The Legislature took action last week to approve an issue about which I have written many times during my four years as State Representative.
Time and again I have heard from House District 31 constituents about their desire to slow the rate by which property tax assessments increase each year. Every year since I have been in the Legislature, this proposal has partially worked its way through the legislative process, only to meet a road block and become derailed.
This fact obviously does nothing to help the sense of desperation in the requests for reform from Oklahoma property owners who feel helpless and unable to respond to the increases that in some cases threaten to force families to sell their family homes. In many cases, these home owners have seen 5% increases each year for a number of years as property tax bills struggle to catch up with property tax assessments.
A senior citizen constituent visited my office once and produced a detailed spreadsheet calculating the implications of a continued 5% increase on his home assessment price over the upcoming years. He could demonstrate how, with compounded interest, the amount of his property tax would double over the next several years. His home property taxes were nearly equal to 25% of his social security income.
And even though property values are currently in a state of decline, because assessors have had to increase the price of properties in excess of the 5% cap in the past, many homeowners will likely continue to see their assessments rise by 5% even in a down economy when their personal budgets may be shrinking.
Now, you will finally have a chance to take action and let your voice be heard on this issue. By a vote of 77-16, the House of Representatives has approved House Joint Resolution 1002. HJR 1002 will allow the people of Oklahoma to vote on changing the Oklahoma Constitution to lower the state’s property tax increase cap from 5% to 3%.
This becomes one of the first state questions which the Legislature has approved to be placed on the 2012 general election ballot.
The adoption of this important reform makes this the best year for tax reform since I started in the Legislature in 2007. Earlier this year it was learned that a statutory trigger previously approved by the Legislature will be enacted and will lower the state income tax to 5.25% starting on January 1st of next year. With the property tax cap likely being reduced and the income tax also getting smaller, I believe this is the most encouraging year for Oklahoma taxpayer in the last 5 years.
You can watch the House discussion of the property tax reform proposal by visiting hd31.org/89 online.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Murphey Update: Redistricting 2011
Not that I am counting or anything, but there are now just six weeks left in this year’s legislative session.
During this time, the legislature must complete its normal set of responsibilities, in addition to developing congressional and legislative redistricting plans. This will be a unique experience for many of us. Legislative redistricting only takes place once every ten years, and since legislators can only serve 12 years due to term limits, this will be the only legislative redistricting process we will ever take part in.
It has been interesting to watch the process as it has evolved throughout the season. Early on, the careful observer could note that lawmakers were on the House floor carrying maps and consulting with the colleagues with whom they shared district borders. The process allowed representatives to draw their own draft redistricting maps and we worked with each other to suggest possible redistricting changes which balanced out the populations in our districts.
Following the creation of these first drafts, the Redistricting Committee Chairmen went to work to build their own proposals which re-shaped the current boundaries and the drafts compiled by the legislators. This is a politically charged process, because one of the foremost ways to make a legislator unhappy is to upset the composition of his/her district.
The population shifts in Oklahoma during the last ten years are almost certain to mean several of our districts will be significantly affected, and this impact will be heavily felt in the area which I represent. As rural Oklahoma fails to keep pace with the state’s population growth, the rural districts must expand in size.
For instance, the district located in the Oklahoma Panhandle must get larger. When it expands to the east and south, it will create a domino effect by pushing other legislative districts to the east. These districts may also already need to pick up new people due to population losses. The domino effect will not stop until it reaches areas like ours which have grown in size. Thus, some of the most dramatic redistricting changes could occur in our area because House District 31 sits directly on the boundary between rural and urban Oklahoma.
I believe it is important for those of us in growth areas to understand the challenge which is facing our rural colleagues and to work with them to facilitate the orderly expansion of their districts in a way that allows their districts to stay as compact as possible. The first map of these proposed changes could be made available as early as this week.
A similar map of proposed congressional district changes has already been made public and can be viewed online at www.hd31.org/83. Unlike the legislative map, the current congressional map does not contain any changes to area congressional representation and has already received the unanimous support of the House Redistricting Committee.
I will continue to provide updates about the redistricting process as it nears its conclusion in the next few weeks.
During this time, the legislature must complete its normal set of responsibilities, in addition to developing congressional and legislative redistricting plans. This will be a unique experience for many of us. Legislative redistricting only takes place once every ten years, and since legislators can only serve 12 years due to term limits, this will be the only legislative redistricting process we will ever take part in.
It has been interesting to watch the process as it has evolved throughout the season. Early on, the careful observer could note that lawmakers were on the House floor carrying maps and consulting with the colleagues with whom they shared district borders. The process allowed representatives to draw their own draft redistricting maps and we worked with each other to suggest possible redistricting changes which balanced out the populations in our districts.
Following the creation of these first drafts, the Redistricting Committee Chairmen went to work to build their own proposals which re-shaped the current boundaries and the drafts compiled by the legislators. This is a politically charged process, because one of the foremost ways to make a legislator unhappy is to upset the composition of his/her district.
The population shifts in Oklahoma during the last ten years are almost certain to mean several of our districts will be significantly affected, and this impact will be heavily felt in the area which I represent. As rural Oklahoma fails to keep pace with the state’s population growth, the rural districts must expand in size.
For instance, the district located in the Oklahoma Panhandle must get larger. When it expands to the east and south, it will create a domino effect by pushing other legislative districts to the east. These districts may also already need to pick up new people due to population losses. The domino effect will not stop until it reaches areas like ours which have grown in size. Thus, some of the most dramatic redistricting changes could occur in our area because House District 31 sits directly on the boundary between rural and urban Oklahoma.
I believe it is important for those of us in growth areas to understand the challenge which is facing our rural colleagues and to work with them to facilitate the orderly expansion of their districts in a way that allows their districts to stay as compact as possible. The first map of these proposed changes could be made available as early as this week.
A similar map of proposed congressional district changes has already been made public and can be viewed online at www.hd31.org/83. Unlike the legislative map, the current congressional map does not contain any changes to area congressional representation and has already received the unanimous support of the House Redistricting Committee.
I will continue to provide updates about the redistricting process as it nears its conclusion in the next few weeks.
Monday, April 11, 2011
The State Government Transparency Proposals
In last week’s update I wrote about a series of what I believe to be innovative transparency and accessibility enhancing reforms which are part of House Bill 1086 that I authored with state Senator Clark Jolley.
In addition to the reforms that I wrote about in last week’s update, the bill also proposes to make state governance processes open to the public.
For instance, all too often, governments embark on expensive information technology projects only to meet with delayed deadlines and implementation, cost overruns, and deliverables which do not meet the envisioned result. House Bill 1086 creates the projects.ok.gov web presence through which the public can monitor the progress of these projects. This will allow the public and policy makers to note when projects start to fall behind schedule or cost more than initially projected.
One of the challenges facing state purchasing offices is communicating with potential vendors who are interested on bidding for government business. All too often, unfortunately, a prospective vendor is uncertain about the details in the state’s request for proposal, and purchasing officials understandably do not wish to privately communicate with one particular vendor for fear of being seen prejudicing the bidding process. If the bidder’s concerns are not addressed in a pre-bid conference, he/she may price the uncertainty into the cost of the bid, thus costing state taxpayers more money. House Bill 1086 establishes a public Wiki platform through which this communication could occur in a public discourse at any time, and therefore mitigate this liability.
The bill also allows state agency-level purchasing officers to use a public Wiki platform to report items which are on a mandated state purchasing schedule and which can be found for less money off the shelf at area businesses. This will have the effect of helping centralized purchasing personnel manage state spend contracts to ensure the state’s purchasing power is properly leveraged. It will also bring transparency to the failure of centralized purchasing officers to address these situations when they arise.
While not part of the reforms in House Bill 1086, House Bill 1601 and Senate Bill 772 (authored by Representative Aaron Stiles and Senator Clark Jolley) also use technology to assist the taxpayers with accessing state government by establishing the state’s business licensing one-stop location. This is a result of a request from Governor Mary Fallin and the policy in these bills is designed to enable business owners get their licenses and permits in one convenient location. Previous state government modernization reforms placed state license and permitting processes online. These bills are now seeking to enable users to access real-time processing and a one-stop location for all of their licensing and permitting needs. This will enable business owners to spend less time dealing with the government and more time growing their businesses and creating jobs.
House Bill 1086 and Senate Bill 772 were approved by a Senate committee last week and now go before the full Senate for consideration. We will consider Senate Bill 772 in the Government Modernization Committee later this week.
In addition to the reforms that I wrote about in last week’s update, the bill also proposes to make state governance processes open to the public.
For instance, all too often, governments embark on expensive information technology projects only to meet with delayed deadlines and implementation, cost overruns, and deliverables which do not meet the envisioned result. House Bill 1086 creates the projects.ok.gov web presence through which the public can monitor the progress of these projects. This will allow the public and policy makers to note when projects start to fall behind schedule or cost more than initially projected.
One of the challenges facing state purchasing offices is communicating with potential vendors who are interested on bidding for government business. All too often, unfortunately, a prospective vendor is uncertain about the details in the state’s request for proposal, and purchasing officials understandably do not wish to privately communicate with one particular vendor for fear of being seen prejudicing the bidding process. If the bidder’s concerns are not addressed in a pre-bid conference, he/she may price the uncertainty into the cost of the bid, thus costing state taxpayers more money. House Bill 1086 establishes a public Wiki platform through which this communication could occur in a public discourse at any time, and therefore mitigate this liability.
The bill also allows state agency-level purchasing officers to use a public Wiki platform to report items which are on a mandated state purchasing schedule and which can be found for less money off the shelf at area businesses. This will have the effect of helping centralized purchasing personnel manage state spend contracts to ensure the state’s purchasing power is properly leveraged. It will also bring transparency to the failure of centralized purchasing officers to address these situations when they arise.
While not part of the reforms in House Bill 1086, House Bill 1601 and Senate Bill 772 (authored by Representative Aaron Stiles and Senator Clark Jolley) also use technology to assist the taxpayers with accessing state government by establishing the state’s business licensing one-stop location. This is a result of a request from Governor Mary Fallin and the policy in these bills is designed to enable business owners get their licenses and permits in one convenient location. Previous state government modernization reforms placed state license and permitting processes online. These bills are now seeking to enable users to access real-time processing and a one-stop location for all of their licensing and permitting needs. This will enable business owners to spend less time dealing with the government and more time growing their businesses and creating jobs.
House Bill 1086 and Senate Bill 772 were approved by a Senate committee last week and now go before the full Senate for consideration. We will consider Senate Bill 772 in the Government Modernization Committee later this week.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
HB 1086 - The 2011 Government 2.0 Proposal
During last year’s legislative session, I served as the House author for Senate Bill 1759 which was sponsored in the Senate by state Senator Anthony Sykes. Our goal was to codify what may be the first in the nation’s Government 2.0 legislation to be approved at the state level.
The bill established the data.ok.gov web portal. This site is the framework through which all kinds of government data will be pushed out to the public so they can hold government accountable. This includes government expenditures, the state payroll, tax credit transparency, and data which is commonly requested through open records requests. You can currently view these data feeds and much more at this website.
This year, I am sponsoring House Bill 1086 with state Senator Clark Jolley. This bill is designed to build on the Government 2.0 framework and make state government processes easier to review and access.
The bill will establish a web presence at the documents.ok.gov web address where citizens will be able to review and search government documents. Every year, state agencies, committees and task forces are required to publish publications containing various reports and performance data. They also generate reports showing how taxpayer savings could be realized through the implementation of reforms. These publications are initially circulated among state officials before invariably being sent to the state archives where they sit on library shelves until they are relevant for little more than historical reference. If the elected officials do not respond to these reports, they are at risk of being completely overlooked by the public and the media under this less-than transparent system.
House Bill 1086 mandates that these reports be placed online in a searchable format. This will allow members of the public to search through these reports by keyword. This was an idea initially requested by the group Oklahomans for Responsible Government (OFRG) during the last legislative interim.
Another convenience offered by HB 1086 is a web portal through which citizens can access government forms. There are likely hundreds of forms produced by government agencies, and you have probably experienced the frustration of needing to submit a form, only to embark on the major chore of looking through a labyrinth of agency web pages seeking a specific form. Forms.ok.gov would serve as a one-stop location where the public can search for a form by form number or keyword and find the document they need. This is especially important for business owners who need to focus on their business instead of trying to figure out how to navigate through complicated bureaucratic processes.
The bill also establishes a portal through which citizens can view geo-data on an overlay of the map of their choice. This resource is currently online and you can view it at hd31.org/74. The current site includes an incredible amount of useful information in one location. For example, political boundaries such as state, county, school and fire districts are denoted so that citizens can quickly learn in which political jurisdiction a property is located. The bill will make the portal the official one-stop shop for state geo-data and enable the state’s geographic information office to push state agency geo-data to the public through this site which will be made available at the maps.ok.gov web address.
The bill also allows the development of state employee performance metrics for publication on the data.ok.gov site -- the publication of public school expenditures, state revolving fund balances, and detailed state expenditure data are all included.
A number of other transparency components are included in this legislation which I plan to write about in future updates.
The bill has been approved by the House of Representatives, a Senate committee and awaits additional consideration in the Senate.
The bill established the data.ok.gov web portal. This site is the framework through which all kinds of government data will be pushed out to the public so they can hold government accountable. This includes government expenditures, the state payroll, tax credit transparency, and data which is commonly requested through open records requests. You can currently view these data feeds and much more at this website.
This year, I am sponsoring House Bill 1086 with state Senator Clark Jolley. This bill is designed to build on the Government 2.0 framework and make state government processes easier to review and access.
The bill will establish a web presence at the documents.ok.gov web address where citizens will be able to review and search government documents. Every year, state agencies, committees and task forces are required to publish publications containing various reports and performance data. They also generate reports showing how taxpayer savings could be realized through the implementation of reforms. These publications are initially circulated among state officials before invariably being sent to the state archives where they sit on library shelves until they are relevant for little more than historical reference. If the elected officials do not respond to these reports, they are at risk of being completely overlooked by the public and the media under this less-than transparent system.
House Bill 1086 mandates that these reports be placed online in a searchable format. This will allow members of the public to search through these reports by keyword. This was an idea initially requested by the group Oklahomans for Responsible Government (OFRG) during the last legislative interim.
Another convenience offered by HB 1086 is a web portal through which citizens can access government forms. There are likely hundreds of forms produced by government agencies, and you have probably experienced the frustration of needing to submit a form, only to embark on the major chore of looking through a labyrinth of agency web pages seeking a specific form. Forms.ok.gov would serve as a one-stop location where the public can search for a form by form number or keyword and find the document they need. This is especially important for business owners who need to focus on their business instead of trying to figure out how to navigate through complicated bureaucratic processes.
The bill also establishes a portal through which citizens can view geo-data on an overlay of the map of their choice. This resource is currently online and you can view it at hd31.org/74. The current site includes an incredible amount of useful information in one location. For example, political boundaries such as state, county, school and fire districts are denoted so that citizens can quickly learn in which political jurisdiction a property is located. The bill will make the portal the official one-stop shop for state geo-data and enable the state’s geographic information office to push state agency geo-data to the public through this site which will be made available at the maps.ok.gov web address.
The bill also allows the development of state employee performance metrics for publication on the data.ok.gov site -- the publication of public school expenditures, state revolving fund balances, and detailed state expenditure data are all included.
A number of other transparency components are included in this legislation which I plan to write about in future updates.
The bill has been approved by the House of Representatives, a Senate committee and awaits additional consideration in the Senate.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)