|
Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: February
24, 2005
Audio Clip
Senate Finance Chair Jay Paul Gumm
Senate Finance Chair Says Working Families
Deserve Responsible Tax Structure
As the Senate Finance Committee completed its work
on Senate bills assigned to it, the panel’s chair said the
panel’s work is responsible and shows a deep respect for Oklahoma
working families.
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm said the committee considered and approved upwards
of $300 million in tax cuts, almost all of which are targeted to
working families or to grow Oklahoma’s economy.
The lawmaker said not every tax cut bill assigned to the Finance
Committee was heard, nor should it have been. A review of the measures
left on the table in the committee shows that if all of them had
been approved, as much as $ 1.5 billion – more than a quarter
of the entire state budget – would have been slashed from
the state’s treasury.
“Oklahomans know full well what those kinds of cuts would
mean to the programs important to this state,” said Gumm,
D-Durant. “Two years ago, we endured a $677 million shortfall
which caused severe hardships on people who need help the most.
The bills not heard would have cut more than twice that from the
budget.
“We have a responsibility to protect important programs like
senior nutrition, public schools, scholarships for high school students,
and rural fire protection,” the senator said. “The Finance
Committee worked responsibly to pass legislation that will create
opportunities to make a better future for our children, not take
away those opportunities.”
Gumm said he took a nonpartisan approach to scheduling bills, killing
more than two dozen bills written by Democratic senators.
“The Finance Committee’s job is to strike the balance
between keeping taxes as low as possible and providing the critical
services Oklahomans depend on to make tomorrow better for our children,”
he said.
“With the committee’s work half complete, I am very
pleased with what we have accomplished.”
The Senate Finance Committee is the first stop in the legislative
process for measures relating to tax. During the past three weeks,
the committee considered dozens of bills, including components of
Governor Henry’s tax package and the Senate Democrats’
HOPE tax program.
The HOPE plan, which stands for Helping Oklahomans Prosper Economically,
is contained in Senate Bill 958. The measure combines income and
sales tax breaks on individuals and businesses while extending a
job creation plan to assist existing state industries as well as
attract new jobs to Oklahoma.
The plan includes:
• A reduction of income taxes for working families by boosting
the standard deduction for the first time in two decades;
• A sales tax holiday on back-to-school shopping during the
same weekend and on the same items as the Texas back-to-school sales
tax holiday;
• The elimination of taxes on capital gains on Oklahoma-based
property for corporations, including small businesses;
• A reduction of income taxes for senior Oklahomans by upping
the amount of retirement income that is exempt from state income
taxes; and
• An increase of Quality Jobs incentives for qualifying companies
that use in-state suppliers.
“The bills approved by the Finance Committee, including the
HOPE program, create a good blueprint as we work toward developing
a responsible budget and revenue package,” Gumm said.
“Our program will put money back into the pockets of working
families and small businesses while protecting our investments in
public schools, health care, job creation and programs that help
our most vulnerable citizens.”
The lawmaker concluded by saying the guiding principle for him is
to create opportunity for working Oklahomans while making tomorrow
better for our children.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

|