Weekly Opinion Editorial
TURNAROUND OR
PROCESSION?
by Steve Fair
On Monday, the Oklahoma legislature convened
and Governor Kevin Stitt delivered his first ‘State of the State’ address to a
joint session of the legislature. Stitt
began his speech with these words: “My vision for Oklahoma is very clear and
simple: to make Oklahoma a Top 10 state.” He outlined three steps to move the Sooner
state from the bottom third to the top ten: (1) Bring Oklahomans together from
throughout the state to serve in critical leadership roles. (2) Set measurable goals for state employees,
agency heads and his staff to be a part of one team working to accomplish one
vision, (3) Hold Oklahoma elected officials accountable for delivering results.
In the speech, Stitt proposed a $1,200 per
year teacher pay raise, which comes on top of the $6,100 the legislature passed
last year. If approved by the
legislature and signed into law, Oklahoma public school teachers will be the
highest paid in the six-state region. “We will invest in the classroom. But we must first continue our investment in
the teacher, because it’s not programs, curriculum, or resources that students
will remember. The magic happens between the student and the teacher in the
classroom,” the newly elected governor
said. Stitt believes a quality public
school system will grow Oklahoma’s economy.
Let’s hope so. The butchers,
bakers and candlestick makers would like to share in the wealth. They are paid much less than the regional
average.
The governor said
every decision in his administration will have the goal of promoting a healthy
economy in the Sooner state. “The government does not create wealth, only
the private sector can,” Stitt said.
Last year, the Republican
controlled state legislature passed record tax increases to plug revenue
shortfalls. The oil and gas industry
rebounded and the shortfalls wasn’t as short as thought. In December, the Oklahoma State Board of Equalization
estimated the legislature will have a minimum of $612 million more to spend this
year vs. last year. That is due to the
increased oil and gas exploration in the state, an industry that is very
cyclical and unpredictable. There is no guarantee
those funds will be there in 2020. The
legislature needs to be prudent and not spend every dime of revenue that comes
in. A downturn is certain and to be ill
prepared will result in the same circumstance as last year.
Two things blatantly missing
from Stitt’s speech were performance audits and the elimination of state payer
funded lobbyists. Over the course of the
last year, his stump speech has always included performance audits of state
agencies. He should press the
legislature to fund the Auditors office to conduct the audits.
The governor’s speech
was much like his campaign- long on energy but short on specifics. In order to make a lasting impact, he needs
to move from campaigning to governing. He
needs to audit every entity that gets one dime of state tax dollars. Root out waste, fraud and abuse first, then
fund accordingly. Spending money isn’t a
turnaround- it’s the same old procession and that won’t make Oklahoma a top ten
state.
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