Lawmakers are back for the second year of the legislatureâs two year session. And while they passed nearly 60 bills last year, there are hundreds more bills that have been introduced â some are halfway through the legislature, some are awaiting hearings â and others have no chance of passing. Taxes lead the list of projects for this year for the stateâs top Republicans â theyâve repeatedly said that while the last two budgets cut the income tax, theyâre not done with tax trimming. But Gov. John Kasich still also wants what heâs called a reasonable severance tax on oil and natural gas drillers. Republican Senate President Keith Faber of Celina in western Ohio said heâs watching a plan from GOP House leaders. Faber: âThereâs a new proposal for a severance tax adjustment that I think many on both sides of the aisle support in some form or another â the question is what form.â? Kasler: âThough Gov. Kasich has said itâs not enough.â? Faber: âWell, heâd like a bigger increase in the severance tax. And weâll see what happens with that. There are other items. I think the goal is still to reduce the income tax rates.â? While Faber said jobs are created with income tax cuts, newly installed Minority Leader Joe Schiavoni of Boardman near Youngstown said he has never heard the income tax cited as a reason for a business leaving Ohio or choosing to move here. Schiavoni: âSo we need to do something else to increase jobs in the state of Ohio, and I think thatâs making the proper investments in training, thatâs making the proper investments in specific companies, thatâs making the proper into local communities and schools. And until we do that, Iâm not sure these numbers are going to move.â? Kasler: âWhere do you get the money to do that? Do you use existing money? Is there more taxes that you can think of? Where does that money come from?â? Schiavoni: âA severance tax â you know, that could be one way to derive some of those revenues.â? Last year, the Senate passed several election law changes, including the bill to allow the Secretary of State to send out unsolicited absentee ballot applications for presidential and gubernatorial elections and a bill to shorten the early voting period by six days. Election law changes are likely to come up again this election year, and there are also other controversial bills that will be before Senators that have passed the House, including a bill banning traffic cameras and the so-called Stand Your Ground update. The Senate has passed conservative bills in the last few years, and with Republicans outnumbering Democrats 2-1, thatâs likely to continue. But Faber said measures dealing with jobs and the economy are his top priority. âI think some 85 percent of bills we passed had bipartisan voters or bipartisan support. And so when people talk about those few that donât," Faber says. "And so when people talk about those few that donât, it tends to get all the attention. But the meat and potatoes of what we do every day is things where we work across the aisle very well. Weâre not Congress, and Iâm pretty proud of that. And so we can walk and chew gum at the same time.â? Schiavoni said heâs on board with jobs-related bills, though Democrats have different ideas on what creates jobs than Republicans do. But he also wants to see other measures approved, including some school safety proposals and a bill requiring insurers to cover oral chemotherapy. âThose arenât political. We shouldnât waste a lot of our time talking about voting bills and abortion bills, all these political bills that get everybody up in arms. Letâs work on things that make sense that people need, and I think that we can do that this year.â? One thing the leaders do agree on â their support of the $1.9 billion bond issue that will likely be before voters in the May primary, the proceeds of which will fund local government infrastructure projects including water, road and bridge construction and improvements.