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Sub. H. B. No. 230 As Reported by the House State Government CommitteeAs Reported by the House State Government Committee
128th General Assembly | Regular Session | 2009-2010 |
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Representatives Moran, Zehringer
Cosponsors:
Representatives Blair, Book, DeGeeter, Domenick, Gardner, Garland, Goyal, Murray, Sayre, Slesnick, Stewart, Williams, B., Gerberry, Lundy, Daniels, Adams, J., Grossman, Hall, Hite, Stebelton
A BILL
To amend sections 103.051, 103.0511, 121.24, 122.08,
122.081,
and 127.18 and to enact sections 121.81,
121.811, 121.812, 121.813, 121.814, 121.815,
121.82, 122.084, and 3745.016 of the Revised
Code
to enact the Common Sense Regulation Act to
improve state agency regulatory processes,
especially as they relate to small businesses, to
require state departments to develop customer
service training programs, and
to require the
Director of Environmental
Protection to provide
environmental regulatory
compliance assistance to
small businesses.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 1. That sections 103.051, 103.0511, 121.24, 122.08,
122.081,
and 127.18 be amended and that sections 121.81, 121.811,
121.812,
121.813, 121.814, 121.815, 121.82, 122.084, and
3745.016 of the Revised Code be enacted to read as follows:
Sec. 103.051. The
"Register of
Ohio" is an electronic
publication that functions as a gazette to which members of the
public may readily resort for notice of and information about
rule-making processes. The director of the legislative service
commission shall publish the register. The register is to
include
all rule-making documents that are required by statute
to be
published in the register and a link to the centralized electronic
system for
regulatory notification. The director shall display
the
register
free of charge on the internet, and shall ensure
that
printed
copies of all or part of a document published in the
register can
be easily produced by users of the internet.
The director, taking into consideration the public notice
and
information functions performed by the register, shall
update the
register at reasonable intervals, but not less often than weekly.
The director shall
establish a reasonable deadline before each
updating. A
document received by the director on or before a
deadline is to
be published in the register upon the register's
next updating.
The director shall purge a document from the
register when its
display no longer serves the public notice and
information
functions performed by the register.
The director upon request of any person shall provide the
person with a printed copy of all or part of a document
published
in the register. The director may charge and collect
a fee for
this service. Any such fee is not to exceed the
actual cost of
printing and delivering the printed copy to the
person requesting
it. The director shall deposit the fees into
the state treasury to
the credit of the register of
Ohio fund.
Sec. 103.0511. The director of the legislative service
commission shall
establish and maintain, and enhance and improve,
an electronic rule-filing
system connecting:
(A) The legislative service commission,
the joint committee
on agency rule review, the secretary of state, and the
office of
entrepreneurship and small business division;
(B) The governor, the senate and house
of representatives,
and the clerks of the senate and house of
representatives;
(C) Each agency that files rules and
other rule-making and
rule-related documents with the legislative service
commission,
the joint committee on agency rule review, the governor, the
secretary of state, the office of entrepreneurship and small
business division, the general
assembly, or a
committee of the
senate or house of representatives
under section 111.15,
117.20,
119.03, 119.031, 119.032, 119.0311,
119.04, 121.24, 121.39,
127.18,
4141.14, 5117.02, or 5703.14 of
the Revised
Code or any
other statute;
(D) The several publishers of the
Administrative
Code; and
(E) Any other person or governmental
officer or entity whose
inclusion in the system is required for the system to
be a
complete electronic rule-filing system.
The electronic rule-filing system is to enable rules and
rule-making and
rule-related documents to be filed, and official
responses to these filings to
be made, exclusively by electronic
means.
Sec. 121.24. (A) As used in this section:
(1)
"Agency" means any agency as defined in division
(A)(2)
of section 111.15 or division (A) of section 119.01 of the
Revised
Code.
(2)
"Employee" means a person who is employed by a small
business or small organization for at least one thousand eight
hundred hours per year.
(3) A rule is
"filed in final form" when it is filed with
the
secretary of state, the director of the legislative service
commission, and the joint committee on agency rule review under
division (B)(1) of section 111.15, division (A)(1) of section
119.04, division (B)(1) of section 4141.14, or division (A) of
section 5703.14 of the Revised Code.
(4)
"History trail" means the supplementary information
required to be provided on each copy of a proposed rule, which
information is not part of the text of the rule, and sets forth
the statute prescribing the procedure in accordance with which
the
proposed rule is required to be adopted, the statute that
authorizes the agency to adopt the proposed rule, the statute
that
the agency intends to amplify or implement by adopting the
proposed rule, the effective dates of any previous versions of
the
rule that is the subject of the proposal, and other similar
information as prescribed in rules of the legislative service
commission.
(5)
"Individual" means any individual who is affected by a
rule in the individual's capacity as an officer or
employee of a
small
business or small organization.
(6)
"Rule summary and fiscal analysis" means a rule
summary
and fiscal analysis of a proposed rule that provides the
information required by division (B) of section 127.18 of the
Revised Code, and that has been prepared in the form prescribed
by
the joint committee on agency rule review under division (E)
of
that section.
(7)
"Rate" means any rate, classification, fare, toll,
rental, or charge of a public utility.
(8)
"Rule" means any rule, regulation, or standard having
a
general and uniform operation, including any appendix thereto,
that is adopted, promulgated, and enforced by an agency under the
authority of the laws governing the agency.
"Rule" includes the
adoption of a new rule or the amendment or rescission of an
existing rule.
"Rule" does not include any of the following:
(a) A rule proposed under section 1121.05, 1121.06, 1155.18,
1163.22, or 1349.33 of
the Revised Code;
(b) A rule governing the internal management of an agency
that does not affect private rights;
(c) A rule authorized by law to be issued as a temporary
written order;
(d) Except as otherwise provided in division (A)(8)(d) of
this section, a rule or order, whether of a quasi-legislative or
quasi-judicial nature, proposed by the public utilities
commission. Any rule or order, whether of a quasi-legislative or
quasi-judicial nature, proposed by the public utilities
commission
that determines a rate of a public utility to be just
and
reasonable is a
"rule" for purposes of this section, unless
the
rule or order contains findings that the public utility, in
applying for approval of the rate under section 4909.18 of the
Revised Code, stated facts and grounds sufficient for the
commission to determine that the proposed rate was just and
reasonable.
(e) A proposed rule, the adoption of which is mandated by
a
federal law or rule, and which must be adopted substantially as
prescribed by federal law or rule, to become effective within one
hundred twenty days of adoption, so long as the history trail of
the proposed rule contains a statement that it is proposed for
the
purpose of complying with a federal law or rule and a
citation to
the federal law or rule that mandates substantial
compliance;
(9)
"Small business" means an independently owned and
operated business having fewer than four hundred employees.
(10)
"Small organization" means an unincorporated
association, sheltered workshop, or nonprofit enterprise having
fewer than four hundred employees. This definition is not
limited
to the types of small organizations expressly mentioned,
and
includes all other types of small organizations, so long as
such
organizations have fewer than four hundred employees.
(B) If an agency intends to adopt a rule, and reasonably
believes that the proposed rule, if adopted, will be likely to
affect individuals, small businesses, or small organizations, the
agency shall comply with the following procedure in adopting the
rule, in addition to any other procedure required by section
111.15, 119.03, 119.032, 119.04, 127.18, 4141.14, or 5117.02
of
the Revised Code or any other statute of this state:
(1) The agency shall prepare a complete and accurate rule
summary and fiscal analysis of the original version of the
proposed rule.
(2) After complying with division (B)(1) of this section,
and
at least sixty days before the agency files the proposed rule
in
final form, the agency shall file with the office of
entrepreneurship and small
business division, in electronic form,
the full text of the original
version of
the proposed rule and the
rule summary and fiscal
analysis of such proposed rule.
(3) During a period commencing on the date the original
version of the proposed rule is filed pursuant to division (B)(2)
of this section and ending forty days thereafter:
(a) The chairperson of the standing committee of the
senate
or house of representatives having jurisdiction over individuals,
small businesses, or small organizations, or any other person
having an interest in the proposed rule, may submit
comments in
electronic form to the agency, to the joint
committee on agency
rule
review, or to both, concerning the expected effect of the
proposed rule, if adopted, upon individuals, small businesses,
and
small organizations. The agency and joint committee shall
accept
all such timely submitted written comments.
(b) The chairperson of the standing committee of the
senate
or house of representatives having jurisdiction over
individuals,
small businesses, or small organizations, in
electronic form, may
request
the agency to appear before the committee and testify,
answer
questions asked by members of the committee, and produce
information in the possession of the agency as requested by the
committee, concerning the expected effect of the proposed rule,
if
adopted, upon individuals, small businesses, or small
organizations. Upon receipt of a request from the
chairperson of
the appropriate standing committee of the senate or house of
representatives under division (B)(3)(b) of this section, the
agency shall designate an officer or employee of the agency to
appear before the committee, and shall otherwise comply with the
request, in the manner directed by the request.
(4) The agency shall not proceed to file the proposed rule
in
final form until it has considered any comments timely
submitted
to it under division (B)(3)(a) of this section, has
identified the
issues raised by the comments, has assessed the
proposed rule in
light of the issues raised by the comments, and
has made such
revisions in the proposed rule as it considers
advisable in light
of its assessment.
An agency is not required to put any revised version of a
proposed rule through the procedure of divisions (B)(1) to (4) of
this section.
(C) Any original version of a proposed rule, rule summary
and
fiscal analysis, or written comment filed or submitted under
division (B) of this section shall be preserved by the agency
with
which it is filed or to which it is submitted, and is a
public
record open to public inspection.
(D) Each agency shall prepare a plan that provides for the
periodic review, at least once every five years, of each rule of
the agency that is not otherwise subject to review under section
119.032
of the Revised Code and that affects individuals, small
businesses, or small
organizations. The purpose of each periodic
review shall be to
determine whether the rule that is being
reviewed should be
continued without change or amended or
rescinded, consistent with
the purpose, scope, and intent of the
applicable statute
authorizing adoption of the rule, so as to
minimize the economic
impact of the rule upon individuals, small
businesses, or small
organizations. Accordingly, in making each
periodic review of a
rule, the agency shall consider the continued
need for the rule,
the nature of any written complaints or
comments that the agency
has received with regard to the rule, the
extent to which the
rule duplicates, overlaps, or conflicts with
other currently
effective rules, and the degree to which
technology, economic
conditions, and other relevant factors have
changed in the area
affected by the rule.
Each agency shall annually report to the governor and
general
assembly, with regard to each of its rules that have been
reviewed
under this division during the preceding calendar year,
the title
and administrative code rule number of the rule, a
brief summary
of the content and operation of the rule, and a
brief summary of
the results of the review. If the agency is
otherwise required to
make an annual report to the governor and
general assembly, the
agency shall report this information in an
appropriately
designated section of its annual report, whether its annual
report
is in print or electronic form or both. If,
however, the agency
is
not otherwise required to make an annual
report to the governor
and general assembly, the agency, on or
before the first day of
February, shall report this information
in a separate report, in
electonic electronic form, to the governor and
general assembly.
In
addition
to the submissions required by section 101.68 of the
Revised Code,
and in addition to any requirement of that section
to submit
notice of the availability of a report instead of
copies
of the
report, the agency shall submit its
annual or separate
report in
electronic form, which provides
the information
required
by this
division, to the chairpersons of the
standing
committees
of the
senate and house of representatives having
jurisdiction
over
individuals, small businesses, and small
organizations.
Each agency having rules in effect on January 1, 1985,
that
affect
individuals, small businesses, or small
organizations shall
divide those rules into groups, so that at
least one-fifth of
those rules are reviewed during each year of a
five-year period
commencing on January 1, 1985. A rule
that is newly
adopted after
January 1, 1985, shall be
reviewed
five years after its effective
date. When a rule has once been reviewed, it shall thereafter be
reviewed again at five-year intervals.
(E) Each agency shall designate an individual or office
within the agency to be responsible for complying with this
division. Each individual or office that has been so designated
shall, within ten days after receiving a request therefor from
any
person:
(1) Provide the person with copies of any rule proposed by
the agency that would affect individuals, small businesses, or
small organizations;
(2) Provide the person with copies of the rule summary and
fiscal analysis of any rule proposed by the agency that would
affect individuals, small businesses, or small organizations; or
(3) Find, collate, and make available to the person any
information in the possession of the agency regarding a rule
proposed by the agency, which information would be of interest to
individuals, small businesses, or small organizations.
The agency shall inform the office of entrepreneurship and
small business division in
writing of the name, address, and
telephone number of each
individual or office designated under
this division. The agency
shall promptly inform the office of
entrepreneurship and small business division in writing of
any
change in the information thus
provided.
(F) Division (B) of this section does not apply to any
emergency rule adopted under division (B)(2) of section 111.15 or
division (F) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code, except that
the emergency rule becomes subject to such division when it is
adopted pursuant to the procedure of section 111.15 or 119.03 of
the Revised Code for the adoption of rules not of an emergency
nature.
(G) The department of taxation shall provide a copy of the
full text of any rule proposed by the department that may affect
any business in electronic form to the office of entrepreneurship
and small
business division,
and the department
shall designate an
office within the agency
responsible for
providing a copy of any
such rule within ten days
of receiving a
request from any person.
Sec. 121.81. As used in sections 121.81 and 121.811 to
121.815 of the Revised Code:
(A) "Rule" means the adoption of a new rule or the amendment
or rescission of an existing rule. "Rule" does not include an
emergency rule, but does include a rule that is to replace an
emergency rule upon its expiration.
(B) A "small business" is an independently owned and operated
for-profit or nonprofit business entity, including affiliates, and
regardless of legal form, that has fewer than four hundred
employees.
(C) A "state agency" is a discrete unit that is organized as
a part of, and that carries out one or more functions of, state
government and that is authorized or required by statute to adopt
rules. "State agency" does not include the elected state officers
or their offices, the general assembly or any legislative agency,
or the courts or any judicial agency.
Sec. 121.811. Sections 121.81 and 121.812 to 121.815 of the
Revised Code are the Common Sense Regulation Act.
Sec. 121.812. (A) On and after July 1, 2010, in the course of
developing a rule for proposal
and adoption, and in any event
before proposing the rule by filing
it under divisions (D) and
(E) of section 111.15 or divisions (B)
and (H) of section 119.03
of the Revised Code, or when reviewing a rule under section
119.032 of the Revised Code, a state agency
shall evaluate the
rule in
light of each of the
following considerations:
(1) Whether the rule is necessary to give effect to the
statute that underlies the rule;
(2) Whether the rule unnecessarily duplicates a federal
regulation or the rules of the
state agency or of another state
agency;
(3) Whether the state agency has notified all interested
persons who have registered through the centralized electronic
system for regulatory
notification to receive notice that the
agency is developing and drafting
the rule
for proposal and
adoption, and whether the state agency has
afforded
those
persons an opportunity to comment to the
state
agency
concerning the substance and the drafting of the
rule;
(4) Whether the rule is drafted so that its desired outcome
will be achieved, and whether the desired outcome of the rule is
based on the
best information, including scientific and technical
data, that
reasonably can be obtained;
(5) Whether the rule will be understandable to the
persons
to whom the rule is addressed;
(6) Whether the rule can be
applied consistently by the
state agency
to the persons who will be affected by the rule;
(7) Whether, when achieving its underlying regulatory
objectives, the rule is a reasonable balance between its
underlying regulatory objectives and the regulatory
burden it
imposes;
(8) Whether it would be advisable for the rule to expire on a
specific future date.
(B) The state agency shall prepare a report of its evaluation
of
the rule. The director of administrative services shall
prescribe the form of the report, designing the form so that it
will elicit from a state agency when the form is completed whether
the state agency has evaluated a rule in light of all the
considerations listed in divisions (A)(1) to (8) of this section.
The form in addition shall require the state agency to explain the
following in particular:
(1) If the rule is duplicative, why the duplication is
necessary;
(2) If the state agency has not notified all interested
persons who have registered through the centralized electronic
system for regulatory
notification to receive notice that the
agency is developing and drafting the rule
for proposal and
adoption, why this is the case; and
(3) If the rule, when achieving its regulatory objectives, is
not a reasonable balance between its
underlying regulatory
objectives and the regulatory
burden it imposes, why this is the
case.
If an existing rule is reviewed under section 119.032 of the
Revised Code, but not changed, the state agency may include in the
report the reason why the rule was left unchanged.
(C) The head of the state agency or the state agency's chief
legal officer shall review the
rule and the report for clarity
to ensure the state agency has
made a good faith effort to
evaluate the rule in light of the
considerations. The state
agency's report shall indicate whether the head of the state
agency or the state agency's
chief legal
officer has completed
this review.
(D) The state agency shall transmit a copy of its report
electronically to the director of administrative services or the
director's designee. The
director or the director's designee
shall publish a summary of the report on the web site of
the
centralized electronic system for regulatory notification.
Sec. 121.813. The director of administrative services, not
later than July 1, 2010, shall establish, and thereafter shall
maintain and improve, a centralized electronic system for
regulatory notification that:
(A) Enables interested persons to register to receive notices
and other information from a state agency concerning a rule that
the state agency is developing and drafting;
(B) Enables the director to publish on the system summaries
of reports the director receives under section 121.812 of the
Revised Code; and
(C) Enables interested persons to register to receive notices
of semiannual meetings that are to be convened under section
121.814 of the Revised Code.
The director shall design the centralized electronic system
for
regulatory notification so that it enables interested persons
to
comment electronically on agency regulatory processes.
The centralized electronic system for regulatory
notification is complementary to the register of Ohio. The
director of the legislative service commission and the director of
administrative services shall consult with each other and link the
centralized electronic system for regulatory notification and the
register of Ohio.
Sec. 121.814. (A) The director of administrative services or
the director's designee
shall convene semiannual meetings, at
convenient times and
locations, at which interested persons may
comment on agency
regulatory processes that are causing
unreasonable impediments to
the efficient and successful
operation of small businesses. The
small business advocate shall
attend and participate in each
semiannual meeting. Comments at a
semiannual meeting may be
recorded.
The director or the director's designee shall transmit notice
of a semiannual meeting,
at least one month in advance of the
meeting, to interested
persons who have registered to receive
notices of the meetings
through the centralized electronic system
for regulatory
notification.
(B) Based on comments made at each semiannual meeting, the
director or the director's designee shall prepare a priority
schedule identifying agency
processes that are causing
unreasonable impediments to the
efficient and successful
operation of small businesses, and
identifying innovative
management tools, such as kaizen, value
stream mapping,
networking, and root cause analysis,
that a state agency
might
bring to bear to reduce or eliminate
these impediments. In
identifying agency processes that are
causing unreasonable
impediments, the director or the director's designee particularly
shall
take account of state agency processes that derogate the
considerations listed in section 121.812 of the Revised Code.
The director or the director's designee shall transmit a copy
of the priority schedule
to each state agency that is identified
in the priority schedule,
and shall monitor the efforts state
agencies are making to reduce
or eliminate impediments identified
in the priority schedule. Each
state agency identified in a
priority schedule shall make efforts
to reduce or eliminate the
identified impediments and any other
impediments it may discover.
At each semiannual meeting after the
first, the director or the
director's designee shall report to those in attendance on the
progress state agencies are making at reducing or eliminating
previously identified impediments to the efficient and successful
operation of small businesses.
The director or the director's designee shall post the
priority schedule
on the web site of the centralized electronic
system for regulatory notification.
Sec. 121.815. The directors of each of the following state
agencies shall appoint an ombudsperson: the departments of
administrative services, agriculture, commerce, development,
health, insurance, job and family services, natural resources,
taxation, and transportation, the environmental protection agency,
the industrial commission, and the bureau of workers'
compensation. The ombudsperson shall report to, and is entitled to
have regular direct access to and the attention of, the director
or other head of the state agency.
An ombudsperson shall serve as a problem-solving liaison
between the state agency and those who are affected by its rules
and regulatory processes when normal state agency processes do not
produce a satisfactory result. A small business also may request
the small business advocate to assist when normal state agency
processes do not produce a satisfactory result. The ombudsperson
or small business advocate may not, however, become involved with
resolving matters that are the subject of an on-going judicial or
administrative enforcement action.
If the ombudsperson, with or without the assistance of the
small business advocate, is unable to resolve a matter, the
ombudsperson may call upon the governor's designee to assist in
resolving the matter. The governor's designee shall assist in a
neutral way to resolve the matter. The
governor's designee shall
identify options, and strategies and
tactics, for resolving the
matter, but may not impose a resolution
or make or reverse legal
decisions to resolve the matter.
A state agency named in this section shall publish on its web
site the name, address, telephone number, and e-mail address of
its ombudsperson, together with a brief explanation of the
ombudsperson's role in resolving matters.
An ombudsperson shall consult with the small business
advocate and negotiate arrangements to facilitate mutual
interaction and avoid duplication of effort.
Sec. 121.82. (A) As used in this section, "department" means
the several departments of state administration enumerated in
section 121.02 of the Revised Code.
(B)(1) It is the policy of this state to improve the customer
service provided by departments. Each department shall emphasize
improved customer service, efficiency, and productivity in
employee orientation and employee training. In light of this
policy, not later than January 1, 2011, each department, with the
assistance of the department of administrative services, shall
adopt customer service principles identifying the
best practices
to be used to provide improved customer service.
(2) Not later than January 1, 2011, each department, with the
assistance of the department of administrative services, shall
develop a customer service training program that employees
designated by the department can complete to improve customer
service, efficiency, and productivity. The customer service
training program shall emphasize the customer service principles
adopted by the department.
(C) Each employee who participates in a customer service
training program, upon completion of the program, shall sign a
written statement acknowledging that the employee understands the
customer service principles adopted by the department and will
follow them.
(D) On its web site, each department shall:
(1) In a frequently-asked-question format, post answers to
frequently asked questions about the department's regulatory
mission and processes; and
(2) Include a customer service survey that users may complete
online, or download, complete, and e-mail to the department.
A department shall review all customer service surveys that
are completed and returned to the department, and may send the
surveys to the governor or the governor's designee.
Sec. 122.08. (A) There is hereby created within the
department of development an office a division to be known as the
office of entrepreneurship and
small business division. The office
division shall be under the supervision of a
manager appointed by
the director of development. The manager shall be known as the
small business advocate.
(B) The office division shall do all of the following:
(1) Act as liaison facilitating interactions between the
small business community
and state governmental agencies;
(2) Furnish information and technical assistance to
persons
and small businesses concerning the establishment and
maintenance
of a small business, and concerning state laws and
rules relevant
to the operation of a small business. In
conjunction with these
duties, the office division shall keep a record of
all state
agency rules affecting individuals, small businesses,
or small
organizations, as defined in section 121.24 of the
Revised Code,
and may testify before the joint committee on
agency rule review
concerning any proposed rule affecting
individuals, small
businesses, or small organizations.
(3) Prepare and publish the small business register under
section 122.081 of the Revised Code;
(4) Receive complaints from small businesses concerning
governmental activity, compile and analyze those complaints, and
periodically make recommendations to the governor and the general
assembly on changes in state laws or agency rules needed to
eliminate burdensome and unproductive governmental regulation to
improve the economic climate within which small businesses
operate;
(5) Receive complaints or questions from small businesses
and
direct those businesses to the appropriate governmental
agency.
If, within a reasonable period of time, a complaint is
not
satisfactorily resolved or a question is not satisfactorily
answered, the office division shall, on behalf of the small
business, make
every effort to secure a satisfactory result. For
this purpose,
the office division may consult with any state
governmental agency and may
make any suggestion or request that
seems appropriate.
(6) Utilize, to the maximum extent possible, the printed
and
electronic media to disseminate information of current
concern and
interest to the small business community and to make
known to
small businesses the services available through the
office
division. The office division shall publish such books, pamphlets,
and
other printed materials, and shall participate in such trade
association meetings, conventions, fairs, and other meetings
involving the small business community, as the manager small
business advocate considers
appropriate.
(7) Prepare for inclusion in the department of
development's
annual report to the governor and general assembly,
a description
of the activities of the office division and a report of the
number of rules affecting individuals, small businesses, and
small
organizations that were filed with the office division under
division (B)(2) of section 121.24 of the Revised Code, during the
preceding calendar year;
(8) Operate the Ohio first-stop business connection to assist
individuals in identifying and preparing applications for business
licenses,
permits, and certificates and to serve as the central
public distributor for
all forms, applications, and other
information related to business licensing.
Each state agency,
board, and commission shall cooperate in providing
assistance,
information, and materials to enable the connection to perform its
duties under this division.
(9) Establish and maintain a toll-free telephone number
persons may call during regular business hours, and an e-mail
address to which persons may transmit e-mail at any time, to
comment to the small business advocate concerning statutes and
rules and state agency processes affecting individuals, small
businesses, and small organizations. The telephone answering point
shall be equipped to record calls that are received after regular
business hours.
(10) Consult with each ombudsperson appointed under section
121.815 of the Revised Code and negotiate arrangements to
facilitate mutual interaction and avoid duplication of effort.
(C) The office division may, upon the request of
a state
agency, assist the agency with the preparation of any
rule that
will affect individuals, small businesses, or small
organizations.
(D) The director of development shall assign
employees and
furnish equipment and supplies to the office division
as the
director considers necessary for the proper
performance of the
duties assigned to the office division.
Sec. 122.081. (A) The office of entrepreneurship and small
business division in the
department of development shall prepare
and publish a "small
business register" or contract with any
person as provided in
this section to prepare and publish the
register. The small
business register shall contain the following
information
regarding each proposed rule filed with the office of
entrepreneurship and small
business division under division (B)(2)
of section 121.24 of the Revised
Code:
(1) The title and administrative code rule number of the
proposed rule;
(2) A brief summary of the proposed rule;
(3) The date on which the proposed rule was filed with the
office of entrepreneurship and small business division under
division (B)(2) of section 121.24
of the Revised Code; and
(4) The name, address, and telephone number of the
individual
or office within the agency that proposed the rule who
has been
designated as being responsible for complying with
division (E) of
section 121.24 of the Revised Code with regard to
the proposed
rule.
(B) The small business register shall be published on a
weekly basis. The information required under division (A) of
this
section shall be published in the register no later than two
weeks
after the proposed rule to which the information relates is
filed
with the office of entrepreneurship and small business division
under division (B)(2) of
section 121.24 of the Revised Code. The
office of entrepreneurship and small business division
shall
furnish the small business register, on a single copy or
subscription basis, to any person who requests it and pays a
single copy price or subscription rate fixed by the office
division. The
office division shall furnish the chairmen
chairpersons of the
standing
committees of the senate and house
of representatives
having jurisdiction over
individuals, small
businesses, and small
organizations with free
subscriptions to
the small business
register.
(C) Upon the request of the office of entrepreneurship and
small business division, the
director of administrative services
shall, in accordance with the
competitive selection procedure of
Chapter 125. of the Revised
Code, let a contract for the
compilation, printing, and
distribution of the small business
register.
(D) The office of entrepreneurship and small business
division shall adopt, and may
amend or rescind, in accordance with
Chapter 119. of the Revised
Code, such rules as are necessary to
enable it to properly carry
out this section.
Sec. 122.084. The entrepreneurship and small business
division shall establish the Ohio small business panel. The
Ohio
small business panel shall meet
semi-annually to
discuss
issues
relevant to small businesses,
including matters
such as
the
special challenges involved in
establishing and in
efficiently
and successfully operating a small
business and the
statutes and
rules and state agency processes
that are involved
in or relate
to the operation of small
businesses. As a result of
its
discussions, the panel may
make recommendations for
changes in
statutes and rules and in
state agency processes that
are needed
to reduce or eliminate
burdensome or unproductive
governmental
regulation to improve the
economic climate within
which small
businesses operate.
The panel may report its recommendations, together
with
supporting commentary, in a communique. The small business
advocate may transmit the communique electronically to the
governor, the general assembly, and each state agency to which the
recommendations apply.
The Ohio small business panel shall consist of the small
business advocate and four members appointed by the governor, two
members appointed by the president of the senate, and two members
appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives. Each
member shall be representative of the small business community.
Initial appointments to the panel shall be made on or before
January 1, 2010. Members of the panel shall serve without
compensation and without reimbursement for expenses.
The terms of office of all members of the panel, except
the
small business advocate, shall be for three years, beginning
on
the first day of January and ending at the close of business on
the thirty-first day of December. A vacancy on the panel
shall be
filled in the same manner as the initial appointment. Any
member
appointed to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the
expiration of
the term for which the member's predecessor was
appointed shall
hold office for the remainder of the term. The
term of office for
the small business advocate shall be for the
entirety of the
advocate's employment as the small business
advocate.
The small business advocate shall be the chairperson of the
panel, and shall appoint a secretary from among the
panel's
members.
Five members of the panel constitute a quorum, and the
affirmative vote of five members is necessary for any action taken
by the panel.
Sec. 127.18. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Rule-making agency" has the same meaning as in
division
(I) of section 119.01 of the Revised Code.
(2) "Rule" includes the adoption, amendment, or rescission
of
a rule.
(3) "Proposed rule" means the original version of a
proposed
rule, and each revised version of the same proposed
rule, that is
filed with the joint committee on agency rule
review under
division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H) of
section 119.03
of the Revised Code.
(B) A rule-making agency shall prepare, in the form
prescribed by the joint committee on agency rule review under
division (E) of this section, a complete and accurate rule
summary
and fiscal analysis of each proposed rule that it files
under
division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H) of section
119.03
of the Revised Code. A rule-making agency, when completing the
rule summary and
fiscal analysis, is encouraged to identify and
estimate the number
of businesses subject to the proposed rule.
The rule summary and fiscal analysis
shall
include all of the
following information:
(1) The name, address, and telephone number of the
rule-making agency, and the name and telephone number of an
individual or office within the agency designated by that agency
to be responsible for coordinating and making available
information in the possession of the agency regarding the
proposed
rule;
(2) The Ohio
Administrative Code rule
number of the
proposed
rule;
(3) A brief summary of, and the legal basis for, the
proposed
rule, including citations identifying the statute that
prescribes
the procedure in accordance with which the rule-making
agency is
required to adopt the proposed rule, the statute that
authorizes
the agency to adopt the proposed rule, and the statute
that the
agency intends to amplify or implement by adopting the
proposed
rule;
(4) An estimate, in dollars, of the amount by which the
proposed rule would increase or decrease revenues or expenditures
during the current biennium;
(5) A citation identifying the appropriation that
authorizes
each expenditure that would be necessitated by the
proposed rule;
(6) A summary of the estimated cost of compliance with the
rule to all directly affected persons;
(7) The reasons why the rule is being proposed;
(8) If the rule has a fiscal effect on school districts,
counties, townships,
or municipal corporations, an estimate in
dollars of the cost of compliance
with the rule, or, if dollar
amounts cannot be determined, a written
explanation of why it was
not possible to ascertain dollar amounts;
(9) If the rule has a fiscal effect on school districts,
counties, townships,
or municipal corporations and is the result
of a federal requirement, a clear
explanation that the proposed
state rule does not exceed the scope and intent
of the
requirement, or, if the state rule does exceed the minimum
necessary
federal requirement, a justification of the excess cost,
and an estimate of
the costs, including those costs for local
governments, exceeding the federal
requirement;
(10) If the rule has a fiscal effect on school districts,
counties,
townships, or municipal corporations, a comprehensive
cost estimate that
includes the procedure and method of
calculating the costs of compliance and
identifies major cost
categories including personnel costs, new equipment or
other
capital costs, operating costs, and indirect central service costs
related to the rule. The fiscal analysis shall also include a
written
explanation of the agency's and the affected local
government's ability to pay
for the new requirements and a
statement of any impact the rule will have on
economic
development.
(11)
If the rule incorporates a text or other material by
reference, and the agency claims the incorporation by reference is
exempt from compliance with sections 121.71 to 121.74 of the
Revised Code because the text or other material is generally
available to persons who reasonably can be expected to be affected
by the rule, an explanation of how the text or other material is
generally available to those persons;
(12) If the rule incorporates a text or other material by
reference, and it was infeasible for the agency to file the text
or other material electronically, an explanation of why filing the
text or other material electronically was infeasible;
(13) If the rule is being rescinded and incorporates a text
or other material by reference, and it was infeasible for the
agency to file the text or other material, an explanation of why
filing the text or other material was infeasible;
(14) Any other information the joint committee on agency
rule
review considers necessary to make the proposed rule or the
fiscal
effect of the proposed rule fully understandable.
The rule summary and fiscal analysis also shall include a box
the rule-making agency can check to indicate that it has evaluated
the rule under section 121.812 of the Revised Code and that its
report of the evaluation was reviewed by the head of the state
agency or the state agency's chief legal officer. Failure to
evaluate a rule under that section and to check the box
constitutes only failure to prepare a complete and accurate rule
summary and fiscal analysis under division (I)(1)(d) of section
119.03 of the Revised Code.
(C) The rule-making agency shall file the
rule summary and
fiscal analysis
in electronic form
along with the proposed
rule
that it files under divisions (D) and (E) of section 111.15
or
divisions (B) and (H) of section 119.03 of the Revised Code.
The
joint committee on agency rule review shall not accept any
proposed rule for filing unless a copy of the rule summary and
fiscal analysis of the proposed rule, completely and accurately
prepared, is filed along with the proposed rule.
(D) The joint committee on agency rule review shall review
the fiscal effect of each proposed rule that is filed under
division (D) of section 111.15 or division (H) of section 119.03
of the Revised Code.
(E) The joint committee on agency rule review shall
prescribe
the form in which each rule-making agency shall prepare
its rule
summary and fiscal analysis of a proposed rule.
(F) This section does not require the auditor of state or
the
auditor of state's designee to prepare or attach a rule
summary
and fiscal
analysis to any copy of a rule proposed under
section
117.12,
117.19, 117.38, or 117.43 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3745.016. (A) As used in this section, "small business"
means:
(1) A "small business stationary source" as defined in
section 3704.01 of the Revised Code; or
(2) If the business does not have a source of an air
pollutant, an independently owned or operated business having one
hundred or fewer employees.
(B) The director of environmental protection
shall
establish,
as part of the environmental protection agency, a
program for
providing environmental regulatory compliance
assistance to small
businesses. The program shall:
(1) Provide environmental regulatory compliance assistance,
including on-site environmental regulatory compliance assistance,
upon the request of a small business, to assist
the small
business in identifying relevant
environmental regulations and
compliance requirements and in
completing application and
reporting forms relating to
environmental regulatory
requirements;
(2) Develop educational materials for small businesses
regarding state and federal environmental
regulatory compliance
requirements, and distribute the materials
to them
free of
charge;
(3) Reach out to small businesses and
provide them with
training on state and federal environmental
regulatory compliance
requirements free of charge; and
(4) Provide other environmental regulatory compliance
assistance to small businesses that will help to
improve their
compliance with environmental regulation and thereby
help
to
improve the overall cleanliness of Ohio's environment.
(C) Any information, regardless of its form or
characteristics, that is created or obtained by the environmental
protection agency in the course of administering the environmental
regulatory compliance assistance program that identifies or
describes an individual facility or operation at a small business
is confidential and not a public record open to
public inspection
unless:
(1) The information reveals a clear and immediate danger to
the environment and the health, safety, or welfare of the public;
(2) The information is obtained independently by the director
of environmental protection or authorized employees or agents of
the environmental protection agency as part of a compliance
inspection or investigation or in a judicial or administrative
enforcement proceeding; or
(3) The information is emissions data or otherwise pertains
to a contaminant source, and treating the information as
confidential would be inconsistent with the requirements of law.
Information that is confidential under this division may not
be used in any manner for purposes of the enforcement of any
environmental compliance requirement or as evidence in any
judicial or administrative enforcement proceeding. This paragraph
does not confer immunity on a small business
from judicial or
administrative enforcement that is based upon
information
obtained
by the director of environmental protection
or
employees or agents
of the environmental protection agency,
insofar as they are not
engaged in administering the
environmental regulatory compliance
assistance program.
Section 2. That existing sections 103.051, 103.0511, 121.24,
122.08,
122.081, and 127.18 of the Revised Code are hereby
repealed.
Section 3. This act includes amendments re-naming and
re-characterizing the Office of Small Business as the
Entrepreneurship and Small Business Division. These amendments do
not otherwise affect the organization or the organizational
position of the office-now-division as part of the Department of
Development. Other amendments pertaining to the
office-now-division affect its functions.
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