Oklahoma has about $500 million its rainy day fund coffers. Does it have to be raining to tap the fund & fix the state capitol building and complete construction of the American Indian Cultural Center Museum in OKC--the state owns this project & should finish it. We're in jeopardy of losing the $40 million in private donations & pledges already collected to match the state's portions. It's costly to let this center remain unfinished as costs to secure the site accumulates each year.
American Indian Cultural Center & Museum (AICCM)
Oklahoma City
Our city is experiencing an important phase of growth; this is not the time to stagnate that growth.
The rainy day fund has accumulated as a result of cuts, shifts, exchanges & transfers over the years to valuable programs like education. A percentage of funds the state receives from the state lottery & the Indian gaming casinos goes toward education. Once the Indian casinos & state lottery were approved; Oklahoma cut the general education funds earmarked for education replacing some of it with revenue taxes collected from the casinos & the state lottery. Does anyone know where we rank in this region (Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, Texas, Arkansas, New Mexico) among states in per pupil funding for education?
Compare States Education Spending for 2014 - Charts
"Oklahoma City looks oh-so pretty... ...as I get my kicks on Route 66." --Nat King Cole.
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