Ali Smith
alissansmith.bsky.social
Ali Smith
@alissansmith.bsky.social
610 followers 1.5K following 48 posts
Childcare researcher. Building power for workers with @policymattersohio.bsky.social. Font collector. Kitten rescuer. Waffles are my love language. she/her
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Reposted by Ali Smith
This is a really important point. Most Medicaid recipients likely have NO idea that they’re about to lose their coverage.
The Ohio Senate has chosen to provide 66% of what low poverty districts need, while wildly underfunding — and in some cases cutting funding from — districts that have higher numbers of kids who live in poverty.

policymattersohio.org/research/eno...

@policymattersohio.bsky.social
Reposted by Ali Smith
ITEP @itep.org · May 21
The House tax bill overwhelmingly benefits the wealthiest Americans.

Net tax cuts:
$138 billion for top 1% of Americans
$92 billion for bottom 60% of Americans

This will worsen wealth inequality through the tax code.
Reposted by Ali Smith
This week at CBPP, we focused on the impacts of the House Republican reconciliation plan. www.cbpp.org/blog/in-case...
Proposed cuts to Medicaid would directly harm 5,500 women veterans in Ohio. See @npwf.bsky.social's new report: nationalpartnership.org/report/medic...
Chaos, cuts, and disruption in D.C. are already harming Ohio kids. Parents, educators, and advocates are ready to take action. Join @policymattersohio.bsky.social for next week's virtual town hall to learn what you can do to stand up for special education in Ohio.

us02web.zoom.us/webinar/regi...
Reposted by Ali Smith
Okay, but in exchange for fewer and more expensive consumer goods, at least we’re getting lower economic growth and higher unemployment!
Trump: “Somebody said, ‘Oh the shelves are going to be open.’ Well, maybe the children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls. And maybe the two dolls will cost a couple bucks more than they would normally.”
The Ohio legislature wants to give $600,000,000 to help a billionaire build a new sports stadium.

And *checks notes* $50 to your public school kid.

Under the current budget proposal more than half of Ohio public school districts will ONLY get an increase of $50/student over the biennium.
Reposted by Ali Smith
Protest footage from today in Columbus, Ohio.
Reposted by Ali Smith
Ohio school districts deserve nothing less than for our legislature to fully and fairly fund the Fair School Funding Plan.

Over the next biennium, Cleveland Municipal SD gets a $6M cut under the current proposed budget.

Instead of cuts, the FSFP would provide $155M in additional, needed funding.
Ohio school districts deserve nothing less than for our legislature to fully and fairly fund the Fair School Funding Plan.

Over the next biennium, Cincinnati Public SD gets a $32M cut under the current proposed budget.

Instead of cuts, the FSFP would provide $40M in additional, needed funding.
Ohio school districts deserve nothing less than for our legislature to fully and fairly fund the Fair School Funding Plan.

Over the next biennium, Columbus City SD gets a $52M cut under the current proposed budget.

Instead of cuts, the FSFP would provide $23M in additional, needed funding.
The legislature has to go all in for Ohio kids and fully and fairly fund public schools in this budget.

Anything less will force communities to choose between raising property taxes or under-funding schools. Neither of those are acceptable.

www.10tv.com/article/news...
Ohio coalition says public schools will lose $103 million if DeWine's budget passes
Kia Reyes Woodward, a Columbus City Schools parent, said the cuts would be unfair, especially after voters recently passed a levy.
www.10tv.com
Reposted by Ali Smith
At a time when Ohio lawmakers are planning to go back on their promise to fund public schools fairly, kids, families, and communities can't afford to lose federal dollars as well.

See what federal funds your district relies on: drive.google.com/drive/folder...

policymattersohio.org/research/fed...
If Governor DeWine's proposals for childcare are implemented, families making under 160% FPL will qualify for Publicly Funded Child Care. This would move Ohio to 46th in the nation for eligibility, and last in the nation for reimbursement rates for providers.

policymattersohio.org/research/how...
How Ohio’s Publicly Funded Child Care measures up - Policy Matters Ohio
Hearings for the Governor’s proposed budget just finished in the Children and Human Services Committee, and Policy Matters testified on the Publicly Funded Child Care (PFCC) system in the state. Broad...
policymattersohio.org
Reposted by Ali Smith
Reposted by Ali Smith
🚨 Child care for one infant is more expensive than public college tuition in 38 states & DC 🚨

Child care is one of the biggest expenses families face. Check out our updated fact sheets to find out the cost of child care in your state: www.epi.org/child-care-c...
Child care costs in the United States
Learn more To learn more about the high cost of child care, check out these EPI resources: EPI Policy Agenda: Education and Child Care  EPI Family Budget Calculator  EPI Minimum Wage Tracker...
www.epi.org
Ohio’s largest school districts will see cuts under the executive budget proposal.

Cleveland Municipal loses $6.3M
Columbus City loses $52M
Cincinnati City loses $32M
If public school opponents have their way, Ohio’s public districts will lose

‼️$103,388,457

in foundation formula funding over the next two years, including

🚫$95,097,368

in cuts to special education funding.

Ohio students deserve better.

policymattersohio.org/research/pub...
Public money for public schools  - Policy Matters Ohio
Voucher programs siphon funds, weaken public schools UPDATE (3/4/25): The original version of this release used out-of-date information about the change in private-school enrollment compared to vouche...
policymattersohio.org
Reposted by Ali Smith
Many Medicaid recipients do not know they receive it because Medicaid is called different things in different states. The public narrative of Medicaid focuses on a distant other, but 40% of US children and 60% of nursing home residents receive Medicaid. Just SOME of the names by state are below: