Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator
Mike Morgan
President Pro Tempore
Senate District 21
Lincoln, Logan & Payne Counties
For Immediate Release: January 20,
2006
Morgan Says OEA Leadership Out of Touch;
Oklahomans Want Accountability, Not Excuses
Senate President Pro Tempore Mike
Morgan said today that the leadership of the Oklahoma Education Association
is woefully out of touch and again denounced the organization’s
lawsuit seeking an additional $1 billion in funding for public schools.
The Senate leader’s comments followed an opinion article by OEA
President Roy Bishop in the Daily Oklahoman, in which the top teachers’
union official intimated that schools should not have to explain how state
tax dollars are spent.
“In my first nine years in the Legislature the appropriation for
schools in Oklahoma has increased by 75 percent. Common education receives
more than one out of every three tax dollars collected by the state.
We can and should do more, but the OEA lawsuit is counter productive,”
Morgan said.
The teachers union is asking for a blank check at a time when Oklahoma
taxpayers are demanding more accountability, the Senate leader explained.
“What exactly does Mr. Bishop mean when he says school leaders are
‘always asked about how much it costs to run our schools’
and that their answer is ‘never appreciated or accepted?’”
Morgan asked.
“It sounds to me like the teachers’ union is offended by having
to be accountable to the Legislature and the taxpayers of Oklahoma for
the money they spend.”
Last year, the Legislature enacted strict accountability reforms with
the passage of Governor Henry’s ACE initiative, the Senate leader
said.
“The statewide teachers union has reacted, not by accepting the
responsibility for providing the academic results Oklahomans expect, but
by filing a lawsuit,” Morgan said
Morgan said that the day before OEA filed its ill-conceived lawsuit, Senate
Democrats announced a plan to increase public school funding by another
$200 million in the next fiscal year – a plan which puts a premium
on personal responsibility and accountability.
He said the public schools funding plan proposed by Senate Democrats provides
a more responsible blueprint for increasing state spending on education.
A better way to improve education in Oklahoma is to encourage educators
to take personal responsibility for better equipping themselves to lead
Oklahoma’s classrooms, Morgan said.
“I believe Oklahomans want more accountability and personal responsibility
from the people who are charged with educating our children. We need to
spend more money on education in Oklahoma, but the taxpayers deserve to
see some results – a measurable return on their investment,”
Morgan said.
The Stillwater Democrat explained that a national survey recently ranked
Oklahoma’s teachers as the seventh best in the country. One of the
key reasons credited for the lofty ranking of Oklahoma’s teachers
was the high number of teachers in the state who have earned National
Board Certification.
Two years ago, Oklahoma lawmakers passed a measure that will raise Oklahoma’s
teachers’ salaries to the regional average over five years. The
Senate Democrats plan will help the state reach that goal faster with
a $3,000 across-the-board pay raise for teachers next year.
Morgan explained, however, that the real opportunity for increasing teacher
pay in Oklahoma can be found the Quality Instruction Pay component of
the Senate Democrats’ funding plan.
“Our plan will raise the pay of every teacher in the state and offers
an incentive for teachers who are willing to earn their master’s
degree and complete the rigorous process to become National Board certified.
Every teacher in Oklahoma will have the opportunity to increase their
salary by $10,000 a year by taking personal responsibility for making
themselves a better educator,” Morgan said.
“That’s how our state should go about increasing the quality
of education, not by holding Oklahoma students hostage for a billion dollars.”
For
more information contact:
Senate President Pro Tem's Office - (405) 521-5605
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