The Buckeye Institute

Press Releases

Press Releases

The Buckeye Institute Applauds Governor DeWine’s Decisions to Get More Workers Back into the Job Market

Rea S. Hederman Jr., executive director of the Economic Research Center and vice president of policy at The Buckeye Institute, issued a statement on Governor Mike DeWine’s announcement that Ohio will withdraw from the federal pandemic unemployment benefits program, which The Buckeye Institute recommended in Policy Solutions for the Pandemic: Declining Extra Unemployment Benefits Will Help Get Ohio Back to Work.

Policy Research & Reports, Press Releases

The Buckeye Institute: Declining Extra Unemployment Benefits Will Help Get Ohio Back to Work

In a new policy memo, Policy Solutions for the Pandemic: Declining Extra Unemployment Benefits Will Help Get Ohio Back to Work, The Buckeye Institute calls on Ohio to decline Washington’s extra unemployment benefit and work instead to reduce labor shortages and get Ohioans back to work.  “With job openings at an all-time high, Ohio policymakers should avoid a weakened recovery and reject Washington’s expanded unemployment benefits.”

Commentary & In the News, Press Releases

Washington Has No Authority to Dictate State Taxes

Ohio and 20 others are suing to challenge an unconstitutional poison pill in the COVID relief law. In The Wall Street Journal, Robert Alt, president and chief executive officer of The Buckeye Institute, writes, “Congressional Democrats last month quietly attempted one of the most sweeping takeovers of state policy making in American history. The ill-conceived American Rescue Plan Act offered states nearly $200 billion in emergency pandemic-relief funding. As is often the case with ‘free’ money, there was a catch.”

Press Releases, Testimony & Public Comments

Buckeye Institute-Championed Universal Occupational Licensing Recognition Will Make Ohio More Prosperous

The Buckeye Institute testified before the Ohio House State and Local Government Committee on the policies in House Bill 203, which would embrace universal occupational license recognition for people moving to Ohio. In its testimony, Buckeye urged lawmakers to follow the lead of Arizona, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Utah and adopt universal occupational license recognition, saying, “House Bill 203’s licensing recognition…will help Ohio by helping would-be Ohio workers pursue careers and professions here.”;  

Press Releases, Testimony & Public Comments

The Buckeye Institute: Education Savings Accounts Give Ohio’s Children the Best Chance to Succeed

The Buckeye Institute testified before the Ohio Senate Primary and Secondary Education Committee on the education budget included in House Bill 110, Ohio’s biennial operating budget. In its testimony, Buckeye outlined how Ohio can “take a student-first approach to funding K-12 education” using education savings accounts, which “provide a bipartisan funding solution” and “help parents afford critical education resources and the flexibility needed for students to succeed.”

Amicus Briefs, Legal, Press Releases

The Buckeye Institute Files Third Legal Brief to Protect Taxpayers Against Biden’s Tax Mandate

The Buckeye Institute filed its third amicus brief calling on the courts to protect taxpayers from the federal tax mandate included in the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). The most recent ARPA-related brief was filed in West Virginia v. Yellen with the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama Western Division. In addition to West Virginia and Alabama, other plaintiffs in the case are the states of Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Utah.

Press Releases

Buckeye Institute-Championed House Bill 2 is Good for Ohioans and Good for Ohio’s Economy

Greg R. Lawson, research fellow at The Buckeye Institute, issued a statement after the Ohio Senate passed House Bill 2, which will expand access to broadband to unserved areas of Ohio, saying, “It has become increasingly clear that access to high-speed broadband is an essential part of daily life in America, and the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need to expand service as millions of Ohioans began to attend school, work, shop, and visit their doctors from home. House Bill 2 is an important step towards increasing access to this critical service.”

Legal, Press Releases

The Buckeye Institute Appeals Columbus Municipal Income Tax Case

Robert Alt, president and chief executive officer of The Buckeye Institute, issued a statement after Buckeye filed its notice of appeal with Ohio’s Tenth District Court of Appeals in Buckeye v. Kilgore—a case challenging the City of Columbus’s application of local income tax to nonresidents who did not work in Columbus for extended periods of time during the pandemic—saying, “The Ohio Supreme Court has been perfectly clear in binding decisions stating that cities lack the authority to tax residents who neither work nor live there.”

Legal, Press Releases

The Buckeye Institute Files Another Brief to Protect Taxpayers Against Biden’s Tax Mandate

The Buckeye Institute filed its amicus brief in Arizona v. Yellen calling on the United States District Court for the District of Arizona to stop enforcement of the federal tax mandate, which was included in the American Rescue Plan Act. “Without clear and unambiguous language of what the states are permitted and what they are forbidden, the Biden administration’s sweeping disregard for the principle of federalism must be overturned,” said Robert Alt, president and chief executive officer of The Buckeye Institute.

Legal, Press Releases

Washington State’s Initiative 1501 is a Clear Violation of the U.S. Constitution

The Buckeye Institute filed its amicus brief in Boardman v. Inslee calling on the United States Supreme Court to overturn a union-backed Washington state law that prohibits access to contact information for public employees to anyone except for unions themselves, a clear violation of the First Amendment. Boardman v. Inslee challenges Washington’s Initiative 1501, a ballot initiative funded by government unions that restricts access to the contact information of public employees to any groups except unions.

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