The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

State News

February 9, 2010

Oklahoma: Democrats propose passing budget, going home

The Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — With about $1.3 billion less to spend this year than last, House and Senate Democrats said Tuesday that lawmakers should focus strictly on passing a state budget and end the legislative session early.

The idea received a cool reception from House Speaker Chris Benge, R-Tulsa, who called the idea “shortsighted.” Without support of GOP leaders in the House and Senate, the plan is unlikely to get much traction this legislative session.

In other action at the state Capitol Tuesday, a Senate committee approved a bill to eliminate the sales tax on groceries once state revenues return to where they were before the economic downturn. The bill would cost the state an estimated $406 million annually, but would not take effect until the state’s economy returned to pre-downturn levels, said Senate author Jay Paul Gumm, D-Durant.

That may not be any time soon, according to preliminary budget figures released Tuesday.

State Treasurer Scott Meacham reported state revenue collections improved slightly in January, but still trailed both prior year collections and estimates for a 13th consecutive month. Meacham reported general revenue collections in January were about 17 percent below the prior year and nearly 21 percent below Oklahoma Tax Commission projections.

Sen. Earl Garrison, D-Muskogee, who proposed the plan to approve the budget and end the session early, said the idea could save the state hundreds of thousands of dollars that could be better spent elsewhere.

“Cutting the session short would allow us to bypass these wasteful practices and allow us to concentrate on fixing the problems related to this budget crisis,” Garrison said. “People are tired of legislators doing nothing while their families are hurting, and this sends the right message that we want to get our job done in an efficient manner.”

More than a dozen House and Senate Democrats appeared with Garrison to endorse the proposal.

But with plenty of work left to do crafting a budget for the next fiscal year that begins July 1 and with final revenue certification still a week away, Benge indicated the proposal had a dim future.

“Their plan to shorten session is shortsighted and would require us to do nothing but slash the budget and run,” Benge said in a statement. “The people sent us here to make tough decisions, and we intend to do so.”

Senate President Pro Tem Glenn Coffee said the plan was a “laudable goal,” but not realistic this year given the uncertainty of the revenue picture through the end of the fiscal year June 30.

It costs the House and Senate an additional $117,000 each week the Legislature is in session, according to figures provided by House and Senate staff. Lawmakers receive mileage reimbursement, and those who live outside a 50-mile radius receive $150 in per diem each day for food and lodging, according to Senate Chief of Staff Tom Walls.

Lawmakers typically meet for four months each year from the first week in February until the last Friday in May.

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State News
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    No injuries or damage is reported.

    January 19, 2011

  • Audit: $108,000 taken from Missouri Veterans Commission JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A former employee of the state auditor’s office embezzled nearly $108,000 while working as an accountant for the Missouri Veterans Commission, the state auditor alleged Monday.

    Stacy Griffin-Lowery was fired by the Veterans Commission in March 2008 and pleaded guilty three months later to a misdemeanor theft charge. She repaid the state $17,665, the auditor’s office said.

    But Missouri Auditor Susan Montee on Monday accused Griffin-Lowery of swiping an additional $90,192 by getting reimbursed for cash advances and purchases made on her personal credit card.

    April 12, 2010

  • Race in Kansas’ 2nd District could heat up for GOP incumbent TOPEKA, Kan. — A conservative Kansas legislator said Monday he will announce in a few weeks whether he will challenge freshman U.S. Rep. Lynn Jenkins in the Republican primary.

    State Sen. Dennis Pyle’s actions in recent months suggest the Hiawatha farmer, who’s served in the Legislature since 2001, is running against Jenkins in the Aug. 2 primary. He set up a campaign organization in November and has a Web site featuring a brief video of him on his farm, asking viewers for support.

    April 12, 2010

  • Oklahoma tea party leaders, lawmakers envision militia OKLAHOMA CITY — Frustrated by recent political setbacks, tea party leaders and some conservative members of the Oklahoma Legislature say they would like to create a new volunteer militia to help defend against what they believe are improper federal infringements on state sovereignty.

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    April 12, 2010

  • Missouri: Senate panel cuts $500 million from proposed budget JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A Senate committee declared Thursday that it has sliced more than $500 million from Missouri’s proposed budget for next year — meeting a target set by Gov. Jay Nixon to bring it in balance.

    April 8, 2010

  • Kansas: Wichita-area casino in doubt after governor’s decision TOPEKA, Kan. — A proposed casino south of Wichita was in doubt Thursday after Gov. Mark Parkinson refused to grant its developers a regulatory reprieve. Partners in the $225 million Chisholm Creek project wanted to delay a state board’s decision on their plans.

    April 8, 2010

  • Oklahoma: Groups oppose education spending initiative OKLAHOMA CITY — A coalition of business and labor groups said Thursday it will work to defeat a ballot initiative to dramatically increase spending on public education that coalition members said would devastate the budgets of many other state services and possibly force tax increases.

    April 8, 2010

  • Missouri: Gov. Nixon affirms support for tuition freeze COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon has no plans to sit idly while lawmakers consider whether to preserve a tuition freeze deal he assembled before the state’s dire financial status was fully known.

    April 7, 2010

  • Kansas: Agency uses YouTube to illustrate road woes TOPEKA, Kan. — It’s one thing to hear about potholes and state budgets. It’s another to see how the two are connected. That’s part of the thinking behind a new video presentation on YouTube this week from the Kansas Department of Transportation.

    April 7, 2010

  • Oklahoma: Pathologist says girl’s throat might have been cut OKLAHOMA CITY — A 7-year-old girl who was found dead in Oklahoma near the body of her suspected kidnapper likely died after her throat was cut, an independent pathologist said Wednesday, the same day the child’s funeral attracted hundreds of mourners.

    April 7, 2010

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