State Budget Update: Impact on Ohio’s Opioid Crisis


This is the final budget of the Gov. John Kasich’s two-term administration and it was a challenging budget for the legislature and the administration with an ongoing decline in state revenue during the current fiscal year.  With the initial announcement, in March state leaders proposed that the pending budget would need to be reduced by $800 million in general revenue funds over the biennium. This total grew to nearly $1 billion by mid-June. As a result, most state agencies received a 4-6 percent across-the-board cut and Medicaid reimbursement rates for nursing homes and hospitals are frozen at January 1, 2017 levels. However, both the House and the Senate identified $170 million to fund priorities to help combat Ohio’s opioid crisis.

Opioid Crisis

Ohio’s growing opioid epidemic, with some of the rural areas of the state being the hardest hit in the country, was an area of focus throughout the budget process.  The additional federal funding Ohio receives for Medicaid expansion has provided more than $1 billion for Ohio to help combat the crisis, which is one benefit to the decision to expand Medicaid in Ohio on which most legislators seem to agree. In 2016, 4,149 Ohioans died from a drug overdose, which equals 11 people a day. Throughout the budget process, advocacy organizations and health care professionals testified that they are seeing the potential of even a higher number of deaths in 2017.  As such, the House and Senate both identified $170 million in funding for additional efforts to fight the growing epidemic as follows:

Mental Health and Addiction:

Child and Family Welfare

Criminal Justice

Wellness and Prevention

Local Government Fund (LGF) Priorities to help local communities:

This post is part of a series of blog posts that explore the Ohio Budget Update.

Ohio Budget Update- July 6, 2017

Ohio State Budget Update: K-12 Education and Higher Education

Ohio State Budget Update: Tax Related Provisions

Ohio State Budget Update: Medicaid Budget in HB 49 (Smith) Operating Budget FY 18-19


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National Law Review, Volume VII, Number 187