Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator
Mike Morgan
President Pro Tempore
Senate District 21
Lincoln, Logan & Payne Counties
For Immediate Release: January 24,
2006
Morgan, Senate Democrats Unveil Agenda to Strengthen Small Business
Building on past successes and providing innovative solutions
for the future, Senate Democrats unveiled their legislative agenda to
“Strengthen Small Business” Tuesday afternoon at the Oklahoma
State Capitol.
Senate President Pro Tempore Mike
Morgan and Shawnee Senator Charlie
Laster teamed up to make the announcement.
“The proposals we announced today, like all the plans we will propose
in the coming days and weeks, put a premium on personal responsibility
and accountability. They will develop a healthier and better trained workforce
for small business in our state and will lower the costs for small business
with common sense reforms of the state’s civil justice system,”
Morgan said.
Pointing to the annual Pollina report and Economy.com’s cost of
doing business survey, Morgan said Oklahoma is consistently ranked among
the most business friendly states in the nation. (The Pollina Corporate
Top 10 Pro-Business States for 2005 ranked Oklahoma with the 10th most
pro-business climate in the nation and Economy.com reported that Oklahoma
has the 4th lowest cost of doing business in the country.)
“We should build on the successes of the past and provide a blueprint
for future growth of small businesses in our state,” Morgan said.
Senate Democrats propose expanding Oklahoma’s health insurance premium
assistance plan to make it available to all businesses with 50 or fewer
employees. Currently, enrollment in the plan, which was developed by the
Legislature in 2004, is limited to businesses with 25 or fewer employees.
Under the plan, the state pays 60 percent of the health insurance premiums
for employees of participating small businesses. The employee pays 15
percent and the employer pays the final 25 percent.
“Employers and employees who are willing to take on the responsibility
of contributing to the cost of health insurance are rewarded because the
state contribution keeps down the cost of health insurance for those individuals.
Employees get health insurance they couldn’t otherwise afford and
small businesses get a healthier workforce,” Morgan said.
Saying the lawsuit reform measures passed in 2003 and 2004 have reduced
the number of lawsuits and slowed the skyrocketing cost of malpractice
insurance premiums for doctors, Laster introduced a series of civil justice
system reforms that will further reduce frivolous lawsuits, eliminate
nagging cases that drag on in the courts for years, and regulate television
advertising by attorneys.
“Frivolous lawsuits and those suits that take years to come to trial
add to the cost of doing business, especially for small business owners.
The Lawsuit Responsibility Act will lower those costs without limiting
access to the courts to just those big corporations with an army of lawyers,”
Laster said.
Morgan also proposed a pilot program to offer tax incentives to small
businesses which provide tuition assistance and pay for retraining for
their employees. Federal law allows for the creation of tax free life-time
learning accounts but currently they tend to benefit wealthy Oklahomans
who can afford to have an additional deduction from their paycheck.
The plan will offer a tax credit to employers who contribute to life-long
learning accounts for their employees, making those accounts possible
for middle class Oklahomans, Morgan said.
“It offers an incentive to employers who will shoulder the responsibility
of helping their employees be better equipped to do their jobs and provides
an opportunity for working Oklahomans who are willing to take on the responsibility
of furthering their education,” Morgan said.
The plan rewards both employers and employees by resulting in a better
educated, better trained small business workforce in Oklahoma, Morgan
said.
The Senate Leader said each of the proposals in the Senate Democrats legislative
agenda to “Strengthen Small Business” will contribute to developing
a culture of greater personal and corporate responsibility in Oklahoma
“Oklahoma should be a state where if you work hard and play by the
rules, you have the opportunity to succeed. We believe these proposals
can make a difference as we strive to make responsibility and accountability
core values that guide our community life,” Morgan said.
For
more information contact:
President Pro Tem's Office - (405) 521-5605
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