Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Debbe Leftwich
Senate District 44
Oklahoma County
Print Article
For Immediate Release:
May 1, 2006
Senator Debbe Leftwich
Republican House Leaders Side with Bureaucrats and Kill Pro-Business
Measure
A bill aimed at strengthening
small businesses and upgrading the skills of Oklahoma’s workforce
was rendered dead when Republicans in the House refused to allow
an “up-or-down” vote on Senate Bill 2047. The author’s
measure, Senator
Debbe Leftwich, a Democrat from Oklahoma City, said the bill
had the support of several pro-business establishments in the state,
including the State Chamber of Commerce.
“Republicans have turned their backs on the businesses of
Oklahoma by not hearing this bill,” Leftwich said. “The
only folks opposed to the measure were a group of misinformed bureaucrats,
yet the Republicans in the House refused to support this common
sense measure. I must say the inaction by the House on this measure
proves the pro-business rhetoric of the Republicans certainly doesn’t
match their record.”
Leftwich explained that SB 2047 directs the Department of Commerce
to utilize $20 million from the Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund
to expand the Existing Worker Training Program. She said the program
has already proven successful in fulfilling the training needs of
companies throughout Oklahoma—including the Goodyear Tire
in Lawton, and CM Trailers in Madill, a small town in rural Oklahoma.
“This is a very pro-business, pro-growth bill, but more importantly
this is a pro-Oklahoma bill,” Leftwich said. “SB 2047
has the support of the Department of Commerce, the Governor’s
Council for Workforce and Economic Development and is backed by
the State Chamber of Commerce, yet despite all this support it was
not granted an “up-or-down” vote of the full House.”
Leftwich said currently the program utilizes $1 million of federal
funds to benefit more than 30 companies that are upgrading the skills
of their employees, which she says is essential to remaining competitive
in today’s growing global economy. Leftwich said the bill
does not add any news costs to companies that do business in Oklahoma;
rather it redirects monies that businesses currently already pay
in unemployment insurance costs to be used for the training of their
own workforce.
“Imagine the message we could have sent companies all across
our state if the House would have passed this measure. That message
would have been loud and clear that Oklahoma is a business friendly
state and we believe in investing in our workforce,” Leftwich
said. “But the House instead chose to send the message that
protecting turf for bureaucrats was far more important than doing
what was right for Oklahoma companies.”
The Senator said the bill strengthens small businesses by allowing
companies that might not otherwise be able to afford to upgrade
the skills of their workforce to do so with the very money they
already pay in unemployment insurance costs.
“If we want to attract new companies to Oklahoma and keep
the companies that are already located here, we must give businesses
the tools they need to be successful. That begins with ensuring
that their employees are as skilled and trained in the newest technology
as possible,” said Leftwich, Chairman of the Senate Business
and Labor Committee in the Senate.
“We have a responsibility to do
everything we can to ensure that our citizens are ready to compete
in this ever changing global economy, and sadly when the Republicans
chose not to hear this bill they effectively turned their noses
up to the hard-working citizens of this state and to the business
community all in one fell swoop.”
For more information, contact:
Senator Leftwich's Office: (405) 521-5557

|