PMA Cleveland District Meeting September 13, 2011 State House Report Ryan Augsburger...
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Transcript of PMA Cleveland District Meeting September 13, 2011 State House Report Ryan Augsburger...
PMA Cleveland District Meeting September 13, 2011
State House Report
• Ryan Augsburger
• Kevin Schmidt
ABOUT THE OHIO MANUFACTURERS’ ASSOCIATION
WHO: Manufacturing Leaders Working with Policy Makers
WHAT: Protect & Grow Manufacturing
WHERE: State Government
WHEN: 24 / 7 Since 1910
WHY: Because if you are not at the table, you are on the menu –Jim McGregor
HOW: Advocacy / ProblemSolving / Informing / Energy Assistance / Workers’ Comp
Assistance
ROADMAP:
• Facts and Figures About Manufacturing in Ohio’s Economy
• Examples of Manufacturing Advocacy Collaboration
• Resources for Manufacturers
• Current State Government Events Impacting Ohio Manufacturing Competitiveness
Manufacturing accounts for 18% of Ohio’s Gross Domestic Product –
Nearly double the contribution of the next largest private-industry sector (real estate, rental and leasing at 9.9%).
Ohio’s total annual manufacturing output of $84.1 billion in 2008 ranked third nationally –
and was $37 billion higher than the next largest non-government sector of the state’s economy.
More than 600,000 Ohioans –
or about 14 percent of all Ohio workers –
are employed in manufacturing,
which makes manufacturing Ohio’s number-one source of non-government jobs.
Total manufacturing payroll in Ohio exceeded $38 billion in 2008,
the highest total annual wages of any economic sector, public or private.
Government = $33 billionHealth care and social assistance = $27 billionRetail trade = $14 billion
Manufacturing is a leading source of new private investment in Ohio.
In 2009, Ohio ranked first nationally in new site selections –
and manufacturing accounted for 58 percent of those investments.
In 2009, Ohio was the seventh-largest exporting state in the nation,
exporting more than $34 billion in goods
to 213 countries and territories.
Ohio ranks first, second or third among U.S. manufacturers in 84 different North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) categories of manufacturing.
What do we make in Ohio?
#1 in:
Wood products Paint and coatings
Adhesives Resins
Plastic bottles Rubber products
Refactory goods Pressed and blown glass
Rolling and drawing steel Ferrous metal foundries
Nonaluminum foundries Custom roll forming
What do we make in Ohio?
And also #1 in:
Hand tool and saw blade Heat treating
Bearings Ordnance
Plastic and rubber machinery Machine tools
Rolling mill machinery Heavy duty trucks
Wood kitchen cabinets Brooms, brushes and mops
What do we make in Ohio?
And, #2 or #3 in:
Dog and cat food Frozen food
Cookies, crackers and pasta Seasonings and dressings
Fabric coating mills Wood containers
Paperboard container ` Coated paper
Asphalt shingles Synthetic dye
Inorganic chemicals Un-laminated plastic sheets
Laminated plastic sheets Plastics products
China and pottery Ceramic tile
What do we make in Ohio?
#2 or #3 more:
Structural clay products Lime
Iron and steel mills Iron and steel pipe
Nonferrous metal foundries Forgings
Metal stamping Cutlery, pots and pans
Architectural metal work Metal tanks
Metal cans Hardware
Springs and wire products Machine shops
Precision turned products Valves and fittings
What do we make in Ohio?
#2 or #3 more:
Small arms ammunition Fabricated metal products
Lawn and garden equipment Ventilation equipment
Industrial molds Special tools, dies and jigs
Cutting tools Metalworking machinery
Mechanical power transmission Packaging machinery
Fluid power equipment General purpose machinery
Fluid meters Industrial controls
Gasoline engines and parts Steering and suspension systems
What do we make in Ohio?
#2 or #3 continued:
Brake systems Transmissions and power trains
Seating and interior trim Vehicle stampings
Vehicle air-conditioning Vehicle parts
Architectural millwork Laboratory apparatuses
Dolls, toys and games Burial caskets
Manufacturing locates where “all-in” costs are lowest.
What makes up “all-in” costs?
What Makes Up All In Costs?
• Labor• Technology & Business Practices (R&D)• Equipment & Financing• Location• Transportation• Energy• Environmental Regulations• Access to Markets• Taxation• Workers’ Compensation• Civil Justice / Lawsuit Exposure
SUCCESSFUL INDUSTRY ADVOCACY COLLABORATION
• Civil Justice Update “Tort Reform”
• Business Tax Code Reform
• Air Permitting Reform
• Electricity Restructuring
• Transportation Policy
CURRENT EVENTS IMPACT OHIO’S COMPETITIVENESS
• State Budget Completed June 30
• Legislative Recess
• November Ballot Issues (SB 5)
• Legislative Redistricting
• JobsOhio / Economic Development Incentives
• Shale Gas and Energy Policy
• Environmental Train Wreck
• Workers’ Comp Reform
STATE BUDGET H.B. 153
• Funds State Operations July 2011 – June 2013• GRF: ~$55.7 Billion• OMA Members Support HB 153
– No Tax Hikes– Phase-In Final Personal Income Tax Rate Reduction (HB
66) – Tools to encourage shared services / consolidation of local
public entities (townships, cities, library systems, school districts)
– Repeal Estate Tax, a disincentive to investment for the thousands of smaller family-owned manufacturing companies whose owners must instead spend capital on unproductive tax avoidance strategies.
– InvestOhio to spur capital investment in Ohio businesses 2011 – 2013.
NOVEMBER GENERAL ELECTION
• Issue 1 – Judicial Age Limit Increase to 75» Constitutional Amendment
• Issue 2 – SB 5 Collective Bargaining» Referendum to Repeal Enacted Legislation» OMA Endorsed» www.betterohio.org
• Issue 3 – Health Care Individual Mandate» Constitutional Amendment
REDISTRICTING / REAPPORTIONMENT
• Follows Decennial Census of 2010
• REDISTRICTING– Ohio House and Senate
• Revise Congressional districts via legislation• Expected timeline – Autumn Session 2011• Population decline – Ohio loses two seats
• RE-APPORTIONMENT– Apportionment Board
• Revises Ohio House (99) / Ohio Senate (33) boundaries• Five Members (Governor, Sec of State, Auditor of State, House Rs
& Senate Ds)• Scheduled throughout August.
JOBSOHIO
• JobsOhio is a private non-profit corporation, guided by a business-minded governor and a highly accomplished board of directors that come from the business world. Like everyone at JobsOhio, they speak your language.
• JobsOhio is holding a series of regional presentations to discuss Ohio's new economic development strategy. Join us for an upcoming meeting, or download a presentation deck from one of our past events.
ENERGY
• Governor’s Energy Summit– September 21-22 in Columbus.
• Shale Gas– Scale and Meaning– OMA advocating for manufacturing priorities.
• Electric Utility Rate Design– Possible revision to Ohio electric rate law– OMA vigilant on this matter.
• OMA Focus– Competitive, predictable rates for manufacturing. Period.– Affinity “Buying Pool” for Manufacturers– Energy Efficiency
ENVIRONMENTAL Train Wreck
• Landslide of new Federal Regulations– NAAQS
• Ozone & SO2– MACT
• Boiler, Utility, etc.– GHG– Cross-State Air Pollution– Coal Ash– Mercury, Arsenic– Cooling Water
TRANSPORTATION
• At the federal level, the OMA has been supportive incorporating the Safe and Efficient Transportation Act (SETA) into the federal highway bill. SETA allows states to lift the truck weight limit for interstate travel from 80,000 pounds to 120,000 pounds with extra axel and braking safeguards to prevent road degradation while improving efficiency.
• U.S. Senator Rob Portman and Congresswoman Jean Schmidt are sponsoring the measure in the U.S. Senate and U.S. House.
• Manufacturers should express support to Senator Portman and Congresswoman Schmidt and other members of Congress.
• Motivated by short-term thinking and self-serving business interests, railroads are lobbying hard to derail SETA.
SAFETY & LABOR REGULATIONS
• SAFETY• OSHA (Federal) proposed rule makings harmful to
manufacturing.– Noise– Musculoskeletal Disorder Reporting– Silica Dust PEL
• LABOR• NLRB (Federal) regulations harmful to
manufacturing. – Boeing Case -- Relocation– Quickie Elections (EFCA aftermath)
VOTE TRACKINGHTTP://WWW.OHIOPOWEREDBYMANUFACTURING.COM
Ohio Senate District 24
(show committee information)
Senator Thomas F. Patton (R) http://www.ohiosenate.gov/tom-patton.html (web) [email protected] (email) Write this official! Capital Address: Senate Building 1 Capitol Square, Room 140 Columbus OH 43215 (614) 466-8056 (phone) (614) 222-0991 (fax)
District Address: 17157 Rabbit's Run Drive, OH 44136 Strongsville OH 44136 (614) 238-7132 (phone)
Key Votes for Ohio Manufacturers in the 127th General Assembly
Description Preferred Position
This official's vote compared with the preferred
position On HB 100: WORKERS' COMPENSATION BUDGET AND REFORMS: Makes important reforms to the state’s workers' compensation system. Containing costs to help employers provide more employment opportunities and ensuring that the workers' compensation system provides the best possible service and level of care to injured workers is an essential part of Ohio's efforts to promote economic growth and competitiveness.
Y
On SB 221: ENERGY POLICY: Provides reliable electric rates for employers and consumers, enabling job retention and economic growth at a time when energy costs are of paramount importance. Y
This official's percentage on this voting record: 50%
VOTE TRACKINGHTTP://WWW.OHIOPOWEREDBYMANUFACTURING.COM
Key Votes For Ohio Manufacturers in the 126th General Assembly
Description Preferred Position
This official's vote compared with the preferred
position On Am. Sub. S.B. 265: Third Consideration Ensuring that Ohio's environmental air permitting system is streamlined, efficient and transparent is important to manufacturers when they are making decisions to move to and locate within the state. This legislation reguires the Ohio EPA to put in writing the standards that industry must follow to control air emissions. This will make Ohio's system more predictable statewide and competitive nationally.
Y
On SB 117 --126thGA: LAWSUIT REFORM: This vote reflects lawmaker's position on important lawsuit reforms, including protection for Ohio employers and employees from costly and frivolous nuisance lawsuits that can hurt efforts to attract business and jobs to Ohio.
Y
On Sub. H.B. 390: Third Consideration For manufacturers to be competitive they a predictable government regulatory system in which to operate. This legislation would create a more predictable tax collection system by establishing a statute of limitation on the collection certain types of taxes.
Y
Sub. H.B. 66: Third Consideration This legislation reformed Ohio's tax system to encourage manufacturers and other business to invest in jobs, tools and facilities in Ohio and lowered all taxpayers' income taxes. Y
On Sub. S.B. 7: Third Consideration This legislation put in place substantial and important workers' compensation reforms that help return injured workers to their jobs and make the BWC more cost efficient.
Y
This official's percentage on this voting record: 80%
Coming together is a beginning. Keeping together is progress. Working together is success. -Henry Ford
Thank You