“This is not a bill that can become law.” Ohio Republican Governor Mike DeWine Offers His Unilateral Opinion On A Bill Passed By The Republican Controlled Legislature To Strip Him And His Health Department Of Their Current Unilateral Authority To Issue Statewide China Wu-Flu Orders


Gov. Mike DeWine said, “[This bill] “would put Ohioans at risk, it would make it hard for [me]… to do what [I think] is necessary for the citizens of this state.”

DeWine added, “This bill is a disaster. This is not a bill that can become law.” And I will veto it out of a “moral obligation.”

Bill to limit health orders passes, but DeWine promises veto

FARNOUSH AMIRI, Report for America/Associated Press

Nov. 19, 2020 Updated: Nov. 19, 2020 4:44 p.m.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Republican Gov. Mike DeWine — after promising a veto — failed to convince lawmakers Thursday not to pass legislation that would limit the powers of his administration and health officials as the virus’ spread across Ohio reached new peaks.

At hand was a Senate bill that would ban the state Department of Health from issuing mandatory quarantine orders enforced against people who are not sick or exposed to disease — such as the order announced by the governor Tuesday setting a curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. The bill passed with a 58-to-30 vote on partisan lines.

When the bill reaches DeWine’s desk, he will veto it out of “moral obligation,” he said. The House would then need 60 votes to override a governor’s veto. Both chambers are currently controlled by a Republican majority.

“In national security measures like this, this bill would make Ohio slow to respond to the crisis,” DeWine said. “It would put Ohioans at risk, it would make it hard for this governor or any future governor to do what is necessary for the citizens of this state.”

He added, “This bill is a disaster. This is not a bill that can become law.”

Earlier Thursday, DeWine for the first time designated one of the state’s most populous areas, Franklin County, home to Columbus, as a purple zone on the state’s color-coded alert system. The designation is the highest on the state’s system and shows the area was flagged for hitting six indicators, including sustained increases in cases and in coronavirus-related hospital admissions.

[snip]

While the numbers continued to rise in nearly every corner of the state, Ohio lawmakers convened for a lame duck session Thursday to vote on the bill DeWine promises to veto and a number of other outstanding bills.

The legislation is the latest instance of a nearly eight-month struggle for DeWine to balance public safety while maintaining a healthy economy.

The initial unemployment compensation filings reported were 14% higher at 24,964 on Thursday than the numbers for the week ending Nov. 7, which were 21,868.

A number of Ohio’s major cities are currently under a stay-at-home advisory including Columbus, Cleveland, Toledo and Akron. The statewide curfew will go into effect Thursday at 10 p.m. and will remain in effect for 21 days.

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Farnoush Amiri is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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