Oklahoma
State Senate
OFFICE OF SENATOR JAY PAUL GUMM
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release: October 21, 2008
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Senator Gumm to File Legislation Preventing Forced School Consolidation
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm said politicians should not have the power to force
consolidation on rural schools. The Democratic Senator from Durant
will re-file legislation returning that power to Oklahoma’s
voters.
“Rural Oklahoma is the heart and soul of our state, and rural
schools are the life force of those communities. Forcing rural schools
to consolidate or close against the will of the community would
be devastating and threaten the rural way of life,” Gumm said.
“Parents and local voters are the ones who should have the
final say on this – not politicians, judges or bureaucrats
who do not live in rural Oklahoma or understand the quality of life
we treasure here.”
Gumm’s proposal would allow Oklahoma voters to decide whether
to amend the Oklahoma Constitution to prohibit any school from consolidating
unless approved by a majority of voters in each of the affected
school districts. Gumm has introduced similar legislation twice
before, and won overwhelming bipartisan support in the Oklahoma
Senate.
In each of the last two Legislatures, Republican leaders in the
Oklahoma House of Representatives killed the measure in the “smoke-filled
room,” even denying the proposal a hearing. In effect, Gumm
said, House Republicans have greedily kept that power for themselves
rather than entrusting it to the people of Oklahoma.
“Senate Republicans have repeatedly supported this proposal
in overwhelming numbers, while House Republican leaders go out of
their way to kill it,” Gumm said. “Rank-and-file Republican
representatives support the bill, and have even co-authored it;
Republican leadership, however, simply has refused to entrust this
power to the people they claim to serve.”
Gumm said he expects bipartisan Senate support again in 2009. He
is hoping House Republican leaders either “see the light or
feel the heat” on this issue, which he said is critical to
the future of dozens of Oklahoma communities.
“Oklahomans have the power to break this logjam in the House,”
he said. “I call on people of both parties who believe in
rural Oklahoma, and who believe that the power to consolidate schools
should belong to the people, to join this fight. Let your voices
be heard.”
Together, he said, Oklahomans can end the threat of forced school
consolidation once and for all.
“Together, we can ensure that the guarantee in Oklahoma’s
Constitution that ‘all political power is inherent in the
people’ applies to questions of school consolidation,”
he said. “Together, we can wrest this power from a few powerful
politicians who will stop at nothing to keep it and return the power
to the people in whom it should be entrusted.”
For more information
contact:
Senator Gumm's Office: (405) 521-5586

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