Cantrell: Budget; public education funding

Image
  • Cantrell
    Cantrell
Body

It’s hard to believe we only have one more week of regular session. Over the past several weeks, w e ’ ve been considering Senate amendments to House bills. If bills are amended in the opposite chamber, they must return to their chamber of origin for a vote to accept or reject the changes.

If amendments are rejected, the bills have one final possibility to advance in the current session – through the conference committee process. This is where members from both the House and Senate committees where the bills were initially considered to gather to approve or disapprove the final language. Many measures die at this crossroads, but a few survive.

Now, if the governor veto’s a bill and we want to override it, we must first make a motion to consider a veto override on a House bill; then, we can ask questions or debate. It must pass by a 2/3 vote unless the bill has an emergency, which requires a three-fourths vote. If it passes the House, it goes over to the Senate, where they repeat the process. If both chambers override it with a 2/3 vote, it becomes law.

The Oklahoma Constitution states that the Legislature’s regular session shall be “adjourned sine die not later than five p.m. on the last Friday in May of each year.” However, lawmakers in the House and Senate have called for a concurrent special session that will begin meeting this week. The concurrent special session will allow us to finalize this year’s budget and meet after the constitutional adjournment date of May 26 if needed.

Inthemeantime,theLegislature is continuing to work on the state budget. In late February, the state Board of Equalization certified revenue of about $12.6 billion to appropriate for FY2024. Now, that’s a significant figure; however, we have plenty of needs in the state to meet.

The legislatively-appropriated budgettakesmonthstoprepareand isbasedoninputfromdozensofpublic legislative budget hearings, the governor’s executive budget proposals, hundreds of publicly available agency budgets and requests, and all citizens through their elected representatives, who each serve on