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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: February
9, 2005
Senate Republican Leader Glenn Coffee
Senate Democrats Reject Back-Up Funding Streams for Higher Ed
Bond Issue
• Coffee: Votes Show Dems Don’t Trust
Henry’s Lottery Predictions
Senate Democrats on the Appropriations Subcommittee on Education
defeated a pair of GOP amendments that would have provided a back-up
funding source for the proposed $500 million higher education bond
issue.
Senate Republican Leader Glenn
Coffee, who authored the two Republican amendments, said , “The
votes today show that despite their rhetoric, the Democrats have
doubts about Gov. Henry’s projections for lottery revenues.
If they really believe the lottery money is going to be there, they
would have joined us in supporting our amendments to provide a back-up
funding source.”
Senate Bill 745 currently provides that the bond debt would be
backed by lottery revenues, which remain unpredictable at this time.
Any deficit would be required to be made up by future legislatures
with general revenues. The GOP amendments provided for secondary
funding sources in case lottery funds were insufficient to make
the entire annual debt payments.
“This bond issue is critical for higher education in our
state,” stated Coffee, R-Oklahoma City. “That’s
why it is important that we have a solid source of future funding
for the bond debt, and that we avoid obligating future legislatures
to spend general revenues to make up the difference if the lottery
funds fail to materialize in the amounts the governor has promised.”
Coffee’s first amendment would have made the state’s
share of revenues from new card games at Indian casinos the back-up
source to make payments on the bond debt in the event that lottery
revenues fell short. The second amendment would have made funds
otherwise intended for the Legislative Service Bureau – a
support agency for the state Legislature – as the back-up
funding source.
Coffee said the 7 to 6 party-line votes show that Democrats intend
to make the bond issue a “partisan” issue, when it should
be a bipartisan effort to help higher education.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

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