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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: March
28, 2005
Audio Clip
Senator Johnnie Crutchfield
House GA Bill Would Shut Down Department of Education; Violates
Constitution by Replacing Higher Ed Funding with Lottery Proceeds
Senate Appropriations Chairman Johnnie
Crutchfield (D-Ardmore) said today, Speaker Hiett needs to take
his own party’s advice and “Fund Education First”
rather than point his finger at the State Senate.
“We passed an historic education appropriations bill more
than two weeks ago, two days before the ‘Fund Education First’
deadline, while the Speaker played politics and refused to sign
on to an agreement that passed unanimously by both parties in the
Senate,” Crutchfield said.
Instead of considering the Senate legislation and sending it to
the Governor by the March 16 “Fund Education First”
deadline, the House passed a general appropriations bill containing
a fatally flawed common education budget.
The Senator explained the House bill does not contain necessary
funding to operate the State Department of Education. Without that
funding, Crutchfield said, the agency will have to shut down and
won’t be able to calculate and allocate the state aid included
in the bill, meaning school districts will never get their state
aid.
“For some districts, state aid is 70 to 80 percent of their
total budget. When those school boards fail to receive state aid
from the State Department of Education, thousands of teachers will
be laid off while millions of dollars in state funding sits on a
shelf and collects dust,” Crutchfield said. “I don’t
want the responsibility of telling Oklahoma taxpayers their schools
will have to close their doors because I signed on to Speakers Hiett’s
bill that clearly doesn’t provide the necessary funding for
education.”
Likewise, the bill omits identified funding for the State Regents
for Higher Education, who provides and oversees funding of the state’s
colleges and universities.
Worst of all, Crutchfield said, the House GA bill supplants existing
higher education funding with lottery money, which is a direct contradiction
to the Constitutional provision passed by voters in November.
The House GA bill, which includes $28 million in new funds from
the state lottery, funds Higher Education at $809 million, just
a $7 million increase over last years budget.
“In effect, the House GA bill cuts the Higher Education budget
by $20 million and then replaces that funding with proceeds from
the Oklahoma Education Lottery,” Crutchfield said. “That
is supplanting funds. It violates Section 41 of Article 10 of the
Oklahoma Constitution. The ink is barely dry on this constitutional
provision approved by voters in November and already they want to
ignore it.”
Crutchfield said Oklahoma legislators must act responsibly to enact
a budget that meets the needs of Oklahoma’s best and brightest
citizens – its school children.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office- (405) 521-5774

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