Bill Text: OH HB576 | 2009-2010 | 128th General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: To authorize the state and local governments to jointly offer tax and other incentives to businesses that establish operations within designated areas.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 9-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-09-01 - To Ways & Means [HB576 Detail]

Download: Ohio-2009-HB576-Introduced.html
As Introduced

128th General Assembly
Regular Session
2009-2010
H. B. No. 576


Representative Morgan 

Cosponsors: Representatives Uecker, Blair, Hite, Grossman, Jordan, Adams, R., Sears, Lehner 



A BILL
To amend sections 1739.02, 4115.04, 4123.01, 4123.35, 1
and 4123.82 and to enact sections 122.09 and 2
4123.354 of the Revised Code to authorize the 3
state and local governments to jointly offer tax 4
and other incentives to businesses that establish 5
operations within designated areas.6


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

       Section 1. That sections 1739.02, 4115.04, 4123.01, 4123.35, 7
and 4123.82 be amended and sections 122.09 and 4123.354 of the 8
Revised Code be enacted to read as follows:9

       Sec. 122.09. (A) As used in this section:10

       (1) "Subdivision" has the same meaning as in section 5705.01 11
of the Revised Code and refers to the subdivision's taxing 12
authority, as defined in that section, where the context requires.13

       (2) "Participating governmental authority" means a 14
subdivision that enters into a contract under this section, and 15
the state if the director of development is a party to such a 16
contract.17

       (3) "Tax and other incentives" includes full or partial 18
exemption from taxation of property in an area; exemptions, 19
deductions, or credits from or against the taxes imposed under 20
Chapter 322., 5725., 5729., 5733., 5739., 5741., 5747., or 5751. 21
of the Revised Code; exemptions, deductions, or credits from or 22
against municipal income taxes; assistance under Chapter 122., 23
165., 166., or 184. of the Revised Code; and any other assistance 24
intended to promote or foster business development, increased 25
employment, and general economic welfare.26

       (4) "Multiple employer welfare arrangement," "fully insured 27
program," and "group self-insurance program" have the same 28
meanings as in section 1739.01 of the Revised Code.29

       (B)(1) For the purpose of facilitating economic development, 30
to create or preserve jobs and employment opportunities, and to 31
improve the economic welfare of the people in this state, the 32
director of development or one or more subdivisions may enter into 33
a contract to create an Ohio opportunity area. The area shall be 34
comprised exclusively of territory zoned for commercial or 35
agricultural use and shall be located within the boundaries of 36
this state and two or more participating governmental authorities. 37
The contract term may not exceed ten years, but it may be renewed 38
upon agreement of the participating governmental authorities. The 39
contract shall describe the area's boundaries, create a board of 40
directors, and delineate the board's authority and duties.41

       Authority granted to the board of directors may include the 42
following:43

       (a) Entering into agreements with businesses whereby a 44
business commits to create or preserve jobs in the area and the 45
board of directors provides tax and other incentives for the 46
business;47

       (b) Accepting service payments in lieu of taxes from 48
contracting businesses and using them for any purpose of the area;49

       (c) Granting or guaranteeing loans to finance infrastructure 50
improvements in the area and to acquire, construct, enlarge, 51
improve, or equip, and to sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise 52
dispose of property, structures, equipment, and facilities within 53
the area for industry, commerce, distribution, and research and 54
development purposes, pursuant to Sections 2p and 13 of Article 55
VIII, Ohio Constitution;56

       (d) Levying an income tax to be used solely for the purposes 57
of the area. A tax levied pursuant to division (B)(1)(d) of this 58
section may be levied only upon written petition signed by all 59
persons owning or leasing real property in the area for the 60
purpose of conducting a trade or business. The tax may be based 61
only on income earned by individuals for services performed within 62
the area and on the net profits of businesses located in the area. 63
The income tax is subject to the limitations of Chapter 718. of 64
the Revised Code. The board of directors may prescribe the form of 65
the petition. The board of directors shall publish or post public 66
notice within the area of any resolution adopted by the board 67
levying an income tax in the same manner required of municipal 68
corporations under sections 731.21 and 731.25 of the Revised Code.69

       (e) Waiving the prevailing wage requirements under Chapter 70
4115. of the Revised Code for public improvement projects in the 71
area for a fixed period of time, for the duration of the project, 72
or as otherwise determined by the board.73

       (2) If tax or other incentives are provided that reduce the 74
revenue from a tax imposed by a taxing authority that is not a 75
participating governmental authority, the taxing authority 76
imposing the tax shall be reimbursed for the entire amount of the 77
reduction unless it agrees otherwise.78

       (3)(a) A participating governmental authority may, by 79
resolution, issue on behalf of the board of directors 80
self-supporting securities to finance improvements in the area for 81
industry, commerce, distribution, and research and development 82
purposes, pursuant to Sections 2p and 13 of Article VIII, Ohio 83
Constitution. Securities shall be secured by a pledge of and a 84
lien upon the revenues derived from ownership or operation of the 85
improvements or amounts from taxes levied by the board of 86
directors or from service payments in lieu of taxes received by 87
the board of directors.88

       (b) A participating governmental authority may, by 89
resolution, issue on behalf of the board of directors bonds to 90
finance improvements in the area for industry, commerce, 91
distribution, and research and development purposes, pursuant to 92
Sections 2p and 13 of Article VIII, Ohio Constitution. The bonds 93
shall be secured by a pledge of and lien on taxes levied by the 94
board of directors or by service payments in lieu of taxes 95
received by the board of directors. The bonds shall not be general 96
obligations of the participating governmental authority, and shall 97
not constitute a debt, or a pledge of the faith and credit, but 98
shall be payable solely from the funds pledged for their payment 99
as authorized by this section.100

       (C) Businesses located in an Ohio opportunity area may form a 101
multiple employer welfare arrangement to provide health insurance 102
to the employees of the businesses and the employees' dependents 103
through a fully insured program or a group self-insurance program. 104
If the multiple employer welfare arrangement provides health 105
insurance through a group self-insurance program, the multiple 106
employer welfare arrangement shall be subject to Chapter 1739. of 107
the Revised Code.108

       (D) A board of directors created pursuant to this section is 109
a body corporate and politic that may sue and be sued, plead and 110
be impleaded, and has the powers and jurisdiction enumerated in 111
this section. The exercise by a board of the powers conferred upon 112
it shall be essential governmental functions of this state but no 113
authority is immune from liability by reason thereof. The 114
provisions of Chapter 2744. and section 121.22 of the Revised Code 115
apply to the board and the area. The board of directors is a 116
governmental agency for the purposes of Chapter 166. of the 117
Revised Code.118

       If the state is a participating governmental authority, the 119
director of development or a designee of the director shall be a 120
member of the board. Other members of the board shall be appointed 121
as provided in the contract from among the other participating 122
governmental authorities and the elected chief executive officers 123
thereof, if any, provided that there shall be at least two members 124
appointed from each of the participating governmental authorities.125

       Official actions of the board of directors require an 126
affirmative vote of two-thirds of the board's members. The board's 127
official actions bind the participating governmental authorities.128

       (E)(1) A contract entered into under division (B) of this 129
section is not binding unless it is approved by each participating 130
governmental authority. The director of development shall 131
determine whether the state will be a party to the contract. All 132
other participating governmental authorities shall approve the 133
contract by ordinance or resolution. After all participating 134
governmental authorities have approved the contract, a copy of the 135
contract shall be filed with the director of development unless 136
the state is a participating governmental authority. Upon creation 137
of the area, no exemption from taxation may be granted or 138
authorized for property in the area unless the exemption is first 139
approved by official action of the board of directors before 140
application is made to the tax commissioner.141

       (2) Before a subdivision approves a contract entered into 142
under this section, each shall hold a public hearing concerning 143
the contract and shall provide thirty days' public notice of the 144
time and place of the public hearing in a newspaper of general 145
circulation in the county or counties in which the area is to be 146
created, a summary of the terms of the contract, a statement that 147
the entire text of the contract and area maps and plans are on 148
file for public examination in the office of the fiscal officer of 149
each subdivision, and information pertaining to any tax or debt 150
changes that will or may occur as a result of the contract.151

       During the thirty-day period before the public hearing, a 152
copy of the text of the contract together with copies of area maps 153
and plans related to or part of the contract shall be on file, for 154
public examination, in the office of the fiscal officer of each 155
subdivision. The public hearing provided for in this division 156
shall allow for public comment and recommendations from the public 157
on the proposed contract. The participating governmental 158
authorities may include in the contract any of those 159
recommendations before approving the contract.160

       Sec. 1739.02.  (A) A trade association, industry association, 161
or professional association that has been organized and maintained 162
in good faith for a continuous period of one year or more for 163
purposes other than obtaining insurance may establish, maintain, 164
or operate a group self-insurance program under a multiple 165
employer welfare arrangement that is chartered and created in this 166
state under sections 1739.01 to 1739.22 of the Revised Code.167

       (B) Except as provided in section 9.833 and sections 1739.01 168
to 1739.22 of the Revised Code, no multiple employer welfare 169
arrangement or other entity by which two or more employers jointly 170
participate in a common employee welfare benefit plan shall 171
operate a group self-insurance program in this state after four 172
months after the effective date of this sectionApril 9, 1993.173

       (C) Sections 1739.01 to 1739.22 of the Revised Code do not 174
apply to any entity that establishes, maintains, or operates a175
fully-insuredfully insured program.176

       (D) No person shall establish, operate, or maintain a 177
multiple employer welfare arrangement providing benefits through a 178
group self-insurance program in this state unless the multiple 179
employer welfare arrangement has a valid certificate of authority 180
from the superintendent of insurance.181

       (E) This chapter shall not apply to a self-insuring 182
consortium created for purposes of workers' compensation as 183
described in section 4123.354 of the Revised Code.184

       Sec. 4115.04.  (A)(1) Every public authority authorized to 185
contract for or construct with its own forces a public 186
improvement, before advertising for bids or undertaking such 187
construction with its own forces, shall have the director of 188
commerce determine the prevailing rates of wages of mechanics and 189
laborers in accordance with section 4115.05 of the Revised Code 190
for the class of work called for by the public improvement, in the 191
locality where the work is to be performed. Except as provided in 192
division (A)(2) of this section, that schedule of wages shall be 193
attached to and made part of the specifications for the work, and 194
shall be printed on the bidding blanks where the work is done by 195
contract. A copy of the bidding blank shall be filed with the 196
director before the contract is awarded. A minimum rate of wages 197
for common laborers, on work coming under the jurisdiction of the 198
department of transportation, shall be fixed in each county of the 199
state by the department of transportation, in accordance with 200
section 4115.05 of the Revised Code.201

       (2) In the case of contracts that are administered by the 202
department of natural resources, the director of natural resources 203
or the director's designee shall include language in the contracts 204
requiring wage rate determinations and updates to be obtained 205
directly from the department of commerce through electronic or 206
other means as appropriate. Contracts that include this 207
requirement are exempt from the requirements established in 208
division (A)(1) of this section that involve attaching the 209
schedule of wages to the specifications for the work, making the 210
schedule part of those specifications, and printing the schedule 211
on the bidding blanks where the work is done by contract.212

       (B) Sections 4115.03 to 4115.16 of the Revised Code do not 213
apply to:214

       (1) Public improvements in any case where the federal 215
government or any of its agencies furnishes by loan or grant all 216
or any part of the funds used in constructing such improvements, 217
provided that the federal government or any of its agencies 218
prescribes predetermined minimum wages to be paid to mechanics and 219
laborers employed in the construction of such improvements;220

       (2) A participant in a work activity, developmental activity, 221
or an alternative work activity under sections 5107.40 to 5107.69 222
of the Revised Code when a public authority directly uses the 223
labor of the participant to construct a public improvement if the 224
participant is not engaged in paid employment or subsidized 225
employment pursuant to the activity;226

       (3) Public improvements undertaken by, or under contract for, 227
the board of education of any school district or the governing 228
board of any educational service center;229

       (4) Public improvements undertaken by, or under contract for, 230
a county hospital operated pursuant to Chapter 339. of the Revised 231
Code or a municipal hospital operated pursuant to Chapter 749. of 232
the Revised Code if none of the funds used in constructing the 233
improvements are the proceeds of bonds or other obligations that 234
are secured by the full faith and credit of the state, a county, a 235
township, or a municipal corporation and none of the funds used in 236
constructing the improvements, including funds used to repay any 237
amounts borrowed to construct the improvements, are funds that 238
have been appropriated for that purpose by the state, a board of 239
county commissioners, a township, or a municipal corporation from 240
funds generated by the levy of a tax, provided that a county 241
hospital or municipal hospital may elect to apply sections 4115.03 242
to 4115.16 of the Revised Code to a public improvement undertaken 243
by, or under contract for, the hospital;244

       (5) Any project described in divisions (D)(1)(a) to (D)(1)(e) 245
of section 176.05 of the Revised Code;246

       (6) Any project for which a waiver has been granted by a 247
board of directors of an Ohio opportunity area pursuant to section 248
122.09 of the Revised Code.249

       Sec. 4123.01.  As used in this chapter:250

       (A)(1) "Employee" means:251

       (a) Every person in the service of the state, or of any 252
county, municipal corporation, township, or school district 253
therein, including regular members of lawfully constituted police 254
and fire departments of municipal corporations and townships, 255
whether paid or volunteer, and wherever serving within the state 256
or on temporary assignment outside thereof, and executive officers 257
of boards of education, under any appointment or contract of hire, 258
express or implied, oral or written, including any elected 259
official of the state, or of any county, municipal corporation, or 260
township, or members of boards of education.261

       As used in division (A)(1)(a) of this section, the term 262
"employee" includes the following persons when responding to an 263
inherently dangerous situation that calls for an immediate 264
response on the part of the person, regardless of whether the 265
person is within the limits of the jurisdiction of the person's 266
regular employment or voluntary service when responding, on the 267
condition that the person responds to the situation as the person 268
otherwise would if the person were on duty in the person's 269
jurisdiction:270

       (i) Off-duty peace officers. As used in division (A)(1)(a)(i) 271
of this section, "peace officer" has the same meaning as in 272
section 2935.01 of the Revised Code.273

       (ii) Off-duty firefighters, whether paid or volunteer, of a 274
lawfully constituted fire department.275

       (iii) Off-duty first responders, emergency medical 276
technicians-basic, emergency medical technicians-intermediate, or 277
emergency medical technicians-paramedic, whether paid or 278
volunteer, of an ambulance service organization or emergency 279
medical service organization pursuant to Chapter 4765. of the 280
Revised Code.281

       (b) Every person in the service of any person, firm, or 282
private corporation, including any public service corporation, 283
that (i) employs one or more persons regularly in the same 284
business or in or about the same establishment under any contract 285
of hire, express or implied, oral or written, including aliens and 286
minors, household workers who earn one hundred sixty dollars or 287
more in cash in any calendar quarter from a single household and 288
casual workers who earn one hundred sixty dollars or more in cash 289
in any calendar quarter from a single employer, or (ii) is bound 290
by any such contract of hire or by any other written contract, to 291
pay into the state insurance fund the premiums provided by this 292
chapter.293

       (c) Every person who performs labor or provides services 294
pursuant to a construction contract, as defined in section 4123.79 295
of the Revised Code, if at least ten of the following criteria 296
apply:297

       (i) The person is required to comply with instructions from 298
the other contracting party regarding the manner or method of 299
performing services;300

       (ii) The person is required by the other contracting party to 301
have particular training;302

       (iii) The person's services are integrated into the regular 303
functioning of the other contracting party;304

       (iv) The person is required to perform the work personally;305

       (v) The person is hired, supervised, or paid by the other 306
contracting party;307

       (vi) A continuing relationship exists between the person and 308
the other contracting party that contemplates continuing or 309
recurring work even if the work is not full time;310

       (vii) The person's hours of work are established by the other 311
contracting party;312

       (viii) The person is required to devote full time to the 313
business of the other contracting party;314

       (ix) The person is required to perform the work on the 315
premises of the other contracting party;316

       (x) The person is required to follow the order of work set by 317
the other contracting party;318

       (xi) The person is required to make oral or written reports 319
of progress to the other contracting party;320

       (xii) The person is paid for services on a regular basis such 321
as hourly, weekly, or monthly;322

       (xiii) The person's expenses are paid for by the other 323
contracting party;324

       (xiv) The person's tools and materials are furnished by the 325
other contracting party;326

       (xv) The person is provided with the facilities used to 327
perform services;328

       (xvi) The person does not realize a profit or suffer a loss 329
as a result of the services provided;330

       (xvii) The person is not performing services for a number of 331
employers at the same time;332

       (xviii) The person does not make the same services available 333
to the general public;334

       (xix) The other contracting party has a right to discharge 335
the person;336

       (xx) The person has the right to end the relationship with 337
the other contracting party without incurring liability pursuant 338
to an employment contract or agreement.339

       Every person in the service of any independent contractor or 340
subcontractor who has failed to pay into the state insurance fund 341
the amount of premium determined and fixed by the administrator of 342
workers' compensation for the person's employment or occupation or 343
if a self-insuring employer has failed to pay compensation and 344
benefits directly to the employer's injured and to the dependents 345
of the employer's killed employees as required by section 4123.35 346
of the Revised Code, shall be considered as the employee of the 347
person who has entered into a contract, whether written or verbal, 348
with such independent contractor unless such employees or their 349
legal representatives or beneficiaries elect, after injury or 350
death, to regard such independent contractor as the employer.351

       (d) Every person to whom all of the following apply:352

       (i) The person is a resident of a state other than this state 353
and is covered by that other state's workers' compensation law;354

       (ii) The person performs labor or provides services for that 355
person's employer while temporarily within this state;356

       (iii) The laws of that other state do not include the 357
provisions described in division (H)(4) of section 4123.54 of the 358
Revised Code.359

       (2) "Employee" does not mean:360

       (a) A duly ordained, commissioned, or licensed minister or 361
assistant or associate minister of a church in the exercise of 362
ministry;363

       (b) Any officer of a family farm corporation;364

       (c) An individual incorporated as a corporation; or365

        (d) An individual who otherwise is an employee of an employer 366
but who signs the waiver and affidavit specified in section 367
4123.15 of the Revised Code on the condition that the 368
administrator has granted a waiver and exception to the 369
individual's employer under section 4123.15 of the Revised Code.370

       Any employer may elect to include as an "employee" within 371
this chapter, any person excluded from the definition of 372
"employee" pursuant to division (A)(2) of this section. If an 373
employer is a partnership, sole proprietorship, individual 374
incorporated as a corporation, or family farm corporation, such 375
employer may elect to include as an "employee" within this 376
chapter, any member of such partnership, the owner of the sole 377
proprietorship, the individual incorporated as a corporation, or 378
the officers of the family farm corporation. In the event of an 379
election, the employer shall serve upon the bureau of workers' 380
compensation written notice naming the persons to be covered, 381
include such employee's remuneration for premium purposes in all 382
future payroll reports, and no person excluded from the definition 383
of "employee" pursuant to division (A)(2) of this section, 384
proprietor, individual incorporated as a corporation, or partner 385
shall be deemed an employee within this division until the 386
employer has served such notice.387

       For informational purposes only, the bureau shall prescribe 388
such language as it considers appropriate, on such of its forms as 389
it considers appropriate, to advise employers of their right to 390
elect to include as an "employee" within this chapter a sole 391
proprietor, any member of a partnership, an individual 392
incorporated as a corporation, the officers of a family farm 393
corporation, or a person excluded from the definition of 394
"employee" under division (A)(2) of this section, that they should 395
check any health and disability insurance policy, or other form of 396
health and disability plan or contract, presently covering them, 397
or the purchase of which they may be considering, to determine 398
whether such policy, plan, or contract excludes benefits for 399
illness or injury that they might have elected to have covered by 400
workers' compensation.401

       (B) "Employer" means:402

       (1) The state, including state hospitals, each county, 403
municipal corporation, township, school district, and hospital 404
owned by a political subdivision or subdivisions other than the 405
state;406

       (2) Every person, firm, professional employer organization as 407
defined in section 4125.01 of the Revised Code, and private 408
corporation, including any public service corporation, that (a) 409
has in service one or more employees or shared employees regularly 410
in the same business or in or about the same establishment under 411
any contract of hire, express or implied, oral or written, or (b) 412
is bound by any such contract of hire or by any other written 413
contract, to pay into the insurance fund the premiums provided by 414
this chapter.415

       All such employers are subject to this chapter. Any member of 416
a firm or association, who regularly performs manual labor in or 417
about a mine, factory, or other establishment, including a 418
household establishment, shall be considered an employee in 419
determining whether such person, firm, or private corporation, or 420
public service corporation, has in its service, one or more 421
employees and the employer shall report the income derived from 422
such labor to the bureau as part of the payroll of such employer, 423
and such member shall thereupon be entitled to all the benefits of 424
an employee.425

       (C) "Injury" includes any injury, whether caused by external 426
accidental means or accidental in character and result, received 427
in the course of, and arising out of, the injured employee's 428
employment. "Injury" does not include:429

       (1) Psychiatric conditions except where the claimant's 430
psychiatric conditions have arisen from an injury or occupational 431
disease sustained by that claimant or where the claimant's 432
psychiatric conditions have arisen from sexual conduct in which 433
the claimant was forced by threat of physical harm to engage or 434
participate;435

       (2) Injury or disability caused primarily by the natural 436
deterioration of tissue, an organ, or part of the body;437

       (3) Injury or disability incurred in voluntary participation 438
in an employer-sponsored recreation or fitness activity if the 439
employee signs a waiver of the employee's right to compensation or 440
benefits under this chapter prior to engaging in the recreation or 441
fitness activity;442

       (4) A condition that pre-existed an injury unless that 443
pre-existing condition is substantially aggravated by the injury. 444
Such a substantial aggravation must be documented by objective 445
diagnostic findings, objective clinical findings, or objective 446
test results. Subjective complaints may be evidence of such a 447
substantial aggravation. However, subjective complaints without 448
objective diagnostic findings, objective clinical findings, or 449
objective test results are insufficient to substantiate a 450
substantial aggravation.451

       (D) "Child" includes a posthumous child and a child legally 452
adopted prior to the injury.453

       (E) "Family farm corporation" means a corporation founded for 454
the purpose of farming agricultural land in which the majority of 455
the voting stock is held by and the majority of the stockholders 456
are persons or the spouse of persons related to each other within 457
the fourth degree of kinship, according to the rules of the civil 458
law, and at least one of the related persons is residing on or 459
actively operating the farm, and none of whose stockholders are a 460
corporation. A family farm corporation does not cease to qualify 461
under this division where, by reason of any devise, bequest, or 462
the operation of the laws of descent or distribution, the 463
ownership of shares of voting stock is transferred to another 464
person, as long as that person is within the degree of kinship 465
stipulated in this division.466

       (F) "Occupational disease" means a disease contracted in the 467
course of employment, which by its causes and the characteristics 468
of its manifestation or the condition of the employment results in 469
a hazard which distinguishes the employment in character from 470
employment generally, and the employment creates a risk of 471
contracting the disease in greater degree and in a different 472
manner from the public in general.473

       (G) "Self-insuring employer" means an employer who is granted 474
the privilege of paying compensation and benefits directly under 475
section 4123.35 of the Revised Code, including a board of county 476
commissioners for the sole purpose of constructing a sports 477
facility as defined in section 307.696 of the Revised Code, 478
provided that the electors of the county in which the sports 479
facility is to be built have approved construction of a sports 480
facility by ballot election no later than November 6, 1997, but 481
does not include a self-insuring consortium.482

       (H) "Public employer" means an employer as defined in 483
division (B)(1) of this section.484

       (I) "Sexual conduct" means vaginal intercourse between a male 485
and female; anal intercourse, fellatio, and cunnilingus between 486
persons regardless of gender; and, without privilege to do so, the 487
insertion, however slight, of any part of the body or any 488
instrument, apparatus, or other object into the vaginal or anal 489
cavity of another. Penetration, however slight, is sufficient to 490
complete vaginal or anal intercourse.491

       (J) "Other-states' insurer" means an insurance company that 492
is authorized to provide workers' compensation insurance coverage 493
in any of the states that permit employers to obtain insurance for 494
workers' compensation claims through insurance companies.495

       (K) "Other-states' coverage" means insurance coverage 496
purchased by an employer for workers' compensation claims that 497
arise in a state or states other than this state and that are 498
filed by the employees of the employer or those employee's 499
dependents, as applicable, in that other state or those other 500
states.501

       (L) "Self-insuring consortium" means a group of employers 502
that is granted the privilege of paying compensation and benefits 503
directly under section 4123.354 of the Revised Code.504

       Sec. 4123.35.  (A) Except as provided in this section, every 505
employer mentioned in division (B)(2) of section 4123.01 of the 506
Revised Code, and every publicly owned utility shall pay 507
semiannually in the months of January and July into the state 508
insurance fund the amount of annual premium the administrator of 509
workers' compensation fixes for the employment or occupation of 510
the employer, the amount of which premium to be paid by each 511
employer to be determined by the classifications, rules, and rates 512
made and published by the administrator. The employer shall pay 513
semiannually a further sum of money into the state insurance fund 514
as may be ascertained to be due from the employer by applying the 515
rules of the administrator, and a receipt or certificate 516
certifying that payment has been made, along with a written notice 517
as is required in section 4123.54 of the Revised Code, shall be 518
mailed immediately to the employer by the bureau of workers' 519
compensation. The receipt or certificate is prima-facie evidence 520
of the payment of the premium, and the proper posting of the 521
notice constitutes the employer's compliance with the notice 522
requirement mandated in section 4123.54 of the Revised Code.523

       The bureau of workers' compensation shall verify with the 524
secretary of state the existence of all corporations and 525
organizations making application for workers' compensation 526
coverage and shall require every such application to include the 527
employer's federal identification number.528

       An employer as defined in division (B)(2) of section 4123.01 529
of the Revised Code who has contracted with a subcontractor is 530
liable for the unpaid premium due from any subcontractor with 531
respect to that part of the payroll of the subcontractor that is 532
for work performed pursuant to the contract with the employer.533

       Division (A) of this section providing for the payment of 534
premiums semiannually does not apply to any employer who was a 535
subscriber to the state insurance fund prior to January 1, 1914, 536
or who may first become a subscriber to the fund in any month 537
other than January or July. Instead, the semiannual premiums shall 538
be paid by those employers from time to time upon the expiration 539
of the respective periods for which payments into the fund have 540
been made by them.541

       The administrator shall adopt rules to permit employers to 542
make periodic payments of the semiannual premium due under this 543
division. The rules shall include provisions for the assessment of 544
interest charges, where appropriate, and for the assessment of 545
penalties when an employer fails to make timely premium payments. 546
An employer who timely pays the amounts due under this division is 547
entitled to all of the benefits and protections of this chapter. 548
Upon receipt of payment, the bureau immediately shall mail a 549
receipt or certificate to the employer certifying that payment has 550
been made, which receipt is prima-facie evidence of payment. 551
Workers' compensation coverage under this chapter continues 552
uninterrupted upon timely receipt of payment under this division.553

       Every public employer, except public employers that are 554
self-insuring employers under this section, shall comply with 555
sections 4123.38 to 4123.41, and 4123.48 of the Revised Code in 556
regard to the contribution of moneys to the public insurance fund.557

       (B) Employers who will abide by the rules of the 558
administrator and who may be of sufficient financial ability to 559
render certain the payment of compensation to injured employees or 560
the dependents of killed employees, and the furnishing of medical, 561
surgical, nursing, and hospital attention and services and 562
medicines, and funeral expenses, equal to or greater than is 563
provided for in sections 4123.52, 4123.55 to 4123.62, and 4123.64 564
to 4123.67 of the Revised Code, and who do not desire to insure 565
the payment thereof or indemnify themselves against loss sustained 566
by the direct payment thereof, upon a finding of such facts by the 567
administrator, may be granted the privilege to pay individually 568
compensation, and furnish medical, surgical, nursing, and hospital 569
services and attention and funeral expenses directly to injured 570
employees or the dependents of killed employees, thereby being 571
granted status as a self-insuring employer. The administrator may 572
charge employers who apply for the status as a self-insuring 573
employer a reasonable application fee to cover the bureau's costs 574
in connection with processing and making a determination with 575
respect to an application.576

       All employers granted status as self-insuring employers shall 577
demonstrate sufficient financial and administrative ability to 578
assure that all obligations under this section are promptly met. 579
The administrator shall deny the privilege where the employer is 580
unable to demonstrate the employer's ability to promptly meet all 581
the obligations imposed on the employer by this section.582

       (1) The administrator shall consider, but is not limited to, 583
the following factors, where applicable, in determining the 584
employer's ability to meet all of the obligations imposed on the 585
employer by this section:586

       (a) The employer employs a minimum of five hundred employees 587
in this state;588

       (b) The employer has operated in this state for a minimum of 589
two years, provided that an employer who has purchased, acquired, 590
or otherwise succeeded to the operation of a business, or any part 591
thereof, situated in this state that has operated for at least two 592
years in this state, also shall qualify;593

       (c) Where the employer previously contributed to the state 594
insurance fund or is a successor employer as defined by bureau 595
rules, the amount of the buyout, as defined by bureau rules;596

       (d) The sufficiency of the employer's assets located in this 597
state to insure the employer's solvency in paying compensation 598
directly;599

       (e) The financial records, documents, and data, certified by 600
a certified public accountant, necessary to provide the employer's 601
full financial disclosure. The records, documents, and data 602
include, but are not limited to, balance sheets and profit and 603
loss history for the current year and previous four years.604

       (f) The employer's organizational plan for the administration 605
of the workers' compensation law;606

       (g) The employer's proposed plan to inform employees of the 607
change from a state fund insurer to a self-insuring employer, the 608
procedures the employer will follow as a self-insuring employer, 609
and the employees' rights to compensation and benefits; and610

       (h) The employer has either an account in a financial 611
institution in this state, or if the employer maintains an account 612
with a financial institution outside this state, ensures that 613
workers' compensation checks are drawn from the same account as 614
payroll checks or the employer clearly indicates that payment will 615
be honored by a financial institution in this state.616

       TheExcept as otherwise provided in section 4123.354 of the 617
Revised Code, the administrator may waive the requirements of 618
divisions (B)(1)(a) and (b) of this section and the requirement of 619
division (B)(1)(e) of this section that the financial records, 620
documents, and data be certified by a certified public accountant. 621
The administrator shall adopt rules establishing the criteria that 622
an employer shall meet in order for the administrator to waive the 623
requirement of division (B)(1)(e) of this section. Such rules may 624
require additional security of that employer pursuant to division 625
(E) of section 4123.351 of the Revised Code.626

       The administrator shall not grant the status of self-insuring 627
employer to the state, except that the administrator may grant the 628
status of self-insuring employer to a state institution of higher 629
education, excluding its hospitals, that meets the requirements of 630
division (B)(2) of this section.631

       (2) When considering the application of a public employer, 632
except for a board of county commissioners described in division 633
(G) of section 4123.01 of the Revised Code, a board of a county 634
hospital, or a publicly owned utility, the administrator shall 635
verify that the public employer satisfies all of the following 636
requirements as the requirements apply to that public employer:637

       (a) For the two-year period preceding application under this 638
section, the public employer has maintained an unvoted debt 639
capacity equal to at least two times the amount of the current 640
annual premium established by the administrator under this chapter 641
for that public employer for the year immediately preceding the 642
year in which the public employer makes application under this 643
section.644

       (b) For each of the two fiscal years preceding application 645
under this section, the unreserved and undesignated year-end fund 646
balance in the public employer's general fund is equal to at least 647
five per cent of the public employer's general fund revenues for 648
the fiscal year computed in accordance with generally accepted 649
accounting principles.650

       (c) For the five-year period preceding application under this 651
section, the public employer, to the extent applicable, has 652
complied fully with the continuing disclosure requirements 653
established in rules adopted by the United States securities and 654
exchange commission under 17 C.F.R. 240.15c 2-12.655

       (d) For the five-year period preceding application under this 656
section, the public employer has not had its local government fund 657
distribution withheld on account of the public employer being 658
indebted or otherwise obligated to the state.659

       (e) For the five-year period preceding application under this 660
section, the public employer has not been under a fiscal watch or 661
fiscal emergency pursuant to section 118.023, 118.04, or 3316.03 662
of the Revised Code.663

       (f) For the public employer's fiscal year preceding 664
application under this section, the public employer has obtained 665
an annual financial audit as required under section 117.10 of the 666
Revised Code, which has been released by the auditor of state 667
within seven months after the end of the public employer's fiscal 668
year.669

       (g) On the date of application, the public employer holds a 670
debt rating of Aa3 or higher according to Moody's investors 671
service, inc., or a comparable rating by an independent rating 672
agency similar to Moody's investors service, inc.673

       (h) The public employer agrees to generate an annual 674
accumulating book reserve in its financial statements reflecting 675
an actuarially generated reserve adequate to pay projected claims 676
under this chapter for the applicable period of time, as 677
determined by the administrator.678

       (i) For a public employer that is a hospital, the public 679
employer shall submit audited financial statements showing the 680
hospital's overall liquidity characteristics, and the 681
administrator shall determine, on an individual basis, whether the 682
public employer satisfies liquidity standards equivalent to the 683
liquidity standards of other public employers.684

       (j) Any additional criteria that the administrator adopts by 685
rule pursuant to division (E) of this section.686

       The administrator shall not approve the application of a 687
public employer, except for a board of county commissioners 688
described in division (G) of section 4123.01 of the Revised Code, 689
a board of a county hospital, or publicly owned utility, who does 690
not satisfy all of the requirements listed in division (B)(2) of 691
this section.692

       (C) A board of county commissioners described in division (G) 693
of section 4123.01 of the Revised Code, as an employer, that will 694
abide by the rules of the administrator and that may be of 695
sufficient financial ability to render certain the payment of 696
compensation to injured employees or the dependents of killed 697
employees, and the furnishing of medical, surgical, nursing, and 698
hospital attention and services and medicines, and funeral 699
expenses, equal to or greater than is provided for in sections 700
4123.52, 4123.55 to 4123.62, and 4123.64 to 4123.67 of the Revised 701
Code, and that does not desire to insure the payment thereof or 702
indemnify itself against loss sustained by the direct payment 703
thereof, upon a finding of such facts by the administrator, may be 704
granted the privilege to pay individually compensation, and 705
furnish medical, surgical, nursing, and hospital services and 706
attention and funeral expenses directly to injured employees or 707
the dependents of killed employees, thereby being granted status 708
as a self-insuring employer. The administrator may charge a board 709
of county commissioners described in division (G) of section 710
4123.01 of the Revised Code that applies for the status as a 711
self-insuring employer a reasonable application fee to cover the 712
bureau's costs in connection with processing and making a 713
determination with respect to an application. All employers 714
granted such status shall demonstrate sufficient financial and 715
administrative ability to assure that all obligations under this 716
section are promptly met. The administrator shall deny the 717
privilege where the employer is unable to demonstrate the 718
employer's ability to promptly meet all the obligations imposed on 719
the employer by this section. The administrator shall consider, 720
but is not limited to, the following factors, where applicable, in 721
determining the employer's ability to meet all of the obligations 722
imposed on the board as an employer by this section:723

       (1) The board as an employer employs a minimum of five 724
hundred employees in this state;725

       (2) The board has operated in this state for a minimum of two 726
years;727

       (3) Where the board previously contributed to the state 728
insurance fund or is a successor employer as defined by bureau 729
rules, the amount of the buyout, as defined by bureau rules;730

       (4) The sufficiency of the board's assets located in this 731
state to insure the board's solvency in paying compensation 732
directly;733

       (5) The financial records, documents, and data, certified by 734
a certified public accountant, necessary to provide the board's 735
full financial disclosure. The records, documents, and data 736
include, but are not limited to, balance sheets and profit and 737
loss history for the current year and previous four years.738

       (6) The board's organizational plan for the administration of 739
the workers' compensation law;740

       (7) The board's proposed plan to inform employees of the 741
proposed self-insurance, the procedures the board will follow as a 742
self-insuring employer, and the employees' rights to compensation 743
and benefits;744

       (8) The board has either an account in a financial 745
institution in this state, or if the board maintains an account 746
with a financial institution outside this state, ensures that 747
workers' compensation checks are drawn from the same account as 748
payroll checks or the board clearly indicates that payment will be 749
honored by a financial institution in this state;750

       (9) The board shall provide the administrator a surety bond 751
in an amount equal to one hundred twenty-five per cent of the 752
projected losses as determined by the administrator.753

       (D) The administrator shall require a surety bond from all 754
self-insuring employers, issued pursuant to section 4123.351 of 755
the Revised Code, that is sufficient to compel, or secure to 756
injured employees, or to the dependents of employees killed, the 757
payment of compensation and expenses, which shall in no event be 758
less than that paid or furnished out of the state insurance fund 759
in similar cases to injured employees or to dependents of killed 760
employees whose employers contribute to the fund, except when an 761
employee of the employer, who has suffered the loss of a hand, 762
arm, foot, leg, or eye prior to the injury for which compensation 763
is to be paid, and thereafter suffers the loss of any other of the 764
members as the result of any injury sustained in the course of and 765
arising out of the employee's employment, the compensation to be 766
paid by the self-insuring employer is limited to the disability 767
suffered in the subsequent injury, additional compensation, if 768
any, to be paid by the bureau out of the surplus created by 769
section 4123.34 of the Revised Code.770

       (E) In addition to the requirements of this section, the 771
administrator shall make and publish rules governing the manner of 772
making application and the nature and extent of the proof required 773
to justify a finding of fact by the administrator as to granting 774
the status of a self-insuring employer, which rules shall be 775
general in their application, one of which rules shall provide 776
that all self-insuring employers shall pay into the state 777
insurance fund such amounts as are required to be credited to the 778
surplus fund in division (B) of section 4123.34 of the Revised 779
Code. The administrator may adopt rules establishing requirements 780
in addition to the requirements described in division (B)(2) of 781
this section that a public employer shall meet in order to qualify 782
for self-insuring status.783

       Employers shall secure directly from the bureau central 784
offices application forms upon which the bureau shall stamp a 785
designating number. Prior to submission of an application, an 786
employer shall make available to the bureau, and the bureau shall 787
review, the information described in division (B)(1) of this 788
section, and public employers shall make available, and the bureau 789
shall review, the information necessary to verify whether the 790
public employer meets the requirements listed in division (B)(2) 791
of this section. An employer shall file the completed application 792
forms with an application fee, which shall cover the costs of 793
processing the application, as established by the administrator, 794
by rule, with the bureau at least ninety days prior to the 795
effective date of the employer's new status as a self-insuring 796
employer. The application form is not deemed complete until all 797
the required information is attached thereto. The bureau shall 798
only accept applications that contain the required information.799

       (F) The bureau shall review completed applications within a 800
reasonable time. If the bureau determines to grant an employer the 801
status as a self-insuring employer, the bureau shall issue a 802
statement, containing its findings of fact, that is prepared by 803
the bureau and signed by the administrator. If the bureau 804
determines not to grant the status as a self-insuring employer, 805
the bureau shall notify the employer of the determination and 806
require the employer to continue to pay its full premium into the 807
state insurance fund. The administrator also shall adopt rules 808
establishing a minimum level of performance as a criterion for 809
granting and maintaining the status as a self-insuring employer 810
and fixing time limits beyond which failure of the self-insuring 811
employer to provide for the necessary medical examinations and 812
evaluations may not delay a decision on a claim.813

       (G) The administrator shall adopt rules setting forth 814
procedures for auditing the program of self-insuring employers. 815
The bureau shall conduct the audit upon a random basis or whenever 816
the bureau has grounds for believing that a self-insuring employer 817
is not in full compliance with bureau rules or this chapter.818

       The administrator shall monitor the programs conducted by 819
self-insuring employers, to ensure compliance with bureau 820
requirements and for that purpose, shall develop and issue to 821
self-insuring employers standardized forms for use by the 822
self-insuring employer in all aspects of the self-insuring 823
employers' direct compensation program and for reporting of 824
information to the bureau.825

       The bureau shall receive and transmit to the self-insuring 826
employer all complaints concerning any self-insuring employer. In 827
the case of a complaint against a self-insuring employer, the 828
administrator shall handle the complaint through the 829
self-insurance division of the bureau. The bureau shall maintain a 830
file by employer of all complaints received that relate to the 831
employer. The bureau shall evaluate each complaint and take 832
appropriate action.833

       The administrator shall adopt as a rule a prohibition against 834
any self-insuring employer from harassing, dismissing, or 835
otherwise disciplining any employee making a complaint, which rule 836
shall provide for a financial penalty to be levied by the 837
administrator payable by the offending self-insuring employer.838

       (H) For the purpose of making determinations as to whether to 839
grant status as a self-insuring employer, the administrator may 840
subscribe to and pay for a credit reporting service that offers 841
financial and other business information about individual 842
employers. The costs in connection with the bureau's subscription 843
or individual reports from the service about an applicant may be 844
included in the application fee charged employers under this 845
section.846

       (I) The administrator, notwithstanding other provisions of 847
this chapter, may permit a self-insuring employer to resume 848
payment of premiums to the state insurance fund with appropriate 849
credit modifications to the employer's basic premium rate as such 850
rate is determined pursuant to section 4123.29 of the Revised 851
Code.852

       (J) On the first day of July of each year, the administrator 853
shall calculate separately each self-insuring employer's 854
assessments for the safety and hygiene fund, administrative costs 855
pursuant to section 4123.342 of the Revised Code, and for the 856
portion of the surplus fund under division (B) of section 4123.34 857
of the Revised Code that is not used for handicapped 858
reimbursement, on the basis of the paid compensation attributable 859
to the individual self-insuring employer according to the 860
following calculation:861

       (1) The total assessment against all self-insuring employers 862
as a class for each fund and for the administrative costs for the 863
year that the assessment is being made, as determined by the 864
administrator, divided by the total amount of paid compensation 865
for the previous calendar year attributable to all amenable 866
self-insuring employers;867

       (2) Multiply the quotient in division (J)(1) of this section 868
by the total amount of paid compensation for the previous calendar 869
year that is attributable to the individual self-insuring employer 870
for whom the assessment is being determined. Each self-insuring 871
employer shall pay the assessment that results from this 872
calculation, unless the assessment resulting from this calculation 873
falls below a minimum assessment, which minimum assessment the 874
administrator shall determine on the first day of July of each 875
year with the advice and consent of the bureau of workers' 876
compensation board of directors, in which event, the self-insuring 877
employer shall pay the minimum assessment.878

       In determining the total amount due for the total assessment 879
against all self-insuring employers as a class for each fund and 880
the administrative assessment, the administrator shall reduce 881
proportionately the total for each fund and assessment by the 882
amount of money in the self-insurance assessment fund as of the 883
date of the computation of the assessment.884

       The administrator shall calculate the assessment for the 885
portion of the surplus fund under division (B) of section 4123.34 886
of the Revised Code that is used for handicapped reimbursement in 887
the same manner as set forth in divisions (J)(1) and (2) of this 888
section except that the administrator shall calculate the total 889
assessment for this portion of the surplus fund only on the basis 890
of those self-insuring employers that retain participation in the 891
handicapped reimbursement program and the individual self-insuring 892
employer's proportion of paid compensation shall be calculated 893
only for those self-insuring employers who retain participation in 894
the handicapped reimbursement program. The administrator, as the 895
administrator determines appropriate, may determine the total 896
assessment for the handicapped portion of the surplus fund in 897
accordance with sound actuarial principles.898

       The administrator shall calculate the assessment for the 899
portion of the surplus fund under division (B) of section 4123.34 900
of the Revised Code that under division (D) of section 4121.66 of 901
the Revised Code is used for rehabilitation costs in the same 902
manner as set forth in divisions (J)(1) and (2) of this section, 903
except that the administrator shall calculate the total assessment 904
for this portion of the surplus fund only on the basis of those 905
self-insuring employers who have not made the election to make 906
payments directly under division (D) of section 4121.66 of the 907
Revised Code and an individual self-insuring employer's proportion 908
of paid compensation only for those self-insuring employers who 909
have not made that election.910

       The administrator shall calculate the assessment for the 911
portion of the surplus fund under division (B) of section 4123.34 912
of the Revised Code that is used for reimbursement to a 913
self-insuring employer under division (H) of section 4123.512 of 914
the Revised Code in the same manner as set forth in divisions 915
(J)(1) and (2) of this section except that the administrator shall 916
calculate the total assessment for this portion of the surplus 917
fund only on the basis of those self-insuring employers that 918
retain participation in reimbursement to the self-insuring 919
employer under division (H) of section 4123.512 of the Revised 920
Code and the individual self-insuring employer's proportion of 921
paid compensation shall be calculated only for those self-insuring 922
employers who retain participation in reimbursement to the 923
self-insuring employer under division (H) of section 4123.512 of 924
the Revised Code.925

       An employer who no longer is a self-insuring employer in this 926
state or who no longer is operating in this state, shall continue 927
to pay assessments for administrative costs and for the portion of 928
the surplus fund under division (B) of section 4123.34 of the 929
Revised Code that is not used for handicapped reimbursement, based 930
upon paid compensation attributable to claims that occurred while 931
the employer was a self-insuring employer within this state.932

       (K) The administrator shall deposit any moneys received from 933
a self-insuring employer for the self-insuring employer's 934
assessment to pay the costs solely attributable to the workers' 935
compensation council into the administrative assessment account 936
described in division (B) of section 4123.342 of the Revised Code 937
for the administrative cost assessment collected by the 938
administrator for the council. There is hereby created in the 939
state treasury the self-insurance assessment fund. All investment 940
earnings of the fund shall be deposited in the fund. The 941
administrator shall use the money in the self-insurance assessment 942
fund only for administrative costs as specified in section 943
4123.341 of the Revised Code.944

       (L) Every self-insuring employer shall certify, in affidavit 945
form subject to the penalty for perjury, to the bureau the amount 946
of the self-insuring employer's paid compensation for the previous 947
calendar year. In reporting paid compensation paid for the 948
previous year, a self-insuring employer shall exclude from the 949
total amount of paid compensation any reimbursement the 950
self-insuring employer receives in the previous calendar year from 951
the surplus fund pursuant to section 4123.512 of the Revised Code 952
for any paid compensation. The self-insuring employer also shall 953
exclude from the paid compensation reported any amount recovered 954
under section 4123.931 of the Revised Code and any amount that is 955
determined not to have been payable to or on behalf of a claimant 956
in any final administrative or judicial proceeding. The 957
self-insuring employer shall exclude such amounts from the paid 958
compensation reported in the reporting period subsequent to the 959
date the determination is made. The administrator shall adopt 960
rules, in accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code, that 961
provide for all of the following:962

       (1) Establishing the date by which self-insuring employers 963
must submit such information and the amount of the assessments 964
provided for in division (J) of this section for employers who 965
have been granted self-insuring status within the last calendar 966
year;967

       (2) If an employer fails to pay the assessment when due, the 968
administrator may add a late fee penalty of not more than five 969
hundred dollars to the assessment plus an additional penalty 970
amount as follows:971

       (a) For an assessment from sixty-one to ninety days past due, 972
the prime interest rate, multiplied by the assessment due;973

       (b) For an assessment from ninety-one to one hundred twenty 974
days past due, the prime interest rate plus two per cent, 975
multiplied by the assessment due;976

       (c) For an assessment from one hundred twenty-one to one 977
hundred fifty days past due, the prime interest rate plus four per 978
cent, multiplied by the assessment due;979

       (d) For an assessment from one hundred fifty-one to one 980
hundred eighty days past due, the prime interest rate plus six per 981
cent, multiplied by the assessment due;982

       (e) For an assessment from one hundred eighty-one to two 983
hundred ten days past due, the prime interest rate plus eight per 984
cent, multiplied by the assessment due;985

       (f) For each additional thirty-day period or portion thereof 986
that an assessment remains past due after it has remained past due 987
for more than two hundred ten days, the prime interest rate plus 988
eight per cent, multiplied by the assessment due.989

        (3) An employer may appeal a late fee penalty and penalty 990
assessment to the administrator.991

        For purposes of division (L)(2) of this section, "prime 992
interest rate" means the average bank prime rate, and the 993
administrator shall determine the prime interest rate in the same 994
manner as a county auditor determines the average bank prime rate 995
under section 929.02 of the Revised Code.996

       The administrator shall include any assessment and penalties 997
that remain unpaid for previous assessment periods in the 998
calculation and collection of any assessments due under this 999
division or division (J) of this section.1000

       (M) As used in this section, "paid compensation" means all 1001
amounts paid by a self-insuring employer for living maintenance 1002
benefits, all amounts for compensation paid pursuant to sections 1003
4121.63, 4121.67, 4123.56, 4123.57, 4123.58, 4123.59, 4123.60, and 1004
4123.64 of the Revised Code, all amounts paid as wages in lieu of 1005
such compensation, all amounts paid in lieu of such compensation 1006
under a nonoccupational accident and sickness program fully funded 1007
by the self-insuring employer, and all amounts paid by a 1008
self-insuring employer for a violation of a specific safety 1009
standard pursuant to Section 35 of Article II, Ohio Constitution 1010
and section 4121.47 of the Revised Code.1011

       (N) Should any section of this chapter or Chapter 4121. of 1012
the Revised Code providing for self-insuring employers' 1013
assessments based upon compensation paid be declared 1014
unconstitutional by a final decision of any court, then that 1015
section of the Revised Code declared unconstitutional shall revert 1016
back to the section in existence prior to November 3, 1989, 1017
providing for assessments based upon payroll.1018

       (O) The administrator may grant a self-insuring employer the 1019
privilege to self-insure a construction project entered into by 1020
the self-insuring employer that is scheduled for completion within 1021
six years after the date the project begins, and the total cost of 1022
which is estimated to exceed one hundred million dollars or, for 1023
employers described in division (R) of this section, if the 1024
construction project is estimated to exceed twenty-five million 1025
dollars. The administrator may waive such cost and time criteria 1026
and grant a self-insuring employer the privilege to self-insure a 1027
construction project regardless of the time needed to complete the 1028
construction project and provided that the cost of the 1029
construction project is estimated to exceed fifty million dollars. 1030
A self-insuring employer who desires to self-insure a construction 1031
project shall submit to the administrator an application listing 1032
the dates the construction project is scheduled to begin and end, 1033
the estimated cost of the construction project, the contractors 1034
and subcontractors whose employees are to be self-insured by the 1035
self-insuring employer, the provisions of a safety program that is 1036
specifically designed for the construction project, and a 1037
statement as to whether a collective bargaining agreement 1038
governing the rights, duties, and obligations of each of the 1039
parties to the agreement with respect to the construction project 1040
exists between the self-insuring employer and a labor 1041
organization.1042

       A self-insuring employer may apply to self-insure the 1043
employees of either of the following:1044

       (1) All contractors and subcontractors who perform labor or 1045
work or provide materials for the construction project;1046

       (2) All contractors and, at the administrator's discretion, a 1047
substantial number of all the subcontractors who perform labor or 1048
work or provide materials for the construction project.1049

       Upon approval of the application, the administrator shall 1050
mail a certificate granting the privilege to self-insure the 1051
construction project to the self-insuring employer. The 1052
certificate shall contain the name of the self-insuring employer 1053
and the name, address, and telephone number of the self-insuring 1054
employer's representatives who are responsible for administering 1055
workers' compensation claims for the construction project. The 1056
self-insuring employer shall post the certificate in a conspicuous 1057
place at the site of the construction project.1058

       The administrator shall maintain a record of the contractors 1059
and subcontractors whose employees are covered under the 1060
certificate issued to the self-insured employer. A self-insuring 1061
employer immediately shall notify the administrator when any 1062
contractor or subcontractor is added or eliminated from inclusion 1063
under the certificate.1064

       Upon approval of the application, the self-insuring employer 1065
is responsible for the administration and payment of all claims 1066
under this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the Revised Code for the 1067
employees of the contractor and subcontractors covered under the 1068
certificate who receive injuries or are killed in the course of 1069
and arising out of employment on the construction project, or who 1070
contract an occupational disease in the course of employment on 1071
the construction project. For purposes of this chapter and Chapter 1072
4121. of the Revised Code, a claim that is administered and paid 1073
in accordance with this division is considered a claim against the 1074
self-insuring employer listed in the certificate. A contractor or 1075
subcontractor included under the certificate shall report to the 1076
self-insuring employer listed in the certificate, all claims that 1077
arise under this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the Revised Code in 1078
connection with the construction project for which the certificate 1079
is issued.1080

       A self-insuring employer who complies with this division is 1081
entitled to the protections provided under this chapter and 1082
Chapter 4121. of the Revised Code with respect to the employees of 1083
the contractors and subcontractors covered under a certificate 1084
issued under this division for death or injuries that arise out 1085
of, or death, injuries, or occupational diseases that arise in the 1086
course of, those employees' employment on that construction 1087
project, as if the employees were employees of the self-insuring 1088
employer, provided that the self-insuring employer also complies 1089
with this section. No employee of the contractors and 1090
subcontractors covered under a certificate issued under this 1091
division shall be considered the employee of the self-insuring 1092
employer listed in that certificate for any purposes other than 1093
this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the Revised Code. Nothing in 1094
this division gives a self-insuring employer authority to control 1095
the means, manner, or method of employment of the employees of the 1096
contractors and subcontractors covered under a certificate issued 1097
under this division.1098

       The contractors and subcontractors included under a 1099
certificate issued under this division are entitled to the 1100
protections provided under this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the 1101
Revised Code with respect to the contractor's or subcontractor's 1102
employees who are employed on the construction project which is 1103
the subject of the certificate, for death or injuries that arise 1104
out of, or death, injuries, or occupational diseases that arise in 1105
the course of, those employees' employment on that construction 1106
project.1107

       The contractors and subcontractors included under a 1108
certificate issued under this division shall identify in their 1109
payroll records the employees who are considered the employees of 1110
the self-insuring employer listed in that certificate for purposes 1111
of this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the Revised Code, and the 1112
amount that those employees earned for employment on the 1113
construction project that is the subject of that certificate. 1114
Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary under this chapter 1115
and Chapter 4121. of the Revised Code, the administrator shall 1116
exclude the payroll that is reported for employees who are 1117
considered the employees of the self-insuring employer listed in 1118
that certificate, and that the employees earned for employment on 1119
the construction project that is the subject of that certificate, 1120
when determining those contractors' or subcontractors' premiums or 1121
assessments required under this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the 1122
Revised Code. A self-insuring employer issued a certificate under 1123
this division shall include in the amount of paid compensation it 1124
reports pursuant to division (L) of this section, the amount of 1125
paid compensation the self-insuring employer paid pursuant to this 1126
division for the previous calendar year.1127

       Nothing in this division shall be construed as altering the 1128
rights of employees under this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the 1129
Revised Code as those rights existed prior to September 17, 1996. 1130
Nothing in this division shall be construed as altering the rights 1131
devolved under sections 2305.31 and 4123.82 of the Revised Code as 1132
those rights existed prior to September 17, 1996.1133

       As used in this division, "privilege to self-insure a 1134
construction project" means privilege to pay individually 1135
compensation, and to furnish medical, surgical, nursing, and 1136
hospital services and attention and funeral expenses directly to 1137
injured employees or the dependents of killed employees.1138

       (P) A self-insuring employer whose application is granted 1139
under division (O) of this section shall designate a safety 1140
professional to be responsible for the administration and 1141
enforcement of the safety program that is specifically designed 1142
for the construction project that is the subject of the 1143
application.1144

       A self-insuring employer whose application is granted under 1145
division (O) of this section shall employ an ombudsperson for the 1146
construction project that is the subject of the application. The 1147
ombudsperson shall have experience in workers' compensation or the 1148
construction industry, or both. The ombudsperson shall perform all 1149
of the following duties:1150

       (1) Communicate with and provide information to employees who 1151
are injured in the course of, or whose injury arises out of 1152
employment on the construction project, or who contract an 1153
occupational disease in the course of employment on the 1154
construction project;1155

       (2) Investigate the status of a claim upon the request of an 1156
employee to do so;1157

       (3) Provide information to claimants, third party 1158
administrators, employers, and other persons to assist those 1159
persons in protecting their rights under this chapter and Chapter 1160
4121. of the Revised Code.1161

       A self-insuring employer whose application is granted under 1162
division (O) of this section shall post the name of the safety 1163
professional and the ombudsperson and instructions for contacting 1164
the safety professional and the ombudsperson in a conspicuous 1165
place at the site of the construction project.1166

       (Q) The administrator may consider all of the following when 1167
deciding whether to grant a self-insuring employer the privilege 1168
to self-insure a construction project as provided under division 1169
(O) of this section:1170

       (1) Whether the self-insuring employer has an organizational 1171
plan for the administration of the workers' compensation law;1172

       (2) Whether the safety program that is specifically designed 1173
for the construction project provides for the safety of employees 1174
employed on the construction project, is applicable to all 1175
contractors and subcontractors who perform labor or work or 1176
provide materials for the construction project, and has as a 1177
component, a safety training program that complies with standards 1178
adopted pursuant to the "Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1179
1970," 84 Stat. 1590, 29 U.S.C.A. 651, and provides for continuing 1180
management and employee involvement;1181

       (3) Whether granting the privilege to self-insure the 1182
construction project will reduce the costs of the construction 1183
project;1184

       (4) Whether the self-insuring employer has employed an 1185
ombudsperson as required under division (P) of this section;1186

       (5) Whether the self-insuring employer has sufficient surety 1187
to secure the payment of claims for which the self-insuring 1188
employer would be responsible pursuant to the granting of the 1189
privilege to self-insure a construction project under division (O) 1190
of this section.1191

       (R) As used in divisions (O), (P), and (Q), "self-insuring 1192
employer" includes the following employers, whether or not they 1193
have been granted the status of being a self-insuring employer 1194
under division (B) of this section:1195

        (1) A state institution of higher education;1196

        (2) A school district;1197

        (3) A county school financing district;1198

        (4) An educational service center;1199

        (5) A community school established under Chapter 3314. of the 1200
Revised Code;1201

       (6) A municipal power agency as defined in section 3734.058 1202
of the Revised Code.1203

        (S) A group of employers mentioned in division (B)(2) of 1204
section 4123.01 of the Revised Code may be granted the privilege 1205
to pay compensation and benefits directly as provided in section 1206
4123.354 of the Revised Code.1207

       (T) As used in this section:1208

       (1) "Unvoted debt capacity" means the amount of money that a 1209
public employer may borrow without voter approval of a tax levy;1210

       (2) "State institution of higher education" means the state 1211
universities listed in section 3345.011 of the Revised Code, 1212
community colleges created pursuant to Chapter 3354. of the 1213
Revised Code, university branches created pursuant to Chapter 1214
3355. of the Revised Code, technical colleges created pursuant to 1215
Chapter 3357. of the Revised Code, and state community colleges 1216
created pursuant to Chapter 3358. of the Revised Code.1217

       Sec. 4123.354. (A) A group of employers mentioned in division 1218
(B)(2) of section 4123.01 of the Revised Code that are located 1219
within an Ohio opportunity area created under section 122.09 of 1220
the Revised Code; that will abide by the rules of the 1221
administrator of workers' compensation; that may be of sufficient 1222
financial ability to render certain the payment of compensation to 1223
claimants, and the furnishing of medical, surgical, nursing, and 1224
hospital attention and services and medicines, and funeral 1225
expenses, equal to or greater than is provided for in sections 1226
4123.52, 4123.55 to 4123.62, and 4123.64 to 4123.67 of the Revised 1227
Code; and that do not desire to insure the payment thereof or 1228
indemnify themselves against loss sustained by the direct payment 1229
thereof, upon a finding of such facts by the administrator, may be 1230
granted the privilege to pay individually compensation, and 1231
furnish medical, surgical, nursing, and hospital attention and 1232
services and funeral expenses directly to claimants, thereby being 1233
granted status as a self-insuring consortium.1234

       (B) To qualify as a self-insuring consortium, the consortium 1235
shall satisfy, as a group, the requirements listed in division 1236
(B)(1) of section 4123.35 of the Revised Code that an individual 1237
employer must satisfy to become a self-insuring employer. For 1238
purposes of satisfying the requirement listed in division 1239
(B)(1)(a) of that section, the administrator shall count only 1240
those employees who work within an Ohio opportunity area and whose 1241
employer wishes to participate in a self-insuring consortium. The 1242
administrator shall not waive the requirement listed in division 1243
(B)(1)(a) of that section with respect to a group of employers 1244
wishing to become a self-insuring consortium.1245

       (C)(1) A group of employers mentioned in division (B)(2) of 1246
section 4123.01 of the Revised Code and located within an Ohio 1247
opportunity area that desires to become a self-insuring consortium 1248
as described in division (A) of this section shall submit an 1249
application to the administrator alleging that the consortium 1250
fulfills the requirements described in division (B)(1) of section 1251
4123.35 of the Revised Code. Upon receipt of the application from 1252
a group, the administrator shall determine whether the group, as a 1253
whole, fulfills the requirements described in division (B)(1) of 1254
section 4123.35 of the Revised Code. The administrator shall 1255
review completed applications within a reasonable amount of time. 1256
If the administrator determines to grant a group the status of a 1257
self-insuring consortium, the administrator shall issue a 1258
statement containing findings of fact that is prepared and signed 1259
by the administrator. The administrator shall not grant the 1260
privilege of self-insurance to a group where the group, as a 1261
whole, is unable to demonstrate that the group satisfies the 1262
requirements described in division (B)(1) of section 4123.35 of 1263
the Revised Code and the employers comprising the group shall 1264
continue to pay their full premiums into the state insurance fund.1265

       (2) The administrator may charge groups that apply for the 1266
status of a self-insuring consortium a reasonable application fee 1267
to cover the administrator's costs in connection with processing 1268
and making a determination with respect to an application.1269

       (D) Each member of a self-insuring consortium is jointly and 1270
severally liable for the payment of compensation and benefits 1271
under this chapter and Chapters 4121., 4127., and 4131. of the 1272
Revised Code. If an individual member of the consortium fails to 1273
pay compensation and benefits for a claim that is compensable 1274
under this chapter or Chapter 4121., 4127., or 4131. of the 1275
Revised Code, the remaining members of the consortium are liable 1276
for that payment. If the number of employees covered by the 1277
consortium is below five hundred employees at any time, the 1278
consortium shall lose the consortium's status as a self-insuring 1279
consortium and the individual employers shall resume the payment 1280
of premiums into the state insurance fund.1281

       (E) An employer that participates in a self-insuring 1282
consortium shall obtain an insurance policy that indemnifies the 1283
employer against all of the employer's loss in excess of fifty 1284
thousand dollars, as such policy is described in division (B)(1) 1285
of section 4123.82 of the Revised Code.1286

       (F) The administrator shall require a self-insuring 1287
consortium to pay a contribution, calculated under section 1288
4123.351 of the Revised Code, to the self-insuring employers' 1289
guaranty fund established pursuant to section 4123.351 of the 1290
Revised Code. The consortium shall adopt procedures to allocate 1291
the cost of that contribution among the members of the consortium.1292

       (G) For the purpose of making determinations as to whether to 1293
grant status as a self-insuring consortium, the administrator may 1294
subscribe to and pay for a credit reporting service that offers 1295
financial and other business information about individual 1296
employers. The costs in connection with the administrator's 1297
subscription or individual reports from the service about a member 1298
of an applicant group may be included in the application fee 1299
charged groups under this section.1300

       (H) The administrator may permit an employer member of a 1301
self-insuring consortium to resume payment of premiums to the 1302
state insurance fund with appropriate credit modifications to the 1303
employer's basic premium rate as such rate is determined pursuant 1304
to section 4123.29 of the Revised Code.1305

       (I) A self-insuring consortium under this section shall pay 1306
assessments for the safety and hygiene fund, administrative costs, 1307
and surplus fund in the same manner as a self-insuring employer as 1308
provided under divisions (J) and (K) of section 4123.35 of the 1309
Revised Code. The consortium shall adopt procedures to allocate 1310
the cost of those assessments among the members of the consortium.1311

       (J) A self-insuring consortium shall certify the paid 1312
compensation for all the members of the consortium for the 1313
previous calendar year in the same manner as a self-insuring 1314
employer as provided in division (L) of section 4123.35 of the 1315
Revised Code.1316

       (K) The administrator shall adopt rules to do all of the 1317
following:1318

       (1) Determine the liability of an employer that requests to 1319
transfer from the state insurance fund coverage to a self-insuring 1320
consortium;1321

       (2) Set forth procedures for auditing the program of a 1322
self-insuring consortium, similar to the requirements for 1323
self-insuring employers provided in division (G) of section 1324
4123.35 of the Revised Code;1325

       (3) Provide for the implementation of this section.1326

       (L) Sections 4121.121, 4121.31, 4121.44, 4121.444, 4123.15, 1327
4123.25, 4123.342, 4123.343, 4123.351, 4123.411, 4123.46, 4123.50, 1328
4123.51, 4123.511, 4123.512, 4123.54, 4123.56, 4123.63, 4123.65, 1329
4123.70, 4123.74, 4123.75, 4123.79, 4123.84, 4123.85, 4123.93, and 1330
4123.931 of the Revised Code apply to a self-insuring consortium 1331
or employers that are members of a self-insuring consortium in the 1332
same manner those sections apply to self-insuring employers.1333

       Sec. 4123.82.  (A) All contracts and agreements are void 1334
which undertake to indemnify or insure an employer against loss or 1335
liability for the payment of compensation to workers or their 1336
dependents for death, injury, or occupational disease occasioned 1337
in the course of the workers' employment, or which provide that 1338
the insurer shall pay the compensation, or which indemnify the 1339
employer against damages when the injury, disease, or death arises 1340
from the failure to comply with any lawful requirement for the 1341
protection of the lives, health, and safety of employees, or when 1342
the same is occasioned by the willful act of the employer or any 1343
of the employer's officers or agents, or by which it is agreed 1344
that the insurer shall pay any such damages. No license or 1345
authority to enter into any such agreements or issue any such 1346
policies of insurance shall be granted or issued by any public 1347
authority in this state. Any corporation organized or admitted 1348
under the laws of this state to transact liability insurance as 1349
defined in section 3929.01 of the Revised Code may by amendment of 1350
its articles of incorporation or by original articles of 1351
incorporation, provide therein for the authority and purpose to 1352
make insurance in states, territories, districts, and counties, 1353
other than the state of Ohio, and in the state of Ohio in respect 1354
of contracts permitted by division (B) of this section, 1355
indemnifying employers against loss or liability for payment of 1356
compensation to workers and employees and their dependents for 1357
death, injury, or occupational disease occasioned in the course of 1358
the employment and to insure and indemnify employers against loss, 1359
expense, and liability by risk of bodily injury or death by 1360
accident, disability, sickness, or disease suffered by workers and 1361
employees for which the employer may be liable or has assumed 1362
liability.1363

       (B) Notwithstanding division (A) of this section:1364

       (1) No contract because of that division is void which 1365
undertakes to indemnify a self-insuring employer or an employer 1366
that is a member of a self-insuring consortium against all or part 1367
of such employer's loss in excess of at least fifty thousand 1368
dollars from any one disaster or event arising out of the 1369
employer's liability under this chapter, but no insurance 1370
corporation shall, directly or indirectly, represent an employer 1371
in the settlement, adjudication, determination, allowance, or 1372
payment of claims. The superintendent of insurance shall enforce 1373
this prohibition by such disciplinary orders directed against the 1374
offending insurance corporation as the superintendent of insurance 1375
deems appropriate in the circumstances and the administrator of 1376
workers' compensation shall enforce this prohibition by such 1377
disciplinary orders directed against the offending employer as the 1378
administrator deems appropriate in the circumstances, which orders 1379
may include revocation of the insurance corporation's right to 1380
enter into indemnity contracts and revocation of the employer's 1381
status as a self-insuring employer or ability to participate in a 1382
self-insuring consortium.1383

       (2) The administrator may enter into a contract of indemnity 1384
with any such employer upon such terms, payment of such premium, 1385
and for such amount and form of indemnity as the administrator 1386
determines and the bureau of workers' compensation board of 1387
directors may procure reinsurance of the liability of the public 1388
and private funds under this chapter, or any part of the liability 1389
in respect of either or both of the funds, upon such terms and 1390
premiums or other payments from the fund or funds as the 1391
administrator deems prudent in the maintenance of a solvent fund 1392
or funds from year to year. When making the finding of fact which 1393
the administrator is required by section 4123.35 of the Revised 1394
Code to make with respect to the financial ability of an employer, 1395
no contract of indemnity, or the ability of the employer to 1396
procure such a contract, shall be considered as increasing the 1397
financial ability of the employer.1398

       (C) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit 1399
the administrator or an other-states' insurer from providing to 1400
employers in this state other-states' coverage in accordance with 1401
section 4123.292 of the Revised Code.1402

       (D) Notwithstanding any other section of the Revised Code, 1403
but subject to division (A) of this section, the superintendent of 1404
insurance shall have the sole authority to regulate any insurance 1405
products, except for the bureau of workers' compensation and those 1406
products offered by the bureau, that indemnify or insure employers 1407
against workers' compensation losses in this state or that are 1408
sold to employers in this state.1409

       Section 2. That existing sections 1739.02, 4115.04, 4123.01, 1410
4123.35, and 4123.82 of the Revised Code are hereby repealed.1411

       Section 3.  Section 4115.04 of the Revised Code is presented 1412
in this act as a composite of the section as amended by both Sub. 1413
H.B. 443 and Am. Sub. H.B. 699 of the 126th General Assembly. The 1414
General Assembly, applying the principle stated in division (B) of 1415
section 1.52 of the Revised Code that amendments are to be 1416
harmonized if reasonably capable of simultaneous operation, finds 1417
that the composite is the resulting version of the section in 1418
effect prior to the effective date of the section as presented in 1419
this act.1420

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