Showing posts with label Dave Bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Bond. Show all posts

Monday, October 07, 2024

Group launches campaign to oust liberal justices on Oklahoma Supreme Court


We're one month out from the election, and finally, someone is actually attempting to do something about activist liberal justices on the Oklahoma Supreme Court and running a campaign to get folks to vote 'NO' on the judicial retention ballot. Since Oklahoma went to this system in the 1960s, no justice or judge has ever lost a retention vote.

Watch the ad from People for Opportunity:

Thursday, July 07, 2022

Frivolous, politically-motivated protective orders against OCPA dropped

In the final days before the primary, State Rep. Anthony Moore's wife sought and received a protective order against several employees of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (OCPA) following what she alleged were threatening text messages. The Moore's seem to have never detailed what exactly was so threatening and have dismissed the protective orders, leaving OCPA furious at what appears now to have been nothing more than a politically-motivated media stunt, and an abuse of the protective order system.

OCPA's press release below:

Moore drops abusive protective orders

(July 6th) Rep. Anthony Moore’s spouse moved to dismiss all five Temporary Protective Orders that she had filed eight days before the primary election, including against four employees of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs. The dismissal was made public on Tuesday.

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Stitt signs bill to track Federal dollars in state agencies

Sen. Dahm (left) and Rep. Hilbert (right) are joined by Dave Bond of OCPA and his son as Gov. Stitt signs SB271.

Gov. Signs Dahm, Hilbert Bill to Track Federal Dollars in State Agencies

OKLAHOMA CITY – Gov. Kevin Stitt signed a bill to improve government transparency in a ceremony at the State Capitol last week. Senate Bill 271 was authored by Sen. Nathan Dahm (R-Broken Arrow) and Rep. Kyle Hilbert (R-Bristow).

The bill requires all state agencies to annually disclose and rank all federally affiliated funds, programs and priorities. Hilbert, who serves as the vice chair of the House Appropriations and Budget Committee, said any agency receiving and administering federal funds that require any level of security clearance in order to administer received funds is exempt from the disclosure requirements.

“As elected officials, we should always take into consideration transparency and accountability,” Dahm said. “Unfortunately, many agencies choose not to share all the information in order for fully-informed decisions to be made. This bill will allow us to better represent our constituents by having this information known when making budget decisions. And by having the agencies post it on their website, this financial information will be directly available to the citizens of Oklahoma as well. It’s a huge step forward for transparency in how agencies spend our money.”

“The Legislature currently does not have a clear understanding of how many federal dollars various state agencies are receiving, how they’re being used or what strings are attached to those federal dollars,” Hilbert said. “The state agencies already have this information available, and Senate Bill 271 will make this information readily accessible to state legislators while considering funding and appropriations.”

SB 271 was officially signed by Stitt on April 29 and will go into effect on Nov. 1.

Tuesday, November 08, 2016

OCPA Impact comments on failure of SQ779



Statement from Dave Bond, CEO of OCPA Impact, Inc., on the voting results on SQ 779 and the continuing need for a teacher pay raise in Oklahoma:

"Today's results on 779 are only a partial victory. Yes, working Oklahoma families have been successfully shielded from being forced to pay the highest sales tax burden in the nation, and we're very pleased with that outcome.

"But the results are only a partial victory because the need for a pay raise for public school classroom teachers across Oklahoma is still very, very real.

"We spent the entire past legislative session at the Oklahoma Capitol advocating for a teacher pay raise without a tax increase on working Oklahomans, and we will push for the same objective at the Capitol this coming session.

"We look forward to working with President Boren, and with others across Oklahoma who have served as strong voices for increasing teacher salaries, toward realizing this common goal without increasing taxes at a time when our state and our economy can least afford it."

Saturday, November 05, 2016

Pro-779 ad makes false, blatantly misleading claims




This week, the group Oklahoma’s Children, Our Future unveiled an ad supporting State Question 779, the permanent, 1% statewide sales tax on the Nov. 8 ballot in Oklahoma.

Together, the ad and an accompanying post on the group’s website make four claims, three of which are most certainly false, while the fourth is blatantly misleading.

Claim #1: 60% of the 779 tax money “will go toward teachers.”

The Facts: It’s shocking that 779’s supporters are trying to present as a positive that 40% of the money from 779’s sales tax increase – 40 cents of every dollar taken from working Oklahomans – would not be spent on teachers.

The reality, though, is even worse: only 39% – not 60%, as the pro-779 ad suggests – of the 779 tax money would be required to go to teacher salaries or benefits. It’s possible, though not guaranteed, this number could ultimately be higher, but there is nothing in 779’s fine print requiring more than 39% of the 779 tax money to go to teacher compensation.

Let’s clarify how we calculated 39%. Proponents of 779 say the measure will bring in $615 million in new tax money each year, via 779’s sales tax increase on working Oklahomans. According to the National Education Assoc. and the Oklahoma State Dept. of Education, there are approx. 42,027 public school classroom teachers in Oklahoma. To provide each with a $5,000 salary increase, factoring in a multiplier of .17 for FICA and other employment-related costs, would cost $245 million.

A simple division calculation reveals that the cost of providing the $5,000 teacher salary boost – $245 million – is 39% of the total 779 is projected to generate – $615 million.

245 / 615 = 39%

After the teacher pay raise dollars are taken out, this particular pot of 779 money – one of five different pots detailed in 779’s fine print – would have $123.9 million remaining.

In 779’s fine print, the only requirement for this $123.9 million is that it be spent to “otherwise address and prevent teacher and certified instructional staff shortages in the manner most suited to local district circumstances and needs.”

That’s it. No requirement to hire more teachers. No requirement to spend the money on teacher salaries, benefits or other compensation.

Experience suggests that, while some local school district officials would use these extra funds to hire more teachers or further increase teacher compensation, others would not.

Verdict: The claim by Oklahoma’s Children, Our Future is false. Only 39% of the 779 tax money is required to go to teacher compensation.

Claim #2: “Every single penny” of the 779 tax money has annual audit requirements built in.

The Facts: In its descriptions of the five different pots of 779 tax money, 779’s fine print only includes audit requirements for two of the pots – the pot from which the teacher pay raise funds will be drawn, and the pot designated for “programs, opportunities, or reforms” to improve reading, boost high school graduation rates, and “increase college and career readiness.”

The other three pots – the $118.3 million lump sum for Higher Education, the $19.9 million lump sum for Career Tech, and the $49.2 million lump sum for the State Dept. of Education – feature no audit requirements whatsoever.

After everything is tabulated, 70% of the 779 tax money will include audit requirements, while 30% will not.

Verdict: The claim by Oklahoma’s Children, Our Future is false. Only 70% of the 779 tax money includes audit requirements.

Claim #3: The 779 tax money cannot be spent on “administrative overhead.”

The Facts: From 779’s fine print:

“None of these monies distributed from the (779 fund) to common school districts may be used to add superintendent positions or increase superintendents’ salaries.”

That’s it. No restrictions on adding positions or increasing salaries for assistant superintendents, administrative assistants, principals, vice-principals, assistant principals, curriculum directors, IT support staff, coaches, program directors, communications officers, chiefs of staff, athletic directors, etc.

Verdict: The claim by Oklahoma’s Children, Our Future is false. Portions of the 779 tax money may be spent on administrative overhead.

Claim #4: Since 779 would be locked into the Oklahoma Constitution, the 779 tax money would be kept out of “the meddling hands of politicians.”

The Facts: Disparaging politicians and their “meddling hands” is a time-honored American tradition, practiced with great wit by Mark Twain, Will Rogers and other luminaries.

In this case, however, it’s merely a ploy to distract voters away from the fact that 779 will: (a) require all Oklahomans, regardless of income, to pay the highest permanent sales tax burden in the nation, and (b) provide state government bureaucrats and school administrators with the constitutional protection to spend up to 60% of the 779 tax money on stuff other than teacher compensation.

Ultimately, whether 779 is approved or rejected on the ballot may come down to Oklahoma voters determining which group they trust the most … or, perhaps, distrust the least: publicly-elected politicians at the state Capitol, or un-elected state government bureaucrats and school administrators.

For many Oklahoma voters, that may be a tough call. Either way, the claim by Oklahoma’s Children, Our Future is blatantly misleading.

Wednesday, November 02, 2016

Don’t be fooled: SQ 779 much more than “only a penny”

Continuing with the spotlight on the state questions on the ballot, here is OCPA Impact's Dave Bond with a column exclusively for MuskogeePolitico on SQ779:


Don’t be fooled: SQ 779 much more than “only a penny”
by Dave Bond

Public school teachers in Oklahoma urgently need a pay raise. But there’s zero need for State Question 779, which would raise Oklahoma’s sales tax burden to the highest in the nation.

Teachers are leaving Oklahoma classrooms. Children are disadvantaged. Parents are worried.

But let’s be clear: On November 8, with SQ 779, Oklahomans aren’t voting on whether public school teachers need a raise.

With SQ 779, we’re voting on whether working Oklahoma families should be forced to pay the nation’s highest sales tax burden in order to fund teacher pay raises and more new spending.

Please don’t be fooled: SQ 779 is much, much more than “only a penny.”

In fact, according to its supporters, SQ 779 would increases taxes by a total of $615 million. That’s an average tax increase of over $420 per household statewide each year.

When added to existing state, county and municipal sales taxes, SQ 779 would raise Oklahoma’s average combined state-and-local sales tax burden to 9.8%, the highest permanent rate of any U.S. state. Oklahoma already has the sixth highest sales tax burden.

In many communities, SQ 779 would cause the sales tax burden to reach double digits.

The combined sales tax burden would hit 10% in Lawton, Ardmore, Guthrie, Chickasha and Weatherford, to name a few.

It would jump to 10.1% in Muskogee and Collinsville, 10.2% in Skiatook, 10.3% in Claremore, Grove and Ada, and 10.5% in Tahlequah, Sapulpa, Miami, Vinita, Catoosa and Chandler.

It would rise to 10.7% in Pryor, Okmulgee, Henryetta and Stilwell, 10.9% in Glenpool, and 11.5% in Checotah.

SQ 779 would be a tax increase on everyday purchases, including groceries, clothing, tools, home supplies and more, for low- and middle- income families.

Adding insult to injury, over 60% of the money from SQ 779’s tax increase would be spent on things besides pay raises for classroom teachers.

You read that correctly.

A $5,000 raise for every public school classroom teacher statewide costs $245 million. And remember, proponents of SQ 779 project the tax increase will raise $615 annually.

Where will the extra $370 million go? In lump sums to bureaucrats in Higher Education, Career Tech, school districts and the State Department of Education, with little direction on how to spend it.

TV commercials say money from SQ 779 will be used to make college more affordable. But there is nothing – nothing – in SQ 779’s fine print requiring this.

Finally, it’s completely unnecessary to raise taxes to increase teacher pay.

Since last fall, our organization has offered an alternative plan to fund teacher pay raises of $5,000 or better without raising taxes or restricting core government services.

At www.StopHigherTaxesOK.com, we offer a menu of $753 million in inefficient or nonessential state government spending that could be redirected to teacher salaries.

Oklahoma needs a teacher pay raise, not a tax increase. SQ 779 is a major tax increase that will unnecessarily burden working Oklahoma families of all incomes.

Bond is CEO of OCPA Impact, a nonpartisan, statewide advocacy group based in Oklahoma City.