Oklahoma State
Senate
Senator Mike Morgan
P resident Pro Tempore
Senate District 21
Payne, Logan and Lincoln Counties
For Immediate Release:
April 17, 2006
Senate Leader Says Legislature Has a Choice:
Tax Cuts for the Rich or Education for Middle Class
Senate President Pro Tempore Mike
Morgan called on House Speaker Todd
Hiett today to allow a hearing for Senate Bill 1993, which would expand
eligibility for the Oklahoma Higher Learning Access Program.
The measure passed the Senate on a 37-10 vote on February 28. It has been
assigned to the Appropriations and Budget Committee in the House but has
not yet been considered.
“Speaker Hiett is supporting a package of tax cuts that will reduce
state revenue by $650 million a year, yet he says he’s concerned
that the state can’t afford to expand educational opportunities
for Oklahoma high school students,” Morgan said.
OHLAP offers tuition scholarships for high school students who complete
a college preparatory curriculum, make good grades and stay out of trouble.
It is currently limited to students whose annual family income is $50,000
or less. Senate Bill 1993 would increase the maximum income eligibility
level to $75,000, making 75 percent of the high schools students in Oklahoma
eligible to participate in the program.
“OHLAP isn’t a hand out. Students earn their scholarship.
They must commit to the program before the end of the 10th-grade year
in high school. They have to take the right courses, make the right grades
and act right to get a scholarship. It’s a program that encourages
young people in Oklahoma to take on more personal responsibility for their
future,” Morgan said.
The first fiscal impact of the measure won’t be felt until Fiscal
Year 2010. The Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education have projected
that expanding the program will increase costs by $10 million in that
first year and add $66 million to the cost of the program by FY 2015.
“We have a choice here. We can invest in our young people from the
middle class who are, in fact, the true future of our state, or we can
engage in a tax cut giveaway that favors the wealthiest Oklahomans,”
Morgan said.
In Fiscal Year 2015, the expanded OHLAP program is estimated to provide
scholarships for 50,100 students at a total cost of $176 million.
“The naysayers seem to be scared by the $176 projected price tag
for OHLAP in FY 2015 if we expand the income eligibility. But that figure,
which it’s going to take us eight years to reach, is less than the
cost next year of the Speaker’s tax cut package,” Morgan said.
The fiscal impact of the Hiett tax cuts is estimated at $191 million in
FY 07 and the annualized fiscal impact of the package reaches $650 million
in FY 08.
Legislators need to decide whether they are willing to look beyond the
next election and focus on the next generation, the Senate leader said.
For more information,
contact:
Senate President Pro Tem's Office: (405) 521-5605
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