Oklahoma State Senate
OFFICE OF SENATOR JAY PAUL GUMM
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release: June 4, 2008
Sen. Jay Paul Gumm
Electronic Reporting Bill Becomes Law
Measure to Save Taxpayers Thousands of Dollars
OKLAHOMA CITY – A bill requiring the hundreds of reports
submitted by state agencies to legislators be transmitted electronically
was signed this week by Gov. Brad Henry.
Senate Bill 1507 could potentially save taxpayers thousands of
dollars in printing and postage costs every year. The measure was
sponsored by Senator Jay
Paul Gumm, D-Durant, and Rep. Joe Dorman,
D-Rush Springs.
“State government kills an untold number of trees every
year just to send reports to the Legislature; worse, agencies squander
taxpayer dollars on slick printing that is no longer necessary,” said
Gumm. “In the age of electronic documents, that printing
is very wasteful; government can and should do better.”
Dorman said the plan also would require agency budget requests
and the governor’s annual budget to be transmitted electronically
rather than through hard copies in the mail. The transition, he
said, from expensively printed documents to a paperless system
will modernize state government and make it less wasteful.
“Here is a perfect example how the bill will save money,” Dorman
related. “According to state records, it cost more than $5,700
to print the governor’s budget proposal to lawmakers this
year. That is money that would be saved next year.”
The annual budget is just one of dozens of reports state agencies
print and send to representatives and senators. Every year, Gumm
said, lawmakers’ mail boxes are jammed with expensively produced
reports from state agencies that could simply be transmitted as
an attachment to an email message.
Gumm said Oklahomans should have no concerns about the lack of
a “paper trail” for the information produced. “The
work product trail that currently exists for these documents will
still be there,” he said. “The only change is that
the end result will be delivered in a far more cost-effective manner,
resulting in reduced costs for taxpayers.”
Dorman said the measure will help save precious natural resources,
and make state government more streamlined and more effective. “It
is more important to put dollars into critical state services like
schools and roads,” he said.
“Wasting money on expensive printing projects does not improve
highways or make public schools better. That should be our focus,
and this is a smart step in a new and better direction for efficiency
and productivity in Oklahoma.”
For more information
contact:
Sen. Gumm's Office: (405) 521-5586

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