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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: April
7, 2005
Educators Turned Senators Say Time Running Out;
School Boards Need Education Appropriation By Monday
Three former educators who are now members of the
Senate Appropriations Sub-Committee on Education said Thursday that
if the House doesn’t act to pass an education appropriation
on Monday school boards across Oklahoma will be forced to make crucial
staffing decisions without knowing how much state funding will be
allocated to their districts.
The result could be a new exodus of teachers to Texas, according
to the trio of lawmakers who have 96 years of experience in public
education among them.
Without a common education appropriations bill, Senators Mary
Easley, Daisy
Lawler and Earl
Garrison said hundreds – maybe thousands – of teachers
won’t be offered a contract for next year.
“These are real people who need to know they are going to
have a job and we’re all well aware that Texas schools are
hiring. Any progress we may have made in stemming the tide of teachers
leaving Oklahoma may very well be lost if we don’t have an
education appropriations bill on Monday,” said Lawler, D-Comanche.
Lawler, who is vice chairwoman of the sub-committee, was a teacher
in Oklahoma schools for 28 years.
“Promising to raise teachers salaries to the regional average
won’t mean much to teachers without a contract,” said
Easley, D-Tulsa. Easley retired after 28 years in the classroom
before joining the Legislature as a member of the House of Representatives
in 1997.
Garrison, who holds a doctorate degree in education from the University
of Oklahoma and was an educator for 40 years, explained that state
law gives school boards until Monday to offer contracts to teachers
for the 2005-2006 school year.
“Time is running out. The deadline facing school districts
is very real and it was the whole reason for the ‘Fund Education
First’ legislation in the first place,” said Garrison,
a freshman from Muskogee who was superintendent at Indian Capital
Technology Center in Muskogee when the Legislature enacted the law.
Easley pointed out that the Senate passed an appropriation for public
schools on March 14. After more than three weeks, the House still
hasn’t taken up the measure.
“It is my understanding that Senator Crutchfield is continuing
to negotiate with the House on a general appropriations bill, but
it doesn’t appear that they’re going to reach an agreement
on a GA bill in time for school boards to meet their deadline. The
only hope for funding education before the deadline is for the House
to approve the Senate measure, Senate Bill 217,” Easley said.
Senate Democrats and Senate Republicans voted unanimously for SB
217 when it passed the Senate on a 43-0 vote. It closely mirrors
the Governor’s education budget and House Democrats tried
to bring the measure to the floor for a vote.
“We’ve seen plenty of ‘my way or the highway’
ultimatums already this session, but that’s not what this
is. This bill is ‘our way’ and by passing it before
it adjourns for the week on Thursday, the House can assure school
boards that K-12 education will be fully funded next year,”
Garrison said.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office- (405) 521-5774

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