|
Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: January
25, 2005
Audio Clip
Senate Republican Floor Leader Glenn Coffee along with his fellow
Republican leaders,
Rep. Fred Morgan, Lt. Gov. Mary Fallin, House Speaker Todd Hiett
and Sen. Scott Pruitt,
unveiled details of their landmark workers' compensation reform
plan.
State Republican Leadership
Turns Spotlight on Workers’ Compensation Crisis
Seeking to stem the tide of lost jobs and lost hope
in Oklahoma, Republican leaders unveiled details of a landmark workers’
compensation reform plan at the State Capitol on Tuesday, January
25.
“I have watched many Oklahomans lose hope in recent years,
as job opportunities move to other states,” says Speaker of
the House Todd
Hiett, R-Kellyville. “We must make significant strides
this year. This is a broken system, and it must be fixed.”
The workers’ compensation reform initiative under House Bill
2046 will fix this broken system. The current system is one of the
most expensive in the nation – the 12th highest in costs –
and it is rife with waste, fraud and legal nightmares. Only one
adjacent state has higher costs: Missouri. And other bordering states
are much lower.
House Bill 2046 will address four major reforms:
- Increasing benefits for workers
- Limiting lawyer involvement
- Reducing medical costs for workers
- Increasing marketplace competition
Also attending the press conference were State Senate Republican
Floor Leader Glenn
Coffee, R-Oklahoma City, and State Senator Scott
Pruitt, R-Broken Arrow, who will carry the bill through the
Senate.
“Oklahoma’s workers’ compensation system is a
terrible burden on our economy that hurts our ability to attract
and retain good jobs,” says Senator Coffee. “It's also
an embarrassment. Time and time again, when Oklahoma’s leaders
try to seek out new potential employers, they hear that the state's
workers’ compensation system is simply too litigious and too
expensive.”
“Our workers’ comp reform plan reduces litigation and
medical costs, increases worker benefits, and injects competition
into the marketplace for workers compensation insurance,”
says Senator Pruitt. “This will make workers comp in Oklahoma
less costly to employers and better for injured workers.”
Lieutenant Governor Mary Fallin also appeared at the reform announcement.
Fallin has been an advocate of serious workers’ compensation
reform for years.
“This must be the year for real, comprehensive workers comp
reform,” says Fallin. “Because of my role in pushing
for these reforms for the past eight years, I frequently hear from
business owners and workers who are increasingly frustrated by our
lack of progress. They were especially upset last year when a very
good reform bill passed the House by a vote of 95-1 and then killed
in the Senate. They aren't going to accept excuses in 2005.”
“This is the most important issue facing our state’s
economy,” says Representative Fred
Morgan, R-Oklahoma City, who will carry the bill through the
House. “The current system lines the pockets of lawyers, while
hindering business owners and stripping away job opportunities from
workers.”
For
more information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

|