Showing posts with label TSET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TSET. Show all posts

Sunday, August 02, 2020

1889 Institute: Sell Unneeded State Assets to Shore up State Pensions


Sell Unneeded State Assets to Shore up State Pensions
By Benjamin Lepak

Oklahoma’s government owns a lot of property. This includes land and buildings, but it also includes valuable assets like the state-owned electric power company, the Grand River Dam Authority (GRDA). GRDA reports nearly $1.8 billion in assets on its most recent balance sheet, with a “net position” of more than $622 million. Or the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET), which has a $1.2 billion endowment producing roughly $50 million annual investment income.

We would be better off if some of these assets were liquidated. Physical assets could be sold or leased to private entities where they would be more economically productive, pay taxes, and relieve the state of maintenance expenses.

The proceeds could be directed to long-term funding challenges like unfunded pensions and infrastructure. The needs are not small. Oklahoma faces $7.9 billion in unfunded pension obligations, totaling approximately the entire rest of the state budget.

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Voters to decide on using TSET funds for Medicaid expansion program


Senate approves bill to use TSET funds for Medicaid; SJR27 will send plan to voters to decide

OKLAHOMA CITY – A plan to help pay for Medicaid in Oklahoma passed off the Senate floor Friday. Senate Joint Resolution 27, by Senate Majority Floor Leader Kim David, R-Porter, refers to Oklahoma voters a constitutional amendment to allow a larger portion of the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust Fund (TSET) annual settlement payments to go towards paying for either the governor’s Medicaid expansion program or Medicaid expansion that may result from the approval of a pending state question.

Monday, February 03, 2020

Stitt delivers State of the State address


GOVERNOR STITT DELIVERS 2020 STATE OF THE STATE ADDRESS

Oklahoma City, Okla. (Feb. 3, 2020) – Governor Kevin Stitt today delivered the 2020 State of the State address in the State House chamber, building a vision for continued state agency reform and consolidation in order to deliver Top Ten outcomes in critical categories of government transparency, health care, criminal justice reform, transportation, and more.

The transcript as prepared for delivery is as follows:

Mr. Speaker, Mr. President Pro Temp, Lt. Governor Matt Pinnell, members of my cabinet, Madam Chief Justice, members of the 57th Legislature, my best friend – the First Lady Sarah Stitt, my children, my parents, and my fellow Oklahomans…

It is a great honor to stand before you to today, and I thank my heavenly Father for allowing me to be in this position of service to Oklahoma.

Let me get right to the point. The state of our state is growing in strength, stability, and new opportunity for generations to come.

We are moving in the direction we all want to go: Top Ten in the Nation.

And we are getting there because of the hard work of Oklahoma’s entrepreneurs, because of the dedication of teachers in the classroom, because of the generous givers and compassion coming from Oklahoma’s non-profits, because of the community involvement of churches, and because of those in this room, and across our state agencies, who are making the tough, selfless decisions for the future of our great state.

I want to take a moment to highlight a few of those individuals, who are my special guests in the Chamber today:

First Lieutenant E.J. Johnson, Technical Sergeant Rebecca Imwalle, and Staff Sergeant Joy Mahan. These proud Guardsmen represent the hundreds of Oklahoma’s finest called to duty during record flooding in the State this past May.

Under the leadership of Major General Michael Thompson, they walked levies, filled sandbags, performed rescues, and conducted countless other tasks day after day.

Engineers in the Oklahoma National Guard also partnered with ODOT to build a temporary road that provided evacuees in Braggs a way out of their flooded community.

In addition to their duties within the State, the Oklahoma National Guard is also fulfilling their federal mission. More than 400 Oklahoma Guardsmen are currently fighting overseas on behalf of our state and nation at this very moment. I ask that every Oklahoman keep these brave men and women in your thoughts and prayers.

Also in the Chamber with us today is Dr. Tomas Diaz de la Rubia, the University of Oklahoma’s new head of research. I am committed to partnering with our state institutions in recruiting the best talent in the nation to Oklahoma. We will compete, and we will win.

This past year, the University of Oklahoma not only won its 13th Big 12 Football Championship, it also won the talent of one of the best researchers in the nation.

Dr. Tomas is an internationally renowned researcher who is bringing his impressive background at Purdue University, and with companies, such as Deloitte, to play a key role in identifying innovative opportunities that will elevate OU’s research reputation to Top Ten in the country. Thank you for choosing the best state in the nation to move to and make an impact.

Today, we also recognize an Oklahoma son from Tuttle - CEO of Paycom, Chad Richison. Chad founded his company, Paycom, right here in Oklahoma City in 1998, and through his vision and leadership, Paycom now serves as one of the largest employers in our great state.

Just this past month, Chad hit an incredible milestone when Paycom was added to the S&P 500 list. Thank you, Chad, for reminding us that the American dream is still alive, and Oklahoma is the best place in the nation to accomplish it.

To all my guests, thank you for being here today.

We all know that Oklahoma’s economy, and quite frankly our state budget, is built on the backs of the hardworking men and women in the oil and natural gas industry. When I delivered this address last year, 60 percent more drilling rigs were operating in Oklahoma than exists today.

Our first budget together was blessed by a thriving industry. Now, we must look at the realities of a changing and evolving market that is becoming more efficient and less influenced by international volatility. As a result, our State’s general revenue fund is estimated to be down almost one percent versus fiscal year 2020, and our total spending authority is very close to the same amount.

But we have nothing to fear. We will remain vigilant in recognizing our needs, planning for our future, and shedding waste where operations are outdated or redundant. In fact, the greatest challenge before us today is not Oklahoma’s economy. There are two reasons why:

First: The fiscal discipline displayed by many of you in this room last year has allowed the State to garner its largest savings account in Oklahoma’s history at $1 billion.

As a result, Moody’s Investor Service changed Oklahoma’s outlook from “stable” to “positive” in October. Their decision reflects an expectation that Oklahoma will maintain “strong fiscal management” and “a commitment to increasing reserves.”

Let’s follow through on that commitment.

Senator Joe Newhouse has filed legislation that would give Oklahomans a voice this year on increasing the Constitutional cap on our State’s Rainy Day fund to 30%. Let’s get it to a vote of the people! And while we wait on this vote, I am also asking for elected leaders to join me, again, in setting aside $100 million in additional funds as part of the Fiscal Year 2021 budget.

Thanks to our strong pension plans, low bond debt and progress in savings, Oklahoma is ranked as the fifth most solvent state in America. Let’s take this to #1. By saving in the good times, we are demonstrating our commitment to protect the taxpayer, the job creator, and the citizen who depends on core services.

Second: Oklahoma’s economy is more diverse than ever before.

When the City of El Reno faced the closure of a major facility, Oklahoma’s Department of Commerce quickly went into action. We deployed two career fairs, and more than 350 Oklahomans were offered employment with companies in aerospace, finance, manufacturing, healthcare and more.

This was possible because Oklahoma’s economy remains on good footing.

Our unemployment rate remains below the national average. Oklahoma’s household income has risen by nearly 4% in 2019. And sixty companies moved to our state or made significant expansions in Oklahoma this past year, with more than $2.9 billion in new capital investments announced.

One of our strongest industries this year was tourism, led by the vision of our own Lt. Governor Matt Pinnell – Imagine That!

In 2019, Oklahoma’s tourism website achieved a #1 ranking in web traffic. We beat states like California and Colorado. And tourism will continue to grow. This year, we are welcoming the largest movie production in state history with Killers of the Flower Moon.

You gave us the tools last year to bolster our recruiting efforts, and the Lt. Governor was an exceptional partner in landing this deal for Oklahoma. Once again, beating states like Texas and New Mexico.

The film production’s presence is expected to inject tens of millions into our economy. Thousands of Oklahomans will be hired as local talent and through contracts for lodging, transportation, hardware, food and more.

Oklahomans, our economy is competitive. And in this administration, we will keep it that way!

The greatest challenge before us today is government bureaucracy.

In my first year of public service and as the chief executive, I have found government too big and too broken. The state of Oklahoma spends roughly $20 billion annually. The Legislature has a strong handle on the 40% managed through the appropriations process.

Then, we – working together – provide oversight of the 60% that goes directly to state agencies from apportionments, fines, fees, and federal funding.

Last year, we delivered the greatest transparency to the State’s budget by publishing Oklahoma’s checkbook online. With the new system, we are providing user-friendly access to recent spending data.

In partnership with my office and Oklahoma Treasurer Randy McDaniel, we took Oklahoma’s 47th ranking to 7th place in online budget transparency. And we will continue to fine tune how citizen interact with it in order to compete for first place in transparency.

Most importantly, the Legislature delivered the strongest accountability in state history when you sent to my desk legislation to reform five of our state’s largest agencies. This action strengthened our budgeting oversight.

Time and time again, state agencies would ask you for more money as the solution. But I’m here to tell you it’s not all about funding. It’s about focus. It’s about leadership.

Your reforms have allowed me to go recruit the best talent, to break down silos between agencies, and to deliver the Legislature with budgets that are results-oriented. When good policy meets the right leadership, anything is possible!

Just look at what transpired in 2019 between two key agencies. When I came into office, I was told that a change in our prison system wasn’t possible without an immediate injection of $1 billion dollars.

I was told the Pardon and Parole Board could not take on an increase in casework without more employees and more funding. I was told that it would be logistically impossible to accomplish a large commutation docket to give low-level, non-violent offenders a second chance.

What did we do? You passed better policy, and we changed leadership in both agencies.

As a result:

Pardon and Parole Board consolidated its investigators with Department of Corrections. This streamlined the case work all while increasing it by 118% over 2018. They did this without a single dollar more.

The Department of Corrections launched its first-ever re-entry fairs across 28 facilities for individuals that were part of the HB 1269 commutation docket.

The idea originated from the First Lady, and it will become a permanent practice at the agency moving forward.

The number of Oklahomans in our state prisons declined by 7.6% from 2018. As a result, the number of those incarcerated is the lowest level since 2009. This is reducing the strain on our prison facilities and giving us the opportunity to reimagine the future of housing inmates. And in conjunction, the Department of Corrections withdrew its year after year request for more than $1 billion in additional funding and submitted a FY’21 request that addresses the critical needs of tomorrow.

It is now time to complete this successful consolidation effort.

I am calling for the Legislature to protect the Constitutional mandate for Pardon and Parole Board appointments yet pass legislation that absorbs the remainder of the operations with Corrections.

Collaboration is already taking place, thanks to the leadership of Director Scott Crow and Director Steve Bickley. It is time we make this official in law to prevent future bureaucracy from creeping back in.

When government is working and is unified under one vision, we can change the lives of Oklahomans for the better.

Here in the Chamber with us today is Tara. Tara is a mother of four children who was serving a 10-year sentence due to a relapse with a drug addiction. Prior to her release, Tara met Chris Linder from Center for Employment Opportunities at the transition fair.

When she was commuted under the HB 1269 docket, Tara was immediately connected to sober housing at Exodus, began working a temporary job for CEO, and within a month of release was hired for a full-time position by a local Tulsa company where she is finding stability and opportunity again.

Tara, we believe in you. The State and our community partners want to help you keep a tight hold of the hope and future you and your family deserve.

Friends, agency consolidation must not stop there.

Sec. Tim Gatz has done an exceptional job leading both the Oklahoma Department of Transportation and the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority. Sec. Gatz is beginning the process of combining all back office and common functions into one shared service entity for both agencies.

We will maintain separate general management for unique functions, while streamlining operations that are duplicative in nature so we can deliver the highest quality of transportation possible.

We will operate with one, unifying vision for infrastructure as we continue to move towards Top Ten status. Thank you, Sec. Gatz, for your leadership.

When Oklahoma is in crisis, it is most often our Office of Emergency Management (OEM) that is at the center of restoring us back to normal. OEM has the ability to call upon whatever resource it needs to help Oklahoma’s communities prevent, respond, or recover from a major crisis.

Homeland Security is a key part of that effort, proving valuable coordination to support our first responders. By merging these two agencies, we will bolster response capabilities, streamline coordination, and leverage existing resources for stronger prevention programs.

As we prepare to recognize the 25th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing in April, we must continue to set the standard for our nation in how to respond to and manage crisis when tested by tragedy. Oklahomans deserve it and this merger will help us achieve that goal.

Thank you to OEM Director Mark Gower and Homeland Security Director Kim Carter who are committed to working with the Legislature to get this done right.

Some will cry that consolidation is disruptive. Let me be clear – it will-be for political insiders and those that find comfort in big bureaucracy. But it is what we need to do to improve decision-making, deliver better accountability, and target dollars directly towards helping our citizens instead of paying for administrative bloat.

Oklahoma has the 20th highest land mass among states, the 28th largest population, and yet, we have the 9th most state agencies out of all 50 states. This is unacceptable. There is no value to having more agencies than other states; it has not solved our Bottom Ten rankings in critical categories.

As we reduce bureaucracy, we must also provide necessary relief and enhanced opportunities for our dedicated public employees. President Pro Tem Greg Treat and Representative Mike Osburn have already filed legislation to begin the conversation again on civil service reform.

It is time we get this done in 2020!

The state’s current civil service program is broken. High quality employees are forced into a system that doesn’t maximize their professional growth and potential. Agency leaders have their hands tied in who they can hire and promote due to outdated restrictions.

Today, I am calling for reform that requires all new hires in state government, moving forward, to be unclassified.

I am requesting language that allows agency directors discretion to offer bonuses, within the confines of their budgets, for employees to receive a promotion out of their restricted classified positions.

Through this attrition model, I am casting a vision for the majority of the State’s work force to be unclassified in the next five years.

As part of civil service reform, I am calling for a 3-person panel in the Human Capital Management Department to maintain whistle blower protections and to provide due process to state employees who have serious grievances, whether these employees are classified or not.

Let’s make the state’s largest employer a place where we can hire the best; where we reward good performers; and where we are building a training ground for an exceptional workforce that can transition beyond public service if they so choose.

With a long-term focus on agency reform, we will lay a new, stronger foundation for the State of Oklahoma. Any policy that the Legislature sends to my desk to further this effort will be signed. This is how we will actually get the tax-dollar directly back to the citizen - through better services.

One of the most significant areas where we need reform is health care.

I just returned from Washington, D.C., where I stood with the Trump administration to announce that the State of Oklahoma will be pursuing new flexibilities through the Healthy Adult Opportunity. With these new flexibilities, Oklahoma will begin the process in the coming weeks to rollout SoonerCare 2.0. Under this reformed Medicaid program, we will seek to close the gap of those uninsured in Oklahoma.

We will deliver much-needed accountability in the Medicaid system to focus on rewarding health outcomes and stronger performance in care. With HAO flexibility, we will deliver personal responsibility to new enrollees under SoonerCare 2.0.

We will seek to establish moderate premiums and work requirements. We will encourage able-bodied adults to transition towards a path of maintaining private insurance and pursuing educational or employment opportunities that advances their full personal potential.

With HAO flexibility, we will seek to establish programs that enhance accessibility of health care in rural Oklahoma. And we will seek to expand targeted treatment for opioid addiction and substance abuse.

But I can’t do this without you.

Oklahoma is currently positioned to be the first in the nation to be granted the Trump administration’s waiver to achieve unprecedented flexibility and accountability in delivering Medicaid to adults.

No one who is currently eligible will lose coverage; actually, more than 180,000 Oklahomans would gain coverage under SoonerCare 2.0.

State Auditor Cindy Byrd is in the middle of auditing our Medicaid rolls, a request I filed last year. Her auditors expect to be done this spring, which will allow us to address abuse in the system and ensure that the reformed SoonerCare 2.0 will truly help those who need it the most.

But Washington needs to see support from the Oklahoma State Legislature to feel confident that this plan is on solid financial standing.

Today, I call on the House and the Senate to send to my desk legislation to give certainty that the Oklahoma Health Care Authority can use the full 4% of the SHOPP assessment to fund SoonerCare 2.0, while protecting reimbursements.

We must also reform TSET. Let’s protect the current corpus yet reallocate future funds towards improving the delivery of rural healthcare. Help me keep Oklahoma #1 in competing for this new opportunity through the Trump administration.

Any other effort to enact a clean expansion of Medicaid, to include putting it in the State’s Constitution, will create significant restrictions. With straight Medicaid Expansion, Oklahoma will be left with the same ineffective and unaccountable program that has failed to bring us out of Bottom Ten rankings.

The time is now to innovate, to focus on outcomes, and to make Oklahoma a national leader in the delivery of healthcare. To make this sustainable, we must also move forward on significant reforms in the operations of our state health and human services agencies.

Did you know that Oklahoma has 10 different state agencies passing money through the Medicaid program in Oklahoma? And 18 state entities that license health care facilities and providers?

You cannot convince me that operating that many bureaucracies is an efficient way of doing business. And it has to change.

This is why I am calling for the Legislature to begin the process of creating one central health care agency.

Let’s partner together to fully integrate, by the year 2022, the functions of the State Department of Health, the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA), the Department of Mental Health, and others, as well as all of the state’s licensing boards that deal with health.

In addition, Oklahoma can no longer afford to be so far behind other states with regards to using and protecting health data. Within the next couple months, we will select a vendor to establish a statewide Health Information Exchange (HIE).

This effort has been a long-time in the making and with the right leadership in place, more progress has been made in 10 months than in the last 10 years. Thank you OHCA Director Kevin Corbett and Secretary Jerome Loughridge.

A functional HIE will protect Oklahomans’ health records while ensuring these records are portable and accessible at all times, and I appreciate Senator Greg McCortney’s legislation that will enhance and protect the hard work underway in our agencies.

And this is just the beginning of health reform in Oklahoma.

Many of you in the Legislature are spearheading legislation that will help to create a better healthcare system across the board, to include legislation that will create pricing transparency for medical bills, and Representative Marcus McEntire’s legislation to put an end to surprise billing practices.

Thank you. Let’s continue to work together and push the envelope on improving health care delivery and outcomes for all 4 million Oklahomans.

In this administration, we will continue to focus on becoming Top Ten in education.

It is why the Legislature put more funding into the funding formula this school year, bringing the total taxpayer investment in common education to the largest in state history. We will protect it. But we must also reform it by taking a hard look at our state’s funding formula.

We should allow voters to unlock more local dollars. With reform, we must also address any mechanisms that are preventing tax dollars from getting directly to today’s classroom.

The path to Oklahoma’s future prosperity will be achieved by promoting the profession of teaching and focusing on students’ advancements and opportunities.

This is why the Legislature rallied last year to give our teachers a second year of much-deserved pay raises.  I am glad to report that not only did districts give pay raises of at least $1,220 last year, but some went beyond, like Owasso Public Schools, where now a first-year teacher can expect a beginning compensation of $42,000.

It is why this Legislature continues to build a competitive and solvent Teacher Retirement System, by investing more than $300 million annually above the $750 million that taxpayers support through employee and employer contributions.

Our dedication will continue so that teachers know that when they retire, their pensions will be funded. But more state revenue is not the answer alone.

We must also continue to recruit the best teachers and confront our teacher shortage. I support legislation that would direct the State Board of Education to issue a teaching certificate to anyone who holds a valid out-of-state teaching certification, with no other requirements except a criminal history record check.

This year, we must get across the finish line proven solutions to enhance learning opportunities for students.

Now is the time to raise the cap on the Oklahoma Equal Opportunity Education Scholarship to $30 million, to allow Oklahomans to be rewarded for investing their funds directly to our students and schools

In the Chamber, as my special guests, are Ms. Alegra Williams and her sixth- and eighth-grade sons, Chaves and Sincere. Ms. Williams’ sons were struggling in school, making all C’s and D’s until she had the opportunity to enroll them in Crossover Preparatory Academy, a private all-boys school in north Tulsa.

Crossover prep was started as a key initiative to restore their community through education for young men. Crossover Prep is a tuition-free school because they believe that a child’s access to a quality education shouldn’t be dependent on their parent’s ability to afford it.

In the boys’ first semester at Crossover, Chaves jumped three reading grade levels, and Sincere jumped two-and-a-half reading levels. Chaves and Sincere, will you stand? And will everyone join me and their mom in applauding their hard work this year?

Chaves and Sincere were able to get the help they needed because of the Oklahoma Equal Opportunity Education Scholarship Act. Increasing the tax credit cap will provide additional incentives for donors, resulting in more public-school grants and private-school scholarships.

Thank you to Senator Dave Rader and Representative Jon Echols for leading the charge.

Let’s work together to make sure all students at all schools have access to an innovative, enriching curriculum, regardless of ZIP code.

Because we believe in all students and helping them succeed, I am also launching a program this year called Jobs for America’s Graduates (JAG). JAG is a state-based national non-profit organization dedicated to preventing dropouts among young people who have serious barriers to graduation and employment.

In more than three decades of operation, JAG has delivered consistent, compelling results – helping more than one million young people stay in school through graduation, pursue postsecondary education and secure quality entry-level jobs leading to career advancement opportunities.

While we are on the topic of education, let me take a brief moment to address one critical matter.

In 2019, 1.3% of the common education funding came from the State’s exclusivity fees on Class III games on tribal casinos. These dollars, which are first deposited to the Oklahoma Education Reform Revolving Fund, equal roughly $130 million compared to public education’s total funding of $9.7 billion, as sourced by the 2019 School District Revenue Report.

The Model Gaming Compacts have been a success, greater than anyone predicted.

Unfortunately, we have an expired Model Gaming Compact, a compact in which notable tribes have previously called “dated” and “unsuitable” for current and future business.

After 5 offers from the State for all stakeholders to come together to modernize the Model Gaming Compact, three tribes instead sued the State on New Year’s Eve.

While we wait for the federal court’s decision, I am calling for the Legislature to join me in protecting public education. I am asking for legislation that will allow the remaining cash balance from 2019 and funds from the Revenue Stabilization Fund to be leveraged, if needed, to compensate for any temporary pause in Class III gaming fees.

As Governor, I remain supportive of the sovereignty of the State of Oklahoma and our right – and your duty as the Legislature – to oversee all industries operating in the State.

I also remain confident the State and Oklahoma’s tribes can hammer out a compromise that is a win-win for all four million Oklahomans, and we can accomplish this without putting public education in the crosshairs.

As I said last year, and it bears repeating, we need more taxpayers, not more taxes. Everything we do has a dotted line back to growing our economy.

It is why my budget calls for the funding of the Closing Fund by another $3 million, as well as a $200 million financing plan with a majority prioritized towards rural roads and high-volume interchanges.

Oklahoma has moved from 49th to 13th in bridge conditions within 15 years, and while we work towards Top Ten in this critical category, we are going to start moving the needle on our ranking of super-two roads and pavement quality.

Oklahoma is the crossroads of America, and our roads are key to attracting future job creators whether it is to Altus, Enid, Broken Bow or in the heart of Tulsa.

Today, I am also filing an executive order to address Oklahoma’s excessive red tape.

Oklahoma’s administrative code is double the size of the state of Kansas and 20 percent more than Missouri and New Mexico. My executive order will call for the first-ever comprehensive review of the State’s administrative code and will instruct agencies to remove two regulations for every new one created.

The intent is to reduce red tape by 25% in the next three years, providing relief to Oklahoma’s job creators and farmers and ranchers while also strengthening our recruitment efforts to diversify and grow Oklahoma’s economy.

We must also continue our progress on occupational licensing reform.

Speaker Charles McCall and Senator Adam Pugh made it a priority last year to reduce barriers to work for military families. And Senator Julie Daniels and Rep. Zach Taylor passed meaningful second-chance legislation to expand occupational licensing opportunity for those who have previously encountered the justice system.

This year, let’s get universal licensing recognition across the finish line too. We can continue to make progress on economic prosperity when we remove unnecessary and antiquated barriers to entry.

Ladies and Gentlemen, Oklahoma is competing. Oklahoma is winning. Oklahoma is undergoing the Turnaround that voters demanded.

It may not be comfortable at times. It demands hard decisions and boldness. It requires long-term planning and commitment to one vision.

But we are making inroads that will last for generations… that will make us stronger… more prosperous… Top Ten.

There is no place I would rather be than Oklahoma. There is no better team than the ones elected in this room. There is no better time in our State’s history than now. Let’s do this together.

God bless you. And God bless the great State of Oklahoma.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Following Trump admin's Medicaid initiative, Stitt announces 'SoonerCare 2.0'


STITT ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCES SOONERCARE 2.0

Oklahoma City, Okla. (Jan. 30, 2020) – Governor Kevin Stitt today announced his administration’s healthcare plan, called SoonerCare 2.0, in Washington, D.C. where he was participating in the Trump administration’s release of the Healthy Adult Opportunity (HAO) initiative to give unprecedented flexibility to States to innovate and develop Medicaid plans for the adult population where federal funding is optional.

“I have sought Oklahomans’ input over the past several months in crafting my administration’s healthcare plan, and they have told me they want more access to care in rural Oklahoma, they want accountability and better outcomes in the current Medicaid system, and they want us to reclaim our tax dollars from Washington, D.C,” said Gov. Stitt. “With SoonerCare 2.0, we will achieve what Oklahomans are asking for, and we will fund it through efficiencies and accountability reforms, protecting Oklahomans from new taxes.

“With SoonerCare 2.0, we will pursue comprehensive reform of Medicaid delivery, made possible due to the unprecedented flexibility and innovation being granted by the Trump administration’s Healthy Adult Opportunity initiative. SoonerCare 2.0 will deliver strong personal-responsibility mechanisms for new enrollees, will target dollars on rural healthcare delivery and substance abuse programs, and transform services to be focused on outcomes and health advancements instead of excessive billing practices. In all things, we will pursue Top Ten status, and with SoonerCare 2.0 we will be taking a next step in pulling Oklahoma out of bottom ten healthcare rankings that our State has battled for generations.”

As part of SoonerCare 2.0, the Stitt administration will be pursuing the following:

Capture total federal funds available under Medicaid: In the coming few weeks, the State will submit a State Plan Amendment to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) coupled with applications for the new Healthy Adult Opportunity waivers to achieve maximum flexibility for use of more than $1.1 billion in additional federal Medicaid funds.

The State will need no new state taxpayer dollars to pay for its roughly $150 million share. The Stitt administration will seek partnership with the Legislature to support the State’s share by:

  • Recognizing cost savings in Department of Corrections and Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, where millions of dollars currently being paid 100% by the State will be replaced with federal funding once SoonerCare 2.0 is fully implemented.
  • Leveraging the full Supplemental Hospital Offset Payment Program (SHOPP) fee of 4% currently in state statue, a rate in Oklahoma that will remain below the national standard of 6%.
  • Requesting Oklahomans to reform TSET, protecting the corpus and leveraging future funds to directly deliver stronger, more accessible healthcare services to rural Oklahoma as part of SoonerCare 2.0.


Pursue maximum flexibility under the Trump administration’s Healthy Adult Opportunity to deliver personal responsibility: For Oklahomans that will become eligible for Medicaid under SoonerCare 2.0, the insurance program will be set up to create a true trampoline and prepare the individual to transition to employment and the responsibility of maintaining private insurance coverage. The Stitt administration will pursue HAO flexibility to implement modest premiums and establish work requirements that encourage individuals to be engaged in activity that advances their personal potential, such as education, certification, or employment.

Innovate the delivery of rural health care as well as specialized substance abuse programs with flexibility granted under the Trump administration’s Healthy Adult Opportunity: With HAO flexibility, SoonerCare 2.0 will innovate to improve access to care in rural Oklahoma. The Stitt administration will work with health care providers, communities and payers to act on new federal opportunities that will allow the State to enhance provider reimbursement, authorize telehealth services, manage non-emergency medical transportation, and redefine “hospitals” to expand care options in areas with limited populations. With HAO flexibility, SoonerCare 2.0 will also seek to expand targeted treatment for opioid addiction and substance abuse.

Deliver system reform across the full Medicaid program: To increase the effectiveness of Oklahoma’s Medicaid program and achieve better outcomes, the state will implement a full-risk managed care program with a strong quality component. Most states have abandoned years ago the government-run, fee-for-service program currently in place in Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Health Care Authority will go through a series of public bids and public comment periods to procure the right cost containment plan for Oklahoma.  The new Medicaid enrollees under SoonerCare 2.0 will be the first population under the reformed delivery system.

“The Oklahoma Health Care Authority is thrilled to be a part of Governor Stitt’s health plan, SoonerCare 2.0,” said Kevin Corbett, Director of the Oklahoma Health Care Authority. “Our agency, along with our partner agencies, stakeholders and in collaboration with the public, will pursue a rigorous and thorough process towards bringing this outcome based approach to managing our state’s health care needs and reaching the administration’s Top Ten goals.”

The agency will pursue the following priorities in obtaining and implementing this major reform initiative:

  • Transform primary care from a system that reacts after someone get sick to a system that keeps people as healthy as possible.
  • Pay for what works to improve and maintain health and convert volume-based fee-for-service payments into value-based payments that reward better health outcomes.
  • Prevent chronic disease whenever possible, and when it occurs, coordinate care to improve the quality of life and help minimize chronic care costs. 

Monday, June 03, 2019

OCPA column: A notable contrast in legislative priorities


A notable contrast in legislative priorities
By Jonathan Small

The 2019 legislative session passed many good reforms, but its failures provided a glimpse of lawmakers’ priorities that should disturb Oklahomans.

Rather than act, lawmakers chose to sideline two measures that would have addressed some of Oklahoma’s most pressing needs in education and health care.

Lawmakers failed to raise the cap on the successful Equal Opportunity Scholarship program, which uses tax credits to inject millions of private dollars into public schools and private-school scholarships. Independent evaluators have concluded the program actually saves taxpayer money even as it increases student opportunity. Yet lawmakers chose not to expand this successful program, leaving thousands of children with special needs, kids struggling with addiction, and students living with the challenges of poverty unable to attend the schools that can best serve them.

Similarly, lawmakers failed to give voters the chance to direct state tobacco settlement payments to rural health care needs through a constitutional amendment. As rural hospitals close, lawmakers chose to instead leave tobacco dollars in a fund that pays for walking paths and advertisements that tell people to drink water.

But legislators did find the will to double the “Hollywood handout” film rebate, a de facto voucher program that sends millions out of state. Consultants hired by the state Incentive Evaluation Commission concluded the film program does nothing to permanently boost the Oklahoma film industry and does little for the state’s image. They recommended the program be ended.

Instead, lawmakers doubled program payments this year and even voted to allow some filmmakers to get payments from the Oklahoma Quick Action Closing Fund. Apparently, they concluded that the Harvey Weinsteins of the world are more deserving of Oklahoma taxpayer cash than homeless children or elderly rural patients in need of care.

The Legislature did advance some good reforms in other areas, including proposals OCPA has endorsed for many years. Those measures, if implemented correctly, should result in better oversight of government, less waste, and greater freedom for citizens.

Those measures include legislation giving the governor the ability to name the leaders of five major agencies, creation of a Legislative Office of Fiscal Transparency to conduct performance evaluations of agencies, boosting state savings by $200 million, and requiring state agencies to report the use of all federal funds in a transparent manner.

Other worthwhile bills that became law provided for Oklahoma Supreme Court redistricting that increased the pool of potential jurists by hundreds in some cases, further criminal justice reforms, free speech protections on college campuses, and lawmakers’ commendable decision to not expand Medicaid and keep their focus on aiding the truly needy.

Put simply, the Legislature did some good this year. But when it was bad, it was really bad.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (www.ocpathink.org).

Monday, April 15, 2019

OCPA: Is TSET putting nightclubs ahead of doctors?

TSET putting nightclubs ahead of doctors?

OKLAHOMA CITY (April 15, 2019) – Oklahoma’s Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust has spent as much, and sometimes more, promoting bars and nightclubs and a boathouse foundation than it has on recruiting rural doctors to Oklahoma, records show.

Curtis Shelton, Policy Research Fellow at the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, a free-market think tank, said those findings demonstrate that Oklahoma is not getting the maximum health benefit from its tobacco dollars.

“As the endowment has grown, so has the scope of TSET’s spending,” Shelton said. “It’s now worth asking if TSET’s spending practices are truly improving Oklahoma’s health statistics, or if it is time to reform the system and redirect future settlement payments to higher priorities such as rural healthcare.”

Thanks to payments from the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement, the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) now holds more than $1 billion in payments from tobacco companies. TSET is supposed to spend earnings from that endowment on health causes, but the constitutional provision creating TSET includes vaguely defined goals, which has led to questionable spending practices.

In 2015 TSET created a program called Free the Night that promotes bars and nightclubs that have smoke-free areas. Between 2015 and 2018 that program received $1.05 million in TSET funding.

Between 2015 and 2017, TSET gave $781,500 to the Oklahoma City Boathouse Foundation. (TSET did not give to the Boathouse in 2018.)

Oklahoma’s Physician Manpower Training Commission (PMTC), which works to attract medical professionals to rural areas, received less from TSET from 2015 to 2017 ($617,500) than did the “Free the Night” program and the boathouse foundation during that same time.

From 2015 to 2018, TSET’s total spending on the physician program barely exceeded the total amount spent on nightclubs, but the amount going to doctor recruitment was still far less than the amount of TSET money spent on the nightclub and boathouse programs combined during those years.

Polling commissioned by the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs and conducted by WPA Intelligence found that 78 percent of Oklahoma voters support redirecting future payments from TSET to rural health care needs. The poll found an outright majority – 58 percent – “strongly” support the proposal.

Legislation to enact that change, House Joint Resolution 1017, has already passed the Oklahoma House of Representatives on a 73-27 vote.

Shelton recently wrote about TSET spending, based on updated financial information. That analysis can be viewed at https://ocpathink.org/post/misplaced-priorities-at-tset.

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

OCPA column: A new direction for TSET


 A new direction for TSET
by Jonathan Small, president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs

If you haven’t heard, Oklahoma’s Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) is searching for a new director. But what this small state agency with a giant bank account really needs is a new direction.

While TSET does some important work, like funding cancer research, it also does silly things, like spending $700,000 advertising “water recipes” in the middle of a state budget crunch. The agency has also spent $1.1 million promoting bars and nightclubs that prohibit indoor smoking.

Unfortunately, many of the non-outrageous things that TSET spends money on are low priorities. The agency replaced working drinking fountains in schools with fancier (and much more expensive) drinking fountains.

TSET was set up as an endowment that will grow with no limit. It collects payments owed to Oklahoma from the 1990s tobacco lawsuit, puts those payments in the bank, and spends the earnings.

That account has grown to $1.2 billion, with TSET expecting to earn $64.8 million from those investments during fiscal year 2018. Over the last five years, TSET’s earnings have averaged $50 million per year.

The good news is that TSET sometimes makes really good decisions. Last year, TSET’s board of directors approved $3 million in one-time funds for senior nutrition services and mental health crisis teams.

The Legislature should reform TSET so that it can continue doing important work while redirecting future settlement payments to critical state health care needs.

One good target would be rural medical care, which is more expensive to provide than medical care in urban and suburban areas. The funds could help cover the actual losses of medical facilities in rural Oklahoma, keeping hospitals open.

Revenues could also go to the Physician Manpower Training Commission, also focused on medical care in rural Oklahoma, and to shore up nursing home provider rates.

These are core services that citizens rely on. Does anyone think “water recipe” billboards or ads for smoke-free booze is more important?

And frankly, reforming TSET this way would leave the agency with exactly as much money as it has right now. What we’re really talking about is letting TSET continue with its current projects, while assuring Oklahomans are taken care of by using future settlement payments.

Excess tobacco settlement payments have approached $60 million per year for the last few years while core services continue to suffer. TSET’s spending is just one example of a government entity making highly questionable spending decisions at a time when we need to prioritize core services. Imagine how far $60 million could go to help rural health care.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs.

Monday, May 14, 2018

OCPA column: The Slippery Three


The Slippery Three
by Jonathan Small, president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (OCPA)

Since 2015, annual taxes and other revenue taken from Oklahomans have increased by $1.1 billion. Oklahomans’ personal income taxes are up at least $185 million annually just since 2016.

Some important reforms passed this session, including enrollment audits and work requirements for Oklahoma’s expensive Medicaid program. Yet other programs proved just how slippery is the status quo when it comes to avoiding common-sense cost savings.

Oklahoma’s film industry handout is one example. The program is an actual welfare payment to cover costs for a favored business. Some of these films are never released. Others paint Oklahoma in a bad light. Perhaps the most prominent subsidized film, August: Osage County, was made by disgraced Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. Because of this program, Oklahomans gave Weinstein’s company $4.6 million.

Oklahoma’s Incentive Evaluation Commission found “no evidence that the Oklahoma film industry has strengthened during the time period when the rebate has been available.” The current rebate each year is $4 million, which could pay for nursing home care for 213 elderly Oklahomans or for mental health services for 1,402 Oklahomans.

A far more expensive outpost of cronyism is Oklahoma’s rebates to the wind industry. We actually pay the wind industry to come to Oklahoma and export energy generated right out of the state. Oklahoma paid out more than $70 million to Big Wind in fiscal year 2017.

The subsidies are such a sweetheart deal that the wind industry will do anything and everything to keep them–like paying for more than 40 lobbyists to lay siege on the state Capitol or apparently stalking lawmakers who oppose them. Eliminating wind subsidies would save, by conservative estimates, $70 million annually.

Finally, Oklahoma’s Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) offers the perfect example of mission creep. TSET grows by about $50 million every year and spends around $30 million to $40 million in earnings from its billion-dollar endowment. Its largesse has grown to the point that, in addition to some important objectives, TSET has spent $1.1 million promoting smoke-free bars and nightclubs and more than $700,000 on billboards for “water recipes.” Just capping TSET’s current endowment would give the state about $53 million in new revenues every year.

Common-sense changes to these three slippery programs could have freed up more than $125 million annually for higher priorities. But they slipped away.

Perhaps next year, legislators will finally reform these wasteful programs. Every dollar spent wastefully by these programs is a dollar that could be better used on health care for our most vulnerable and public education, including teacher pay and classroom supplies.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs.

Tuesday, May 08, 2018

OCPA column: More money, more problems


More money, more problems
by OCPA President Jonathan Small

It’s been busy lately, so you may not have noticed that the state of Oklahoma received $71 million from the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement.

Of that amount, the Oklahoma attorney general received a little over $4 million. The state general fund collected a little over $13 million.

The real winner was the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET). TSET received a little more than $53 million. Don’t worry; they’ve got a safe place to keep it. They will add that $53 million to the $1.1 billion they are already sitting on.

This payment from the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement happens every year. With all that cash in the bank and yearly deposits around $50 million, one can’t help but wonder how TSET will use their growing largesse. TSET gets to spend the earnings just about however they want.

A few years ago, TSET hired a California consulting firm that labels itself “the behavior change agency,” to create Free The Night. Over the last few years, TSET has spent more than $1.1 million on the program “supporting smoke-free bars and clubs.”

In 2017, TSET spent more than $700,000 on billboard advertisements, mostly in Oklahoma’s large metro areas, advising Oklahomans to (among other things) consume more water. One message even offered “water recipes.” Former Oklahoma attorney general and TSET architect Drew Edmondson has questioned TSET’s harassment of Oklahomans for drinking sugary drinks or juice.

TSET could also double down on their relationship with the embattled Oklahoma State Department of Health, or TSET could try to add a new administrator at a salary of $250,000 again.

All this is what happens when an unaccountable government agency sits on mountains of cash and gets more every year. Soon enough, some spending moves from core, critical areas like health and human services and towards silly pet projects.

Sometimes TSET does make healthier financial decisions. Last year, TSET’s board of directors voted to provide more than $3 million for senior nutrition services and a mobile mental health crisis program for children. This is how TSET money should be spent: on core, critical services for our most vulnerable.

Core services continue to suffer from unreformed spending. TSET's spending is just one example of a government entity making highly questionable spending decisions at a time when we need to prioritize core services.

It’s time we stop TSET’s spending spree and allow Oklahomans the chance to better spend future tobacco settlement dollars. If lawmakers allow us to vote on TSET reforms, then we can prioritize spending and help the most vulnerable.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (www.ocpathink.org).

Thursday, May 03, 2018

OCPA column: Era of Oversight Needed


Era of Oversight Needed

Since 2015, annual taxes and other revenue taken from Oklahomans has increased by $1.1 billion – Oklahomans’ personal income taxes are up at least $185 million annually just since 2016.

Oklahoma government is growing. Some growth is earmarked for teachers and textbooks; other new tax and revenue dollars will go to bail out poorly operated state agencies.

While total state spending is much higher, people often look just at the appropriated budget. This fiscal year’s appropriations budget is about $6.8 billion, and next year’s will jump to more than $7.5 billion.

More than $400 million of the increase will go to teachers and classroom support. The teacher raises passed by the Legislature were even slightly more than what some teachers’ unions demanded.

Unfortunately, some of this increase in government spending will go to bail out agencies like the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH). You might remember that last fall the agency revealed it might not make payroll. Investigative reports suggest the agency had been running an illegal deficit for years.

Meanwhile, the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA) forgot to tell anyone – for years – that a change in federal policy had compromised funding for state medical schools. That state agency had been warned by the Obama and Trump administrations but did nothing until the funding finally stopped.

Lawmakers are right to require future OSDH, Mental Health, and OHCA CEOs to be subject to direct appointment by the governor. Ultimately, this will ensure greater accountability to voters.

The OHCA and OSDH put the current and upcoming budgets under unnecessary pressure. The situations are a reminder that the most important part of the Legislature’s budget process is oversight. The reason elected state legislators hold the power of the purse is that they are supposed to scrutinize government bureaucracies on behalf of the taxpayers who elect them.

Oklahoma’s Medicaid agency gets the second-largest amount of state appropriations, now $1.1 billion, with an increase this year of $113 million. State health, human services, and welfare agencies combined appropriated budget will increase $168 million and will exceed the entire amount appropriated to K-12 education for fiscal year 2017.

There is a measure this session that will reform a key part of government. Senate Joint Resolution 45 by Sen. Fields and Rep. Echols would take to the ballot a measure that would better utilize $57 million annually. The measure would allow voters to amend the Oklahoma Constitution to improve the use of future tobacco settlement payments. Currently, approximately $57 million a year is deposited into the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET). These deposits continue despite the fact the endowment now sits at $1.1 billion with annual earnings up to $40 million.

TSET funds have been used to promote bars, harass Oklahomans about their intake of juice and other sugary drinks, and distract the embattled state Health Department from its core mission. SJR 45 would require TSET to operate within its current means and redirect future settlement payments to support mental health efforts as a part of non-violent offender justice reform efforts.

For the sake of Oklahoma’s most vulnerable citizens and the recipients of other core services, it’s time for a new era of accountability and transformative reforms in these critical and expensive state agencies.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (www.ocpathink.org).

Monday, February 19, 2018

OCPA column: A Better Plan

A Better Plan
by OCPA President Jonathan Small

It’s easy for insiders to support tax increases–much easier than it is for low- and middle-income families and small businesses to pay higher taxes.

That’s why the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs has offered a revenue and reform plan. Our plan even received the endorsement of former U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn.

What’s missing from our plan? A messy income tax hike on those who can’t afford it. Included is the same $5,000 teacher pay raise that big government advocates keep using for their bait-and-switch games. It’s time to give teachers the pay raises they deserve and stop the rest of the bureaucracy from using teachers as pawns while state agencies refuse to reform.

“It’s time for the circus to end,” Sen. Coburn said, noting that “teachers, the most vulnerable, working Oklahomans, and small businesses are being held captive and will suffer damaging tax increases that will harm families and ruin future efforts for pro-growth tax reform.”

Our alternative plan would set gross production taxes to 5 percent on new wells for 36 months. It would increase cigarette taxes by 75 cents a pack. Wind tax credits would be capped at $10 million. Voters would be asked to approve shifting new settlement payments from the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust to the state’s Medicaid program, surely a worthy way to spend money earmarked for health. And, the Indian tribes would be asked to forgo $67 million in rebates on tobacco sales since they are also citizens of Oklahoma.

Those measures would pump $505.4 million into the state treasury to fund a $5,000 teacher pay raise. They wouldn’t make the tax code more complex or make revenue promises that are unlikely to materialize. And, they avoid burdening most families and working Oklahomans with more taxes.

If lawmakers are dead set on raising taxes, at least they should do it in the least damaging way. The more challenging but vital work remains: reforming and restructuring state government to prevent this annual exercise in panic budgeting from ever happening again.

We could start with rigorous audits of every state agency, questioning outcomes rather than just accounting for inputs, and by passing some real reforms like work requirements for able-bodied Medicaid recipients and allowing schools to use local revenues for top priorities like teacher pay. We should also end Oklahoma's Hollywood film handout that paid millions to Harvey Weinstein.

As Sen. Coburn said, “It’s time for politicians to do their number one job, which is tough and accountable oversight.”

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs.

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Coburn Joins Conservative Legislators in Proposing State Budget Reforms


Coburn Joins Conservative Legislators in Proposing State Budget Reforms

OKLAHOMA CITY – Several conservative Republican State Representatives today joined with former U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn in proposing a path to a teacher pay raise without a tax increase.  The statement is below.

We appreciate the members of Step Up Oklahoma for their civic leadership in addressing the issue of balancing our state budget, raising teacher pay and reforming state government processes. We share their goals. We want to provide teachers a $5,000 pay raise and are confident there will be a permanent teacher pay raise this year with or without a tax increase. We also must balance our budget, which will also happen with or without a tax increase. And, we agree with reforming state government to cut out wasteful spending.

We agree with most of the means chosen by Step Up Oklahoma to accomplish these goals: cutting wasteful subsidies to industrial wind companies; allowing the governor to appoint agency directors, and several of the other ideas furthered by Step Up Oklahoma.

We also believe that the people of Oklahoma are rightly suspicious of state government.  The Health Department scandal shows that there still is a great deal of wasteful spending, “bloat” and “mission creep,” and even corruption in state spending.

The Office of Management and Enterprise Services (OMES) has over 1,200 employees who are supposed to catch such wasteful spending and root it out, but they failed.  Recently, the whistleblower in the Health Department scandal accused former OMES Director and Gov. Fallin’s Secretary of Finance Preston Doerflinger of grand jury tampering and witness intimidation. If this is how the head of OMES treats whistleblowers, it begs the question:  how many other whistleblowers have been discouraged from bringing wasteful spending to light?

Before raising taxes on Oklahomans, we must make sure state government is spending current tax money wisely, with real performance audits.  But a bill to empower the State Auditor’s Office to conduct real performance audits on agencies was vetoed by Gov. Fallin at Doerflinger’s request.

There are many ways to balance the budget and give teachers a $5,000 pay raise, the combined cost of which is about $760 million. Just last Thursday, it was announced that state revenue is up $812.5 million over last year due to the improving economy.

Moreover, a bill held over from last year, for Medicaid audits, would remove people no longer eligible for Medicaid in Oklahoma.  This one bill would generate savings of at least $86 million, and as Arkansas’ recent experience shows, more likely up to $240 million, which savings could be applied to more efficient uses in our budget.

Cutting out corporate welfare subsidies to the wind industry, often owned by foreign companies, could generate up to $172 million annually.

Using existing funds from the Commissioners of the Land Office could also provide additional millions for a teacher pay raise, without reducing any current payments to school districts and without dipping into the current principal corpus of the School Land Trust.

The Legislature could right now afford the $760 million needed for a $5,000 teacher pay raise and balance the budget without a tax increase.

And there’s more. For each $1 allowed in the Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit, $2.58 is generated for scholarships and $1.24 is saved for the state budget, due to leveraging private donations for education. We should increase the current cap on such scholarship credits.

Up to $95 million of annual revenue from the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) is currently used on such wasteful things such as ads for smoke-free strip clubs and drag shows, and billboards against soda pop. These funds could be rerouted to more efficient uses, also.  This reform would require a vote of the people.

School districts could be allowed flexibility to use any part of their property tax revenue on teacher pay if they wished, instead of being restricted to current uses such as buildings. This reform also would require a vote of the people.

Administration costs in our state’s colleges are 70 percent higher than the national average. Reducing such administrative costs to the national average would save the state over $300 million per year.  Currently, legislators are prohibited from making such line-item appropriations to the Regents for Higher Education.  A vote of the people would be required to allow line-items on the Regents’ budget.

There are many ways to reform our education system to make sure more of our tax dollars are going to teacher pay, rather than to excessive administration and other non-teacher costs.

Bills on all these topics have been introduced this session, but are awaiting committee hearings.

“For too long, bureaucrats have grown Oklahoma state government without being audited.  The sensible reforms offered here will help raise teacher pay and right-size Oklahoma’s government without a tax increase.  Medicaid audits, eliminating corporate wind subsidies, TSET reform, and better use of funds from the Commissioners of the Land Office are common-sense proposals that are long overdue,” Coburn said.

Let’s demand performance audits on the agencies and schools and cut out the waste before we increase taxes. We can still give a $5000 pay raise to teachers and balance the budget in the meantime.

Republican Lawmakers who are a part of this plan include:

Rep. Kevin Calvey
Rep. Scott McEachin
Rep. Bobby Cleveland
Rep. Kevin West
Rep. John Bennett
Rep. George Faught
Rep. Tom Gann
Rep. Rick West
Rep. Jeff Coody
Rep. Mike Ritze

Monday, February 12, 2018

OCPA offers ‘a plan that can pass’


OCPA offers ‘a plan that can pass’

OKLAHOMA CITY (Feb. 12, 2018) — On Monday, the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (OCPA) offered a revenue plan in hopes of breaking the tax-and-budget impasse at the state Capitol.

“Oklahomans want to see teachers receive a $5,000 pay raise, but they know this can be done without unnecessarily heavy tax increases on working families and small businesses,” OCPA chairman Larry Parman said.

“Many people have asked OCPA for, in their words, ‘a plan that can pass,’ something that doesn’t raise taxes on working families, something simple that doesn’t require lawmakers to go through much gnashing of teeth from state government bureaucrats and tax consumers, but that still funds a $5,000 teacher pay raise and prevents nursing homes and other critical services from going under.”

OCPA’s “plan that can pass” includes:

  • A gross production tax increase to 5 percent for existing wells taxed at 2 percent and for all future wells for 36 months, and 7 percent thereafter—$199.5 million in new annual revenue
  • A $0.75 per pack cigarette tax increase—$121.9 million in new annual revenue
  • A cap of $10 million on the zero-emission tax credit for wind—$60 million in new annual available revenue
  • Send to Oklahoma voters a ballot measure dedicating all new tobacco settlement payments that currently go to the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) to the state’s Medicaid budget—$57 million in new annual revenue
  • Tribes in Oklahoma step up and decline to accept any future rebates from the state for the sale of cigarettes and tobacco products—at least $67 million in new annual revenue

The OCPA plan provides the revenue necessary—$505.4 million annually—to address a $5,000 pay raise for every classroom teacher in Oklahoma public schools statewide.

“It’s time to give teachers the pay raise they deserve and provide the funding for it and stop the rest of the bureaucracy from using teachers as pawns while state agencies refuse to reform,” OCPA president Jonathan Small said. “This plan, once passed, would make revenues available within 90 days. We believe this plan is the fastest way to get our teachers the raise they deserve.”

A close reading of Gov. Mary Fallin’s Fiscal Year 2019 budget, released last week, reveals that the gap between base agency appropriations and estimated certified revenue has been completely eliminated. Gov. Fallin’s budget also indicates that recurring certified revenue exceeds last year’s recurring appropriations by $59 million.

Small said that with the budget deficit now resolved for Oklahoma’s state government, it’s time to focus on a narrowly tailored package that solves the teacher pay raise challenge and doesn’t include cumbersome, damaging tax increases on working Oklahoma families.

“We acknowledge there is not currently the political will at the state Capitol to enact targeted reform of nonessential spending or to rein in the mismanagement that has taken place at state agencies like the Health Department, the Health Care Authority, and elsewhere,” Small said.

Small added that several proposals from state lawmakers this legislative session should also be approved to ensure that existing taxpayer resources are directed to areas of highest priority.

“Each legislative session should be devoted to reforming government and exploring the expenditure of every penny paid in by taxpayers,” Small said. “Unfortunately, this hasn’t happened.”

A few such proposals under consideration in the current session include:

  • A proposal to dedicate Commissioners of the Land Office funds for salary increases for teachers and other public-school personnel
  • A proposal to place on the 2018 ballot a measure allowing public schools to utilize a larger percentage of ad valorem funds for teacher and staff compensation and other classroom-related expenditures, as opposed to being restricted to facility and technology upgrades
  • A proposal to institute more thorough and frequent eligibility audits of the state’s Medicaid rolls, as has recently been done in Arkansas
  • A proposal to model successful reforms in other states by implementing work requirements for able-bodied adults to empower them and protect Oklahoma’s exploding Medicaid program for the most vulnerable
  • A proposal to end Oklahoma’s Hollywood film credit subsidy, which paid $4.6 million to Harvey Weinstein

Parman also called for a return to oversight and responsible governance.

“This plan solves the state government problem with which there is consensus and allows for a clean slate for the rest of special session and the regular session to focus on structurally reforming and transforming Oklahoma’s structurally flawed government,” Parman said. “It is a violation of the Oklahoma Standard for policymakers and government personnel to neglect their number one responsibility which is to responsibly govern and protect the most vulnerable and taxpayers.”

“Not another penny in tax increases after this package passes should be considered at least until all of Oklahoma’s top twenty appropriated agencies have thorough financial audits, thorough performance and process improvement audits, and government personnel employment structures are reformed.”


Statement from Dr. Tom Coburn:
“For nearly eight years now, the executive branch, the bureaucracy, special interests, and even some legislators have predominantly been obsessed with trying to figure out how to get more revenue out of Oklahomans or expand government’s spending role in Oklahomans’ lives. They have thwarted efforts to truly transform government so it works better with less—and now are insisting on either tax increases or even more dysfunctional government.

“Because of their false choices, and the accompanying deterioration, teachers, the most vulnerable, working Oklahomans, and small businesses are being held captive and will suffer damaging tax increases that will harm families and ruin future efforts for pro-growth tax reform.

“To prevent that damage from occurring, this proposal by OCPA provides the best way, given the unfortunate circumstances, to give hardworking teachers the pay raise they have earned, protect the most vulnerable, and protect working Oklahomans and small businesses from damaging tax increases.

“It’s time for the circus to end. This narrowly tailored package proposed by OCPA will prioritize what’s important. It’s time for politicians to do their number one job which is tough and accountable oversight. It’s a violation of the Oklahoma Standard to raise taxes on the most vulnerable, working Oklahomans and small businesses when fraud and mismanagement is occurring at the Oklahoma Health Department, the state Medicaid budget is out of control and scores of opportunities for efficiency and savings are avoided. It’s time for politicians to do the tough work of responsible fiscal governance, structural reform and transformational policy solutions that end income the failed status quo of government operation — as promised.”

BONUS: Video of the press conference is below.

Tuesday, February 06, 2018

OCPA's Small: Back to Basics


Back to Basics
by OCPA President Jonathan Small

On Feb. 5, Gov. Mary Fallin delivered her final State of the State address to open the 2018 legislative session.

For the governor in her final year in office, and for the Legislature in the second year of session, there’s plenty of unfinished business.

Gov. Fallin won her current office in 2010 on a wave of voter angst about overreach and overspending. As a member of Congress, she called for spending restraint and opposed Obamacare because it increased the power of Washington, D.C., over the lives and finances of Oklahomans.

By 2010, outgoing Gov. Brad Henry had signed two large income tax cuts. Candidate Fallin promised more: to phase out the state income tax to make Oklahoma competitive with Texas and “right-size state government.”

Tax and spending reforms turned out to be tough. Gov. Henry had cut taxes, but he increased spending thanks to high oil and natural gas prices, federal stimulus funds, and an artificially inflated economy as a result of the housing bubble. Government growth tends to be a one-way ratchet since it creates new dependents and special interests.

Gov. Fallin turned to other issues and won some victories, including workers’ compensation and tort reforms and state employee pension reforms. But with natural gas prices low, federal stimulus gone, and then crashing oil prices, the budget has come to dominate the governor’s final years in office.

With unreformed government structures and the state Health Department scandal, Gov. Fallin has an opportunity to recover one of her campaign themes: right-sizing state government. Medicaid enrollment audits, Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) reforms, ending Oklahoma’s Hollywood and film production boondoggle that paid millions to Harvey Weinstein, and initiation of performance and process improvement audits at every state agency would be a lasting legacy. She can also work to end crony capitalism for out-of-state wind energy companies and tribes selling tobacco. Pursuing these reforms will generate the savings and revenue needed to give every classroom teacher a $5,000 a year raise and protect Oklahomans.

Gov. Fallin brought together thoughtful people from across the political spectrum to create a package of criminal justice reform measures. But the hard work is getting the bills passed, and they desperately need the governor’s thoughtful support. The alternative is building new prisons over the next decade.

Finally, the Trump administration has invited states to be more innovative and accountable in managing their Medicaid programs. Here again is a chance for Gov. Fallin to deliver on a campaign theme by bringing more power back to Oklahoma while also restraining one of the fastest-growing parts of the state budget.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (www.ocpathink.org).

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

OCPA's Small: TSET Mission Creep


The Mission Creep
By OCPA President Jonathan Small

“In good times, I do think that it’s true that government is subject to ‘mission creep,’” my old boss Scott Meacham once sagely observed. “When the revenue is flowing maybe there’s a trend to drift into areas that are outside of the core mission or missions of government. What happens when things are going well is that things that are ‘nice to do’ become new programs.”

With state government spending at an all-time high, I think of that quote often.

Consider a recent report from The Oklahoman’s Brianna Bailey and Dale Denwalt. It turns out the Oklahoma State Department of Health has been shifting money around to fund programs it was never intended to fund.

“Now officials say the state Health Department faces a $30 million funding shortfall this year,” Bailey and Denwalt report. “In August, the state Health Department was forced to end an $8.5 million program with the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust that funded grants for things like lighted walking trails at city parks and school playground equipment across the state, records show.”

It’s not just the Health Department. The Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) is guilty of frivolous spending. TSET promotes smoke-free bars and nightclubs—including one that advertises to teenagers “15 and up”—and buys pricey billboard space in the metro areas for “water recipes.” Talk about a ‘mission creep.’

Sadly, this isn’t particularly surprising from a state agency with a billion-dollar endowment, $50 million in annual income from cigarette sales, $30 million-$40 million in earnings, and zero accountability to voters.

To its credit, however, TSET recently did make some healthier fiscal choices by choosing to shift some spending back to its core mission of supporting the health of the most vulnerable Oklahomans. TSET’s board voted to provide funds for senior nutrition services at the Oklahoma Department of Human Services and mobile mental health crisis teams through the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services.

That’s a trend that certainly needs to continue. I continue to recommend a vote of the people directing all future TSET payments to a rural health care infrastructure fund. The money could be used for reimbursement to rural areas that struggle with revenue stream diversity for their hospitals and have suffered actual dollar losses. It could also be used to fund the Physician Manpower Training Commission and shore up nursing home provider rates.

That’s certainly more mission-critical than promoting bars or harassing folks to drink water.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (www.ocpathink.org).

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

OCPA President comments on TSET Providing Funds to DHS and ODMHSAS

Statement from OCPA President Jonathan Small on TSET Providing Funds to DHS and ODMHSAS

After the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) Board of Directors voted Tuesday to provide funds for senior nutrition services at the Department of Human Services (DHS) and mobile mental health crisis teams for children through the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (ODMHSAS), OCPA president Jonathan Small released the following statement:

“It’s encouraging to see TSET making healthier fiscal choices by shifting some spending back to its core mission of supporting the health of our most vulnerable citizens. I certainly hope this is a trend that continues. With more than $1 billion in the bank, investment earnings of about $40 million per year, and additional income of $50 million per year from the sale of cigarettes, it’s obvious TSET offers an opportunity to shore up core services.”

Blogger's note: TSET's board voted  today to give a $1.81 million grant to DHS for senior nutrition centers and $1.27 million to ODMHSAS mobile mental health crisis teams for children.

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Drunk on cash? TSET promotes nightclubs, bars, drag shows


OCPA’s Center for Investigative Journalism revealed some shocking news this week about the spending habits of Oklahoma’s Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET). TSET is a state agency created to fund programs that help people quit smoking and help pay for the costs of smoking-related health care.

TSET was formed as a result of the state's lawsuit against tobacco companies in the 1990s, and currently sits on an endowment worth over $1 billion. It brings in and spends about $50 million every year on tobacco cessation campaigns or health issues related to tobacco use. Or rather, that's what TSET is supposed to use the money for.

These days, you often find TSET promoting drinking water instead of surgery drinks, exercising, eating fruits and vegetables... which, while good things to encourage, are not what TSET was set up to spend money on. Oh, and TSET apparently now pushes nightclubs, bars, and drag shows for teenagers -- at non-smoking locales, of course.

Because alcohol is so much better than tobacco for Oklahomans' health and safety.

From the OCPA-CIJ article (they warn that the many links in their article showing what TSET is pushing "will lead to content that some will consider offensive"):
Smoking and second-hand smoke are health risks. So are many other behaviors. But one Oklahoma state agency is so focused on opposition to smoking that it promotes bars and night clubs as long as the venues promise to be smoke free.

One promoted Oklahoma City night club specifically advertises to teenagers “15 and up” and hosts regular “drag shows.” Other boosted bars and clubs feature similarly racy fare, putting Oklahoma in the odd place of promoting alcohol and risky behaviors just because they are not accompanied by smoking.

[...]

One TSET project that is about smoking is Free The Night, which offers "promotional opportunities to smokefree bars and clubs.” TSET created the program in 2013 and spent $653,150 on it in fiscal years 2015 and 2016.

On its website and various social media pages, Free The Night promotes 35 “partners” that are “smokefree bars and clubs.” Many are traditional bars, sports bars, or dance clubs, but some of these TSET-promoted businesses offer racier fare.

One Tulsa club specializes in scantily-clad women performing burlesque shows, another recently featured male strippers, and a third is advertising “torture acts” and a “spanking booth” as part of an upcoming event. A fourth Tulsa venue specializes in programs featuring men dressed as women and hosts watch parties for “Ru Paul’s Drag Race.”

Perhaps most startling is the Oklahoma City club that TSET’s Free The Night website calls “a safe, supervised, and smokefree place to hang out” and “an exciting, different place for youth to spend their weekends.” The Free The Night site links to the club’s Facebook page, which shows that most of the programs involve men dressed, but often barely dressed, as women. With TSET’s help, the club targets teenagers, inviting people as young as 15 to attend programs like “drag 101” and making show times earlier “so our younger crowd can actually stay and see the show.” There is no upper age limit at the club.

According to a presentation last year by the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, “excessive alcohol use cost $3.08 billion [in Oklahoma] in 2010 as a result of lost workplace productivity, healthcare expenses, and crime.” Part of the Department’s mission is to provide services to the 251,000 Oklahomans who are dependent on or otherwise abusing alcohol. But while one state agency tries to combat alcohol abuse, another—TSET—actually spends state money to promote bars and nightclubs.

Read the full article, along with the aforementioned and warned links, here

From another OCPA article on the shocking program:
Beyond the hypocrisy of spending state dollars to promote shots, cocktails, and vodka infusions, consider what else those funds could buy. The state share of nursing home costs is $51.45 per day. That means TSET’s Free The Night spending could have covered the state’s share of 12,694 days of nursing home care.

TSET appears to be yet another example of a runaway government agency in need of oversight.