Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Cal Hobson
Chairman, Transportation
Senate District 16
Cleveland and MCClain Counties
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For Immediate Release:
November 10, 2005
Senator Cal Hobson
Hobson to Hiett: Why Continue the Wait?
Veteran Senator Cal
Hobson questioned Thursday why, if House Speaker Todd Hiett
believes the Oklahoma prisons have been under-funded for 10 years,
he is willing to wait until next year to address the critical staffing
shortage in the Oklahoma Department of Corrections.
“On a campaign stop in Enid last week the Speaker indicated
that the problems facing DOC are not new and, he claimed, date back
10 years, but he continues to refuse to be willing to address them
until next year. It just doesn’t make any sense to me to refuse
to correct a problem that he admit exists just because it’s
not a new problem,” Hobson said, referring to an interview
Hiett granted to a reporter from the Oklahoma Educational Television
Authority last week.
Governor Brad Henry added Corrections funding to his special session
call in June. In July, in response to the Governor’s call,
Senate Democrats unveiled an $11 million plan that would allow DOC
to hire 150 new guards in Fiscal Year 2006. House leaders refused
to negotiate on the issue and in late August, the Senate returned
the Capitol alone and voted 46-1 in favor of the $11 million funding
plan.
Hiett has steadfastly insisted that the Corrections issue can wait
until February.
“For more than two months, the House has refused to act on
a measure that would put dozens of new corrections officers in the
state’s prisons before the next regular session of the Legislature
convenes February 6. While we’re waiting on the Speaker to
act, our corrections officers, the inmates in our prisons and our
families are at risk,” said Hobson, whose district includes
two state prisons.
Since the Governor called on the Legislature to address the staffing
shortages in our prisons, one inmate has been killed, several more
have been wounded.
“In my own hometown a woman was kidnapped when a convicted
rapist and a convicted murderer escaped from the Joseph Harp Correctional
Center,” Hobson said. “This is a real public safety
crisis and it’s irresponsible for the Speaker not to be willing
to address it as soon as possible.”
Hiett, Hobson pointed out, has said lawmakers should comprehensively
review the Department of Corrections and enact a permanent fix to
prevent future staffing shortages.
“I don’t think anyone disagrees that we want to prevent
this kind of crisis from arising in the future and I’m in
favor of taking a comprehensive look at our prison system next session.
That is no reason, however, not to act as soon as we can to begin
increasing the number of corrections officers in our state prisons,”
said Hobson who is entering his 28th year in the Legislature.
“I’ve been around the legislative process long enough
to know that if the Speaker insists on including additional funds
for District Attorneys, raises for State Troopers and other things
in the bill that provides funding to reduce the shortage of corrections
officers, the battle could drag out until May. I’m not willing
to wait that long to do what’s necessary to make the people
in my district safe.”
For more information contact:
Senator Hobson's Office- (405) 521-5553

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