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Association News
Capitol 2009: A year of political change
Wednesday, December 30, 2009


Capitol 2009: A year of political change

December 31, 2009

OKLAHOMA CITY – Republicans controlled the Oklahoma Legislature for the first time in history in 2009, but the biggest political story of the year had more to do with the turnover that is shaping up in many statewide offices in the 2010 elections.

Officeholders who are term-limited or announced in 2009 that they are retiring or running for higher office will not seek re-election for governor, lieutenant governor, treasurer, superintendent of schools and attorney general next year as a growing list of candidates vies for more open statewide seats than at any time in the past decade.

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Oklahoma board certifies lower revenue estimate
Tuesday, December 22, 2009


December 23, 2009 OKLAHOMA CITY – The state Board of Equalization on Tuesday certified a revenue estimate for next year that is $1.3 billion less than the current one, the result of a sluggish economy and low oil and natural gas prices that have reduced tax revenue during the past year.

The board, made up of Gov. Brad Henry and other statewide elected and appointed officials, said lawmakers will have about $5.3 billion to spend during the fiscal year that begins July 1 – a dramatic 20 percent drop from this year’s $6.6 billion legislative spending authority.

The board also declared a revenue shortfall of more than $729 million for the current year. Henry, who will use the board’s revenue figures to write his executive budget proposal, said ongoing budget cuts at state agencies will reduce the gap to about $530 million by the end of the fiscal year June 30.

State officials ordered 5 percent across-the-board state agency budget cuts in August to cope with declining revenue and later extended the cuts through the end of the fiscal year. Last week, the cuts were doubled to 10 percent for December and January as revenue continued its downward spiral.

“This is a very difficult challenge,” Henry said. “But there is no need to panic.”

He said budget cuts, constitutional Rainy Day reserve funds and federal economic stimulus money will help fill this year’s budget hole and fund state agencies next year.

The Rainy Day fund contains almost $600 million, and the state has set aside another $600 million in economic stimulus money. The governor said any additional cuts should be targeted to preserve vital state services to Oklahomans.

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Lawmakers mull timing of special session
Friday, December 04, 2009


OKLAHOMA CITY – State lawmakers remain undecided on a special legislative session, a spokesman for the governor’s chief budget negotiator said Monday.

Deputy Treasurer Tim Allen said state Treasurer Scott Meacham, Gov. Brad Henry and legislative leaders were still talking about the possibility of meeting in late December or early January to develop a fix for what could become a $1 billion hole in the state’s checkbook.

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