Weekly Opinion Editorial
THE REAL STEP
UP OKLAHOMANS
By Steve Fair
Last
week, a nonpartisan group of business, civic and community leaders released the
‘Step Up Oklahoma’ plan. It includes a
plan to stabilize state revenue, reform government to increase efficiency and
cut abuse and to increase teacher pay by $5,000 per year. The Step Up website lists 85 people as
supporters and it is a virtual ‘Who’s Who’ in Oklahoma. To see the list, go to stepupoklahoma.com.
Step Up has ten things they want addressed. They want to lower the super majority needed
for the legislature to increase taxes from 75% to 60%. They want to create an Independent Budget
Office to root out waste, fraud and abuse in government. They want to increase the amount of time a
lawmaker can serve from 12 to 16 years. They want to make the Governor in Oklahoma
more powerful and have the Lt. Governor and Governor run on the same
ticket. They also want to create a Budget
stabilization Fund which would protect against budget downturns like Oklahoma
government has seen the last couple of years.
First, much of what Step Up Oklahoma is proposing
must be voted on by the people. The state
legislature can’t repeal SQ #640 without a vote of the people. They can’t change term limits without a vote
of the people. They can’t have the
Governor and Lt. Governor run on the same ticket without a vote of the people. They can’t reorganize county government
without a vote of the people.
Second, why do we need to establish another
state agency to root out fraud and waste when we have a constitutional office
now? Step Up’s idea of the Independent
Budget Office controlled by the Governor deliberately circumvents the office of
Oklahoma State Auditor & Inspector, who is elected by the people. A better solution would be to dramatically
increase the scope and power of the Auditor’s office instead of adding another
state agency that reports to the Governor.
Third, Step Up seems more intent on raising
revenue than right sizing government.
They want to increase gross production tax, income tax, cigarette tax,
and gasoline tax. These are the same revenue
proposals Governor Fallin has failed to get passed, but Step Up has repackaged them
with community and business leader’s support.
Oklahoma has 101 House members and 48
Senate members charged with balancing the budget each year. That is their job. While anyone has a right to lobby for any
cause anytime, it appears this group didn’t just happen. It clearly was organized by elected officials
to lobby for more taxes. Many of the 85 Step
Up supporters wrote campaign checks to those 149 legislators they are now
pressuring to vote for their proposals. It will be interesting to see if the Oklahoma
legislature will bow to the pressure from the donor class. If Step Up is successful, the unemployed and
underemployed in Oklahoma will be the ones that will have to step up and pay
more taxes.
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