Friday, September 29, 2017

[In The Know] Oklahoma House and Senate recess without budget deal

In The Know is your daily briefing on Oklahoma policy-related news. Inclusion of a story does not necessarily mean endorsement by the Oklahoma Policy Institute. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and see past editions.

Today In The News

Oklahoma House and Senate recess without budget deal: The Oklahoma House and Senate recessed from the special session Wednesday without a deal to close an estimated $215 million state budget shortfall, which could deal a crippling blow to agencies that provide health care services to the poor and mentally ill. The House recessed after it became clear there weren’t 76 members willing to support a $1.50-per-pack cigarette tax increase to help restore the lost funding. [Associated Press] Lawmakers must use special session to fix the budget, not pass the buck [OK Policy] Lawmakers have good revenue options for special session if they have the will to use them [OK Policy]

Little movement during special session's first days: After spending less than a half hour in debate over its first three days, the special session of the Oklahoma Legislature is now in recess. Though there is general sentiment in the House of Representatives and Senate to pass a cigarette tax to help fill a $215 million funding deficit, it has never gone to a vote because there isn't enough support to get it through the House. Revenue measures must originate and be passed by the House before being sent to the Senate. [Tahlequah Daily Press] Bills filed in special session put many options in play [OK Policy]

House members back at negotiation table over proposed cigarette tax: House lawmakers were supposed to vote Wednesday on a cigarette tax increase, but that vote never happened. Both sides are playing the political blame game, but the bottom line is the votes were not there for a cigarette tax to pass, therefore the House is going into recess. House Majority Floor Leader Rep. Jon Echols, R-Oklahoma City, said Republicans are not willing to raise the gross production tax up to 5 percent. That has been the House Democrats’ bargaining chip to support a $1.50 increase on a pack of cigarettes. [KOCO]

House Committee Passes Bill Requiring Stringent Checks of State Medicaid Rolls: Despite complaints it doesn’t fall under the purview of special session, a state House committee passed a bill Thursday requiring intensive checks of Oklahoma’s Medicaid rolls every three months. [Public Radio Tulsa] When you're working on a budget hole, maybe you should stop digging deeper [Editorial Writers/Tulsa World] This bill was considered and rejected in regular session, and it's still a bad idea - it adds bureaucratic hurdles for Oklahoma families and won’t generate promised savings [OK Policy]

Bills Take Aim At Film Rebate, Affordable Housing Tax Credit: One bill filed during the special legislative session would end Oklahoma’s film rebate program, while another piece of legislation would eliminate the Oklahoma Affordable Housing Tax Credit. [KGOU]

Oklahoma’s Insurance Commissioner is preparing ​t​o undermine the people working to insure Oklahomans: Earlier this month, Oklahoma Insurance ​Commissioner John Doak testifiedbefore a U.S. Congressional Committee that he wants Congress to eliminate Navigators,​​ the community workers who help enroll people in health care under the Affordable Care Act​. Doak told Congress that he opposes these Navigators because they compete with private insurance agents and brokers.​ [OK Policy]

SoonerCare adds limits to pulling teeth, cystic fibrosis testing: The Oklahoma Health Care Authority board voted to cover only “emergency” tooth extractions for adults covered by SoonerCare. Previously, the program covered “medically necessary” extractions. The move will save the state about $479,017 — a relative drop in the $70 million budget hole the agency may need to fill after the Oklahoma Supreme Court struck down the cigarette tax in August. [The Oklahoman]

Prison Guard Unions Play a Key Role in Expanding the Prison-Industrial Complex: Despite recent pushes for prison reforms and sentence reductions, the ranks of the incarcerated are growing in many states. Meanwhile, there's a widespread shortage of corrections officers partially due to the profession's cultural stigma as a job with less prestige than that of a firefighter or police officer. In 2014, 34 states submitted four-year prison projections to The Pew Charitable Trusts. Twenty-eight expected their prison populations to grow between 1 and 16 percent by 2018. [Truthout]

Oklahoma relies on more underqualified teachers as state approves 245 more emergency certifications: Another 224 emergency teaching certifications were approved Thursday by the Oklahoma State Board of Education, tacking onto its record total. In the first four months of the fiscal year, the state board has approved 44 percent more emergency teaching certifications than in the entirety of the previous year. [Tulsa World] Oklahoma’s teacher shortage is not just about salaries [OK Policy]

We run the food banks, and we know how important SNAP is: The devastating floods from recent hurricanes remind us how quickly our situation can change. They further serve to prompt us that hunger is not a political issue, it is a humanitarian one. Everyone deserves to eat. With 47 percent of Americans living paycheck to paycheck with little to no savings, the risk of hunger is closer to many of us than we realize. This is why we oppose recent proposals in Congress to cut critical food assistance programs like SNAP. [Katie Fitzgerald and Eileen Bradshaw/Tulsa World] SNAP is working to feed Oklahoma’s Children [OK Policy]

Officials investigating after noose found in football locker room at Oklahoma school: Two northern Oklahoma schools are investigating after a noose was found by students returning to a locker room during a football game. The noose was discovered by middle school students from Ponca City Public Schools Sept. 26 as they entered the locker room at D. Bruce Selby Stadium in Enid following a 7th and 8th grade football game. [Fox25]

Quote of the Day

"The state of Oklahoma was cheated this week. We were in session a total of 28 minutes over three days at a cost of $30,000 a day. We believe the Senate Republicans want to work with us. The governor wants to work with us. We're all wanting to get something done, but we need the revenue. We're all on the same page: We cannot cut. I'm hoping House Republicans will get on board and work with everybody. You can only blame the Democrats so much."

- Rep. Matt Meredith (D-Tahlequah) on the lack of a budget deal at the end of the first week of special session (Source)

Number of the Day

5.4%

Percentage of Oklahoma adolescents age 12-17 reporting marijuana use in 2014-2015. The national average was 7.2%

Source: SAMHSA

See previous Numbers of the Day here.

Policy Note

To Understand Rising Inequality, Consider the Janitors at Two Top Companies, Then and Now: Gail Evans and Marta Ramos have one thing in common: They have each cleaned offices for one of the most innovative, profitable and all-around successful companies in the United States. For Ms. Evans, that meant being a janitor in Building 326 at Eastman Kodak’s campus in Rochester in the early 1980s. For Ms. Ramos, that means cleaning at Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., in the present day. In the 35 years between their jobs as janitors, corporations across America have flocked to a new management theory: Focus on core competence and outsource the rest. The approach has made companies more nimble and more productive, and delivered huge profits for shareholders. It has also fueled inequality and helps explain why many working-class Americans are struggling even in an ostensibly healthy economy [New York Times]

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Doak’s insistence that Navigators are unnecessary is an attack on one of the only programs helping the most marginalized people in Oklahoma to get insured.

Doak’s insistence that Navigators are unnecessary is an attack on one of the only programs helping the most marginalized people in Oklahoma to get insured.

Oklahoma's Insurance Commissioner is preparing ​t​o undermine the people working to insure Oklahomans

Earlier this month, Oklahoma Insurance ​Commissioner John Doak testified before a U.S. Congressional Committee that he wants Congress to eliminate Navigators,​​ the community workers who help enroll people in health care under the Affordable Care Act​. Doak told Congress that he opposes these Naviga...

from

Thursday, September 28, 2017

[In The Know] House goes into recess so cigarette tax negotiations can continue 'off the clock'

In The Know is your daily briefing on Oklahoma policy-related news. Inclusion of a story does not necessarily mean endorsement by the Oklahoma Policy Institute. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and see past editions.

Today In The News

House goes into recess so cigarette tax negotiations can continue 'off the clock': Gov. Mary Fallin made the rounds of legislative caucuses Wednesday in attempts to piece together a budget agreement after the special session wheezed to a halt. “I told them the people of Oklahoma expect us to solve the problem,” Fallin said early Wednesday evening after a 2½-hour closed-door session with House Republicans. Fallin met with Democrats earlier in the day and was to face Senate Republicans later Wednesday evening. House Republicans continued their closed caucus meeting after Fallin left about 5 p.m. [Tulsa World]

State health department employees to be furloughed amid budget crunch: While lawmakers are working in a special session to fill a $215 million budget hole, leaders at one Oklahoma agency say they are being forced to cut their budget. On Wednesday, the Oklahoma State Department of Health announced that it is working to reduce agency spending due to a shortfall of more than $10 million. Officials say the shortfall is due to a loss of federal funds, increased costs and reduction in state appropriation [KFOR].

As Oklahoma Lawmakers Try to Fill Budget Hole, State Employees Ask For Increased Pay: As Oklahoma lawmakers work to fix a budget hole of $215 million dollars during the special session, frustrated state workers are calling on the legislature to increase their pay. The Oklahoma Public Employees Association wants a $7,500 per person raise provided to state workers. Executive Director Sterling Zearley says most of the 34,000 employees in Oklahoma haven’t seen a pay increase in ten years and earn 25 percent less than those in the private sector [KOSU].

Six Ways to Bring in New Revenues in Special Session: Even before the court threw out the cigarette fee, the budget severely underfunded core services — worsening the teacher shortage, forcing senior nutrition sites to close, cutting support for foster families, and not even beginning to undo the damage to our communities caused by years of cuts. Lawmakers now have a second chance to get it right and fix the budget by passing widely-supported revenue options. Here are six of them [OK Policy].

Prosperity Policy: What’s really bad for business: As lawmakers convene in special session to address Oklahoma’s latest budget crisis, they will hear from plenty of nonprofits, state workers, and educators about the need to fix the budget and fund core services. But some of the strongest voices sounding the alarm about our current state of affairs have come from the business community. In the competition to recruit national and international companies looking for highly skilled workers to fill well-paid jobs, Oklahoma is too often left out of the running [Journal Record].

Calvey files bill to put wrap on film rebate program: “The film rebate is at the core of why we have a successful film industry,” said Lance McDaniel, executive director of deadCenter. But the rebates could end Jan. 1, 2018, if a House of Representatives bill is approved. State Rep. Kevin Calvey, R-Edmond, filed House Bill 1004, in which he proposes ending the Oklahoma Film Rebate Enhancement Program by ceasing rebates after Jan. 1, 2018. Calvey could not be reached for comment [Journal Record]. The bills filed in special session put many options in play [OK Policy].

Rep. Katie Henke out of country during special session: With the Oklahoma House of Representatives struggling to find a revenue agreement to plug a state budget hole in special session, Rep. Katie Henke (R-Tulsa) is out of the country. Multiple people with explicit connections to Henke told NonDoc that the third-term lawmaker is traveling abroad — some said to Italy — on a family trip that was planned in advance [NonDoc].

No state wins under latest health care repeal bill -- including Oklahoma: This week, the Senate may take up the latest and most radical attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Supporters of the legislation, which was primarily authored by Sens. Lindsay Graham (R- South Carolina) and Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana), claim that it will give states like Oklahoma more money and freedom to design their own health care systems. In truth, Graham-Cassidy would bankrupt many states, roll back protections for pre-existing conditions, and tear out the foundation of our health care safety net. Under the Graham-Cassidy plan, all states lose [Carly Putnam / Tulsa World].

Oklahoma County commissioners hear jail trust report, extend contract for juvenile detention: A document establishing an Oklahoma County jail trust is ready for approval by the Board of County Commissioners. "We're ready to set up the trust, if that's what the board wants," Randy Grau told the commissioners at their meeting Wednesday. Grau, chairman of a committee formed in April to explore formation of a jail trust, presented a status report at the meeting [NewsOK].

Biggs objects to early release of non-violent offenders: The same lawmaker who derailed efforts to reduce the state’s prison population this year is now criticizing corrections officials for releasing inmates early. Department of Corrections officials announced months ago they were working on a program to release all prisoners who had only 18 months left on their sentences and no violent crime convictions. Director Joe Allbaugh has said in several public meetings that the Legislature left the agency no choice but to do so when several bills to cut the population failed in committee [Journal Record].

Most Oklahoma metro areas had more people working in August: Oklahomans continued to see improved employment conditions in most of the state's largest cities in August, compared to the same time a year earlier. Nonseasonal adjusted jobless rates for August were lower in Enid, Oklahoma City and Tulsa than they were during the same month the year before, according to data released Wednesday by the U.S. Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics [NewsOK].

Governor Appoints District Attorney in Northeastern Oklahoma: Gov. Mary Fallin has appointed an assistant district attorney as the new district attorney for District 27 in northeastern Oklahoma. Fallin said Wednesday that she's appointing Jack Thorp as prosecutor for Adair, Cherokee, Sequoyah and Wagoner counties. Thorp replaces Brian Kuester, who resigned after being appointed U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Oklahoma [Associated Press].

EPA's Scott Pruitt took non-commercial flights totaling more than $58,000: In July, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt flew on a private plane for official travel in his home state of Oklahoma – leaving taxpayers on the hook for more than $14,000. Pruitt, the former Oklahoma attorney general, along with staff and security, flew on an eight-seat Learjet on July 27 from Tulsa across the state to Guymon, Oklahoma. There, he met with farmers at a town hall to discuss water issues. Afterward, he boarded the same plane and flew to Oklahoma City [CBS News].

Quote of the Day

"We always hear legislators say how much they appreciate state employees and that's all fine and good, but you know what—they need to pay them and retain them. There's $120 million dollars worth of turnover rate. State employees are getting tired of saying 'we appreciate you, we appreciate you'—that can just go so far. You need to compensate them appropriately."

- Sterling Zearley, Executive Director of the Oklahoma Public Employees Association, calling for a $7,500 raise for all state employees (Source)

Number of the Day

27.6%

Share of jobs in Oklahoma with median annual pay below 100% of the poverty threshold for a family of four, 2015.

Source: Prosperity Now

See previous Numbers of the Day here.

Policy Note

The Real Reason Middle America Should Be Angry: The relative decline of St. Louis—along with that of other similarly endowed heartland cities—is not simply, or even primarily, a story of deindustrialization. The larger explanation involves how presidents and lawmakers in both parties, influenced by a handful of economists and legal scholars, quietly altered federal competition policies, antitrust laws, and enforcement measures over a period of thirty years. These changes, which enabled the same kind of predatory corporate behavior that took the Rams away from St. Louis, also robbed the metro area of a vibrant economy, and of hundreds of locally based companies [Washington Monthly].

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Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Photo - Oklahoma lawmakers are negotiating a major budget deal as we speak. Oklahomans must speak out to get them to do the right thing! Learn more and take action: https://okpolicy.org/special-2017/



Oklahoma lawmakers are negotiating a major budget deal as we speak. Oklahomans must speak out to get them to do the right thing! Learn more and take action: https://okpolicy.org/special-2017/

from

Special Session Update: Bill would add bureaucracy and expensive barriers to health care

Dear Friend,

As you know, lawmakers were called back to work this week by the Governor to reach an agreement that would deal with the state's budget shortfalls, address inefficiencies, and provide a teacher pay raise. Unfortunately, House leaders are considering a measure that would achieve none of these goals but would instead impose new, unnecessary costs on state agencies while creating siginificant barriers to health care access for Oklahoma families that rely on SoonerCare.

HB 1093 - the deceptively named HOPE Act - would require the Oklahoma Health Care Authority to subject SoonerCare patients to enhanced verification procedures to determine eligibility for coverage of their medical needs. The bill is a carbon copy of legislation (HB 1270) that passed both chambers during regular session but failed to gain final approval. It originates from a Florida-based advocacy group that is pushing identical bills in multiple states.

HB 1093 would require intensive quarterly eligibility verification for most SoonerCare members and applications, and require new applicants to complete a quiz of personal and financial questions to prove their identity. The bill would impose new start-up costs ($1.2 million) and recurring annual costs ($1.0 - $1.2 million) on a cash-strapped state agency. The legislation doesn't serve any worthwhile purpose and perpetuates the mistaken notion that public benefit programs like Medicaid are riddled with fraud and abuse — when, in reality, Oklahoma's Medicaid program has the lowest payment error rate in the nation. Creating expensive and cumbersome new bureaucratic procedures is not what lawmakers have been asked to do in Special Session.

What You Can Do

HB 1093 has been scheduled for a hearing in the House rules committee at 9:30AM, Thursday, September 28. Although the full House has gone into recess, tomorrow's committee meetings are still on the schedule. Please contact members of the House Rules committee and your legislators and urge them to vote No on HB 1093.

You can find contact information for the House Rules committee here. You can look up your two legislators here or call the House switchboard at 405-521-2711 and the Senate switchboard at 405-524-0126.

Short message: Lawmakers have been called back into Special Session to fix the budget and provide a teacher pay raise, not to create expensive and unnecessary new barriers to health care. Please vote No on HB 1093.

See our advocacy alert on HB 1093 for more talking points and links to blog posts, op-eds and other resources on the earlier version of HB 1093

Thank you for concern and involvement.

The OK Policy Team

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[In The Know] Lawmakers resume partisan stances as special session begins

In The Know is your daily briefing on Oklahoma policy-related news. Inclusion of a story does not necessarily mean endorsement by the Oklahoma Policy Institute. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and see past editions.

Today In The News

Lawmakers resume partisan stances as special session begins: Oklahoma lawmakers met for about 15 minutes Monday, the first day of a special session that so far has produced no answers to the state's $215 million budget shortfall. Aside from procedural votes to kick-start the special session, state Capitol politics picked up where lawmakers left it four months ago. House Republicans are calling for a cigarette tax, and criticizing Democrats for not supporting a stand-alone vote [NewsOK]. Lawmakers have good revenue options for special session if they have the will to use them [OK Policy].

Cigarette tax passes first test in special session: A $1.50 per pack cigarette tax the Republican-led Legislature is depending on to patch a $215 million hole in the state budget passed House and Senate committee votes Tuesday on the second day of a special session. Tuesday's actions set up a floor vote in the House as soon as Wednesday, but passage is far from certain. The bill will require 76 of the current 100 votes in the House, and has significant opposition in both parties [Tulsa World]. The second attempt at the cigarette tax is already in jeopardy [Public Radio Tulsa]. A House Democrat called the cigarette tax a distraction [Rep. Shane Stone / NewsOK].

Oklahoma Could Lose $49M for Needy Children's Health Care: Though the Senate now will not vote by Saturday’s deadline for Republicans to repeal the Affordable Care Act with a simple majority, it’s also the last day for another significant action. Additional funding approved under President Barack Obama for the Children’s Health Insurance Program must be reauthorized by then. "Should the enhanced CHIP funding not be reauthorized, the Oklahoma Health Care Authority stands to lose about $49 million in federal funds in state fiscal year 2018," said Cate Jeffries with OHCA [Public Radio Tulsa].

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

The latest on bills filed in special session

Friend,

Yesterday was the first day of the special legislative session called by Governor Fallin to fix Oklahoma's chronic budget problems. One day in, the outcome of special session is still very much up in the air. With so much at stake, it's an essential time for Oklahomans to call, write, and visit lawmakers. Read on for analysis of the bills filed so far and what you can do to influence the result.

Although Governor Fallin promised to veto any budget that makes further cuts to state agencies, House Speaker Charles McCall continues to insist that the only revenue on the table will be another try at a cigarette tax. At this point in the year, the cigarette tax by itself will only close about half of Oklahoma's current budget shortfall. And if the Legislature still does not have a three-fourths majority needed to pass the tax, sending it to a vote of the people means the soonest it could go into effect would be 2019, far too late to avoid life-threatening cuts to health care.

NO new cuts! Fix the shortfall! Teacher pay raise! sing it with me now

Friend, Do you know what a big deal it is that Republican Senators are coming up to me at the Capitol saying, "I don't know what we are going to do, but I can tell you this, NO MORE CUTS!" 

They are finally starting to get it! Saying it out loud is the first step to taking action, but that doesn't mean they are ready to really #GetItRightOK.  You've got to call them today because important votes are happening this week.

Senate Joint Committee on Appropriations and Budget meets today at 11 am.

Call these folks now and tell them we want:

What You Can Do

Please do this now!

If you have time, text or call a few of your friends and have them do it too.  

We've won some important battles with the misguided philosophies that have plagued our state.  Keep it up!

KJ

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[In The Know] Senate Republicans call for hiking motor fuels taxes as special session opens

In The Know is your daily briefing on Oklahoma policy-related news. Inclusion of a story does not necessarily mean endorsement by the Oklahoma Policy Institute. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and see past editions.

Today In The News

Senate Republicans call for hiking motor fuels taxes as special session opens: Senate Republicans on Monday proposed increasing the gasoline and diesel tax as one way of plugging the budget hole that brought lawmakers back to the Capitol for a special session. Lawmakers met briefly in separate chambers Monday for the start of a special session called by Gov. Mary Fallin after the Oklahoma Supreme Court said lawmakers had violated the law in passing a $1.50 cigarette tax as a "fee" during the regular session [Tulsa World]. No agreement was made after the first day of special session [Oklahoma Watch]. Lawmakers have good revenue options for special session if they have the will to use them [OK Policy].

McCall: Cigarette tax ‘first priority,’ GPT not focus right now: After Oklahoma’s 56th Legislature gaveled in this afternoon for the state’s first special session since 2013, House of Representatives leadership said passage of the storied $1.50 cigarette tax is top priority in filling a $215 million budget hole. “First priority of the House (…) will be to take up the tobacco tax,” House Speaker Charles McCall (R-Atoka) said Monday. “That is the issue that will fix the hole that’s been created, and to the extent we can do that, that dictates other conversations we’ll have.” [NonDoc]

As Legislature gathers, Oklahomans await results: When the compressor broke on the industrial refrigerator at the Cocina De Mino Mexican restaurant in south Oklahoma City, co-owner Tim Wagner faced a $5,000 replacement or a quick fix for around $1,500. "I just went ahead and paid for a new one because you can't always put a Band-Aid on problems," said Wagner, sitting in his windowless office behind the kitchen, between stacks of purchase orders and food inventory lists [NewsOK]. The special session started quietly [Journal Record].

Monday, September 25, 2017

[In The Know] Governor promises to veto any proposal with further cuts to state agencies

In The Know is your daily briefing on Oklahoma policy-related news. Inclusion of a story does not necessarily mean endorsement by the Oklahoma Policy Institute. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and see past editions.

Today In The News

Governor promises to veto any proposal with further cuts to state agencies: Governor Mary Fallin today issued the following statement on the upcoming special session of the Oklahoma Legislature, which is scheduled to get underway Monday: “This special session is an opportunity for lawmakers to solve lingering, critical structural problems in our state budget. I am hopeful lawmakers will consider thoughtful, realistic solutions in a timely manner. Many ideas have been fully vetted over the past couple of legislative sessions, so it really should be a matter of taking care of unfinished business. [Norman Transcript] The 5 things Gov. Mary Fallin wants legislators to do in the special session and how much it will cost taxpayers [Tulsa World] State Party leaders comment on upcoming Special Legislative Session [Sandite Pride News]

Special session has special process: The fall date won’t be the only deviation from the norm during Oklahoma’s special legislative session. The process will look pretty different as well. No bill is required to go through the committee process. Lawmakers can circumvent the initial hearings, where a dozen other members get to prod their colleagues for more information, voice their concerns or offer amendments. If the measures do go to committee, the window for amendments will be shorter. Instead of the normal two days, amendments will have to be filed on the same day as the committee hearing. [Journal Record]

Second Time’s a Charm? Budget Again Hinges on Tobacco Tax: If at first you don’t succeed … try the same thing again. When legislators return to the State Capitol Monday for a special session, they will face a familiar dilemma: Can they muster enough Republican and Democratic votes to pass a $1.50-per-pack cigarette tax? Or will an impasse lead to cuts in core state services? In either case, given previous votes and lawmakers’ statements, both parties could share responsibility.[Oklahoma Watch] Lawmakers have good revenue options for special session if they have the will to use them [OK Policy]

Education leaders hold out hope special session will produce teacher pay raise: The Legislature’s upcoming special session has rekindled hope among Tulsa-area school district leaders that 2017 may yet bring a teacher pay raise. It at least gives them another chance to call for one. “The best-case scenario for us is for our state legislators to make the necessary decisions to allow our school districts to provide our teachers with a competitive professional salary,” said Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent Deborah Gist. [Tulsa World] Time for teachers to use their outside voices [OK Policy]

Several reasons for my special session call: I gave lawmakers quite an assignment when I called them to return in special session next week. The Oklahoman's editorial board believes I should have kept my special session call simple: Focus primarily on dealing with a $215 million budget hole that has developed since lawmakers adjourned in May. I appreciate the opportunity to further explain each point of my special session call. [Gov. Mary Fallin/Tulsa World]

Oklahoma’s ‘broken budget’ fuels community conversations: Amber England is the executive director for Oklahoma’s chapter of Stand for Children, a national advocacy organization that seeks a quality public education for all students. Stand for Children is a partner in the Save Our State coalition, which is launching a series of community conversations each Tuesday in October to discuss Oklahoma’s “broken budget” at the local level. [NonDoc]

A five-point agenda for the Oklahoma Legislature: The Legislature has a chance to get to the real work of state government starting Monday. Gov. Mary Fallin has called lawmakers back to the Capitol for a special session to deal with a state budget hole of more than $200 million, and to address other critical jobs left undone during the regular session. In the spirit of the priorities outlined by Fallin, the Tulsa World presents this agenda for the special session. [Editorial Writers/Tulsa World] The best vote a legislator can cast in special session [OK Policy]

David Boren wants to keep lawmakers reminded of their 'No. 1 responsibility — the next generation': David Boren may not be going quietly into the night. After giving his notice to the University of Oklahoma last week — he’s retiring as OU’s president, effective next June 30 — Boren said he still has things he wants to say. He laughed off a question about writing his memoirs, saying they probably couldn’t be published until after his death. But, he said, he might start a blog to keep his opinions circulating. [Tulsa World]

Oklahomans are increasingly absent from the workforce: As Oklahoma’s Legislature convenes in special session to address the budget and flagging state revenue, one thing not likely to attract much attention is this: An unusually large number of Oklahomans don’t work. This may seem to fly in the face of the state’s persistently low unemployment rates, but in fact it is just another side of the same statistical coin. About one-quarter of state residents between ages 25 and 54 — generally the prime employment years — do not have a job. [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma, Tulsa counties try to fight health problems with food, transportation: When you visit a doctor in Oklahoma County next spring, don't be surprised if "Can you afford food?" follows "What brings you in today?" Oklahoma and Tulsa counties are part of the “accountable health community” grant program, which aims to reduce health care spending by connecting patients to social services. Hospitals and other providers will screen Medicare and Medicaid patients about whether they can afford food, housing, utilities and transportation, and whether they are at risk of violence. [The Oklahoman] At the intersection of hunger and health [OK Policy]

It's time to update Oklahoma equal pay law: Since President John Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act of 1963, it has been illegal in the United States to pay men and women working in the same place different salaries for similar work. While this groundbreaking law narrowed the wage gap during the past half century, progress has stalled in recent years, bringing to light the need for updates to this measure. [Rep. Jason Dunnington/The Oklahoman] Oklahoma women can’t afford wage discrimination [OK Policy]

State senator's legal representation of pharmaceutical companies raises conflict of interest questions: Oklahoma Senate Minority Leader John Sparks is providing legal representation to several pharmaceutical companies that the state is suing for alleged fraudulent marketing practices — prompting some to question whether Sparks has a conflict of interest. [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma Gets Poor Grade on State Finances But Isn't Alone: A nonprofit that analyzes state finances has given Oklahoma a D grade. Oklahoma was not alone — or even among just a few — to get a D for its finances. "A D may sound bad, but it's about average for the 50 states," Bergman said. "The position has deteriorated in Oklahoma in recent years with the challenge of declining energy prices." [Public Radio Tulsa]

Lankford, other officials to attend north Tulsa 'community conversation' on Oct. 12: U.S. Sen. James Lankford will join Mayor G.T. Bynum, state Sen. Kevin Matthews, D-Tulsa, and state Rep. Regina Goodwin, D-Tulsa, for a “community conversation” at 6 p.m. Oct. 12 at the Big Ten Ballroom, 1632 E. Apache St. The event will include a town hall-style meeting and performances by local musicians and participants in the Pocket Full of Hope program. [Tulsa World]

Quote of the Day

“Additional cuts to agencies will further harm state services. I will veto a proposal that calls for cuts to state agencies. Also, sending the cigarette tax to a vote of the people is not an option. The earliest the issue could be decided by voters is June, the last month of the current fiscal year. It doesn’t fix the budget hole because it would not generate any revenue for this fiscal year."

- Gov. Mary Fallin urging lawmakers to address the state's structural budget deficit in the special session beginning today (Source)

Number of the Day

15.2%

Percentage of Oklahoma households experiencing food insecurity in 2016

Source: USDA

See previous Numbers of the Day here.

Policy Note

The Biggest Misconception About Today's College Students: You might think the typical college student lives in a state of bliss, spending each day moving among classes, parties and extracurricular activities. But the reality is that an increasingly small population of undergraduates enjoys that kind of life. Of the country’s nearly 18 million undergraduates, more than 40 percent go to community college, and of those, only 62 percent can afford to go to college full-time. By contrast, a mere 0.4 percent of students in the United States attend one of the Ivies [The New York Times].

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