Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Senate District 6
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston and Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release: January 25, 2007
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Gumm Files Legislation to Strengthen Teachers
Retirement System
With $140 million left on the table after the 2006 session of the
Oklahoma Legislature, one lawmaker wants to use half of that money
to shore up the Teachers’ Retirement System.
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm, a Democrat from Durant, has introduced legislation
to take $70 million of the so-called “spillover” dollars
and put it into the beleaguered system. That money, left on the
table after last year’s budget was written, would give the
Oklahoma Teachers Retirement System (OTRS) a much needed shot in
the arm.
“Many retired educators have told me they are frustrated and
outraged at the way the teachers’ retirement system has been
ignored,” he said. “This won’t solve all the problems,
but it would give the system added strength at a time when we have
resources available.”
As of last year, Teacher’s Retirement System had an unfunded
liability of $7 billion – which is more than the state’s
annual budget. The weakness in the system led to retired educators
receiving the smallest cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) of any group
of state retirees.
“Teachers certainly deserved better than that,” Gumm
said. “But an agreement to put more dollars into the system
got caught up in election politics, which was really a shame because
the money was there.”
In addition, the OTRS unfunded liability has affects far beyond
the system. The unfunded liability of the system is considered when
the state’s bond rating is determined. Just like a poor credit
rating increases interest costs for individuals, a poor bond rating
increases interest costs for the state’s capital projects.
The current estimate is that the OTRS unfunded liability costs taxpayers
an additional $20 million per year in interest charges.
“As bad as that is, it is just a side effect,” Gumm
said. “The heartbreaking truth is that many Oklahoma’s
active and retired educators do not feel as though they can depend
on this system in the future. Certainly we owe them better than
that.”
The lawmaker said there is no reason to leave this money on the
table when the state “has an obligation to our educators that
must be met.” He hopes for bipartisan support, which is necessary
to ensure its passage.
“In a Senate divided evenly down the middle, it takes support
from Democrats and Republicans to pass any legislation,” Gumm
said. “This gives us a tremendous chance to put partisanship
aside for the greater good of all Oklahomans.
“I look forward to working with members of both parties to
send a strong message of support to our educators and of fiscal
responsibility to Oklahoma’s taxpayers.”
For more information contact:
Senator Gumm's Office - (405) 521-5586

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