Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Johnnie Crutchfield
Appropriations Chairman
Senate District 14
Carter, Garvin, Love and Murray Counties
For Immediate Release: April 5, 2006
House GA bill slashes Corrections, DPS Budgets
Two key members of the Senate budget
team said Wednesday that the General Appropriations bill passed by the
Oklahoma House of Representatives last week would lead to another severe
funding shortfall at the Oklahoma Department of Corrections and the furloughing
of Oklahoma Highway Patrol Troopers.
The amended version of Senate Bill 2165 cuts the Department of Corrections
budget by $24 million when compared to Fiscal Year 2006 and is $43.4 million
less than is necessary for the department to meet the obligations approved
by the Legislature in a supplemental appropriation in February.
The measure also falls nearly $11 million short of meeting the Department
of Public Safety’s obligations. Two weeks ago, lawmakers agreed
to a $3.6 million supplemental appropriation for DPS to help offset rising
fuel and utility costs. Fully annualizing that supplemental appropriation
will cost $10.8 million. Without that money DPS could be facing furloughs
for Highway Patrol troopers again next year.
“In their rush to set money aside to provide tax cuts for their
wealthy friends, House Republicans are shortchanging the public safety
of all Oklahomans,” Appropriations Chairman Johnnie
Crutchfield said. “House budget leaders called this bill an
insurance policy. All that it ensures is that there will be budget shortfalls
at two important public safety agencies.”
House leaders have said that the GA bill funds agencies at their FY 2006
level, but Crutchfield said that’s simply just not true. The final
FY 2006 appropriation for DOC was $433.4 million. The House GA bill appropriates
just $409 to the agency.
“Throughout the eight months of the interim, the Senate worked to
craft a comprehensive plan to adequately fund the Department of Corrections
the first time around and end the cycle of budget supplementals that have
been needed to keep the department afloat in the last decade,” said
Corn, chairman
of the Appropriations Sub-Committee on Public Safety and Judiciary. “First
House leaders risked the safety of Oklahoma families by refusing to answer
the call for the special session. Now in their GA bill, the House Republicans
have doomed DOC to once again come begging.”
In negotiating a $2,800 pay raise for corrections officers and giving
DOC the authority to hire additional corrections and probations officers
in the $24 million supplemental in February, House leaders agreed to annualize
the pay raise and funding for the additional personnel, Corn said.
“Their General Appropriations bill turns the $24 million supplemental,
basically, into a series of unfunded mandates. It takes away the pay raise
given to the hard-working corrections officers and other DOC facility
employees and doesn’t provide money to pay the new hires,”
Corn said.
Department of Corrections officials say that under the budget included
in the House GA bill, it would have to stop receiving new prisoners at
the Lexington Assessment and Reception Center and shift 4,000 prisoners
from private prisons into “non-traditional bed space” in existing
state facilities.
In addition to decreases in the budgets of the Departments of Corrections
and Public Safety, the House general appropriations bill cuts the budget
of the Department of Commerce by $5 million; reduces the Oklahoma Historical
Society’s budget by nearly $1.2 million; cuts the budget of the
Oklahoma Department of Agriculture by $950,000; and slashes the budget
of the Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation by $700,000.
For
more information contact:
Senator Corn's Office - (405) 521-5576
Senator Crutchfield's Office - (405) 521-5607
|