Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Constance Johnson
Senate District 48
Oklahoma County
Print Article
For Immediate Release:
May 26, 2006
Senator Constance N. Johnson
Legislature Approves African-American Plaza For Capitol
Legislation was approved Thursday on the House floor
for the creation of an African-American Centennial Plaza to be built
south of the State Capitol as part of Oklahoma’s Centennial
celebration in 2007.
Senate Bill 1919, co-authored by Sen. Constance
N. Johnson (D-Oklahoma City) and Rep. Jabar
Shumate (D- Tulsa), calls for the creation of an African-American
Centennial Plaza and a committee to oversee the design of the project.
It now goes to Gov. Brad Henry for his signature.
Johnson said the purpose of the committee is to recommend the design
of the plaza and to provide oversight and advice to the Oklahoma
Historical Society in the design, construction, and funding sources
of the project.
The plaza will be located in the median of Lincoln Boulevard between
18th Street and the State Capitol Building. Total cost is estimated
at $4 million and construction will begin after funding is secured.
“I appreciate the process whereby we reached a nonpartisan
consensus on the language of this bill,” Johnson said. "We
all learned a lot and grew a lot. That accomplishment alone speaks
volumes to the timeliness of this project.”
“I want to thank my fellow legislators for their support.
This plaza is something the entire state can be proud of,”
Rep. Shumate added.
Johnson said the design committee will consist of seven members
including members from the offices of the Senate Pro Tempore, the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Governor, Lieutenant
Governor, Oklahoma Historical Society, Department of Central Services
and the Oklahoma Arts Council.
The committee’s duties will include developing criteria for
and soliciting public comment and input on the development and design
of the plaza. It will also develop and implement criteria for a
design competition.
The committee will select three designs as finalists from among
the designs submitted through the competition and will present the
selected designs to the public for comment and input.
A winning and an alternate design will be chosen and forwarded
on to the executive director of the Oklahoma Historical Society.
The committee also will provide oversight and advice to the Oklahoma
Historical Society during the design and construction of the plaza.
The director of the Department of Central Services will be responsible
for awarding all contracts related to the construction of the plaza.
The DCS will be responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of the
plaza.
Blake Wade, Executive Director of the Oklahoma Centennial Commission,
said he was pleased the Legislature approved SB 1919.
“As we commemorate our state’s first 100 years, we’re
pleased that we’ll be able to have the Oklahoma African-American
History Plaza on the grounds of our capitol as a lasting memorial
and tribute to Oklahoma’s rich African-American history,”
Wade said.
Themes for the plaza will include Oklahoma’s African American
military history, such as black Civil War soldiers in Indian Territory;
the founding and development of historically black towns like Langston,
which houses Langston University; Tulsa’s Black Wall Street;
and Deep Deuce in Oklahoma City, which was the home of some of the
most prominent African-American jazz musicians in the country.
“For the first time in Oklahoma’s history, people will
see a magnificent outdoor monument that features the accomplishments
of African-Americans toward the growth and development of this great
state of ours,” said Bruce Fisher of the Oklahoma Historical
Society.
Johnson said SB 1919 passed on the House floor by a vote of 77-13
and unanimously on the Senate floor.
“With the passage of this enabling legislation, we are now
empowered to go full speed ahead in the raising the money to make
the plaza a reality,” Johnson said. "This bill also represents
a victory for the people who believed in this concept from day one.
They lobbied and advocated and learned that the power of the people
to affect the legislative process is real and do-able. Rep. Shumate
and I congratulate them for a job well-done.”
For more information, contact:
Senator Johnson's Office: (405) 521-5531

|