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Kasich Still Fighting To Get 'Fracking' Tax Approved This Year

Lawmakers scrapped Gov. Kasich's proposal that would have given schools less money.
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Ohio Statehouse

Senate leaders are talking about possibly creating a so-called "fracking" tax through this year’s budget plan. The fight over increasing the oil and natural gas tax has been a long battle on many fronts.

The Senate plans on releasing a revised budget any day now and it might include an increase to what’s known as the severance tax—this is a tax on the oil and gas extracted from Ohio’s shale. 

If that happens, it could be Gov. John Kasich’s closest shot at getting an increase to pass in three years.

Right now, the rate is at $.20 per barrel of oil and $.03 per 1,000 cubic feet, or MCF, of natural gas. Kasich says that’s way too low for a state with a booming shale natural gas industry. 

“That’s unbelievable. We wanted to raise it like 4 or 4.5 percent - we would have the lowest severance tax in America,” Kasich said. 

His fight to raise the severance tax officially began in 2012 when he proposed, in his budget update, hiking the rate to 1.5 percent of the value of the well in the first year then 4 percent every year after that. 

For Kasich’s 2013 budget proposal he stayed consistent, asking for a straight 4 percent severance tax rate. Then, in last year’s budget update, Kasich sought a more modest rate of 2.75 percent. The House ended up passing an increase at 2.5 percent, with some breaks attached, a proposal with which Kasich was not happy. 

“The House passed version on oil and gas is a joke—ok—it’s a joke. It’s an insult to Ohioans,” he said. 

A Pennsylvania gas well.  fracking drilling
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Flickr/Creative Commons
Right now, the rate is at $.20 per barrel of oil and $.03 per 1,000 cubic feet, or MCF, of natural gas. Gov. Kasich says that’s way too low for a state with a booming shale natural gas industry.

The governor came back with a much bigger swing of the bat in this year’s budget, pitching a rate of 6.5 percent. Of course industry leaders do not like this, including Ohio Oil and Gas Association Executive Vice President Shawn Bennett. 

“This is not a proposal that would foster growth.” 

Bennett says the oil and gas industry is going through a recession and companies are seeing very low prices for their product. 

“We would be charged a rate—a tax rate on a price that we as an industry don’t actually get for our product,” he said. 

In other words, the state’s tax commissioner will appraise the gas at the well and tax the drilling company at that value. But Bennett says the product will actually sell at a lower cost on the market. 

Wendy Patton with the liberal-leaning think tank Policy Matters Ohio says it’s important to remember why we have a severance tax. 

“It’s a way of recompensing the people of the state of a nation for the loss of that valuable natural resource that can only be taken out of the ground once,” Patton said. 

She agrees with Kasich and says the state’s current severance tax is an antiquated rate based on a business that peaked in 1896, that is until this recent boom. 

“People need to understand that Ohio has a ridiculously low severance tax and very high needs.” 

Credit Office of Governor John Kasich
Gov. Kasich wants an increase in the severance tax to help fund his proposed state budget. Lawmakers in the Ohio House said "no," but the Senate is still considering it.

There are other elements to this debate as well. Patton agrees with Kasich’s proposed rate but she doesn’t like the revenue going towards tax cuts. Policy Matters - and Democratic state lawmakers - would rather see more money go back to helping local communities for economic development. 

As for Bennett and the oil and gas association, besides not liking the hike, they have another problem. 

“There is not a single individual in the industry that feels comfortable dealing with this issue in the budget,” he said. 

Bennett says the severance tax is a very complicated issue and while he trusts Kasich and his administration, he doesn’t want to see it passed in a budget where the governor has the power to line item veto. 

And the fight doesn’t end with the Senate. Even if the upper chamber decided to increase the rate, the proposal would go back to the House where its members have a history of being less keen on raising the severance tax.

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