Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Mike Morgan
President Pro Tempore
Senate District 21
Lincoln, Logan & Payne Counties
For Immediate Release: May 24, 2007
Timely Conclusion of Session Proves Senate
Power-Sharing Agreement Worked
Senate Democrats List 2007 Accomplishments
Senate President Pro Tempore Mike
Morgan said Thursday Democrats and Republicans in
the Oklahoma State Senate proved the skeptics wrong
by working together in an unprecedented manner in
the First Session of the 51st Oklahoma Legislature.
“The voters handed us a tie in November and
there weren’t very many people who believed
we could make it work. Sure, there were bumps in
the road, but for the most part we put aside our
partisan differences and worked together to accomplish
the people’s business,” Morgan said,
moments after the Legislature adjourned for the
year a full day before its constitutionally mandated
deadline. “Our power-sharing agreement worked.
The pundits will want to talk about the winners
and losers in this session. I am proud to say that
the people of Oklahoma were the big winners.”
For the first in state history, the Senate is divided
evenly with 24 Democrats and 24 Republicans. Under
an agreement reached in December, Morgan, D-Stillwater,
shared power evenly with Co-President Pro Tempore
Glenn Coffee, R-Oklahoma City.
“I couldn’t have asked for a better
partner than Glenn Coffee. The two of us recognized
early on that although we, at times, had serious
disagreements over policy that the people expected
us to work together. I think we did that. It’s
been noisy at times, but partisan differences never
kept us from completing the people’s business.”
Democratic Floor Leader Charlie Laster said, he
too, was proud of the nice way the Senate conducted
its business in a professional manner.
Laster said Oklahomans were the real winners in
the session, thanks in part, to passage of key elements
in the Senate Democrats’ Oklahoma Rising Agenda.
The Shawnee Senator specifically listed passage
of the All Kids Act, which will close the gap and
provide health insurance for an additional 42,000
Oklahoma and approval of the toughest state immigration
reform legislation in the country. He also praised
passage of legislation that will allow more small
businesses to offer health insurance to their employees.
“We began this session with the goals of expanding
the availability of health care for all Oklahomans
and protecting working Oklahomans from unfair competition
from illegal immigrants. We passed legislation to
help us reach both of those goals,” Laster
said.
Morgan lauded passage of a dedicated funding source
for the Oklahoma’s Promise Scholarship Program.
“We have ensured that Oklahoma will keep its
promise to every student who has earned a scholarship
and that this program will remain an important part
of our efforts to increase the number of college
graduates in our state,” Morgan said.
Laster said he is disappointed that Republicans
obstructed efforts by Senate Democrats to increase
the minimum wage, which would put more money into
the pockets of Oklahomans struggling to make ends
meet.
Appropriations Co-Chairman Johnnie Crutchfield said
he was pleased with passage of the Fiscal Year 2008
budget, which includes the first step in a long-term
fix for the troubled Oklahoma Teacher Retirement
System. The $10 million deposit in the fund will
be followed with additional deposits, eventually
increasing to $60 million a year over the next two
decades to reduce the system’s unfunded liability.
Crutchfield also lauded the budget’s inclusion
of an average $1,000 per-teacher pay increase, weighted
toward veteran teachers and those with advanced
degrees and an increase of $122 million for higher
education.
Crutchfield said the budget includes a series of
important Democratic initiatives including:
• $2.5 million for rural fire department equipment
costs and $1.4 million for firefighter training;
• $15 million for the Oklahoma Centennial
Commission, as that entity completes celebrations,
plans and projects for the 2007 State Centennial;
• $10 million for a state Bioenergy Fund;
• And $3 million for drug courts and the “Smart
on Crime Initiative.” Drug courts have been
shown as one way to reduce prison overcrowding.
For more information, contact:
Senator Morgan's Office: (405) 521-5605