Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Jeff Rabon
Senate District 5
Assistant Majority Leader
Choctaw,
McCurtain, Atoka and Pushmataha Counties
Henry Shuns Rural Oklahoma
Communities
With Veto of Sub-State Planning
District Funds
(Oklahoma City) Governor Brad Henry turned his back on rural Oklahoma
late Wednesday by vetoing a section of the Department of Commerce
appropriation bill that directed $3.1 million to sub-state planning
districts to fund local projects.
“These funds would have been used for grants for rural fire
departments, community water and sewer system expansion and rehabilitation,
hot lunch programs for senior citizens and other projects that benefit
the taxpayers of Oklahoma,” said Rabon,
Assistant Senate Majority Leader and chairman of the Appropriations
Sub-Committee for Natural Resources and Regulatory Services. “Some
people like to criticize these projects as so-called ‘pork-barrel’
spending, but in rural Oklahoma the people see this funding as a
way for them to get a few of their tax dollars back.”
Governor Henry, Rabon said, spent 10 years in the Senate and “was
more than happy to accept funding for local projects in his district
back then.”
“It’s extremely hypocritical for him to veto this
funding now. I notice he didn’t use his line item veto power
to reject the $200,000 increase in the Department of Central Services
budget that will be used to hire a chef for the Governor’s
Mansion,” Rabon said.
Henry’s veto was only of Section 24 of Senate Bill 149,
meaning that the Commerce Department gets to keep and spend the
$3.1 million but without directing it to the sub-state planning
districts.
“The most hypocritical thing about this veto is that it doesn’t
save any money. His political appointee gets to keep that $3.1 million
as part of her budget. All he accomplished was to make sure that
money won’t be spent to help local communities,” Rabon
said. “The Governor’s veto message said that Section
24 ‘lacks specificity.’ There certainly isn’t
any specificity for how that money can be spent now.”
Rabon also criticized the Governor for waiting until after hours
Wednesday to veto the measures and then flying off to Europe while
his staff delayed informing lawmakers of his decisions until mid-day
Thursday.
The Senator suggested the Governor of employing these tactics
to avoid having to answer questions – not just from lawmakers
and the press, but from the Oklahomans whose fire protection districts
and senior nutrition programs will suffer because of his vetoes.
“While he’s jet-setting halfway around the world,
economically disadvantaged Oklahoma communities are left to wonder
why their governor would turn his back on them. I think lawmakers
are going to have a hard time defending the governor on this one.
I know in my district in Southeastern Oklahoma – where voters
strongly supported Henry in his gubernatorial campaign – this
decision is going to be impossible to defend,” Rabon said.
The Senator also questioned Henry’s veto of Section 2 of
House Bill 1122, which appropriated $2.4 million to the Department
of Tourism to fix previously identified waste water system problems
at state parks.
“Three years ago, we had some state parks that had to shut
down campgrounds, cabins and swimming areas because of these problems.
We had appropriated REAP funds to fix many of these problems, but,
in his veto message, the Governor said we should have spent that
money for a water study. We don’t need another study, we know
what needs fixing and it’s not going to get fixed thanks to
the Governor,” Rabon said.
Rabon pointed out that another section of Senate Bill 149 directs
$1 million of REAP funds to the Department of Commerce for operations.
“The governor insisted that we provide that extra money
for Commerce. If any REAP money was being misused, it’s that
$1 million and not the money appropriated to fix the sewer problems
at the state parks,” Rabon said.
For more information contact:
Senator Jeff Rabon - State Capitol: (405) 521-5614
Email: rabon@oksenate.gov

|