The online versions of legislation provided on this website are not official. Enrolled bills are the final version passed by the Ohio General Assembly and presented to the Governor for signature. The official version of acts signed by the Governor are available from the Secretary of State's Office in the Continental Plaza, 180 East Broad St., Columbus.
|
(124th General Assembly)
(Amended Substitute House Bill Number 299)
AN ACT
To amend sections 145.321, 145.326, 145.3210, 175.21,
3307.693,
3307.695, 3307.698, 3309.371, 3309.376,
3309.3710,
3318.084, 4507.52,
4519.10, 5505.171,
and 5505.173, and to
enact
section 339.19 of
the
Revised Code and to
amend
Sections 13.04,
28.02,
41, 41.10, 44.02,
44.12, 56, 56.01, 63, 63.09,
63.10, 63.11,
63.15,
63.36, 63.37, and 96 of
Am.
Sub. H.B. 94 of the
124th
General Assembly to
change
a scheduled deputy
registrar fee increase
relative
to
duplicate
or
replacement identification
cards
from $3.75 to
$2.75, to make other
budget-related corrections, to
provide for the
continued operation of any county
tuberculosis
hospital that existed on the effective
date of Sub.
S.B. 173 of the 123rd General
Assembly, to permit a
school district to apply a
"local donation
contribution" toward a total or
partial offset of
its obligation to raise
maintenance money, to
return the imputed occupancy
percentage for a
nursing home's or ICF-MR's
indirect care costs for
fiscal 2003 from 87% to
85%, to require the
Department of Job and Family
Services to use money
in the Nursing Facility
Stabilazation Fund to pay
nursing facilities an
amount equal to $1.50 per
Medicaid day for fiscal
years 2002 and 2003, to
make an
appropriation, and
to
declare an emergency.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio:
SECTION 1. That sections 145.321, 145.326, 145.3210, 175.21,
3307.693, 3307.695, 3307.698, 3309.371, 3309.376, 3309.3710,
3318.084, 4507.52, 4519.10, 5505.171, and 5505.173 be amended and
section 339.19 of the Revised Code be
enacted to read as follows:
Sec. 145.321. On and after October 1, 1957, all persons in
receipt of, or who are or become eligible to receive, a monthly
allowance, pension, or other benefit effective prior to June 29,
1955, which is payable or becomes payable pursuant to the
provisions of sections 145.33 to 145.36 and 145.46 of the Revised
Code, or an allowance payable at any time under an option elected
by a member and effective prior to that date, shall be paid an
increased allowance, pension, or benefit as follows:
(A) An amount determined by increasing the original
allowance, pension, or benefit by the following percentages as
determined by the calendar year in which the allowance, pension,
or benefit became effective:
Calendar Year |
Per Cent |
Effective |
of Increase |
1938-39 |
100 |
1940 |
94 |
1941 |
89 |
1942 |
77 |
1943 |
70 |
1944 |
68 |
1945 |
66 |
1946 |
55 |
1947 |
35 |
1948 |
23 |
1949 |
25 |
1950 |
23 |
1951 |
8 |
1952 |
4 |
1953 |
3 |
1954 |
2 |
Prior to June 29, 1955 |
2 |
(B) If the amount of any allowance, pension, or other
benefit is increased by division (A) of this section to an amount
less than one hundred ten per cent of the present amount payable
immediately prior to October 1, 1957, the present amount shall be
increased by ten per cent.
(C) On and after August 1, 1959 the monthly allowance,
pension, or other benefit effective prior to June 29, 1955,
(exclusive of any amount receivable monthly by reason of a
voluntary deposit made for additional annuity), together with the
supplemental allowance payable pursuant to divisions (A) and (B)
of this section, shall be increased by twelve per cent.
(D) Effective November 1, 1965, the allowances of each
person who retired on or before June 30, 1955 and is receiving
age
and service or disability benefits under sections 145.32,
145.33,
145.34, and 145.36 of the Revised Code shall be increased
by one
hundred twenty dollars annually, notwithstanding the final
average
salary limitations in division
(F)(A)(6) of section
145.33 and
division (B) of section 145.36 of the Revised Code.
(E) Effective November 1, 1965, the allowances of each
person who retired after June 30, 1955 and on or before October
31, 1965 and is receiving age and service
of
or disability
benefits under sections 145.32, 145.33, 145.34, and 145.36 of the
Revised Code shall be increased by one hundred twenty dollars
annually, which when added to the allowance in effect on October
31, 1965, shall not exceed the final average salary limitations
found in division
(F)(A)(6) of section 145.33 and division (B)
of
section 145.36 of the Revised Code, except that the increase
shall
not be less than seventy-two dollars annually.
(F) Beginning November 1, 1965, the monthly benefit
payable
under section 145.45 of the Revised Code shall be
increased six
dollars for each survivor beneficiary receiving a
benefit on
October 31, 1965 and for each successor to such
benefit.
For the purposes of this section: (1) The total increase
payable per month on or after November 1, 1965 to a retirant or
beneficiary from one or more state systems shall not exceed the
ten dollar increase as provided in this division, and (2) in all
cases involving combined membership and service as provided for
under section 145.37 of the Revised Code, only those cases which
are being paid by the public employees retirement system shall be
calculated under the provisions of this section.
On or before August 1, 1982, and on or before the first day
of August in each year thereafter, the public employees
retirement
board shall certify to the treasurer of state the
amount required
to be paid in the preceding fiscal year under
divisions (A) and
(B) of this section. Upon receipt of this
certification, the
treasurer of state shall pay the amount
certified. The amount
received by the public employees
retirement board shall be
credited to the proper fund from which
such additional payments
are paid.
Sec. 145.326. On and after December 31, 1971, all persons
who retired and were eligible to receive a pension that was
payable prior to July 1, 1968, pursuant to section 145.33,
145.34,
or 145.36 of the Revised Code, or in the event of the
death of
such persons, the person designated by the deceased to
receive
payments under section 145.46 of the Revised Code, shall
receive
an additional monthly payment of two dollars for each
year between
the member's effective date of retirement or
disability and
December 31, 1971, or an additional fifty dollars,
whichever is
less.
On or before the first day of August in 1980
and on or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter,
the public
employees retirement board shall certify to the
treasurer of state
the amount required to be paid in the
preceding fiscal year under
this section. Upon receipt of such
certification, the treasurer
of state shall pay to the public
employees retirement system the
amount certified.
Sec. 145.3210. (A) Effective July 1, 1981, each person
eligible to receive an allowance, pension, or benefit pursuant to
sections 145.33, 145.34, 145.36, 145.37, division (A) of section
145.45, and section 145.46 of the Revised Code, that was based
upon an award made effective before July 1, 1974, shall have
his
the
person's
monthly allowance, pension, or benefit increased by
five per
cent, except that the twelve-month sum of such increases
shall
not exceed five per cent of the first five thousand dollars
of
the annual allowance, pension, or benefit. (B) Effective July 1, 1981, each person receiving or
qualified to receive a benefit, pursuant to division (B) of
section 145.45 of the Revised Code, that was effective on and
after June 14, 1951, through August 26, 1970, shall receive an
increase in such benefit of five per cent. (C) The increases provided in divisions (A) and (B) of
this
section shall be applied to the benefit payable on and after
July
1, 1981. (D) The increase in the monthly allowance, pension, or
benefit provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this section shall
be
included in the calculation of additional benefits to
recipients
under section 145.323 of the Revised Code. (E) The benefits provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this
section are a continuation of those first provided in Am. Sub.
H.B. 204 as passed by the 113th general assembly. (F) On or before the first day of August, 1982, and on or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter, the
public
employees retirement board shall certify to the treasurer
of state
the amount needed to pay the cost of the additional
payments
required under this section for the preceding fiscal
year. Upon
receipt of these certifications, the treasurer of
state shall pay
the amount certified.
Sec. 175.21. (A) The low- and moderate-income housing
trust
fund is hereby created in the state treasury. The fund
shall
consist of all appropriations, grants, gifts, loan
repayments,
and
contributions of money made from any source to the
department of
development for the fund. All investment earnings
of the fund
shall be
credited to the fund. The director of
development shall
allocate a portion of the money in the fund to
an account of the
Ohio housing finance agency. The department
shall administer the
fund. The agency shall use money allocated
to it in the fund for
implementing and administering its programs
and duties under
sections 175.22 and 175.24 of the Revised Code,
and the
department
shall use the remaining money in the fund for
implementing and
administering its programs and duties under
sections 175.22 to
175.25 of the Revised Code. Use of all money
in the fund is
subject to the following restrictions: forty-five
per cent of the
amount of funds awarded during any one fiscal
year shall be used
to make grants
and loans to nonprofit
organizations under section
175.22 of the
Revised Code, not less
than
forty-five
fifty per
cent of
the
amount of funds awarded
during any one fiscal year
shall be
used
to make grants and loans
for activities
that will
provide
housing
and housing assistance to
families and
individuals
in
rural areas
and small cities that
would
not be
eligible to
participate
as a participating
jurisdiction under the "HOME
Investment Partnerships Act," 104
Stat. 4094 (1990), 42 U.S.C.
12701 note, 12721, no
more than
six
five per cent of the money in
the
fund shall be used
for
administration, and no money in the
fund
shall be used to pay
for
any legal services other than the
usual
and customary legal
services
associated with the acquisition
of
housing. Except as
otherwise provided
by
the director
under
division (B) of this
section, money in the fund may be used
as
matching money for
federal funds received by the state,
counties,
municipal
corporations, and townships for the
activities listed in
section
175.22 of the Revised Code. (B) If after the second quarter of any year it appears to
the director that the full amount of the money in the low- and
moderate-income housing trust fund designated in that year for
activities that will provide housing and housing assistance to
families and individuals in rural areas and small cities under
division (A) of this section will not be so used, the director
may
reallocate all or a portion of that amount for other housing
activities. In determining whether or how to reallocate money
under this division, the director may consult with and shall
receive advice from the housing trust fund advisory committee.
Sec. 339.19. Notwithstanding the amendment of sections
339.38, 339.39, 339.42, and 339.43 of the Revised Code, the repeal
of sections 339.20, 339.21, 339.22, 339.23, 339.231, 339.24,
339.25, 339.26, 339.27, 339.28, 339.29, 339.30, 339.31, 339.32,
339.33, 339.34, 339.35, 339.36, 339.37, 339.40, 339.41, 339.45,
339.46, and 339.99 of the Revised Code, and any other changes made
by Substitute Senate Bill No. 173 of the 123rd general assembly
relative to the establishment, maintenance, and operation of a
county tuberculosis hospital, a county tuberculosis hospital that
was operating under those sections on the effective date of that
act, October 10, 2000, may continue to exist and operate on and
after that date as though the provisions of those sections were
neither amended nor repealed and had remained in full force and
effect.
Sec. 3307.693. On and after October 1, 1957, all
persons
in
receipt of, or who are or become eligible to receive, a
monthly
allowance, pension, or other benefit effective prior to
June 29,
1955, which is payable or becomes payable pursuant to
the
provisions of former sections 3307.26, 3307.38, 3307.43, and
3307.50
of the Revised Code, or an allowance payable at any time
under an
option elected by a member and effective prior to that
date,
shall be paid an increased allowance, pension, or benefit as
follows: (A) An amount determined by increasing the original
allowance, pension, or benefit by the following percentages as
determined by the calendar year in which the allowance, pension,
or benefit became effective:
| Calendar Year | | Per Cent of |
| Effective | | Increase |
|
1921-1939 | | 100 |
| 1940 | | 94 |
| 1941 | |
89 |
| 1942 | | 77 |
| 1943 | | 70 |
| 1944 | |
68 |
| 1945 | | 66 |
| 1946 | | 55 |
| 1947 | | 35 |
| 1948 | | 23 |
| 1949 | | 25 |
|
1950 | | 23 |
| 1951 | | 8 |
| 1952 | | 4 |
|
1953 | | 3 |
| 1954 | | 2 |
| Prior to June 29,
1955 | | 2 |
(B) If the amount of any such allowance, pension, or other
benefit is increased by division (A) of this section to an amount
less than one hundred ten per cent of the present amount payable
immediately prior to October 1, 1957, such present amount shall
be
increased by ten per cent. (C) On and after August 1, 1959, the monthly allowance,
pension, or other benefit effective prior to June 29, 1955,
(exclusive of any amount receivable monthly by reason of a
voluntary deposit made for additional annuity, or for purchase of
out-of-state credit on or after June 25, 1945), together with the
supplemental allowance payable pursuant to divisions (A) and (B)
of this section, shall be increased by twelve per cent. (D) Effective November 1, 1965, the allowances of all
persons who retired before June 30, 1955, and who are receiving
benefits as of October 31, 1965, except those granted under former
section 3307.49 of the Revised Code, shall be increased ten
dollars per month, notwithstanding the seventy-five per cent
final
average salary limitation in former section 3307.38 of the
Revised
Code and the sixty per cent final average salary limitation in
former section 3307.43 of the Revised Code. (E) Effective November 1, 1965, the allowances of all
persons who retired on or after June 30, 1955, and who are
receiving benefits as of October 31, 1965, except those granted
under former section 3307.49 of the Revised Code, but including
allowances payable at any time under an option elected by a
member, shall be increased by ten dollars per month, which when
added to the allowance in effect on October 31, 1965, shall not
exceed the seventy-five per cent final average salary limitation
in former section 3307.38 of the Revised Code or the sixty per
cent
final average salary limitation in former section 3307.43 of
the
Revised
Code, provided that the increase shall not be less
than six
dollars per month. (F) Beginning November 1, 1965, the monthly benefit
payable
under division (C)(2) of former section 3307.49 of the Revised
Code shall be increased six dollars for each survivor beneficiary
receiving a benefit on October 31, 1965, and for each successor
to
such benefit. Beginning November 1, 1965, all survivor
beneficiaries receiving benefits as of October 31, 1965, under
division (C)(1) of former section 3307.49 of the Revised Code
shall be
increased six dollars per month. On or before August 1, 1982, and on or before the first day
of August in each year thereafter, the state teachers retirement
board shall certify to the treasurer of state the amount required
to be paid in the preceding fiscal year under divisions (A) and
(B) of this section. Upon receipt of this certification, the
treasurer of state shall pay the amount certified. The amount
received by the state teachers retirement board shall be credited
to the proper fund from which such additional payments are paid.
Sec. 3307.695. On and after December 31, 1971, all
persons
who retired and were eligible to receive a pension that was
payable prior to July 1, 1968, pursuant to former section 3307.38
or
3307.43 of the Revised Code, or in the event of the death of
such
persons, the person designated by the deceased to receive
payments under former section 3307.50 of the Revised Code, shall
receive
an additional monthly payment of two dollars for each year
between the member's effective date of retirement or disability
and December 31, 1971, or an additional fifty dollars, whichever
is less.
On or before the first day of August in 1980 and on or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter, the state
teachers retirement board shall certify to the treasurer of state
the amount required to be paid in the preceding fiscal year under
this section. Upon receipt of such certification, the treasurer
of state shall pay to the state teachers retirement system the
amount certified.
Sec. 3307.698. (A) Effective July 1, 1981, each
person
eligible to receive an allowance, pension, or benefit pursuant to
former sections 3307.38, 3307.41, 3307.43, division (C)(1) of
former section
3307.49, and former section 3307.50 of the Revised
Code that was based
upon an award made effective before July 1,
1974, shall have the
person's
monthly allowance, pension, or
benefit increased by five per
cent, except that the twelve-month
sum of such increases shall
not exceed five per cent of the first
five thousand dollars of
the annual allowance, pension, or
benefit. (B) Effective July 1, 1981, each person receiving or
qualified to receive a benefit, pursuant to division (C)(2) of
former section 3307.49 of the Revised Code, that was effective on
and
after June 14, 1951, through August 26, 1970, shall receive an
increase in such benefit of five per cent. (C) The increases provided in divisions (A) and (B) of
this
section shall be applied to the benefit payable on and after
July
1, 1981. (D) The increase in the monthly allowance, pension, or
benefit provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this section shall
be
included in the calculation of additional benefits to
recipients
under section 3307.67 of the Revised Code. (E) The benefit provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this
section is a continuation of those first provided in Am. Sub.
H.B.
204 as passed by the 113th general assembly. (F) On or before the first day of August 1982, and on or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter, the state
teachers retirement board shall certify to the treasurer of state
the amounts needed to pay the cost of the additional payments
required under this section for the preceding fiscal year. Upon
receipt of these certifications, the treasurer of state shall pay
the amount certified.
Sec. 3309.371. On and after October 1, 1957, all persons
in
receipt of, or who are or become eligible to receive, a
monthly
allowance, pension, or other benefit effective prior to
June 29,
1955, which is payable or becomes payable pursuant to
sections
3309.36 to 3309.38, 3309.40, and 3309.65 of the Revised
Code, or
an allowance payable at any time under an option elected
by a
member and effective prior to that date, shall be paid an
increased allowance, pension, or benefit as follows: (A) An amount determined by increasing the original
allowance, pension, or benefit by the following percentages as
determined by the calendar year in which the allowance, pension,
or benefit became effective:
Calendar Year | | Per Cent | Effective | | of Increase | 1937 - 1939 | | 100 | 1940 | | 94 |
1941 | | 89 |
1942 | | 77 |
1943 | | 70 |
1944 | | 68 |
1945 | | 66 |
1946 | | 55 |
1947 | | 35 |
1948 | | 23 |
1949 | | 25 |
1950 | | 23 |
1951 | | 8 |
1952 | | 4 |
1953 | | 3 |
1954 | | 2 |
Prior to June 29, 1955 | | 2 |
(B) If the amount of any such allowance, pension, or other
benefit is increased by division (A) of this section to an amount
less than one hundred ten per cent of the present amount payable
immediately prior to
october
October 1, 1957, such present
amount
shall be increased by ten per cent. (C) On and after August 1, 1959, the monthly allowance,
pension, or other benefit effective prior to June 29, 1955,
(exclusive of any amount receivable monthly by reason of a
voluntary deposit made for additional annuity), together with the
supplemental allowance payable pursuant to divisions (A) and (B)
of this section, shall be increased by twelve per cent. On or before August 1, 1982, and on or before the first day
of August in each year thereafter, the school employees
retirement
board shall certify to the treasurer of state the
amount required
to be paid in the preceding fiscal year under
divisions (A) and
(B) of this section.
UPon receipt of this
certification, the
treasurer of state shall pay the amount
certified. The amount
received by the school employees
retirement board shall be
credited to the proper fund from which
such additional payments
are paid.
Sec. 3309.376. On and after December 31, 1971, all persons
who retired and were eligible to receive a pension that was
payable prior to July 1, 1968, pursuant to section 3309.36,
3309.38, or 3309.40 of the Revised Code, or in the event of the
death of such persons, the person designated by the deceased to
receive payments under section 3309.46 of the Revised Code, shall
receive an additional monthly payment of two dollars for each
year
between the member's effective date of retirement or
disability
and December 31, 1971, or an additional fifty dollars,
whichever
is less.
On or before the first day of August in 1980
and on or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter,
the school
employees retirement board shall certify to the
treasurer of state
the amount required to be paid in the
preceding fiscal year under
this section. Upon receipt of such
certification, the treasurer
of state shall pay to the school
employees retirement system the
amount certified.
Sec. 3309.3710. (A) Effective July 1, 1981, each person
eligible to receive an allowance, pension, or benefit pursuant to
sections 3309.35, 3309.36, 3309.38, 3309.40, division (A) of
section 3309.45, and section 3309.46 of the Revised Code that was
based upon an award made effective before July 1, 1974, shall
have
his
the person's monthly allowance, pension, or benefit
increased
by five
per cent, except that the twelve-month sum of such
increases
shall not exceed five per cent of the first five
thousand dollars
of the annual allowance, pension, or benefit. (B) Effective July 1, 1981, each person receiving or
qualified to receive a benefit, pursuant to division (B) of
section 3309.45 of the Revised Code, that was effective on and
after June 14, 1951, through August 26, 1970, shall receive an
increase in such benefit of five per cent. (C) The increases provided in divisions (A) and (B) of
this
section shall be applied to the benefit payable on and after
July
1, 1981. (D) The increase in the monthly allowance, pension, or
benefit provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this section shall
be
included in the calculation of additional benefits to
recipients
under section 3309.374 of the Revised Code. (E) The benefits provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this
section are a continuation of those first provided in Am. Sub.
H.B. 204 as passed by the 113th general assembly. (F) On or before the first day of August, 1982, and on or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter, the
school
employees retirement board shall certify to the treasurer
of state
the amount needed to pay the cost of the additional
payments
required under this section for the preceding fiscal
year. Upon
receipt of these certifications, the treasurer of
state shall pay
the amount certified.
Sec. 3318.084.
(A) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
in
Chapter 3318. of
the Revised Code, a school district board may
apply any
local donated contribution toward
the
either or both of
the following: (1) The district's portion of the basic project
cost of a
project under sections 3318.01 to
3318.20 of the Revised Code
and
may use such local donated
contribution to reduce the amount of
bonds the district otherwise must issue
in order to receive state
assistance under those
sections;
(2) An offset of all or part of a district's obligation to
levy the tax described in division (B) of section 3318.05 of the
Revised Code, which shall be applied only in the manner prescribed
in division (B) of this section.
(B) No school district board shall apply any local donated
contribution under division (A)(2) of this section unless the Ohio
school facilities commission first approves that application.
Upon the request of the school district board to apply
local donated contribution under division (A)(2) of this section,
the commission in consultation with the department of taxation
shall determine the amount of total revenue that likely would be
generated by one-half mill of the tax described in division (B) of
section 3318.05 of the Revised Code over the entire
twenty-three-year period required under that section and shall
deduct from that amount any amount of local donated contribution
that the board has committed to apply under division (A)(2) of
this section. The commission then shall determine in consultation
with the department of taxation the rate of tax over twenty-three
years necessary to generate the amount of a one-half mill tax not
offset by the local donated contribution. Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in section 3318.06, 3318.061, or
3318.361
of the Revised Code, the rate determined by the
commission shall
be the rate for which the district board shall seek elector
approval under those sections to meet its obligation under
division (B) of section 3318.05 of the Revised Code. In the case
of a complete offset of the district's obligation under division
(B) of section 3318.05 of the Revised Code, the district shall not
be required to levy the tax otherwise required under that section.
At the end of the twenty-three-year period of the tax required
under division (B) of section 3318.05 of the Revised Code, whether
or not the tax is actually levied, the commission in consultation
of the department of taxation shall recalculate the amount that
would have been generated by the tax if it had been levied at
one-half mill. If the total amount actually generated over that
period from both the tax that was actually levied and any local
donated contribution applied under division (A)(2) of this section
is less than the amount that would have been raised by a one-half
mill tax, the district shall pay any difference. If the total
amount actually raised in such manner is greater than the amount
that would have been raised by a one-half mill tax the difference
shall be zero and no payments shall be made by either the district
or the commission. (C) As used in this section,
"local donated contribution"
means either of the following: (A)(1) Any moneys irrevocably donated or granted to a school
district board by a source other than the state which
the board
has the authority to apply to the school district's project
under
sections 3318.01 to 3318.20 of the Revised Code and
which the
board has pledged for that purpose by resolution adopted by a
majority of its members;
(B)(2) Any irrevocable letter of credit issued on behalf of
a school
district or any cash a school district has on hand,
including any year-end operating fund balances, that can be spent
for
classroom
facilities, either of which the
school district
board has encumbered for payment of the school district's
share of
its project under sections 3318.01 to 3318.20 of the Revised
Code
and either of which has been approved by the
Ohio
school
facilities commission in consultation with the department of
education.
(D) No state moneys shall be released for a project to which
this
section applies until any
local donated
local contribution
authorized under
this section is first deposited into the school
district's project
construction fund, if applied under division
(A)(1) of this section, or into the district's capital and
maintenance fund if applied under division (A)(2) of this
section.
Sec. 4507.52. Each identification card issued by the
registrar of motor vehicles or a deputy registrar shall
display a
distinguishing number assigned to the cardholder, and shall
display the following inscription: "STATE OF OHIO IDENTIFICATION CARDThis card is not valid for the purpose of operating a motor
vehicle. It is provided solely for the purpose of establishing
the identity of the bearer described on the card, who currently
is
not licensed to operate a motor vehicle in the state of Ohio." The identification card shall display substantially the
same
information as contained in the application and as described in
division (A)(1) of section 4507.51 of the Revised Code,
including
the cardholder's social security number unless the cardholder
specifically requests that the cardholder's social security number
not be
displayed on the card. If federal law requires the
cardholder's social
security number to be displayed on the
identification card, the social
security number shall be displayed
on the card notwithstanding a request to
not display the number
pursuant to this section. The identification card also
shall
display the color photograph of the cardholder. If
the cardholder
has executed a
durable power of attorney for health care or a
declaration
governing the use or continuation, or the withholding
or
withdrawal, of life-sustaining treatment and has specified that
the cardholder wishes the identification
card to indicate that the
cardholder has
executed either type of instrument, the card also
shall
display
any symbol chosen by the registrar to indicate that
the
cardholder has executed either type of instrument. The card
shall be sealed in transparent plastic or similar material and
shall be so designed as to prevent its reproduction or alteration
without ready detection. The identification card for persons under twenty-one years of
age shall have
characteristics prescribed by the registrar
distinguishing it from that issued
to a person who is twenty-one
years of age or older, except that an
identification card issued
to a person who applies no more than thirty days
before the
applicant's twenty-first birthday shall have the characteristics
of
an identification card issued to a person who is twenty-one
years of age or
older. Every identification card issued to a resident of this state
shall
expire, unless canceled or
surrendered earlier, on the
birthday of the cardholder in the
fourth year after the date on
which it is issued. Every identification
card issued to a
temporary resident shall expire in accordance with rules
adopted
by the registrar and is nonrenewable, but may be replaced with a
new
identification card upon the applicant's compliance with all
applicable
requirements. A cardholder
may renew the cardholder's
identification card within
ninety days prior to the day on which
it expires by filing an
application and paying the prescribed fee
in accordance with section 4507.50
of the Revised Code. If a cardholder applies for a driver's or commercial
driver's
license in this state or another licensing jurisdiction,
the
cardholder shall surrender the
cardholder's identification card to
the registrar or
any deputy registrar before the license is
issued. If a card is lost, destroyed, or mutilated, the person to
whom the card was issued may obtain a duplicate by doing both of
the following: (A) Furnishing suitable proof of the loss, destruction, or
mutilation to the registrar or a deputy registrar; (B) Filing an application and presenting documentary
evidence under section 4507.51 of the Revised Code. Any person who loses a card and, after obtaining a
duplicate,
finds the original, immediately shall surrender
the original to
the registrar or a deputy registrar. A cardholder may obtain a replacement identification card
that reflects any change of the cardholder's name by
furnishing
suitable proof
of the change to the registrar or a deputy
registrar and
surrendering the cardholder's existing card. When a cardholder applies for a duplicate or obtains a
replacement identification card, the cardholder shall
pay a fee of
two dollars
and fifty cents. A deputy registrar shall be allowed
an
additional fee of
three
two dollars
and seventy-five cents
commencing on July 1, 2001,
three dollars and twenty-five cents
commencing on January 1, 2003,
and three dollars and fifty cents
commencing on January 1, 2004,
for
issuing a duplicate or
replacement identification card.
A
disabled veteran who is a
cardholder and has a
service-connected
disability rated at one
hundred per cent by
the veterans'
administration may apply to
the
registrar or a deputy registrar
for the issuance of a
duplicate or
replacement identification card
without payment of
any fee
prescribed in this section, and without
payment of any
lamination
fee if the disabled veteran would not be
required to
pay a
lamination fee in connection with the issuance
of an
identification card or temporary identification card as
provided
in division (B) of section
4507.50 of the Revised
Code. A duplicate or replacement identification card shall expire
on the same date as the card it replaces. The registrar shall cancel any card upon determining that
the
card was obtained unlawfully, issued in error, or was
altered.
The
registrar also shall cancel any card that
is surrendered to
the
registrar or to a deputy registrar after the holder has
obtained a
duplicate, replacement, or driver's or commercial
driver's
license. No agent of the state or its political subdivisions shall
condition the granting of any benefit, service, right, or
privilege upon the possession by any person of an identification
card. Nothing in this section shall preclude any publicly
operated or franchised transit system from using an
identification
card for the purpose of granting benefits or
services of the
system. No person shall be required to apply for, carry, or possess
an identification card. (C) Except in regard to an identification card issued to a
person who applies no more than thirty days before the applicant's
twenty-first birthday, neither the registrar nor any deputy
registrar
shall issue an identification card to a person under
twenty-one years of age
that does not have the characteristics
prescribed by the registrar
distinguishing it from the
identification card issued to persons who are
twenty-one years of
age or older.
Sec. 4519.10. (A) The purchaser of an off-highway
motorcycle or
all-purpose vehicle, upon application and proof of
purchase, may obtain a
temporary license placard for it. The
application for such a placard shall be
signed by the purchaser of
the off-highway motorcycle or all-purpose vehicle.
The temporary
license placard shall be issued only for the applicant's use of
the off-highway motorcycle or all-purpose vehicle to enable the
applicant to
operate it legally while proper title and a
registration sticker are being
obtained and shall be displayed on
no other off-highway motorcycle or
all-purpose vehicle. A
temporary license placard issued under this section
shall be in a
form prescribed by the registrar of motor vehicles, shall differ
in some distinctive manner from a placard
issued under section
4503.182 of the Revised Code,
shall be valid for a period of
thirty days from the date of issuance, and
shall not be
transferable or renewable. The placard either shall consist of
or
be coated with such material as will enable it to remain legible
and
relatively intact despite the environmental conditions to
which the placard is
likely to be exposed during the thirty-day
period for which it is valid. The
purchaser of an off-highway
motorcycle or all-purpose vehicle shall attach the
temporary
license placard to it, in a manner prescribed by rules the
registrar
shall adopt, so that the placard numerals or letters are
clearly visible. The fee for a temporary license placard issued under this
section shall be
two dollars. If the placard is issued by a
deputy registrar, the deputy
registrar shall charge an additional
fee of
two dollars and
seventy-five cents
commencing
on July 1,
2001, three dollars and twenty-five cents commencing on
January 1,
2003, and three dollars and fifty cents commencing on
January 1,
2004,
which the deputy registrar shall retain. The
deputy
registrar shall transmit
each two-dollar fee received by
the
deputy registrar under this section to the
registrar, who
shall
pay the two dollars to the treasurer of state for deposit
into the
state bureau of motor vehicles fund established by
section 4501.25
of the Revised Code. (B) The registrar may issue temporary license placards to a
dealer to be issued to purchasers for use on vehicles sold by the
dealer, in
accordance with rules prescribed by the registrar. The
dealer shall notify
the registrar within forty-eight hours of
proof of issuance on a form
prescribed by the registrar. The fee for each such placard issued by the registrar to a
dealer shall be
two dollars plus a fee of two dollars and
twenty-five
seventy-five cents
commencing on July 1, 2001, three
dollars and twenty-five cents commencing on January 1, 2003, and
three dollars and fifty cents commencing on January 1, 2004.
Sec. 5505.171. (A) All persons who retired and were
eligible to receive a pension that was payable prior to July 1,
1968, pursuant to division (A)(1) of section 5505.17 or division
(B)(1) of section 5505.18 of the Revised Code, shall receive an
additional monthly payment of two dollars for each year between
the member's effective date of retirement or disability and
December 31, 1971, or an additional fifty dollars, whichever is
less. On or before the first day of August in 1981 and on or
before
the first day of August in each year thereafter, the state
highway
patrol retirement board shall certify to the treasurer of
state
the amount required to be paid in the preceding fiscal year
under
this division. Upon receipt of such certification, the
treasurer
of state shall pay to the state highway patrol
retirement system
the amount certified.
(B) Each person who retired and was eligible to receive a
pension,
other than
a reduced pension, that was payable prior to
the effective date of this
amendment
June 30, 2000, pursuant to
division (A)
or (B) of section 5505.16 or division (B) of section
5505.18 of the Revised
Code shall have the pension recalculated by
the board so that the person
receives a monthly pension of not
less than one thousand fifty dollars.
Any pension
increase
resulting from a recalculation made under this division shall be
included in the calculation of the additional benefit paid under
section
5505.174 of the Revised Code. (C) The pension of each person who is receiving a pension
pursuant to division (B) of section 5505.16 of the
Revised
Code on
June 5, 1996, of less
than
nine hundred
dollars per month shall be
increased to nine hundred dollars per month.
Any increase under
this
division shall be included
in the calculation of the
additional benefit paid under section
5505.174 of the Revised
Code.
Sec. 5505.173. (A) Effective July 1, 1981, each person
eligible to receive an age and service or disability pension,
allowance, or benefit pursuant to Chapter 5505. of the Revised
Code, that was based upon an award made effective before October
1, 1974, shall have
his
the person's monthly pension increased
by
five per cent of the first five thousand dollars of the annual
pension,
allowance, or benefit. (B) Effective July 1, 1981, each person eligible to
receive
a survivor's benefit pursuant to Chapter 5505. of the
Revised Code
that was based upon an award made effective before
July 1, 1981,
shall have
his
the person's monthly benefit
increased by five per
cent, except that the twelve-month sum of such increases
shall not
exceed five per cent of the first five thousand dollars
of the
annual benefit. (C) The increases provided in divisions (A) and (B) of
this
section shall be applied to the benefit payable on and after
July
1, 1981. (D) The benefits provided in divisions (A) and (B) of this
section are a continuation of those first provided in Am. Sub.
H.
B. 204 as passed by the 113th general assembly. (E) On or before the first day of August in 1982, and on
or
before the first day of August in each year thereafter, the
state
highway patrol retirement board shall certify to the
treasurer of
state the amounts needed to pay the cost of the
additional
payments required under this section for the preceding
fiscal
year. Upon receipt of these certifications, the treasurer
of
state shall pay the amount certified.
SECTION 2. That existing sections 145.321, 145.326, 145.3210,
175.21, 3307.693, 3307.695, 3307.698, 3309.371, 3309.376,
3309.3710, 3318.084, 4507.52, 4519.10, 5505.171, and 5505.173 of
the
Revised Code
are hereby repealed.
SECTION 3. That Sections 13.04, 28.02, 41, 41.10, 44.02,
44.12, 56, 56.01, 63, 63.09, 63.10, 63.11, 63.15,
63.36, 63.37,
and 96 of Am. Sub. H.B.
94 of the 124th General Assembly be
amended
to read as follows: "Sec. 13.04. MINORITY
AFFAIRS The foregoing appropriation item 100-451, Minority
Affairs,
shall be used to establish minority affairs programs within the
Equal Opportunity Division. The office shall provide an
access
point and official representation to multi-cultural
communities;
research and reports on multi-cultural issues; and
educational,
governmental, and other services that foster
multi-cultural
opportunities and understanding in the state of
Ohio.
On July 1, 2001, or as soon as possible thereafter, the
Director of Administrative Services shall certify to the Director
of Budget and Management the unencumbered and unexpended cash
balance within GRF appropriation item 100-451, Minority Affairs,
for the completion of the predicate study. This amount is hereby
appropriated. Sec. 28.02. TRANSFER OF
INCREASES IN GRF
FUNDS
APPROPRIATIONS
TO
THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEVELOPMENT The
If the director determines that unspent and unobligated
cash balances in the General Revenue Fund are sufficient to do so,
the Director of Budget and Management, at the request of the
Director of Development, may
transfer
increase by up to $25
million
in
unobligated, unspent GRF appropriations over the
biennium
to
appropriations in existing GRF appropriation items or
new appropriation items created by the Director of Budget and
Management for the
Department of Development to support
GRF-funded
economic
development projects for which appropriations would not
otherwise
be available.
The amounts transferred
Such increases are
hereby appropriated.
COAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT FUND Notwithstanding sections 1555.08 and 1555.15 of the Revised
Code, on July 1, 2001, or as soon as possible thereafter, the
Director of Budget and Management shall transfer all cash in the
Coal Research and Development Fund (Fund 046), which represents
investment earnings of that fund previously credited to that fund,
to the General Revenue Fund. Sec. 41. DEV DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENT General Revenue Fund
GRF | 195-100 | | Personal Services | | $ | 2,651,334 | | $ | 2,920,941 |
GRF | 195-200 | | Maintenance | | $ | 589,524 | | $ | 601,314 |
GRF | 195-300 | | Equipment | | $ | 108,161 | | $ | 110,324 |
GRF | 195-401 | | Thomas Edison Program | | $ | 20,000,000 | | $ | 20,000,000 |
GRF | 195-404 | | Small Business Development | | $ | 2,452,342 | | $ | 2,529,843 |
GRF | 195-405 | | Minority Business Development Division | | $ | 2,278,888 | | $ | 2,297,314 |
GRF | 195-406 | | Transitional and Permanent Housing | | $ | 2,770,145 | | $ | 2,770,155 |
GRF | 195-407 | | Travel and Tourism | | $ | 6,345,500 | | $ | 6,448,399 |
GRF | 195-408 | | Coal Research Development | | $ | 562,551 | | $ | 585,290 |
GRF | 195-412 | | Business Development Grants | | $ | 8,033,935 | | $ | 9,092,851 |
GRF | 195-414 | | First Frontier Match | | $ | 490,000 | | $ | 490,000 |
GRF | 195-415 | | Regional Offices and Economic Development | | $ | 6,420,675 | | $ | 6,735,253 |
GRF | 195-416 | | Governor's Office of Appalachia | | $ | 5,466,954 | | $ | 5,475,126 |
GRF | 195-417 | | Urban/Rural Initiative | | $ | 980,000 | | $ | 980,000 |
GRF | 195-422 | | Technology Action | | $ | 14,000,000 | | $ | 14,000,000 |
GRF | 195-431 | | Community Development Corporation Grants | | $ | 2,530,860 | | $ | 2,530,860 |
GRF | 195-432 | | International Trade | | $ | 5,390,000 | | $ | 5,551,700 |
GRF | 195-434 | | Investment in Training Grants | | $ | 12,500,000 | | $ | 12,500,000 |
GRF | 195-436 | | Labor/Management Cooperation | | $ | 1,146,805 | | $ | 1,152,752 |
GRF | 195-440 | | Emergency Shelter Housing Grants | | $ | 2,768,313 | | $ | 2,841,441 |
GRF | 195-441 | | Low and Moderate Income Housing | | $ | 19,000,000 | | $ | 19,000,000 |
GRF | 195-497 | | CDBG Operating Match | | | | | | |
| | | Federal | | $ | 5,200,000 | | $ | 6,500,000 | | | | CDBG Operating Match Total | | $ | 6,408,576 | | $ | 7,715,295 | | | | State | | $ | 1,208,576 | | $ | 1,215,295 |
GRF | 195-498 | | State Energy Match | | $ | 153,558 | | $ | 158,548 |
GRF | 195-501 | | Appalachian Local Development Districts | | $ | 453,962 | | $ | 453,962 |
GRF | 195-502 | | Appalachian Regional Commission Dues | | $ | 219,912 | | $ | 219,912 |
GRF | 195-505 | | Utility Bill Credits | | $ | 7,350,000 | | $ | 7,350,000 |
GRF | 195-507 | | Travel
and Tourism Grants | | $ | 1,250,000 | | $ | 1,250,000 |
GRF | 195-510 | | Issue 1 Implementation | | $ | 1,000,000 | | $ | 1,500,000 | GRF | 195-906 | | Coal Research and Development General Obligation Debt Service | | $ | 8,971,700 | | $ | 9,420,300 |
TOTAL GRF General Revenue Fund | | | | | | |
State | | $ | 137,093,695 | | $ | 140,181,580 | Federal | | $ | 5,200,000 | | $ | 6,500,000 | GRF TOTAL | | $ | 142,293,695 | | $ | 146,681,580 |
General Services Fund Group
135 | 195-605 | | Supportive Services | | $ | 9,038,988 | | $ | 9,531,707 |
136 | 195-621 | | International Trade | | $ | 100,000 | | $ | 24,915 |
685 | 195-636 | | General Reimbursements | | $ | 1,275,234 | | $ | 1,323,021 |
TOTAL GSF General Services Fund | | | | | | |
Group | | $ | 10,414,222 | | $ | 10,879,643 |
Federal Special Revenue Fund Group
3K8 | 195-613 | | Community Development Block Grant | | $ | 65,149,441 | | $ | 65,088,961 |
3K9 | 195-611 | | Home Energy Assistance Block Grant | | $ | 62,000,000 | | $ | 62,000,000 |
3K9 | 195-614 | | HEAP Weatherization | | $ | 10,412,041 | | $ | 10,412,041 |
3L0 | 195-612 | | Community Services Block Grant | | $ | 22,135,000 | | $ | 22,135,000 |
3V1 | 195-601 | | HOME Program | | $ | 40,000,000 | | $ | 40,000,000 | 3X3 | 195-619 | | TANF Housing Program | | $ | 5,200,000 | | $ | 0 |
308 | 195-602 | | Appalachian Regional Commission | | $ | 350,000 | | $ | 350,200 |
308 | 195-603 | | Housing and Urban Development | | $ | 5,000,000 | | $ | 5,000,000 |
308 | 195-605 | | Federal Projects | | $ | 7,855,501 | | $ | 7,855,501 |
308 | 195-609 | | Small Business Administration | | $ | 3,799,626 | | $ | 3,799,626 |
308 | 195-618 | | Energy Federal Grants | | $ | 2,803,560 | | $ | 2,803,560 |
335 | 195-610 | | Oil Overcharge | | $ | 8,500,000 | | $ | 8,500,000 |
380 | 195-622 | | Housing Development Operating | | $ | 4,507,212 | | $ | 4,696,198 |
TOTAL FED Federal Special Revenue | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 232,512,381 | | $ | 232,641,087 |
| | $ | 237,712,381 | | | |
State Special Revenue Fund Group
4F2 | 195-639 | | State Special Projects | | $ | 1,052,762 | | $ | 1,079,082 |
4H4 | 195-641 | | First Frontier | | $ | 600,000 | | $ | 650,000 |
4S0 | 195-630 | | Enterprise Zone Operating | | $ | 211,900 | | $ | 211,900 |
4S1 | 195-634 | | Job Creation Tax Credit Operating | | $ | 372,700 | | $ | 375,800 |
4W1 | 195-646 | | Minority Business Enterprise Loan | | $ | 2,572,960 | | $ | 2,580,597 |
444 | 195-607 | | Water and Sewer Commission Loans | | $ | 511,000 | | $ | 523,775 |
445 | 195-617 | | Housing Finance Operating | | $ | 3,782,808 | | $ | 3,968,184 |
450 | 195-624 | | Minority Business Bonding Program Administration | | $ | 13,232 | | $ | 13,563 |
451 | 195-625 | | Economic Development Financing Operating | | $ | 2,062,451 | | $ | 2,143,918 |
5M4 | 195-659 | | Universal Service | | $ | 160,000,000 | | $ | 160,000,000 | 5M5 | 195-660 | | Energy Efficiency Revolving Loan | | $ | 12,000,000 | | $ | 12,000,000 |
611 | 195-631 | | Water and Sewer Administration | | $ | 15,330 | | $ | 15,713 |
617 | 195-654 | | Volume Cap Administration | | $ | 200,000 | | $ | 200,000 |
646 | 195-638 | | Low and Moderate Income Housing Trust Fund | | $ | 21,539,552 | | $ | 22,103,807 |
TOTAL SSR State Special Revenue | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 204,934,695 | | $ | 205,866,339 |
Facilities Establishment Fund
037 | 195-615 | | Facilities Establishment | | $ | 56,701,684 | | $ | 58,119,226 |
4Z6 | 195-647 | | Rural Industrial Park Loan | | $ | 5,000,000 | | $ | 5,000,000 |
5D1 | 195-649 | | Port Authority Bond Reserves | | $ | 2,500,000 | | $ | 2,500,000 |
5D2 | 195-650 | | Urban Redevelopment Loans | | $ | 10,000,000 | | $ | 10,475,000 |
5H1 | 195-652 | | Family Farm Loan Guarantee | | $ | 2,246,375 | | $ | 2,246,375 |
TOTAL 037 Facilities | | | | | | |
Establishment Fund | | $ | 76,448,059 | | $ | 78,340,601 |
Coal Research/Development Fund
046 | 195-632 | | Coal Research and Development Fund | | $ | 12,847,178 | | $ | 13,168,357 |
TOTAL 046 Coal Research/ | | | | | | |
Development Fund | | $ | 12,847,178 | | $ | 13,168,357 |
TOTAL ALL BUDGET FUND GROUPS | | $ | 679,450,230 | | $ | 687,577,607 |
| | $ | 684,650,230 | | | |
Sec. 41.10. EMERGENCY SHELTER HOUSING GRANTS (A) As used in this section,
"emergency shelter housing"
means a
structure
suitable for the temporary housing of the
homeless and the
provision of, or
referral to, supportive
services. Shelters that restrict
admission to victims
of domestic
violence, runaways, or alcohol or substance abusers
shall not be
considered emergency shelter housing. (B) The foregoing appropriation item 195-440, Emergency
Shelter Housing
Grants, shall be used by the Office of Housing and
Community Partnerships in
the Department of Development to make
grants to private, nonprofit
organizations to provide emergency
shelter housing for the homeless. The
department shall distribute
the grants pursuant to rules adopted by the
Director of
Development. The director may amend or rescind
the rules and may
adopt other rules necessary to implement this section. In awarding
grants, the department shall give preference to organizations
applying to fund existing emergency shelter housing. The department shall notify each organization that applied
for a grant under
this section of the amount of its grant award,
if any. To receive a grant,
the organization shall provide
matching funds equal to 50 per cent of the
total grant it was
awarded. The organization shall expend its grant for
shelter
operations and supportive services, which include employment
assistance, case management, information and referral services,
transportation, and clothing. In providing employment assistance,
the
organization shall, at a minimum, refer persons to the
Department of Job and Family Services. LOW AND MODERATE INCOME HOUSING The Director of Budget and Management, after consulting with
the Director of Development, shall transfer up to $19,000,000 from
appropriation item 195-441, Low and Moderate Income Housing, to
appropriation item 195-638, Low and Moderate Income Housing Trust
Fund. This transfer shall be made via an intrastate transfer
voucher.
UTILITY BILL CREDIT
The foregoing appropriation item 195-505, Utility Bill
Credits, shall be used to provide utility and fuel assistance to
eligible low-income Ohio households with elderly and disabled
members. TANF HOUSING PROGRAM
There is hereby established the TANF Housing Program to be
administered by the Department of Development in accordance with
an interagency agreement entered into with the Department of Job
and Family Services under section 5101.801 of the Revised Code.
The program shall provide benefits and services to TANF eligible
individuals under a Title IV-A program pursuant to the
requirements of section 5101.801 of the Revised Code.
The foregoing appropriation item 195-619, TANF Housing
Program, shall be used to provide supportive services for
low-income families related to housing or homelessness, including
housing counseling; to provide grants to nonprofit organizations
to assist Title IV-A eligible families with incomes at or below
200 per cent of the federal poverty guidelines with down-payment
assistance for homeownership or down-payment assistance toward the
purchase of mobile homes, to provide emergency home repair funding
for Title IV-A eligible families with incomes at or below 200 per
cent of the federal poverty guidelines; to provide operating
support for family emergency shelter programs; and to provide
emergency rent and mortgage assistance for families with incomes
at or below 200 per cent of the federal poverty guidelines. The
funds shall not be used to match federal funds.
To the extent practicable and in order to prevent duplication
of the provision of assistance, the Department of Development
shall require applicants for these funds to provide evidence of
collaboration with other county governmental entities, including,
when appropriate, county job and family services departments.
The Department of Job and Family Services shall transfer into
the TANF Housing Fund (3X3) of the Department of Development,
which is hereby created, funds necessary to reimburse allowable
TANF Housing Program expenditures as reported by the Department of
Development. The transfer of funds shall be made by intrastate
transfer vouchers processed against appropriation item 600-689,
TANF Block Grant, of the Department of Job and Family Services and
shall not exceed $5,200,000 in fiscal year 2002 and $6,500,000 in
fiscal year 2003.
No more than five per cent of the transferred funds may be
used by the Department of Development for the administrative
expenses of this program. The benefits and services provided under the TANF Housing
Program shall not be "assistance" as defined in 45 C.F.R.
260.31(a), and shall be benefits and services that 45 C.F.R.
260.31(b) excludes from the definition of assistance.
As used in this section, "federal poverty guideline" means
the poverty guideline as defined by the United States Office of
Management and Budget and revised by the United States Secretary
of Health and Human Services in accordance with section 673 of the
"Community Services Block Grant Act," 95 Stat. 511 (1981), 42
U.S.C.A. 9902, as amended.
Sec. 44.02. HEAD START
the Director of Budget and
Management shall
transfer
$76,156,175 from Fund 3W6, TANF
Education, to the General Revenue
Fund.
the Director of Budget and Management
shall transfer
$98,843,825 from Fund 3W6, TANF Education, to the General
Revenue
Fund. The transferred funds are appropriated for the
appropriation
item 200-406, Head Start. The foregoing appropriation item
200-406, Head Start, includes transferred funds of $76,156,175 in
fiscal year 2002 and $98,843,825 in fiscal year 2003.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-406, Head Start,
$100,000 per fiscal year shall be used for the Read Baby Read Book
Club Program. The
Pursuant to the interagency agreement entered into
between the Department of Education and the Department of Job and
Family Services under division (A)(2) of section 5101.801 of the
Revised Code, the remainder of foregoing appropriation item
200-406, Head
Start, shall
be distributed by
the Department of
Education to Head
Start
agencies. A
"Head Start agency"
means an
entity that has
been
approved to be an agency in accordance with
Section
641 (42
U.S.C.
9836) of the Head Start Act and amendments
thereto,
or an
entity
designated for state Head Start funding
under
this section.
Participation in state-funded Head Start
programs is voluntary.
Moneys distributed under this heading shall not be used to
reduce expenditures
from funds received by a Head Start agency
from any other sources. Section
3301.31 of the Revised Code does
not apply to funds distributed under this
heading. In lieu of
section 3301.31 of the Revised Code, distribution of
moneys under
this heading shall be as follows: (A) In fiscal years 2002 and 2003, up to two per cent of the
appropriation may be used by the department for administrative
costs of complying with this section; developing program capacity;
and
assisting programs
with facilities planning, construction,
renovation, or lease agreements in
combination with the Community
Development Finance Fund (CDFF). Up to
$1,530,000 in fiscal year
2002 and up to $1,560,600 in fiscal year 2003 may be used
for the
services of literacy specialist and
training in early literacy for
Head Start classroom teachers and
administrators to support the
OhioReads Initiative. (B) The department shall provide an annual report to the
Governor,
the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the
President of the Senate, the
State Board of Education, Head Start
grantees, and other interested parties.
The report shall include
the following: (1) The number and per cent of eligible children by county
and by grantee; (2) The amount of state funds received for continuation per
grantee; (3) A summary of program performance on the state critical
performance
indicators; (4) A summary of developmental progress of children
participating in the
state-funded Head Start program; (5) Any other data reflecting the performance of Head Start
that the
department considers pertinent. (C) For purposes of this section,
"eligible child" means a
child who is at
least three years of age and not of compulsory
school age whose family earns
no more than 100 per cent of the
federal poverty level, except as otherwise
provided in this
division. The Department of Education, in consultation with Head Start
grantees or their designated representatives, shall establish
criteria under which individual Head Start grantees may apply to
the department for a waiver to include as
"eligible children"
those children from families earning up to 185 per cent of the
federal poverty level when the children otherwise qualify as
"eligible children" under this division.
In order to serve children whose families receive child care
subsidy and whose incomes do not exceed 185 per cent of the
federal poverty guidelines, Head Start grantees may enroll
children whose families receive child care subsidy from the Ohio
Department of Job and Family Services. Head Start grantees
providing full-day, full-year comprehensive services, or otherwise
meeting the child care needs of working families, may partner with
child care centers or family day care homes or may access child
care subsidy directly. This provision is to meet the child care
needs of low-income families who are working, in training or
education programs, or participating in Ohio Works First
appproved
approved
activities. (D) After setting aside amounts to make any payments due
from the prior
fiscal year,
pursuant to the interagency agreement,
in fiscal years 2002 and 2003, funds
shall only be distributed
to
recipients of Head Start funds
during
the preceding fiscal year.
Awards under
this
division shall be
based on a per-pupil formula
prescribed by the Department of
Education and may
be adjusted for
one-time
start-up costs, actual
months of program
operation, or
the number of children enrolled
and
receiving services, as defined
by the Department of Education,
reported during the first full
week of
December, and may be
increased by a reasonable percentage
for
inflation to be
determined by the
Department of Education and
in
accordance with
this section.
The
Pursuant to the interagency
agreement, the department may redistribute
dollars to programs
demonstrating an unmet
need based on updated
assessments of family
needs and community resources. In fiscal
years 2002 and 2003, the
department may authorize recipients to
carry over
funds to the
subsequent fiscal year. The
In accordance with the interagency agreement, the
department may reallocate unobligated or unspent money to
participating
Head Start agencies for: (1) facilities planning
grants and to leverage construction, renovation, or lease
agreements and for repair of critical deferred maintenance and
safety items in combination with the CDFF; (2) teacher
professional development and enhanced compensation in order to
meet the requirements of section 3301.311 of the Revised Code; (3)
meeting the documentation and reporting requirements and for
technical support in accordance with division (F) of this section;
and (4)
expansion, improvement, or special
projects to promote
excellence
and innovation.
(E) Costs for developing and administering a Head Start
program may not
exceed
fifteen per cent of the total approved
costs of the program
the costs established in the interagency
agreement. All recipients of funds shall maintain such fiscal control
and
accounting procedures as may be necessary to ensure the
disbursement of, and accounting for, these funds
in accordance
with section 5101.801 of the Revised Code. The control of
funds
provided in this program, and title to property obtained
therefrom, shall be under the authority of the approved recipient
for purposes provided in the program. The approved recipient
shall
administer and use such property and funds for the purposes
specified. Each recipient shall furnish the department an annual audit
that
includes the review of
state funds received under this
section.
In conjunction with the required audit of federal
Head Start
funds, the independent auditor shall examine state Head Start
funds in accordance with the federal regulations and agreed-upon
state procedures formulated by the department. (F) The department
shall prescribe
target levels for
critical performance indicators for the purpose of assessing
Head
Start programs. On-site reviews and follow-up visits shall be
based on
grantee progress in meeting the prescribed target levels.
The Department of Education, in consultation with the
interested parties, including the state Department of Job and
Family Services, shall develop the criteria to be used by Head
Start grantees and delegate agencies with developing partnership
agreements. The
department
Department of Education or the Department of
Job and Family Services may audit a Head Start agency's financial
and
program records. Head Start agencies that have financial
practices not in accordance with standard accounting principles,
that fail to substantially meet the Head Start performance
standards, or that exhibit below-average performance shall be
subject to an on-site review. The
department
Department of Education shall require
corrective plans of action for
programs not achieving target
levels or financial and program
standards.
Action plans shall
include activities to
be conducted
by the grantee and timelines
for activities to be completed and
timelines for additional data
submission to the department
demonstrating
targets have been met.
The Policy Council
chairperson and the appropriate
grantee board
official shall sign
the corrective plans of action. Head Start programs not meeting performance targets in
accordance
with
the plan of action and prescribed timelines may
have their
funding reduced until targets are
met, or have all
state funds
withdrawn. The department shall require school districts to collect
"preschool" information by program type. All data shall be
reported via the
Education Management Information System (EMIS). (G) The department shall develop prekindergarten reading and
mathematics content standards and model curricula. These
standards and curricula shall be made available to grantees. Head
Start grantees delegate agencies, and child care partners shall
document child
progress, using a common instrument prescribed by
the department,
and report results annually. The department shall
determine the
dates for documenting and reporting. (H) New agencies may be designated for state Head Start
funding if a Head Start agency voluntarily waives its right for
funding or is de-funded based on performance. In either event,
the grantee and delegate shall transfer
control of title to
property, equipment, and remaining supplies
obtained through this
program to the newly designated grantee and
return any unexpended
funds to the department along with any
reports prescribed by the
department. Section 3313.646 of the Revised Code does not apply to funds
distributed under this section. (I) It is the intent of the General Assembly that
appropriations for
appropriation items 200-406, Head Start, and
200-408, Public Preschool, be
available for transfer between Head
Start and public preschool programs so that unallocated funds may
be used
between the two programs.
(J) The Department of Education shall comply with all TANF
requirements,
including reporting requirements and timelines, as
specified in state and
federal laws, federal regulations, state
rules, and the Title IV-A state
plan, and is responsible for
payment of any adverse audit finding, final
disallowance of
federal financial participation, or other sanction or
penalty
issued by the federal government or other entity concerning these
funds.
Having met all of the above requirements, the Department
shall have the authority to administer these funds in accordance
with its own rules and guidelines, including grant administration
procedures.
The interagency agreement between the Department of
Education and the Department of Job and Family Services shall
establish conditions for the reimbursement of allowable Title IV-A
funds as specified in 42 U.S.C.A. 604(a), except that they may not
be "assistance" as defined in 45 C.F.R. 260.31(a). The benefits
and services shall be benefits and services that 45 C.F.R.
260.31(b) excludes from the definition of "assistance." The
interagency agreement also shall require that Head Start agencies
comply with requirements of Title IV-A of the "Social Security
Act," 49 Stat. 620 (1935), 42 U.S.C. 301, as amended, including
eligibility of individuals, reporting requirements, allowable
benefits and services, use of funds, and audit requirements, as
specified in state and federal laws, federal regulations, state
rules, federal office of management and budget circulars, and the
Title IV-A state plan. The Department of Education shall be
responsible for assuring that all Title IV-A funds are used solely
for purposes allowable under federal regulations, section 5101.801
of the Revised Code, and the Title IV-A state plan. Sec. 44.12. ADULT LITERACY EDUCATION The foregoing appropriation item 200-509, Adult Literacy
Education, shall be used to support adult basic and literacy
education instructional programs and the State Literacy Resource
Center Program. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-509, Adult
Literacy
Education, up to $543,150 in fiscal
year 2002 and up to $554,013
in fiscal year 2003 shall be used
for the support and operation
of
the State Literacy Resource Center. The remainder shall be used to continue to satisfy the
state
match and maintenance of effort requirements for the support and
operation of the
Department of Education-administered
instructional grant program
for adult basic and literacy education
in accordance with the
department's state plan for adult basic and
literacy education as
approved by the State Board of Education and
the Secretary of the
United States Department of Education. AUXILIARY SERVICES The foregoing appropriation item 200-511, Auxiliary
Services,
shall be used by the State Board of Education for the
purpose of
implementing section 3317.06 of the Revised Code. Of
the
appropriation, up to $1,250,000 in fiscal year 2002 and up to
$1,500,000 in fiscal year 2003 may be used for payment of the
Post-Secondary Enrollment
Options Program for nonpublic students
pursuant to section
3365.10 of the Revised Code. STUDENT INTERVENTION SERVICES The foregoing appropriation item 200-513, Student
Intervention Services,
shall be used to assist districts
providing
the intervention services specified in section 3313.608 of the
Revised Code.
The Department of Education
shall establish
guidelines for the use and distribution of these moneys
in
accordance with the interagency agreement entered into between the
Department of Education and the Department of Job and Family
Services under division (A)(2) of section 5101.801 of the Revised
Code. School
districts receiving funds from this appropriation
shall report to
the Department of Education on how funds were
used. the
Director of Budget and
Management
shall transfer
$35,000,000 from Fund 3W6, TANF
Education, to the General
Revenue
Fund. The transferred funds are
appropriated for the
appropriation
item 200-513, Student
Intervention Services. The foregoing
appropriation item
200-513,
Student Intervention Services,
includes transferred funds of
$35,000,000 in fiscal year 2003.
The Department of Education shall comply with all TANF
requirements,
including reporting requirements and timelines, as
specified in state and
federal laws, federal regulations, state
rules, and the Title IV-A state
plan, and is responsible for
payment of any adverse audit finding, final
disallowance of
federal financial participation, or other sanction or
penalty
issued by the federal government or other entity concerning these
funds.
The interagency agreement between the Department of Education
and the Department of Job and Family Services shall establish
conditions for the reimbursement of allowable Title IV-A funds as
specified in 42 U.S.C.A. 604(a), except that they may not be
"assistance" as defined in 45 C.F.R. 260.31(a). The benefits and
services shall be benefits and services that 45 C.F.R. 260.31(b)
excludes from the definition of "assistance." The interagency
agreement also shall require that school districts receiving funds
from this appropriation comply with requirements of Title IV-A of
the "Social Security Act," 49 Stat 620 (1935), 42 U.S.C. 301, as
amended, including eligibility of individuals, reporting
requirements, allowable benefits and services, use of funds, and
audit requirements, as specified in state and federal laws,
federal regulations, state rules, federal office of management and
budget circulars, and the Title IV-A state plan. The Department
of Education shall be responsible for assuring that all Title IV-A
funds are used solely for purposes allowable under federal
regulations, section 5101.801 of the Revised Code, and the Title
IV-A state plan. POST-SECONDARY/ADULT CAREER-TECHNICAL EDUCATION The foregoing appropriation item 200-514,
Post-Secondary/Adult Career-Technical Education, shall be used by
the
State Board of Education to provide post-secondary/adult
career-technical education under sections 3313.52 and 3313.53 of
the
Revised Code. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-514,
Post-Secondary/Adult Career-Technical Education, up to $500,000
in
each
fiscal year shall be allocated for the Ohio Career
Information
System (OCIS) and used for the dissemination of
career
information
data to public schools, libraries, rehabilitation
centers, two-
and four-year colleges and universities, and other
governmental
units. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-514,
Post-Secondary/Adult Career-Technical
Education, up to $40,000 in
each
fiscal year shall be used for the statewide
coordination of
the
activities of the Ohio Young Farmers. DISADVANTAGED PUPIL IMPACT AID The foregoing appropriation item 200-520, Disadvantaged
Pupil
Impact Aid, shall be distributed to school districts according to
section
3317.029 of the Revised Code.
However, no money shall be
distributed for all-day kindergarten to any school district whose
three-year
average formula ADM exceeds 17,500 but whose DPIA index
is not at least equal
to 1.00 in each fiscal year, unless the
Department of Education
certifies that
sufficient funds
exist in
this appropriation to
make all other
payments required by section
3317.029 of the
Revised Code. The Department of Education shall pay all-day, everyday
kindergarten funding
to all school districts in fiscal year 2002
and fiscal year 2003 that
qualified for and provided the service
in a preceding fiscal year pursuant to
section
3317.029 of the
Revised Code, regardless of changes to such districts'
DPIA
indexes in fiscal year 2002 and fiscal year 2003. The Department of Education shall pay to community
schools an
amount for all-day kindergarten if the school district in which
the
student is entitled to attend school is eligible but does not
receive a
payment for all-day kindergarten, pursuant to division
(B) of section
3314.13 of the Revised Code, and the student is
reported by
the community school as enrolled in all-day
kindergarten at the community
school. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-520, Disadvantaged
Pupil Impact Aid,
up to $3,200,000 in fiscal year 2002 and up to
$3,300,000 in fiscal year 2003
shall be used for school breakfast
programs. Of these amounts, up to
$500,000
shall be used each
year by the Department of Education to provide start-up
grants to
rural school districts and to school districts with less than
1,500
ADM that start school breakfast programs. The
remainder of
the appropriation shall be used to: (1) partially
reimburse
school buildings within school districts that are required to have
a
school breakfast program pursuant to section 3313.813 of the
Revised Code, at
a rate decided by the department, for each
breakfast served to any pupil
enrolled in the district; (2)
partially reimburse districts participating in
the National School
Lunch Program that have at least 20 per cent of students
who are
eligible for free and reduced meals according to federal
standards, at
a rate decided by the department; and (3) to
partially reimburse
districts participating in the National School
Lunch Program for breakfast
served to children eligible for free
and reduced meals enrolled in the
district, at a rate decided by
the department. Of the portion of the funds distributed to the Cleveland City
School
District under section 3317.029 of the Revised Code
calculated under division (F)(2) of that section, up to
$14,903,943 in fiscal year 2002 and up to $18,066,820 in fiscal
year 2003
shall be used to operate the pilot school
choice program
in the Cleveland City School District pursuant to sections
3313.974 to 3313.979 of the Revised Code. Of the foregoing appropriation item 200-520, Disadvantaged
Pupil Impact Aid,
$1,000,000 in each fiscal year shall be used
to
support dropout recovery programs
administered by the Department
of Education, Jobs for Ohio's Graduates
Program. Sec. 56. DOH DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH General Revenue Fund
GRF | 440-406 | | Hemophilia Services | | $ | 1,230,492 | | $ | 1,230,492 |
GRF | 440-407 | | Animal Borne Disease and Prevention | | $ | 2,643,874 | | $ | 2,598,297 |
GRF | 440-412 | | Cancer Incidence Surveillance System | | $ | 898,978 | | $ | 1,104,175 |
GRF | 440-413 | | Ohio Health Care Policy and Data | | $ | 3,056,959 | | $ | 3,157,200 |
GRF | 440-416 | | Child and Family Health Services | | $ | 11,187,078 | | $ | 10,839,187 |
| | | | | | 11,437,078 | | | 10,889,187 |
GRF | 440-418 | | Immunizations | | $ | 9,403,469 | | $ | 9,616,514 |
GRF | 440-419 | | Sexual Assault Prevention and Intervention | | $ | 50,000 | | $ | 50,000 |
GRF | 440-444 | | AIDS Prevention and Treatment | | $ | 9,142,101 | | $ | 9,476,508 |
GRF | 440-446 | | Infectious Disease Prevention | | $ | 642,821 | | $ | 649,291 | GRF | 440-451 | | Public Health Prevention Programs | | $ | 7,708,440 | | $ | 7,212,245 |
GRF | 440-452 | | Child and Family Health Care Operations | | $ | 1,316,947 | | $ | 1,320,455 |
GRF | 440-453 | | Health Care Facility Protection and Safety | | $ | 12,466,643 | | $ | 12,662,779 |
GRF | 440-454 | | Local Environmental Health | | $ | 1,243,340 | | $ | 1,244,824 | GRF | 440-459 | | Help Me Grow | | $ | 12,500,000 | | $ | 12,500,000 |
GRF | 440-461 | | Vital Statistics | | $ | 3,891,580 | | $ | 3,863,425 |
GRF | 440-501 | | Local Health Districts | | $ | 3,991,111 | | $ | 3,991,111 |
GRF | 440-504 | | Poison Control Network | | $ | 388,000 | | $ | 388,000 |
GRF | 440-505 | | Medically Handicapped Children | | $ | 7,634,095 | | $ | 7,540,879 |
GRF | 440-507 | | Cystic Fibrosis | | $ | 818,131 | | $ | 818,131 |
GRF | 440-508 | | Migrant Health | | $ | 120,767 | | $ | 118,049 |
GRF | 440-510 | | Arthritis Care | | $ | 75,000 | | $ | 75,000 |
TOTAL GRF General Revenue Fund | | $ | 90,409,826 | | $ | 90,456,562 |
| | | 90,659,826 | | | 90,506,562 |
General Services Fund Group
142 | 440-618 | | General Operations | | $ | 2,764,557 | | $ | 2,892,340 |
211 | 440-613 | | Central Support Indirect Costs | | $ | 25,527,855 | | $ | 26,149,512 |
473 | 440-622 | | Lab Operating Expenses | | $ | 4,006,440 | | $ | 4,154,045 |
5C1 | 440-642 | | TANF Family Planning | | $ | 255,500 | | $ | 261,888 |
683 | 440-633 | | Employee Assistance Program | | $ | 1,017,408 | | $ | 1,062,965 |
698 | 440-634 | | Nurse Aide Training | | $ | 240,000 | | $ | 265,808 |
TOTAL GSF General Services | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 33,811,760 | | $ | 34,786,558 |
Federal Special Revenue Fund Group
320 | 440-601 | | Maternal Child Health Block Grant | | $ | 32,702,100 | | $ | 34,335,562 |
387 | 440-602 | | Preventive Health Block Grant | | $ | 9,278,173 | | $ | 9,278,173 |
389 | 440-604 | | Women, Infants, and Children | | $ | 185,850,000 | | $ | 195,142,500 |
391 | 440-606 | | Medicaid/Medicare | | $ | 24,297,017 | | $ | 25,778,700 |
392 | 440-618 | | General Operations | | $ | 74,384,890 | | $ | 77,720,166 |
TOTAL FED Federal Special Revenue | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 326,512,180 | | $ | 342,255,101 |
State Special Revenue Fund Group
3W5 | 440-611 | | Title XX Transfer | | $ | 500,000 | | $ | 500,000 | 4D6 | 440-608 | | Genetics Services | | $ | 2,725,894 | | $ | 2,799,641 |
4F9 | 440-610 | | Sickle Cell Disease Control | | $ | 1,010,091 | | $ | 1,035,344 |
4G0 | 440-636 | | Heirloom Birth Certificate | | $ | 1,000 | | $ | 1,000 |
4G0 | 440-637 | | Birth Certificate Surcharge | | $ | 5,000 | | $ | 5,000 |
4L3 | 440-609 | | Miscellaneous Expenses | | $ | 257,548 | | $ | 258,570 |
4T4 | 440-603 | | Child Highway Safety | | $ | 224,855 | | $ | 233,894 |
4V6 | 440-641 | | Save Our Sight | | $ | 1,232,421 | | $ | 1,266,900 |
470 | 440-618 | | General Operations | | $ | 12,364,273 | | $ | 12,941,359 |
471 | 440-619 | | Certificate of Need | | $ | 352,598 | | $ | 370,524 |
477 | 440-627 | | Medically Handicapped Children Audit | | $ | 4,400,452 | | $ | 4,640,498 |
5B5 | 440-616 | | Quality, Monitoring, and Inspection | | $ | 802,502 | | $ | 838,479 |
5C0 | 440-615 | | Alcohol Testing and Permit | | $ | 1,395,439 | | $ | 1,455,405 |
5D6 | 440-620 | | Second Chance Trust | | $ | 831,924 | | $ | 852,723 |
5L1 | 440-623 | | Nursing Facility Technical Assistance Program | | $ | 1,080,000 | | $ | 1,157,150 | 610 | 440-626 | | Radiation Emergency Response | | $ | 870,505 | | $ | 923,315 |
666 | 440-607 | | Medically Handicapped Children - County Assessments | | $ | 14,039,889 | | $ | 14,039,889 |
TOTAL SSR State Special Revenue | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 42,094,391 | | $ | 43,319,691 |
Holding Account Redistribution Fund Group
R14 | 440-631 | | Vital Statistics | | $ | 49,000 | | $ | 49,000 |
R48 | 440-625 | | Refunds, Grants Reconciliation, and Audit Settlements | | $ | 20,000 | | $ | 20,000 |
TOTAL 090 Holding Account | | | | | | | Redistribution Fund Group | | $ | 69,000 | | $ | 69,000 |
TOTAL ALL BUDGET FUND GROUPS | | $ | 494,897,157 | | $ | 510,886,912 |
| | | 495,147,157 | | | 510,936,912 |
Sec. 56.01. HEMOPHILIA SERVICES Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-406, Hemophilia
Services,
$205,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to implement
the
Hemophilia Insurance Pilot Project. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-406, Hemophilia
Services,
up to $245,000 in each fiscal year
shall
be used by the
Department of Health to provide grants
to the
nine hemophilia
treatment centers to provide prevention
services for
persons with
hemophilia and their family members
affected by AIDS
and other
bloodborne pathogens. CANCER REGISTRY SYSTEM Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-412, Cancer Incidence
Surveillance
System, $50,000 in each fiscal year shall be provided
to the Northern Ohio
Cancer Resource Center. The remaining moneys in appropriation item 440-412, Cancer
Incidence
Surveillance System, shall be used to maintain and
operate the Ohio Cancer
Incidence Surveillance System pursuant to
sections 3701.261 to 3701.263 of the
Revised Code. No later than March 1, 2002, the Ohio Cancer Incidence
Surveillance Advisory Board shall report to the General Assembly
on the effectiveness of the cancer incidence surveillance
system
and the partnership between the Department of Health and
the
Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research
Institute of The Ohio State University. CHILD AND FAMILY HEALTH SERVICES Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and
Family
Health Services, $1,700,000 in each fiscal year shall be
used for
family planning services. None of the funds received through
these family
planning grants shall be used
to provide abortion
services. None of the funds received through these family
planning grants shall be used for counseling for or referrals for
abortion, except
in the case of a medical emergency. These funds
shall be
distributed on
the basis of the relative need in the
community
served by the
Director of Health to family planning
programs,
which shall include family
planning programs funded
under Title V
of
the
"Social Security Act," 49 Stat. 620 (1935),
42
U.S.C.A.
301, as amended, and Title X of the
"Public Health
Services Act,"
58 Stat. 682 (1946), 42 U.S.C.A. 201, as
amended,
as well as to
other family planning programs that the Department
of
Health also
determines will provide services that are
physically and financially separate from abortion-providing and
abortion-promoting activities, and that do not include counseling
for or
referrals for
abortion, other than in the case of medical
emergency, with state
moneys, but that otherwise substantially
comply with the
quality
standards for such programs under Title V
and Title X. The Director of Health, by rule, shall provide reasonable
methods by
which a grantee wishing to be eligible for federal
funding may comply with
these requirements for state funding
without losing its eligibility for
federal funding, while ensuring
that a family
planning program receiving a family planning grant
must be organized so that
it is physically and financially
separate from the provision of abortion
services and from
activities promoting abortion as a method of family
planning. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and
Family
Health Services, $150,000 in each fiscal year shall be
used to
provide malpractice insurance for physicians and other health
professionals providing prenatal services in programs funded by
the Department of Health.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health
Services,
$279,000 shall be used in each fiscal year for
the OPTIONS dental
care access program. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $600,000 in each fiscal year shall be used by
local child and family health services clinics to provide services
to uninsured low-income persons. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $900,000 in each fiscal year shall be used by
federally qualified health centers and federally designated
look-alikes to provide services to uninsured low-income persons. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $50,000 in each fiscal year shall be used for the
Tree of Knowledge Learning Center in Cleveland Heights. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $25,000 in fiscal year 2002 shall be provided to
the Suicide Prevention Program of Clermont County. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $50,000 in fiscal year 2002 shall be provided to
the Discover Health Project. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $75,000 in fiscal year 2002 shall be provided to
the Mayerson Center. Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-416, Child and Family
Health Services, $50,000 in fiscal year 2002 shall be provided to
the Central Clinic at the University of Cincinnati. IMMUNIZATIONS Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-418, Immunizations,
$125,000 per
fiscal year shall be used to provide vaccinations for
Hepatitis B to all qualified underinsured
students in the seventh
grade who have not been
previously immunized.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-418, Immunizations,
up to $25,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to provide
vaccinations for pneumococcal disease for children between the
ages of two and five. SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION The foregoing appropriation item 440-419, Sexual Assault
Prevention and Intervention, shall be used for the following
purposes: (A) Funding of new services in counties with no services for
sexual assault;
(B) Expansion of services provided in currently funded
projects so that comprehensive crisis intervention and prevention
services are offered; (C) Start-up funding for Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE)
projects; (D) Statewide expansion of local outreach and public
awareness efforts.
HIV/AIDS PREVENTION/TREATMENT Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-444, AIDS
Prevention
and Treatment, $6.7 million in fiscal year 2002 and $7.1 million
in
fiscal year
2003 shall be used to assist persons with HIV/AIDS
in acquiring
HIV-related medications. The HIV Drug Assistance Program is pursuant to section
3701.241 of
the Revised
Code and Title XXVI of the
"Public Health
Services
Act," 104
Stat. 576 (1990), 42 U.S.C.A. 2601, as amended.
The
Department of
Health may adopt rules pursuant to
Chapter 119.
of the Revised Code as necessary for the
administration of the
program. INFECTIOUS DISEASE PREVENTION Notwithstanding section 339.77 of the Revised Code, $60,000
of the foregoing appropriation
item 440-446, Infectious Disease
Prevention, shall
be used by the Director of
Health to reimburse
Boards of County
Commissioners for the cost of detaining indigent
persons with
tuberculosis. Any portion of the $60,000 allocated
for detainment
not used
for that purpose shall be used to make
payments to
counties pursuant to
section 339.77 of the Revised
Code.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-446, Infectious
Disease Prevention, $200,000 in each fiscal year shall be used for
the purchase of drugs for sexually transmitted diseases. HELP ME GROW The foregoing appropriation item 440-459, Help Me Grow,
shall
be used by the Department of Health to distribute subsidies
to
counties to implement section 3701.61 of the Revised Code.
Appropriation item 440-459 may be
used in
conjunction with
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
from the
Department of Job
and Family Services, Even Start from
the
Department of Education,
and in conjunction with other early
childhood funds and services
to promote the optimal development of
young children. Local
contacts shall be developed between local
departments of job and
family services and family and children
first councils for the
administration of TANF funding for the Help
Me Grow Program. The
Department of Health shall enter into an
interagency agreement
with the Department of Education to
coordinate the planning,
design, and grant selection process for
any new Even Start grants
and to ensure that all new and existing
programs within Help Me
grow are school linked. POISON CONTROL NETWORK The foregoing appropriation item 440-504, Poison Control
Network, shall be used in each fiscal year by the Department of
Health for grants to the consolidated Ohio
Poison Control Center
to provide poison control services to Ohio
citizens.
TANF FAMILY PLANNING The Director of Budget and Management shall transfer by
intrastate transfer voucher,
no
later than the fifteenth day of
July of each fiscal year,
cash from
the General Revenue Fund,
appropriation item 600-410,
TANF State,
to General Services
Fund
5C1 in the Department of
Health, in
an amount of $250,000 in
each
fiscal year for the
purpose of family planning
services for
children or their
families
whose income is at or below 200 per
cent of the official
poverty
guideline. As used in this section,
"poverty guideline" means the
official
poverty guideline as revised annually by the United
States Secretary of Health
and Human Services in accordance with
section 673 of the
"Community
Services Block Grant Act," 95 Stat.
511 (1981), 42 U.S.C.A.
9902, as amended, for a family size equal
to the size of the family of the
person whose income is being
determined. MATERNAL CHILD HEALTH BLOCK GRANT Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-601, Maternal Child
Health Block Grant
(Fund 320), $2,091,299 shall be used in each
fiscal year for the purposes of
abstinence-only education. The
Director of Health shall develop guidelines
for the establishment
of abstinence programs for teenagers with the purpose of
decreasing unplanned pregnancies and abortion. Such guidelines
shall be
pursuant to Title V of the
"Social Security Act," 42
U.S.C.A. 510, and shall include, but are not limited to,
advertising
campaigns and direct training in schools and other
locations. A portion of the foregoing appropriation item 440-601,
Maternal
Child Health Block Grant (Fund 320), may be used to
ensure that
current information on sudden infant death syndrome is
available for
distribution by local health districts. TITLE XX TRANSFER Of the foregoing appropriation item 440-611, Title XX
Transfer (Fund 3W5),
$500,000
in each fiscal year, to the extent
funds are available based on deposits made pursuant to Section
63.09 of this act, shall be used
for the purposes of
abstinence-only education. The Director of
Health shall develop
guidelines
for the establishment of
abstinence programs for
teenagers with the purpose
of decreasing
unplanned pregnancies and
abortion. The guidelines shall be
developed pursuant to Title V of
the "Social Security Act," 42
U.S.C. 510,
and shall include, but
are not to be limited to,
advertising campaigns and
direct
training in schools and other
locations. GENETICS SERVICES The foregoing appropriation item 440-608, Genetics Services
(Fund
4D6), shall be used by the Department of Health to
administer
programs authorized by sections 3701.501 and 3701.502
of the Revised
Code. None of these funds shall be used to counsel
or refer for abortion, except in the case of a medical emergency. SICKLE CELL FUND The foregoing appropriation item 440-610, Sickle Cell Disease
Control (Fund 4F9), shall be used by the Department of Health
to
administer programs authorized by section 3701.131 of the Revised
Code. The source of the funds is as specified in section 3701.23
of the Revised Code.
SAFETY AND QUALITY OF CARE STANDARDS
The Department of Health may use Fund 471, Certificate of
Need, for administering sections 3702.11 to 3702.20 and 3702.30 of
the Revised Code in each fiscal year. MEDICALLY HANDICAPPED CHILDREN AUDIT The Medically Handicapped Children Audit Fund (Fund 477)
shall receive revenue from audits of hospitals and recoveries
from
third-party payors. Moneys may be expended for payment of
audit
settlements and for costs directly related to obtaining
recoveries
from third-party payors and for encouraging Medically
Handicapped
Children's Program recipients to apply for
third-party benefits.
Moneys also may be expended for payments
for diagnostic and
treatment services on behalf of medically
handicapped children, as
defined in division (A) of section
3701.022 of the Revised Code,
and Ohio residents who are twenty-one
or more years of age and who
are suffering from cystic fibrosis. Moneys may also be expended
for administrative expenses incurred in operating the Medically
Handicapped Children's Program. CASH TRANSFER FROM LIQUOR CONTROL FUND TO ALCOHOL TESTING AND
PERMIT FUND The Director of Budget and Management, pursuant to a plan
submitted by the Department of Health, or as otherwise
determined
by the Director of Budget and Management, shall set a schedule to
transfer cash
from the Liquor Control Fund (Fund 043) to the
Alcohol Testing and
Permit Fund (Fund 5C0) to meet the operating
needs of the Alcohol
Testing and Permit program. The Director of Budget and Management shall transfer to the
Alcohol Testing and Permit Fund (Fund 5C0) from the Liquor Control
Fund (Fund 043) established in section 4301.12 of the Revised Code
such amounts at such times as determined by the transfer schedule. MEDICALLY HANDICAPPED CHILDREN - COUNTY ASSESSMENTS The foregoing appropriation item 440-607, Medically
Handicapped Children - County Assessments (Fund 666), shall be
used to make
payments pursuant to division (E) of section 3701.023
of the
Revised Code.
Sec. 63. JFS DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES General Revenue Fund
GRF | 600-100 | | Personal Services | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 56,614,143 | | $ | 58,715,838 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 18,645,558 | | $ | 19,317,882 |
| | | Personal Services Total | | $ | 75,259,701 | | $ | 78,033,720 |
GRF | 600-200 | | Maintenance | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 30,439,164 | | $ | 24,320,541 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 7,295,237 | | $ | 5,828,810 |
| | | Maintenance Total | | $ | 37,734,401 | | $ | 30,149,351 |
GRF | 600-300 | | Equipment | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 5,469,830 | | $ | 979,504 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 179,026 | | $ | 32,059 |
| | | Equipment Total | | $ | 5,648,856 | | $ | 1,011,563 |
GRF | 600-402 | | Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 7,551,305 | | $ | 7,715,079 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 7,551,305 | | $ | 7,715,079 |
| | | EBT Total | | $ | 15,102,610 | | $ | 15,430,158 |
GRF | 600-410 | | TANF State | | $ | 268,636,561 | | $ | 268,619,061 |
GRF | 600-413 | | Day Care Match/Maintenance of Effort | | $ | 84,120,606 | | $ | 84,120,606 |
GRF | 600-416 | | Computer Projects | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 137,583,171 | | $ | 142,908,736 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 32,665,206 | | $ | 34,770,353 |
| | | Computer Projects Total | | $ | 170,248,377 | | $ | 177,679,089 |
GRF | 600-420 | | Child Support Administration | | $ | 7,919,511 | | $ | 7,885,309 |
GRF | 600-426 | | Children's Health Insurance Plan (CHIP) | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 13,571,338 | | $ | 15,770,373 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 33,535,007 | | $ | 38,968,860 |
| | | CHIP Total | | $ | 47,106,345 | | $ | 54,739,233 |
GRF | 600-427 | | Child and Family Services Activities | | $ | 7,189,086 | | $ | 7,000,427 |
GRF | 600-435 | | Unemployment Compensation Review Commission | | $ | 3,759,151 | | $ | 3,785,380 |
GRF | 600-436 | | Medicaid Systems Enhancements | | $ | 4,445,384 | | $ | 1,853,611 |
GRF | 600-502 | | Child Support Match | | $ | 17,383,992 | | $ | 16,814,103 |
GRF | 600-504 | | Non-TANF County Administration | | $ | 70,554,373 | | $ | 68,697,679 |
GRF | 600-511 | | Disability Assistance/Other Assistance | | $ | 84,662,017 | | $ | 98,152,408 |
GRF | 600-512 | | Non-TANF Emergency Assistance | | $ | 1,079,000 | | $ | 1,079,000 |
GRF | 600-525 | | Health Care/Medicaid | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 2,908,181,745 | | $ | 3,112,834,875 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 4,174,579,446 | | $ | 4,460,972,607 |
| | | Health Care Total | | $ | 7,082,761,191 | | $ | 7,573,807,482 |
GRF | 600-527 | | Child Protective Services | | $ | 59,592,059 | | $ | 64,047,479 |
GRF | 600-528 | | Adoption Services | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 33,085,023 | | $ | 37,697,562 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 32,158,564 | | $ | 36,641,941 |
| | | Adoption Services Total | | $ | 65,243,587 | | $ | 74,339,503 |
GRF | 600-534 | | Adult Protective Services | | $ | 2,850,975 | | $ | 2,775,950 |
GRF | 600-552 | | County Social Services | | $ | 11,354,550 | | $ | 11,055,746 |
TOTAL GRF General Revenue Fund | | | | | | |
| | | State | | $ | 3,816,042,984 | | $ | 4,036,829,267 |
| | | Federal | | $ | 4,306,609,349 | | $ | 4,604,247,591 |
| | | GRF Total | | $ | 8,122,652,333 | | $ | 8,641,076,858 |
General Services Fund Group
4A8 | 600-658 | | Child Support Collections | | $ | 42,389,027 | | $ | 42,389,027 |
4R4 | 600-665 | | BCII Service Fees | | $ | 124,522 | | $ | 136,974 |
5C9 | 600-671 | | Medicaid Program Support | | $ | 50,846,239 | | $ | 59,226,893 |
5R1 | 600-677 | | County Computers | | $ | 5,000,000 | | $ | 5,000,000 | 613 | 600-645 | | Training Activities | | $ | 1,462,626 | | $ | 1,157,525 |
TOTAL GSF General Services | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 99,822,414 | | $ | 107,910,419 |
Federal Special Revenue Fund Group
3A2 | 600-641 | | Emergency Food Distribution | | $ | 2,018,844 | | $ | 2,018,844 |
3D3 | 600-648 | | Children's Trust Fund Federal | | $ | 2,040,524 | | $ | 2,040,524 |
3F0 | 600-623 | | Health Care Federal | | $ | 260,504,926 | | $ | 281,562,040 |
3F0 | 600-650 | | Hospital Care Assurance Match | | $ | 320,551,643 | | $ | 332,807,785 |
3G5 | 600-655 | | Interagency Reimbursement | | $ | 852,461,818 | | $ | 860,986,436 |
3G9 | 600-657 | | Special Activities Self Sufficiency | | $ | 522,500 | | $ | 190,000 |
3H7 | 600-617 | | Day Care Federal | | $ | 299,156,430 | | $ | 337,848,130 |
3N0 | 600-628 | | IV-E Foster Care Maintenance | | $ | 152,981,760 | | $ | 173,963,142 |
3S5 | 600-622 | | Child Support Projects | | $ | 534,050 | | $ | 534,050 |
3V0 | 600-688 | | Workforce Investment Act | | $ | 128,476,093 | | $ | 128,476,093 |
3V4 | 600-678 | | Federal Unemployment Programs | | $ | 74,025,525 | | $ | 74,025,525 | 3V4 | 600-679 | | Unemployment Compensation Review Commission - Federal | | $ | 2,286,421 | | $ | 2,286,421 | 3V6 | 600-689 | | TANF Block Grant | | $ | 654,410,661 | | $ | 677,098,311 | 3V6 | 600-690 | | Wellness | | $ | 14,337,515 | | $ | 14,337,515 | 316 | 600-602 | | State and Local Training | | $ | 10,166,587 | | $ | 10,325,460 |
327 | 600-606 | | Child Welfare | | $ | 34,594,191 | | $ | 34,592,977 |
331 | 600-686 | | Federal Operating | | $ | 41,600,896 | | $ | 41,640,897 |
365 | 600-681 | | JOB Training Program | | $ | 25,000,000 | | $ | 5,469,259 |
384 | 600-610 | | Food Stamps and State Administration | | $ | 160,371,358 | | $ | 161,716,857 |
385 | 600-614 | | Refugee Services | | $ | 4,388,503 | | $ | 4,559,632 |
395 | 600-616 | | Special Activities/Child and Family Services | | $ | 9,491,000 | | $ | 9,491,000 |
396 | 600-620 | | Social Services Block Grant | | $ | 51,195,100 | | $ | 51,297,478 |
397 | 600-626 | | Child Support | | $ | 248,001,590 | | $ | 247,353,041 |
398 | 600-627 | | Adoption Maintenance/
Administration | | $ | 277,806,175 | | $ | 341,298,661 |
TOTAL FED Federal Special Revenue | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 3,626,924,110 | | $ | 3,795,920,078 |
State Special Revenue Fund Group
198 | 600-647 | | Children's Trust Fund | | $ | 4,368,785 | | $ | 4,379,333 |
3W3 | 600-695 | | Adult Protective Services | | $ | 120,227 | | $ | | 3W3 | 600-696 | | Non-TANF Adult Assistance | | $ | 1,000,000 | | $ | | 3W8 | 600-638 | | Hippy Program | | $ | 62,500 | | $ | | 3W9 | 600-640 | | Adoption Connection | | $ | 50,000 | | $ | |
4A9 | 600-607 | | Unemployment Compensation Admin Fund | | $ | 9,420,000 | | $ | 9,420,000 |
4E3 | 600-605 | | Nursing Home Assessments | | $ | 95,511 | | $ | 95,511 |
4E7 | 600-604 | | Child and Family Services Collections | | $ | 145,805 | | $ | 149,450 |
4F1 | 600-609 | | Foundation Grants/Child and Family Services | | $ | 116,400 | | $ | 119,310 |
4J5 | 600-613 | | Nursing Facility Bed Assessments | | $ | 31,179,798 | | $ | 31,279,798 |
4J5 | 600-618 | | Residential State Supplement Payments | | $ | 15,700,000 | | $ | 15,700,000 |
4K1 | 600-621 | | ICF/MR Bed Assessments | | $ | 21,604,331 | | $ | 22,036,418 |
4R3 | 600-687 | | Banking Fees | | $ | 592,937 | | $ | 592,937 |
4V2 | 600-612 | | Child Support Activities | | $ | 124,993 | | $ | 124,993 |
4Z1 | 600-625 | | HealthCare Compliance | | $ | 10,000,000 | | $ | 10,000,000 |
5A5 | 600-685 | | Unemployment Benefit Automation | | $ | 19,607,027 | | $ | 13,555,667 |
5E6 | 600-634 | | State Option Food Stamps | | $ | 6,000,000 | | $ | 6,000,000 | 5P4 | 600-691 | | TANF Child Welfare | | $ | 7,500,000 | | $ | 7,500,000 | 5P5 | 600-692 | | Health Care Services | | $ | 223,847,498 | | $ | 255,386,713 | 5R2 | 600-608 | | Medicaid-Nursing Facilities | | $ | 59,462,415 | | $ | 79,283,220 | 651 | 600-649 | | Hospital Care Assurance Program Fund | | $ | 222,480,109 | | $ | 233,384,431 |
TOTAL SSR State Special Revenue | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 633,478,336 | | $ | 690,240,508 |
Agency Fund Group
192 | 600-646 | | Support Intercept - Federal | | $ | 80,000,000 | | $ | 82,000,000 |
5B6 | 600-601 | | Food Stamp Intercept | | $ | 5,283,920 | | $ | 5,283,920 |
583 | 600-642 | | Support Intercept - State | | $ | 20,162,335 | | $ | 20,565,582 |
TOTAL AGY Agency Fund Group | | $ | 105,446,255 | | $ | 107,849,502 |
Holding Account Redistribution Fund Group
R12 | 600-643 | | Refunds and Audit Settlements | | $ | 200,000 | | $ | 200,000 |
R13 | 600-644 | | Forgery Collections | | $ | 700,000 | | $ | 700,000 |
TOTAL 090 Holding Account Redistribution | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 900,000 | | $ | 900,000 |
TOTAL ALL BUDGET FUND GROUPS | | $ | 12,589,223,448 | | $ | 13,343,897,365 |
Sec. 63.09. TANF TANF COUNTY INCENTIVES Of the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant, the Department of Job and Family Services may provide
financial
incentives to those
county departments of job and family
services
that have exceeded performance standards
adopted by the
state
department, and where the board of county commissioners
has
entered into a written agreement with the state department under
section
5101.21 of the Revised Code governing the administration
of the county
department. Any financial incentive funds provided
pursuant to this division
shall be used by the county department
for additional or enhanced
services for families eligible for
assistance under Chapter 5107. or benefits and services under
Chapter 5108. of
the Revised Code or, on request by the county and
approval by the Department
of Job
and Family Services, be
transferred to the Child Care and Development
Fund
or the Social
Services Block Grant. The county departments
of job and family
services
may retain and expend
such funds without regard
to the
state or county fiscal year in which the
financial
incentives were
earned or paid. Each county department of job and family
services
shall file an annual report with the Department of
Job and
Family
Services providing detailed information on the
expenditure of
these
financial
incentives and an evaluation of the
effectiveness
of the county department's
use of these funds in
achieving
self-sufficiency for families eligible for
assistance
under
Chapter 5107. or benefits and services under Chapter 5108. of the
Revised Code.
TANF YOUTH DIVERSION PROGRAMS Of the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant, $19,500,000 in each fiscal year shall be allocated by the
Department of Job and Family Services to the counties according to
the allocation formula established in division (D) of section
5101.14 of the Revised Code. Of the funds allocated to each
county, up to half may be used for contract
services for unruly
and misdemeanant diversionary programs. The remaining funds not allocated for use in juvenile
diversion activities may be used by the county for other contract
child welfare services. In counties with
separate departments of
job and family services and public
children services agencies, the
county department of job and
family services shall serve as a pass
through to the public
children services agencies for these funds.
Separate public
children services agencies receiving such funds
shall comply with
all TANF requirements, including reporting
requirements and
timelines, as specified in state and federal
laws, federal
regulations, state rules, and the Title IV-A state
plan, and are
responsible for payment of any adverse audit
finding, final
disallowance of federal financial participation, or
other sanction
or penalty issued by the federal government or
other entity
concerning these funds. Of the foregoing $19,500,000 set aside, any funds remaining
unspent on June 30, 2002, shall be carried forward and added to
the earmark for fiscal year 2003, and allocated to the counties
according to the allocation formula established in division (D) of
section 5101.14 of the Revised Code.
KINSHIP NAVIGATORS
Of the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant, up to $3 million in each fiscal year shall be allocated by
the Department of Job and Family Services to county departments of
job and family services for the purpose of making allocations to
local public children services agencies to provide services in the
Kinship Navigation program. The allocation to county departments
of job and family services shall be based on the number of Ohio
works first cases in the county, and the number of children
seventeen years of age or younger in the county. The Department of
Job and Family Services shall develop an appropriate method of
reallocating these funds in each fiscal year among the county
deparments
departments of job and family services, if they would
otherwise be
unspent.
TANF FAITH-BASED
AND NON-PROFIT CAPACITY-BUILDING PROGRAMS From the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant, up to $1,000,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to
support capacity-building efforts among faith-based
and non-profit
organizations,
for the purpose of providing allowable services to
TANF-eligible
individuals. Organizations receiving these funds
shall comply
with all TANF requirements, and shall agree with the
Department of
Job and Family Services on reporting requirements to
be
incorporated into the grant agreement. TANF EDUCATION
the
Director of Budget and
Management shall transfer
$35,000,000 in appropriation authority
from appropriation item
600-689, TANF Block Grant (Fund 3V6), to
Fund 3W6, TANF Education,
in the Department of Education, which is
created in the State
Treasury. The transferred funds shall be
used for the purpose of
providing allowable services to
TANF-eligible individuals.
the
Director of Budget and
Management shall transfer
$76,156,175 from Fund 3V6, TANF Block
Grant, to Fund 3W6, TANF
Education, in the Department of
Education.
the
Director of
Budget
and Management shall transfer $98,843,825 from Fund 3V6,
TANF
Block Grant, to Fund 3W6, TANF Education, in the Department
of
Education. The transferred funds shall be used for the purpose
of
providing allowable services to TANF-eligible individuals. The
Department of Education shall comply with all TANF requirements,
including reporting requirements and timelines, as specified in
state and federal laws, federal regulations, state rules, and the
Title IV-A state plan, and is responsible for payment of any
adverse audit finding, final disallowance of federal financial
participation, or other sanction or penalty issued by the federal
government or other entity concerning these funds.
There is hereby established the Title IV-A Education Program
to be administered by the Department of Education in accordance
with an interagency agreement entered into with the Department of
Job and Family Services under division (A)(2) of section 5101.801
of the Revised Code. The program shall provide benefits and
services to TANF eligible individuals with incomes at or below 200
per cent of the federal poverty guidelines under a Title IV-A
program pursuant to the requirements of section 5101.801 of the
Revised Code. Upon approval by the Department of Job and Family
Services, the Department of Education shall adopt policies and
procedures establishing program requirements for eligibility,
services, fiscal accountability, and other criteria necessary to
comply with the provisions of Title IV-A of the "Social Security
Act," 49 Stat. 620 (1935), 42 U.S.C. 301, as amended. The Department of Job and Family Services shall reimburse the
General Revenue Fund through intrastate transfer vouchers for
allowable Title IV-A Head Start expenditures reported by the
Department of Education in fiscal year 2002 by amounts up to
$76,156,175 from Fund 3V6, TANF Block Grant, and in fiscal year
2003, up to $98,843,825 from Fund 3V6, TANF Block Grant. The
Department of Job and Family Services shall reimburse the General
Revenue Fund through intrastate transfer vouchers for allowable
Title IV-A student intervention services expenditures in fiscal
year 2003 up to $35,000,000 from Fund 3V6, TANF Block Grant. COUNTY DEPARTMENTS OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES TITLE IV-A
ADULT LITERACY AND CHILD READING PROGRAMS There is hereby
established the Title
IV-A Adult Literacy and
Child Reading
Program to be administered by the
county departments
of job and
family services in accordance with division
(B)(1) of
section
5101.801 of the Revised Code. The program shall provide
benefits
and services to TANF-eligible individuals with incomes at
or below
200 per cent of the federal poverty guidelines under a
Title IV-A
program
pursuant to the requirements of section
5101.801 of the
Revised Code. The
county departments of job and
family services
shall ensure program
requirements for eligibility,
services,
fiscal accountability, and other
criteria necessary to
comply with
the provisions of Title IV-A of the
"Social Security
Act," 110
Stat. 2113 (1996), 42 U.S.C. 601, as amended, and
ensure
that
benefits and services are allowable uses of federal Title
IV-A
funds as specified in 42 U.S.C.A. 604(a), except that they
may not
be
"assistance" as defined in 45 C.F.R. 260.31(a). The
benefits
and services
shall be benefits and services that 45
C.F.R.
260.31(b) excludes from the
definition of "assistance."
From the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant,
up to
$5,000,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to
support
local adult literacy
and child reading programs.
TALBERT HOUSE
In each fiscal year, the Director of Job and Family Services
shall provide $100,500 from appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant, to the
Hamiliton
Hamilton County Department of Job and
Family
Services to contract with the Talbert House for the purpose
of
providing allowable services to TANF-eligible individuals with
incomes at or below 200 per cent of the federal poverty
guidelines. The contract between the
Hamilton County Department
of Job and Family Services and the
Talbert House shall establish
conditions for the reimbursement of
allowable Title IV-A
expenditures for services that are allowable
uses of federal Title
IV-A
funds as specified in 42 U.S.C.A.
604(a), except that they
may not be
"assistance" as defined in 45
C.F.R. 260.31(a). The
benefits and services
shall be benefits and
services that 45
C.F.R. 260.31(b) excludes from the
definition of
"assistance."
The
contract shall also require Talbert House to
comply with
requirements of Title IV-A of the "Social Security
Act," 110
Stat.
2113 (1996), 42 U.S.C. 601, as amended, including
eligibility of
individuals, reporting requirements, allowable
benefits and
services, use of
funds, and audit requirements, as
specified in
state and federal laws,
federal regulations, state
rules, federal
Office of Management and Budget
circulars, and the
Title IV-A
state plan.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY OUT-OF-SCHOOL YOUTH PROJECT In each fiscal year, the Director of Job and Family Services
shall provide $1,000,000 from appropriation item 600-689, TANF
Block
Grant, to the Montgomery County Department of Job and Family
Services to be used to support the Out-of-School Youth Project in
Montgomery County for the purpose of providing allowable services
to TANF-eligible individuals. The Montgomery County Department of
Job and Family Services and the Sinclair Community College shall
comply with all TANF requirements, including reporting
requirements and timelines, as specified in state and federal
laws, federal regulations, state rules, and the Title IV-A state
plan.
APPALACHIAN WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT AND JOB TRAINING
From the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Grant, the Director of Job and Family Services shall provide up to
$15,000,000 to be awarded to the county
departments of job and
family services in the twenty-nine
Appalachian counties,
contingent upon passage of H.B. 6 of the
124th General Assembly.
These funds shall be used by the county
departments of job and
family services in coordination with the
Governor's Office of
Appalachia, the Governor's Regional Economic
Office, and local
development districts. These funds shall be
used for the
following activities: workforce development and
supportive
services; economic development; technology expansion,
technical
assistance, and training; youth job training;
organizational
development for workforce development partners; and
improving
existing technology centers, workforce development, job
creation
and retention, purchasing technology, and technology and
technology infrastructure upgrades.
As a condition on the use of these funds, each county
department of job and family services shall submit a plan for the
intended use of these funds to the Department of Job and Family
Services. The plan shall also be reviewed by the Governor's Office
of Appalachia, the Governor's Regional Economic Office, and local
development districts. Also as a condition on the use of these
funds, each county and contract agency shall acknowledge that
these funds are a one-time allocation, not intended to fund
services beyond September 30, 2002.
In fiscal year 2002, the TANF allocation to each of the
Appalachian counties shall not be less than the TANF allocation
amount for fiscal year 2001, as allocated according to the
methodology set forth in paragraph (I) of rule 5101-6-03 of the
Administrative Code.
The use of these funds shall comply with all TANF
requirements, including reporting requirements and timelines, as
specified in state and federal laws, federal regulations, state
rules, and the Title IV-A state plan.
CENTER FOR FAMILY AND CHILDREN
Of the foregoing appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block
Brant
Grant, $150,000 in fiscal year 2002 shall be provided to the
Center for Family and Children.
TANF FAMILY PLANNING
The Director of Budget and Management shall transfer by
intrastate voucher, no later than the fifteenth day of July of
each fiscal year, cash from the General Revenue Fund,
appropriation item 600-410, TANF State, to General Services Fund
5C1 in the Department of Health, in an amount of $250,000 in each
fiscal year for the purpose of family planning services for
children or their families whose income is at or below 200 per
cent of the official poverty guideline. TANF FEDERAL BLOCK GRANT FUNDS AND TRANSFERS
From the foregoing appropriation items 600-410, TANF State;
600-658, Child
Support Collections; or 600-689, TANF Block Grant,
or a combination of these
appropriation items, no less than
$369,040,735 in each fiscal year shall be
allocated to county
departments of job and family services as follows:
| County Allocations | | $276,586,957 | | | WIA Supplement | | $35,109,178 | | | Early Start - Statewide | | $38,034,600 | | | Transportation | | $5,000,000 | | | County Training | | $3,050,000 | | | Adult Literacy and Child | | | | | Reading Programs | | $5,000,000 | | | Disaster Relief | | $5,000,000 | | | School Readiness Centers | | $1,260,000 | |
Upon the request of the Department of Job and Family
Services, the Director
of Budget and Management may seek
Controlling Board approval to increase
appropriations in
appropriation item 600-689, TANF Block Grant, provided
sufficient
Federal TANF Block Grant funds exist to do so, without any
corresponding decrease in other appropriation items. The
Department of Job
and Family Services shall provide the Office of
Budget and Management and
the Controlling Board with documentation
to support the need for the
increased appropriation. All transfers of moneys from or charges against TANF Federal
Block
Grant awards for use in the Social Services Block Grant or
the Child Care
and Development Block
Grant from either unobligated
prior year appropriation authority in appropriation item
400-411,
TANF Federal Block Grant, or 600-411, TANF Federal Block Grant, or
from fiscal
year 2002 and fiscal year 2003
appropriation authority
in item 600-689, TANF Block Grant, shall be done ten days after
the Department of Job and Family Services gives written notice to
the Office of Budget and Management.
The Department of Job
and
Family Services
shall first provide the
Office of Budget and
Management with
documentation to
support the
need for such
transfers or charges
for use in the Social Services
Block Grant or
in the Child Care and
Development Block Grant.
The Department of Job and
Family Services shall in each
fiscal year of the biennium transfer
the maximum amount of funds
from the federal TANF Block Grant to
the federal Social Services
Block Grant as permitted under federal
law. Not later than July
15, 2001, the Department of Job and Family Services shall draw
$60,000,000 in receipts from TANF funds that were transferred into
the Social Services Block Grant into State Special
Revenue Fund
5Q8, in the Office of Budget
and Management. Not
later than June
1, 2002, the Director of
Budget and Management
shall determine the
amount of funds in State
Special Revenue Fund
5Q8 that is needed
for the purpose of
balancing the General
Revenue Fund, and may
transfer that amount
to the General Revenue
Fund. Not later than
June 1, 2003, the
Director of Budget and Management shall
determine the amount of
funds in State Special Revenue Fund 5Q8
that is needed for the
purpose of balancing the General Revenue
Fund, and may transfer
that amount to the General Revenue Fund.
Any moneys remaining in
State Special Revenue Fund
5Q8 on June 15,
2003, shall be
transferred not later than June 20,
2003, to Fund
3V6, TANF Block
Grant, in the Department of Job and
Family
Services. Before the thirtieth day of September of each fiscal year,
the Department of Job and Family
Services shall file claims with
the United States Department of
Health and Human Services for
reimbursement for all allowable
expenditures for services provided
by the Department of Job and
Family Services, or other agencies
that may qualify for Social
Services Block Grant funding pursuant
to Title XX of the Social
Security Act. The Department of Job and
Family Services shall deposit, into Fund
5E6, State Option Food
Stamps, $6 million, into Fund 5P4, TANF
Child Welfare, $7.5
million, into Fund 3W5, Health Care
Services,
$500,000, into Fund
3W8, Hippy Program, $62,500, and
into Fund
3W9, Adoption
Connection, $50,000 and
deposit in fiscal
year 2002,
into Fund
3W2,
Title XX Vocational
Rehabilitation,
$600,000, into
Fund 162
in the Department of Natural Resources, $7,885,349, and
into Fund
3W3, Adult Special Needs, $4,720,227 in receipts from TANF
Block
Grant funds credited
to the
Social
Services Block Grant.
In fiscal
year 2003,
if, pursuant
to federal law, the state is allowed to
transfer up
to 10 per cent of the
TANF block grant and no less
than
$72,796,826 for the purposes of
reimbursing allowable
expenditures
for services provided by the Department
of Job and
Family
Services, or other agencies that may qualify for Social
Services
Block Grant funding pursuant to Title XX of the Social
Security
Act, then the Department of Job and Family Services shall
deposit
$6 million
into Fund 5E6, State Option Food Stamps, $7.5
million
into Fund 5P4 TANF
Child Welfare, $897,052 into Fund 3W2,
Title XX
Vocational Rehabilitation,
and $500,000 into Fund 3W5,
Health Care
Services. To the extent that the
amount allowed to be
transferred
is less than the $72,796,826, then the
amounts
deposited into the
above funds shall be reduced proportionally.
On
verification of the
receipt of
the above
revenue, the funds
provided by these
transfers shall be
used as
follows:
| Fund 5E6 | | | | Second Harvest Food Bank
in fiscal year 2002 | $4,500,000 | | | Second Harvest Food Bank in fiscal year 2003 | $4,500,000 | | | Child Nutrition Services
in fiscal year 2002 | $900,000 | | | Child Nutrition Services in fiscal year 2003 | $900,000 | | | Ohio Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs
in fiscal year 2002 | $600,000 | | | Ohio Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs in fiscal year 2003 | $600,000 | |
| Fund 5P4 | | | | Support and Expansion for PCSA Activities
in fiscal year 2002 | $5,500,000 | | | Support and Expansion for PCSA Activities in fiscal year 2003 | $5,500,000 | | | Pilot Projects for Violent and Aggressive Youth
in fiscal year 2002 | $2,000,000 | | | Pilot Projects for Violent and Aggressive Youth in fiscal year 2003 | $2,000,000 | |
| Fund 3W2 | | | | Title XX Vocational Rehabilitation in fiscal year 2002 | $600,000 | |
| Fund 3W3 | | | | Adult Protective Services in fiscal year 2002 | $120,227 | | | Non-TANF Adult Assistance in fiscal year 2002 | $1,000,000 | | | Community-Based Correctional Facilities in fiscal year 2002 | $3,600,000 | |
| Fund 162 | | | | CCC Operations in fiscal year 2002 | $7,885,349 | |
| Fund 3W5 | | | | Abstinence-only Education
in fiscal year 2002 | $500,000 | | | Abstinence-only Education in fiscal year 2003 | $500,000 | |
| Fund 3W8 | | | | Hippy Program | $62,500 | |
| Fund 3W9 | | | | Adoption Connection | $50,000 | |
WELLNESS
The foregoing appropriation item 600-690, Wellness, shall be
used by county departments of job and family services for teen
pregnancy prevention programming. Local contracts shall be
developed between county departments of job and family services
and local family and children first councils for the
administration of TANF funding for this program.
Sec. 63.10. OHIO ASSOCIATION OF SECOND HARVEST FOOD BANKS The Department of Job and Family Services may use up to
$4,500,000 of appropriation item 600-634, State Options
Food
Stamps (Fund 5E6),
in each fiscal year, to the extent funds are
available based on deposits made pursuant to Section 63.09, to
support
expenditures
to the Ohio
Association of Second
Harvest
Food Banks
pursuant to the following
criteria. As used in this section,
"federal poverty guidelines" has the
same meaning as in section 5101.46 of the Revised Code. The Department of Job and Family Services shall provide
$4,500,000 to the Ohio
Association of Second Harvest Food
Banks.
the
The Ohio Association of Second Harvest Food
Banks shall
use
$2,500,000 for the purchase of food products for
the Ohio Food
Program, of
which up to $105,000 may be used for
food storage and
transport, and shall use
$2,000,000 for the
Agricultural Surplus
Production Alliance Project. Funds
provided
for the Ohio Food
Program shall be used to purchase food products
and
distribute
those food products to agencies participating in
the emergency
food
distribution program. No funds provided
through this grant
may be used for
administrative expenses other
than funds provided
for food storage and
transport. As soon as
possible after
entering into a grant agreement at the
beginning of
the fiscal
year, the Department of Job and Family Services shall
distribute
the grant funds in one single payment. The Ohio
Association of
Second Harvest Food Banks shall develop a plan for
the
distribution of the
food products to local food
distribution
agencies. Agencies receiving these food products shall ensure
that individuals and families who receive any of the food products
purchased
with these funds have an income at or below 150 per cent
of the federal poverty
guidelines. The Department of Job and
Family
Services and the Ohio Association
of Second Harvest Food
Banks
shall agree on reporting requirements to be
incorporated
into the
grant agreement. The Ohio Association of Second Harvest Food Banks shall
return any fiscal year
2002 funds from this grant remaining
unspent on June 30, 2002, to
the Department of Job and Family
Services no later than November
1, 2002. Sec. 63.11. CHILD NUTRITION SERVICES The Department of Job and Family Services may use up to
$900,000 of appropriation item
600-634,
State
Option Food
Stamps
(Fund 5E6),
in each fiscal year, to the extent funds are
available
based on deposits made pursuant to Section 63.09, to
support
Child
Nutrition
Services
in the
Department of Education.
As soon as
possible
after the
effective
date of this section, the
Department
of Job
and Family
Services
shall enter into an
interagency
agreement with
the
Department of
Education to
reimburse the 19
pilot programs
that
provide
nutritional evening
meals to
adolescents 13
through
18
years of
age participating in
educational or
enrichment
activities
at youth
development centers.
Such funds
shall not be
used as
matching
funds. Eligibility and
reporting
guidelines
shall be
detailed in
the interagency
agreement.
OHIO ALLIANCE OF BOYS AND GIRLS CLUBS Of the foregoing appropriation item 600-634, State Option
Food Stamps (Fund 5E6), the Department of Job and Family Services
shall use up to $600,000
in each fiscal year, to the extent funds
are available based on deposits made pursuant to Section 63.09, to
support
expenditures of the Ohio
Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs
to
provide nutritional meals,
snacks, and educational and
enrichment
services, including
tutoring, homework assistance, and
standardized achievement test
preparation, to children
participating in programs and activities
operated by eligible Boys
and Girls Clubs. The Ohio Alliance of
Boys and Girls Clubs shall
provide allowable services to Title XX
eligible children. As soon as possible after entering into a grant agreement at
the beginning of the fiscal year, the Department of Job and Family
Services shall distribute the grant funds in one single payment.
The Ohio Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs shall return any fiscal
year 2002 funds from this grant remaining unspent on June 30,
2002, to the Department of Job and Family Services not later than
November 1, 2002. Sec. 63.15. SINGLE ALLOCATION FOR COUNTY DEPARTMENTS OF
JOB
AND FAMILY
SERVICES Using the foregoing appropriation items 600-504, Non-TANF
County
Administration; 600-610, Food Stamps and State
Administration;
600-410, TANF State;
600-689, TANF Block
Grant;
600-620, Social Services
Block Grant; 600-552, County
Social
Services; 600-413, Day Care
Match/Maintenance of Effort;
600-617,
Day Care Federal; 600-534, Adult
Protective Services; and
600-614,
Refugees Services, the Department of Job and
Family
Services may
establish
a single allocation for county departments
of job and
family services
that are subject to a partnership agreement
between a board of
county commissioners and the department under
section 5101.21 of the Revised Code. The
county department
is not
required to use all the money from one or
more of the
appropriation items listed in this paragraph
for the
purpose for
which the
specific appropriation item is made so long as
the
county
department uses the money for a purpose for which at least
one of
the other
of those appropriation items is made. The
county
department may not use the money in the allocation for a
purpose
other than a purpose any of those
appropriation
items
are made.
If
the spending estimates used in
establishing
the
single
allocation
are not realized and the
county department
uses
money
in one or
more of those
appropriation items
in a
manner for which
federal
financial
participation is not
available,
the department
shall use
state
funds available in one
or more of
those
appropriation
items
to ensure that the
county
department receives
the full
amount of
its allocation. The
single
allocation is the
maximum
amount the
county department
shall
receive from those
appropriation items.
ADULT PROTECTIVE SERVICES
The foregoing appropriation item 600-695, Adult Protective
Services, shall be used to provide adult protective services in
accordance with section 5101.62 of the Revised Code.
NON-TANF ADULT ASSISTANCE
The foregoing appropriation item 600-696, Non-TANF Adult
Assistance, shall be used to provide funding for the Adult
Emergency Assistance Program in accordance with section 5101.86 of
the Revised Code. HIPPY PROGRAM The Department of Job and Family Services may use up to
$62,500 of
appropriation item 600-638, Hippy Program (Fund 3W8),
to
support expenditures to the Hippy Program
in Hamilton County.
The
Department of Job and Family Services and
the Hippy Program
shall agree on
reporting requirements to be
incorporated into the
grant agreement. ADOPTION CONNECTION The Department of Job and Family Services may use up to
$62,500
$50,000 of
appropriation item 600-640, Adoption Connection
(Fund
3W9), to support expenditures to the Adoption
Connection
Program in Hamilton
County. The Department of Job and
Family
Services and the Adoption
Connection Program shall agree on
reporting requirements to be incorporated
into the grant
agreement.
Sec. 63.36. (A) Notwithstanding division (Q)(1) of
section
5111.20 of the Revised Code, when calculating indirect
care costs
for the purpose of establishing rates under section
5111.24 or
5111.241 of the Revised Code for fiscal year 2002, "per
diem," as
used in sections 5111.20 to 5111.32 of the Revised Code,
means a
nursing facility's or intermediate care facility for the
mentally
retarded's actual, allowable indirect care costs in the
cost
reporting period divided by the greater of the facility's
inpatient days for that period or the number of inpatient days the
facility would have had during that period if its occupancy rate
had been eighty-two per cent.
(B)
Notwithstanding division (Q)(1) of section 5111.20 of
the
Revised Code, when calculating indirect care costs for the
purpose
of establishing rates under section 5111.24 or 5111.241 of
the
Revised Code for fiscal year 2003, "per diem," as used in
sections
5111.20 to 5111.32 of the Revised Code, means a nursing
facility's
or intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded's actual,
allowable indirect care costs in the cost
reporting period divided
by the greater of the facility's
inpatient days for that period or
the number of inpatient days the
facility would have had during
that period if its occupancy rate
had been eighty-seven per cent.
(C) Notwithstanding division (Q)(2) of section 5111.20 of
the Revised Code, when calculating capital costs for the purpose
of establishing rates under section 5111.25 or 5111.251 of the
Revised Code for fiscal year 2002, "per diem," as used in sections
5111.20 to 5111.32 of the Revised Code, means a nursing facility's
or intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded's actual,
allowable capital costs in the cost reporting period divided by
the greater of the facility's inpatient days for that period or
the number of inpatient days the facility would have had during
that period if its occupancy rate had been eighty-eight per cent.
(E)(C) As soon as practicable, the Department of Job and
Family
Services shall follow this section for the purpose of
calculating
nursing facilities' and intermediate care facilities
for the
mentally retarded's Medicaid reimbursement rates for
indirect care
and capital costs for fiscal years 2002 and 2003. If
the
Department is unable to calculate the rates before it makes
payments for services provided during fiscal year 2002 or 2003,
the Department shall pay a nursing facility or intermediate care
facility for the mentally retarded the difference between the
amount it pays the facility and the amount that would have been
paid had the Department made the calculation in time.
Sec. 63.37. NURSING FACILITY STABILIZATION FUND (A) As used in this section: (1) "Inpatient days" and "nursing facility" have the same
meanings as in section 5111.20 of the Revised Code.
(2) "Medicaid day" means all days during which a resident
who is a Medicaid recipient occupies a bed in a nursing facility
that is included in the facility's certified capacity under Title
XIX of the "Social Security Act," 79 Stat. 286 (1965), 42 U.S.C.A.
1396, as amended. Therapeutic or hospital leave days for which
payment is made under section 5111.33 of the Revised Code are
considered Medicaid days proportionate to the percentage of the
nursing facility's per resident per day rate paid for those days.
(B) The Department of Job and Family Services shall use
money in the Nursing Facility Stabilization Fund created under
section 3721.56 of the Revised Code to do all of the following:
(1) Make payments to nursing facilities under sections
5111.20 to 5111.32 of the Revised Code;
(2) Beginning with payments made to nursing facilities in
August 2001, make payments to each nursing facility for each
Medicaid day in fiscal years
2002 and 2003 in an amount equal to
sixty-nine and seven-tenths per cent of the franchise
permit fee
the nursing facility pays under section 3721.53 of the
Revised
Code for the fiscal year the department makes the payment
divided
by the nursing facility's inpatient days for the calendar
year
preceding the calendar year in which that fiscal year begins;
(3) Beginning with payments made to nursing facilities in
August 2001, make payments to each nursing facility for fiscal
years 2002 and 2003 in an amount equal to one dollar and fifty
cents per Medicaid day for the purpose of enhancing quality of
care. (C) Any money remaining in the Nursing Facility
Stabilization Fund after payments specified in division (B) of
this section are made for fiscal years 2002 and 2003 shall be
retained in
the fund. Any
interest or other investment proceeds
earned on money in the fund
shall be credited to the fund and used
to make payments in
accordance with division (B) of this section.
(D) Notwithstanding division (N) of section 5111.20 of the
Revised Code, the Department of Job and Family Services, in making
Medicaid payments to a nursing facility under sections 5111.20 to
5111.32 of the Revised Code, shall exclude from a nursing
facility's other protected costs the cost of sixty-nine and
seven-tenths per cent of the franchise permit fee that the nursing
facility pays under section 3721.53 of the Revised Code for fiscal
years 2002 and 2003 if the nursing facility receives payments
under division (B)(2) of this section for sixty-nine and
seven-tenths per cent of those franchise permit fees." Sec. 96. RSC REHABILITATION SERVICES COMMISSION
General Revenue Fund
GRF | 415-100 | | Personal Services | | $ | 8,506,587 | | $ | 8,949,644 |
GRF | 415-401 | | Personal Care Assistance | | $ | 943,374 | | $ | 943,374 |
GRF | 415-402 | | Independent Living Council | | $ | 398,582 | | $ | 398,582 |
GRF | 415-403 | | Mental Health Services | | $ | 754,473 | | $ | 754,473 |
GRF | 415-404 | | MR/DD Services | | $ | 1,326,302 | | $ | 1,326,301 |
GRF | 415-405 | | Vocational Rehabilitation/Job and Family Services | | $ | 564,799 | | $ | 564,799 |
GRF | 415-406 | | Assistive Technology | | $ | 50,000 | | $ | 50,000 |
GRF | 415-431 | | Office for People with Brain Injury | | $ | 246,856 | | $ | 247,746 |
GRF | 415-506 | | Services for People with Disabilities | | $ | 11,785,245 | | $ | 12,082,297 |
GRF | 415-508 | | Services for the Deaf | | $ | 145,040 | | $ | 145,040 |
GRF | 415-509 | | Services for the Elderly | | $ | 378,043 | | $ | 378,044 |
GRF | 415-520 | | Independent Living Services | | $ | 61,078 | | $ | 61,078 |
TOTAL GRF General Revenue Fund | | $ | 25,160,379 | | $ | 25,901,378 |
General Services Fund Group
4W5 | 415-606 | | Administrative Expenses | | $ | 18,775,759 | | $ | 19,649,829 |
467 | 415-609 | | Business Enterprise Operating Expenses | | $ | 1,585,602 | | $ | 1,493,586 |
TOTAL GSF General Services | | | | | | |
Fund Group | | $ | 20,361,361 | | $ | 21,143,415 |
Federal Special Revenue Fund Group
3L1 | 415-601 | | Social Security Personal Care Assistance | | $ | 3,044,146 | | $ | 3,044,146 |
3L1 | 415-605 | | Social Security Community Centers for the Deaf | | $ | 1,100,488 | | $ | 1,100,488 |
3L1 | 415-607 | | Social Security Administration Cost | | $ | 163,596 | | $ | 171,085 |
3L1 | 415-608 | | Social Security Special Programs/Assistance | | $ | 16,949,140 | | $ | 7,309,984 |
3L1 | 415-610 | | Social Security Vocational Rehabilitation | | $ | 1,338,324 | | $ | 1,338,324 |
3L4 | 415-612 | | Federal-Independent Living Centers or Services | | $ | 681,726 | | $ | 681,726 |
3L4 | 415-615 | | Federal - Supported Employment | | $ | 1,753,738 | | $ | 1,753,738 |
3L4 | 415-617 | | Independent Living/Vocational Rehabilitation Programs | | $ | 1,033,853 | | $ | 1,035,196 |
317 | 415-620 | | Disability Determination | | $ | 68,752,767 | | $ | 71,452,334 |
379 | 415-616 | | Federal-Vocational Rehabilitation | | $ | 107,747,928 | | $ | 110,980,366 |
TOTAL FED Federal Special | | | | | | |
Revenue Fund Group | | $ | 202,565,706 | | $ | 198,867,387 |
State Special Revenue Fund Group
4L1 | 415-619 | | Services for Rehabilitation | | $ | 5,698,621 | | $ | 5,260,262 |
468 | 415-618 | | Third Party Funding | | $ | 1,231,465 | | $ | 892,991 |
TOTAL SSR State Special | | | | | | |
Revenue Fund Group | | $ | 6,930,086 | | $ | 6,153,253 |
TOTAL ALL BUDGET FUND GROUPS | | $ | 255,017,532 | | $ | 252,065,433 |
STAND CONCESSIONS FUND - CREDITING OF INCOME In crediting interest and other income earned on moneys
deposited in the Stand Concessions Fund (Fund 467), the Treasurer
of State and Director of Budget and Management shall ensure that
the requirements of section 3304.35 of the Revised Code are met. PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANCE The foregoing appropriation item 415-401, Personal Care
Assistance, shall be used in addition to Social
Security
reimbursement funds to provide personal care
assistance
services.
These funds shall not be used in lieu of Social
Security
reimbursement funds. MR/DD SERVICES The foregoing appropriation item 415-404, MR/DD Services,
shall
be used as state matching funds to provide vocational
rehabilitation services to mutually eligible clients between the
Rehabilitation Services Commission and the Department of
Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities. The
Rehabilitation
Services Commission shall report to the
Department of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities,
as outlined in an
interagency agreement, on the number and
status of mutually
eligible clients and the status of the funds
and expenditures for
these clients. VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION/JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES The foregoing appropriation item 415-405, Vocational
Rehabilitation/Job and Family
Services, shall be used as state
matching
funds to provide vocational
rehabilitation services to
mutually
eligible clients between the
Rehabilitation Services
Commission
and the Department of Job and Family Services.
The
Rehabilitation Services
Commission shall report to the Department
of
Job and Family Services, as
outlined in an interagency
agreement, on the number and
status of
mutually eligible clients
and the status of the funds and
expenditures for these clients. ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY
The foregoing appropriation item 415-406, Assistive
Technology, shall be provided to Assistive Technology of Ohio and
shall be used only to provide grants under that program. No
amount of the appropriation may be used for administrative costs. OFFICE FOR PEOPLE WITH BRAIN INJURY Of the foregoing appropriation item 415-431, Office for
People with Brain
Injury, $100,000 in each fiscal year shall be
used for
the state match for a
federal grant awarded through the
Traumatic Brain Injury Act, Pub. L. No.
104-166, and $50,000 in
fiscal year 2002 and $50,000 in fiscal year 2003 shall be provided
to the Brain Injury Trust Fund. The remaining
appropriation in
this item shall be used to plan and
coordinate
head-injury-related
services provided by state agencies and other
government or
private entities, to assess the needs for such
services, and to
set priorities in this area.
SERVICES FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES On verification of the receipt of revenue in Fund 3W2, Title
XX Vocational
Rehabilitation, the Director of Budget and
Management shall transfer those
funds to the General Revenue Fund.
The transferred funds are appropriated to
appropriation item
415-506, Services for People with Disabilities. The
foregoing
appropriation item 415-506, Services for People with Disabilities,
includes transferred funds of $600,000 in fiscal year 2002 and
$897,052 in fiscal year 2003. SERVICES FOR THE DEAF The foregoing appropriation item 415-508, Services for the
Deaf, shall be used to supplement Social Security
reimbursement
funds used to provide grants to community centers
for the deaf.
These funds shall not be used in lieu of Social
Security
reimbursement funds. SERVICES FOR THE ELDERLY The foregoing appropriation item 415-509, Services for the
Elderly, shall be used as matching funds for vocational
rehabilitation services for eligible elderly citizens with a
disability. SOCIAL SECURITY REIMBURSEMENT FUNDS Reimbursement funds received from the Social Security
Administration, United States Department of Health and Human
Services, for
the costs of providing services and training to
return disability
recipients to gainful employment, shall be used
in the Social
Security Reimbursement Fund (Fund 3L1),
as follows: (A) Appropriation item 415-601, Social Security Personal
Care Assistance, to provide personal care
services in accordance
with section 3304.41 of the Revised Code; (B) Appropriation item 415-605, Social Security Community
Centers for the Deaf, to provide grants to
community centers for
the deaf in Ohio for services to
individuals with hearing
impairments; (C) Appropriation item 415-607, Social Security
Administration Cost, to provide administrative
services needed to
administer the Social Security reimbursement
program; (D) Appropriation item 415-608, Social Security Special
Programs/Assistance,
to provide vocational rehabilitation services
to individuals with severe
disabilities, who are Social Security
beneficiaries, to achieve competitive
employment. This item also
includes funds to assist the Personal Care
Assistance, Community
Centers for the Deaf, and Independent Living Programs to
pay their
share of indirect costs as mandated by federal OMB Circular
A-87. (E) Appropriation item 415-610, Social Security Vocational
Rehabilitation,
to provide vocational rehabilitation services to
individuals with severe
disabilities to achieve a noncompetitive
employment goal such as homemaker. ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES The foregoing appropriation item 415-606, Administrative
Expenses,
shall be used to support the administrative functions
of
the commission related to the provision of vocational
rehabilitation, disability determination services, and ancillary
programs. INDEPENDENT LIVING COUNCIL The foregoing appropriation items 415-402, Independent Living
Council, shall be
used to fund the
operations of the State
Independent Living
Council. MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES The foregoing appropriation item 415-403, Mental Health
Services, shall be
used for the provision of vocational
rehabilitation services to mutually
eligible consumers of the
Rehabilitation Services Commission and the
Department of
Mental
Health. The Department of Mental Health shall receive a quarterly
report from
the Rehabilitation Services Commission stating the
numbers served, numbers
placed
in employment, average hourly wage,
and average hours worked. INDEPENDENT LIVING SERVICES The foregoing appropriation items 415-520, Independent Living
Services, and 415-612, Federal-Independent Living Centers or
Services, shall
be used to support state independent living
centers or independent living
services pursuant to Title VII of
the Independent Living Services and Centers
for
Independent
Living
of the Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1992, 106 Stat.
4344, 29
U.S.C. 796d. INDEPENDENT LIVING/VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PROGRAMS The foregoing appropriation item 415-617, Independent
Living/Vocational
Rehabilitation Programs, shall be used to
support vocational rehabilitation
programs, including, but not
limited to, Projects with Industry and Training
Grants.
SECTION 4. That existing Sections 13.04, 28.02, 41, 41.10,
44.02,
44.12, 56, 56.01, 63, 63.09, 63.10, 63.11, 63.15, 63.36,
63.37, and 96 of
Am.
Sub. H.B. 94
of the 124th General Assembly
are hereby
repealed.
SECTION 5. Section 175.21 of the Revised
Code, as amended by
this act, shall take effect September 5, 2001.
SECTION 6. Taxes imposed pursuant to Chapter 5748. of the
Revised Code that otherwise meet the requirements established
under division (A)(2) of Section 201 of Am. Sub. H.B. 94 of the
124th General Assembly shall be eligible for treatment as
"qualifying delinquent taxes" under Section 201 of that act. For
such purpose, "taxpayer", as used in that section, shall include
any individual or other person subject to the tax imposed under
Chapter 5748. of the Revised Code. Notwithstanding division (D) of
Section 201 of Am. Sub. H.B. 94 of the 124th General Assembly,
qualifying delinquent taxes and interest thereon
collected
pursuant to this section shall be credited and
distributed as
required under divisions (C) and (D) of section
5747.03 of the
Revised Code.
SECTION 7. This act is hereby declared to be an emergency
measure
necessary for the immediate preservation of the public
peace,
health, and safety. The necessity occurs because errors in
Am.
Sub. H.B. 94 of the 124th General Assembly, the recently
enacted
biennial operating budget measure, need to be cured at the
earliest possible time in order to prevent or remedy legislatively
unintended results. Therefore, this act shall go into
immediate
effect.
|