the director determines complies with those 2456
criteria;2457

       (iii) Require any such environmental professional initially 2458
to pay the fee established in the rules adopted under division 2459
(B)(5)(b) of this section at the time that the environmental 2460
professional is so certified by the director;2461

       (iv) Establish a time period within which any such 2462
environmental professional who does not comply with those criteria 2463
may obtain the credentials that are necessary for certification;2464

       (v) Require the director to deny certification for any such 2465
environmental professional who does not comply with those criteria 2466
and who fails to obtain the necessary credentials within the 2467
established time period.2468

       (d) Require that any information submitted to the director 2469
for the purposes of the rules adopted under division (B)(5)(a) or 2470
(c) of this section comply with division (A) of section 3746.20 of 2471
the Revised Code;2472

       (e) Authorize the director to suspend or revoke the 2473
certification of an environmental professional if the director 2474
finds that the environmental professional's performance has 2475
resulted in the issuance of no further action letters under 2476
section 3746.11 of the Revised Code that are not consistent with 2477
applicable standards or finds that the certified environmental 2478
professional has not substantially complied with section 3746.31 2479
of the Revised Code;2480

       (f) Authorize the director to suspend for a period of not 2481
more than five years or to permanently revoke a certified 2482
environmental professional's certification for any violation of or 2483
failure to comply with an ethical standard established in rules 2484
adopted under division (B)(5) of this section;2485

       (g) Require the director to revoke the certification of an 2486
environmental professional if the director finds that the 2487
environmental professional falsified any information on the 2488
environmental professional's application for certification 2489
regarding the environmental professional's credentials or 2490
qualifications or any other information generated for the purposes 2491
of or use under this chapter or rules adopted under it;2492

       (h) Require the director permanently to revoke the 2493
certification of an environmental professional who has violated or 2494
is violating division (A) of section 3746.18 of the Revised Code;2495

       (i) Preclude the director from revoking the certification of 2496
an environmental professional who only conducts investigations and 2497
remedies at property contaminated solely with petroleum unless the 2498
director first consults with the director of commerce.2499

       (6) Criteria and procedures for the certification of 2500
laboratories to perform analyses under this chapter and rules 2501
adopted under it. The issuance, denial, suspension, and revocation 2502
of those certifications are subject to Chapter 3745. of the 2503
Revised Code, and the director of environmental protection shall 2504
take any such action regarding a certification as a final action.2505

       The rules adopted under division (B)(6) of this section shall 2506
do all of the following:2507

       (a) Provide for the certification to perform analyses of 2508
laboratories in accordance with the criteria and procedures 2509
established in the rules adopted under division (B)(6)(a) of this 2510
section and establish an annual fee to be paid by those 2511
laboratories. The fee shall be established at an amount calculated 2512
to defray the costs to the agency for the review of the 2513
qualifications of those laboratories for certification and for the 2514
issuance of the certifications. The rules adopted under division 2515
(B)(6)(a) of this section may provide for the certification of 2516
those laboratories to perform only particular types or categories 2517
of analyses, specific test parameters or group of test parameters, 2518
or a specific matrix or matrices under this chapter.2519

       (b) Develop a schedule for and establish requirements 2520
governing the review by the director of the operations of 2521
laboratories that were deemed to be certified laboratories under 2522
division (E) of section 3746.07 of the Revised Code in order to 2523
determine if they comply with the criteria established in rules 2524
adopted under division (B)(6) of this section. The rules adopted 2525
under division (B)(6)(b) of this section shall do at least all of 2526
the following:2527

       (i) Ensure that the review is conducted in a timely fashion;2528

       (ii) Require the director to certify any such laboratory that 2529
the director determines complies with those criteria;2530

       (iii) Require any such laboratory initially to pay the fee 2531
established in the rules adopted under division (B)(6)(a) of this 2532
section at the time that the laboratory is so certified by the 2533
director;2534

       (iv) Establish a time period within which any such laboratory 2535
that does not comply with those criteria may make changes in its 2536
operations necessary for the performance of analyses under this 2537
chapter and rules adopted under it in order to be certified by the 2538
director;2539

       (v) Require the director to deny certification for any such 2540
laboratory that does not comply with those criteria and that fails 2541
to make the necessary changes in its operations within the 2542
established time period.2543

       (c) Require that any information submitted to the director 2544
for the purposes of the rules adopted under division (B)(6)(a) or 2545
(b) of this section comply with division (A) of section 3746.20 of 2546
the Revised Code;2547

       (d) Authorize the director to suspend or revoke the 2548
certification of a laboratory if the director finds that the 2549
laboratory's performance has resulted in the issuance of no 2550
further action letters under section 3746.11 of the Revised Code 2551
that are not consistent with applicable standards;2552

       (e) Authorize the director to suspend or revoke the 2553
certification of a laboratory if the director finds that the 2554
laboratory falsified any information on its application for 2555
certification regarding its credentials or qualifications;2556

       (f) Require the director permanently to revoke the 2557
certification of a laboratory that has violated or is violating 2558
division (A) of section 3746.18 of the Revised Code.2559

       (7) Information to be included in a no further action letter 2560
prepared under section 3746.11 of the Revised Code, including, 2561
without limitation, all of the following:2562

       (a) A summary of the information required to be submitted to 2563
the certified environmental professional preparing the no further 2564
action letter under division (C) of section 3746.10 of the Revised 2565
Code;2566

       (b) Notification that a risk assessment was performed in 2567
accordance with rules adopted under division (B)(2) of this 2568
section if such an assessment was used in lieu of generic 2569
numerical clean-up standards established in rules adopted under 2570
division (B)(1) of this section;2571

       (c) The contaminants addressed at the property, if any, their 2572
source, if known, and their levels prior to remediation;2573

       (d) The identity of any other person who performed work to 2574
support the request for the no further action letter as provided 2575
in division (B)(2) of section 3746.10 of the Revised Code and the 2576
nature and scope of the work performed by that person;2577

       (e) A list of the data, information, records, and documents 2578
relied upon by the certified environmental professional in 2579
preparing the no further action letter.2580

       (8) Methods for determining fees to be paid for the following 2581
services provided by the agency under this chapter and rules 2582
adopted under it:2583

       (a) Site- or property-specific technical assistance in 2584
developing or implementing plans in connection with a voluntary 2585
action;2586

       (b) Reviewing applications for and issuing consolidated 2587
standards permits under section 3746.15 of the Revised Code and 2588
monitoring compliance with those permits;2589

       (c) Negotiating, preparing, and entering into agreements 2590
necessary for the implementation and administration of this 2591
chapter and rules adopted under it;2592

       (d) Reviewing no further action letters, issuing covenants 2593
not to sue, and monitoring compliance with any terms and 2594
conditions of those covenants and with operation and maintenance 2595
agreements entered into pursuant to those covenants, including, 2596
without limitation, conducting audits of properties where 2597
voluntary actions are being or were conducted under this chapter 2598
and rules adopted under it.2599

       The fees established pursuant to the rules adopted under 2600
division (B)(8) of this section shall be at a level sufficient to 2601
defray the direct and indirect costs incurred by the agency for 2602
the administration and enforcement of this chapter and rules 2603
adopted under it other than the provisions regarding the 2604
certification of professionals and laboratories.2605

       (9) Criteria for selecting the no further action letters 2606
issued under section 3746.11 of the Revised Code that will be 2607
audited under section 3746.17 of the Revised Code, and the scope 2608
and procedures for conducting those audits. The rules adopted 2609
under division (B)(9) of this section, at a minimum, shall require 2610
the director to establish priorities for auditing no further 2611
action letters to which any of the following applies:2612

       (a) The letter was prepared by an environmental professional 2613
who was deemed to be a certified professional under division (D) 2614
of section 3746.07 of the Revised Code, but who does not comply 2615
with the criteria established in rules adopted under division 2616
(B)(5) of this section as determined pursuant to rules adopted 2617
under division (B)(5)(d) of this section;2618

       (b) The letter was submitted fraudulently;2619

       (c) The letter was prepared by a certified environmental 2620
professional whose certification subsequently was revoked in 2621
accordance with rules adopted under division (B)(5) of this 2622
section, or analyses were performed for the purposes of the no 2623
further action letter by a certified laboratory whose 2624
certification subsequently was revoked in accordance with rules 2625
adopted under division (B)(6) of this section;2626

       (d) A covenant not to sue that was issued pursuant to the 2627
letter was revoked under this chapter;2628

       (e) The letter was for a voluntary action that was conducted 2629
pursuant to a risk assessment in accordance with rules adopted 2630
under division (B)(2) of this section;2631

       (f) The letter was for a voluntary action that included as 2632
remedial activities engineering controls or institutional controls 2633
or activity and use limitations authorized under section 3746.05 2634
of the Revised Code.2635

       The rules adopted under division (B)(9) of this section shall 2636
provide for random audits of no further action letters to which 2637
the rules adopted under divisions (B)(9)(a) to (f) of this section 2638
do not apply.2639

       (10) A classification system to characterize ground water 2640
according to its capability to be used for human use and its 2641
impact on the environment and a methodology that shall be used to 2642
determine when ground water that has become contaminated from 2643
sources on a property for which a covenant not to sue is requested 2644
under section 3746.11 of the Revised Code shall be remediated to 2645
the standards established in the rules adopted under division 2646
(B)(1) or (2) of this section.2647

       (a) In adopting rules under division (B)(10) of this section 2648
to characterize ground water according to its capability for human 2649
use, the director shall consider all of the following:2650

       (i) The presence of legally enforceable, reliable 2651
restrictions on the use of ground water, including, without 2652
limitation, local rules or ordinances;2653

       (ii) The presence of regional commingled contamination from 2654
multiple sources that diminishes the quality of ground water;2655

       (iii) The natural quality of ground water;2656

       (iv) Regional availability of ground water and reasonable 2657
alternative sources of drinking water;2658

       (v) The productivity of the aquifer;2659

       (vi) The presence of restrictions on the use of ground water 2660
implemented under this chapter and rules adopted under it;2661

       (vii) The existing use of ground water.2662

       (b) In adopting rules under division (B)(10) of this section 2663
to characterize ground water according to its impacts on the 2664
environment, the director shall consider both of the following:2665

       (i) The risks posed to humans, fauna, surface water, 2666
sediments, soil, air, and other resources by the continuing 2667
presence of contaminated ground water;2668

       (ii) The availability and feasibility of technology to remedy 2669
ground water contamination.2670

       (11) Governing the application for and issuance of variances 2671
under section 3746.09 of the Revised Code;2672

       (12)(a) In the case of voluntary actions involving 2673
contaminated ground water, specifying the circumstances under 2674
which the generic numerical clean-up standards established in 2675
rules adopted under division (B)(1) of this section and standards 2676
established through a risk assessment conducted pursuant to rules 2677
adopted under division (B)(2) of this section shall be 2678
inapplicable to the remediation of contaminated ground water and 2679
under which the standards for remediating contaminated ground 2680
water shall be established on a case-by-case basis prior to the 2681
commencement of the voluntary action pursuant to rules adopted 2682
under division (B)(12)(b) of this section;2683

       (b) Criteria and procedures for the case-by-case 2684
establishment of standards for the remediation of contaminated 2685
ground water under circumstances in which the use of the generic 2686
numerical clean-up standards and standards established through a 2687
risk assessment are precluded by the rules adopted under division 2688
(B)(12)(a) of this section. The rules governing the procedures for 2689
the case-by-case development of standards for the remediation of 2690
contaminated ground water shall establish application, public 2691
participation, adjudication, and appeals requirements and 2692
procedures that are equivalent to the requirements and procedures 2693
established in section 3746.09 of the Revised Code and rules 2694
adopted under division (B)(11) of this section, except that the 2695
procedural rules shall not require an applicant to make the 2696
demonstrations set forth in divisions (A)(1) to (3) of section 2697
3746.09 of the Revised Code.2698

       (13) A definition of the evidence that constitutes sufficient 2699
evidence for the purpose of division (A)(5) of section 3746.02 of 2700
the Revised Code.2701

       At least thirty days before filing the proposed rules 2702
required to be adopted under this section with the secretary of 2703
state, director of the legislative service commission, and joint 2704
committee on agency rule review in accordance with divisions (B) 2705
and (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, the director of 2706
environmental protection shall hold at least one public meeting on 2707
the proposed rules in each of the five districts into which the 2708
agency has divided the state for administrative purposes.2709

       Sec. 4117.02.  (A) There is hereby created the state 2710
employment relations board, consisting of three members to be 2711
appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the 2712
senate. Members shall be knowledgeable about labor relations or 2713
personnel practices. No more than two of the three members shall 2714
belong to the same political party. A member of the state 2715
employment relations board during the member's period of service 2716
shall hold no other public office or public or private employment 2717
and shall allow no other responsibilities to interfere or conflict 2718
with the member's duties as a full-time state employment relations 2719
board member. Of the initial appointments made to the state 2720
employment relations board, one shall be for a term ending October 2721
6, 1984, one shall be for a term ending October 6, 1985, and one 2722
shall be for a term ending October 6, 1986. Thereafter, terms of 2723
office shall be for six years, each term ending on the same day of 2724
the same month of the year as did the term that it succeeds. Each 2725
member shall hold office from the date of the member's appointment 2726
until the end of the term for which the member is appointed. Any 2727
member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the 2728
expiration of the term for which the member's predecessor was 2729
appointed shall hold office for the remainder of the term. Any 2730
member shall continue in office subsequent to the expiration of 2731
the member's term until the member's successor takes office or 2732
until a period of sixty days has elapsed, whichever occurs first. 2733
The governor may remove any member of the state employment 2734
relations board, upon notice and public hearing, for neglect of 2735
duty or malfeasance in office, but for no other cause.2736

       (B)(1) The governor shall designate one member of the state 2737
employment relations board to serve as chairperson of the state 2738
employment relations board. The chairperson is the head of the 2739
state employment relations board and its chief executive officer.2740

       (2) The chairperson shall exercise all administrative powers 2741
and duties conferred upon the state employment relations board 2742
under this chapter and shall do all of the following:2743

       (a) Employ, promote, supervise, and remove all employees of 2744
the state employment relations board, and establish, change, or 2745
abolish positions and assign or reassign the duties of those 2746
employees as the chairperson determines necessary to achieve the 2747
most efficient performance of the duties of the state employment 2748
relations board under this chapter;2749

       (b) Determine the utilization by the state personnel board of 2750
review of employees of the state employment relations board as 2751
necessary for the state personnel board of review to exercise the 2752
powers and perform the duties of the state personnel board of 2753
review.2754

       (c) Maintain the office of the state employment relations 2755
board in Columbus and manage the office's daily operations, 2756
including securing offices, facilities, equipment, and supplies 2757
necessary to house the state employment relations board, employees 2758
of the state employment relations board, the state personnel board 2759
of review, and files and records under the control of the state 2760
employment relations board and under the control of the state 2761
personnel board of review;2762

       (d) Prepare and submit to the office of budget and management 2763
a budget for each biennium according to section 107.03 of the 2764
Revised Code, and include in the budget the costs of the state 2765
employment relations board and its staff and the costs of the 2766
state employment relations board in discharging any duty imposed 2767
by law upon the state employment relations board, the chairperson, 2768
or any of the employees or agents of the state employment 2769
relations board, and the costs of the state personnel board of 2770
review in discharging any duty imposed by law on the state 2771
personnel board of review or an agent of the state personnel board 2772
of review.2773

       (C) The vacancy on the state employment relations board does 2774
not impair the right of the remaining members to exercise all the 2775
powers of the state employment relations board, and two members of 2776
the state employment relations board, at all times, constitute a 2777
quorum. The state employment relations board shall have an 2778
official seal of which courts shall take judicial notice.2779

       (D) The state employment relations board shall make an annual 2780
report in writing to the governor and to the general assembly, 2781
stating in detail the work it has done.2782

       (E) Compensation of the chairperson and members shall be in 2783
accordance with division (J) of section 124.15 of the Revised 2784
Code. The chairperson and the members are eligible for 2785
reappointment. In addition to such compensation, all members shall 2786
be reimbursed for their necessary expenses incurred in the 2787
performance of their work as members.2788

       (F)(1) The chairperson, after consulting with the other state 2789
employment relations board members and receiving the consent of at 2790
least one other board member, shall appoint an executive director. 2791
The chairperson also shall appoint attorneys and shall appoint an 2792
assistant executive director who shall be an attorney admitted to 2793
practice law in this state and who shall serve as a liaison to the 2794
attorney general on legal matters before the state employment 2795
relations board. 2796

       (2) The state employment relations board shall appoint 2797
members of fact-finding panels and shall prescribe their job 2798
duties.2799

       (G)(1) The executive director shall serve at the pleasure of 2800
the chairperson. The executive director, under the direction of 2801
the chairperson, shall do all of the following:2802

       (a) Act as chief administrative officer for the state 2803
employment relations board;2804

       (b) Ensure that all employees of the state employment 2805
relations board comply with the rules of the state employment 2806
relations board;2807

       (c) Do all things necessary for the efficient and effective 2808
implementation of the duties of the state employment relations 2809
board.2810

       (2) The duties of the executive director described in 2811
division (G)(1) of this section do not relieve the chairperson 2812
from final responsibility for the proper performance of the duties 2813
described in that division.2814

       (H) The attorney general shall be the legal adviser of the 2815
state employment relations board and shall appear for and 2816
represent the state employment relations board and its agents in 2817
all legal proceedings. The state employment relations board may 2818
utilize regional, local, or other agencies, and utilize voluntary 2819
and uncompensated services as needed. The state employment 2820
relations board may contract with the federal mediation and 2821
conciliation service for the assistance of mediators, arbitrators, 2822
and other personnel the service makes available. The chairperson 2823
shall appoint all employees on the basis of training, practical 2824
experience, education, and character, notwithstanding the 2825
requirements established by section 119.09 of the Revised Code. 2826
The chairperson shall give special regard to the practical 2827
training and experience that employees have for the particular 2828
position involved. The executive director, assistant executive 2829
director, administrative law judges, employees holding a fiduciary 2830
or administrative relation to the state employment relations board 2831
as described in division (A)(9) of section 124.11 of the Revised 2832
Code, and the personal secretaries and assistants of the state 2833
employment relations board members are in the unclassified 2834
service. All other full-time employees of the state employment 2835
relations board are in the classified service. All employees of 2836
the state employment relations board shall be paid in accordance 2837
with Chapter 124. of the Revised Code.2838

       (I) The chairperson shall select and assign administrative 2839
law judges and other agents whose functions are to conduct 2840
hearings with due regard to their impartiality, judicial 2841
temperament, and knowledge. If in any proceeding under this 2842
chapter, any party prior to five days before the hearing thereto 2843
files with the state employment relations board a sworn statement 2844
charging that the administrative law judge or other agent 2845
designated to conduct the hearing is biased or partial in the 2846
proceeding, the state employment relations board may disqualify 2847
the person and designate another administrative law judge or agent 2848
to conduct the proceeding. At least ten days before any hearing, 2849
the state employment relations board shall notify all parties to a 2850
proceeding of the name of the administrative law judge or agent 2851
designated to conduct the hearing.2852

       (J) The principal office of the state employment relations 2853
board is in Columbus, but it may meet and exercise any or all of 2854
its powers at any other place within the state. The state 2855
employment relations board may, by one or more of its employees, 2856
or any agents or agencies it designates, conduct in any part of 2857
this state any proceeding, hearing, investigation, inquiry, or 2858
election necessary to the performance of its functions; provided, 2859
that no person so designated may later sit in determination of an 2860
appeal of the decision of that cause or matter.2861

       (K) In addition to the powers and functions provided in other 2862
sections of this chapter, the state employment relations board 2863
shall do all of the following:2864

       (1) Create a bureau of mediation within the state employment 2865
relations board, to perform the functions provided in section 2866
4117.14 of the Revised Code. This bureau shall also establish, 2867
after consulting representatives of employee organizations and 2868
public employers, panels of qualified persons to be available to 2869
serve as members of fact-finding panels and arbitrators.2870

       (2) Conduct studies of problems involved in representation 2871
and negotiation and make recommendations for legislation;2872

       (3) Hold hearings pursuant to this chapter and, for the 2873
purpose of the hearings and inquiries, administer oaths and 2874
affirmations, examine witnesses and documents, take testimony and 2875
receive evidence, compel the attendance of witnesses and the 2876
production of documents by the issuance of subpoenas, and delegate 2877
these powers to any members of the state employment relations 2878
board or any administrative law judge employed by the state 2879
employment relations board for the performance of its functions;2880

       (4) Train representatives of employee organizations and 2881
public employers in the rules and techniques of collective 2882
bargaining procedures;2883

       (5) Make studies and analyses of, and act as a clearinghouse 2884
of information relating to, conditions of employment of public 2885
employees throughout the state and request assistance, services, 2886
and data from any public employee organization, public employer, 2887
or governmental unit. Public employee organizations, public 2888
employers, and governmental units shall provide such assistance, 2889
services, and data as will enable the state employment relations 2890
board to carry out its functions and powers.2891

       (6) Make available to employee organizations, public 2892
employers, mediators, fact-finding panels, arbitrators, and joint 2893
study committees statistical data relating to wages, benefits, and 2894
employment practices in public and private employment applicable 2895
to various localities and occupations to assist them to resolve 2896
issues in negotiations;2897

       (7) Notwithstanding section 119.13 of the Revised Code, 2898
establish standards of persons who practice before it;2899

       (8) Adopt, amend, and rescind rules and procedures and 2900
exercise other powers appropriate to carry out this chapter. 2901
Before the adoption, amendment, or rescission of rules and 2902
procedures under this section, the state employment relations 2903
board shall do all of the following:2904

       (a) Maintain a list of interested public employers and 2905
employee organizations and mail notice to such groups of any 2906
proposed rule or procedure, amendment thereto, or rescission 2907
thereof at least thirty days before any public hearing thereon;2908

       (b) Mail a copy of each proposed rule or procedure, amendment 2909
thereto, or rescission thereof to any person who requests a copy 2910
within five days after receipt of the request therefor;2911

       (c) Consult with appropriate statewide organizations 2912
representing public employers or employees who would be affected 2913
by the proposed rule or procedure.2914

       Although the state employment relations board is expected to 2915
discharge these duties diligently, failure to mail any notice or 2916
copy, or to so consult with any person, is not jurisdictional and 2917
shall not be construed to invalidate any proceeding or action of 2918
the state employment relations board.2919

       (L) In case of neglect or refusal to obey a subpoena issued 2920
to any person, the court of common pleas of the county in which 2921
the investigation or the public hearing occurs, upon application 2922
by the state employment relations board, may issue an order 2923
requiring the person to appear before the state employment 2924
relations board and give testimony about the matter under 2925
investigation. The court may punish a failure to obey the order as 2926
contempt.2927

       (M) Any subpoena, notice of hearing, or other process or 2928
notice of the state employment relations board issued under this 2929
section may be served personally, by certified mail, or by leaving 2930
a copy at the principal office or personal residence of the 2931
respondent required to be served. A return, made and verified by 2932
the individual making the service and setting forth the manner of 2933
service, is proof of service, and a return post office receipt, 2934
when certified mail is used, is proof of service. All process in 2935
any court to which application is made under this chapter may be 2936
served in the county wherein the persons required to be served 2937
reside or are found.2938

       (N) All expenses of the state employment relations board, 2939
including all necessary traveling and subsistence expenses 2940
incurred by the members or employees of the state employment 2941
relations board under its orders, shall be paid pursuant to 2942
itemized vouchers approved by the chairperson of the state 2943
employment relations board, the executive director, or both, or 2944
such other person as the chairperson designates for that purpose.2945

       (O) Whenever the state employment relations board determines 2946
that a substantial controversy exists with respect to the 2947
application or interpretation of this chapter and the matter is of 2948
public or great general interest, the state employment relations 2949
board shall certify its final order directly to the court of 2950
appeals having jurisdiction over the area in which the principal 2951
office of the public employer directly affected by the application 2952
or interpretation is located. The chairperson shall file with the 2953
clerk of the court a certified copy of the transcript of the 2954
proceedings before the state employment relations board pertaining 2955
to the final order. If upon hearing and consideration the court 2956
decides that the final order of the state employment relations 2957
board is unlawful or is not supported by substantial evidence on 2958
the record as a whole, the court shall reverse and vacate the 2959
final order or modify it and enter final judgment in accordance 2960
with the modification; otherwise, the court shall affirm the final 2961
order. The notice of the final order of the state employment 2962
relations board to the interested parties shall contain a 2963
certification by the chairperson of the state employment relations 2964
board that the final order is of public or great general interest 2965
and that a certified transcript of the record of the proceedings 2966
before the state employment relations board had been filed with 2967
the clerk of the court as an appeal to the court. For the purposes 2968
of this division, the state employment relations board has 2969
standing to bring its final order properly before the court of 2970
appeals.2971

       (P) Except as otherwise specifically provided in this 2972
section, the state employment relations board is subject to 2973
Chapter 119. of the Revised Code, including the procedure for 2974
submission of proposed rules to the general assembly for 2975
legislative review under division (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the 2976
Revised Code.2977

       Sec. 4141.14. (A) All rules of the director of the 2978
department of job and family services adopted pursuant to this 2979
chapter shall be approved by the unemployment compensation review 2980
commission before the rules become effective. All such rules shall 2981
specify on their face their effective date and the date on which 2982
they will expire, if known. Approval by the unemployment 2983
compensation review commission shall also be required before 2984
amendments to, or rescission of, any rules of the director adopted 2985
pursuant to this chapter become effective. If the commission 2986
disapproves a rule of the director, it shall determine and 2987
promulgate a rule that it considers appropriate after affording a 2988
hearing to the director.2989

       (B)(1) Any rule promulgated pursuant to this section shall be 2990
effective on the tenth day after the day on which the rule in 2991
final form and in compliance with division (B)(2) of this section 2992
is filed as follows:2993

       (a) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with both the 2994
secretary of state and the director of the legislative service 2995
commission;2996

       (b) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with the joint 2997
committee on agency rule review. Division (B)(1)(b) of this 2998
section does not apply to any rule to which division (H) of 2999
section 119.03 of the Revised Code does not apply.3000

       If all filings are not completed on the same day, the rule 3001
shall be effective on the tenth day after the day on which the 3002
latest filing is completed. If the department of job and family 3003
services or the unemployment compensation review commission in 3004
adopting a rule pursuant to this chapter designates an effective 3005
date that is later than the effective date provided for by this 3006
division, the rule if filed as required by this division shall 3007
become effective on the later date designated by the department or 3008
commission.3009

       If the commission or department adopts or amends a rule that 3010
is subject to division (H) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, 3011
the commission or department shall assign a review date to the 3012
rule that is not later than five years after its effective date. 3013
If no review date is assigned to a rule, or if a review date 3014
assigned to a rule exceeds the five-year maximum, the review date 3015
for the rule is five years after its effective date. A rule with a 3016
review date is subject to review under section 119.032 of the 3017
Revised Code.3018

       (2) The department and commission shall file the rule in 3019
compliance with the following standards and procedures:3020

       (a) The rule shall be numbered in accordance with the 3021
numbering system devised by the director for the Ohio 3022
administrative code.3023

       (b) The rule shall be prepared and submitted in compliance 3024
with the rules of the legislative service commission.3025

       (c) The rule shall clearly state the date on which it is to 3026
be effective and the date on which it will expire, if known.3027

       (d) Each rule that amends or rescinds another rule shall 3028
clearly refer to the rule that is amended or rescinded. Each 3029
amendment shall fully restate the rule as amended.3030

       If the director of the legislative service commission or the 3031
director's designee gives the department of job and family 3032
services or the unemployment compensation review commission notice 3033
pursuant to section 103.05 of the Revised Code that a rule filed 3034
by the department or review commission is not in compliance with 3035
the rules of the legislative service commission, the department or 3036
review commission shall within thirty days after receipt of the 3037
notice conform the rule to the rules of the commission as directed 3038
in the notice.3039

       The secretary of state and the director of the legislative 3040
service commission shall preserve the rules filed under division 3041
(B)(1)(a) of this section in an accessible manner. Each such rule 3042
shall be a public record open to public inspection and may be 3043
transmitted to any law publishing company that wishes to reproduce 3044
it.3045

       (C) As used in this section:3046

       (1) "Rule" includes an amendment or rescission of a rule.3047

       (2) "Substantive revision" has the same meaning as in 3048
division (J) of section 119.01 of the Revised Code.3049

       Sec. 5103.0325.  Notwithstanding division (B) of section 3050
119.032106.03 of the Revised Code, the department of job and 3051
family services shall review once every two years the department's 3052
rules governing visits and contacts by a public children services 3053
agency or private child placing agency with a child in the 3054
agency's custody and placed in foster care in this state. The 3055
department shall adopt rules in accordance with Chapter 119. of 3056
the Revised Code to ensure compliance with the department's rules 3057
governing agency visits and contacts with a child in its custody.3058

       Sec. 5117.02.  (A) The director of development shall adopt 3059
rules, or amendments and rescissions of rules, pursuant to section 3060
4928.52 of the Revised Code, for the administration of the Ohio 3061
energy credit program under sections 5117.01 to 5117.12 of the 3062
Revised Code.3063

       (B) As a means of efficiently administering the program, the 3064
director may extend, by as much as a total of thirty days, any 3065
date specified in such sections for the performance of a 3066
particular action by an individual or an officer.3067

       (C)(1) Except as provided in division (C)(2) of this section, 3068
the director shall adopt, in accordance with divisions (A), (B), 3069
(C), (D), (E), and (H)(F) of section 119.03 and section 119.04 of 3070
the Revised Code, whatever rules, or amendments or rescissions of 3071
rules are required by or are otherwise necessary to implement 3072
sections 5117.01 to 5117.12 of the Revised Code. A rule, 3073
amendment, or rescission adopted under this division is not exempt 3074
from the hearing requirements of section 119.03 of the Revised 3075
Code pursuant to division (G)(H) of that section, or subject to 3076
section 111.15 of the Revised Code.3077

       (2) If an emergency necessitates the immediate adoption of a 3078
rule, or the immediate adoption of an amendment or rescission of a 3079
rule that is required by or otherwise necessary to implement 3080
sections 5117.01 to 5117.12 of the Revised Code, the director 3081
immediately may adopt the emergency rule, amendment, or rescission 3082
without complying with division (A), (B), (C), (D), (E), or (H)(F)3083
of section 119.03 of the Revised Code so long as the commissioner3084
director states the reasons for the necessity in the emergency 3085
rule, amendment, or rescission. The emergency rule, amendment, or 3086
rescission is effective on the day the emergency rule, amendment, 3087
or rescission, in final form and in compliance with division 3088
(A)(2) of section 119.04 of the Revised Code, is filed in 3089
electronic form with the secretary of state, the director of the 3090
legislative service commission, and the joint committee on agency 3091
rule review. If all filings are not completed on the same day, the 3092
emergency rule, amendment, or rescission is effective on the day 3093
on which the latest filing is completed. An emergency rule, 3094
amendment, or rescission adopted under this division is not 3095
subject to section 111.15 or division (F)(G) of section 119.03 of 3096
the Revised Code. An emergency rule, amendment, or rescission 3097
adopted under this division continues in effect until amended or 3098
rescinded by the director in accordance with division (C)(1) or 3099
(2) of this section, except that the rescission of an emergency 3100
rescission does not revive the rule rescinded.3101

       (D) Except where otherwise provided, each form, application, 3102
notice, and the like used in fulfilling the requirements of 3103
sections 5117.01 to 5117.12 of the Revised Code shall be approved 3104
by the director.3105

       Sec. 5703.14. (A) Any rule adopted by the board of tax 3106
appeals and any rule of the department of taxation adopted by the 3107
tax commissioner shall be effective on the tenth day after the day 3108
on which the rule in final form and in compliance with division 3109
(B) of this section is filed by the board or the commissioner as 3110
follows:3111

       (1) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with both the 3112
secretary of state and the director of the legislative service 3113
commission;3114

       (2) The rule shall be filed in electronic form with the joint 3115
committee on agency rule review. Division (A)(2) of this section 3116
does not apply to any rule to which division (H) of section 119.03 3117
of the Revised Code does not apply.3118

       If all filings are not completed on the same day, the rule 3119
shall be effective on the tenth day after the day on which the 3120
latest filing is completed. If the board or the commissioner in 3121
adopting a rule designates an effective date that is later than 3122
the effective date provided for by this division, the rule if 3123
filed as required by this division shall become effective on the 3124
later date designated by the board or commissioner.3125

       (B) The board and commissioner shall file the rule in 3126
compliance with the following standards and procedures:3127

       (1) The rule shall be numbered in accordance with the 3128
numbering system devised by the director for the Ohio 3129
administrative code.3130

       (2) The rule shall be prepared and submitted in compliance 3131
with the rules of the legislative service commission.3132

       (3) The rule shall clearly state the date on which it is to 3133
be effective and the date on which it will expire, if known.3134

       (4) Each rule that amends or rescinds another rule shall 3135
clearly refer to the rule that is amended or rescinded. Each 3136
amendment shall fully restate the rule as amended.3137

       If the director of the legislative service commission or the 3138
director's designee gives the board or commissioner notice 3139
pursuant to section 103.05 of the Revised Code that a rule filed 3140
by the board or commissioner is not in compliance with the rules 3141
of the legislative service commission, the board or commissioner 3142
shall within thirty days after receipt of the notice conform the 3143
rule to the rules of the legislative service commission as 3144
directed in the notice.3145

       All rules of the department and board filed pursuant to 3146
division (A)(1) of this section shall be recorded by the secretary 3147
of state and the director under the name of the department or 3148
board and shall be numbered in accordance with the numbering 3149
system devised by the director. The secretary of state and the 3150
director shall preserve the rules in an accessible manner. Each 3151
such rule shall be a public record open to public inspection and 3152
may be transmitted to any law publishing company that wishes to 3153
reproduce it. Each such rule shall also be made available to 3154
interested parties upon request directed to the department.3155

       (C) Applications for review of any rule adopted and 3156
promulgated by the tax commissioner may be filed with the board of 3157
tax appeals by any person who has been or may be injured by the 3158
operation of the rule. The appeal may be taken at any time after 3159
the rule is filed with the secretary of the state, the director of 3160
the legislative service commission, and, if applicable, the joint 3161
committee on agency rule review. Failure to file an appeal does 3162
not preclude any person from seeking any other remedy against the 3163
application of the rule to the person. The applications shall set 3164
forth, or have attached thereto and incorporated by reference, a 3165
true copy of the rule, and shall allege that the rule complained 3166
of is unreasonable and shall state the grounds upon which the 3167
allegation is based. Upon the filing of the application, the board 3168
shall notify the commissioner of the filing of the application, 3169
fix a time for hearing the application, notify the commissioner 3170
and the applicant of the time for the hearing, and afford both an 3171
opportunity to be heard. The appellant, the tax commissioner, and 3172
any other interested persons that the board permits, may introduce 3173
evidence. The burden of proof to show that the rule is 3174
unreasonable shall be upon the appellant. After the hearing, the 3175
board shall determine whether the rule complained of is reasonable 3176
or unreasonable. A determination that the rule complained of is 3177
unreasonable shall require a majority vote of the three members of 3178
the board, and the reasons for the determination shall be entered 3179
on the journal of the board.3180

       Upon determining that the rule complained of is unreasonable, 3181
the board shall file copies of its determination as follows:3182

       (1)(A) The determination shall be filed in electronic form 3183
with both the secretary of state and the director of the 3184
legislative service commission, who shall note the date of their 3185
receipt of the certified copies conspicuously in their files of 3186
the rules of the department;3187

       (2)(B) The determination shall be filed in electronic form 3188
with the joint committee on agency rule review. Division (C)(2) of 3189
this section does not apply to any rule to which division (H)(C)3190
of section 119.03 of the Revised Code does not apply.3191

       On the tenth day after the determination has been received by 3192
the secretary of state, the director, and, if applicable, the 3193
joint committee, the rule referred to in the determination shall 3194
cease to be in effect. If all filings of the determination are not 3195
completed on the same day, the rule shall remain in effect until 3196
the tenth day after the day on which the latest filing is 3197
completed. This section does not apply to licenses issued under 3198
sections 5735.02, 5739.17, and 5743.15 of the Revised Code, which 3199
shall be governed by sections 119.01 to 119.13 of the Revised 3200
Code.3201

       The board is not required to hear an application for the 3202
review of any rule where the grounds of the allegation that the 3203
rule is unreasonable have been previously contained in an 3204
application for review and have been previously heard and passed 3205
upon by the board.3206

       (D) As used in this section, "substantive revision" has the 3207
same meaning as in division (J) of section 119.01 of the Revised 3208
Code.3209

       Sec. 6111.31.  All substantive wetland, stream, or lake 3210
mitigation standards, criteria, scientific methods, processes, or 3211
other procedures or policies that are used in a uniform manner by 3212
the director of environmental protection in evaluating the 3213
adequacy of a mitigation proposal contained in an application for 3214
a section 401 water quality certification shall be adopted and 3215
reviewed in accordance with sections 119.03 and 119.032106.03 of 3216
the Revised Code before those standards, criteria, or scientific 3217
methods have the force of law. Until that time, any such 3218
mitigation standards, criteria, scientific methods, processes, or 3219
other procedures or policies that are used by or approved for use 3220
by the director to evaluate, measure, or determine the success, 3221
approval, or denial of a mitigation proposal, but that have not 3222
been subject to review under sections 119.03 and 119.032106.03 of 3223
the Revised Code shall not be used as the basis for any 3224
certification or permit denial or as a standard applied to 3225
mitigation unless the applicant has been notified in advance that 3226
additional mitigation standards, criteria, scientific methods, 3227
processes, or procedures will be considered as part of the review 3228
process.3229

       Sec. 6111.51. (A)(1) The director of environmental protection 3230
shall adopt rules that establish criteria for three levels of 3231
credible data related to surface water monitoring and assessment. 3232
The rules pertaining to each level shall establish requirements 3233
for data assessment, sample collection and analytical methods, and 3234
quality assurance and quality control procedures that must be 3235
followed in order to classify data as credible at that level. The 3236
rules shall provide that level three credible data are collected 3237
by employing the most stringent methods and procedures, level two 3238
credible data are collected using methods and procedures that are 3239
less stringent than methods and procedures used to collect level 3240
three credible data, but more stringent than methods and 3241
procedures used to collect level one, and level one credible data 3242
are collected by employing the least stringent methods and 3243
procedures.3244

       The requirements established in the rules for each level of 3245
credible data shall be commensurate with, and no more stringent 3246
than necessary to support, the purposes for which the data will be 3247
used. In adopting rules under this section, the director shall 3248
consider the cost of data collection methods and procedures to 3249
persons or entities collecting data, and the burden of compliance 3250
with those methods and procedures for those persons or entities, 3251
while ensuring the degree of accuracy commensurate with the 3252
purpose for which the data will be used. No data shall be 3253
classified as credible data unless they have been collected in 3254
compliance with the applicable methods and procedures for 3255
collecting the data established in rules adopted under this 3256
section.3257

       (2) The director shall file the rules required to be adopted 3258
under division (A)(1) of this section with the secretary of state, 3259
the director of the legislative service commission, and the joint 3260
committee on agency rule review in accordance with divisions (B) 3261
and (H)(C) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code not later than 3262
one year after the effective date of this sectionOctober 21, 3263
2003. As soon as practicable thereafter, the director shall 3264
proceed to adopt the rules in accordance with all other applicable 3265
provisions of Chapter 119. of the Revised Code.3266

       (B)(1) Level three credible data shall be used for the 3267
purposes specified in section 6111.52 of the Revised Code.3268

       (2) Levels two and three credible data shall be used for the 3269
purpose of evaluating the effectiveness of pollution controls for 3270
point sources and nonpoint sources and initial screening of water 3271
quality problems to determine if additional study is needed.3272

       (3) Levels one, two, and three credible data shall be used 3273
for public awareness and education activities.3274

        (C) No data shall be considered credible unless the data 3275
originate from studies and samples collected by the environmental 3276
protection agency, its contractors, federal or state environmental 3277
agencies, or qualified data collectors. However, data submitted 3278
pursuant to the requirements of a permit issued by an agency of 3279
the state or submitted as a result of findings and orders issued 3280
by the director or pursuant to a court order shall be considered 3281
credible unless the director identifies reasons why the data are 3282
not credible.3283

        (D) If the director has obtained credible data for a surface 3284
water, the director also may use historical data for the purpose 3285
of determining whether any water quality trends exist for that 3286
surface water.3287

        (E) Sections 6111.50 to 6111.56 of the Revised Code do not 3288
apply to civil or criminal enforcement actions brought under 3289
section 6111.07 of the Revised Code.3290

       (F) The director's use of credible data shall be consistent 3291
with the Federal Water Pollution Control Act.3292

       (G) Nothing in sections 6111.50 to 6111.56 of the Revised 3293
Code is an exception to statutory, common, or municipal law of 3294
trespass.3295

       Section 2.  That existing sections 101.35, 103.0511, 107.54, 3296
111.15, 117.20, 119.01, 119.03, 119.04, 121.39, 121.73, 121.74, 3297
121.81, 121.82, 121.83, 127.18, 1531.08, 3319.22, 3319.221, 3298
3333.021, 3333.048, 3737.88, 3746.04, 4117.02, 4141.14, 5103.0325, 3299
5117.02, 5703.14, 6111.31, and 6111.51 of the Revised Code are 3300
repealed.3301

       Section 3.  That sections 119.031 and 119.032 of the Revised 3302
Code are repealed.3303

       Section 4.  Sections 106.02, 106.021, 106.022, 106.04, and 3304
106.041 of the Revised Code are a continuation, although with 3305
revisions, of former division (I) of section 119.03 of the Revised 3306
Code. Division (C) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code is a 3307
continuation, although with revisions, of former division (H) of 3308
that section. And sections 106.03, 106.031, and 106.032 of the 3309
Revised Code are a continuation, although with revisions, of 3310
former section 119.032 of the Revised Code.3311

       Section 5.  The date by which the periodic review of an 3312
existing rule is to be completed has been referred to as its 3313
"119.032 review date." The Revised Code section referred to is the 3314
number of the Revised Code section under which periodic review of 3315
existing rules formerly was carried out. Because of the 3316
recodification of that former section by this act, periodic review 3317
of existing rules is to be carried out under sections 106.03 to 3318
106.032 of the Revised Code. A reference to the "119.032 review 3319
date" of a rule therefore shall be read as if it referred to 3320
periodic review of the rule under sections 106.03 to 106.032 of 3321
the Revised Code.3322

       It is recommended that the date by which the periodic review 3323
of an existing rule is to be completed be referred to as its 3324
"periodic review date."3325

       Section 6.  Legislative Information Systems, in consultation 3326
with the Director of the Legislative Service Commission, the 3327
Executive Director of the Joint Committee on Agency Rule Review, 3328
the Common Sense Initiative Office, and any other person or agency 3329
involved in the electronic rule filing system, shall program or 3330
reprogram the electronic rule filing system as necessary to enable 3331
electronic filing and other electronic processing of rules and 3332
rule-making documents as required by this act. Legislative 3333
Information Systems shall complete the programming or 3334
reprogramming as soon as reasonably possible after the effective 3335
date of this section but not later than the day that is six months 3336
after that effective date.3337

       If at the time a provision of this act that contemplates 3338
electronic filing or other electronic processing of rules or 3339
rule-making documents takes effect, electronic filing or other 3340
electronic processing is not available, the provision shall be 3341
complied with manually until electronic filing or other electronic 3342
processing is available.3343

       Section 7.  The General Assembly, applying the principle 3344
stated in division (B) of section 1.52 of the Revised Code that 3345
amendments are to be harmonized if reasonably capable of 3346
simultaneous operation, finds that the following sections, 3347
presented in this act as composites of the sections as amended by 3348
the acts indicated, are the resulting versions of the sections in 3349
effect prior to the effective date of the sections as presented in 3350
this act:3351

       Section 3737.88 of the Revised Code as amended by both Am. 3352
Sub. H.B. 153 and Sub. S.B. 171 of the 129th General Assembly.3353

       Section 5117.02 of the Revised Code as amended by both Am. 3354
Sub. S.B. 3 and the version of Am. Sub. S.B. 11 of the 123rd 3355
General Assembly effective on April 1, 2002.3356

       Section 5703.14 of the Revised Code as amended by both Am. 3357
Sub. S.B. 3 and the version of Am. Sub. S.B. 11 of the 123rd 3358
General Assembly effective on April 1, 2002.3359

       Section 8.  (A)(1) Sections 106.02, 106.021, and 106.022 of 3360
the Revised Code do not apply to a proposed rule or revised 3361
proposed rule that was filed under division (D) of section 111.15 3362
or former division (H) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code and, 3363
on the effective date of this section, is pending before the Joint 3364
Committee on Agency Rule Review for review under former division 3365
(I) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code. The Joint Committee, 3366
subject to division (B) of this section, shall review the proposed 3367
rule or revised proposed rule under former division (I) of section 3368
119.03 of the Revised Code as if the division had not been 3369
repealed.3370

       (2) Sections 106.03, 106.031, and 106.032 of the Revised Code 3371
do not apply to an existing rule that was filed under former 3372
section 119.032 of the Revised Code and, on the effective date of 3373
this section, is pending before the Joint Committee on Agency Rule 3374
Review for review under that former section. The Joint Committee, 3375
subject to division (B) of this section, shall review the existing 3376
rule under former section 119.032 of the Revised Code as if the 3377
section had not been repealed.3378

       (B) If, on or after the effective date of this section, the 3379
Joint Committee on Agency Rule Review recommends invalidation of a 3380
proposed rule or revised proposed rule under section 106.021 or 3381
former division (I) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, or 3382
invalidation of an existing rule under section 106.031 or former 3383
section 119.032 of the Revised Code, the invalidation shall be 3384
carried out under sections 106.04 and 106.041 of the Revised Code.3385

       Section 9.  The phases of this act that complete the intent 3386
of S.B. 2 of the 129th General Assembly are the following:3387

       (1) The amendment of section 103.0511 of the Revised Code 3388
that refers to the Common Sense Initiative Office;3389

       (2) The introductory paragraph and division (E) of section 3390
106.021 of the Revised Code;3391

       (3) Division (A)(6) of section 106.03 of the Revised Code, 3392
and division (B) of section 106.03 of the Revised Code insofar as 3393
it applies to periodic review of an existing rule that has an 3394
impact on businesses;3395

       (4) Divisions (A), (C)(1) and (2), and (E)(2) of section 3396
106.031 of the Revised Code, and division (E)(1) of section 3397
106.031 of the Revised Code insofar as it applies to review of an 3398
existing rule under division (A)(6) of section 106.03 of the 3399
Revised Code;3400

       (5) Sections 106.04 and 106.041 of the Revised Code insofar 3401
as they apply to business review of an existing rule;3402

       (6) The amendment of section 107.54 of the Revised Code; and3403

       (7) Sections 6 and 8 of this act insofar as they apply to 3404
business review of an existing rule. 3405

       Section 10.  Section 9 of this act, and the sections and 3406
parts of sections contained in this act that are identified in 3407
Section 9 of this act, constitute an emergency measure that is 3408
necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, 3409
health, and safety. An omission exists in the legislatively 3410
intended scope of recently enacted laws providing for executive 3411
and legislative review of rules to evaluate their impact on 3412
businesses. Unless the omission is promptly cured, it may allow 3413
existing rules having an adverse impact on businesses to remain in 3414
effect, to the detriment of the people, businesses, and economy of 3415
Ohio. Therefore, Section 9 of this act, and the sections and parts 3416
of sections contained in this act that are identified in Section 9 3417
of this act, go into immediate effect.3418