Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Kenneth Corn
Majority Caucus Chairman
Senate District 4
Le Flore and Sequoyah Counties
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For Immediate Release: February 8, 2006
Senator Kenneth Corn
Senate Works to End Public Safety Crisis Despite Continuous
Road Blocks from Republicans
After working closely all summer with
corrections officials, and even convening a special
session to deal with Oklahoma’s public safety
crisis, the Oklahoma State Senate passed a $24 million
supplemental appropriation for the Oklahoma Department
of Corrections (DOC) today. The Chairman of the Senate
Appropriations Subcommittee on Public Safety and Judiciary,
Senator Kenneth
Corn, said after it became apparent that House budget
framers were more interested in political grandstanding
than actually ending the public safety crisis in Oklahoma,
he presented Senate Bill 1264 for approval on the Senate
floor this afternoon.
“It was clear to me that Republicans were more
interested in digging their heels in the sand with their
‘my way or the highway’ approach to governing
than actually sitting down at the table to come up with
a comprehensive corrections funding plan,” Corn,
(D-Poteau) said.
“Sometimes you just have to decide what is more
important, creating a safer Oklahoma or allowing politics
to drive the debate. Obviously the Democratic majority
in the Senate made the responsible decision to create
a safer Oklahoma by passing this critical funding plan
for Oklahoma prisons.”
Corn said the measure that passed off the senate floor
today will immediately allow DOC to hire additional
correctional officers and probation and parole officers
as well as increase salaries of most all DOC employees.
The provisions of SB 1264 include:
• A $3,200 pay raise for correctional officers,
probation and parole officers, and other employees at
state prisons;
• DOC’s private prison and county jail contracts;
• Medical services;
• Increased fuel and utilities costs;
• And $1.48 million to cover the cost of hiring
and training of 50 additional corrections officers and
30 probation and parole officers.
“Families deserve to feel safe in their own homes
and in their own communities,” Corn said. “Our
bill allows all Oklahoma families to have a sense of
security as they allow their children to play outside
in school and church playgrounds across this state.”
Corn said he is particularly pleased with the provision
in the bill that allows DOC to immediately hire 50 correctional
officers and 30 probation and parole officers.
“After visiting with probation and parole officers
we discovered that there wasn’t enough manpower
to track all of Oklahoma’s sex offenders who live
in our communities, often times just down the road from
places children play.” Corn said. “Our plan
will give public safety officials the manpower they
need to keep these convicted child molesters away from
our children.”
Corn said the Senate plan is not a knee jerk reaction
to Oklahoma’s growing public safety crisis, rather
it is a thoughtful and planned approach to create a
safer Oklahoma that has been months in the making.
“Members of my subcommittee and me have personally
walked the yard at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary,
we visited with officials that the Oklahoma State Reformatory
in Granite and we toured facilities in Stringtown,”
Corn said. “All the while, House Republicans did
nothing but make false accusations and use smoke and
mirror tactics to hide their ‘do-nothing’
approach to public safety.”
Corn said today’s passage of SB 1264 is a huge
step forward for public safety in Oklahoma. He encouraged
House leadership to take the bill up immediately in
order to fast track funding to an agency that is literally
broke.
“We should not allow politics to stand in the
way of creating a safer Oklahoma for our children and
families that call Oklahoma home,” Corn said.
“I urge House Republicans to show true leadership
and immediately bring this bill to the House floor in
order to give DOC the tools necessary to keep the bad
guys locked up away from Oklahoma families. As lawmakers
we have no greater responsibility than to keep our citizens
safe, and to allow politics to get in the way of this
task is simply immoral, reckless and downright irresponsible.”
For
more information contact:
Senate Leadership's Office - (405) 521-5605