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Oklahoma state leaders renew pledge for budget transparency, but may end public negotiations
Oklahoma state leaders renew pledge for budget transparency, but may end public negotiations

Yahoo

time28-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Oklahoma state leaders renew pledge for budget transparency, but may end public negotiations

While the public had front row seats to the process of determining Oklahoma's budget in 2024, access may look different this year. The Oklahoma State Capitol is pictured. (Photo by Kyle Phillips/For Oklahoma Voice) OKLAHOMA CITY – Leaders of the Oklahoma House and Senate made renewed vows Thursday for transparency in determining the state budget, although the process may look different this year. Legislative leaders made major changes to the budget process for the 2024 session, including giving the public direct access to negotiations, after criticisms that it was 'too secretive.' This year, House and Senate leaders said they remain committed to transparency but these public negotiations may not continue. House Speaker Kyle Hilbert, R-Bristow, said he's had conversations and is working 'diligently' with Gov. Kevin Stitt, who has released his own budget proposal, the leader of the Senate, and the chairs of the House and Senate budget committees. 'I don't anticipate you'll see a live stream like what you saw in last year's budget negotiations,' Hilbert said. '… I don't think you'll see quite the breakdown, like what you experienced in 2024 just because the two chambers, we are working together, not to say that we agree on everything. … We're working through those discussions to figure out, really, not just what's a House priority, what's a Senate priority, but what's good for the people of Oklahoma.' In a historic move last session, the Legislature livestreamed hours of budget negotiations with most of the parties present. The budget negotiations revealed specific details about what was being discussed, along with intraparty fractures about policy and funding priorities. At times, the public watched budget talks break down. The public conversations helped give Oklahomans insight into issues facing the state that the they might not have seen otherwise. Hilbert said the House plans to continue using the House Transparency Portal, which was also launched last year, to maintain a transparent budget process. 'I don't want to get ahead of the appropriations chairs and vice chairs on how and when, because you know that that's always subject to the negotiations and where we are,' Hilbert said. 'And so I don't want to set an arbitrary date on when we would update that portal with the House position, but that's something they're working on with their members.' Senate President Pro Tem Lonnie Paxton, R-Tuttle, also said the process would look different from last year. 'Last year was the first shot out of the box on the transparency,' he said. 'We're not at all backing off of transparency. We're just trying to find the right way to do it. … I'm not sure what the 'different' is, just the fact we're trying to make it a more workable process without ever taking away the transparency and even building on that transparency.' Paxton said one improvement he has pledged to make concerns the Joint Committee on Appropriations and Budget process. He said he has promised his caucus, and now the public, that there will be a minimum of a few days' notice for the chambers to consider and figure out budget legislation before they vote on it. 'Coming up in the Senate, there was many times I voted on very large pieces of legislation that I learned about the day before,' he said. 'And if your state senator is learning about something 24 hours before you're voting on a $200 million package, that means none of you all have the opportunity to see it as well. That's not right, and that's what we're correcting.' The Governor's Office did not respond to requests for comment. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

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