As Passed by the House

133rd General Assembly

Regular Session Am. Sub. S. B. No. 310

2019-2020

Senator Dolan

Cosponsors: Senators Hottinger, Eklund, Burke, Schuring, Antonio, Blessing, Brenner, Craig, Fedor, Gavarone, Hackett, Hoagland, Huffman, S., Johnson, Kunze, Lehner, Maharath, Manning, Obhof, O'Brien, Peterson, Rulli, Schaffer, Sykes, Thomas, Williams, Wilson, Yuko Representatives Cera, Ghanbari, Hambley, O'Brien, Patterson, Rogers, West, Carruthers, Hicks-Hudson, Liston, Miller, J., Oelslager, Patton, Richardson, Robinson, Seitz, Sheehy


A BILL

To amend sections 124.393, 307.86, 505.08, 731.14, 749.37, 5165.01, 5165.15, 5165.16, 5165.17, 5165.19, 5165.26, 5166.01, and 5540.03 and to repeal section 5165.361 of the Revised Code and to amend Section 333.10 of H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly and Section 812.10 of H.B. 529 of the 132nd General Assembly and to repeal Section 333.270 of H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly to provide for the distribution of some federal coronavirus relief funding to local subdivisions and businesses, to revise the formula used to determine Medicaid rates for nursing facility services, to exclude loan amounts forgiven under the federal CARES Act from the commercial activity tax, to apply the Prevailing Wage Law to transportation improvement district projects under certain circumstances, to allow certain state employees' salaries and pay supplements to be frozen during the pay period that includes July 1, 2020, through the pay period that includes June 30, 2021, to temporarily expand the use of certain tax increment financing payments, to exempt certain political subdivision purchases from competitive bidding requirements during the COVID-19 emergency, to suspend certain county hospital bidding requirements during the COVID-19 emergency, to allow a county, township, or municipal corporation appointing authority to establish a mandatory cost savings program in response to COVID-19, to make capital reappropriations for the biennium ending June 30, 2022, to make other appropriations, and to declare an emergency.

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

Section 1. That sections 124.393, 307.86, 505.08, 731.14, 749.37, 5165.01, 5165.15, 5165.16, 5165.17, 5165.19, 5165.26, 5166.01, and 5540.03 of the Revised Code be amended to read as follows:

Sec. 124.393. (A) As used in this section:

(1) "Exempt employee" means a permanent full-time or permanent part-time county, township, or municipal corporation employee who is not subject to a collective bargaining agreement between a public employer and an exclusive representative.

(2) "Fiscal emergency" means any of the following:

(a) A fiscal emergency declared by the governor under section 126.05 of the Revised Code.

(b) A fiscal watch or fiscal emergency has been declared or determined under section 118.023 or 118.04 of the Revised Code.

(c) Lack of funds as defined in section 124.321 of the Revised Code.

(d) Reasons of economy as described in section 124.321 of the Revised Code.

(3) "Lack of work" has the same meaning as in section 124.321 of the Revised Code.

(B)(1) A county, township, or municipal corporation appointing authority may establish a mandatory cost savings program applicable to its exempt employees. Each exempt employee shall participate in the program of mandatory cost savings for not more than eighty hours, as determined by the appointing authority, in each of state fiscal years 2010 to 2013. The program may include, but is not limited to, a loss of pay or loss of holiday pay. The program may be administered differently among employees based on their classifications, appointment categories, or other relevant distinctions.

(2) After June 30, 2013, a county, township, or municipal corporation appointing authority may implement mandatory cost savings days as described in division (B)(1) of this section that apply to its exempt employees in the event of a fiscal emergency.

(C) A county, township, or municipal corporation appointing authority shall issue guidelines concerning how the appointing authority will implement the cost savings program.

(D)(1) A county, township, or municipal corporation appointing authority may establish a mandatory cost savings program applicable to its exempt employees in the event of a fiscal emergency or lack of work due to COVID-19. Each exempt employee shall participate in the program of mandatory cost savings for not more than four hundred eighty hours, as determined by the appointing authority, in state fiscal year 2021. The program may include, but is not limited to, a loss of pay or loss of holiday pay. The program may be administered differently among employees based on their classifications, appointment categories, or other relevant distinctions.

(2) A county, township, or municipal corporation appointing authority that establishes a mandatory cost savings program under division (D)(1) of this section shall issue guidelines concerning how the appointing authority will implement the cost savings program.

Sec. 307.86. Anything to be purchased, leased, leased with an option or agreement to purchase, or constructed, including, but not limited to, any product, structure, construction, reconstruction, improvement, maintenance, repair, or service, except the services of an accountant, architect, attorney at law, physician, professional engineer, construction project manager, consultant, surveyor, or appraiser, by or on behalf of the county or contracting authority, as defined in section 307.92 of the Revised Code, at a cost in excess of fifty thousand dollars, except as otherwise provided in division (D) of section 713.23 and in sections 9.48, 125.04, 125.60 to 125.6012, 307.022, 307.041, 307.861, 339.05, 340.036, 4115.31 to 4115.35, 5119.44, 5513.01, 5543.19, 5713.01, and 6137.05 of the Revised Code, shall be obtained through competitive bidding. However, competitive bidding is not required when any of the following applies:

(A) The board of county commissioners, by a unanimous vote of its members, makes a determination that a real and present emergency exists, and that determination and the reasons for it are entered in the minutes of the proceedings of the board, when either any of the following applies:

(1) The estimated cost is less than one hundred thousand dollars.

(2) There is actual physical disaster to structures, radio communications equipment, or computers.

(3) The purchase or lease is necessary to respond to the COVID-19 emergency declared by Executive Order 2020-01D, issued on March 9, 2020.

For purposes of this division, "unanimous vote" means all three members of a board of county commissioners when all three members are present, or two members of the board if only two members, constituting a quorum, are present.

Whenever a contract of purchase, lease, or construction is exempted from competitive bidding under division (A)(1) of this section because the estimated cost is less than one hundred thousand dollars, but the estimated cost is fifty thousand dollars or more, the county or contracting authority shall solicit informal estimates from no fewer than three persons who could perform the contract, before awarding the contract. With regard to each such contract, the county or contracting authority shall maintain a record of such estimates, including the name of each person from whom an estimate is solicited. The county or contracting authority shall maintain the record for the longer of at least one year after the contract is awarded or the amount of time the federal government requires.

(B)(1) The purchase consists of supplies or a replacement or supplemental part or parts for a product or equipment owned or leased by the county, and the only source of supply for the supplies, part, or parts is limited to a single supplier.

(2) The purchase consists of services related to information technology, such as programming services, that are proprietary or limited to a single source.

(C) The purchase is from the federal government, the state, another county or contracting authority of another county, or a board of education, educational service center, township, or municipal corporation.

(D) The purchase is made by a county department of job and family services under section 329.04 of the Revised Code and consists of family services duties or workforce development activities or is made by a county board of developmental disabilities under section 5126.05 of the Revised Code and consists of program services, such as direct and ancillary client services, child care, case management services, residential services, and family resource services.

(E) The purchase consists of criminal justice services, social services programs, family services, or workforce development activities by the board of county commissioners from nonprofit corporations or associations under programs funded by the federal government or by state grants.

(F) The purchase consists of any form of an insurance policy or contract authorized to be issued under Title XXXIX of the Revised Code or any form of health care plan authorized to be issued under Chapter 1751. of the Revised Code, or any combination of such policies, contracts, plans, or services that the contracting authority is authorized to purchase, and the contracting authority does all of the following:

(1) Determines that compliance with the requirements of this section would increase, rather than decrease, the cost of the purchase;

(2) Requests issuers of the policies, contracts, plans, or services to submit proposals to the contracting authority, in a form prescribed by the contracting authority, setting forth the coverage and cost of the policies, contracts, plans, or services as the contracting authority desires to purchase;

(3) Negotiates with the issuers for the purpose of purchasing the policies, contracts, plans, or services at the best and lowest price reasonably possible.

(G) The purchase consists of computer hardware, software, or consulting services that are necessary to implement a computerized case management automation project administered by the Ohio prosecuting attorneys association and funded by a grant from the federal government.

(H) Child care services are purchased for provision to county employees.

(I)(1) Property, including land, buildings, and other real property, is leased for offices, storage, parking, or other purposes, and all of the following apply:

(a) The contracting authority is authorized by the Revised Code to lease the property.

(b) The contracting authority develops requests for proposals for leasing the property, specifying the criteria that will be considered prior to leasing the property, including the desired size and geographic location of the property.

(c) The contracting authority receives responses from prospective lessors with property meeting the criteria specified in the requests for proposals by giving notice in a manner substantially similar to the procedures established for giving notice under section 307.87 of the Revised Code.

(d) The contracting authority negotiates with the prospective lessors to obtain a lease at the best and lowest price reasonably possible considering the fair market value of the property and any relocation and operational costs that may be incurred during the period the lease is in effect.

(2) The contracting authority may use the services of a real estate appraiser to obtain advice, consultations, or other recommendations regarding the lease of property under this division.

(J) The purchase is made pursuant to section 5139.34 or sections 5139.41 to 5139.46 of the Revised Code and is of programs or services that provide case management, treatment, or prevention services to any felony or misdemeanant delinquent, unruly youth, or status offender under the supervision of the juvenile court, including, but not limited to, community residential care, day treatment, services to children in their home, or electronic monitoring.

(K) The purchase is made by a public children services agency pursuant to section 307.92 or 5153.16 of the Revised Code and consists of family services, programs, or ancillary services that provide case management, prevention, or treatment services for children at risk of being or alleged to be abused, neglected, or dependent children.

(L) The purchase is to obtain the services of emergency medical service organizations under a contract made by the board of county commissioners pursuant to section 307.05 of the Revised Code with a joint emergency medical services district.

(M) The county contracting authority determines that the use of competitive sealed proposals would be advantageous to the county and the contracting authority complies with section 307.862 of the Revised Code.

(N) The purchase consists of used supplies and is made at a public auction.

Any issuer of policies, contracts, plans, or services listed in division (F) of this section and any prospective lessor under division (I) of this section may have the issuer's or prospective lessor's name and address, or the name and address of an agent, placed on a special notification list to be kept by the contracting authority, by sending the contracting authority that name and address. The contracting authority shall send notice to all persons listed on the special notification list. Notices shall state the deadline and place for submitting proposals. The contracting authority shall mail the notices at least six weeks prior to the deadline set by the contracting authority for submitting proposals. Every five years the contracting authority may review this list and remove any person from the list after mailing the person notification of that action.

Any contracting authority that negotiates a contract under division (F) of this section shall request proposals and negotiate with issuers in accordance with that division at least every three years from the date of the signing of such a contract, unless the parties agree upon terms for extensions or renewals of the contract. Such extension or renewal periods shall not exceed six years from the date the initial contract is signed.

Any real estate appraiser employed pursuant to division (I) of this section shall disclose any fees or compensation received from any source in connection with that employment.

As used in division (N) of this section, "supplies" means any personal property including equipment, materials, and other tangible assets.

Sec. 505.08. After adopting by a unanimous vote a resolution declaring a real and present emergency in connection with the administration of township services or the execution of duties assigned by law to any officer of a township, the board of township trustees may, by resolution, enter into a contract, without bidding or advertising, for the purchase of services, materials, equipment, or supplies needed to meet the emergency if the estimated cost of the contract is less than fifty thousand dollars.

During the period of the emergency declared by Executive Order 2020-01D, issued on March 9, 2020, the board of township trustees may, by resolution, enter into a contract, without bidding or advertising, for the purchase of services, materials, equipment, or supplies needed to meet the emergency, regardless of the estimated cost of the contract.

Sec. 731.14. All contracts made by the legislative authority of a village shall be executed in the name of the village and signed on its behalf by the mayor and clerk. Except where the contract is for equipment, services, materials, or supplies to be purchased under division (D) of section 713.23 or section 125.04 or 5513.01 of the Revised Code, available from a qualified nonprofit agency pursuant to sections 4115.31 to 4115.35 of the Revised Code, or required to be purchased from a qualified nonprofit agency under sections 125.60 to 125.6012 of the Revised Code, or, during the period of emergency declared by Executive Order 2020-01D, issued on March 9, 2020, when the purchase is necessary to respond to that emergency, when any expenditure, other than the compensation of persons employed in the village, exceeds fifty thousand dollars, such contracts shall be in writing and made with the lowest and best bidder after advertising once a week for not less than two consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation within the village. The legislative authority may also cause notice to be inserted in trade papers or other publications designated by it or to be distributed by electronic means, including posting the notice on the legislative authority's internet web site. If the legislative authority posts the notice on its web site, it may eliminate the second notice otherwise required to be published in a newspaper of general circulation within the village, provided that the first notice published in such newspaper meets all of the following requirements:

(A) It is published at least two weeks before the opening of bids.

(B) It includes a statement that the notice is posted on the legislative authority's internet web site.

(C) It includes the internet address of the legislative authority's internet web site.

(D) It includes instructions describing how the notice may be accessed on the legislative authority's internet web site.

The bids shall be opened and shall be publicly read by the clerk of the village or a person designated by the clerk at the time, date, and place specified in the advertisement to bidders or specifications. The time, date, and place of bid openings may be extended to a later date by the legislative authority of the village, provided that written or oral notice of the change shall be given to all persons who have received or requested specifications no later than ninety-six hours prior to the original time and date fixed for the opening. This section does not apply to those villages that have provided for the appointment of a village administrator under section 735.271 of the Revised Code.

Sec. 749.37. Notwithstanding any conflicting provision of sections 749.09 to 749.14 and 749.26 to 749.31 of the Revised Code, Chapter 153. of the Revised Code, or any other competitive bidding requirement specified in the Revised Code that requires a public authority to enter into separate contracts for the design and construction of a public improvement, a:

(A) A board of hospital commissioners or a board of hospital trustees may enter into a single contract under which the entity awarded the contract is responsible for providing both design and construction services related to the erection of a hospital, any addition to the hospital, or any other improvement to the hospital or its properties involving alteration, repair, replacement, renovation, installation, or demolition.

(B) During the period of the emergency declared by Executive Order 2020-01D, issued on March 9, 2020, a board of hospital commissioners or a board of hospital trustees may purchase equipment and supplies necessary to respond to the emergency without following competitive bidding procedures.

This section does not otherwise alter the competitive bidding requirements that apply to the board when entering into a contract for a public improvement.

Sec. 5165.01. As used in this chapter:

(A) "Affiliated operator" means an operator affiliated with either of the following:

(1) The exiting operator for whom the affiliated operator is to assume liability for the entire amount of the exiting operator's debt under the medicaid program or the portion of the debt that represents the franchise permit fee the exiting operator owes;

(2) The entering operator involved in the change of operator with the exiting operator specified in division (A)(1) of this section.

(B) "Allowable costs" are a nursing facility's costs that the department of medicaid determines are reasonable. Fines paid under sections 5165.60 to 5165.89 and section 5165.99 of the Revised Code are not allowable costs.

(C) "Ancillary and support costs" means all reasonable costs incurred by a nursing facility other than direct care costs, tax costs, or capital costs. "Ancillary and support costs" includes, but is not limited to, costs of activities, social services, pharmacy consultants, habilitation supervisors, qualified intellectual disability professionals, program directors, medical and habilitation records, program supplies, incontinence supplies, food, enterals, dietary supplies and personnel, laundry, housekeeping, security, administration, medical equipment, utilities, liability insurance, bookkeeping, purchasing department, human resources, communications, travel, dues, license fees, subscriptions, home office costs not otherwise allocated, legal services, accounting services, minor equipment, maintenance and repairs, help-wanted advertising, informational advertising, start-up costs, organizational expenses, other interest, property insurance, employee training and staff development, employee benefits, payroll taxes, and workers' compensation premiums or costs for self-insurance claims and related costs as specified in rules adopted under section 5165.02 of the Revised Code, for personnel listed in this division. "Ancillary and support costs" also means the cost of equipment, including vehicles, acquired by operating lease executed before December 1, 1992, if the costs are reported as administrative and general costs on the nursing facility's cost report for the cost reporting period ending December 31, 1992.

(D) "Applicable calendar year" means the calendar year immediately preceding the calendar year that precedes the first of the state fiscal years for which a rebasing is conducted.

(E) "Budget reduction adjustment factor" means the factor specified pursuant to or in section 5165.361 of the Revised Code for a state fiscal year.

(F)(1) "Capital costs" means the actual expense incurred by a nursing facility for all of the following:

(a) Depreciation and interest on any capital assets that cost five hundred dollars or more per item, including the following:

(i) Buildings;

(ii) Building improvements;

(iii) Except as provided in division (C) of this section, equipment;

(iv) Transportation equipment.

(b) Amortization and interest on land improvements and leasehold improvements;

(c) Amortization of financing costs;

(d) Lease and rent of land, buildings, and equipment.

(2) The costs of capital assets of less than five hundred dollars per item may be considered capital costs in accordance with a provider's practice.

(G) (F) "Capital lease" and "operating lease" shall be construed in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

(H) (G) "Case-mix score" means a measure determined under section 5165.192 of the Revised Code of the relative direct-care resources needed to provide care and habilitation to a nursing facility resident.

(I) (H) "Change of operator" means an entering operator becoming the operator of a nursing facility in the place of the exiting operator.

(1) Actions that constitute a change of operator include the following:

(a) A change in an exiting operator's form of legal organization, including the formation of a partnership or corporation from a sole proprietorship;

(b) A transfer of all the exiting operator's ownership interest in the operation of the nursing facility to the entering operator, regardless of whether ownership of any or all of the real property or personal property associated with the nursing facility is also transferred;

(c) A lease of the nursing facility to the entering operator or the exiting operator's termination of the exiting operator's lease;

(d) If the exiting operator is a partnership, dissolution of the partnership;

(e) If the exiting operator is a partnership, a change in composition of the partnership unless both of the following apply:

(i) The change in composition does not cause the partnership's dissolution under state law.

(ii) The partners agree that the change in composition does not constitute a change in operator.

(f) If the operator is a corporation, dissolution of the corporation, a merger of the corporation into another corporation that is the survivor of the merger, or a consolidation of one or more other corporations to form a new corporation.

(2) The following, alone, do not constitute a change of operator:

(a) A contract for an entity to manage a nursing facility as the operator's agent, subject to the operator's approval of daily operating and management decisions;

(b) A change of ownership, lease, or termination of a lease of real property or personal property associated with a nursing facility if an entering operator does not become the operator in place of an exiting operator;

(c) If the operator is a corporation, a change of one or more members of the corporation's governing body or transfer of ownership of one or more shares of the corporation's stock, if the same corporation continues to be the operator.

(J) (I) "Cost center" means the following:

(1) Ancillary and support costs;

(2) Capital costs;

(3) Direct care costs;

(4) Tax costs.

(K) (J) "Custom wheelchair" means a wheelchair to which both of the following apply:

(1) It has been measured, fitted, or adapted in consideration of either of the following:

(a) The body size or disability of the individual who is to use the wheelchair;

(b) The individual's period of need for, or intended use of, the wheelchair.

(2) It has customized features, modifications, or components, such as adaptive seating and positioning systems, that the supplier who assembled the wheelchair, or the manufacturer from which the wheelchair was ordered, added or made in accordance with the instructions of the physician of the individual who is to use the wheelchair.

(L)(1) (K)(1) "Date of licensure" means the following:

(a) In the case of a nursing facility that was required by law to be licensed as a nursing home under Chapter 3721. of the Revised Code when it originally began to be operated as a nursing home, the date the nursing facility was originally so licensed;

(b) In the case of a nursing facility that was not required by law to be licensed as a nursing home when it originally began to be operated as a nursing home, the date it first began to be operated as a nursing home, regardless of the date the nursing facility was first licensed as a nursing home.

(2) If, after a nursing facility's original date of licensure, more nursing home beds are added to the nursing facility, the nursing facility has a different date of licensure for the additional beds. This does not apply, however, to additional beds when both of the following apply:

(a) The additional beds are located in a part of the nursing facility that was constructed at the same time as the continuing beds already located in that part of the nursing facility;

(b) The part of the nursing facility in which the additional beds are located was constructed as part of the nursing facility at a time when the nursing facility was not required by law to be licensed as a nursing home.

(3) The definition of "date of licensure" in this section applies in determinations of nursing facilities' medicaid payment rates but does not apply in determinations of nursing facilities' franchise permit fees.

(M) (L) "Desk-reviewed" means that a nursing facility's costs as reported on a cost report submitted under section 5165.10 of the Revised Code have been subjected to a desk review under section 5165.108 of the Revised Code and preliminarily determined to be allowable costs.

(N) (M) "Direct care costs" means all of the following costs incurred by a nursing facility:

(1) Costs for registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, and nurse aides employed by the nursing facility;

(2) Costs for direct care staff, administrative nursing staff, medical directors, respiratory therapists, and except as provided in division (N)(8) (M)(8) of this section, other persons holding degrees qualifying them to provide therapy;

(3) Costs of purchased nursing services;

(4) Costs of quality assurance;

(5) Costs of training and staff development, employee benefits, payroll taxes, and workers' compensation premiums or costs for self-insurance claims and related costs as specified in rules adopted under section 5165.02 of the Revised Code, for personnel listed in divisions (N)(1)(M)(1), (2), (4), and (8) of this section;

(6) Costs of consulting and management fees related to direct care;

(7) Allocated direct care home office costs;

(8) Costs of habilitation staff (other than habilitation supervisors), medical supplies, emergency oxygen, over-the-counter pharmacy products, physical therapists, physical therapy assistants, occupational therapists, occupational therapy assistants, speech therapists, audiologists, habilitation supplies, and universal precautions supplies;

(9) Costs of wheelchairs other than the following:

(a) Custom wheelchairs;

(b) Repairs to and replacements of custom wheelchairs and parts that are made in accordance with the instructions of the physician of the individual who uses the custom wheelchair.

(10) Costs of other direct-care resources that are specified as direct care costs in rules adopted under section 5165.02 of the Revised Code.

(O) (N) "Dual eligible individual" has the same meaning as in section 5160.01 of the Revised Code.

(P) (O) "Effective date of a change of operator" means the day the entering operator becomes the operator of the nursing facility.

(Q) (P) "Effective date of a facility closure" means the last day that the last of the residents of the nursing facility resides in the nursing facility.

(R) (Q) "Effective date of an involuntary termination" means the date the department of medicaid terminates the operator's provider agreement for the nursing facility.

(S) (R) "Effective date of a voluntary withdrawal of participation" means the day the nursing facility ceases to accept new medicaid residents other than the individuals who reside in the nursing facility on the day before the effective date of the voluntary withdrawal of participation.

(T) (S) "Entering operator" means the person or government entity that will become the operator of a nursing facility when a change of operator occurs or following an involuntary termination.

(U) (T) "Exiting operator" means any of the following:

(1) An operator that will cease to be the operator of a nursing facility on the effective date of a change of operator;

(2) An operator that will cease to be the operator of a nursing facility on the effective date of a facility closure;

(3) An operator of a nursing facility that is undergoing or has undergone a voluntary withdrawal of participation;

(4) An operator of a nursing facility that is undergoing or has undergone an involuntary termination.

(V)(1) (U)(1) Subject to divisions (V)(2) (U)(2) and (3) of this section, "facility closure" means either of the following:

(a) Discontinuance of the use of the building, or part of the building, that houses the facility as a nursing facility that results in the relocation of all of the nursing facility's residents;

(b) Conversion of the building, or part of the building, that houses a nursing facility to a different use with any necessary license or other approval needed for that use being obtained and one or more of the nursing facility's residents remaining in the building, or part of the building, to receive services under the new use.

(2) A facility closure occurs regardless of any of the following:

(a) The operator completely or partially replacing the nursing facility by constructing a new nursing facility or transferring the nursing facility's license to another nursing facility;

(b) The nursing facility's residents relocating to another of the operator's nursing facilities;

(c) Any action the department of health takes regarding the nursing facility's medicaid certification that may result in the transfer of part of the nursing facility's survey findings to another of the operator's nursing facilities;

(d) Any action the department of health takes regarding the nursing facility's license under Chapter 3721. of the Revised Code.

(3) A facility closure does not occur if all of the nursing facility's residents are relocated due to an emergency evacuation and one or more of the residents return to a medicaid-certified bed in the nursing facility not later than thirty days after the evacuation occurs.

(W) (V) "Franchise permit fee" means the fee imposed by sections 5168.40 to 5168.56 of the Revised Code.

(X) (W) "Inpatient days" means both of the following:

(1) All days during which a resident, regardless of payment source, occupies a bed in a nursing facility that is included in the nursing facility's medicaid-certified capacity;

(2) Fifty per cent of the days for which payment is made under section 5165.34 of the Revised Code.

(Y) (X) "Involuntary termination" means the department of medicaid's termination of the operator's provider agreement for the nursing facility when the termination is not taken at the operator's request.

(Z) (Y) "Low resource utilization resident" means a medicaid recipient residing in a nursing facility who, for purposes of calculating the nursing facility's medicaid payment rate for direct care costs, is placed in either of the two lowest resource utilization groups, excluding any resource utilization group that is a default group used for residents with incomplete assessment data.

(AA) (Z) "Maintenance and repair expenses" means a nursing facility's expenditures that are necessary and proper to maintain an asset in a normally efficient working condition and that do not extend the useful life of the asset two years or more. "Maintenance and repair expenses" includes but is not limited to the costs of ordinary repairs such as painting and wallpapering.

(BB) (AA) "Medicaid-certified capacity" means the number of a nursing facility's beds that are certified for participation in medicaid as nursing facility beds.

(CC) (BB) "Medicaid days" means both of the following:

(1) All days during which a resident who is a medicaid recipient eligible for nursing facility services occupies a bed in a nursing facility that is included in the nursing facility's medicaid-certified capacity;

(2) Fifty per cent of the days for which payment is made under section 5165.34 of the Revised Code.

(DD) "Medicare skilled nursing facility market basket index" means the index established by the United States secretary of health and human services under section 1888(e)(5) of the "Social Security Act," 42 U.S.C. 1395yy(e)(5).

(EE)(1) (CC)(1) "New nursing facility" means a nursing facility for which the provider obtains an initial provider agreement following medicaid certification of the nursing facility by the director of health, including such a nursing facility that replaces one or more nursing facilities for which a provider previously held a provider agreement.

(2) "New nursing facility" does not mean a nursing facility for which the entering operator seeks a provider agreement pursuant to section 5165.511 or 5165.512 or (pursuant to section 5165.515) section 5165.07 of the Revised Code.

(FF) (DD) "Nursing facility" has the same meaning as in the "Social Security Act," section 1919(a), 42 U.S.C. 1396r(a).

(GG) (EE) "Nursing facility services" has the same meaning as in the "Social Security Act," section 1905(f), 42 U.S.C. 1396d(f).

(HH) (FF) "Nursing home" has the same meaning as in section 3721.01 of the Revised Code.

(II) (GG) "Operator" means the person or government entity responsible for the daily operating and management decisions for a nursing facility.

(JJ)(1) (HH)(1) "Owner" means any person or government entity that has at least five per cent ownership or interest, either directly, indirectly, or in any combination, in any of the following regarding a nursing facility:

(a) The land on which the nursing facility is located;

(b) The structure in which the nursing facility is located;

(c) Any mortgage, contract for deed, or other obligation secured in whole or in part by the land or structure on or in which the nursing facility is located;

(d) Any lease or sublease of the land or structure on or in which the nursing facility is located.

(2) "Owner" does not mean a holder of a debenture or bond related to the nursing facility and purchased at public issue or a regulated lender that has made a loan related to the nursing facility unless the holder or lender operates the nursing facility directly or through a subsidiary.

(KK) (II) "Per diem" means a nursing facility's actual, allowable costs in a given cost center in a cost reporting period, divided by the nursing facility's inpatient days for that cost reporting period.

(LL) (JJ) "Provider" means an operator with a provider agreement.

(MM) (KK) "Provider agreement" means a provider agreement, as defined in section 5164.01 of the Revised Code, that is between the department of medicaid and the operator of a nursing facility for the provision of nursing facility services under the medicaid program.

(NN) (LL) "Purchased nursing services" means services that are provided in a nursing facility by registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, or nurse aides who are not employees of the nursing facility.

(OO) (MM) "Reasonable" means that a cost is an actual cost that is appropriate and helpful to develop and maintain the operation of patient care facilities and activities, including normal standby costs, and that does not exceed what a prudent buyer pays for a given item or services. Reasonable costs may vary from provider to provider and from time to time for the same provider.

(PP) (NN) "Rebasing" means a redetermination of each of the following using information from cost reports for an applicable calendar year that is later than the applicable calendar year used for the previous rebasing:

(1) Each peer group's rate for ancillary and support costs as determined pursuant to division (C) of section 5165.16 of the Revised Code;

(2) Each peer group's rate for capital costs as determined pursuant to division (C) of section 5165.17 of the Revised Code;

(3) Each peer group's cost per case-mix unit as determined pursuant to division (C) of section 5165.19 of the Revised Code;

(4) Each nursing facility's rate for tax costs as determined pursuant to section 5165.21 of the Revised Code.

(QQ) (OO) "Related party" means an individual or organization that, to a significant extent, has common ownership with, is associated or affiliated with, has control of, or is controlled by, the provider.

(1) An individual who is a relative of an owner is a related party.

(2) Common ownership exists when an individual or individuals possess significant ownership or equity in both the provider and the other organization. Significant ownership or equity exists when an individual or individuals possess five per cent ownership or equity in both the provider and a supplier. Significant ownership or equity is presumed to exist when an individual or individuals possess ten per cent ownership or equity in both the provider and another organization from which the provider purchases or leases real property.

(3) Control exists when an individual or organization has the power, directly or indirectly, to significantly influence or direct the actions or policies of an organization.

(4) An individual or organization that supplies goods or services to a provider shall not be considered a related party if all of the following conditions are met:

(a) The supplier is a separate bona fide organization.

(b) A substantial part of the supplier's business activity of the type carried on with the provider is transacted with others than the provider and there is an open, competitive market for the types of goods or services the supplier furnishes.

(c) The types of goods or services are commonly obtained by other nursing facilities from outside organizations and are not a basic element of patient care ordinarily furnished directly to patients by nursing facilities.

(d) The charge to the provider is in line with the charge for the goods or services in the open market and no more than the charge made under comparable circumstances to others by the supplier.

(RR) (PP) "Relative of owner" means an individual who is related to an owner of a nursing facility by one of the following relationships:

(1) Spouse;

(2) Natural parent, child, or sibling;

(3) Adopted parent, child, or sibling;

(4) Stepparent, stepchild, stepbrother, or stepsister;

(5) Father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, or sister-in-law;

(6) Grandparent or grandchild;

(7) Foster caregiver, foster child, foster brother, or foster sister.

(SS) (QQ) "Residents' rights advocate" has the same meaning as in section 3721.10 of the Revised Code.

(TT) (RR) "Skilled nursing facility" has the same meaning as in the "Social Security Act," section 1819(a), 42 U.S.C. 1395i-3(a).

(UU) (SS) "State fiscal year" means the fiscal year of this state, as specified in section 9.34 of the Revised Code.

(VV) (TT) "Sponsor" has the same meaning as in section 3721.10 of the Revised Code.

(WW) (UU) "Tax costs" means the costs of taxes imposed under Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code, real estate taxes, personal property taxes, and corporate franchise taxes.

(XX) (VV) "Title XIX" means Title XIX of the "Social Security Act," 42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq.

(YY) (WW) "Title XVIII" means Title XVIII of the "Social Security Act," 42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.

(ZZ) (XX) "Voluntary withdrawal of participation" means an operator's voluntary election to terminate the participation of a nursing facility in the medicaid program but to continue to provide service of the type provided by a nursing facility.

Sec. 5165.15. Except as otherwise provided by sections 5165.151 to 5165.157 and 5165.34 of the Revised Code, the total per medicaid day payment rate that the department of medicaid shall pay a nursing facility provider for nursing facility services the provider's nursing facility provides during a state fiscal year shall be determined as follows:

(A) Determine the sum of all of the following:

(1) The per medicaid day payment rate for ancillary and support costs determined for the nursing facility under section 5165.16 of the Revised Code;

(2) The per medicaid day payment rate for capital costs determined for the nursing facility under section 5165.17 of the Revised Code;

(3) The per medicaid day payment rate for direct care costs determined for the nursing facility under section 5165.19 of the Revised Code;

(4) The per medicaid day payment rate for tax costs determined for the nursing facility under section 5165.21 of the Revised Code;

(5) If the nursing facility qualifies as a critical access nursing facility, the nursing facility's critical access incentive payment paid under section 5165.23 of the Revised Code.

(B) To the sum determined under division (A) of this section, add sixteen dollars and forty-four cents.

(C) From the sum determined under division (B) of this section, subtract one dollar and seventy-nine cents.

(D) To the difference determined under division (C) of this section, add the per medicaid day quality payment rate determined for the nursing facility under section 5165.25 of the Revised Code.

(E) To the sum determined under division (D) of this section, add, for the second half of state fiscal year 2020 and all of each state fiscal year thereafter2021, the per medicaid day quality incentive payment rate determined for the nursing facility under section 5165.26 of the Revised Code.

Sec. 5165.16. (A) The department of medicaid shall determine each nursing facility's per medicaid day payment rate for ancillary and support costs. A nursing facility's rate shall be the rate determined under division (C) of this section for the nursing facility's peer group.

(B) For the purpose of determining nursing facilities' rates for ancillary and support costs, the department shall establish six peer groups composed as follows:

(1) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group one or two: Brown, Butler, Clermont, Clinton, Hamilton, and Warren. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has fewer than one hundred beds shall be placed in peer group one. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has one hundred or more beds shall be placed in peer group two.

(2) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group three or four: Allen, Ashtabula, Champaign, Clark, Cuyahoga, Darke, Delaware, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Fulton, Geauga, Greene, Hancock, Knox, Lake, Licking, Lorain, Lucas, Madison, Mahoning, Marion, Medina, Miami, Montgomery, Morrow, Ottawa, Pickaway, Portage, Preble, Ross, Sandusky, Seneca, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Union, and Wood. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has fewer than one hundred beds shall be placed in peer group three. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has one hundred or more beds shall be placed in peer group four.

(3) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group five or six: Adams, Ashland, Athens, Auglaize, Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Crawford, Defiance, Erie, Gallia, Guernsey, Hardin, Harrison, Henry, Highland, Hocking, Holmes, Huron, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Logan, Meigs, Mercer, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Paulding, Perry, Pike, Putnam, Richland, Scioto, Shelby, Tuscarawas, Van Wert, Vinton, Washington, Wayne, Williams, and Wyandot. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has fewer than one hundred beds shall be placed in peer group five. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has one hundred or more beds shall be placed in peer group six.

(C)(1) The department shall determine the rate for ancillary and support costs for each peer group established under division (B) of this section. The rate for ancillary and support costs determined under this division for a peer group shall be used for subsequent years until the department conducts a rebasing. To determine a peer group's rate for ancillary and support costs, the department shall do all of the following:

(a) Subject to division (C)(2) of this section, determine the rate for ancillary and support costs for each nursing facility in the peer group for the applicable calendar year by using the greater of the nursing facility's actual inpatient days for the applicable calendar year or the inpatient days the nursing facility would have had for the applicable calendar year if its occupancy rate had been ninety per cent;

(b) Subject to division (C)(3) of this section, identify which nursing facility in the peer group is at the twenty-fifth percentile of the rate for ancillary and support costs for the applicable calendar year determined under division (C)(1)(a) of this section;

(c) Multiply the rate for ancillary and support costs determined under division (C)(1)(a) of this section for the nursing facility identified under division (C)(1)(b) of this section by the rate of inflation for the eighteen-month period beginning on the first day of July of the applicable calendar year and ending the last day of December of the calendar year immediately following the applicable calendar year using the following:

(i) Except as provided in division (C)(1)(c)(ii) of this section, the consumer price index for all items for all urban consumers for the midwest region, published by the United States bureau of labor statistics;

(ii) If the United States bureau of labor statistics ceases to publish the index specified in division (C)(1)(c)(i) of this section, the index the bureau subsequently publishes that covers urban consumers' prices for items for the region that includes this state.

(d) For state fiscal year 2020 and each state fiscal year thereafter (other than the first state fiscal year in a group of consecutive state fiscal years for which a rebasing is conducted), adjust the amount calculated under division (C)(1)(c) of this section using the difference between the following:

(i) The medicare skilled nursing facility market basket index determined for the federal fiscal year that begins during the state fiscal year immediately preceding the state fiscal year for which the adjustment is being made under division (C)(1)(d) of this section;

(ii) The budget reduction adjustment factor for the state fiscal year for which the adjustment is being made under division (C)(1)(d) of this section.

(2) For the purpose of determining a nursing facility's occupancy rate under division (C)(1)(a) of this section, the department shall include any beds that the nursing facility removes from its medicaid-certified capacity unless the nursing facility also removes the beds from its licensed bed capacity.

(3) In making the identification under division (C)(1)(b) of this section, the department shall exclude both of the following:

(a) Nursing facilities that participated in the medicaid program under the same provider for less than twelve months in the applicable calendar year;

(b) Nursing facilities whose ancillary and support costs are more than one standard deviation from the mean desk-reviewed, actual, allowable, per diem ancillary and support cost for all nursing facilities in the nursing facility's peer group for the applicable calendar year.

(4) The department shall not redetermine a peer group's rate for ancillary and support costs under this division based on additional information that it receives after the rate is determined. The department shall redetermine a peer group's rate for ancillary and support costs only if the department made an error in determining the rate based on information available to the department at the time of the original determination.

Sec. 5165.17. (A) The department of medicaid shall determine each nursing facility's per medicaid day payment rate for capital costs. A nursing facility's rate shall be the rate determined under division (C) of this section for the nursing facility's peer group.

(B) For the purpose of determining nursing facilities' rates for capital costs, the department shall establish six peer groups.

(1) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group one or two: Brown, Butler, Clermont, Clinton, Hamilton, and Warren. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has fewer than one hundred beds shall be placed in peer group one. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has one hundred or more beds shall be placed in peer group two.

(2) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group three or four: Allen, Ashtabula, Champaign, Clark, Cuyahoga, Darke, Delaware, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Fulton, Geauga, Greene, Hancock, Knox, Lake, Licking, Lorain, Lucas, Madison, Mahoning, Marion, Medina, Miami, Montgomery, Morrow, Ottawa, Pickaway, Portage, Preble, Ross, Sandusky, Seneca, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Union, and Wood. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has fewer than one hundred beds shall be placed in peer group three. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has one hundred or more beds shall be placed in peer group four.

(3) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group five or six: Adams, Ashland, Athens, Auglaize, Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Crawford, Defiance, Erie, Gallia, Guernsey, Hardin, Harrison, Henry, Highland, Hocking, Holmes, Huron, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Logan, Meigs, Mercer, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Paulding, Perry, Pike, Putnam, Richland, Scioto, Shelby, Tuscarawas, Van Wert, Vinton, Washington, Wayne, Williams, and Wyandot. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has fewer than one hundred beds shall be placed in peer group five. Each nursing facility located in any of those counties that has one hundred or more beds shall be placed in peer group six.

(C)(1) The department shall determine the rate for capital costs for each peer group established under division (B) of this section. The rate for capital costs determined under this division for a peer group shall be used for subsequent years until the department conducts a rebasing. To determine a A peer group's rate for capital costs, the department shall do both of the following:

(a) Determine be the rate for capital costs for the nursing facility in the peer group that is at the twenty-fifth percentile of the rate for capital costs for the applicable calendar year;

(b) For state fiscal year 2020 and each state fiscal year thereafter (other than the first state fiscal year in a group of consecutive state fiscal years for which a rebasing is conducted), adjust the amount calculated under division (C)(1)(a) of this section using the difference between the following:

(i) The medicare skilled nursing facility market basket index determined for the federal fiscal year that begins during the state fiscal year immediately preceding the state fiscal year for which the adjustment is being made under division (C)(1)(a) of this section;

(ii) The budget reduction adjustment factor for the state fiscal year for which the adjustment is being made under division (C)(1)(a) of this section.

(2) To identify the nursing facility in a peer group that is at the twenty-fifth percentile of the rate for capital costs for the applicable calendar year, the department shall do both of the following:

(a) Subject to division (C)(3) of this section, use the greater of each nursing facility's actual inpatient days for the applicable calendar year or the inpatient days the nursing facility would have had for the applicable calendar year if its occupancy rate had been one hundred per cent;

(b) Exclude both of the following:

(i) Nursing facilities that participated in the medicaid program under the same provider for less than twelve months in the applicable calendar year;

(ii) Nursing facilities whose capital costs are more than one standard deviation from the mean desk-reviewed, actual, allowable, per diem capital cost for all nursing facilities in the nursing facility's peer group for the applicable calendar year.

(3) For the purpose of determining a nursing facility's occupancy rate under division (C)(2)(a) of this section, the department shall include any beds that the nursing facility removes from its medicaid-certified capacity after June 30, 2005, unless the nursing facility also removes the beds from its licensed bed capacity.

(4) The department shall not redetermine a peer group's rate for capital costs under this division based on additional information that it receives after the rate is determined. The department shall redetermine a peer group's rate for capital costs only if the department made an error in determining the rate based on information available to the department at the time of the original determination.

(D) Buildings shall be depreciated using the straight line method over forty years or over a different period approved by the department. Components and equipment shall be depreciated using the straight-line method over a period designated in rules adopted under section 5165.02 of the Revised Code, consistent with the guidelines of the American hospital association, or over a different period approved by the department. Any rules authorized by this division that specify useful lives of buildings, components, or equipment apply only to assets acquired on or after July 1, 1993. Depreciation for costs paid or reimbursed by any government agency shall not be included in capital costs unless that part of the payment under this chapter is used to reimburse the government agency.

(E) The capital cost basis of nursing facility assets shall be determined in the following manner:

(1) Except as provided in division (E)(3) of this section, for purposes of calculating the rates to be paid for facilities with dates of licensure on or before June 30, 1993, the capital cost basis of each asset shall be equal to the desk-reviewed, actual, allowable, capital cost basis that is listed on the facility's cost report for the calendar year preceding the state fiscal year during which the rate will be paid.

(2) For facilities with dates of licensure after June 30, 1993, the capital cost basis shall be determined in accordance with the principles of the medicare program, except as otherwise provided in this chapter.

(3) Except as provided in division (E)(4) of this section, if a provider transfers an interest in a facility to another provider after June 30, 1993, there shall be no increase in the capital cost basis of the asset if the providers are related parties or the provider to which the interest is transferred authorizes the provider that transferred the interest to continue to operate the facility under a lease, management agreement, or other arrangement. If the previous sentence does not prohibit the adjustment of the capital cost basis under this division, the basis of the asset shall be adjusted by one-half of the change in the consumer price index for all items for all urban consumers, as published by the United States bureau of labor statistics, during the time that the transferor held the asset.

(4) If a provider transfers an interest in a facility to another provider who is a related party, the capital cost basis of the asset shall be adjusted as specified in division (E)(3) of this section if all of the following conditions are met:

(a) The related party is a relative of owner;

(b) Except as provided in division (E)(4)(c)(ii) of this section, the provider making the transfer retains no ownership interest in the facility;

(c) The department determines that the transfer is an arm's length transaction pursuant to rules adopted under section 5165.02 of the Revised Code. The rules shall provide that a transfer is an arm's length transaction if all of the following apply:

(i) Once the transfer goes into effect, the provider that made the transfer has no direct or indirect interest in the provider that acquires the facility or the facility itself, including interest as an owner, officer, director, employee, independent contractor, or consultant, but excluding interest as a creditor.

(ii) The provider that made the transfer does not reacquire an interest in the facility except through the exercise of a creditor's rights in the event of a default. If the provider reacquires an interest in the facility in this manner, the department shall treat the facility as if the transfer never occurred when the department calculates its reimbursement rates for capital costs.

(iii) The transfer satisfies any other criteria specified in the rules.

(d) Except in the case of hardship caused by a catastrophic event, as determined by the department, or in the case of a provider making the transfer who is at least sixty-five years of age, not less than twenty years have elapsed since, for the same facility, the capital cost basis was adjusted most recently under division (E)(4) of this section or actual, allowable capital costs was determined most recently under division (F)(9) of this section.

(F) As used in this division:

"Imputed interest" means the lesser of the prime rate plus two per cent or ten per cent.

"Lease expense" means lease payments in the case of an operating lease and depreciation expense and interest expense in the case of a capital lease.

"New lease" means a lease, to a different lessee, of a nursing facility that previously was operated under a lease.

(1) Subject to division (A) of this section, for a lease of a facility that was effective on May 27, 1992, the entire lease expense is an actual, allowable capital cost during the term of the existing lease. The entire lease expense also is an actual, allowable capital cost if a lease in existence on May 27, 1992, is renewed under either of the following circumstances:

(a) The renewal is pursuant to a renewal option that was in existence on May 27, 1992;

(b) The renewal is for the same lease payment amount and between the same parties as the lease in existence on May 27, 1992.

(2) Subject to division (A) of this section, for a lease of a facility that was in existence but not operated under a lease on May 27, 1992, actual, allowable capital costs shall include the lesser of the annual lease expense or the annual depreciation expense and imputed interest expense that would be calculated at the inception of the lease using the lessor's entire historical capital asset cost basis, adjusted by one-half of the change in the consumer price index for all items for all urban consumers, as published by the United States bureau of labor statistics, during the time the lessor held each asset until the beginning of the lease.

(3) Subject to division (A) of this section, for a lease of a facility with a date of licensure on or after May 27, 1992, that is initially operated under a lease, actual, allowable capital costs shall include the annual lease expense if there was a substantial commitment of money for construction of the facility after December 22, 1992, and before July 1, 1993. If there was not a substantial commitment of money after December 22, 1992, and before July 1, 1993, actual, allowable capital costs shall include the lesser of the annual lease expense or the sum of the following:

(a) The annual depreciation expense that would be calculated at the inception of the lease using the lessor's entire historical capital asset cost basis;

(b) The greater of the lessor's actual annual amortization of financing costs and interest expense at the inception of the lease or the imputed interest expense calculated at the inception of the lease using seventy per cent of the lessor's historical capital asset cost basis.

(4) Subject to division (A) of this section, for a lease of a facility with a date of licensure on or after May 27, 1992, that was not initially operated under a lease and has been in existence for ten years, actual, allowable capital costs shall include the lesser of the annual lease expense or the annual depreciation expense and imputed interest expense that would be calculated at the inception of the lease using the entire historical capital asset cost basis of one-half of the change in the consumer price index for all items for all urban consumers, as published by the United States bureau of labor statistics, during the time the lessor held each asset until the beginning of the lease.

(5) Subject to division (A) of this section, for a new lease of a facility that was operated under a lease on May 27, 1992, actual, allowable capital costs shall include the lesser of the annual new lease expense or the annual old lease payment. If the old lease was in effect for ten years or longer, the old lease payment from the beginning of the old lease shall be adjusted by one-half of the change in the consumer price index for all items for all urban consumers, as published by the United States bureau of labor statistics, from the beginning of the old lease to the beginning of the new lease.

(6) Subject to division (A) of this section, for a new lease of a facility that was not in existence or that was in existence but not operated under a lease on May 27, 1992, actual, allowable capital costs shall include the lesser of annual new lease expense or the annual amount calculated for the old lease under division (F)(2), (3), (4), or (6) of this section, as applicable. If the old lease was in effect for ten years or longer, the lessor's historical capital asset cost basis shall be, for purposes of calculating the annual amount under division (F)(2), (3), (4), or (6) of this section, adjusted by one-half of the change in the consumer price index for all items for all urban consumers, as published by the United States bureau of labor statistics, from the beginning of the old lease to the beginning of the new lease.

In the case of a lease under division (F)(3) of this section of a facility for which a substantial commitment of money was made after December 22, 1992, and before July 1, 1993, the old lease payment shall be adjusted for the purpose of determining the annual amount.

(7) For any revision of a lease described in division (F)(1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or (6) of this section, or for any subsequent lease of a facility operated under such a lease, other than execution of a new lease, the portion of actual, allowable capital costs attributable to the lease shall be the same as before the revision or subsequent lease.

(8) Except as provided in division (F)(9) of this section, if a provider leases an interest in a facility to another provider who is a related party or previously operated the facility, the related party's or previous operator's actual, allowable capital costs shall include the lesser of the annual lease expense or the reasonable cost to the lessor.

(9) If a provider leases an interest in a facility to another provider who is a related party, regardless of the date of the lease, the related party's actual, allowable capital costs shall include the annual lease expense, subject to the limitations specified in divisions (F)(1) to (7) of this section, if all of the following conditions are met:

(a) The related party is a relative of owner;

(b) If the lessor retains an ownership interest, it is, except as provided in division (F)(9)(c)(ii) of this section, in only the real property and any improvements on the real property;

(c) The department determines that the lease is an arm's length transaction pursuant to rules adopted under section 5165.02 of the Revised Code. The rules shall provide that a lease is an arm's length transaction if all of the following apply:

(i) Once the lease goes into effect, the lessor has no direct or indirect interest in the lessee or, except as provided in division (F)(9)(b) of this section, the facility itself, including interest as an owner, officer, director, employee, independent contractor, or consultant, but excluding interest as a lessor.

(ii) The lessor does not reacquire an interest in the facility except through the exercise of a lessor's rights in the event of a default. If the lessor reacquires an interest in the facility in this manner, the department shall treat the facility as if the lease never occurred when the department calculates its reimbursement rates for capital costs.

(iii) The lease satisfies any other criteria specified in the rules.

(d) Except in the case of hardship caused by a catastrophic event, as determined by the department, or in the case of a lessor who is at least sixty-five years of age, not less than twenty years have elapsed since, for the same facility, the capital cost basis was adjusted most recently under division (E)(4) of this section or actual, allowable capital costs were determined most recently under division (F)(9) of this section.

(10) This division does not apply to leases of specific items of equipment.

Sec. 5165.19. (A) Semiannually, the department of medicaid shall determine each nursing facility's per medicaid day payment rate for direct care costs by multiplying the facility's semiannual case-mix score determined under section 5165.192 of the Revised Code by the cost per case-mix unit determined under division (C) of this section for the facility's peer group.

(B) For the purpose of determining nursing facilities' rates for direct care costs, the department shall establish three peer groups.

(1) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group one: Brown, Butler, Clermont, Clinton, Hamilton, and Warren.

(2) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group two: Allen, Ashtabula, Champaign, Clark, Cuyahoga, Darke, Delaware, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Fulton, Geauga, Greene, Hancock, Knox, Lake, Licking, Lorain, Lucas, Madison, Mahoning, Marion, Medina, Miami, Montgomery, Morrow, Ottawa, Pickaway, Portage, Preble, Ross, Sandusky, Seneca, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Union, and Wood.

(3) Each nursing facility located in any of the following counties shall be placed in peer group three: Adams, Ashland, Athens, Auglaize, Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Crawford, Defiance, Erie, Gallia, Guernsey, Hardin, Harrison, Henry, Highland, Hocking, Holmes, Huron, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Logan, Meigs, Mercer, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Paulding, Perry, Pike, Putnam, Richland, Scioto, Shelby, Tuscarawas, Van Wert, Vinton, Washington, Wayne, Williams, and Wyandot.

(C)(1) The department shall determine a cost per case-mix unit for each peer group established under division (B) of this section. The cost per case-mix unit determined under this division for a peer group shall be used for subsequent years until the department conducts a rebasing. To determine a peer group's cost per case-mix unit, the department shall do all of the following:

(a) Determine the cost per case-mix unit for each nursing facility in the peer group for the applicable calendar year by dividing each facility's desk-reviewed, actual, allowable, per diem direct care costs for the applicable calendar year by the facility's annual average case-mix score determined under section 5165.192 of the Revised Code for the applicable calendar year;

(b) Subject to division (C)(2) of this section, identify which nursing facility in the peer group is at the twenty-fifth percentile of the cost per case-mix units determined under division (C)(1)(a) of this section;

(c) Calculate the amount that is two per cent above the cost per case-mix unit determined under division (C)(1)(a) of this section for the nursing facility identified under division (C)(1)(b) of this section;

(d) Using the index specified in division (C)(3) of this section, multiply the rate of inflation for the eighteen-month period beginning on the first day of July of the applicable calendar year and ending the last day of December of the calendar year immediately following the applicable calendar year by the amount calculated under division (C)(1)(c) of this section;

(e) For state fiscal year 2020 and each state fiscal year thereafter (other than the first state fiscal year in a group of consecutive state fiscal years for which a rebasing is conducted), adjust the amount calculated under division (C)(1)(d) of this section using the difference between the following:

(i) The medicare skilled nursing facility market basket index determined for the federal fiscal year that begins during the state fiscal year immediately preceding the state fiscal year for which the adjustment is being made under division (C)(1)(e) of this section;

(ii) The budget reduction adjustment factor for the state fiscal year for which the adjustment is being made under division (C)(1)(e) of this section.

(2) In making the identification under division (C)(1)(b) of this section, the department shall exclude both of the following:

(a) Nursing facilities that participated in the medicaid program under the same provider for less than twelve months in the applicable calendar year;

(b) Nursing facilities whose cost per case-mix unit is more than one standard deviation from the mean cost per case-mix unit for all nursing facilities in the nursing facility's peer group for the applicable calendar year.

(3) The following index shall be used for the purpose of the calculation made under division (C)(1)(d) of this section:

(a) Except as provided in division (C)(3)(b) of this section, the employment cost index for total compensation, nursing and residential care facilities occupational group, published by the United States bureau of labor statistics;

(b) If the United States bureau of labor statistics ceases to publish the index specified in division (C)(3)(a) of this section, the index the bureau subsequently publishes that covers nursing facilities' staff costs.

(4) The department shall not redetermine a peer group's cost per case-mix unit under this division based on additional information that it receives after the peer group's per case-mix unit is determined. The department shall redetermine a peer group's cost per case-mix unit only if it made an error in determining the peer group's cost per case-mix unit based on information available to the department at the time of the original determination.

Sec. 5165.26. (A) As used in this section:

(1) "Base rate" means the portion of a nursing facility's total per medicaid day payment rate determined under divisions (A) and (B) of section 5165.15 of the Revised Code.

(2) "CMS" means the United States centers for medicare and medicaid services.

(3) "Force majeure event" means an uncontrollable force or natural disaster not within the power of a nursing facility's operator.

(4) "Long-stay resident" and "measurement period" have has the same meanings meaning as in section 5165.25 of the Revised Code.

(5) "Nursing facilities for which a quality score was determined" includes nursing facilities that are determined to have a quality score of zero.

(B) For the second half of state fiscal year 2020 and all of each state fiscal year thereafter2021, and subject to divisions (D) and, (E), and (F) of this section, the department of medicaid shall determine each nursing facility's per medicaid day quality incentive payment rate as follows:

(1) Determine the sum of the quality scores determined under division (C) of this section for all nursing facilities.

(2) Determine the average quality score by dividing the sum determined under division (B)(1) of this section by the number of nursing facilities for which a quality score was determined.

(3) Determine the following:

(a) For the second half of state fiscal year 2020, the sum of the total number of medicaid days for the second half of calendar year 2018 for all nursing facilities for which a quality score was determined;

(b) For all of state fiscal year 2021 and each state fiscal year thereafter, determine the sum of the total number of medicaid days for the measurement period applicable to the state fiscal year all of calendar year 2019 for all nursing facilities for which a quality score was determined.

(4) Multiply the average quality score determined under division (B)(2) of this section by the sum determined under division (B)(3) of this section.

(5) Determine the value per quality point by determining the quotient of the following:

(a) The following:

(i) For the second half of state fiscal year 2020, the sum determined under division (E)(1)(b) of this section;

(ii) For all of state fiscal year 2021 and each state fiscal year thereafter, the sum determined under division (E)(2)(b) (F)(2) of this section.

(b) The product determined under division (B)(4) of this section.

(6) Multiply the value per quality point determined under division (B)(5) of this section by the nursing facility's quality score determined under division (C) of this section.

(C)(1) Except as provided in divisions (C)(2) and (3) of this section, a nursing facility's quality score for a state fiscal year 2021 shall be the sum of the total number of points that CMS assigned to the nursing facility under CMS's nursing facility five-star quality rating system for the following quality metrics based on the most recent four-quarter average data available in the database maintained by the U.S. centers for medicare and medicaid services and known as nursing home compare in May of 2020:

(a) The percentage of the nursing facility's long-stay residents at high risk for pressure ulcers who had pressure ulcers during the measurement period;

(b) The percentage of the nursing facility's long-stay residents who had a urinary tract infection during the measurement period;

(c) The percentage of the nursing facility's long-stay residents whose ability to move independently worsened during the measurement period;

(d) The percentage of the nursing facility's long-stay residents who had a catheter inserted and left in their bladder during the measurement period.

(2) In determining a nursing facility's quality score for a state fiscal year 2021, the department shall make the following adjustment to the number of points that CMS assigned to the nursing facility for each of the quality metrics specified in division (C)(1) of this section:

(a) Unless division (C)(2)(b) of this section applies, divide the number of the nursing facility's points for the quality metric by twenty.

(b) If CMS assigned the nursing facility to the lowest percentile for the quality metric, reduce the number of the nursing facility's points for the quality metric to zero.

(3) A nursing facility's quality score shall be zero for a state fiscal year 2021 if it is not to receive a quality incentive payment for that state fiscal year because of division (D) of this section.

(D)(1) Except as provided in division (D)(2) of this section, a nursing facility shall not receive a quality incentive payment for a state fiscal year, other than the second half of state fiscal year 2020,2021 if the nursing facility's licensed occupancy percentage is less than eighty per cent.

(2) Division (D)(1) of this section does not apply to a nursing facility for a state fiscal year if either any of the following apply:

(a) The nursing facility has a quality score under division (C) of this section for the state fiscal year 2021 of at least fifteen points;

(b) The nursing facility was initially certified for participation in the medicaid program on or after January 1, 2019;

(c) Subject to division (D)(4) of this section, one or more of the beds that are part of the nursing facility's licensed capacity could not be used for resident care during calendar year 2019 due to causes beyond the reasonable control of the nursing facility's operator, including a force majeure event;

(d) Subject to division (D)(5) of this section, the nursing facility underwent a renovation during the period beginning January 1, 2018, and ending January 1, 2020, to which both of the following apply:

(i) The renovation involved capital expenditures of at least fifty thousand dollars, excluding expenditures for equipment, staffing, or operational costs.

(ii) The renovation directly impacted the area of the nursing facility in which the beds that are part of the nursing facility's licensed capacity are located.

(3) A nursing facility's licensed occupancy percentage for a state fiscal year the purpose of division (D)(1) of this section shall be determined as follows:

(a) Multiply the Determine the product of the following:

(i) The nursing facility's licensed capacity on the last day of the measurement period applicable to the state fiscal year by the number of days in that measurement period; as of December 31, 2019, as identified on the nursing facility's cost report filed with the department pursuant to section 5165.10 of the Revised Code;

(ii) Three hundred sixty-five.

(b) Divide the Determine the quotient of the following:

(i) The total number of the nursing facility's inpatient days for the measurement period applicable to the state fiscal year by the calendar year 2019, as identified on the nursing facility's cost report filed with the department pursuant to section 5165.10 of the Revised Code;

(ii) The product determined under division (D)(3)(a) of this section.

(c) Multiply the quotient determined under division (D)(3)(b) of this section by one hundred.

(4) For a nursing facility to be exempt from division (D)(1) of this section on account of division (D)(2)(c) of this section, the nursing facility's operator must provide to the department written documentation of the number of days during calendar year 2019 that one or more of the beds that are part of the nursing facility's licensed capacity could not be used and the specific reason why they could not be used.

(5) For a nursing facility to be exempt from division (D)(1) of this section on account of division (D)(2)(d) of this section, the nursing facility's operator must provide to the department written documentation that confirms the renovation and capital expenditures.

(E) A nursing facility shall not receive a quality incentive payment for state fiscal year 2021 if either of the following apply:

(1) The nursing facility's initial total per medicaid day payment rate for calendar year 2019 or state fiscal year 2021 is determined pursuant to section 5165.151 of the Revised Code.

(2) The nursing facility undergoes a change of operator during calendar year 2019 or state fiscal year 2021.

(F) The total amount to be spent on quality incentive payments for a state fiscal year 2021 shall be the followingdetermined as follows:

(1) For the second half of state fiscal year 2020, the amount determined as follows:

(a) Determine the following amount for each nursing facility, including those that do not receive a quality incentive payment because of division (D) of this section:

(i) The amount that is two and four-tenths per cent of the nursing facility's base rate for nursing facility services provided on January 1, 2020;

(ii) Multiply the amount determined under division (E)(1)(a)(i) of this section by the number of the nursing facility's medicaid days for the second half of calendar year 2018.

(b) Determine the sum of the products determined under division (E)(1)(a)(ii) of this section for all nursing facilities for which the product was determined for the second half of state fiscal year 2020.

(2) For all of state fiscal year 2021 and each state fiscal year thereafter, the amount determined as follows:

(a) (1) Determine the following amount for each nursing facility, including those that do not receive a quality incentive payment because of division (D) of this section:

(i) (a) The amount that is two five and four-tenths two-tenths per cent of the nursing facility's base rate for nursing facility services provided on the first day of the state fiscal year;

(ii) (b) Multiply the amount determined under division (E)(2)(a)(i) (F)(1)(a) of this section by the number of the nursing facility's medicaid days for the measurement period applicable to the state fiscal yearcalendar year 2019.

(b) (2) Determine the sum of the products determined under division (E)(2)(a) (F)(1)(b) of this section for all nursing facilities for which the product was determined for the state fiscal year.

Sec. 5166.01. As used in this chapter:

"209(b) option" means the option described in section 1902(f) of the "Social Security Act," 42 U.S.C. 1396a(f), under which the medicaid program's eligibility requirements for aged, blind, and disabled individuals are more restrictive than the eligibility requirements for the supplemental security income program.

"Administrative agency" means, with respect to a home and community-based services medicaid waiver component, the department of medicaid or, if a state agency or political subdivision contracts with the department under section 5162.35 of the Revised Code to administer the component, that state agency or political subdivision.

"Care management system" has the same meaning as in section 5167.01 of the Revised Code.

"Dual eligible individual" has the same meaning as in section 5160.01 of the Revised Code.

"Enrollee" has the same meaning as in section 5167.01 of the Revised Code.

"Expansion eligibility group" has the same meaning as in section 5163.01 of the Revised Code.

"Federal poverty line" has the same meaning as in section 5162.01 of the Revised Code.

"Home and community-based services medicaid waiver component" means a medicaid waiver component under which home and community-based services are provided as an alternative to hospital services, nursing facility services, or ICF/IID services.

"Hospital" has the same meaning as in section 3727.01 of the Revised Code.

"Hospital long-term care unit" has the same meaning as in section 5168.40 of the Revised Code.

"ICDS participant" has the same meaning as in section 5164.01 of the Revised Code.

"ICF/IID" and "ICF/IID services" have the same meanings as in section 5124.01 of the Revised Code.

"Integrated care delivery system" and "ICDS" have the same meanings as in section 5164.01 of the Revised Code.

"Level of care determination" means a determination of whether an individual needs the level of care provided by a hospital, nursing facility, or ICF/IID and whether the individual, if determined to need that level of care, would receive hospital services, nursing facility services, or ICF/IID services if not for a home and community-based services medicaid waiver component.

"Medicaid buy-in for workers with disabilities program" has the same meaning as in section 5163.01 of the Revised Code.

"Medicaid MCO plan" has the same meaning as in section 5167.01 of the Revised Code.

"Medicaid provider" has the same meaning as in section 5164.01 of the Revised Code.

"Medicaid services" has the same meaning as in section 5164.01 of the Revised Code.

"Medicaid waiver component" means a component of the medicaid program authorized by a waiver granted by the United States department of health and human services under the "Social Security Act," section 1115 or 1915, 42 U.S.C. 1315 or 1396n. "Medicaid waiver component" does not include the care management system.

"Medically fragile child" means an individual who is under eighteen years of age, has intensive health care needs, and is considered blind or disabled under section 1614(a)(2) or (3) of the "Social Security Act," 42 U.S.C. 1382c(a)(2) or (3).

"Medicare skilled nursing facility market basket index" has the same meaning as in section 5165.01 of the Revised Code.

"Nursing facility" and "nursing facility services" have the same meanings as in section 5165.01 of the Revised Code.

"Ohio home care waiver program" means the home and community-based services medicaid waiver component that is known as Ohio home care and was created pursuant to section 5166.11 of the Revised Code.

"Provider agreement" has the same meaning as in section 5164.01 of the Revised Code.

"Residential treatment facility" means a residential facility licensed by the department of mental health and addiction services under section 5119.34 of the Revised Code, or an institution certified by the department of job and family services under section 5103.03 of the Revised Code, that serves children and either has more than sixteen beds or is part of a campus of multiple facilities or institutions that, combined, have a total of more than sixteen beds.

"Skilled nursing facility" has the same meaning as in section 5165.01 of the Revised Code.

"Unified long-term services and support medicaid waiver component" means the medicaid waiver component authorized by section 5166.14 of the Revised Code.

Sec. 5540.03. (A) A transportation improvement district may:

(1) Adopt bylaws for the regulation of its affairs and the conduct of its business;

(2) Adopt an official seal;

(3) Sue and be sued in its own name, plead and be impleaded, provided any actions against the district shall be brought in the court of common pleas of the county in which the principal office of the district is located, or in the court of common pleas of the county in which the cause of action arose, and all summonses, exceptions, and notices of every kind shall be served on the district by leaving a copy thereof at its principal office with the secretary-treasurer;

(4) Purchase, construct, maintain, repair, sell, exchange, police, operate, or lease projects;

(5) Issue either or both of the following for the purpose of providing funds to pay the costs of any project or part thereof:

(a) Transportation improvement district revenue bonds;

(b) Bonds pursuant to Section 13 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution;.

(6) Maintain such funds as it considers necessary;

(7) Direct its agents or employees, when properly identified in writing and after at least five days' written notice, to enter upon lands within its jurisdiction to make surveys and examinations preliminary to the location and construction of projects for the district, without liability of the district or its agents or employees except for actual damage done;

(8) Make and enter into all contracts and agreements necessary or incidental to the performance of its functions and the execution of its powers under this chapter;

(9) Employ or retain or contract for the services of consulting engineers, superintendents, managers, and such other engineers, construction and accounting experts, financial advisers, trustees, marketing, remarketing, and administrative agents, attorneys, and other employees, independent contractors, or agents as are necessary in its judgment and fix their compensation, provided all such expenses shall be payable solely from the proceeds of bonds or from revenues;

(10) Receive and accept from the federal or any state or local government, including, but not limited to, any agency, entity, or instrumentality of any of the foregoing, loans and grants for or in aid of the construction, maintenance, or repair of any project, and receive and accept aid or contributions from any source or person of money, property, labor, or other things of value, to be held, used, and applied only for the purposes for which such loans, grants, and contributions are made. Nothing in division (A)(10) of this section shall be construed as imposing any liability on this state for any loan received by a transportation improvement district from a third party unless this state has entered into an agreement to accept such liability.

(11) Acquire, hold, and dispose of property in the exercise of its powers and the performance of its duties under this chapter;

(12) Establish and collect tolls or user charges for its projects;

(13) Subject to section 5540.18 of the Revised Code, enter into an agreement with a contiguous board of county commissioners other than the board of county commissioners that created the transportation improvement district, for the district to exercise all or any portion of its powers with respect to a project that is located wholly or partially within the county that is party to the agreement;

(14) Do all acts necessary and proper to carry out the powers expressly granted in this chapter.

(B)(1) Chapters 123., 124., 125., and 153., and 4115., and sections 9.331 to 9.335 and 307.86 of the Revised Code do not apply to contracts or projects of a transportation improvement district.

(2) A transportation improvement district is subject to sections 4115.03 to 4115.21 and 4115.99 of the Revised Code, unless the amount of state or local government funds, including, but not limited to, those provided by any agency, entity, or instrumentality of the state or a local government as described in division (A)(10) of this section received for the contract or project, is, in the aggregate, less than the amounts described in or calculated under section 4115.03 of the Revised Code.

Section 2. That existing sections 124.393, 307.86, 505.08, 731.14, 749.37, 5165.01, 5165.15, 5165.16, 5165.17, 5165.19, 5165.26, 5166.01, and 5540.03 of the Revised Code are hereby repealed.

Section 3. That section 5165.361 of the Revised Code is hereby repealed.

Section 4. That Section 333.270 of H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly is hereby repealed.

Section 5. All of the following apply to the Medicaid payment rates for nursing facility services provided on and after the effective date of this section and not to the Medicaid payment rates for those services provided before that date:

(A) The amendments by this act to sections 5165.01, 5165.16, 5165.17, 5165.19, and 5165.26 of the Revised Code;

(B) The repeal by this act of section 5165.361 of the Revised Code;

(C) The repeal by this act of Section 333.270 of Am. Sub. H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly.

Section 6. (A) As used in this section:

(1) "Subdivision" means a county, township, or municipal corporation, and does not include a park district.

(2) "Ineligible subdivision" means a county or municipal corporation receiving a direct payment under section 5001 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," as described in 42 U.S.C. 601(b)(2).

(3) "2019 LGF allocation" means the amount that would have been deposited to a county's county undivided local government fund in 2019 disregarding any reduction under section 5747.502 of the Revised Code and excluding any amounts deposited in that fund that were paid in that year to ineligible subdivisions or pursuant to section 5747.503 of the Revised Code.

(4) "2019 CULGF allocation" means the amount of funds from a county's county undivided local government fund a subdivision would have received in 2019 under section 5747.51 or 5747.53 of the Revised Code disregarding any reduction under section 5747.502 of the Revised Code and any adjustment because the subdivision, pursuant to an ordinance or resolution, elected to forgo all or a portion of its share of such funds.

(5) "Population" has the same meaning as in section 1.59 of the Revised Code.

(B) As soon as is practicable after the effective date of this section, the Director of Budget and Management, in consultation with the Tax Commissioner, shall provide for payment from the Coronavirus Relief Fund to each county treasury, to be deposited into a new fund in the county treasury to be named the county coronavirus relief distribution fund, which the county auditor shall create for this purpose. The amount of the payment to each county coronavirus relief distribution fund shall equal the amount appropriated under Section 13 of this act multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the 2019 LGF allocation for that county and the denominator of which is the sum of the 2019 LGF allocations for all counties.

(C) Within seven days of deposit in the county coronavirus relief distribution fund of the payment described in division (B) of this section, the county auditor shall distribute that money to the county, unless the county is an ineligible subdivision, and to each municipal corporation and township that is not an ineligible subdivision, in an amount equal to the amount of money in that fund multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which equals the subdivision's 2019 CULGF allocation and the denominator of which equals the sum of the 2019 CULGF allocations from that county's county undivided local government fund for all such subdivisions.

Upon making the distribution, the county auditor shall report to the Director of Budget and Management the amount distributed to each subdivision. The report shall be made in the manner prescribed by the Director.

(D) To be eligible to receive a payment under division (C) of this section, the legislative authority of a county, township, or municipal corporation must adopt a resolution or ordinance affirming that the funds so received may be expended only to cover costs of the subdivision consistent with the requirements of section 5001 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," as described in 42 U.S.C. 601(d), and any applicable regulations. Subject to division (F) of this section, until the legislative authority adopts this resolution or ordinance, the subdivision's share of the money from the county coronavirus relief distribution fund shall remain in that fund. The legislative authority shall certify a copy of the resolution or ordinance to the county auditor and the Director of Budget and Management.

(E) Money received under division (C) of this section by a subdivision shall be deposited into a new fund in the subdivision's treasury to be named the local coronavirus relief fund, which the subdivision's fiscal officer shall create for this purpose. Money in that fund shall be used to cover only costs of the subdivision consistent with the requirements of section 5001 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," as described in 42 U.S.C. 601(d). Money in a subdivision's local coronavirus relief fund shall be audited by the Auditor of State during the subdivision's next regular audit under section 117.11 of the Revised Code to determine whether money in the fund has been expended in accordance with the requirements of this section.

(F) Not later than October 15, 2020, the fiscal officer of each subdivision shall pay the unencumbered balance of money in the subdivision's local coronavirus relief fund to the county treasurer, who shall deposit this revenue in the county coronavirus relief distribution fund. On or before October 22, 2020, the county auditor shall distribute all money to the credit of the county coronavirus relief distribution fund as follows to the county and to each municipal corporation and township in that county, unless the subdivision is an ineligible subdivision or paid an unencumbered balance to the treasurer under this division or the subdivision's legislative authority has not adopted the resolution or ordinance required under division (D) of this section:

(1) Twenty-five per cent of the money to the county if it qualifies for a distribution under this division;

(2) The remaining balance to each such qualifying municipal corporation or township, of which the distribution to each shall equal the amount of the remaining balance multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the population of the municipal corporation or the unincorporated area of the township, and the denominator of which is the sum of the populations of all such municipal corporations and the unincorporated areas of all such townships in the county eligible to receive a payment under division (F) of this section.

Money received by a subdivision under division (F) of this section shall be deposited in the subdivision's local coronavirus relief fund and used as required under division (E) of this section.

Upon making the distribution under this division, the county auditor shall report to the Director of Budget and Management the amount of the unencumbered balance paid to the county treasury by each subdivision making such a payment and the amount distributed to each subdivision receiving a distribution under this division. If no subdivision made such a payment to the county treasury, the auditor shall report that no such payments were made. The report shall be made in the manner prescribed by the Director.

(G) Not later than December 28, 2020, the fiscal officer of each subdivision shall pay the balance of money in the subdivision's local coronavirus relief fund that remains unexpended on that date to the state treasury in the manner prescribed by the Director of Budget and Management.

(H) A county, municipal corporation, or township receiving a payment from a county coronavirus relief distribution fund under this section shall, upon request, provide any information related to those payments or their expenditure to the Director of Budget and Management.

Section 7. Notwithstanding any provision of Chapter 5751. of the Revised Code to the contrary, "gross receipts," as defined in section 5751.01 of the Revised Code, excludes receipts from any forgiven indebtedness that is excluded from the gross income of the taxpayer for federal income tax purposes pursuant to section 1106(i) of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act," 15 U.S.C. 9005(i).

Section 8. (A) As used in this section, "state employee" means any employee paid directly by warrant of the Director of Budget and Management who is not subject to a collective bargaining agreement entered into between a public employer and an employee organization in accordance with Chapter 4117. of the Revised Code.

(B) Notwithstanding any provision of section 124.152, 124.181, or 3901.07 of the Revised Code, or any other provision of the Revised Code to the contrary, and except as provided in division (C) of this section, during the pay period that includes July 1, 2020, through the pay period that includes June 30, 2021, if the Director of Budget and Management determines it to be necessary due to anticipated revenue shortfalls, the Director of Budget and Management may request the Director of Administrative Services to order that both of the following apply beginning on the date the Director of Administrative Services issues the order until the end of the pay period specified by the Director of Administrative Services or the end of the pay period that includes July 1, 2021, whichever is earlier:

(1) A state employee shall not receive an increase in the employee's pay rate, including any step increase or pay supplement, while the employee is serving in the same position the employee was serving in on or before the effective date of this section.

(2) A state employee who is hired, who changes positions, or whose position is reclassified on or after the effective date of this section shall be paid at the rate that applies to the position's classification during the pay period that includes June 7, 2020, and the employee shall not receive any increases in the employee's pay rate, including any step increases or pay supplements.

(C) Division (B) of this section does not do any of the following:

(1) Apply to a special hazard salary adjustment related to COVID-19 submitted to the Director of Administrative Services in accordance with division (F) of section 124.181 of the Revised Code;

(2) Limit the Governor's authority under section 126.05 of the Revised Code to issue necessary orders to the Director of Administrative Services to implement personnel actions;

(3) Subject to division (D) of this section, apply to any of the following employees:

(a) An employee of either house of the General Assembly or an employee of a legislative agency;

(b) An employee of the Supreme Court;

(c) An employee of the Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, or Attorney General.

(D) The Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, or Attorney General may elect to apply divisions (B)(1) and (2) to state employees employed by the Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, or Attorney General. If the Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, or Attorney General so elects, the Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, or Attorney General shall notify the Director of Administrative Services of the election in writing.

Section 9. (A) As used in this section:

(1) "Qualifying business" means a trade or business that has its principal place of business in this state and has fifty or fewer employees. Employees of a business's affiliates are employees of the business for the purpose of this division.

(2) "Business interruption" means a closure mandated by a state COVID-19 order, a voluntary closure to promote social distancing measures, or decreased customer demand attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic.

(3) "Affiliate" means a business that directly, or indirectly through one or more intermediaries, controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with, another business. For the purpose of this division, a business is "controlled by" another business if an owner or owners of the controlling business hold, directly or indirectly, the majority voting or ownership interest in the controlled business or have control over the day-to-day operations of the controlled business by contract or by law.

(4) "Federal aid received in connection with the COVID-19 pandemic" means any federal financial assistance received under any of the following:

(a) "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," Pub. L. No. 116-136;

(b) "Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2020," Pub. L. No. 116-23;

(c) "Families First Coronavirus Response Act," Pub. L. No. 116-127;

(d) "Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act," Pub. L. No. 116-139.

Economic impact payments distributed pursuant to section 2101 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," 26 U.S.C. 6428, are not "federal aid in connection with the COVID-19 pandemic" for the purpose of this section.

(5) "State COVID-19 order" means any of the following, issued on or after March 9, 2020, as the result of or in response to the COVID-19 pandemic:

(a) An executive order issued by the Governor;

(b) An order issued by the Director of Health under section 3701.13 of the Revised Code;

(c) Any other order authorized by the Revised Code issued by another state official or state agency.

(6) "Eligible costs" means a trade or business expense of a qualifying business either directly resulting from business interruption or arising from the decrease of gross revenue resulting from business interruption, except for any such expense paid or reimbursed pursuant to a COVID-19 related claim through business interruption insurance or federal aid received in connection with the COVID-19 pandemic.

(B) A subdivision that receives a payment from a county coronavirus relief distribution fund under division (C) or (F) of Section 6 of this act may use all or a portion of that payment to award grants to qualifying businesses for the purpose of reimbursing the businesses' eligible costs. The legislative authority of such a subdivision that determines to use all or a portion of such a payment in this manner shall adopt a resolution or ordinance creating the grant program and prescribing all of the following:

(1) The form and manner by which a qualifying business may apply for a grant. At minimum, each application shall include the following:

(a) The name and address of the qualifying business and the address of its place of business located in the subdivision;

(b) The number of individuals employed by the qualifying business and the business's affiliates;

(c) A detailed accounting of the business's eligible costs; and

(d) The eligible costs for which the grant money will be used.

(2) Standards for evaluating and prioritizing grant applications. The standards may account for the order in which the grant applications were received, a qualifying business's need for the grant relative to other applicants, the likelihood that the grant will allow the business to retain jobs in this state, and the overall economic impact of the grant on the qualifying business and the surrounding community.

(3) Reporting requirements for qualifying businesses that are awarded a grant sufficient to allow the subdivision to verify that grant proceeds are spent by business before December 28, 2020, on the eligible costs for which the grant was approved;

(4) The manner in which unspent and improperly spent grant proceeds are to be repaid by the grant recipient to the subdivision.

The subdivision shall certify this resolution or ordinance to the Director of Budget and Management.

(C)(1) The amount of the grant awarded to a qualifying business shall not exceed the amount of eligible costs listed in the business's application and approved by the subdivision. The cumulative amount of grants received by a qualifying business and its affiliates under this section from one or more subdivisions shall not exceed ten thousand dollars. Not more than one grant may be awarded on the basis of the same eligible cost. A subdivision may award a grant to a qualifying business only if it has a place of business located in the subdivision.

(2) A qualifying business that receives a grant shall comply with the reporting requirements prescribed by the subdivision that awarded the grant.

(3) Grant proceeds may be used only for the eligible costs for which the grant was approved. If the subdivision determines that the grant proceeds were not utilized in that manner, the qualifying business is liable for and shall pay to the subdivision an amount equal to the improper expenditure. Subject to division (D)(5) of this section, amounts repaid under this division shall be deposited to the subdivision's local coronavirus relief fund and may be used by the subdivision to award additional grants to qualifying businesses or for other expenditures permissible under Section 6 of this act.

(4) Not later than December 28, 2020, a qualifying business that received a grant under this section shall pay to the subdivision that awarded the grant an amount equal to the remaining balance of grant proceeds that have not been expended by the qualifying business for eligible costs as of that date. No repayment is required for grant proceeds spent by the qualifying business before that date on eligible costs for which the grant was approved.

(5) Amounts repaid to a subdivision under division (D)(3) of this section on or after December 28, 2020, and all amounts repaid to a subdivision under division (D)(4) of this section shall be paid immediately by the subdivision to the state treasury in the manner specified by the Director of Budget and Management.

(6) If a qualifying business fails to repay any unspent or improperly spent grant proceeds as required under division (D)(3) or (4) of this section, the subdivision that awarded the grant shall certify the unpaid amount to the Attorney General for collection under section 131.02 of the Revised Code.

(E) On or before January 15, 2021, the Director of Budget and Management shall submit a report on all of the subdivision grant programs authorized under this section to the General Assembly in accordance with section 101.68 of the Revised Code. The report shall identify each qualifying business that received a grant under these programs and itemize the eligible costs for which the grant was utilized. The Director may request, and each subdivision that established a grant program shall provide, any information that is necessary for the Director to compile the report.

(F) The General Assembly hereby determines that grants awarded to qualifying businesses under this section are "costs of the subdivision" for the purpose of Section 6 of this act, and are "necessary expenditures incurred due to the public health emergency with respect to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID19)" under section 5001 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," as described in 42 U.S.C. 601(d)(1), and any applicable regulations.

(G) A subdivision that receives a direct payment from the federal government under section 5001 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," as described in 42 U.S.C. 601(b)(2), may use all or a portion of that payment to award grants to small businesses in accordance with section 5001 of the "Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act," as described in 42 U.S.C. 601(d)(1), and any applicable regulations or federal guidance. Divisions (A) through (F) of this section do not apply to such a subdivision or to any business to which the subdivision awards a grant.

Section 10. (A) Notwithstanding sections 5709.43 and 5709.75 of the Revised Code, the legislative authority of a municipal corporation or a board of township trustees may do either or both of the following:

(1) On or after the effective date of this section but before the last day of the municipal corporation's or township's fiscal year that ends in or with 2020, appropriate and expend the sum of not more than twenty-five per cent of the unencumbered money in the municipal public improvement tax increment equivalent fund, urban redevelopment tax increment equivalent fund, or township public improvement tax increment equivalent fund, as applicable, as of that effective date, plus not more than twenty-five per cent of any amount deposited to that fund during the remainder of that fiscal year, to be used as authorized in division (B) of this section;

(2) On or after the first day of the municipal corporation's or township's fiscal year ending in or with 2021 but before the last day of that fiscal year, appropriate and expend the sum of not more than twenty-five per cent of the unencumbered balance of the municipal public improvement tax increment equivalent fund, urban redevelopment tax increment equivalent fund, or township public improvement tax increment equivalent fund, as applicable, as of the first day of that fiscal year, plus not more than twenty-five per cent of any amount deposited to that fund during that fiscal year, to be used as authorized in division (B) of this section.

(B) Money appropriated and expended under division (A)(1) or (2) of this section shall be used solely to pay current public safety expenses or road and bridge maintenance expenses of the subdivision that are not eligible to be paid or reimbursed with funds received by the subdivision pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 601 and Section 6 of this act.

(C) A municipal corporation or township appropriating and expending money under division (A)(1) or (2) of this section shall reimburse the fund from which the appropriation or expenditure was made for the sum so appropriated and expended from funds received by the subdivision pursuant to federal legislation that may be used to pay for or reimburse those expenses, but only if and to the extent those funds are available. No reimbursement shall be required if such funds are not received before the date the applicable exemption granted under the resolution adopted under section 5709.40, 5709.41, or 5709.73 of the Revised Code expires.

Section 11. That Section 333.10 of H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly be amended to read as follows:

Sec. 333.10.



1

2

3

4

5

A

MCD DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAID

B

General Revenue Fund

C

GRF

651425

Medicaid Program Support - State

$ 164,132,342

$ 170,223,643

D

GRF

651426

Positive Education Program Connections

$ 2,500,000

$ 2,500,000

E

GRF

651525

Medicaid Health Care Services

F



State

$ 4,153,141,174

$ 4,733,728,704

4,734,928,704

G



Federal

$ 9,959,196,340

$ 11,152,542,781

11,154,542,781

H



Medicaid Health Care Services Total

$ 14,112,337,514

$ 15,886,271,485

15,889,471,485

I

GRF

651526

Medicare Part D

$ 490,402,102

$ 533,290,526

J

GRF

651529

Brigid's Path Pilot

$ 500,000

$ 500,000

K

GRF

651533

Food Farmacy Pilot Project

$ 250,000

$ 250,000

L

TOTAL GRF General Revenue Fund

M



State

$ 4,810,925,618

$ 5,440,492,873

5,441,692,873

N



Federal

$ 9,959,196,340

$ 11,152,542,781

11,154,542,781

O



GRF Total

$ 14,770,121,958

$ 16,593,035,654

16,596,235,654

P

Dedicated Purpose Fund Group

Q

4E30

651605

Resident Protection Fund

$ 3,910,338

$ 4,013,000

R

5AN0

651686

Care Innovation and Community Improvement Program

$ 53,435,797

$ 53,406,291

S

5DL0

651639

Medicaid Services - Recoveries

$ 741,454,299

$ 781,970,233

T

5DL0

651685

Medicaid Recoveries – Program Support

$ 40,351,245

$ 44,375,000

U

5DL0

651690

Multi-system Youth Custody Relinquishment

$ 6,000,000

$ 12,000,000

V

5FX0

651638

Medicaid Services - Payment Withholding

$ 12,000,000

$ 12,000,000

W

5GF0

651656

Medicaid Services - Hospital Upper Payment Limit

$ 822,016,219

$ 887,150,856

X

5R20

651608

Medicaid Services - Long Term

$ 420,154,000

$ 425,554,000

Y

5SC0

651683

Medicaid Services – Physician UPL

$ 7,520,000

$ 7,645,000

Z

5TN0

651684

Medicaid Services - HIC Fee

$ 834,564,060

$ 806,187,400

AA

6510

651649

Medicaid Services - Hospital Care Assurance Program

$ 249,167,065

$ 168,310,123

AB

TOTAL DPF Dedicated Purpose Fund Group

$ 3,205,573,023

3,190,573,023

$ 3,232,611,903

3,202,611,903

AC

Holding Account Fund Group

AD

R055

651644

Refunds and Reconciliation

$ 1,000,000

$ 1,000,000

AE

TOTAL HLD Holding Account Fund Group

$ 1,000,000

$ 1,000,000

AF

Federal Fund Group

AG

3ER0

651603

Medicaid and Health Transformation Technology

$ 48,031,056

$ 48,340,000

AH

3F00

651623

Medicaid Services - Federal

$ 6,563,381,020

$ 6,596,507,934

AI

3F00

651624

Medicaid Program Support - Federal

$ 516,667,497

$ 527,369,363

AJ

3FA0

$

Health Care Grants - Federal

$ 11,988,670

$ 12,000,000

AK

3G50

651655

Medicaid Interagency Pass Through

$ 225,701,597

$ 225,701,597

AL

TOTAL FED Federal Fund Group

$ 7,365,769,840

$ 7,409,918,894

AM

TOTAL ALL BUDGET FUND GROUPS

$ 25,342,464,821

25,327,464,821

$ 27,236,566,451

27,209,766,451


Section 12. That existing Section 333.10 of H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly is hereby repealed.

Section 13. All appropriation items in this section are appropriated out of money in the state treasury to the credit of the Coronavirus Relief Fund (Fund 5CV1). For all appropriations made in this section, the amounts in the first column are for fiscal year 2020 and the amounts in the second column are for fiscal year 2021. The appropriations made in this section are in addition to any other appropriations made for the FY 2020-FY 2021 biennium.



1

2

3

4

5

A

OBM OFFICE OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT

B

Dedicated Purpose Fund Group

C

5CV1

042501

Coronavirus Relief - Local Govt

$ 350,000,000

$ 0

D

TOTAL DPF

Dedicated Purpose Fund Group

$ 350,000,000

$ 0

E

TOTAL ALL BUDGET FUND GROUPS

$ 350,000,000

$ 0


Amounts appropriated in line item 042501, Coronavirus Relief - Local Govt, are to be distributed and used as specified in Section 6 of this act. Amounts appropriated in line item 042501, Coronavirus Relief - Local Govt, may also be used to award grants in accordance with Section 9 of this act. Any unencumbered and unexpended amounts left at the end of fiscal year 2020 are hereby reappropriated in fiscal year 2021.

Within the limits set forth in this act, the Director of Budget and Management shall establish accounts indicating the source and amount of funds for each appropriation made in this act, and shall determine the form and manner in which appropriation accounts shall be maintained. Expenditures from appropriations contained in this act shall be accounted for as though made in H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly.

The appropriations made in this act are subject to all provisions of H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly that are generally applicable to such appropriations.

Section 201.10. Except as otherwise provided in this act, all appropriation items in this act are appropriated out of any moneys in the state treasury to the credit of the designated fund that are not otherwise appropriated.

Section 203.10. ADJ ADJUTANT GENERAL



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Army National Guard Service Contract Fund (Fund 3420)

C

C74537

Renovation Projects - Federal Share

$ 4,000,000

D

TOTAL Army National Guard Service Contract Fund

$ 4,000,000

E

Air National Guard Federal Construction Fund (Fund 3HJ0)

F

C74545

Mansfield Taxiway Federal

$ 1,151,550

G

TOTAL Air National Guard Federal Construction Fund

$ 1,151,550

H

Ohio Military Facilities Fund (Fund 5RV0)

I

C74547

Mansfield Taxiway OMFC

$ 2,051,550

J

TOTAL Ohio Military Facilities Fund

$ 2,051,550

K

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

L

C74535

Renovations and Improvements

$ 2,200,000

M

C74541

Armory Technology Infrastructure

$ 90,000

N

C74555

Rickenbacker Runway Project

$ 139,000

O

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 2,429,000

P

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 9,632,100


RICKENBACKER RUNWAY PROJECT

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C74555, Rickenbacker Runway Project, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C74555, Rickenbacker Runway Project, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C23065, Rickenbacker Boyhood Home.

Section 205.10. AGO ATTORNEY GENERAL



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C05502

Bowling Green Facility

$ 300,000

D

C05515

Data Center Renovations

$ 895,020

E

C05517

General Building Renovations

$ 280,558

F

C05521

BCI London Renovations

$ 849,638

G

C05523

Security Improvements

$ 92,950

H

C05525

Richfield HVAC

$ 2,354,393

I

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 4,772,559

J

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 4,772,559



Section 207.10. DEPARTMENT OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND STATE INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

BOR DEPARTMENT OF HIGHER EDUCATION

C

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

D

C23501

Ohio Supercomputer Center

$ 1,972,217

E

C23502

Research Facility Action and Investment Funds

$ 5,179,992

F

C23506

Third Frontier Project

$ 635,579

G

C23529

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 2,000,000

H

C23530

Technology Initiatives

$ 1,734,732

I

C23532

OARnet

$ 6,728,650

J

C23551

Ohio Innovation Exchange

$ 400,000

K

C23560

HEI Critical Maintenance and Upgrades

$ 4,183,900

L

C23563

Ohio Cyber Range

$ 2,461,227

M

C23564

Ohio Aerospace Institute Improvements

$ 150,000

N

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 25,446,297

O

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 25,446,297


RESEARCH FACILITY ACTION AND INVESTMENT FUNDS

Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C23502, Research Facility Action and Investment Funds, shall be used for a program of grants to be administered by the Department of Higher Education to provide timely availability of capital facilities for research programs and research-oriented instructional programs at or involving state-supported and state-assisted institutions of higher education.

THIRD FRONTIER PROJECT

The foregoing appropriation item C23506, Third Frontier Project, shall be used to acquire, renovate, or construct facilities and purchase equipment for research programs, technology development, product development, and commercialization programs at, or involving, state-supported and state-assisted institutions of higher education. The funds shall be used to make grants awarded on a competitive basis, and shall be administered by the Third Frontier Commission. Expenditure of these funds shall comply with Section 2n of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution, and sections 151.01 and 151.04 of the Revised Code for the period beginning July 1, 2020, and ending June 30, 2022.

The Third Frontier Commission shall develop guidelines relative to the application for and selection of projects funded from appropriation item C23506, Third Frontier Project. The Commission may develop these guidelines in consultation with other interested parties. The Department of Higher Education and all state-assisted and state-supported institutions of higher education shall take all actions necessary to implement grants awarded by the Third Frontier Commission.

WORKFORCE BASED TRAINING AND EQUIPMENT

(A) Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C23529, Workforce Based Training and Equipment, shall be used to support the Regionally Aligned Priorities in Developing Skills (RAPIDS) program in the Department of Higher Education. The purpose of the RAPIDS program is to support collaborative projects among higher education institutions to strengthen education and training opportunities that maximize workforce development efforts in defined areas of the state.

(B) Capital funds reappropriated for this purpose by the General Assembly shall be distributed by the Chancellor of Higher Education to Ohio regions or subsets of regions. Regions or subsets of regions may be defined by the state's economic development strategy.

(C) The Chancellor shall award capital funds within the program using an application and review process, as developed by the Chancellor. In reviewing applications and making awards, priority shall be given to proposals that demonstrate:

(1) Collaboration among and between state institutions of higher education, as defined in section 3345.011 of the Revised Code, Ohio Technical Centers, and other entities as determined to be appropriate by the Chancellor;

(2) Evidence of meaningful business support and engagement;

(3) Identification of targeted occupations and industries supported by data, which sources may include the Governor's Office of Workforce Transformation, OhioMeansJobs, labor market information from the Department of Job and Family Services, and lists of in-demand occupations;

(4) Sustainability beyond the grant period with the opportunity to provide continued value and impact to the region.

(D) In submitting proposals for consideration under the program, a state institution of higher education, as defined in section 3345.011 of the Revised Code, shall be the lead applicant and preference shall be given to proposals in which equipment and technology acquired by capital funds awarded under the program are owned by a state institution of higher education. If equipment,technology, or facilities acquired by capital funds awarded under the program will be owned by a separate governmental or nonprofit entity, the state institution of higher education shall enter into a joint use agreement with the entity, which shall be approved by the Chancellor.

Section 207.12. BTC BELMONT TECHNICAL COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C36800

Basic Renovations

$ 644,054

D

C36806

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 345,266

E

C36809

Industrial Trades Center

$ 195,561

F

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 1,184,881

G

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 1,184,881



Section 207.14. BGU BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C24000

Basic Renovations

$ 66,662

D

C24001

Basic Renovations - Firelands

$ 390,068

E

C24035

Library Depository Northwest

$ 464,726

F

C24037

Academic Buildings Rehabilitation

$ 5,366,879

G

C24042

Water Quality Lab Equipment

$ 1,805

H

C24048

K-12/Higher Education Technology Enhancement Initiative

$ 10,059

I

C24059

Technology Building Renovation

$ 2,000,000

J

C24062

Cedar Fair Hospitality Program

$ 800,000

K

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 9,100,199

L

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 9,100,199


ACADEMIC BUILDINGS REHABILITATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C24037, Academic Buildings Rehabilitation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C24037, Academic Buildings Rehabilitation, plus $10,501, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C24046, Moseley Hall Science Labs. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Bowling Green State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $10,501.

K-12/HIGHER EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY ENHANCEMENT INITIATIVE

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C24048, K-12/Higher Education Technology Enhancement Initiative, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C24048, K-12/Higher Education Technology Enhancement Initiative, plus $28,260. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Bowling Green State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $28,260.

Section 207.16. COT CENTRAL OHIO TECHNICAL COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C36920

COTC Pataskala Campus Renovation Planning/Design

$ 2,874,973

D

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,874,973

E

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,874,973


Section 207.18. CSU CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C25515

Information Technology Network and Infrastructure

$ 6,775

D

C25516

Campus-wide Chillers and HVAC Replacements

$ 30,167

E

C25517

Brown Library Modernization Phase 2

$ 3,636

F

C25518

Security and Lighting

$ 138,157

G

C25520

Campus Security Update

$ 100,000

H

C25521

Classroom Technology Upgrades

$ 1,032,500

I

C25522

ADA Upgrades

$ 4,508

J

C25523

HVAC and Chiller Renewal

$ 11,163

K

C25524

Historic YWCA Dayton Building Renovation

$ 725,000

L

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,051,906

M

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,051,906


HVAC AND CHILLER RENEWAL

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C25523, HVAC and Chiller Renewal, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C25523, HVAC and Chiller Renewal, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C25510, Central State University Center, and C25513, Direct Metal Sintering (3-D) Manufacturing Initiative.

Section 207.20. CTC CINCINNATI STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C36101

Basic Renovations

$ 9,420

D

C36124

STEM Laboratory Renovations

$ 16,606

E

C36127

Center for Workforce Innovation and Education

$ 1,098,187

F

C36128

Mt. Healthy Facility

$ 13,500

G

C36134

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 70,493

H

C36135

Student Completion and Career Services One-Stop Center

$ 787,944

I

C36136

Energy Efficiency and Savings Projects

$ 253,714

J

C36137

Greater Cincinnati Manufacturing Careers Accelerator Additive Design and Materials Testing Innovations

$ 981,300

K

C36139

Hamilton County Agricultural Facility Improvements

$ 50,000

L

C36140

Main Building Renovations

$ 4,177,010

M

C36141

IT System Upgrades

$ 2,056,751

N

C36142

Mercy Health Dental Residency Operation Rooms

$ 500,000

O

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 10,014,925

P

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 10,014,925



Section 207.22. CLT CLARK STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38520

Springfield Downtown Parking Facility

$ 2,550,000

D

C38527

Rhodes Hall and Applied Science Center Renovation

$ 685,191

E

C38531

Greene County Career Center Take Flight Initiative

$ 850,000

F

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 4,085,191

G

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 4,085,191


RHODES HALL AND APPLIED SCIENCE CENTER RENOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C38527, Rhodes Hall and Applied Science Center Renovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C38527, Rhodes Hall and Applied Science Center Renovation, plus $6,990. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Clark State Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $6,990.

Section 207.24. CLS CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C26008

Geographic Information Systems

$ 4,951

D

C26022

Campus Fire Alarm Upgrade

$ 15,575

E

C26064

Engaged Learning Laboratories

$ 908,242

F

C26065

Main Classroom Renovation

$ 2,293,958

G

C26069

Cleveland Institute of Art Campus Unification Project

$ 550,000

H

C26070

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 10,202

I

C26072

Fenn Hall Addition Project

$ 190,322

J

C26073

School of Film, Television, and Interactive Media

$ 280,336

K

C26079

Rhodes Tower Restroom Renovation

$ 168,661

L

C26080

University Hospitals Harrington Heart and Vascular Institute

$ 350,000

M

C26082

Campus Wide Elevator Modifications

$ 1,313,200

N

C26086

Mandel Jewish Community Center

$ 210,000

O

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 6,295,447

P

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 6,295,447


ENGAGED LEARNING LABORATORIES

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C26064, Engaged Learning Laboratories, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C26064, Engaged Learning Laboratories, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C26002, 17th-18th Street Block.

MAIN CLASSROOM RENOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C26065, Main Classroom Renovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C26065, Main Classroom Renovation, plus $39,046. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Cleveland State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $39,046.

MANDEL JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C26086, Mandel Jewish Community Center, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C26086, Mandel Jewish Community Center, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C58020, Mandel Jewish Community Center.

Section 207.26. CTI COLUMBUS STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38429

Delaware Entrepreneur Center

$ 50,000

D

C38435

Student Success Renovations

$ 50,000

E

C38436

Building Repairs

$ 400,000

F

C38437

Building Infrastructure Repairs

$ 600,000

G

C38438

Accessibility Upgrades

$ 200,000

H

C38439

Academic/Student Space Upgrades

$ 100,000

I

C38440

Delaware Entrepreneurial Center at Ohio Wesleyan

$ 100,000

J

C38441

Freedom Cafe Project

$ 100,000

K

C38442

The Point at Otterbein University

$ 275,000

L

C38443

Central Ohio Job Skills and Workforce Developmental Center in Whitehall

$ 400,000

M

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,275,000

N

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,275,000



Section 207.28. CCC CUYAHOGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C37805

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 239,439

D

C37838

Structural Concrete Repairs

$ 473,275

E

C37839

Roof Repair and Replacements

$ 187,234

F

C37840

Workforce Economic Development Renovations

$ 65,788

G

C37844

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum 2.0

$ 400,000

H

C37852

East Campus Exterior Plaza

$ 1,000

I

C37853

CWRU Dental Clinic Relocation

$ 200,000

J

C37854

Cleveland Sight Center Health Record System Modernization

$ 150,000

K

C37855

Harvard Community Services Center Improvements

$ 75,000

L

C37856

MetroHealth West 25th Street Corridor Revitalization

$ 750,000

M

C37859

Bay Village Emergency Boat Shelter

$ 32,500

N

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,574,236

O

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,574,236


EAST CAMPUS EXTERIOR PLAZA

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C37852, East Campus Exterior Plaza, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C37852, East Campus Exterior Plaza, plus $64,522. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Cuyahoga Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $64,522.

Section 207.30. JTC EASTERN GATEWAY COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38607

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 518,092

D

C38618

Student Success Center

$ 15,318

E

C38620

Safety, Security, and Accessibility Upgrade

$ 5,000

F

C38621

Mahoning Valley Community Healthcare Training Center

$ 100,000

G

C38622

Eastwood Field Improvements

$ 200,000

H

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 838,410

I

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 838,410


STUDENT SUCCESS CENTER

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C38618, Student Success Center, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C38618, Student Success Center, plus $8,828. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Eastern Gateway Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $8,828.

Section 207.32. ESC EDISON STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C39000

Basic Renovations

$ 370,991

D

C39014

Access Improvements

$ 5,165

E

C39015

Information Technology Upgrades

$ 256,686

F

C39016

Roof Repair and Replacements

$ 364,921

G

C39017

Electronic Lock System

$ 10,429

H

C39018

HVAC Repair and Replacements

$ 431,028

I

C39019

Parking Lot Resurfacing

$ 73,758

J

C39020

Security Cameras

$ 139,502

K

C39021

Computer Center/Edison Infrastructure Protection/Renovation

$ 89,045

L

C39022

Classroom and Laboratory Renovation

$ 250,000

M

C39023

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 104,666

N

C39024

Arcanum Butler Agricultural Education Initiative

$ 150,000

O

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,246,191

P

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,246,191



Section 207.34. HTC HOCKING TECHNICAL COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C36313

Perry County Community Health at Hocking

$ 200,000

D

C36320

Chiller and Plumbing Repairs

$ 50,941

E

C36321

Workforce Development and Training Center Renovation

$ 755,000

F

C36323

Equestrian and Veterinary Workforce Facilities Renovation

$ 1,865,600

G

C36324

Dental Hygiene Workforce Facilities Renovation

$ 75,171

H

C36326

Technology Media Workforce Center

$ 600,000

I

C36327

Public Safety and Natural Resources Program Laboratory Renovation and Expansion

$ 1,100,742

J

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 4,647,454

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 4,647,454


EQUESTRIAN AND VETERINARY WORKFORCE FACILITIES RENOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C36323, Equestrian and Veterinary Workforce Facilities Renovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C36323, Equestrian and Veterinary Workforce Facilities Renovation, plus $104,159. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Hocking Technical College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $104,159.

Section 207.36. LTC JAMES RHODES STATE COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38100

Basic Renovations

$ 500,000

D

C38109

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 25,000

E

C38116

Center for Health Science Education and Innovation

$ 7,000,000

F

C38117

IT Infrastructure

$ 1,100,000

G

C38119

Completion Plan Outcome - Toolbox

$ 70,000

H

C38122

Campus and Classroom Safety Upgrades

$ 100,000

I

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 8,795,000

J

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 8,795,000


CENTER FOR HEALTH SCIENCE EDUCATION AND INNOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C38116, Center for Health Science Education and Innovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C38116, Center For Health Science Education and Innovation, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C38113, Cook Hall Renovations and C38118, Road and Parking Resurfacing.

Section 207.38. KSU KENT STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund (Fund 7024)

C

C270H7

LCM Material Science Hood Control - Taxable

$ 1,000

D

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund

$ 1,000

E

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

F

C27003

Classroom Building Renovations - East Liverpool

$ 1,590

G

C27079

Blossom Music Center

$ 3,800,000

H

C270F3

Severance Hall Improvements

$ 3,850,000

I

C270G3

Campus Fire Alarm System Replacements

$ 52,950

J

C270H2

Founders Hall HVAC Upgrades - Tuscarawas

$ 3,000

K

C270H3

Founders Hall Partial Roof Replacement - Tuscarawas

$ 15,000

L

C270H5

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 70,102

M

C270I1

Design Innovation Center

$ 150,000

N

C270I2

Rockwell Hall Roof Replacement

$ 100,000

O

C270I3

Research Laboratory Build-outs

$ 179,468

P

C270I4

Henderson Hall HVAC and ADA Improvements

$ 750,000

Q

C270I5

White Hall Rehabilitation

$ 650,000

R

C270I7

Library Asbestos Abatement and Restroom Installation - Ashtabula

$ 800,000

S

C270I8

Purinton Hall Roof Replacement - East Liverpool

$ 300,000

T

C270I9

Main Classroom Building Partial Roof Replacement - Salem

$ 30,000

U

C270J1

Main Classroom Building Window Replacement - Geauga

$ 10,000

V

C270J2

Link Building Windows and Tech Building Partial Roof - Trumbull

$ 10,000

W

C270J4

Notre Dame College Performing Arts Center Renovations

$ 50,000

X

C270J6

Buckeye Career Center Energy Operations Classroom Facility Renovation

$ 350,000

Y

C270J9

Kent Stage Theater Restoration Project

$ 100,000

Z

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 11,272,110

AA

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 11,273,110


CAMPUS FIRE ALARM SYSTEM REPLACEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C270G3, Campus Fire Alarm System Replacements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C270G3, Campus Fire Alarm System Replacements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C270J8, Basic Renovation - Taxable.

Section 207.40. LCC LAKELAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C37900

Basic Renovations

$ 270,240

D

C37911

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 202,468

E

C37918

Welding Laboratory Program Expansion

$ 417,330

F

C37919

Engineering Building Renovations

$ 4,000,000

G

C37920

Student Success Center

$ 189,632

H

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 5,079,670

I

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 5,079,670


BASIC RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C37900, Basic Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C37900, Basic Renovations, plus $32,753. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Lakeland Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $32,753.

Section 207.42. LOR LORAIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38315

Manufacturing Innovation Center Renovation

$ 1,100,000

D

C38318

IT Upgrades

$ 749,260

E

C38320

South Lorain Boys and Girls Club Education and Wellness Center

$ 75,000

F

C38321

Mercy Regional Behavioral Health Access Center

$ 325,000

G

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,249,260

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,249,260



Section 207.44. MTC MARION TECHNICAL COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C35909

Academic Program and Career Counseling Expansion

$ 2,128

D

C35912

Bryson Hall Renovations

$ 300,636

E

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 302,764

F

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 302,764



Section 207.46. MUN MIAMI UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C28502

Basic Renovations - Hamilton

$ 51,971

D

C28503

Basic Renovations - Middletown

$ 157,612

E

C28505

Cooperative Regional Library Depository Southwest

$ 83,501

F

C28580

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 5,826

G

C28581

Pearson Hall Renovation

$ 434,236

H

C28590

Boys and Girls Club of Hamilton

$ 400,000

I

C28591

Butler Tech Manufacturing Center

$ 200,000

J

C28592

Middletown Regional Airport Aviation Workforce Training Center

$ 750,000

K

C28593

Hillel Building Improvements

$ 400,000

L

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,483,146

M

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,483,146


BASIC RENOVATIONS - HAMILTON

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C28502, Basic Renovations - Hamilton, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C28502, Basic Renovations - Hamilton, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C28523, Special Academic/Administrative Projects - Hamilton.

BASIC RENOVATIONS - MIDDLETOWN

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C28503, Basic Renovations - Middletown, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C28503, Basic Renovations - Middletown, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C28525, Special Academic/Administrative Projects - Middletown and C28560, Academic/Administrative and Renovation Projects.

Section 207.48. NCC NORTH CENTRAL TECHNICAL COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38000

Basic Renovations

$ 14,333

D

C38010

Kehoe Center Infrastructure Renovation

$ 157,527

E

C38012

Health Sciences Center Renovations

$ 1,441

F

C38014

IT Data Infrastructure Upgrade Project

$ 58,086

G

C38018

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 2,837

H

C38019

Kee Hall Renovation

$ 196,079

I

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 430,303

J

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 430,303



Section 207.50. NEM NORTHEAST OHIO MEDICAL UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C30500

Basic Renovations

$ 3,559

D

C30501

Cooperative Regional Library Depository Northeast

$ 60,000

E

C30535

Electrical Panels Infrastructure Replacement and Upgrade

$ 100,000

F

C30538

University Hospitals Geauga Medical Center

$ 900,000

G

C30539

Cleveland Clinic Children's Outpatient Therapy Services Medina

$ 750,000

H

C30540

Pro Football Hall of Fame

$ 1,000,000

I

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,813,559

J

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,813,559


BASIC RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30500, Basic Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30500, Basic Renovations, plus $171,929. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Northeast Ohio Medical University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $171,929.

Section 207.52. NTC NORTHWEST STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38210

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 263,924

D

C38217

Napoleon Civic Center

$ 100,000

E

C38219

Building B Renovations

$ 2,329,873

F

C38220

Mercy College Learning Commons and Classroom Expansion

$ 200,000

G

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,893,797

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,893,797



Section 207.54. OSU OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C315AZ

Neuromodulation Clinical Expansion

$ 278,734

D

C315BR

Replacement Emergency Generators

$ 1,334,861

E

C315D2

Supercomputer Center Expansion

$ 11,120

F

C315DE

Ohio Library and Information Network

$ 1,674

G

C315DM

Roof Repair and Replacements

$ 5,223,634

H

C315DN

Fire System Replacements

$ 4,134,044

I

C315DP

HVAC Repair and Replacements

$ 13,084,042

J

C315DQ

Elevator Safety Repairs and Replacements

$ 4,486,250

K

C315DR

Infrastructure Improvements

$ 569,200

L

C315DS

Building Envelope Repair

$ 371,351

M

C315DT

Plumbing Repair

$ 945,475

N

C315DU

Road/Bridge Improvements

$ 4,067,118

O

C315DX

Thorne Hall - Wooster

$ 156,000

P

C315EF

HVAC Repair and Replacements - Lima

$ 249,608

Q

C315EH

Campus Security Improvement - Lima

$ 40,669

R

C315EK

OSU African-American Studies Extension Center

$ 1,000,000

S

C315EZ

Dynamic Materials Instrument

$ 18,681

T

C315FC

Postle Partial Replacement

$ 260,000

U

C315FD

Electrical Repairs

$ 2,488,080

V

C315FE

Standby Generators - Lima

$ 257,000

W

C315FQ

Founder's Hall Renovation Planning - Newark

$ 3,220,532

X

C315FV

Mathematical Biosciences

$ 12,568

Y

C315GA

Celeste Lab Renovation

$ 22,321,066

Z

C315GB

Hamilton Hall Renovation

$ 14,403,070

AA

C315GC

Newton Hall Renovation/ Addition

$ 6,909,332

AB

C315GD

Reed Hall Restroom Renovations - Lima

$ 263,869

AC

C315GE

Parking Lot/Sidewalk Renovations - Lima

$ 53,057

AD

C315GF

Outdoor Lighting Renovations - Lima

$ 645,500

AE

C315GG

Conard Hall Chemistry Labs Renovation - Mansfield

$ 1,716,887

AF

C315GH

Alber Student Center Renovation - Marion

$ 1,725,547

AG

C315GJ

Asphalt Paving Renovations - Marion

$ 620,000

AH

C315GK

Building Envelope and Walk Renovations - Marion

$ 326,218

AI

C315GO

Canine Companions Regional Training Facility

$ 750,000

AJ

C315GP

Smart Columbus Experience Center

$ 500,000

AK

C315GR

Heath Port Authority Primary Standards Lab

$ 250,000

AL

C315GS

Boys and Girls Club Marion County Teen Center Improvements

$ 50,000

AM

C315GT

Raemelton Therapeutic Equestrian Center Greenhouse Project

$ 90,000

AN

C315GU

Union County Automotive and Mobility Center

$ 1,500,000

AO

C315GW

Sea Grant – Stone Laboratory

$ 2,143,446

AP

C315H3

OARnet

$ 9,457

AQ

C315S4

Library Depository – Central

$ 28,631

AR

C315T9

Basic Renovations - OARDC

$ 1,000

AS

C315X2

Integrated Technical Infrastructure

$ 23,382

AT

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 96,541,103

AU

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 96,541,103


SUPERCOMPUTER CENTER EXPANSION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315D2, Supercomputer Center Expansion, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315D2, Supercomputer Center Expansion, plus $261,239. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $261,239.

HVAC REPAIR AND REPLACEMENTS - LIMA

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315EF, HVAC Repair and Replacements - Lima, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315EF, HVAC Repair and Replacements - Lima, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315FG, Reed Hall Roof - Lima.

OSU AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDIES EXTENSION CENTER

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315EK, OSU African-American Studies Extension Center, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315EK, OSU African-American Studies Extension Center, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315U8, OSU African-American and African Studies.

FOUNDER'S HALL RENOVATION PLANNING - NEWARK

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315FQ, Founder's Hall Renovation Planning - Newark, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315FQ, Founder's Hall Renovation Planning - Newark, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315FN, Basic Renovations - Newark.

CELESTE LAB RENOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315GA, Celeste Lab Renovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315GA, Celeste Lab Renovation, plus $206,754, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315BF, Boiler Replacement. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $206,754.

CONARD HALL CHEMISTRY LABS RENOVATION - MANSFIELD

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315GG, Conard Hall Chemistry Labs Renovation - Mansfield, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315GG, Conard Hall Chemistry Labs Renovation - Mansfield, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315FH, Conard 2nd Floor Renovations - Mansfield.

BUILDING ENVELOPE AND WALK RENOVATIONS - MARION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315GK, Building Envelope and Walk Renovations - Marion, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315GK, Building Envelope and Walk Renovations - Marion, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C315FK, Morrill Hall Renovations - Marion and C315CA, Morrill Hall Renovation - Marion.

OARNET

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315H3, OARnet, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315H3, OARnet, plus $78,103. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $78,103.

BASIC RENOVATIONS - OARDC

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315T9, Basic Renovations - OARDC, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315T9, Basic Renovations - OARDC, plus $6,578. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $6,578.

INTEGRATED TECHNICAL INFRASTRUCTURE

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C315X2, Integrated Technical Infrastructure, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C315X2, Integrated Technical Infrastructure, plus $25,472. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $25,472.

Section 207.56. OHU OHIO UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C30025

Southeast Library Warehouse

$ 50,890

D

C30037

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 120,944

E

C30075

Infrastructure Improvements

$ 1,651,257

F

C30136

Building Envelope Restorations

$ 3,098,077

G

C30151

Zanesville Building/ Infrastructure Renewal

$ 179,926

H

C30157

Building and Safety Systems Improvements

$ 5,441,759

I

C30158

Academic Space Improvements

$ 14,386,927

J

C30160

Chillicothe Building/ Infrastructure Renewal

$ 1,080,331

K

C30161

Eastern Building/ Infrastructure Renewal

$ 2,552

L

C30162

Lancaster Building/ Infrastructure Renewal

$ 805,834

M

C30163

Southern Building/ Infrastructure Renewal

$ 540,097

N

C30164

Building Exterior Improvements – Regional Campuses

$ 1,016,685

O

C30169

CWRU Health Education Campus

$ 1,000,000

P

C30170

Building Interior Improvements – Regional Campuses

$ 904,857

Q

C30171

Campus Infrastructure Improvements – Regional Campuses

$ 1,904,254

R

C30173

Lawrence EMS Services and Senior Center - Southern

$ 1,000,000

S

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 33,184,390

T

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 33,184,390


INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30075, Infrastructure Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30075, Infrastructure Improvements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30133, Electrical Distribution Upgrades.

BUILDING ENVELOPE RESTORATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30136, Building Envelope Restorations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30136, Building Envelope Restorations, plus $22,698. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $22,698.

BUILDING AND SAFETY SYSTEMS IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30157, Building and Safety Systems Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30157, Building and Safety Systems Improvements, plus $2,801, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C30131, College of Fine Arts Infrastructure Upgrades, and C30148, Campus Chilled Water/AHU Improvements. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $2,801.

CHILLICOTHE BUILDING/INFRASTRUCTURE RENEWAL

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30160, Chillicothe Building/Infrastructure Renewal, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30160, Chillicothe Building/Infrastructure Renewal, plus $41,195, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30147, Bennett Hall Electrical - Chillicothe. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $41,195.

EASTERN BUILDING/INFRASTRUCTURE RENEWAL

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30161, Eastern Building/Infrastructure Renewal, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30161, Eastern Building/Infrastructure Renewal, plus $10,287, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30118, Shannon Hall Renovation - Eastern. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $10,287.

LANCASTER BUILDING/INFRASTRUCTURE RENEWAL

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30162, Lancaster Building/Infrastructure Renewal, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30162, Lancaster Building/Infrastructure Renewal, plus $3,487, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C30074, Basic Renovations - Lancaster, and C30119, Brasee Hall Renovations - Lancaster. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $3,487.

SOUTHERN BUILDING/INFRASTRUCTURE RENEWAL

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30163, Southern Building/Infrastructure Renewal, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30163, Southern Building/Infrastructure Renewal, plus $17,540, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C30008, Basic Renovations - Ironton, C30073, Proctor Planning and Site Improvements, and C30141, Safety and Security Systems Improvements - Southern. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $17,540.

CAMPUS INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENTS - REGIONAL CAMPUSES

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C30171, Campus Infrastructure Improvements – Regional Campuses, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C30171, Campus Infrastructure Improvements – Regional Campuses, plus $1,347. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Ohio University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $1,347.

Section 207.58. OTC OWENS COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund (Fund 7024)

C

C38838

Advanced Manufacturing/ STEM Renovations - Taxable

$ 50,000

D

C38839

Roof Renovations - Taxable

$ 5,000

E

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund

$ 55,000

F

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

G

C38826

College Hall Renovation

$ 150,000

H

C38833

IT Campus Security Upgrades

$ 2,500

I

C38837

Center for Emergency Preparedness

$ 10,000

J

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 162,500

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 217,500


COLLEGE HALL RENOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C38826, College Hall Renovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C38826, College Hall Renovation, plus $10,987. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Owens Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $10,987.

Section 207.60. RGC RIO GRANDE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C35600

Basic Renovations

$ 1,587,774

D

C35608

College Completion to Career Center

$ 937,914

E

C35609

Jackson Center Acquisition and Renovation

$ 177,876

F

C35610

Technology Infrastructure and Information Systems

$ 600,000

G

C35612

Rio Grande Community College McArthur Center

$ 75,000

H

C35613

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 121,978

I

C35615

Vinton County Rio Grande Branch Campus

$ 200,000

J

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 3,700,542

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 3,700,542


TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C35610, Technology Infrastructure and Information Systems, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C35610, Technology Infrastructure and Information Systems, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C30168, Holzer Health and Wellness Center, and C315FT, Bidwell/OSU Cattle Processing Facility.

Section 207.62. SSC SHAWNEE STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C32400

Basic Renovations

$ 2,708,954

D

C32430

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 81,753

E

C32431

Clark Memorial Library - Rehabilitation and Repurposing

$ 1,800,000

F

C32432

Advanced Technology Center/Technology and Industrial Buildings Rehabilitation

$ 345,250

G

C32433

Shawnee State University Innovation Accelerator

$ 200,000

H

C32434

Kricker Innovation Hub

$ 500,000

I

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 5,635,957

J

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 5,635,957



Section 207.64. SCC SINCLAIR COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C37746

Dayton Regional Crisis Stabilization Unit and Detox Center

$ 800,000

D

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 800,000

E

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 800,000


DAYTON REGIONAL CRISIS STABILIZATION UNIT AND DETOX CENTER

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C37746, Dayton Regional Crisis Stabilization Unit and Detox Center, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C37746, Dayton Regional Crisis Stabilization Unit and Detox Center, plus $800,000.

Section 207.66. SOC SOUTHERN STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C32200

Basic Renovations

$ 290,252

D

C32206

Adams County Satellite Campus

$ 1,166,815

E

C32216

Wilmington Air Park Improvements

$ 1,075,000

F

C32218

Health Science Center Renovation

$ 3,567,300

G

C32226

STEM+M Academy

$ 600,000

H

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 6,699,367

I

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 6,699,367


WILMINGTON AIR PARK IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C32216, Wilmington Air Park Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C32216, Wilmington Air Park Improvements, plus $75,000, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C32223, Clinton County Airport Equipment and Facilities Complex.

STEM+M ACADEMY

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C32226, STEM+M Academy, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C32226, STEM+M Academy, plus $600,000.

Section 207.68. STC STARK TECHNICAL COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C38924

Parking Lot Resurfacing

$ 209,141

D

C38927

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 137,363

E

C38931

Storefront Renovations

$ 284,010

F

C38932

Campbell Community Literacy Workforce and Cultural Center

$ 300,000

G

C38933

Greater Akron CDL Training Center

$ 186,524

H

C38934

Barberton Headstart Expansion

$ 200,000

I

C38935

Roof Replacements

$ 361,718

J

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 1,678,756

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 1,678,756


PARKING LOT RESURFACING

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C38924, Parking Lot Resurfacing, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020 in appropriation item C38924, Parking Lot Resurfacing, plus $10,300, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020 in appropriation items C38929, Akron Center for Education and Workforce, and C38936, Parking Lots. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Stark Technical College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $10,300.

ROOF REPLACEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C38935, Roof Replacements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020 in appropriation item C38935, Roof Replacements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020 in appropriation item C38923, Atrium Skylight Glass Replacement.

Section 207.70. TTC TERRA STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C36400

Basic Renovations

$ 12,114

D

C36414

Northwest Ohio Community Technology Learning Center

$ 50,000

E

C36417

Ohio Partnership for Water, Industrial, and Cyber Security

$ 700,000

F

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 762,114

G

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 762,114


BASIC RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C36400, Basic Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C36400, Basic Renovations, plus $1,479. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Terra State Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $1,479.

Section 207.72. UAK UNIVERSITY OF AKRON



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C25000

Basic Renovations - Main

$ 2,555,247

D

C25055

Auburn Science and Engineering Center

$ 1,200,000

E

C25077

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 143,333

F

C25079

Campus Infrastructure Improvements

$ 504,454

G

C25081

Buckingham Building Renovations

$ 983,150

H

C25082

Crouse/Ayer Hall Consolidation

$ 2,466,100

I

C25083

University of Akron AMES

$ 1,947,461

J

C25084

Bierce Library

$ 850,000

K

C25086

Ashland County-West Holmes Career Center Workforce Development Center

$ 300,000

L

C25088

Ohio Cyber Range

$ 118,742

M

C25089

McClain Gallery

$ 100,000

N

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 11,168,487

O

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 11,168,487


MCCLAIN GALLERY

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C25089, McClain Gallery, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C25089, McClain Gallery, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C25087, AxessPointe Community Health Center.

Section 207.74. UCN UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C26604

Barrett Cancer Center

$ 2,027,594

D

C26615

Beech Acres

$ 1,790

E

C26678

Muntz Hall - Blue Ash

$ 3,802,946

F

C26687

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 279,075

G

C26695

Rhodes Hall Roof Replacement and Fire Suppression

$ 550,000

H

C26697

Vontz Center Roof, Panel, and Window Replacements

$ 8,171,822

I

C266A5

Rieveschl Hall Laboratory Renovations

$ 6,101,157

J

C266A6

Kettering Exhaust Manifold and Roof Replacement

$ 1,032,625

K

C266A8

People Working Cooperatively Campus Safety Systems

$ 75,000

L

C266B2

Ohio Cyber Range

$ 1,350,000

M

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 23,392,009

N

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 23,392,009


VONTZ CENTER ROOF, PANEL, AND WINDOW REPLACEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C26697, Vontz Center Roof, Panel, and Window Replacements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C26697, Vontz Center Roof, Panel, and Window Replacements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C26681, Institutional Roof Replacement.

RIEVESCHL HALL LABORATORY RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C266A5, Rieveschl Hall Laboratory Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C266A5, Rieveschl Hall Laboratory Renovations, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C26500, Basic Renovations and C26694, Rieveschl Roof Replacement and Rooftop Exhaust.

Section 207.76. UTO UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C34072

Building Automation System Upgrades

$ 50,000

D

C34073

Mechanical System Improvements

$ 19,886

E

C34080

Building Envelope/ Weatherproofing

$ 50,000

F

C34089

Research Laboratory Renovations

$ 21,622

G

C34097

North Engineering Lab/Classroom Renovations

$ 50,000

H

C34099

University of Toledo/Ohio State Highway Patrol Public Safety Facility

$ 575,000

I

C340A2

Virtual Laboratory Expansion

$ 100,000

J

C340A3

Application Security

$ 123,073

K

C340A5

ProMedica Transformative Low Income Medical Senior Housing

$ 250,000

L

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 1,239,581

M

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 1,239,581


NORTH ENGINEERING LAB/CLASSROOM RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C34097, North Engineering Lab/Classroom Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C34097, North Engineering Lab/Classroom Renovations, plus $309,816. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the University of Toledo shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $309,816.

Section 207.78. WTC WASHINGTON STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C35800

Basic Renovations

$ 1,052,489

D

C35807

WTC Health Sciences Center

$ 31,904

E

C35813

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 482,666

F

C35814

Main Building Door and Window Replacement/ Drivit Repairs

$ 519,047

G

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 2,086,106

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,086,106


BASIC RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C35800, Basic Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C35800, Basic Renovations, plus $45,730, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C35815, Health Wellness & Education Facility Planning. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Washington State Community College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $45,730.

Section 207.80. WSU WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund (Fund 7024)

C

C27566

Advanced Manufacturing Center - CNC and Robotics Academy - Taxable

$ 2,974

D

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund

$ 2,974

E

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

F

C27551

Veterans and Workforce Gateways

$ 646,185

G

C27555

Advanced Manufacturing Center - CNC and Robotics Academy

$ 53,164

H

C27558

Dayton Regional Cyber Lab and Analyst Innovation Center

$ 2,346

I

C27567

Campus-wide Instructional Laboratory Modernization and Maintenance

$ 527,954

J

C27569

Campus-wide Elevator Upgrades

$ 1,072,625

K

C27570

Envelope Repairs

$ 1,095,854

L

C27571

Wellfield Remediation

$ 1,011,952

M

C27572

Electrical Infrastructure

$ 1,357,450

N

C27574

Campus Infrastructure - Shoreline Renovation/ Stabilization - Lake

$ 27,124

O

C27575

Tri-Star STEM Project

$ 500,000

P

C27576

Wright State Campus Connector Building - Lake

$ 193,418

Q

C25577

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 216,468

R

C27578

University Safety Initiative

$ 3,950,500

S

C27579

Pedestrian Tunnel Renewal

$ 601,880

T

C27580

Campus Roof Renewal and Replacement

$ 384,366

U

C27582

Campus Paving and Grounds

$ 41,959

V

C27584

Dunbar Library Modernization

$ 78,929

W

C27585

Campus Energy Efficiency and Controls

$ 1,245,559

X

C27586

Fairborn Fiber Expansion Project

$ 75,000

Y

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 13,082,733

Z

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 13,085,707


CAMPUS-WIDE INSTRUCTIONAL LABORATORY MODERNIZATION AND MAINTENANCE

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C27567, Campus-wide Instructional Laboratory Modernization and Maintenance, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C27567, Campus-wide Instructional Laboratory Modernization and Maintenance, plus $5,000. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Wright State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $5,000.

ENVELOPE REPAIRS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C27570, Envelope Repairs, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C27570, Envelope Repairs, plus $127,199. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Wright State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $127,199.

WELLFIELD REMEDIATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C27571, Wellfield Remediation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C27571, Wellfield Remediation, plus $10,999. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Wright State University shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $10,999.

Section 207.82. YSU YOUNGSTOWN STATE UNIVERSITY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C34500

Basic Renovations

$ 276,832

D

C34529

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 131,879

E

C34531

Campus Elevator Upgrades

$ 57,374

F

C34534

Roof Renovations

$ 5,694

G

C34536

Storm Water Upgrades

$ 250,000

H

C34539

Edmund J. Salata Complex Renovation

$ 300,000

I

C34540

Cushwa Hall Renovations

$ 9,004

J

C34542

Campus-wide Building System Upgrades

$ 54,196

K

C34544

Restroom Renovations

$ 323,321

L

C34549

Ward Beecher Science Hall Renovations

$ 290,052

M

C34550

Jones Hall Student Success Facility Upgrades

$ 35,209

N

C34551

Academic Area Renovations and Upgrades

$ 282,162

O

C34552

Meshel Hall Renovations

$ 71,007

P

C34554

Mahoning Valley Innovation and Commercialization Center

$ 5,965,760

Q

C34556

Cushwa Hall Physical Therapy Renovations/ Expansion

$ 1,031,395

R

C34557

Ward Beecher Science Hall Structural Improvements

$ 1,612,836

S

C34558

Fedor Hall Renovations

$ 887,175

T

C34559

Pedestrian Bridge Renovations

$ 1,363,505

U

C34560

Campus Roof Replacements

$ 383,050

V

C34561

Building Envelope Renovations

$ 684,003

W

C34567

Western Reserve Port Authority

$ 250,000

X

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 14,264,454

Y

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 14,264,454


WESTERN RESERVE PORT AUTHORITY

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C34567, Western Reserve Port Authority, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C34567, Western Reserve Port Authority, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C74544, Western Reserve Port Authority.

Section 207.84. MAT ZANE STATE COLLEGE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C36215

Workforce Based Training and Equipment

$ 25,000

D

C36218

Zanesville Campus Renovations

$ 800,000

E

C36224

IT Infrastructure

$ 60,000

F

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 885,000

G

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 885,000


ZANESVILLE CAMPUS RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C36218, Zanesville Campus Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C36218, Zanesville Campus Renovations, plus $1,659. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Zane State College shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $1,659.

Section 208.10. For all reappropriations in this act from the Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034) or the Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund (Fund 7024) that require local funds to be contributed by any state-supported or state-assisted institution of higher education, the Department of Higher Education shall not recommend that any funds be released until the recipient institution demonstrates to the Department of Higher Education and the Office of Budget and Management that the local funds contribution requirement has been secured or satisfied. The local funds shall be in addition to the reappropriations in this act.

Section 208.20. None of the capital reappropriations in this act for state-supported or state-assisted institutions of higher education shall be expended until the particular appropriation has been recommended for release by the Department of Higher Education and released by the Director of Budget and Management or the Controlling Board. Either the institution concerned, or the Department of Higher Education with the concurrence of the institution concerned, may initiate the request to the Director of Budget and Management or the Controlling Board for the release of the particular appropriation.

Section 208.30. (A) No capital reappropriations in this act made from the Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034) or the Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund (Fund 7024) shall be released for planning or for improvement, renovation, construction, or acquisition of capital facilities if the institution of higher education or the state does not own the real property on which the capital facilities are or will be located. This restriction does not apply in any of the following circumstances:

(1) The institution has a long-term (at least twenty years) lease of, or other interest (such as an easement) in, the real property.

(2) The Department of Higher Education certifies to the Controlling Board that undue delay will occur if planning does not proceed while the property or property interest acquisition process continues. In this case, funds may be released upon approval of the Controlling Board to pay for planning through the development of schematic drawings only.

(3) In the case of a reappropriation for capital facilities that, because of their unique nature or location, will be owned or will be part of facilities owned by a separate nonprofit organization or public body and will be made available to the institution of higher education for its use or benefit, the nonprofit organization or public body either owns or has a long-term (at least twenty years) lease of the real property or other capital facility to be improved, renovated, constructed, or acquired and has entered into a joint or cooperative use agreement with the institution of higher education that meets the requirements of division (C) of this section.

(B) Any reappropriations that require cooperation between a technical college and a branch campus of a university may be released by the Controlling Board upon recommendation by the Department of Higher Education that the facilities proposed by the institutions are:

(1) The result of a joint planning effort by the university and the technical college, satisfactory to the Department of Higher Education;

(2) Facilities that will meet the needs of the region in terms of technical and general education, taking into consideration the totality of facilities that will be available after the completion of the projects;

(3) Planned to permit maximum joint use by the university and technical college of the totality of facilities that will be available upon their completion; and

(4) To be located on or adjacent to the branch campus of the university.

(C) The Department of Higher Education shall adopt and maintain rules regarding the release of moneys from all the appropriations for capital facilities for all state-supported or state-assisted institutions of higher education. In the case of capital facilities referred to in division (A)(3) of this section, the joint or cooperative use agreements shall include, as a minimum, provisions that:

(1) Specify the extent and nature of that joint or cooperative use, extending for not fewer than twenty years, with the value of such use or benefit or right to use to be, as is determined by the parties and approved by the Department of Higher Education, reasonably related to the amount of the appropriations;

(2) Provide for pro rata reimbursement to the state should the arrangement for joint or cooperative use be terminated prior to the expiration of its full term;

(3) Provide that procedures to be followed during the capital improvement process will comply with appropriate applicable state statutes and rules, including the provisions of this act; and

(4) Provide for payment or reimbursement to the institution of its administrative costs incurred as a result of the facilities project, not to exceed 1.5 per cent of the appropriated amount.

(D) Upon the recommendation of the Department of Higher Education, the Controlling Board may approve the transfer of appropriations for projects requiring cooperation between institutions from one institution to another institution with the approval of both institutions.

(E) Notwithstanding section 127.14 of the Revised Code, the Controlling Board, upon the recommendation of the Department of Higher Education, may transfer amounts appropriated to the Department of Higher Education to accounts of state-supported or state-assisted institutions created for that same purpose.

Section 208.40. The requirements of Chapters 123. and 153. of the Revised Code, with respect to the powers and duties of the Executive Director of the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission as they relate to the procedure and awarding of contracts for capital improvement projects, and the requirements of section 127.16 of the Revised Code, with respect to the Controlling Board, do not apply to projects of community college districts and technical college districts.

Section 208.50. Those institutions locally administering capital improvement projects pursuant to sections 3345.50 and 3345.51 of the Revised Code may:

(A) Establish charges for recovering costs directly related to project administration as defined by the Executive Director of the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission. The Ohio Facilities Construction Commission, in consultation with the Office of Budget and Management, shall review and approve these administrative charges when the charges are in excess of 1.5 per cent of the total construction budget, provided that total administrative charges paid by the state do not exceed four per cent of the state's contribution to the total construction budget.

(B) Seek reimbursement from state capital appropriations to the institution for the in-house design services performed by the institution for the capital projects. Acceptable charges are limited to design document preparation work that is done by the institution. These reimbursable design costs shall be shown as "A/E fees" within the project's budget that is submitted to the Controlling Board or the Director of Budget and Management as part of a request for release of funds. The reimbursement for in-house design shall not exceed seven per cent of the estimated construction cost.

Section 208.60. The Director of Budget and Management may as necessary to maintain the exclusion from the calculation of gross income for federal income taxation purposes under the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986," 100 Stat. 2085, 26 U.S.C. 1 et seq., with respect to obligations issued to fund projects appropriated from the Higher Education Improvement Fund:

(A) Transfer appropriations between the Higher Education Improvement Fund and the Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund;

(B) Create new appropriation items within the Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund and make transfers of appropriations to them for projects originally funded from appropriations made from the Higher Education Improvement Fund.

The projects that are funded under new appropriation items created in this manner shall automatically be designated as specific for purposes of section 126.14 of the Revised Code.

Section 209.10. ETC BROADCAST EDUCATIONAL MEDIA COMMISSION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034)

C

C37406

Network Operations Center Upgrades

$ 3,330

D

C37412

OGT Facilities and Equipment

$ 44,220

E

TOTAL Higher Education Improvement Fund

$ 47,550

F

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 47,550



Section 211.10. CSR CAPITOL SQUARE REVIEW AND ADVISORY BOARD



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Underground Parking Garage Operating Fund (Fund 2080)

C

C87402

Capitol Square Repair/Improvements

$ 246,550

D

TOTAL Underground Parking Garage Operating Fund

$ 246,550

E

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

F

C87407

Statehouse Repair/Improvements

$ 172,600

G

C87412

Capitol Square Security

$ 49,265

H

C87414

CSRAB Warehouse

$ 8,800

I

C87417

Statehouse Garage Repair/Improvements

$ 4,290,257

J

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 4,520,922

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 4,767,472



Section 213.10. DAS DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Building Improvement Fund (Fund 5KZ0)

C

C10035

Building Improvement

$ 25,000,000

D

TOTAL Building Improvement Fund

$ 25,000,000

E

Administrative Building Taxable Bond Fund (Fund 7016)

F

C10041

MARCS - Taxable

$ 850,000

G

TOTAL Administrative Building Taxable Bond Fund

$ 850,000

H

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

I

C10000

Governor's Residence

$ 1,100,996

J

C10010

Office Services Building Renovation

$ 295,418

K

C10015

SOCC Renovations

$ 6,073,549

L

C10019

25 S. Front Street Renovations

$ 10,582

M

C10020

North High Building Complex Renovations

$ 19,326,378

N

C10021

Office Space Planning

$ 1,909,204

O

C10023

eSecure Ohio

$ 137,016

P

C10031

Operations Facilities Improvement

$ 1,457,206

Q

C10038

Riffe Renovations

$ 1,130,110

R

C10043

Williams County MARCS Tower Project

$ 250,000

S

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 31,690,459

T

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 57,540,459


MARCS STEERING COMMITTEE AND STATEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM

There is hereby continued a Multi-Agency Radio Communications System (MARCS) Steering Committee consisting of the designees of the Directors of Administrative Services, Public Safety, Natural Resources, Transportation, Rehabilitation and Correction, and Budget and Management, and the State Fire Marshal or the State Fire Marshal's designee. The Director of Administrative Services or the Director's designee shall chair the Committee. The Committee shall provide assistance to the Director of Administrative Services for effective and efficient operation of MARCS as well as develop policies for the ongoing management of the system.

The Committee shall establish a subcommittee to represent MARCS users on the local government level. The chairperson of the subcommittee shall serve as a member of the MARCS Steering Committee.

The foregoing appropriation item C10041, MARCS - Taxable, shall be used to purchase or construct the components of MARCS that are not specific to any one agency. The equipment may include, but is not limited to, computer and telecommunications equipment used for the functioning and integration of the system, communications towers, tower sites, tower equipment, and linkages among towers. The Director of Administrative Services shall, with the concurrence of the MARCS Steering Committee, determine the specific use of funds. Expenditures from this appropriation shall not be subject to Chapters 123. and 153. of the Revised Code.

BUILDING IMPROVEMENT

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10035, Building Improvement, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10035, Building Improvement, plus $14,532. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Administrative Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $14,532.

MARCS - TAXABLE

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10041, MARCS - Taxable, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10041, MARCS - Taxable, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10011, Statewide Communications System.

SOCC RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10015, SOCC Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10015, SOCC Renovations, plus $79,082. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Administrative Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $79,082.

25 S. FRONT STREET RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10019, 25 S. Front Street Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10019, 25 S. Front Street Renovations, plus $1,218. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Administrative Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $1,218.

NORTH HIGH BUILDING COMPLEX RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10020, North High Building Complex Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10020, North High Building Complex Renovations, plus $50,108. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Administrative Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $50,108.

OFFICE SPACE PLANNING

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10021, Office Space Planning, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10021, Office Space Planning, plus $17,305. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Administrative Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $17,305.

WILLIAMS COUNTY MARCS TOWER PROJECT

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C10043, Williams County MARCS Tower Project, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C10043, Williams County MARCS Tower Project, plus $250,000.

Section 215.10. AGR DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C70007

Building and Grounds

$ 800,000

D

C70024

Building #22 Renovation

$ 1,000,000

E

C70028

Delaware County Fairgrounds Grandstand Improvements Project

$ 50,000

F

C70029

Crawford County Fairgrounds Improvements

$ 30,000

G

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 1,880,000

H

Clean Ohio Agricultural Easement Fund (Fund 7057)

I

C70009

Clean Ohio Agricultural Easement

$ 25,000,000

J

TOTAL Clean Ohio Agricultural Easement

$ 25,000,000

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 26,880,000


BUILDING #22 RENOVATION

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C70024, Building #22 Renovation, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C70024, Building #22 Renovation, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C70026, EPA Warehouse Facility.

DELAWARE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS GRANDSTAND IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT   

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C70028, Delaware County Fairgrounds Grandstand Improvements Project, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C70028, Delaware County Fairgrounds Grandstand Improvements Project, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C23052, Little Brown Jug Facility Improvements.

CRAWFORD COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C70029, Crawford County Fairgrounds Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C70029, Crawford County Fairgrounds Improvements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C23054, Bucyrus Historic Depot Renovations.

Section 217.10. COM DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

State Fire Marshal Fund (Fund 5460)

C

C80023

SFM Renovations and Improvements

$ 2,003,805

D

C80034

Fire Training Apparatus

$ 191,631

E

TOTAL State Fire Marshal Fund

$ 2,195,436

F

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,195,436



Section 219.10. DDD DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Mental Health Facilities Improvement Fund (Fund 7033)

C

C59004

Community Assistance Projects

$ 10,000

D

C59034

Statewide Developmental Centers

$ 1,000,000

E

C59064

Heinzerling Community Facilities

$ 350,000

F

C59066

Children's Home Autism Building

$ 1,000,000

G

TOTAL Mental Health Facilities Improvement Fund

$ 2,360,000

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 2,360,000


COMMUNITY ASSISTANCE PROJECTS

Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C59004, Community Assistance Projects, may be used to provide community assistance funds for the development, purchase, construction, or renovation of facilities for day programs or residential programs that provide services to persons eligible for services from the Department of Developmental Disabilities or county boards of developmental disabilities and shall be distributed by the Department of Developmental Disabilities subject to Controlling Board approval.

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C59004, Community Assistance Projects, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C59004, Community Assistance Projects, plus $1,198,710. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Developmental Disabilities shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $1,198,710.

STATEWIDE DEVELOPMENTAL CENTERS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C59034, Statewide Developmental Centers, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C59034, Statewide Developmental Centers, plus $89,939. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Developmental Disabilities shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $89,939.

Section 221.10. MHA DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ADDICTION SERVICES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Mental Health Facilities Improvement Fund (Fund 7033)

C

C58001

Community Assistance Projects

$ 18,000,000

D

C58007

Infrastructure Renovations

$ 2,000,000

E

C58033

Salvation Army of Greater Cleveland Harbor Light Complex

$ 350,000

F

C58044

Alvis Women Community Reentry Project

$ 50,000

G

C58046

Summer Entrepreneurial Experience and Knowledge

$ 100,000

H

C58047

TVBH Campus Redevelopment

$ 80,000

I

C58048

Community Resiliency Projects

$ 6,500,000

J

TOTAL Mental Health Facilities Improvement Fund

$ 27,080,000

K

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 27,080,000



Section 221.13. COMMUNITY ASSISTANCE PROJECTS

Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C58001, Community Assistance Projects, may be used for facilities constructed or to be constructed pursuant to Chapter 340., 5119., 5123., or 5126. of the Revised Code or the authority granted by section 154.20 and other applicable sections of the Revised Code and the rules issued pursuant to those chapters and that section and shall be distributed by the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services subject to Controlling Board approval.

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C58001, Community Assistance Projects, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, minus $600,000. The foregoing appropriation item C58001, Community Assistance Projects, shall be used to support the projects listed in this section unless the amounts are distributed prior to June 30, 2020.



1

2

3

A

Project List

B

Cuyahoga County Mental Health Jail Diversion Facility

$ 700,000

C

Cornerstone of Hope - Cuyahoga County

$ 500,000

D

Lorain County Recovery One Center Renovation

$ 500,000

E

Tri-County One Wellness Place Troy Facility

$ 450,000

F

Portage County Detoxification and Residential Treatment Center

$ 400,000

G

Phillis Wheatley Home for Youth Aging Out of Foster Care

$ 350,000

H

Opiate Treatment Center at Western Reserve Area on Aging

$ 300,000

I

Alvis House Opiate Addiction Treatment Center

$ 300,000

J

Adams County Wilson Children's Home

$ 250,000

K

Lake County Painesville Addiction Recovery Center

$ 160,000

L

Maryhaven's Addiction Stabilization Center

$ 125,000

M

Talbert House Glenway Outpatient Treatment Center Renovations

$ 75,000

N

Child Focus Opiate Addiction Supervised Visitation Facility at Batavia

$ 50,000


Section 221.15. INFRASTRUCTURE RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C58007, Infrastructure Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C58007, Infrastructure Renovations, plus $585,587, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation items C58000, Hazardous Materials Abatement, C58004, Demolition, C58008, Emergency Improvements, and C58010, Campus Consolidation. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $585,587.

Section 221.20. COMMUNITY RESILIENCY PROJECTS

The foregoing appropriation item, C58048, Community Resiliency Projects, shall be used in support of the establishment, expansion, and renovation of programming spaces for individuals affected by behavioral health related issues, specifically targeting, to the extent possible, programming spaces for middle and high school age youth affected by behavioral health related issues.

Funds shall be awarded to projects through a process to be developed by the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services that may take into account, but is not limited to, the following factors: the poverty rate of the community in which the facility is to be located, the breadth and nature of the plan to engage a broad spectrum of at-risk youth, support of community partners, readiness of the funding applicant to move forward with the project, and the array of supportive programming to be offered by the applicant. All projects shall comply with the community project standards and guidelines of the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

Section 223.10. DNR DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Wildlife Fund (Fund 7015)

C

C725K9

Wildlife Area Building Development/Renovation

$ 10,000,000

D

TOTAL Wildlife Fund

$ 10,000,000

E

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

F

C725D5

Fountain Square Building and Telephone Improvement

$ 1,000,000

G

C725D7

Multi-Agency Radio Communications Equipment

$ 50,000

H

C725E0

DNR Fairgrounds Areas Upgrading

$ 1,000

I

C725N7

District Office Renovations

$ 1,000,000

J

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 2,051,000

K

Ohio Parks and Natural Resources Fund (Fund 7031)

L

C725E1

Local Parks Projects Statewide

$ 1,200,000

M

C725E5

Project Planning

$ 50,000

N

C725J0

Natural Areas and Preserves Maintenance Facility Development - Springville Carbon Rod Removal

$ 400,000

O

C725K0

State Park Renovations/Upgrading

$ 700,000

P

C725M0

Dam Rehabilitation

$ 100,000

Q

C725N5

Wastewater/Water Systems Upgrades

$ 500,000

R

C725T3

Healthy Lake Erie Initiative

$ 2,000,000

S

TOTAL Ohio Parks and Natural Resources Fund

$ 4,950,000

T

Parks and Recreation Improvement Fund (Fund 7035)

U

C725A0

State Parks, Campgrounds, Lodges, Cabins

$ 7,000,000

V

C725B5

Buckeye Lake Dam Rehabilitation

$ 1,000

W

C725C4

Muskingum River Lock and Dam

$ 2,000,000

X

C725E2

Local Parks, Recreation, and Conservation Projects

$ 20,110,000

Y

C725E6

Project Planning

$ 2,000,000

Z

C725L8

Statewide Trails Program

$ 100,000

AA

C725N6

Wastewater/Water Systems Upgrades

$ 3,500,000

AB

C725R3

State Parks Renovations/Upgrades

$ 2,000,000

AC

C725R4

Dam Rehabilitation - Parks

$ 4,000,000

AD

C725R5

Lake White State Park - Dam Rehabilitation

$ 100,000

AE

C725U7

Eagle Creek Watershed Flood Mitigation

$ 1,000

AF

TOTAL Parks and Recreation Improvement Fund

$ 40,812,000

AG

Clean Ohio Trail Fund (Fund 7061)

AH

C72514

Clean Ohio Trail Fund

$ 1,100,000

AI

TOTAL Clean Ohio Trail Fund

$ 1,100,000

AJ

Waterways Safety Fund (Fund 7086)

AK

C725A7

Cooperative Funding for Boating Facilities

$ 5,000,000

AL

C725N9

Operations Facilities

$ 2,000,000

AM

TOTAL Waterways Safety Fund

$ 7,000,000

AN

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 65,913,000


FEDERAL REIMBURSEMENT

All reimbursements received from the federal government for any expenditures made pursuant to this section shall be deposited in the state treasury to the credit of the fund from which the expenditure originated.

Section 223.15. LOCAL PARKS, RECREATION, AND CONSERVATION PROJECTS

The amount reappropriated from the foregoing appropriation item C725E2, Local Parks, Recreation, and Conservation Projects, shall be equal to the amount of all unreleased local parks projects and allowable administrative costs specified in this section, unless amounts are released prior to June 30, 2020. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Natural Resources shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $52,144.

Of the foregoing appropriation item C725E2, Local Parks, Recreation, and Conservation Projects, an amount equal to two per cent of the projects listed may be used by the Department of Natural Resources for the administration of local projects.



1

2

3

A

Project List

B

Lakefront Pedestrian Bridge

$ 3,500,000

C

Flats East Development

$ 2,000,000

D

City of Cleveland - Lakefront Access Project

$ 1,500,000

E

Bridge to Wendy Park

$ 1,000,000

F

Worthington Pools Renovation

$ 1,000,000

G

Dublin Bridge Park and Greenways Project

$ 650,000

H

The REC at Crawford Commons Facility

$ 500,000

I

Buckeye Lake Feeder Channel Restoration

$ 400,000

J

Buckeye Lake Public Pier

$ 400,000

K

Danny Thomas Park Renovation

$ 400,000

L

Lincoln Park Stadium and Field Restoration

$ 400,000

M

Miami Canal Trail Extension at Gilmore MetroPark

$ 350,000

N

Dover Riverfront Trailhead Connector

$ 350,000

O

Glenford Earthworks Phase III

$ 300,000

P

Solon-Chagrin Falls Multi-purpose Trail

$ 300,000

Q

Wadsworth City Park

$ 300,000

R

Tiffin Recreation, Arts and Learning Park

$ 300,000

S

Wooster Venture Boulevard Park Project

$ 300,000

T

Muskingum River Lock and Dam

$ 250,000

U

New Bremen Bike Path

$ 250,000

V

Grand Lake Shoreline Water Quality Improvements

$ 250,000

W

Jeffrey Mansion Expansion Project

$ 250,000

X

Montgomery Gateway Keystone Park

$ 250,000

Y

Village of Woodmere Chagrin Valley Gateway Pedestrian Trail

$ 215,000

Z

Dayton Webster Station Landing

$ 200,000

AA

Little Miami State Park/Little Miami Trail

$ 200,000

AB

South Point Community Recreation Center

$ 200,000

AC

Union and Rome Townships Trails Project

$ 200,000

AD

Marion Tallgrass Trail

$ 150,000

AE

Harrisburg Baseball Complex

$ 150,000

AF

Mill Creek Valley Conservancy District Corridor Revitalization

$ 150,000

AG

Moberly Branch Connector Trail - Pedestrian Bridge

$ 150,000

AH

Montville Township Park Improvements

$ 150,000

AI

Medina County Rocky River Trail West Branch

$ 150,000

AJ

Clearcreek Hazel Woods Bike Connector

$ 150,000

AK

Redskin Memorial Park Playground

$ 145,000

AL

Cahoon Memorial Park Improvements

$ 130,000

AM

Fairlawn Gully Water Quality Basins

$ 125,000

AN

Bremenfest Shelterhouse

$ 100,000

AO

Deer Park Community Center Renovation & Trailhead

$ 100,000

AP

Fairfax Ziegler Park Improvements

$ 100,000

AQ

Steubenville Ohio River Marina Improvement Project

$ 100,000

AR

City of Sylvania SOMO Project

$ 100,000

AS

Brunswick Hills Township Park

$ 100,000

AT

Scippo Creek Conservation

$ 75,000

AU

Jackson Street Pier and Shoreline Drive Revitalization Project

$ 75,000

AV

Western Reserve Greenway Bike Trail

$ 75,000

AW

Mary Fate Park Improvements

$ 60,000

AX

Gallipolis Pool Project

$ 52,144

AY

Miami Erie Canal Cleanup

$ 50,000

AZ

James Day Park Warrior Run

$ 50,000

BA

Jefferson Park Recreation Upgrades

$ 50,000

BB

Rocky Fork State Park Water and Electrical Upgrade

$ 50,000

BC

Avon Lake Veterans Park Gazebo

$ 50,000

BD

Camp Sherman Park

$ 50,000

BE

Willard Splash Pad and Park Improvements

$ 50,000

BF

Bruce L. Chapin Bridge - Northcoast Inland Trail

$ 45,000

BG

Beaver Park Sports Field

$ 40,000

BH

Village of Highland Hills Gazebo

$ 35,000

BI

Monroeville Clark Park - North Coast Inland Trail Connection

$ 33,000

BJ

Camp McKinley Improvements

$ 30,000

BK

Crestline Park Lighting

$ 25,000

BL

Ohio City Warrior Trail Extension Phase 2

$ 22,000

BM

Waverly Canal Park

$ 20,000

BN

Clifton to Yellow Springs Bike Trail

$ 20,000

BO

Waverly Canal Park

$ 20,000

BP

Seville Memorial Park Public Restroom Facilities

$ 15,000

BQ

Hinkley Township Park

$ 13,000

BR

Shiloh Firestone Park Restoration

$ 12,000

BS

Village of Albany Bike Paths

$ 10,000


Section 223.20. For the projects for which reappropriations are made in this act from the Parks and Recreation Improvement Fund (Fund 7035), the Department of Natural Resources shall periodically prepare and submit to the Director of Budget and Management the estimated design, planning, and engineering costs of capital-related work to be done by the Department of Natural Resources for each project. Based on the estimates, the Director of Budget and Management may release appropriations from appropriation item C725E6, Project Planning, within Fund 7035, to pay for design, planning, and engineering costs incurred by the Department of Natural Resources for the projects. Upon release of the appropriations by the Director of Budget and Management, the Department of Natural Resources shall pay for these expenses from the Parks Capital Expenses Fund (Fund 2270), and be reimbursed by Fund 7035 using an intrastate voucher.

Section 223.30. For the projects for which reappropriations are made in this act from the Ohio Parks and Natural Resources Fund (Fund 7031), the Ohio Department of Natural Resources shall periodically prepare and submit to the Director of Budget and Management the estimated design, planning, and engineering costs of capital-related work to be done by the Department of Natural Resources for each project. Based on those estimates, the Director of Budget and Management may release appropriations from appropriation item C725E5, Project Planning, within Fund 7031 to pay for design, planning, and engineering costs incurred by the Department of Natural Resources for the projects. Upon release of the appropriations by the Director of Budget and Management, the Department of Natural Resources shall pay for these expenses from the Capital Expenses Fund (Fund 4S90) and be reimbursed by Fund 7031 using an intrastate voucher.

Section 225.10. DOT DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C77706

Allen County Building Demolition, Maintenance, or Construction

$ 200,000

D

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 200,000

E

Transportation Building Fund (Fund 7029)

F

C77705

Statewide Land and Buildings

$ 25,000,000

G

TOTAL Transportation Building Fund

$ 25,000,000

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 25,200,000


STATEWIDE LAND AND BUILDINGS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C77705, Statewide Land and Buildings, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C77705, Statewide Land and Buildings, plus $5,000,000. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Transportation shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management lapsed prior year appropriation of at least $5,000,000.

Section 227.10. DPS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C76035

Alum Creek Facility Renovations and Upgrades

$ 500,000

D

C76036

Shipley Building Renovations and Improvements

$ 292,409

E

C76044

OSHP Headquarters/Post Renovations and Improvements

$ 700,000

F

C76045

OSHP Academy Renovations and Improvements

$ 85,591

G

C76049

EMA Building Renovations and Improvements

$ 12,702

H

C76050

OSHP Dispatch Center Renovations and Improvements

$ 500,000

I

C76060

Medina County Safety Services Complex

$ 400,000

J

C76061

Warren County Drug Taskforce Headquarters

$ 500,000

K

C76067

Radiological Calibration Laboratory Relocation

$ 850,000

L

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 3,840,702

M

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 3,840,702


OSHP HEADQUARTERS/POST RENOVATIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C76044, OSHP Headquarters/Post Renovations and Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C76044, OSHP Headquarters/Post Renovations and Improvements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C76043, Minor Capital Projects.

Section 229.10. DRC DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Adult Correctional Building Fund (Fund 7027)

C

C50100

Local Jails

$ 4,525,000

D

C50101

Community-Based Correctional Facilities

$ 13,602,598

E

C50105

Water System/Plant Improvements

$ 2,000,000

F

C50114

Community Residential Program

$ 1,219,535

G

C50136

General Building Renovations

$ 10,000,000

H

TOTAL Adult Correctional Building Fund

$ 31,347,133

I

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 31,347,133


COMMUNITY-BASED CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C50101, Community-Based Correctional Facilities, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C50101, Community-Based Correctional Facilities, plus $222,864. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $222,864.

WATER SYSTEM/PLANT IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C50105, Water System/Plant Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C50105, Water System/Plant Improvements, plus $12,983. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $12,983.

COMMUNITY RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C50114, Community Residential Program, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C50114, Community Residential Program, plus $9,549. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $9,549.

GENERAL BUILDING RENOVATIONS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C50136, General Building Renovations, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C50136, General Building Renovations, plus $3,289,709. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $3,289,709.

Section 229.20. LOCAL JAILS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C50100, Local Jails, shall be equal to the amount of all projects specified in this section, unless the amounts are released prior to June 30, 2020.



1

2

3

A

Project List

B

Hamilton County Justice Center Capacity and Recovery Expansion

$ 2,500,000

C

Warren County Jail Interceptor Center

$ 750,000

D

Barberton Municipal Jail

$ 500,000

E

Columbiana County Jail

$ 250,000

F

Fayette County Adult Detention Facility

$ 225,000

G

Tuscarawas County Jail

$ 200,000

H

Allen County Jail Facility

$ 100,000



Section 229.25. COMMUNITY-BASED CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES

For capital reappropriations in this act made from  appropriation item C50101, Community-Based Correctional Facilities, the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shall designate the projects involving the construction and renovation of single-county and district community-based correctional facilities.

The Department of Rehabilitation and Correction may review and approve the renovation and construction of projects for which funds are provided. The proceeds of any obligations authorized under this section shall not be applied to any such facilities that are not designated and approved by the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

The Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shall adopt guidelines to accept and review applications and designate projects. The guidelines shall require the county or counties to justify the need for the facility and to comply with timelines for the submission of documentation pertaining to the site, program, and construction.

Section 229.30. COMMUNITY RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM RENOVATIONS

Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C50114, Community Residential Program, may be used by the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, pursuant to sections 5120.103 to 5120.105 of the Revised Code, to provide for the construction or renovation of halfway house facilities for offenders eligible for community supervision by the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

Section 231.10. DVS DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS SERVICES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Nursing Home – Federal Fund (Fund 3190)

C

C90067

S-Veterans Hall HVAC Mechanical Upgrade

$ 81,784

D

C90074

Sandusky Renovation Federal

$ 3,172,190

E

C90077

Georgetown Renovation Federal

$ 1,330,575

F

C90082

Information Technology Federal

$ 778,260

G

TOTAL Nursing Hone - Federal Fund

$ 5,362,809

H

Veterans' Home Improvement Fund (Fund 6040)

I

C90066

S-Veterans Hall HVAC Mechanical Upgrade

$ 44,037

J

C90075

Sandusky Renovation State

$ 2,333,498

K

C90078

Georgetown Renovation State

$ 716,463

L

TOTAL Veterans' Home Improvement Fund

$ 3,093,998

M

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 8,456,807



Section 233.10. DYS DEPARTMENT OF YOUTH SERVICES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Juvenile Correctional Building Fund (Fund 7028)

C

C47001

Fire Suppression, Safety, and Security

$ 500,000

D

C47002

General Institutional Renovations

$ 1,000,000

E

C47003

Community Rehabilitation Centers

$ 280,275

F

C47007

Local Juvenile Detention Centers

$ 93,000

G

C47025

Cuyahoga Housing Replacement

$ 6,981,385

H

C47027

Ashtabula Juvenile Court Resources and Reporting Center Improvements

$ 500,000

I

TOTAL Juvenile Correctional Building Fund

$ 9,354,660

J

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 9,354,660


FIRE SUPPRESSION/SAFETY/SECURITY

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C47001, Fire Suppression/Safety/Security, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C47001, Fire Suppression/Safety/Security, plus $206,479. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Department of Youth Services shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $206,479.

Section 233.20. COMMUNITY REHABILITATION CENTERS

For capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C47003, Community Rehabilitation Centers, the Department of Youth Services shall designate the projects involving the construction and renovation of single-county and multicounty community corrections facilities.

The Department of Youth Services may review and approve the renovation and construction of projects for which funds are provided. The proceeds of any obligations authorized under this section shall not be applied to any such facilities that are not designated and approved by the Department of Youth Services.

The Department of Youth Services shall adopt guidelines to accept and review applications and designate projects. The guidelines shall require the county or counties to justify the need for the facility and to comply with timelines for the submission of documentation pertaining to the site, program, and construction.

For purposes of this section, "community corrections facilities" has the same meaning as in section 5139.36 of the Revised Code.

Section 233.30. LOCAL JUVENILE DETENTION CENTERS

For capital appropriations or reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C47007, Local Juvenile Detention Centers, the Department of Youth Services shall designate the projects involving the construction and renovation of county and multicounty juvenile detention centers.

The Department of Youth Services may review and approve the renovation and construction of projects for which funds are provided. The proceeds of any obligations authorized under this section shall not be applied to any such facilities that are not designated by the Department of Youth Services.

The Department of Youth Services shall comply with the  guidelines set forth in this section, accept and review  applications, designate projects, and determine the amount of  state match funding to be applied to each project. The department shall, with the advice of the county or counties participating in a project, determine the funded design capacity of the detention centers that are designated to receive funding. Notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary contained in Chapter 153. of the Revised Code, the Department of Youth Services may coordinate, review, and monitor the drawdown and use of funds for the renovation and construction of projects for which designated funds are provided.

(A) The Department of Youth Services shall develop a formula to determine the amount, if any, of state match that may be provided to a single county or multicounty detention center project.  

(B) The formula developed by the Department of Youth Services shall yield a percentage of state match ranging from zero to sixty per cent. The funding authorized under this section that may be applied to a construction or renovation project shall not exceed the actual cost of the project.

The funding authorized under this section shall not be applied to any project unless the detention center will be built in compliance with health, safety, and security standards for detention centers as established by the Department of Youth Services. In addition, the funding authorized under this section shall not be applied to the renovation of a detention center unless the renovation is for the purpose of increasing the number of beds in the center, or to meet health, safety, or security standards for detention centers as established by the Department of Youth Services.

Section 234.10. DEV DEVELOPMENT SERVICES AGENCY



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Coal Research and Development Fund (Fund 7046)

C

C19505

Coal Research and Development

$ 5,500,000

D

TOTAL Coal Research and Development Fund

$ 5,500,000

E

Service Station Cleanup Fund (Fund 7100)

F

C19507

Service Station Cleanup

$ 3,500,000

G

TOTAL Service Station Cleanup Fund

$ 3,500,000

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 9,000,000



Section 234.20. SERVICE STATION CLEANUP FUND

(A) For purposes of this section:

(1) "Political subdivision" means a county, municipal corporation, township, port authority, or a county land reutilization corporation organized under Chapter 1724. of the Revised Code.

(2) "Class C release" has the same meaning as in section 3737.87 of the Revised Code.

(3) "Property assessment" means a property assessment conducted in accordance with section 3746.04 of the Revised Code or a corrective action process or source investigation process under section 1301:7-9-13 of the Ohio Administrative Code.

(4) "Property owner" means a political subdivision, an organization that owns publicly owned lands, or, with respect to land forfeited to the state under Chapter 5723. of the Revised Code, a county land reutilization corporation.

(5) "Cleanup or remediation" means any action at a Class C release site to contain, remove, or dispose of petroleum or other hazardous substances or remove underground storage tanks used to store petroleum or other hazardous substances.

(6) "Publicly owned lands" includes lands that are owned by an organization that has entered into a relevant agreement with a political subdivision and lands forfeited to the state under Chapter 5723. of the Revised Code.

(B) The Abandoned Gas Station Cleanup Grant Program is established in the Development Services Agency for the purpose of cleanup and remediation of Class C release sites to provide for and enable the environmentally safe and productive reuse of publicly owned lands by the remediation or cleanup, or planning and assessment for that remediation or cleanup, of contamination or by addressing property conditions or circumstances that may be deleterious to public health and safety or the environment or that preclude or inhibit environmentally sound or economic reuse of the property as authorized by Section 2o of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution. Under this program, the Director of Development Services may do either or both of the following:

(1) Award a grant of up to $100,000 to a property owner for purposes of a property assessment on a Class C release site;

(2) Award a grant of up to $500,000 to a property owner for purposes of cleanup or remediation of a Class C release site.

Grants under divisions (B)(1) and (2) of this section shall be used by a property owner to create a site that provides opportunities for economic impact through redevelopment. The Director of Development Services may consult with the Environmental Protection Agency, the State Fire Marshal, the Ohio Water Development Authority, and the Ohio Public Works Commission in connection with this program and the awarding of these grants.  Sections 122.651 to 122.658 of the Revised Code do not apply to this program.

(C) A property owner applying for a grant under division (B)(1) or (2) of this section shall submit an application for the grant on a form prescribed by the Director of Development Services.

An authorized representative of the property owner shall sign and submit an affidavit with the application certifying that the property owner did not cause or contribute to any prior release of petroleum or other hazardous substances on the site.

Upon receipt of an application, the Director shall examine the application and all accompanying information to determine if the application is complete. If the Director determines that the application is not complete, the Director shall promptly notify the property owner that the application is not complete, provide a description of the information that is missing from the application, and return the application and all accompanying information to the property owner. The property owner may resubmit the application.

If the Director approves an application under this section, the Director may enter into an agreement with the property owner to award a grant to the property owner. The agreement shall be executed prior to paying or disbursing any grant funds approved by the Director under this section. With respect to a grant awarded to a county land reutilization corporation for land that has been forfeited to the state under Chapter 5723. of the Revised Code, the agreement shall require that the land be transferred to the corporation prior to the payment or disbursement of the grant funds.

Section 235.10. EXP EXPOSITIONS COMMISSION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C72305

Facility Improvements and Modernization

$ 243,084

D

C72312

Renovations and Equipment Replacement

$ 300,000

E

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 543,084

F

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 543,084



Section 237.10. FCC FACILITIES CONSTRUCTION COMMISSION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Capital Donations Fund (Fund 5A10)

C

C230E2

Capital Donations

$ 1,798,801

D

TOTAL Capital Donations Fund

$ 1,798,801

E

Public School Building Fund (Fund 7021)

F

C23001

Public School Buildings

$ 37,000,000

G

C230W4

Community School Classroom Facilities Assistance

$ 11,964,763

H

TOTAL Public School Building Fund

$ 48,964,763

I

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

J

C23016

Energy Conservation Project

$ 2,198,308

K

C230E3

Hazardous Substance Abatement

$ 432,652

L

C230E5

State Agency Planning/Assessment

$ 941,444

M

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 3,572,404

N

Cultural and Sports Facilities Building Fund (Fund 7030)

O

C23028

OHS - Basic Renovations and Emergency Repairs

$ 729,979

P

C23036

The Anchorage

$ 50,000

Q

C23039

Malinta Historical Society Caboose Exhibit

$ 6,000

R

C23057

OHS - Online Portal to Ohio's Heritage

$ 1,000

S

C23062

Village of Edinburg Veterans Memorial

$ 35,000

T

C23066

Variety Theater

$ 85,000

U

C23072

Madisonville Arts Center of Hamilton County

$ 36,000

V

C230AB

Cleveland Music Hall

$ 400,000

W

C230AE

Variety Theatre

$ 250,000

X

C230AG

Darke County Historical Society Garst Museum Parking Lot

$ 150,000

Y

C230AH

Longtown Clemens Farmstead Museum

$ 90,000

Z

C230AN

Village of Buckeye Lake Corridor Improvements

$ 125,000

AA

C230AU

Charleen and Charles Hinson Amphitheater

$ 1,000,000

AB

C230AZ

Madcap Productions - New Madcap Puppet Theater

$ 200,000

AC

C230BB

Golf Manor Volunteer Park Outdoor Amphitheater

$ 45,000

AD

C230BF

Malinta Ohio Historical Site Rehabilitation

$ 19,000

AE

C230BL

Fairport Harbor Lighthouse Project

$ 200,000

AF

C230BR

Amherst Historical Water Tower Project

$ 40,000

AG

C230BV

Downtown Toledo Music Hall

$ 400,000

AH

C230CH

Mt. Perry Scenic Railroad Structure Renovations

$ 125,000

AI

C230CL

Everts Community & Arts Center

$ 200,000

AJ

C230CM

Waverly Old Children's Home Renovation

$ 20,000

AK

C230CN

Garrettsville Buckeye Block Community Theatre

$ 700,000

AL

C230DL

Marysville Avalon Theatre Renovations

$ 300,000

AM

C230DU

Kister Water Mill and Education Center

$ 200,000

AN

C230DV

Wayne Center for the Arts

$ 150,000

AO

C230EC

Triumph of Flight

$ 250,000

AP

C230EF

Dayton Aviation Park

$ 1,000,000

AQ

C230EN

OHS - Collections Storage Facilities Expansion

$ 14,828,000

AR

C230FM

Cultural and Sports Facilities Projects

$ 48,086,000

AS

C230J6

West Side Market Renovation

$ 500,000

AT

C230J7

Cardinal Center

$ 75,000

AU

C230K3

African-American Legacy Project

$ 75,000

AV

C230L3

Harmony Project

$ 300,000

AW

C230N5

Logan Theater

$ 25,000

AX

C230P3

Sterling Theater Revitalization Project

$ 72,000

AY

C230Q4

Toledo Repertoire Theatre

$ 150,000

AZ

C230Q8

Stambaugh Auditorium

$ 1,000,000

BA

C230R5

Wright Company Factory Project

$ 250,000

BB

C230R8

National Ceramic Museum and Heritage Center Renovation

$ 100,000

BC

C230X8

Riverside Veterans Memorial

$ 15,000

BD

C230Y6

Ashtabula Maritime and Surface Transportation Museum

$ 100,000

BE

C230Y7

Ashtabula Covered Bridge Festival Entertainment Pavilion

$ 100,000

BF

C230Z8

Brooklyn John Frey Park

$ 90,000

BG

TOTAL Cultural and Sports Facilities Building Fund

$ 72,572,979

BH

School Building Program Assistance Fund (Fund 7032

BI

C23002

School Building Program Assistance

$ 56,300,000

BJ

C23011

Corrective Action Program Grants

$ 2,331,865

BK

C23018

STEM Facility Assistance

$ 20,000

BL

TOTAL School Building Program Assistance Fund

$ 58,651,865

BM

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 185,560,812


OHS - ONLINE PORTAL TO OHIO'S HERITAGE

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C23057, OHS - Online Portal to Ohio's Heritage, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C23057, OHS - Online Portal to Ohio's Heritage, plus $10,123. Prior to the expenditure of this appropriation, the Facilities Construction Commission shall certify to the Director of Budget and Management canceled encumbrances in the amount of at least $10,123.

PUBLIC SCHOOL BUILDINGS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C23001, Public School Buildings, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C23001, Public School Buildings, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C230X9, Lead Plumbing Fixture Replacement.

Section 237.13. STATE AGENCY PLANNING/ASSESSMENT

Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C230E5, State Agency Planning/Assessment, shall be used by the Facilities Construction Commission to provide assistance to any state agency for assessment, capital planning, and maintenance management.

Section 237.15. CULTURAL AND SPORTS FACILITIES PROJECTS

The amount reappropriated from the foregoing appropriation item C230FM, Cultural and Sports Facilities Projects, shall be equal to the amount of all projects specified in this section, unless the amounts are released prior to June 30, 2020.



1

2

3

A

Project List

B

Columbus Crew SC Stadium

$ 20,000,000

C

FC Cincinnati Stadium

$ 4,000,000

D

Cleveland Museum of Natural History Phase II

$ 2,500,000

E

Cleveland Museum of Art Holden Terrace

$ 1,250,000

F

Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park Theater Project

$ 1,200,000

G

Playhouse Square Parking District Improvement

$ 1,000,000

H

BalletMet Renovation and Building Connector

$ 1,000,000

I

North Market Grand Atrium

$ 1,000,000

J

Cincinnati Art Museum Building Envelope Improvements

$ 1,000,000

K

Imagination Station Theater Experience

$ 1,000,000

L

Dayton Arcade Innovation Hub

$ 1,000,000

M

Playhouse Square Theater Improvements

$ 850,000

N

Renaissance of Duncan Plaza

$ 750,000

O

Akron Civic Theater Restoration and Expansion

$ 675,000

P

Holmes County Center for the Arts Facility

$ 600,000

Q

Ohio Aviation Hall of Fame

$ 550,000

R

Flats East Bank Performance Stage

$ 500,000

S

King Arts Complex Renovations

$ 500,000

T

SeaGate Convention Centre Renovation

$ 500,000

U

Majestic Theater

$ 500,000

V

Kettering Rosewood Arts Center Renovation

$ 450,000

W

Restoration of John Brown House

$ 400,000

X

Lake View Cemetery Garfield Memorial Preservation

$ 350,000

Y

Mazza Museum S.T.E.(A.)M. Exhibit Gallery

$ 350,000

Z

Lynchburg Covered Bridge

$ 350,000

AA

Kister Water Mill and Education Center Improvements

$ 350,000

AB

Dublin North Market Bridge Park

$ 350,000

AC

LaSalle Arts & Media Center Redevelopment

$ 300,000

AD

National Museum of the Great Lakes Expansion

$ 300,000

AE

Ashtabula Lighthouse Restoration & Preservation

$ 280,000

AF

Gordon Square Arts District Theatre Renovations

$ 250,000

AG

Yoctangee Park Historic Armory

$ 250,000

AH

Hale Farm & Village Capital Improvement Project

$ 250,000

AI

Springboro Performing Arts Center

$ 250,000

AJ

World Heritage and Visitor Center

$ 230,000

AK

Delaware Arts Castle Improvements

$ 225,000

AL

Wellston Pride Park Depot

$ 225,000

AM

Lilly Weston House Improvements

$ 200,000

AN

Upper Arlington Veterans Memorial

$ 200,000

AO

Wolcott House Heritage Center

$ 200,000

AP

Peninsula Grand Army of the Republic Hall Improvements

$ 200,000

AQ

Van Wert County Niswonger Performing Arts Center

$ 200,000

AR

Unionville Tavern Restoration Structural Rehabilitation

$ 185,000

AS

Cozad-Bates House Interpretive Center and Cultural Park Renovations

$ 180,000

AT

Wright Factory Unit - Dayton

$ 175,000

AU

Village of Genoa Civic Theater Renovations

$ 150,000

AV

Williams County Fountain City Amphitheatre Park

$ 150,000

AW

Evendale Cultural Arts Center ADA Compliance

$ 125,000

AX

Lorain County Historical Society

$ 112,000

AY

Cleveland Museum of Contemporary Art

$ 100,000

AZ

Levi Scofield Mansion Transformation

$ 100,000

BA

El Mercado at La Villa Hispana Cultural Revitalization

$ 100,000

BB

Mayfield Civic Center Theater Renovation

$ 100,000

BC

Leesburg Historic B & O Rail Depot

$ 100,000

BD

The Funk Music Hall of Fame & Exhibition Center

$ 100,000

BE

Jacob Miller's Tavern Renovation

$ 100,000

BF

Morris-Sharp Estate Restoration Project

$ 75,000

BG

Mantua Township Historic Building Upgrades

$ 75,000

BH

Medina County and Brunswick Historical Societies Project

$ 64,000

BI

Motts Military Museum - Improvements

$ 50,000

BJ

Clark Gable Facility Improvements

$ 50,000

BK

Tiffin History Museum Improvements

$ 50,000

BL

Avalon Uptown Theatre Restoration

$ 50,000

BM

Platt R. Spencer House Preservation

$ 25,000

BN

Bucyrus Bicentennial Arch Project

$ 25,000

BO

Fairborn Military Veterans Memorial

$ 25,000

BP

1872 German Furniture Factory Project

$ 25,000

BQ

French Art Colony Renovations

$ 15,000



Section 237.20. SCHOOL BUILDING PROGRAM ASSISTANCE

Capital reappropriations in this act made from appropriation item C23002, School Building Program Assistance, shall be used by the Facilities Construction Commission to provide funding to school districts that receive conditional approval from the Commission pursuant to Chapter 3318. of the Revised Code.

Section 237.30. CORRECTIVE ACTION PROGRAM GRANTS

The foregoing appropriation item C23011, Corrective Action Program Grants, may be used to provide funding to bring facilities up to Ohio School Design Manual standards for a project funded pursuant to sections 3318.01 to 3318.20 or 3318.40 to 3318.45 of the Revised Code for the correction of work that is found after occupancy of the facility to be defective, or to have been omitted. Funding shall only be provided for work if the impacted school district notifies the Executive Director of the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission within five years after occupancy of the facility for which the district seeks the funding. The Commission may provide funding assistance necessary to take corrective measures after evaluating defective or omitted work. If the work to be corrected or remediated is part of a project not yet completed, the Commission may amend the project agreement to increase the project budget and use corrective action funding to provide the state portion of the amendment. If the work to be corrected or remediated was part of a completed project and funds were retained or transferred pursuant to division (C) of section 3318.12 of the Revised Code, the Commission may enter into a new agreement to address the necessary corrective action. The Commission shall assess responsibility for the defective or omitted work and seek cost recovery from responsible parties, if applicable. Any funds recovered shall be applied first to the district portion of the cost of the corrective action. Any remaining funds shall be applied to the state portion and deposited into the School Building Program Assistance Fund (Fund 7032).

HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE ABATEMENT IN STATE FACILITIES

The foregoing appropriation item C230E3, Hazardous Substance Abatement, shall be used to fund the removal of asbestos, PCB, radon gas, and other contamination hazards from state facilities.

Prior to the release of funds for asbestos abatement, the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission shall review proposals from state agencies to use these funds for asbestos abatement projects based on criteria developed by the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission. Upon a determination by the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission that the requesting agency cannot fund the asbestos abatement project or other toxic materials removal through existing capital and operating appropriations, the Commission may request the release of funds for such projects by the Controlling Board. State agencies intending to fund asbestos abatement or other toxic materials removal through existing capital and operating appropriations shall notify the Executive Director of the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission of the nature and scope prior to commencing the project.

Only agencies that have received appropriations for capital projects from the Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026) are eligible to receive funding from this item. Public school districts are not eligible.

ENERGY CONSERVATION PROJECT

The foregoing appropriation item C23016, Energy Conservation Project, shall be used to perform energy conservation renovations, including the United States Environmental Protection Agency's Energy Star Program, in state-owned facilities. Prior to the release of funds for renovation, state agencies shall have performed a comprehensive energy audit for each project. The Ohio Facilities Construction Commission shall review and approve proposals from state agencies to use these funds for energy conservation. Public school districts and state-supported and state-assisted institutions of higher education are not eligible for funding from this item.

Section 237.40. COMMUNITY SCHOOL CLASSROOM FACILITIES GRANTS

The foregoing appropriation item C230W4, Community School Classroom Facilities Grants, may be used by the Facilities Construction Commission to provide grant funding to an eligible high-performing community school established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code.

For purposes of this section, an "eligible high-performing community school" means a community school that has available and has certified it will supply, at least fifty per cent of the cost of the project funded under this section and that meets the following other conditions:

(A) Except as provided in division (B) or (C) of this section, the school both:

(1) Has received a grade of "A," "B," or "C" for the performance index score under division (C)(1)(b) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code or has increased its performance index score under division (C)(1)(b) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code in each of the previous three years of operation; and

(2) Has received a grade of "A" or "B" for the value-added progress dimension under division (C)(1)(e) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code on its most recent report card rating issued under that section.

(B) If the school serves only grades kindergarten through three, the school received a grade of "A" or "B" for making progress in improving literacy in grades kindergarten through three under division (C)(1)(g) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code on its most recent report card issued under that section.

(C) If the school primarily serves students enrolled in a dropout prevention and recovery program as described in division (A)(4)(a) of section 3314.35 of the Revised Code, the school received a rating of "exceeds standards" on its most recent report card issued under section 3314.017 of the Revised Code.

Notwithstanding the definition of an eligible high-performing community school under divisions (A) to (C) of this section, a newly established community school may be eligible for assistance under this section, if it is implementing a community school model that has a track record of high quality academic performance, as determined by the Department of Education.

The foregoing appropriation may be used for the purchase, construction, reconstruction, renovation, remodeling, or addition to classroom facilities. A grant may be awarded to an eligible high-performing community school that demonstrates that the funds will be used to purchase or support classroom facilities construction or modifications that increase the supply of seats in effective schools, service specific unmet student needs through community school education, and show innovation in design and potential as a successful, replicable school model. The Facilities Construction Commission may award a grant to an eligible high-performing community school upon the approval of a grant application by the Executive Director of the Commission and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. A facility that is purchased, constructed, or modified by the grant funds shall be used for educational purposes for a minimum of ten years after receiving the grant funds. The Facilities Construction Commission, in consultation with the Superintendent of Public Instruction, shall develop guidelines and may adopt rules under Chapter 111. of the Revised Code for the administration of the grants, including provisions for the ownership and disposal of the facilities funded under this section in the event the community school closes at any time. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, all Revised Code exemptions applicable to grants awarded and projects administered by the Facilities Construction Commission shall apply to the grants pursuant to this section.

Section 239.10. JFS DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Special Administrative Fund (Fund 4A90)

C

C60005

Youngstown Office Improvements

$ 723,820

D

C60007

Lima Office Improvements

$ 512,126

E

C60009

Central Office Improvements

$ 391,300

F

TOTAL Special Administrative Fund

$ 1,627,246

G

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 1,627,246


Section 241.10. JSC JUDICIARY SUPREME COURT



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C00502

General Building Renovations

$ 200,000

D

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 200,000

E

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 200,000



Section 243.10. PWC PUBLIC WORKS COMMISSION



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

State Capital Improvements Fund (Fund 7038)

C

C15000

Local Public Infrastructure

$ 1,004,000

D

C15001

Infrastructure - District 1

$ 31,214,552

E

C15002

Infrastructure - District 2

$ 13,860,322

F

C15003

Infrastructure - District 3

$ 26,791,311

G

C15004

Infrastructure - District 4

$ 9,944,295

H

C15005

Infrastructure - District 5

$ 8,317,110

I

C15006

Infrastructure - District 6

$ 10,035,543

J

C15007

Infrastructure - District 7

$ 10,737,598

K

C15008

Infrastructure - District 8

$ 17,683,859

L

C15009

Infrastructure - District 9

$ 7,842,900

M

C15010

Infrastructure - District 10

$ 13,440,169

N

C15011

Infrastructure - District 11

$ 10,236,035

O

C15012

Infrastructure - District 12

$ 8,773,043

P

C15013

Infrastructure - District 13

$ 6,637,312

Q

C15014

Infrastructure - District 14

$ 6,432,288

R

C15015

Infrastructure - District 15

$ 7,376,287

S

C15016

Infrastructure - District 16

$ 8,173,105

T

C15017

Infrastructure - District 17

$ 9,210,404

U

C15018

Infrastructure - District 18

$ 6,805,211

V

C15019

Infrastructure - District 19

$ 7,068,148

W

C15020

Emergency Set Aside

$ 5,969,609

X

C15022

Ohio Small Government Capital Improvement

$ 24,603,746

Y

TOTAL State Capital Improvement Fund

$ 252,156,847

Z

State Capital Improvements Revolving Loan Fund (Fund 7040)

AA

C15030

Revolving Loan

$ 6,132,884

AB

C150RA

Revolving Loan Fund-District 1

$ 12,779,521

AC

C150RB

Revolving Loan Fund-District 2

$ 10,052,786

AD

C150RC

Revolving Loan Fund-District 3

$ 11,342,421

AE

C150RD

Revolving Loan Fund-District 4

$ 6,616,453

AF

C150RE

Revolving Loan Fund-District 5

$ 2,687,929

AG

C150RF

Revolving Loan Fund-District 6

$ 6,521,841

AH

C150RG

Revolving Loan Fund-District 7

$ 5,587,427

AI

C150RH

Revolving Loan Fund-District 8

$ 3,814,226

AJ

C150RI

Revolving Loan Fund-District 9

$ 4,082,928

AK

C150RJ

Revolving Loan Fund-District 10

$ 6,492,965

AL

C150RK

Revolving Loan Fund-District 11

$ 5,701,197

AM

C150RL

Revolving Loan Fund-District 12

$ 5,353,855

AN

C150RM

Revolving Loan Fund-District 13

$ 2,811,272

AO

C150RN

Revolving Loan Fund-District 14

$ 2,554,690

AP

C150RO

Revolving Loan Fund-District 15

$ 3,535,277

AQ

C150RP

Revolving Loan Fund-District 16

$ 5,452,577

AR

C150RQ

Revolving Loan Fund-District 17

$ 4,164,859

AS

C150RS

Revolving Loan Fund-District 18

$ 4,658,332

AT

C150RT

Revolving Loan Fund-District 19

$ 3,540,069

AU

C150RU

Small Government Program

$ 6,956,258

AV

C150RV

Emergency Program

$ 990,514

AW

TOTAL State Capital Improvements Revolving Loan Fund

$ 121,830,281

AX

Clean Ohio Conservation Fund (Fund 7056)

AY

C150AA

Clean Ohio-District 1

$ 6,364,244

AZ

C150BB

Clean Ohio-District 2

$ 4,721,542

BA

C150CC

Clean Ohio-District 3

$ 7,504,509

BB

C150DD

Clean Ohio-District 4

$ 5,818,128

BC

C150EE

Clean Ohio-District 5

$ 3,199,090

BD

C150FF

Clean Ohio-District 6

$ 4,743,634

BE

C150GG

Clean Ohio-District 7

$ 4,716,808

BF

C150HH

Clean Ohio-District 8

$ 5,324,658

BG

C150II

Clean Ohio-District 9

$ 4,031,869

BH

C150JJ

Clean Ohio-District 10

$ 4,739,969

BI

C150KK

Clean Ohio-District 11

$ 5,072,954

BJ

C150LL

Clean Ohio-District 12

$ 3,696,315

BK

C150MM

Clean Ohio-District 13

$ 7,330,745

BL

C150NN

Clean Ohio-District 14

$ 7,108,486

BM

C150OO

Clean Ohio-District 15

$ 6,289,397

BN

C150PP

Clean Ohio-District 16

$ 7,136,473

BO

C150QQ

Clean Ohio-District 17

$ 4,041,371

BP

C150RR

Clean Ohio-District 18

$ 4,676,875

BQ

C150SS

Clean Ohio-District 19

$ 5,191,826

BR

TOTAL Clean Ohio Conservation Fund

$ 101,708,893

BS

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 475,696,021


LOCAL PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE

Capital reappropriations in this act made from the State Capital Improvements Fund (Fund 7038) shall be used in accordance with sections 164.01 to 164.12 of the Revised Code. The Director of the Public Works Commission may certify to the Director of Budget and Management that a need exists to appropriate investment earnings to be used in accordance with sections 164.01 to 164.12 of the Revised Code. If the Director of Budget and Management determines pursuant to division (D) of section 164.08 and section 164.12 of the Revised Code that investment earnings are available to support additional appropriations, such amounts are hereby appropriated.

If the Public Works Commission receives refunds due to project overpayments that are discovered during a post-project audit, the Director of the Public Works Commission may certify to the Director of Budget and Management that refunds have been received. In certifying the refunds, the Director of the Public Works Commission shall provide the Director of Budget and Management information on the project refunds. The certification shall detail by project the source and amount of project overpayments received and include any supporting documentation required or requested by the Director of Budget and Management. Upon receipt of the certification, the Director of Budget and Management shall determine if the project refunds are necessary to support existing appropriations. If the project refunds are available to support additional appropriations, these amounts are hereby appropriated to appropriation item C15000, Local Public Infrastructure/State CIP.

REVOLVING LOAN

Capital reappropriations in this act made from the State Capital Improvements Revolving Loan Fund (Fund 7040) shall be used in accordance with sections 164.01 to 164.12 of the Revised Code.

If the Public Works Commission receives refunds due to project overpayments that are discovered during a post-project audit, the Director of the Public Works Commission may certify to the Director of Budget and Management that refunds have been received. In certifying the refunds, the Director of the Public Works Commission shall provide the Director of Budget and Management information on the project refunds. The certification shall detail by project the source and amount of project overpayments received and include any supporting documentation required or requested by the Director of Budget and Management. Upon receipt of the certification, the Director of Budget and Management shall determine if the project refunds are necessary to support existing appropriations. If the project refunds are available to support additional appropriations, these amounts are hereby appropriated to appropriation item C15030, Revolving Loan.

CLEAN OHIO CONSERVATION GRANT REPAYMENTS

Capital reappropriations in this act made from the Clean Ohio Conservation Fund (Fund 7056) shall be used in accordance with sections 164.20 to 164.27 of the Revised Code.

Any amount in grant repayments received by the Public Works Commission and deposited into the Clean Ohio Conservation Fund pursuant to section 164.261 of the Revised Code is hereby appropriated through the foregoing appropriation item C15060, Clean Ohio Conservation.

Section 245.10. OSB SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C22616

Renovations and Improvements

$ 95,961

D

C22628

Old Campus Building Demolition

$ 110,653

E

C22629

Roadway Improvements

$ 275,000

F

C22700

Infrastructure Improvements

$ 17,146

G

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 498,760

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 498,760



Section 247.10. OSD SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF



1

2

3

A

Reappropriations

B

Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026)

C

C22107

Renovations and Improvements

$ 626,171

D

C22114

Dormitory Construction

$ 2,503,000

E

C22116

Old Campus Building Demolition

$ 193,134

F

C22800

Infrastructure Improvements

$ 2,668

G

TOTAL Administrative Building Fund

$ 3,324,973

H

TOTAL ALL FUNDS

$ 3,324,973


RENOVATIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS

The amount reappropriated for the foregoing appropriation item C22107, Renovations and Improvements, is the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C22107, Renovations and Improvements, plus the unencumbered balance as of June 30, 2020, in appropriation item C22111, Staff Building Windows and Repair.

Section 509.10. CERTIFICATION OF AVAILABILITY OF MONEYS

Moneys that require release shall not be expended from any appropriation contained in this act without certification of the Director of Budget and Management that there are sufficient moneys in the state treasury in the fund from which the appropriation is made. Such certification made by the Office of Budget and Management shall be based on estimates of revenue, receipts, and expenses. Nothing in this section limits the authority of the Director of Budget and Management granted in section 126.07 of the Revised Code.

Section 509.20. LIMITATION ON USE OF CAPITAL APPROPRIATIONS

The appropriations made in this act, excluding those made from the State Capital Improvement Fund (Fund 7038) and the State Capital Improvements Revolving Loan Fund (Fund 7040) for buildings or structures, including remodeling and renovations, are limited to:

(A) Acquisition of real property or interests in real property;

(B) Buildings and structures, which includes construction,  demolition, complete heating and cooling, lighting, and lighting fixtures, and all necessary utilities, ventilating, plumbing, sprinkling, water and sewer systems, when such systems are authorized or necessary;

(C) Architectural, engineering, and professional services expenses directly related to the projects;

(D) Machinery that is necessary to the operation or function of the building or structure at the time of initial acquisition or construction;

(E) Acquisition, development, and deployment of new computer  systems, including the integration of existing and new computer systems, but excluding regular or ongoing maintenance or support agreements;

(F) Furniture, fixtures, or equipment that meets all the following criteria:

(1) Is essential in bringing the facility up to its intended use or is necessary for the functioning of the particular facility or project;

(2) Has a unit cost of about $100 or more; and

(3) Has a useful life of five years or more.

Furniture, fixtures, or equipment that is not an integral part of or directly related to the basic purpose or function of a project for which moneys are appropriated shall not be paid for from these appropriations. This paragraph does not apply to appropriation line items specifically for furniture, fixtures, or equipment.

Section 509.30. CONTINGENCY RESERVE REQUIREMENT

Any request for release of capital appropriations by the Director of Budget and Management or the Controlling Board for projects, the contracts for which are awarded by the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission, shall contain a contingency reserve, the amount of which shall be determined by the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission, for payment of unanticipated project expenses. Any amount deducted from the encumbrance for a contractor's contract as an assessment for liquidated damages shall be added to the encumbrance for the contingency reserve. Contingency reserve funds shall be used to pay costs resulting from unanticipated job conditions, to comply with rulings regarding building and other codes, to pay costs related to errors or omissions in contract documents, to pay costs associated with changes in the scope of work, and to pay the cost of settlements and judgments related to the project.

Any funds remaining upon completion of a project, may, upon approval of the Controlling Board, be released for the use of the institution to which the appropriation was made for another capital facilities project or projects.

Section 509.40. SATISFACTION OF JUDGMENTS AND SETTLEMENTS AGAINST THE STATE

Except as otherwise provided in this section, an appropriation contained in this act or in any other act may be used for the purpose of satisfying judgments, settlements, or administrative awards ordered or approved by the Court of Claims or by any other court of competent jurisdiction in connection with civil actions against the state. This authorization does not apply to appropriations that are to be applied to or used for payment of guarantees by or on behalf of the state or for payments under lease agreements relating to or debt service on bonds, notes, or other obligations of the state. Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, this authorization includes appropriations from funds into which proceeds or direct obligations of the state are deposited only to the extent that the judgment, settlement, or administrative award is for or represents capital costs for which the appropriation may otherwise be used and is consistent with the purpose for which any related obligations were issued or entered into. Nothing contained in this section is intended to subject the state to suit in any forum in which it is not otherwise subject to suit, nor is it intended to waive or compromise any defense or right available to the state in any suit against it.

Section 509.50. CAPITAL RELEASES BY THE DIRECTOR OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT

Notwithstanding section 126.14 of the Revised Code, appropriations for appropriation items C50100, Local Jails, and C50101, Community-Based Correctional Facilities, appropriated from the Adult Correctional Building Fund (Fund 7027) to the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, and any projects specifically identified for C58001, Community Assistance Projects, shall be released upon the written approval of the Director of Budget and Management. The appropriations from the Public School Building Fund (Fund 7021), the Education Facilities Trust Fund (Fund N087), and the School Building Program Assistance Fund (Fund 7032) to the Facilities Construction Commission, from the Transportation Building Fund (Fund 7029) to the Department of Transportation, from the Clean Ohio Conservation Fund (Fund 7056), the State Capital Improvement Fund (Fund 7038), and the State Capital Improvements Revolving Loan Fund (Fund 7040) to the Public Works Commission, and from the Underground Parking Garage Operating Fund (Fund 2080) to the Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board shall be released upon presentation of a request to release the funds, by the agency to which the appropriation has been made, to the Director of Budget and Management.

Section 509.60. PREVAILING WAGE REQUIREMENT

Except as provided in section 4115.04 of the Revised Code, moneys appropriated or reappropriated by the 133rd General Assembly shall not be used for the construction of public improvements, as defined in section 4115.03 of the Revised Code, unless the mechanics, laborers, or workers engaged therein are paid the prevailing rate of wages prescribed in section 4115.04 of the Revised Code. Nothing in this section affects the wages and salaries established for state employees under Chapter 124. of the Revised Code, or collective bargaining agreements entered into by the state under Chapter 4117. of the Revised Code, while engaged on force account work, nor does this section interfere with the use of inmate and patient labor by the state.

Section 509.70. AUTHORIZATION OF THE DIRECTOR OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT

The Director of Budget and Management shall authorize both of the following:

(A) The initial release of moneys for projects from the funds into which proceeds of direct obligations of the state are deposited; and

(B) The expenditure or encumbrance of moneys from funds into which proceeds of direct obligations are deposited, only after determining to the Director's satisfaction that either of the following applies:

(1) The application of such moneys to the particular project will not negatively affect any exclusion of the interest or interest equivalent on obligations issued to provide moneys to the particular fund from the calculation of gross income for federal income tax purposes under the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986," 100 Stat. 2085, 26 U.S.C. 1, as amended.

(2) Moneys for the project will come from the proceeds of federally taxable obligations, the interest on which is not so excluded from the calculation of gross income for federal income tax purposes and which have been authorized and issued on that basis by their issuing authority.

In the event the Director determines that the condition set forth in division (B)(1) of this section does not apply, and that there is no existing fund in the state treasury to enable compliance with the condition set forth in division (B)(2) of this section, the Director may create a fund in the state treasury for the purpose of receiving proceeds of federally taxable obligations. The Director may establish capital appropriation items in that taxable bond fund that correspond to the preexisting capital appropriation items in the associated tax-exempt bond fund. The Director also may transfer capital appropriations in whole or in part between the taxable and tax-exempt bond funds within a particular purpose for which the bonds have been authorized.

Section 509.80. REAPPROPRIATION OF UNEXPENDED ENCUMBERED BALANCES OF CAPITAL APPROPRIATIONS

(A)(1) Notwithstanding the original year of appropriation or encumbrance, the unexpended balance of a capital appropriation or reappropriation that a state agency has lawfully encumbered prior to the close of the fiscal year 2019-2020 capital biennium is hereby reappropriated for the fiscal year 2021-2022 capital biennium from the fund from which it was originally appropriated or was reappropriated and shall be used only for the purpose of discharging the encumbrance. For those encumbered appropriations or reappropriations, any Controlling Board approval previously granted and referenced by the encumbering document remains in effect until the encumbrance is discharged or until the encumbrance expires at the end of the fiscal year 2021-2022 capital biennium.

(2) During the fiscal year 2021-2022 capital biennium, the Director of Budget and Management may cancel an encumbrance that was reappropriated pursuant to division (A)(1) of this section if the Director determines that the encumbrance is no longer needed to complete the project for which it was reappropriated or appropriated.

(B) If during the fiscal year 2021-2022 capital biennium, pursuant to section 126.22 of the Revised Code in order to correct an accounting error, the Director of Budget and Management reestablishes an encumbrance that was reappropriated pursuant to division (A) of this section, the amount representing the encumbrance canceled in error is reappropriated in accordance with division (A) of this section.

Section 509.90. PREVIOUSLY RELEASED REAPPROPRIATIONS

Capital reappropriations in this act that have been released by the Controlling Board or the Director of Budget and Management between July 1, 2018, and June 30, 2020, do not require further approval or release prior to being encumbered. Funds reappropriated in excess of such prior releases shall be released in accordance with applicable provisions of this act.

Section 510.10. REAPPROPRIATION OF UNENCUMBERED BALANCES OF CAPITAL APPROPRIATIONS

The reappropriations made in this act represent the unencumbered balances of prior years' capital improvements appropriations estimated to be available on June 30, 2020. Notwithstanding the foregoing, unless otherwise specified, the actual unencumbered balances on June 30, 2020, for the appropriation items in this act identified as reappropriations are hereby reappropriated. Additionally, there is hereby reappropriated the actual unencumbered balances on June 30, 2020, of any appropriation items either appropriated or reappropriated in H.B. 529 of the 132nd General Assembly or appropriated in H.B. 24 of the 132nd General Assembly, H.B. 92 of the 132nd General Assembly, S.B. 299 of the 132nd General Assembly, S.B. 51 of the 132nd General Assembly, H.B. 62 of the 133rd General Assembly, or H.B. 166 of the 133rd General Assembly and not otherwise listed in this act, or created by the Controlling Board pursuant to section 127.15 of the Revised Code, if the Director of Budget and  Management determines that such balances are needed to complete  the projects for which they were reappropriated or appropriated.  The appropriation items and amounts that are reappropriated by  this act shall be reported to the Controlling Board within 30 days  after the effective date of this section.

Section 510.20. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO NON-STATE OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN FINANCED PROJECTS

(A) No capital improvement reappropriations made in this act from the Mental Health Facilities Improvement Fund (Fund 7033) or from the Parks and Recreation Improvement Fund (Fund 7035) shall be released for planning or for improvement, renovation, or construction or acquisition of capital facilities if a governmental agency, as defined in section 154.01 of the Revised Code, does not own the real property that constitutes the capital facilities or on which the capital facilities are or will be located. This restriction does not apply in any of the following circumstances:

(1) The governmental agency has a long-term (at least fifteen years) lease of, or other interest (such as an easement) in, the real property.

(2) In the case of a reappropriation for capital facilities that, because of their unique nature or location, will be owned or be part of facilities owned by a separate nonprofit organization and made available to the governmental agency for its use or benefit, the nonprofit organization either owns or has a long-term (at least fifteen years) lease of the real property or other capital facility to be improved, renovated, constructed, or acquired and has entered into a joint or cooperative use agreement, with and approved by the governmental agency that meets the requirements of division (B) of this section.

(B) In the case of capital facilities referred to in division (A)(2) of this section, the joint or cooperative use agreement shall include, as a minimum, provisions that:

(1) Specify the extent and nature of that joint or cooperative use, extending for not fewer than fifteen years, with the value of such use or right to use to be, as determined by the parties and approved by the approving department, reasonably related to the amount of the appropriation;

(2) Provide for pro rata reimbursement to the state should the arrangement for joint or cooperative use by a governmental agency be terminated; and

(3) Provide that procedures to be followed during the capital improvement process will comply with appropriate applicable state statutes and rules, including the provisions of this act.

Section 518.10. OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER CHAPTER 151. OF THE REVISED CODE

The capital improvements for which reappropriations are made in this act from the Higher Education Improvement Taxable Fund (Fund 7024), the Ohio Parks and Natural Resources Fund (Fund 7031), the School Building Program Assistance Fund (Fund 7032), the Higher Education Improvement Fund (Fund 7034), the State Capital Improvements Fund (Fund 7038), the State Capital Improvements Revolving Loan Fund (Fund 7040), the Coal Research and Development Fund (Fund 7046), the Clean Ohio Conservation Fund (Fund 7056), the Clean Ohio Agricultural Easement Fund (Fund 7057), and the Clean Ohio Trail Fund (Fund 7061) are determined to be capital improvements and capital facilities for natural resources, a statewide system of common schools, state-supported and state-assisted institutions of higher education, local subdivision capital improvement projects, coal research and development projects, and conservation purposes (under the Clean Ohio Program) and are designated as capital facilities to which proceeds of obligations issued under Chapter 151. of the Revised Code are to be applied.

Section 518.20. OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER CHAPTER 154. OF THE REVISED CODE

The capital improvements for which reappropriations are made in this act from the Administrative Building Taxable Bond Fund (Fund 7016), the Administrative Building Fund (Fund 7026), the Adult Correctional Building Fund (Fund 7027), the Juvenile Correctional Building Fund (Fund 7028), the Transportation Building Fund (Fund 7029), the Cultural and Sports Facilities Building Fund (Fund 7030), the Mental Health Facilities Improvement Fund (Fund 7033), and the Parks and Recreation Improvement Fund (Fund 7035) are determined to be capital improvements and capital facilities for housing state agencies and branches of government, mental health and developmental disabilities, and parks and recreation and are designated as capital facilities to which proceeds of obligations issued under Chapter 154. of the Revised Code are to be applied.

Section 523.10. TRANSFER OF OPEN ENCUMBRANCES

Upon the request of the agency to which a capital project appropriation item is appropriated, the Director of Budget and Management may transfer open encumbrance amounts between separate encumbrances for the project appropriation item to the extent that any reductions in encumbrances are agreed to by the contracting vendor and the agency.

Section 525.10. LITIGATION PROCEEDS TO THE ADMINISTRATIVE BUILDING FUND

Any proceeds received by the state as the result of litigation or a settlement agreement related to any liability for the planning, design, engineering, construction, or constructed management of facilities operated by the Department of Administrative Services shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund or the Building Improvement Fund (Fund 5KZ0).

Section 601.10. That Section 812.10 of H.B. 529 of the 132nd General Assembly be amended to read as follows:

Sec. 812.10. Sections of this act H.B. 529 of the 132nd General Assembly prefixed with section numbers in the 200s take effect on July 1, 2018, or on the effective date of this section June 29, 2018, under Ohio Constitution, Article II, Section 1c, whichever occurs later. The provisions with the purpose of drawing money from the state treasury in payment of liabilities lawfully incurred under those sections, cease to have effect at midnight (24:00) on June 30, 2020.

Section 601.11. That existing Section 812.10 of H.B. 529 of the 132nd General Assembly is hereby repealed.

Section 806.10. The items of law contained in this act, and their applications, are severable. If an item of law contained in this act, or if an application of an item of law contained in this act, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other items of law contained in this act and their applications that can be given effect without the invalid item or application.

Section 806.20. During the period of the emergency declared by Executive Order 2020-01D, issued on March 9, 2020, and notwithstanding any contrary provision of the Revised Code, the part of division (B) of section 339.05 of the Revised Code that states ", and either of the following applies" is suspended, and divisions (B)(1), (2), and (D) of section 339.05 of the Revised Code are suspended.

Section 807.10. This act is hereby declared to be an emergency measure necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, and safety. The reason for such necessity is to address the financial impact to governments from the COVID-19 pandemic and to provide for the continuation, without interruption, of ongoing capital projects. Therefore, this act shall go into immediate effect.