Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Mike Morgan
president Pro Tempore
Senate District 21
Payne, Logan and Lincoln Counties
For Immediate Release: February 1, 2006
Morgan Announces Plans to Fast-track OHLAP Expansion Legislation
Senate President Pro Tempore Mike
Morgan announced Wednesday that intends to fast-track through the
Senate a measure that would expand college scholarship opportunities for
high school students in Oklahoma.
Morgan’s plan calls for raising the maximum income level under which
students are eligible to take part in the Oklahoma Higher Learning Access
Program from $50,000 to $75,000. The measure would increase the number
of students eligible to take part in the program by 20 percent.
“Senate Democrats want to send a signal to Oklahoma that we are
looking beyond the fall campaigns and focusing, instead, on the future.
This session needs to be about more than just the next election. It must
be about the next generation,” Morgan said.
Under the OHLAP program students who complete a specific college-preparatory
curriculum, made good grades and don’t get into trouble are rewarded
with a scholarship that pays their tuition.
“OHLAP puts a premium on personal responsibility and Senate Democrats
intend this year to focus on programs that help create a greater culture
of personal responsibility in our state,” Morgan said.
The program would first have a fiscal impact in FY 2010, increasing the
cost of the OHLAP program by $10 million in that year. In future years,
the program will call for an even larger investment.
Morgan said some lawmakers may try to insist that expanding the OHLAP
program is too expensive but those people are only looking at half of
the equation.
A study last year by Oklahoma State University economist Kent Olson indicates
that the state earns a 7.1% increase on every dollar it invests in higher
education. In other states, merit-based scholarship programs like OHLAP
have a return of 4.18 percent.
Mr. Olson found that over their lifetime, college graduates in Oklahoma
earn - in today's dollars - $832,000 more than people with just a high
school diploma.
Most people agree that Oklahoma needs more college graduates, the Stillwater
Democrat said.
He pointed to the 2003 EDGE report that said:
“There is a very clear relationship between educational attainment
and per capita income: More education results in better jobs. Better jobs
mean better pay. Better pay means both workers and employers have more
money for investing.
"Better paid workers and more successful businesses result in increased
tax revenues so Oklahoma can offer a better quality life for all of its
citizens. A highly educated workforce will be much more attractive to
businesses considering relocating to Oklahoma and, even more importantly,
will enable existing and new Oklahoma businesses to hire high-quality
employees and be more productive.”
Morgan said some in the Legislature may actually try to reduce the number
of students who qualify for OHLAP by increasing the academic requirements
or lowering the maximum income eligibility level.
“That’s the wrong approach. We need to expand the opportunities
to earn a college degree to more students, not fewer. This is an investment
in our future, an investment in the next generation of Oklahomans,”
Morgan said.
For
more information contact:
Senate President Pro Tem's Office - (405) 521-5605
|