Oklahoma
State Senate
Oklahoma State Senate
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Assistant Majority Leader
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release: April 5, 2006
Senate Finance Committee Defeats
Speaker’s “Keep Taxing Oklahomans” Bill
Senate Finance Committee “More Than Fair, Even to Bad Ideas”
The
latest attack news release from the Speaker of the House is “deceptive
at best” about actions of the Senate Finance Committee, the panel’s
chairman said Wednesday.
In a news release, Republican Speaker Todd Hiett lamented the Senate Finance
Committee’s defeat of the so-called “Come Home Oklahoma”
act, a tax giveaway to individuals who may have never set foot in Oklahoma
– part of the REDI initiative.
“Tax policy and budgets are a reflection of our values,” said
Sen. Jay Paul Gumm,
a Democrat from Durant and Finance Committee chair. “With this bill,
Todd Hiett said clearly that he values anyone from outside of Oklahoma
more than he does those who have made their lives and are raising their
families here.”
The measure would give any person who has lived in another state for at
least four years a five-year, 100-percent income tax exemption if they
move to certain areas of Oklahoma that have lost population. Anyone currently
living in Oklahoma would still have to pay their full amount of income
taxes under Hiett’s bill.
“How in the world Todd Hiett can look the hard-working Oklahoma
families in the eye and say some newcomer deserves a tax break they cannot
get is beyond me,” said Gumm. “This wasn’t ‘Come
Home Oklahoma’, this was ‘Keep Taxing Oklahomans.’ The
bill is a very bad idea that is patently unfair to the very people it
purported to help.”
A former chamber of commerce executive, Gumm helped create one of the
nation’s most successful rural job creation programs in his hometown
of Durant. Drawing on that economic development experience, he said “Come
Home Oklahoma” was a “completely backward” way to achieve
growth.
“This proposal only makes sense if everyone in rural Oklahoma is
fully employed at the top of their earning potential,” he said.
“That clearly is not the case. The challenge in rural Oklahoma is
a shortage of opportunities. That is what we should address, not this
‘smoke-and-mirrors’ quick fix that will do nothing to build
an economy.”
During the debate, Gumm laid out a scenario the bill would create he said
would outrage working families. If a new national business moved to rural
Oklahoma, chances are they would bring their top, high-wage management
who would not have to pay income taxes under the bill.
The rank-and-file employees – likely lifelong Oklahomans who have
always paid their taxes and have roots in this state – would have
to pay their full income tax on salaries far less than executives.
Also, the bill would create a situation where two people – one a
lifelong Oklahoman and the other a newcomer – working side-by-side
in the same job would have vastly different take-home paychecks. The lifelong
Oklahoman would have been severely shortchanged by Hiett’s “Keep
Taxing Oklahomans” plan.
As to the charge the Senate Finance Committee killed repeal of the estate
tax, Gumm said if Speaker Hiett will look on his own House calendar, he
will find a bill that passed the Finance Committee and the Senate earlier
this year.
“That fact begs the question: which is more important, the policy
or whether the Speaker’s name is attached to it?” Gumm asked.
“His press release answers that question. If he feels slighted,
perhaps he can persuade one of his members to let him carry the bill in
the House.”
Finally, Gumm said he was proud of the Senate Finance Committee’s
work this year. “The committee members, of both parties, worked
very hard and realized that not every bill deserves a hearing or even
to be passed,” he said. “We were more than fair, even to bad
ideas like this one of the Speaker’s.
“Despite what his deceptive news release says, we gave hearings
to bills without regard to partisan affiliations,” Gumm said. “If
you counted them up, my guess is we heard a much greater percentage of
Republican bills in the Finance Committee than the percentage of Democratic
bills the Speaker allows to be heard in the House.
“His shrill complaints are getting harder and harder to believe.”
For
more information contact:
Senator Gumm's Office - (405) 521-5586
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