Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Assistant Majority Leader
Senate District 6
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties Comanche
County
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For Immediate Release:
May 1, 2006
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Effort to End Forced School Consolidation Gets New Life
Proposal Alive Despite House GOP’s Refusal
to Hear Earlier Bill
Vowing to continue his effort to protect rural schools and communities,
the author of a bill to permanently end forced school consolidation
breathed new life into the measure last Wednesday.
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm, D-Durant, successfully amended a House joint resolution
to include his proposed constitutional amendment to end forced school
consolidation. The proposal would allow voters to decide the issue
instead of politicians or bureaucrats.
Earlier this session, the Oklahoma Senate on an overwhelming bipartisan
vote passed Senate Joint Resolution 35. That measure contained a
constitutional amendment to put the power to consolidate schools
solely in the hands of parents and local school patrons.
House Republican leaders killed the proposal “in the dark
of night” when it was not even given a hearing by the committee
to which it was assigned.
Despite that setback, Gumm said the future of rural Oklahoma is
far too important to not keep trying to save small schools and their
communities. “Any effort to boost rural Oklahoma is woefully
incomplete – in fact, only window dressing – without
protecting rural schools,” said the Senate assistant majority
leader.
“All the House Republicans’ bluster about ‘rural
economic development’ is meaningless without empowering rural
families to make this decision instead of leaving that power with
the politicians and bureaucrats.”
Gumm, a former chamber of commerce executive who wrote one of the
state’s most successful rural job creation programs in his
hometown of Durant, said education is the key to any effort to bring
jobs to rural Oklahoma. “Without rural education, rural economic
development doesn’t exist,” he said.
The measure Gumm amended is destined for a conference committee
for final negotiations. If approved by the House, voters would get
to decide in November whether to permanently put the power to consolidate
schools in the hands of parents and local school patrons.
Gumm said time and again, Republicans tell their constituents
they will oppose rural school consolidation. However, it is a different
story when they get to the Capitol. “This constitutional amendment
is an historic opportunity for those who claim to oppose school
consolidation to match their record with their rhetoric,”
he said.
Gumm also questioned why Republican members of the House Rural
Caucus, a bipartisan group with 60 members, did not demand a hearing
on the issue when the proposal first arrived in the House after
the bipartisan Senate vote.
“Are rural Republican legislators going to represent their
constituents or bow down to their leadership?” Gumm asked.
“Now, they have another chance to stand up to their leadership
and stand up for their constituents.”
Gumm said if House Republicans fail to pass the constitutional
amendment, it would solidify the growing perception that their real
goal is to eventually close rural schools and kill the communities
they serve.
“Either House Republicans trust Oklahoma families to make
this decision or they do not, and this bill will answer that question,”
Gumm concluded. “As for me, I will always place my trust in
rural families and continue my fight to truly empower rural Oklahoma.”
For
more information, contact:
Senator Gumm's Office: (405) 521-5586
Durant Office: (580) 924-4717

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