For Immediate
Release: December 13, 2005
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Gumm Files Measure to Settle School Consolidation “Once
and For All”
OKLAHOMA CITY – With almost annual attempts
to force rural schools to consolidate against their will, one
rural lawmaker says it is time for Oklahoma to settle the issue
“once and for all.”
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm, a Democrat from Durant, filed a measure that would
end the concept of forced school consolidation. The proposed constitutional
amendment would put the power to consolidate rural districts solely
in the hands of local voters.
Senate Joint Resolution 35 would give Oklahoma
voters a chance to amend the Constitution to prohibit any school
consolidation unless approved by a majority of voters in each
of the affected school districts.
“For far too long, many Republicans in the
Legislature have tried to consolidate rural schools without input
from the very people their policies would affect,” Gumm
said. “I believe that decision should be left to the families
who live in rural Oklahoma, not by politicians in Oklahoma City.
“We hear a lot of politicians talk about
‘local control’ for schools. The vote on SJR 35 will
let us see whether they can live up to their own rhetoric.”
Gumm, a Senate assistant majority leader, said
the constitutional amendment would be placed on the November 2006
general election if it passes the Oklahoma Legislature.
“We in rural Oklahoma have grown weary of
this seemingly annual battle, which is little more than an attack
on the rural way of life,” the senator said. “Forced
rural school consolidation is just a small piece of a plan to
effectively kill rural communities, and I simply will not allow
that to happen without a fight.”
The proposal, Gumm said, does not end consolidation;
however, forced consolidation could never happen under the amendment.
For those districts and their patrons who decide consolidation
is in their best interest, the amendment would give local voters
complete control.
“I believe Oklahomans want policies that
promote personal responsibility,” Gumm said. “That
sense of personal responsibility is common among rural Oklahomans.
Giving rural families this power to decide what is best for their
children gives them the respect they have earned.”
Gumm said while he expects SJR 35 to clear the
Senate, he has reservations about its chances in the House of
Representatives. Since Republicans took control of that body,
one of the staunchest advocates for forced consolidation –
an urban Republican – has served as chair of the House Education
Committee.
“Just last year, urban Republicans introduced
a bill that would have led to a list of ‘school districts
that…are subject to some level of administrative reorganization
or consolidation’,” Gumm related.
“The list would have been a ‘hit list’
on rural Oklahoma, not even taking into account the wishes of
the people who live there. That is poor policy and the flat wrong
thing to do.”
Lawmakers will take up Gumm’s bill when the
2006 session begins Feb. 6.