Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Assistant Majority Leader
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
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For Immediate Release: March 9, 2006
Sen. Jay Paul Gumm
Senate Overwhelmingly Votes to End Forced School Consolidation
Constitutional Amendment Clears Senate Committee
The Oklahoma Senate Thursday overwhelmingly
approved a measure by Senator Jay
Paul Gumm that would protect rural Oklahoma from
forced consolidation of public schools.
Senate Joint Resolution 35, which passed the Senate
43-1, calls for a statewide vote on an amendment to
the Oklahoma Constitution that would end forever the
concept of forced school consolidation. The amendment
would prevent the consolidation of rural school districts
unless the proposal is approved by voters in the affected
school districts.
“Every year, the threat of forced school consolidation
hangs over the heads of rural communities and rural
families,” said Gumm, a Democrat from Durant who
serves as a Senate assistant majority leader.
“This proposal would end that legislative threat
forever. In short, the resolution takes the decision
on school consolidation away from politicians, judges,
or bureaucrats and places it where it belongs: in the
hands of parents in school districts across the state.”
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.
The lawmaker said momentum is building across the state
to permanently ban forced school consolidation.
“The overwhelming bipartisan vote in the Senate
sends a strong message to the leadership in the House
of Representatives and those among them who support
the idea of forced school consolidation,” he said.
“They won’t be able to hide their intentions
behind bills that would lead to consolidation without
using the word. Either this bill gets an up-or-down
vote in the House or it doesn’t. If it does not,
then we know where House Republicans really stand on
this issue of school consolidation and every rural Oklahoma
family will know as well.”
Should the bill receive approval by both the Senate
and House, Oklahoma voters would make the final decision
on whether the amendment is placed in the Constitution
during the November 2006 general election.
For
more information contact:
Senator Gumm's Office - (405) 521-5586