Weekly Opinion Editorial
TAXPAYERS
PAY FOR WAGGISH STUDY!
by
Steve Fair
An interim study is a study of legislative and policy
issues by members of the legislature. An
interim study is requested by members of the Oklahoma House or Senate to the
leadership of their respective chamber. They often address issues that have
been the subject of legislation during the session that failed to pass or subjects
that a lawmaker deems worthy of more in-depth consideration. The two chambers of the Oklahoma legislature
handle interim studies differently. In
the Senate, the President Pro Tempore assigns the requests to the appropriate
standing committee. The committee chair of the standing committee then decides
which studies will be conducted. In the House, the Speaker of the House sovereignly
decides which studies to approve or disapprove. In some cases, House study
requests on similar subjects are combined into a single study to avoid
duplication. On occasion, some interim studies may be considered jointly by the
House and Senate.
Interim studies are typically held when the legislature is out of
session and usually meet at the State Capitol. Depending on the study, a
committee may devote anywhere from one hour to several full meetings to each
study. Experts are often invited to testify at interim study meetings. Interim
studies rarely generate a formal report to the public.
This year 136
requests for interim studies were made by member of the Oklahoma House. 121 of those were approved. In the Senate 71 interim studies were conducted.
Two observations:
First, interim
studies have a purpose. They can result
in a lawmaker crafting a more well thought bill that addresses a real
issue. Taking time and tax payer money
to have round table discussions to consider all the ramifications of a bill
before it is filed makes sense. Too
often during session, legislation is edited on the fly, which can result in
laws with unintended consequences.
Second, there
are far too many interim studies. The
number of requests for studies are up in both chambers and frankly some interim
studies are simply frivolous. An
excellent example is Rep. Jacob Rosecrants’, (D-Norman) study on the benefits
of recess to Oklahoma secondary students. In a press release, Rosecrants said his
study found, not surprisingly, that recess is beneficial because it allows
students to decompress and relate to other students.
Rosecrants, you
may recall, is the same lawmaker who ran the ‘Play to Learn’ bill this past session,
which makes it illegal for Oklahoma school administers to prevent early
childhood teachers from using play to learn in their classroom.
Conducting an
interim study on the importance of recess sounds like a joke, but no Oklahoma taxpayer
should be laughing. When legislature
leadership accommodates such frivolous, flippant, meaningless and
ill-considered studies like this, they waste taxpayer dollars. Rosecrants was accommodated by the legislature
and the governor on ‘Play to Learn,’ which resulted in a totally unnecessary
law on the books. It appears he plans to run a bill in the
upcoming session ‘mandating recess.’
Legislative leadership needs to stop indulging and obliging waggish interim studies and unnecessary laws. Oklahoman’s tax dollars shouldn’t be used for such nonsense. Our state has far more pressing issues to address.
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