Category Archives: economy

SBE Council Urges Senators to Vote for McConnell Amendment to Stop EPA Overreach

Congress is currently on break, but the House and Senate return next week where the Senate will pick up where it left off on small business legislation. There are several key amendments to the legislation that SBE Council is weighing in on, one of which is the McConnell amendment that would nullify EPA’s intrusive greenhouse gas (GHG) regulations. SBE Council is strongly supporting the McConnell amendment and will KEY VOTE the amendment next week as a vote for small business for our forthcoming Ratings of the 112th Congress.

The EPA regulations will have a significant impact on businesses, driving energy costs higher. Various studies have found EPA’s GHG regulations could destroy 800,000 to 7 million jobs over the next several decades. As SBE Council has told Congress on many occasions, unelected bureaucrats should not be determining the fate of our economy, and EPA does not have the authority to regulate GHGs under the Clean Air Act.

In a March 16 media release, SBE Council President Karen Kerrigan said American businesses must be given “a fighting chance to stage an economic recovery and compete in the global economy.” Higher energy costs will not allow firms to fully rebound. “We must remove uncertainties and burdens in order to spark needed investment, and the vote on the McConnell amendment offers the opportunity to take a major step in the right direction,” she added.
Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) has offered an amendment to delay implementation of the EPA rules for two years, which will also be voted upon. The delay only creates additional uncertainties for businesses of all sizes. With a delay, we anticipate that businesses will start preparing for eventual implementation of the costly EPA rules, which means less investment, less job growth and more businesses looking overseas to expand. A mere delay of the regulations does nothing to address the core problems – higher energy costs and the fact that the EPA does not have the authority to regulate GHGs under the Clean Air Act.

Only a vote for the McConnell amendment will protect small business!

In another piece of related news, the SBEC came out in support of Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011 (H.R. 910).
As stated in a letter to both houses of Congress, “If this regulatory initiative moves forward, energy prices will continue to move higher undermining U.S. economic strength and competitiveness. Small businesses will be disproportionately impacted by EPA’s regulation, as our ability to create jobs and compete will be permanently impaired.”

Beware of Global Currency

[Editors note: Below is an article that mainstream media would surely classify as compiracy theory by which they wild ideas lacking anything resembling reality. So why post it? One reasin is because I believe much less than half of what mainstream media aires or prints. Another reason is many, if not most, so-called conspiracy theories that I have been exposed to contain a lot of factual reality. The problem lies in those parts that are more hypothesis than fact and more reading between the lines as it were than verifiable reality. Consequently, like academic futurists, authors of conspiracy are not always exactly right about the future. Yet, the following is worth taking mental notes for future reference in order to remember when it comes to pass.]

Beware of Global Currency

By Jeff Putman

The good news is, finally, after all these decades, the corrupt, coercive, fraudulent, loan sharking central bank known as the Federal Reserve, will finally be abolished! The bad news is, it’s going to be replaced by a GLOBAL central bank! With all of the same evils as the Fed, plus more! (Since we call the Federal Reserve the Fed for short, perhaps we should call the global central bank the Glob for short.)

What’s wrong with a global currency can be seen in the history of the Federal Reserve, which is already far too much concentration of power. By controlling interest rates, the Fed controls the amount of currency circulating. In the 1930s the Fed raised interest rates and caused the Great Depression. In the 1970s the Fed kept rates low and caused high inflation. You can be sure that the Federal Reserve Board told their Wall Street pals ahead of time which way they were going to go so their pals could position themselves to profit from the coming shifts.

Also in the 1930s, many local governments started issuing local currencies so their local economy could keep functioning in spite of the shortage of money. The U.S. government responded by making it illegal for local governments to issue currency. They had created a Depression, and by God, they were going to make sure nobody is allowed to escape it!

Any global currency will work the same way, only worse. A global central bank will issue the currency, LOANING in into circulation, of course, just like the Fed. This will put everyone in the world in debt to the central bank, making every last human a slave in their global plantation. When they decide to have a Great Depression, nobody in the whole world will be allowed to escape it! No country, state, county, village, or anything will be allowed to create a local currency to enable any economic activity without the permission of the global central bank.

Free trade of multiple currencies on open markets is ESSENTIAL to world economic stability. When Japan started selling millions of cars in America, billions of dollars flowed to Japan. They piled up. Something had to be done with them. So, they were traded in currency markets. Dollars were exchanged for yen. Dollars were plentiful, so their value went down. Yen were scarce, so their value went up. This made the price of Japanese labor come up close to that of American labor, eliminating the price disparity that had caused so much havoc in the economy.

A global currency would completely eradicate this stabilizing mechanism in the world economy. When China floods the world with cheap products made by slave labor (the only kind of labor China uses) with a global currency, there will be no price adjustment made like there was with Japan. Instead of a free market in currency raising Japanese wages to Western standards, the one world currency will lock China’s price advantage in place and force the rest of the world down to match China’s draconian pay scale!

A global currency is even more inappropriate now that we have computers to make calculating exchange rates so easy. Never in the history of the world has it been easier to accomodate numerous currencies. You can already go
almost anywhere in the world, pay with a credit card, and automatically, the merchant is paid in his local currency and you receive your monthly statement in dollars. We DON’T need a global currency to facilitate trade! We’re
getting a global currency rammed down our throats at the time in history when there’s the LEAST use for it, and MOST reason it should be avoided!

Another candidate for a global currency is the SDR – Special Drawing Rights. It’s a basket of currencies (currently 44% dollars, 34% euros, 11% pounds, and 11% yen) offered by the International Monetary Fund to serve as a global currency. It’s been available for almost fifty years, but attracted very little interest.

Also being offered as a global currency is the WOCU – WOrld Currency Unit. It’s a basket of 20 currencies offered by the WDX Institute in London. It’s pretty new, but it’s also attracting little interest.

In both cases, it seems that international traders don’t want to bother exchanging their currency for a global currency and then exchanging that for the currency of the other country. In theory, the business people of both countries would agree to pay or be paid in SDRs or WOCUs because they know its value over time will fluctuate less than either of their currencies. But if ALL of the major currencies are inflated to try to pay the debt the politicians keep loading on us (as is happening now), then any currency based on a basket of those currencies will also lose its value.

To see the sources used for this article, go to http://www.cpnlive.com/forum/post/1431349.

Gov. Kaisch’s State Budget: The Ugly, the Bad, and the Good

In my opinion, Gov. Kaisch is not the handsomest dude on the planet. I suspect his wife may have a different opinion.

What the governor lacks in appearance he makes up in statesmanship. His speech to the legislators on the budget was downright inspirational. Not only that but he even dared to praise the members of the opposing party for their work and accomplishments on a number of issues.

It almost made me cry.

I did say–almost!

Seriously, the budget itself is a mixed bag of missed opportunities (the bad) and a number of advancements for Ohioans and their economy (the good). Of course, it all depends on who you talk to, or, in this case, whose report you read.

According to the report by Matt Mayer, President of the Buckeye Institute, the governor’s budget missed some important opportunities. The bad news is the general revenue fund will be $1.26 billion greater for 2012 than in 2011 and $1.73 billion for 2013. That is a biennium increase of 12 percent. This is the second highest increase since 1990.

So how can the Governor increase spending with an $8 billion deficit? According to Mayer, the governor’s budget shows total revenues exceeding the deficit by $8 billion, which causes Mayer a lot of concern. It shows Gov. Kaisch has chosen to continue the same old policies of the past that eventually resulted in the present fiscal crisis.

Equally disturbing is the governor’s cuts to local governments. Instead of innovating new strategy to fund both state and local governance, the governor chose the slash-and-burn approach. This easy money strategy doesn’t reduce the size of state government and thus return local tax dollars back to local governments who must continue or fund new programs. Gov. Kaisch simply cuts funding to local governments to increase spending and balance the budget.

The $5 million budget deficit proposed by Xenia city and school officials may be nothing more than advanced notice of the state budget cuts. On the other hand, the budget deficit could be the typical 10% inflation budget estimates for contingency purposes; all institutions increase budget estimates for unforeseen costs. Budgets are based on previous year revenues, expenditures, known issues that will increase costs, plus 10% for unknown costs usually in addition to a contingency fund for emergencies.

Be that as it may, Mayer wishes Gov. Kaisch would have made the difficult choice of cut government employee compensation a little as well as cut the executive and legislative branch budgets. If he had cut the death tax, the bill making away through both houses, he would have as much money to spend, and many others will wish he had less money to throw at his program agendas.

Mayer did find some good in the Gov. Kaisch’s budget. The governor made noteworthy strides in such areas as prison reform, healthcare cost containment, and education funding. He included alternative sentencing approaches to non-violent offender that along with reforms nursing home service costs to Medicare will save taxpayers millions of dollars.

Some think his nursing home reforms are ugly and bad too.

Gov. Kaisch chalked up a few more good points with a number of his educational reforms. For example, his “support for Teach for America and doubling of EdChoice scholarships are vital lifelines to the most vulnerable and will inject more competition into our broken K-12 system.” Scraping the previous governor’s unfunded, evidenceless, one-size-fits-all Evidence Based School-Improvement Model will end the veiled attempt to increase dues-paying membership for unions. At the college level, the governor calls for professors to use fewer assistants for classroom instruction and a three-year degree. (Here, it is assumed that also means high schools will be required to ensure college-bound student meet the once first year prerequisites whether through coursework in high schools, college campuses, or virtual schools. That in itself would not only save a lot of money but would also be a systemic great achievement.)

Many of us may like Governor’s enthusiasm and business acumen, but analysts like Mayer give us reason to doubt his ability to help Ohio innovate its way to a better future and greater prosperity. If he cannot find innovative ways to fund government, can we expect he will achieve his inspiring goals for Ohio? Unless his goals are primary for big corporate concerns, maybe not.

To read Matt Mayer’s report on Governor Kaisch’s budget, visit the Buckeye Institute website: http://www.buckeyeinstitute.org/reports.

Marriage and Unemployment : Some Advise on How to Cope

Even though financial expert claim the great recession is over, its effects on marriages and families still continues. One of those devastating outcomes is unemployment. Many marriages are strained to point of breaking as a result of job loss and as well as home foreclosures.

An article published by the online publication For Your Marriage addresses some of the problems many couples are experiencing as result of unemployment. Authored by Bill Dodds, the article titled “When Unemployment Hits Home: Seven Ways to Help Your Marriage” is written from the perspective of clinical health professional Sarah Griffin who provides counseling services at the Seattle Archdiocese’s Catholic Community Services in Everett, Washington.

“Unemployment can leave an individual—and a couple—feeling overwhelmed, powerless, frightened. In a word, crushed. Yes, the partner looking for work can follow all the recommended steps for landing that next job but in the meantime…the meantime can be a long time.”

The article continues by offering seven ways to for couples and individuals can cope as well as strengthen their marriage. Following is only one of the things a couple can do. The entire article can be read online at
For Your Marriage.

“6. They can notice and appreciate that, in the middle of all this turmoil, there may well be some positives. A formerly two-income family may not be able to afford day care anymore, but now the family doesn’t need day care. A dad may be surprised to discover he really enjoys being home with the kids. (Not that it’s easier than heading out every day to a job!) Now he gets to know them, and they get to know him, in ways that wouldn’t have happened without his unemployment. A couple that has talked about, and seriously considered, simplifying the family’s lifestyle can realize that now there’s both a perfect excuse to do just that–and little option to do otherwise.”

For Your Marriage is a publication of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Tax appeals, parks, libraries, weights & measures: Policy Matters finds erosion of basic state services

A new report from Policy Matters Ohio finds that Ohio has seen a decline in the capacity of state government to deliver basic public services in disparate areas ranging from tax appeals to policing the ethics of public officials. The state’s library and park systems have been eroded. Service to localities has suffered at the Division of Weights and Measures, while new cuts could imperil the Ohio Civil Rights Commission’s ability to handle discrimination complaints. The paper focuses on areas outside of human services and education, and it is not comprehensive, it is merely a review of several areas that have been cut in recent years, including:

Board of Tax Appeals: Homeowners and businesses that appeal property-tax valuations now have to wait more than two years for a hearing because of staff cuts and the rising volume of cases. Between Fiscal Years 2005 and 2010, cases nearly tripled, from 1,608 to 4,679, yet the state sliced funding by $815,847 or 41 percent in Fiscal 2010 from FY09. Funding for FY11 slipped another one percent, to $1,149,715. The board was forced to lay off 60 percent of staff in 2009, leaving just three examiners, compared to 10 three years ago. The last full year that the BTA kept up with its caseload was FY2006. In February 2011, the examiners were hearing cases filed more than two years earlier.

Division of Weights and Measures: This division ensures honest commerce by helping ensure that scales weigh items properly and that counties adequately monitor supermarket scanners, gas pumps and other measuring devices. Over the past five years, General Revenue Fund (GRF) funding for Weights and Measures in Ohio dropped precipitously by 81.4 percent, from $1.074 million to $200,000. Field services provided by the state have been slashed, and spot checks in some instances have replaced the previous regular inspections. Ohio and its counties share responsibility for these services, and the state’s retreat leaves hard-pressed counties struggling to pick up the responsibilities in the face of their own budget shortfalls.

Division of Parks and Recreation: Seventy-four state parks in 60 counties encompass 174,212 acres of land and water, attract more than 50 million visitors annually, and generate over a billion tourism dollars per year. According to the November 2010 budget request letter, the General Revenue Fund request for FY2012-13 matches the 1988 request. Over the last decade, funding for parks and recreation has declined in inflation-adjusted dollars by 23.5 percent. The parks have deferred maintenance projects, including EPA-mandated sewer and water upgrades. We’ve seen a 45 percent staffing reduction, a $556 million backlog in maintenance, and a decline in perceived safety by visitors. Ohio is considering selling Jefferson Lake State Park to Jefferson County for one dollar. The County would sell timber and drilling rights to pay for dam repair and campsite upgrades.

“Years of investment in a system of parks and recreational facilities could be lost, hurting tourism and removing affordable recreation options for Ohio families,” said Wendy Patton, report co-author and senior associate at Policy Matters Ohio.

Ohio Civil Rights Commission: In FY 2000, the Ohio Civil Rights Commission had 199 employees; there are now 94. GRF funding of $10.6 million in 2000 was hacked to $4.6 million in FY 2010, a decline of 54 percent. Flat or ten percent reduced funding is expected to result in the elimination of an additional 17 to 23 positions. A loss of 23 individuals would mean 1,600 fewer investigations per year, a 36% decline. More cuts could bring quality problems, negative press, even lawsuits, as in the mid-1990s, when a burst of activity and lack of capacity undermined service provision.

Ohio Ethics Commission: Ethics cases rose an average of 18 percent each year since 2000 and ethics filings are up 30 percent over the past 15 years, but the budget hasn’t kept up. In the Strickland administration’s first year, Ethics Commission funding rose by about 16 percent, inflation-adjusted. But by FY2010, GRF funding had fallen by 19 percent after inflation from the 2007 high. As a result, ethics education was reduced by 19 percent; staffing fell from 25 to 21; the operations budget was cut by 30 percent; and equipment has not been updated for three fiscal years.

Environmental Review Appeals Commission: GRF funding for Environmental Review Appeals Commission has fallen by 20 percent over the past decade after inflation. Staffing has fallen from 14 to 2 since the agency was founded in the mid 1970s. Length of time in investigations has caused legislation and litigation.

Public libraries: Historically, Ohio libraries have dominated the ranks of the nation’s top libraries. Over the past two years, state support for library funding has been chopped by nearly 23 percent. Overall, libraries received $347.9 million from the state Public Library Fund last calendar year, compared to $450 million in 2008, despite a successful grassroots effort that reduced the cuts. In response, libraries reduced hours, closed branches, reduced purchasing, cut programming and shed staff. Overall, Ohio public libraries cut hours by more than 10 percent in 2009. The slashed state support has meant a huge increase in proposed property-tax levies. According to a recent analysis by Driscoll & Fleeter, the 71 library levy proposals that appeared on the ballot across the state in 2010 were twice as many as in any previous year since 1980, except 2009. Greater dependence on local levies will result in disparity of service.

Recommendations include protecting taxpayer return on investment, restoring capacity to services eroded by inflation, and reducing dependence on fees to avoid politicization and disparities between communities. “Cuts to education and human services rightly get a lot of attention,” said Zach Schiller, report co-author and Research Director at Policy Matters. “This report shows that we also need to pay attention to some of the very basics. Ohio has slashed staffing and funding to ensure that your public library is open, your park’s sewage system is safe, your tax appeals are reviewed and your community’s employers are not discriminating. Such cuts threaten business, individuals and communities in Ohio.”

Policy Matters Ohio is nonprofit, nonpartisan research institute with offices in Cleveland and Columbus.

Ask Your Senators to ‘Cut It Out!’

Last week, the U.S. Senate voted down the federal funding bill passed through the House weeks ago. This bill included ending taxpayer funding of Planned Parenthood and taxpayer-funded abortion in the District of Columbia, as well as taking away funding for President Obama’s czars, among other budget cuts.

As you may recall, Congress has been in limbo for months working to pass a spending bill that both cuts expenses and funds the necessities, and has narrowly avoided a government shutdown multiple times because of the lack of a bill that funds the federal government’s expenses.

The Senate has made it clear that it will not pass a bill that cuts spending, if the proposed cuts include ending taxpayer-funding of Planned Parenthood or President Obama’s czars. In fact, the Democratic Party sent an email to its supporters earlier this week in which it condemned the plan to end Planned Parenthood funding because it could eliminate jobs at the organization’s facilities! How’s that for misunderstanding the American people’s concern about the unemployment rate?

While this is disappointing, it’s not surprising. However, you can make a difference by asking your Senators to stand for important funding cuts like these.

Source: Liberty Watch, March 11, 2011

Fulfilling Our Promises to the American People

By Representative Steve Austria

Like many of you, I am very concerned about our nation’s economic future and the excessive government spending that has occurred over the past few years. That is why the new majority in Congress, led by House Speaker and fellow Ohioan John Boehner, is responding to the American people’s request to change the way they do things in Washington – and that starts with reducing the $14 trillion debt and cutting the wasteful Washington spending.

Last week, Congress responded to the American people’s request to change the way we do things in Washington, D.C. We did the difficult work of cutting government spending in a full, open and transparent process in which the House Speaker allowed more than 600 amendments to be offered and countless hours of debate to take place on the House floor. Although there were many difficult decisions, we were united in our purpose, and the end result is significant: more than *$100 billion has been cut from the budget for Fiscal Year 2011. These cuts are essential to helping put our country back on a fiscally-sustainable path that will create jobs in the private sector and strengthen the economy for our children and grandchildren.

The Senate must now work with the House to pass a Continuing Resolution (CR) which must include cuts to Washington spending to keep the federal government operating.

Pleased be assured that I remain committed to principles of smaller, more accountable government; economic freedom; lower taxes; fiscal responsibility; protecting life, American values, and the Constitution; and providing for strong national security. The governing agenda of the majority, as outlined in the Pledge to America, offers a way forward that is consistent with all of these principles.

The foundation of our plan is to get the economy back on track by creating jobs. As a former small business owner, I understand that the way to help create new jobs is by helping the small businesses who are the job creators. We must promote policies that will protect individual choice and help our small businesses. Now is the time for Congress to address the issues facing our nation and I believe we took the first steps last week. The road ahead may be hard, but we must reverse the spending binge and work to reduce the crippling national debt.

*(source: House Republican Conference)

How Union Busting Could Effect Xenia Community Schools

The so-called “union busting” efforts by state officials is a blessing in disguise. The fiscal conundrum faced by governors and state representatives has forced all of them to deal with public unions one way of another. In states like Wyoming, the Democrat governor convinced the union to cut pay and benefits in order to maintain a growing economy. In Indiana, the Republican governor eliminated collective bargaining that enabled government to become more efficient, provide services more effectively, and increase merit-based pay to public employees. This means both methods of controlling public finances work.

In Ohio, Republican lawmakers are seeking to implement similar fiscal policies as Indiana.

Union employees, Ted Strickland and other democrats claim an end to collective bargaining will harm the middle-class. Mary McCleary of The Buckeye Institute refutes their claim. In a recent article, she wrote:

“Contrary to the rhetoric these folks are spouting, eliminating collective bargaining for public sector employees actually does the opposite. It helps the middle class and protects our vulnerable populations. As it currently stands when there is not enough money to pay for all government employees in the system, workers get laid off. They lose their jobs. If a collective bargaining agreement weren’t in place, jobs could be saved. Everyone could take a small pay cut, and everyone would keep their jobs. Furthermore, when government workers are laid off, services are necessarily cut. Think about our schools where teachers are let go and programs are cut. The students suffer and all because the unions won’t make concessions. Contrary to what has been said, collective bargaining for government employees actually hurts the middle class.”

Last week, a manufacturer’s sales rep shared his experience with unions. He was an autoworker who made it to the highest position in the AEU. He sat at the bargaining tables with corporate executives. He made the big bucks and yet he quit. Why? Because all it was about was getting the biggest pay for himself and the union bosses. Union workers were never a part of real deal.

How does any of this apply to Xenia Schools?

School officials claim they have a budget deficit of $5 million. In order to make ends meet, they have to close two schools and lay-off around 70 teachers. What if all union employees including administrators, teachers, and support staff accepted a temporary pay and benefit cut for say three years? After all, wages, salaries and benefits make up the largest part of the budget. Because the school budget is about $60 million, a 10% cut would reduce costs by about $5 million. That would save 70 teaching positions.

Of course, it might mess up the plan to close two schools in order to get the “Tobacco Money” for building new schools, which plan is wrong for Xenia. The plan eventually to close Spring Hill is no more necessary because of a high water table any more than at Tecumseh. Besides, rebuilding Spring Hill without a basement would solve the previous flooding problem. A number of other schools do not have basements either.

Actually, Xenia needs at least one more neighborhood elementary school, not two less. Xenia lawyers could challenge the Ohio School Facilities Commission future projections of school building enrollements and its minimum enrollement requirement in court.

As in previous posts, education research proves small neighborhood schools provide better interactive learning environments than larger ones. Because small schools facilitate greater personal interaction, teachers and students enjoy learning more and consequently are more productive. (See my series titled Xenia Community Schools Rebuilding Plan I, II, III)

This blogger has a graduate level education in secondary education.

Blue Ribbon Task Force Community Update

by U.S. Rep. Steve Austria

Last week, I joined the Blue Ribbon Task Force in Dayton to update community leaders and elected officials on the status of the recommendations from the Blue Ribbon Commission report. I think it is important now, more than ever, to focus on how our region can bring our ‘A’ game to the table to be more competitive and bring additional jobs to Ohio. With Wright-Patterson Air Force Base being the largest single site employer in the state, it is vitally important that we continue to evaluate how we can help grow Wright-Patt and better do business with the base.

The Blue Ribbon Commission, which was formed in 2009, was made up of small businesses, community leaders, retirees from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB) and academia, to evaluate the strengths of the region and better compete for contracts in support of WPAFB. The Blue Ribbon Task Force was then formed to implement the recommendations proposed by the Blue Ribbon Commission Report in July 2010. The recommendations aim to support Ohio’s military facilities and increase the number of WPAFB contracts awarded to local companies, bringing more jobs to the region. The Task Force has done an extraordinary job implementing the Commission’s recommendations, and I am encouraged to hear of their progress and success. This community-based effort has truly taken enormous strides towards returning jobs to the state of Ohio.

Also last week, the Task Force launched and highlighted a social media Web site that was created to address several of the Commission’s recommendations. The Web site was designed to be a resource to the community, where people can share community information. I encourage you to learn more by visiting this page on my Web site to see for yourself how the Task Force’s efforts can help bring the community together. Wright State University’s School of Engineering and Computer Science has also agreed to run and operate the Web site from here on out, and I look forward to their continued efforts.

Today’s hearing on Senate Bill 5… Please come to the Statehouse this Thursday in red

By Rebecca Heimlich

I’m sitting in the Ohio Statehouse Rotunda listening to proponent testimony for Senate Bill 5, which would significantly reform Ohio’s collective bargaining law for public employees. I got to the Statehouse an hour before the hearing and saw several buses and knew our side’s buses weren’t coming until Thursday. The Statehouse is packed with union members who have been bused in from around the state. The Rotunda is the second overflow room for those who came to the hearing. Unfortunately, our red shirts are outnumbered.

We have to pack the Statehouse for Thursday’s hearing with SB 5 supporters in red shirts. I recognize it is more difficult for our activists to to get to Columbus. Most of us can’t get a taxpayer paid day off to come like many union members can, and we don’t have unions to pay for our buses. That said… Senate Bill 5 is crucial to balancing Ohio’s budget and getting us back on track to prosperity.

Under Ohio’s current collective bargaining law, public employers (which are ultimately taxpayers) cannot effectively manage their workforce. These laws take away public employers’ ability to decide how much to pay their employees and don’t allow flexibility in employment decisions.

Ohio must be able to hire, promote and pay based on merit.

Please join us this Thursday at 9am on the West Statehouse Lawn and wear red. Please come earlier if you can. If today is any indication, the union buses will already be at the Statehouse at 9am Thursday.

To read more, go to the Americans for Prosperity Ohio website. http://www.americansforprosperity.org/021511-todays-hearing-senate-bill-5-please-come-statehouse-thursday-red