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Ohio Officials Testify Before Fraud Task Force
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Ohio Officials Testify Before Fraud Task Force

The House Oversight Committee task force, led by Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, met on Wednesday to study Medicaid fraud in Ohio. Lawmakers heard from The Daily Wire’s Luke Rosiak, as well as Ohio Auditor Keith Faber and State Rep. Mike Dovilla. The hearing also saw a simple question from Gill nearly bring a Ohio lawmaker to tears. ‘No Verification, No Oversight’ As Rosiak explained, “unsupervised and untrained workers” can collect money for providing services, even and including companionship and conversation, or family members who are Medicaid beneficiaries. There’s “no verification and little oversight,” Rosiak warned about the home health care system, highlighting how his investigation “found millionaire tax cheats, almost all of them foreign-born, ripping off taxpayers at a scale that threatens to bankrupt America.” Columbus has the second largest concentration of Somalis in the country and the largest concentration of Bhutanese outside of Bhutan. In northeast Columbus, this was “a side hustle” for many suspected fraudsters. While many were taking in money from taxpayers, they weren’t paying their own taxes, and often had criminal records. Many used relatives as company owners on paper. “Whistleblowers in the area tell me companies knock on doors in ethnic neighborhoods where most people are on Medicaid, and most people live in multigenerational households, and they tell the older family member to go to particular doctors and claim particular symptoms, and then they will put the younger family member on their payroll, with the parent as their only patient,” Rosiak explained, which can result in $90,000 a a year. .@lukerosiak talks about a Medicaid fraudster who flaunts on social media a life of private jets, yachts, etc. "These are people that came here as refugees & now they’re living as millionaires [via fraud]."ROSIAK: "Whistleblowers in the [Columbus] area tell me companies knock… pic.twitter.com/lJIL7EEjSd— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) June 3, 2026 For this year’s audit, Faber’s office identified up to $4.44 billion in fraud related exposure connected to ineligible recipients in Ohio’s Medicaid program and an ineligibility rate of 15.6%, which he said “again highlighted the need for substantially stronger oversight and internal controls.” Approximately 56% of home health care services were not processed through the electronic visit verification system to verify services, that they came from the right caregiver, and within an authorized time and location. That this represents an estimated 1.1 billion claims not matched with EVV visits “is a significant control weakness,” Faber said. A March 2024 report found that more than 124,000 individuals were enrolled in Ohio Medicaid and at least one other state for three consecutive months, with organizations associated with such enrollees receiving more than $1 billion. In the General Assembly, Dovilla is working on a Medicaid integrity bill as a member of the Medicaid Committee. He described the bill as having provisions to “strengthen provider enrollment, improve electronic visit verification, impose additional safeguards on high-risk providers, enhance fraud reporting, and increase penalties for fraud.” Thanks to @RepBrandonGill for the opportunity to testify this morning before @GOPoversight on my ongoing work to address Medicaid fraud, waste, and abuse in Ohio.Here is my opening statement to the task force, which met today for the first time to explore these matters. https://t.co/j5FPrv6ezu— Rep. Mike Dovilla (@mikedovilla) June 4, 2026 Brought Nearly to Tears An exchange between Gill and state Sen. Nickie Antoni grew heated when the congressman asked her, “Has Somali immigration been good for Ohio?” She first claimed it was outside of her purview. Gill pressed further, asking if she’d like to see more immigration. “I’m processing your question, and I have to say that I was almost brought to tears just now,” Antonio responded. While Gill pointed to 72% of Somali immigrants being on welfare, Antonio spoke out against “the rate and the level of hateful rhetoric based on false information.” They continued to speak over one another, with Gill reiterating about Somalis “defrauding your state at an astounding rate,” to billions of dollars, while Antonio stressed how “shocking” she found the framing. Ohio Democrats aren’t serious people. https://t.co/W24VldHHds— Ohio Republican Party (@ohiogop) June 3, 2026 Gill had just asked Rosiak about alleged fraudsters who were of Somali, other African, or Bhutanese origin, which was 100% of the companies he looked into. When asked if there was a connection between the Medicaid fraud in Ohio and the Somali fraud in Minnesota, Rosiak replied, “Yeah, it’s the same people. They all have relatives in both places and they move back and forth,” Rosiak further testified, “there is a large interstate criminal enterprise of Somali fraudsters that are defrauding the federal government in multiple states of bill potentially billions of dollars.” When task force member Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, brought up race as well, Rosiak testified that a home health owner he spoke told him he was “going to tell everyone you’re a racist.” Jordan responded, “That’s how the Left operates.” The congressman also offered a contrast between Ohio and Minnesota. “The only difference is… in Ohio they’re actually doing something about it,” while in the more liberal Minnesota they “didn’t do squat” at the state level, Jordan said, citing the issue “might cause backlash among the Somali community… a core voting bloc.” “Politics stopped them in Minnesota, it’s not stopping Mr. Faber, Mr. Dovilla from doing their work,” Jordan continued. The Democrats' playbook is clear.@Jim_Jordan lays it out: "That's how the left operates … the left will tell a lie … big media will report … big tech will amplify. You tell the truth. They call you racist."People are not buying it. Ohio deserves better. pic.twitter.com/sHl6EFKtNd— Oversight Committee (@GOPoversight) June 3, 2026

Trump Admin Seeks to Give Mom-and-Pop American Exporters Advantage
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Trump Admin Seeks to Give Mom-and-Pop American Exporters Advantage

FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—In an effort to give small businesses a leg-up in exporting their products abroad, two government agencies are partnering on an initiative to simplify small banks’ paperwork and give American exporters quicker access to loans. On Thursday, the Export-Import Bank and the Small Business Administration launched the Community Lender Enhancement Initiative, a program meant to simplify the process of smaller banks getting access to federal financing. Export-Import Bank is a federal credit agency that seeks to provide financing for American exporters to give them a competitive advantage. “Thousands of community lenders serve markets that larger financial institutions often overlook. By simplifying documentation and partnering with SBA, EXIM is supporting American workers and the small businesses that employ them,” reads an EXIM document viewed by the Daily Signal. “The Trump Administration is prioritizing the tools and resources American businesses need to compete on the global market,” it adds. “Actions like this that streamline existing programs, cut red tape, and prioritize partnerships across the federal government will help small businesses grow.” Specifically, the export credit agency is taking on some of community lenders’ “collateral management burden,” in which smaller banks have to gather information on the assets exporters are using as collateral for financing. “The idea is that lenders will be able to utilize our program without the fear of, ‘we don’t know how to do asset-based lending,’” said Mark Klein, EXIM’s managing director of lender accounts, in a video announcing the program. Klein argues the program will open up the credit agency’s financing tools to smaller banks and, in turn, help mom-and-pop American exporters. “Bottom line is you don’t have to be a big bank to use EXIM,” Klein said. “We’re going to allow [smaller banks] to play in the same arena as the large money center banks because we’re going to take a lot of that back-office burden off your plate.” Export-Import Bank is also aligning its U.S. content threshold requirements—or the percentage of an exporter’s goods that have to be of U.S. origin in order to get access to financing—with those of the SBA. Related Posts‘There’s No Question Prices Are Elevated’: Trump Official Addresses Small Businesses’ Economic PainSmall Business Administrator Kelly Loeffler acknowledged that Americans are facing increased prices but promised that the economy will improve after the military operation in Iran ends.  “There’s no question in recent weeks, prices have bumped up because of rising gas prices due to the Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz now,” Loeffler told the…Weak American Leaders Green-Light Bloodshed, IDF Major SaysFIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—Weak American leaders open the door for global terror, a decorated member of the Israel Defense Forces told the Daily Signal. “Terrorists pray for weak leaders to control the strongest enforcer of world peace, the United States of America,” Shadi Khalloul, a decorated Aramaic Catholic IDF soldier, said. “Those terrorists use…Trump Launches New Program to Stop Missing Foster Children From Being TraffickedFIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—President Donald Trump’s Department of Health and Human Services has launched a new program to locate missing foster children, The Daily Signal can first report. The agency’s Administration of Children and Families has piloted a new program in Mississippi to rescue foster children before they are trafficked. About 60% of all…

‘NATIONAL EMBARRASSMENT’: Mehek Cooke Says Ohio Lacked the Political Will to Confront Medicaid Fraud
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‘NATIONAL EMBARRASSMENT’: Mehek Cooke Says Ohio Lacked the Political Will to Confront Medicaid Fraud

On Tuesday, Mehek Cooke, Daily Signal’s senior national security & legal analyst, testified at a hearing examining fraud within Ohio’s Medicaid system. This transcript of Cooke’s testimony has been slightly edited for clarity. Opening Statement Thank you very much for the opportunity to testify to strengthen Ohio’s Medicaid funding system so that we could prevent fraud. I have testimony written, and I’m going to follow it as much as I can, given that we have five minutes. But I want to stress that Medicaid is really meant for vulnerable Ohioans.  Every dollar spent that is stolen from people that really need it in the state of Ohio, it’s an elderly person, disabled, kids with autism. So it doesn’t just merely try and steal tax dollars. It’s actually destroying public trust and monies that we need for people in Ohio who are most vulnerable.   I’m testifying because I have spent several months investigating as a taxpayer, an attorney, an Ohioan.  I also work with the Daily Signal now on Ohio fraud.   Whistleblowers back in December came to me and shared that they had gone to several legislators, several offices and the attorney general’s office, because there was massive fraud in the state of Ohio. They specifically asked the attorney general’s office to please not share their names, but they wanted to share all the information because they feared to be stoned to death within that community.  They identified the Somalian, Nepalese, and Bhutanese community where this fraud was occurring. And primarily, there’s a language barrier.   Many individuals don’t speak English, so they seek out certain providers that have either a common background or can speak multiple languages.   I was told that individuals would sometimes, seeking home health care services, would not only be coached by home health care providers, but in many cases, the applicant was actually accompanied by a home health care provider that would speak for them in terms of ailments.  These providers conducted MRIs, CT scans, and then declined to actually allow for approvals because their medical need was not substantiated.  Thereafter, these providers were threatened, verbally told that we are going to go back to our old provider that stamped this paperwork for us, and some healthcare services, one of them in particular, actually said, “I’ll make it worth your while,” which sounds like a kickback.  I provided all of this information to the Ohio Department of Medicaid, all of the providers that are potentially engaging in fraud, in addition to even the home health cares that are complicit in this and asked them to do an investigation.   I also went to the attorney general’s office. They specifically first asked for the names of the whistleblowers, which I wouldn’t give them, attorney-client privilege.  I represent them now, and they cannot protect them. They continued to push, saying that they would subpoena me, and I told them they had all the information needed.   But this is the type of cover-up when you’re unwilling to actually work with somebody who’s providing information, detailed summaries, explaining how the fraud and corruption works.  At the Department of Medicaid, I spoke to several people there on a phone call and specifically said, “All you have to do in addition to auditing, start with anybody who closes their program starting in December. That will tell you, because they’re moving to Pennsylvania. I’m not asking you to track the fraud to Pennsylvania, but if you actually stop and audit just anybody closing, that will show you fraud because their biggest concern was racism.”  Well, fraud is not the cost of doing business, and it’s certainly not racist to look into allegations and to make sure fraud isn’t occurring.   During my recent visits in months, we had one home care health center that had thirty-four providers in there. Many people weren’t even present. One or two people that we were able to speak to didn’t even speak English.  They didn’t know how to actually explain what home health care services were. They would call somebody else, and they’d tell me to come back.  On my fourth visit, three men cornered me and stated that this was, that they do not want to provide home health care services to me, which is fine, but continue to intimidate and call this racist when all we’re doing is asking basic questions in our state.  I have outlined a lot of potential opportunities for us to strengthen, but one of the biggest things the governor’s executive order does not do is if you stop new home health care services, that’s great. But what about the ones that are already existing? What about auditing those? And the fact that we haven’t done that is shocking to me.  There are places where individuals are billing. So an individual could come in and make seventy-five thousand dollars at a home healthcare provider.  You add a parent, you add, let’s just say my, my parents in addition to my husband’s parents, now you’re making close to two hundred and fifty to a half a million dollars.  Those all should be flagged within the system.   We also need to inquire independent, verified medical necessity. And there’s two options here.   The General Assembly could actually create doctors that are approved to look at home healthcare services and patients, so that way you have an approved system of doctors that you have verified on a list.  They need to apply, they need to be verified, they need to be in good medical standing with the board. Those are opportunities for us to strengthen this.   The other way to strengthen this is also to make sure that we have an accessor that’s independent, that’s not tied to any agency, that’s actually verifying the recipient’s limited functions, the medical necessity, the hours.  Also, we need unannounced site visits.   I guarantee you, if people had visited from the Department of Medicaid the number of times I went to these facilities, you would have known that there was something wrong.   The Attorney General’s office had letters underneath the door, several other mail that just wasn’t opened.  It’s a completely vacant building. There are hundreds of these.   In addition, I think we need to also look at shell company patterns. Ohio should implement automated analytics to help with shared addresses, phone numbers, emails, bank accounts, ownership, duplicate overlapping of business registrations.   This is something that has occurred over and over again, where you have one person that can own up to fifty to sixty home healthcare and make millions.  My biggest issue right now is the Department of Medicaid, through a public records request, has refused to give us how much we’re spending on home healthcare systems. After five months, their response to me, our tax dollars, their response was, “Please go talk to our vendor.” That’s unacceptable in this state.  You made me wait five months to tell me that our tax dollars are sitting at a vendor and, and we think that’s okay? There needs to be a transparency checkbook for Medicaid. Every single dollar, we don’t need patients’ names, but every single dollar that we have going out that are our tax dollars, we want that transparency.  We want that audit for everybody. It doesn’t matter who the home healthcare service is. And lastly, I’ll just tell you, whistleblowers need protection. They shouldn’t have to come to attorneys like me.   And yes, I did this pro bono because I believe them and I believe this work warranted a lot more from Ohioans and a lot more from our leaders.  We need whistleblower protections.   And if you look at the crime, I know that we are strengthening the penalties. Under current law, Medicaid fraud is involved less than $1,000 is treated as a misdemeanor. I know you’re looking at penalties, but I support the idea of also using Medicaid fraud as a predicate offense under the Ohio’s engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity.  That way you have another way that we can bring law enforcement and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in terms of enforcing our law. I think it’s weak right now, and that’s another area for strength.   I’m happy to answer any questions. Thank you for the opportunity to testify.   Testimony Q&A Mehek Cooke: I’m happy to answer any questions. Thank you for the opportunity to testify. Rep. Jennifer Gross: Thank you so much for your time today, Ms. Cooke. Representative Romer. Rep. Bill Romer: Thank you so much. I appreciate you being here. One of the things that I’ve looked at is the number of patients that are approved by doctors. Do you think it would be effective if we had some sort of tracking mechanism that would say these doctors approved something at 500 or 1,000% of the average, versus doctors who might do one or two approvals for home health care patients on a yearly basis? Mehek Cooke: Representative Romer, that’s an amazing question, and I think that’s where data analytics are important. We’re not just auditing the home health care services or the individuals trying to get certified—that needs to be strengthened as well—but also having a tracking system. So whether you have an Ohio-approved list of doctors, or you have doctors who have to submit how many individuals they are approving, that’s a guaranteed way to know there are some doctors approving, as you said, 500%, versus some that are only approving 10%. Rep. Romer: Thank you. No follow-up. Rep. Gross: Representative Timms. Rep. Desiree Timms: Thank you, Chair, and thank you for being here today and for your testimony. I have a question about the complaints you received before you represented the client. Did you reach out to the attorney general’s office? And if so, did you ask your— Mehek Cooke: I can hear you. Rep. Timms: OK. Houston, we have landed. So I ask this question because, at the last hearing, the Medicaid Fraud Unit came and talked to us about how many cases they had open and how they were working on this, and that these units exist in every single state under federal statute. And you are saying that you reached out to the attorney general’s office and nothing was done—nobody called you back—or they just wanted the person’s information? Mehek Cooke: I am saying that the whistleblowers reached out to several offices, including the attorney general’s office. They asked for anonymity, and they were not granted that. They then came to me and asked if I would represent them, because they did not want to go on record with any of these offices because they do not want to be—it’s a cultural thing—“stoned to death,” as they say. They don’t want to lose their lives or their livelihoods. So when that information was shared with me, I shared it with the Department of Medicaid, the attorney general’s office, and I also followed up with Keith [Faber], Ohio’s auditor. The attorney general’s office was notified about these complaints almost a year ago. When I notified them in December, it was because things started heating up in the media, and that’s the only reason they called me. Then they wanted the whistleblowers’ names, and I refused that based on attorney-client privilege. I also gave them a list of everything they would need to investigate. Did I answer your question, Representative Timms? Rep. Gross: Follow-up? Rep. Timms: Yes, please. Thank you, Chair. It seems odd, based on what you’re saying and how typical whistleblower complaints go. I will say that. I’ll move on to the next question. Mehek Cooke: What part is odd? To the chair. Rep. Gross, may I ask Rep. Timms what part is odd? Rep. Timms: I’m asking the questions. You mentioned that you decided to pop up at a site on your own. I’m assuming wearing your journalism hat or your investigator hat—I’m not sure which hat. But you showed up to investigate a home health care agency—a patient’s home. Where did you pop up at? I’m confused. You said you did a surprise visit and encountered someone who did not speak English. That is what you just said. So I’m asking you, “Where did this occur?” Mehek Cooke: You made an incorrect assumption. I would never go to somebody’s home. So failed assumption number one. I went to an office building that is a public office, that is open to anyone that comes in to seek services. I knocked on the door, asked permission to enter, and asked if they provided home health care services. As I stated in my testimony, the majority of those offices, nobody was present. The couple of people I did see— one was a very young woman who said she didn’t know anything about home health care. She asked, “May I call my uncle?” I said that would be great. She called her uncle, who asked if I could make an appointment. I said I was happy to come back, but she couldn’t give me any times. I came back the next day, and nobody was there. This was one office building with tons of offices, mostly with locked doors. These are not personal homes—these are just public buildings where if you wanted to walk in tomorrow you could say, “I’d love to come to talk about home healthcare.” One individual did go through a bit of information with me and said she generally doesn’t see a lot of traffic. I have all these notes. But for the most part, many individuals were not there, and the few who were either didn’t speak English or really didn’t understand what home health care services were. Rep. Gross: Are there any other questions? Representative Lett. Rep. Crystal Lett: Thank you, Chairwoman. I wanted to follow up on what Representative Timms was asking. It’s interesting to me that you are showing up at the location the business is based out of. I know, because my son has disabilities and we receive the SP services and the home health services to help us so that he can live in the home. Those home health care providers are not at the office. They are generally dispatched throughout the community all day long. So I would just like to state that for the record, I would like for you to opine on that, but I don’t think it is a reasonable expectation for the entire office to be staffed during the day. That is not the purpose of home health, and that would be more concerning to me than providers being out in the community. I’d love your thoughts on that. Mehek Cooke: Thank you for the question, and I’m glad your son is receiving care. Generally, I’m not expecting a full office, but usually there’s one or two people there—I have a friend who has since sold his home health care. I mean, it’s a functioning office, administrators taking calls, coordinating care, handling issues when aides don’t show up. My grandmother is in her 90’s, and she also receives home health care services, and there is always someone available to respond. So even that home health care has some– an administrator or somebody to say, “Oh, the home health care aide didn’t come. Let me help you. Let me transfer somebody else.” But there’s always a couple organizers. But in these cases, there was nobody. It was a complete ghost town. And the couple people that were manning the office really didn’t understand home health care systems. And the other thing that I found really interesting was every door had a sign. Most of them said they were open eight to three, eight to five, but they weren’t open. So that was the other part that was confusing. I did call a couple, and generally, it was a man on the other side, and it wasn’t, “Hi, this is Home Health Care Kindness.” It was, “Hello. Who’s this? What do you want?” And I’m like, “Maybe I’ll just go knock on the door and see if they’re willing to answer my questions.” Face-to-face goes a long way versus text messages and phone calls with people. Rep. Gross: Follow-up? Rep. Lett: So you’re saying there were one to two people present? Mehek Cooke: There were, there were empty offices. There were, like, one to two, and, like, let’s just say there was one home… So it’s 34 home health cares. One office may have had one person. The third floor may have had one. That’s what I mean, but they’re all separate home health cares. Rep. Lett: Through the chair to the witness, just to clarify—there are 34 individual provider companies in that building? Mehek Cooke: Yes, that’s correct. Rep. Lett: Thank you for clarifying for the record. Rep. Gross: Representative Hall. Rep. Derrick Hall: I work in health care in my day job, right? So I find fraud, waste, and abuse abhorrent in all its forms. So again, I appreciate the things that you’ve come to talk about today. My question was gonna be there’s sort of the bucket, and we talked about, I think, last committee meeting around MFUCU. I can never say it right. But the unit that does the investigating—MFUCU from the AG’s office. And I asked them in committee, I said, “Hey,” I said, “Do you have enough in the way of resources?” And the answer was like, “Yeah, we have nine hundred cases, but I don’t wanna say no to more resources,” but, I think we all know what he was trying to say: “I need more resource.” But that’s just one bucket. So my question, though, is you mentioned the site visits and last count there’s over 850 home health agencies in Ohio. I think it’s closer to a thousand now. Yeah. I’m all for site visits. If I had my druthers, they all would have a site visit unannounced multiple times a year. My concern, though, this is my question for you is, it doesn’t appear, though, that either ODM or ODH are appropriately staffed to be able to carry out that level and that number of inspections. We all talk about fraud, waste, and abuse and how this deplorable thing. But if we’re not gonna fund additional resources to root it out, I mean, fund, I don’t just mean saying, “Let’s require ODH to do a thousand visits,” without giving them more manpower and more funding. Sorry, womanpower too, by the way. What are your thoughts on the resource allocation to actually rooting out fraud, waste, and abuse? Mehek Cooke: Thank you for the question. So I think that there’s two buckets here, and you’re right. The AG’s office definitely needs more help and more fraud-based investigators for home health care to you name the fraud. If there’s a welfare program, we’re going to have fraud. There’s always going to be a level of activity that people engage in. So I do think more resources, they’re in priority, but I think we have to start with the basics. Look at the application for home health care services. Only six states allow for a relative to do that. Only six states, Ohio, and of course, you guys know Minnesota. So we have to start thinking about maybe it shouldn’t be our own family members and take that into account. Look, I just shared with you, my grandmother has a home health care service aide that comes in. My mother could have easily applied. She’s very qualified. That really shouldn’t be the funding that we’re providing family members. Our family members are here for love and support. They really shouldn’t be the ones that are caregivers that are then dipping into funds for somebody like Representative Letts’ child. I think that’s unacceptable. So let’s look at that. Let’s review it. We’re one of six states, so I say that again. In terms of rooting out the fraud, though, our home health care application, I mean, anybody can apply. I’m sorry, but the bar is so low, and then we expanded services during COVID, and we never pulled those back to really rethink what is home health care really for? What is that purpose? And then the other part of this is the only way that we’re going to detect it is to be smart by it. We have lots of people working at Medicaid. They need to start detecting at a certain level. Let’s do an audit. They’re not doing that right now. Representative Hall, they don’t even know how much they’re sending home health care systems because after over five months, they asked me to go to their private vendor on how much money we’re spending. So if we were to call Medicaid right now and I was to say, “Do you know which vendors have spent $2 million or $5 million?” They would have to say, “Can I put you on a hold for five months? Let me go ask my subcontractor.” That’s deplorable. We should be able to actually have a system where you can get on, your family members can see who’s getting the most Medicaid funding. I mean, that’s how you detect fraud when there’s spikes. This is common sense. You don’teven need a law degree or anything else. So I think some of it also is creating a blueprint, which I have reached out to the White House Task Force to ask for one, to work with them to provide to this committee. There should be a blueprint of internal protocols that we have where we’re not just throwing more money at a controlling board and saying, “Well, I need more money for fraud detection.” Some of this is just use your common sense. Gosh, this provider is spending millions. Rep. Gross: Follow-up?  Rep. Hall: I just had one more follow‑up question. There’s a famous nurse who once said that sunlight is the best disinfectant. With regard to transparency, do you think there’s a role for AI to go through large amounts of data and look for patterns—particularly in detecting fraud?  Mehek Cook: Representative Hall, I’m 100% supportive of this. AI can detect higher levels of spending, but you still need a physical person. There’s no replacement for you or me or anyone else on this committee to go to a home health care office and say, “My gosh, they haven’t been open in a month. There’s nobody there even taking phone calls. It goes to some random man who says, ‘What do you need?’”  AI could be instrumental here. There are ways we can reduce costs without using manpower for every single thing.  AI could also be used for what Representative Roemer brought up earlier. Doctors should be reporting to Medicaid how much they’re billing and how many patients are receiving home health care. We could use AI to look at the top 25 doctors and conduct periodic audits there if we don’t have enough manpower.  And while we’re talking about this, we should also look at nurses. There are several nurses—and I have a list of them that I’m happy to send to the new attorney general when he takes office—who I’m told allegedly are rubber‑stamping a lot of this. So maybe we should rethink who should be providing and approving home health care. Perhaps consider doctors and not nurses.  Thank you for the question.  Rep. Gross: Committee, are there any other questions?  Thank you, Ms. Cooke, for your testimony today. We really appreciate you.  Before we conclude, I’d like to ask one more question, and I don’t mean to put you on the spot. Do you happen to remember a street or office building that members could visit themselves to see what you saw?  Mehek Cook: Yes. I have an address here: 2700 East Dublin Granville Road. The nice thing is there’s also a bank there if you need to do banking, but you could easily stroll in.  There are 34 individual home health care centers that are empty. A couple of people have staffed them in the past. There are also trucking companies there with nobody inside. And if I’m not mistaken, that same building billed almost $66 million to Ohio Medicaid.  Rep. Gross: Yes.  Mehek Cook: And this was flagged in December to officeholders. I think it’s a national embarrassment for me to have to go on live television and talk about our state like this—especially when you have the Daily Wire coming in to talk about what we could have done together as a state, as a group of individuals, to correct this.  Thank you so much.  Rep. Gross: Thank you, Ms. Cooke, for your testimony today. We really appreciate you. 

Job Market Notches Third Straight Month of Solid Growth
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Job Market Notches Third Straight Month of Solid Growth

REUTERS–The U.S. economy posted a third straight month of strong job gains in May, confirming the labor market was gaining traction after stumbling last year and giving the Federal Reserve more room to keep interest rates unchanged amid rising inflation due to the war in the Middle East. The closely watched employment report from the Labor Department on Friday painted an upbeat picture of the jobs market. The economy added 93,000 more jobs in March and April than previously estimated and the unemployment rate held at 4.3% for a third consecutive month. While financial markets boosted the chances of an interest rate hike in December, economists said the bar remains high for monetary policy tightening. Economists say fiscal stimulus, in the form of tax and import tariff refunds, has cushioned the impact of the U.S.-backed war with Iran, which has stoked inflation through a surge in oil prices. Corporate profits have increased since the second quarter of 2025, allowing businesses to refrain from large-scale layoffs. Economists, however, warned of risks to the labor market if the war persists. “This report is likely to confirm to the Fed that the labor market is in a stable place, allowing inflation to be the only focus and driver of Fed policy heading into the June meeting,” said Sophia Kearney-Lederman, a senior economist at FHN Financial. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 172,000 jobs last month after rising by an upwardly revised 179,000 in April, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast payrolls would increase by 85,000 jobs after a previously reported rise of 115,000 in April. Estimates for job growth ranged from 50,000 to 125,000. The payrolls count for March was revised up by 29,000 jobs to 214,000. Economists estimated the economy needs to create between zero and 50,000 jobs per month to keep up with growth in the working-age population. The so-called break-even rate has dropped because of an immigration crackdown that has reduced the labor force, limiting the rise in the unemployment rate. The labor market had been hampered by uncertainty over the Trump administration’s implementation last year of sweeping tariffs, which made businesses cautious about boosting hiring. Though businesses are hiring, much of the improvement in job growth is likely due to historically low layoffs. FINANCIAL MARKETS RAISE ODDS OF RATE HIKE  The U.S. Supreme Court in February struck down the tariffs, and some businesses have filed for refunds. Large income tax refunds have allowed consumers to keep spending, though upper-income households are doing most of the heavy lifting. The run of strong employment gains suggests the labor market could be breaking out of its “slow-hire, slow-fire” equilibrium. U.S. interest rate futures priced in about a 65% chance that the Fed would raise rates in December, compared with 48% earlier, according to LSEG estimates. The U.S. central bank’s benchmark overnight interest rate is currently in the 3.50%-3.75% range. The dollar gained versus a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury yields rose, with the interest rate-sensitive two-year note hitting its highest level since February 2025. U.S. stocks opened lower. The leisure and hospitality sector led the broad increase in employment last month, with 70,000 jobs added, well above the average monthly gain of 14,000 over the past 12 months. Payrolls at restaurants and bars rose by 48,000 jobs. These establishments could be hiring in preparation for the FIFA World Cup soccer tournament, which is being partly hosted by the United States. Local government employment increased by 55,000 jobs. The healthcare sector added 35,000 jobs, most of them in ambulatory services. There were also increases in payrolls in the social assistance, mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction industries. But employment tied to financial activities dropped by 22,000 jobs and is down by 107,000 since a recent peak in May 2025. There were employment losses for insurance carriers and related activities as well as commercial banking. Annual wage growth slowed to 3.4% from 3.6% in April. Inflation increased at its fastest pace in three years in April, the government reported last week. Income at the disposal of households after adjusting for inflation has dropped for three straight months and the saving rate is at a four-year low, which economists said could undercut consumer spending. “There is no compelling reason to expect the Fed to cut rates this year,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at Nationwide. “At this point it is premature to anticipate a rate increase. For the Fed to consider a rate hike, the jump in energy prices would need to push up prices of other goods and services away from the immediate direct impact and dislodge the so-far well-contained bond market inflation expectations.”  Originally published by Reuters.

EXCLUSIVE: Poll Shows Ohio Voters Support Voter ID Amendment
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EXCLUSIVE: Poll Shows Ohio Voters Support Voter ID Amendment

FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—With this week’s passage of Senate Joint Resolution 10 in the state Senate, Ohioans are that much closer to voting on a ballot initiative this November that will enshrine photo voter ID into the state constitution. The passage of SJR 10, with the state House also set to vote on such an effort, comes as Honest Elections Project Action released a new poll—first shared with the Daily Signal—showing “overwhelmingly popular” public support for Voter ID. Sure enough, according to the HEP Action polling memo, 86% of likely voters in Ohio agree that voters should be required to show a photo ID when they vote, with 68% saying they “strongly agree.” A majority of voters from all political parties, including 99% of Republicans, 90% of independents, and 69% of Democrats say they agree photo ID should be required. The poll also asked about voters’ thoughts on a constitutional amendment, with 70% indicating they favor a voter ID amendment, with 57% strongly voting in favor. Those in support include 97% of Republicans, 79% of independents, and 48% of Democrats. “Our latest polling confirms that voter ID is exceedingly popular in Ohio. The Ohio House should quickly pass SJR 10, sending a ballot issue to voters to make voter ID permanent by enshrining it into the state constitution. The Buckeye State deserves to have honest elections where it’s easy to vote and hard to cheat,” Jason Snead, executive director of Honest Elections Project Action, told the Daily Signal. As members are voting or are set to vote, there are Republicans in the state legislature and grassroots activists concerned that the constitutional amendment as it is written does not go far enough, arguing it doesn’t apply to every voter since photo ID isn’t required for mail-in ballots. According to the HEP Action memo, 69% would vote for requiring voters to submit a copy of their ID with their ballot. State Rep. Ron Ferguson has introduced HB 577, the Secure Vote Act, which would require photo ID for absentee ballots cast by mail, He previously shared with the Daily Signal how “voters strongly support photo ID for every voter.” That bill current rests in the General Government Committee. The HEP Action memo also determined that 70% would vote for an amendment requiring mail-in voters to write their driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number on the ballot. This is a provision which state Sen. Jane Timken, a sponsor of SJR 10 who recently spoke to the Daily Signal about the bill, mentioned as one way to safeguard those mail-in ballots. Vivek Ramaswamy, the Republican nominee for governor in Ohio, called last month for a constitutional amendment on voter ID to fully enshrine current state law. He explained restoring trust in elections is one reason such an amendment is necessary. The polling also spoke to whether the constitutional amendment being on the ballot would make Ohioans more likely to vote in November, with 86% saying they’d be more likely, including 52% who are much more likely. This includes 93% of Republicans who are more likely to vote, as well as 85% of independents and 80% of Democrats. The poll was conducted May 27-June 2, 2026, with 800 likely voters, including 400 by phone and 400 online. There was an overall margin of error of ± 3.46%.