Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Assistant Majority Leader
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
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For Immediate Release:
April 21, 2006

Sen. Jay Paul Gumm (left) receives the "Champion of
TRIO" Award
from Al White (center) during a recent ceremony in Oklahoma City.
Joining White
in making the presentation is Paul Risser, chancellor of Oklahoma's
higher education system.
Gumm, D-Durant, was honored for his work to protect TRIO programs
- which
assist students who would be the first generation in the family
to attend college - from budget cuts.
Senator Gumm Named “Champion Of TRIO”
For his work to ensure Oklahoma’s neediest high school students
have a chance at a higher education, Senator Jay Paul Gumm was recently
declared a “Champion of TRIO.”
TRIO is a series of programs that help students from disadvantaged
backgrounds – especially students whose parents did not attend
college – prepare for higher education. The program provides
services that include: academic advice and assistance; tutorial
services; help with college admission and financial aid applications;
as well as mentoring and counseling.
Senator Gumm,
a Senate assistant majority leader, is only the second Oklahoman
to receive such a distinction, which was made during a recent Oklahoma
City ceremony. The only other Oklahoman to ever receive this award
is U.S. Congressman Tom Cole.
“The way for Oklahoma to become more prosperous is for more
of our young people to get a college education,” said Gumm,
a Democrat from Durant. “Education is the means by which young
Oklahomans become all God intended for them to be, and I will do
everything I can to make certain no child, regardless of their background,
is denied a college education.”
Al White, director of TRIO’s Educational Talent Search at
Southeastern Oklahoma State University in Durant, said the decision
to name Gumm a “Champion of Trio” was an easy one to
make.
“Senator Gumm understands that programs like TRIO are often
times are a student’s ticket to a new beginning and a brighter
future,” White said. “When President Bush cut the TRIO
program’s funding out of his proposed budget, Senator Gumm
quickly worked to send the message to Washington that he would fight
tirelessly to ensure TRIO funding was restored.”
White referred to Senate Resolution 63, which passed the Oklahoma
State Senate with overwhelmingly support. The measure urged Oklahoma’s
congressional delegation to ensure TRIO funding was restored. The
resolution was only the second of its kind to pass through a state
legislature anywhere in America.
Gumm said he was honored to be recognized for his work to make
college more than just a dream for students who want to succeed.
“My mother was a first generation college graduate, and she
pushed me to continue that family tradition,” he said. “Getting
that first generation into college lays the groundwork to ensure
a family tradition of higher education. Because of that, TRIO programs
truly change not just one student, but every generation that will
follow.”
The lawmaker concluded that the ability to be educated should not
depend on how much money a student’s parent has. “A
child’s education should not be based on mom and dad’s
ability to pay, but on that child’s willingness and ability
to learn,” he said. “TRIO is an investment in our future
that must continue.
“As long as my constituents continue to send me to the Capitol
to be their voice in the Senate, I will continue to do my part to
strengthen educational opportunities for all Oklahoma children.”
For more information,
contact:
Senator Gumm's Office: (405) 521-5586

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