For Immediate Release: March 7, 2007
Senate Approves Dedicated Funding Source For
Successful Scholarship Program
Legislation to ensure that Oklahoma
will keep its promise to pay the college tuition
for thousands of deserving scholarship recipients
was approved by the full State Senate Wednesday.
Senate Bill 820 creates a permanent dedicated
funding source for the Oklahoma’s Promise
Scholarship Program.
“This legislation will assure that every
student who qualifies for an Oklahoma’s
Promise scholarship will receive their scholarship,”
said Senate President Pro Tempore Mike Morgan,
author of the measure. Currently, approximately
15,000 students are attending college on Oklahoma’s
Promise scholarships and another 30,000 middle
and high school students have signed up for
the program.
“As a state, we’ve made a promise
to these students. This bill will ensure that
we keep that promise,” Morgan said. The
legislation is part of the 2007 legislative
agendas of the Senate Democrats’ and Governor
Brad Henry.
Morgan noted that funds to pay Oklahoma’s
Promise scholarships for the current fiscal
year have run out due to lagging revenues from
some sources, leaving many scholarship students
in limbo.
“I am confident that the Legislature will
provide a supplemental appropriation and that
these students will receive their scholarships,
but passage of this legislation, will mean we
won’t have to have this discussion in
the future. Oklahoma’s Promise scholarships
will get funded first,” Morgan said.
Senate Bill 820 requires the Oklahoma State
Regents for Higher Education to certify the
amount needed to fund the program in the coming
fiscal year each November. The funds would then
be set aside when the State Board of Equalization
meets in December and February.
The measure is similar to the ROADS program
passed by the Legislature in 2006 to boost highway
maintenance funding. Unlike the ROADS program,
however, Oklahoma’s Promise funding is
not limited to revenue from personal income
tax. Oklahoma’s Promise funding will simply
come from state general revenue, further ensuring
that funds will always be available to pay for
the scholarships.
Oklahoma’s Promise, originally known as
the Oklahoma Higher Learning Access Program,
provides scholarships for students who complete
a specific college-preparatory curriculum, make
good grades and stay out of trouble. Students,
whose family income is $50,000 or less, can
sign up for the program in the 8th, 9th or 10th
grades.
The program began in the early 1990s and has
been incredibly successful. The program’s
annual cost has grown to nearly $40 million
is projected to reach nearly $50 million in
Fiscal Year 2008 and $60 million by FY 2009.
“These students take personal responsibility
for their future. They make a promise to the
state that they will prepare themselves for
college and the state, in turn, commits to provide
them with a college education.
This legislation will ensure that the state
keeps its end of the bargain,” Morgan
said.
For more information contact:
Senator Morgan's Office - (405) 521-5605