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House Budget Pumps $170M into Solving Ohio’s Opiate Epidemic
< < Back to house-budget-pumps-170m-into-solving-ohios-opiate-epidemicCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) – A plan unveiled Tuesday by majority House Republicans includes funding for a smartphone app, a 24-hour hotline and other inventive ways to tackle Ohio’s opioid crisis.
Speaker Clifford Rosenberger and Finance Chairman Ryan Smith said their version of Ohio’s two-year operating budget adds over $170 million to address the scourge driven by prescription painkillers and heroin.
House revisions include 1.5-percent across-the-board cuts to most programs, while protecting certain priority areas, including K-12 education.
It scraps Republican Gov. John Kasich’s tax-reform package and cuts about $2.5 billion overall from his initial budget plan, mostly by adjustments to the federal-state Medicaid health insurance program.
In a statement, Kasich said balancing the budget and restraining spending are essential to Ohio’s economy and that he’s reviewing the proposed House changes.