Fugate votes against property tax measures, advocates for economy that works for everyone


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OKLAHOMA CITY – This week, the Oklahoma House of Representatives heard a series of bills proposing major changes to how property taxes are calculated in Oklahoma. Rep. Andy Fugate, D–Del City, voted against the measures, arguing that the bills are targeting the wrong problem.

“Yesterday the House Rules Committee heard a series of bills that change how we handle property taxes in Oklahoma,” Fugate said. “It’s clear that Oklahomans are having trouble paying their property taxes, even though the conservative U.S. Tax Foundation ranks Oklahoma’s property tax burden as 11th lowest in the nation.”

Fugate emphasized that Oklahoma’s property tax structure is not new, untested, or unusually burdensome. In fact, he noted, the property tax is the only tax that must have voter approval for every levy.

“Most of Oklahoma’s property tax structures have been in place for generations,” he said. “The problem is not how we structure our property tax. The problem is the 'Stitt Economy’ is not working for anybody in Oklahoma except those in the top one percent. Some opportunists are attempting to blame the property tax system for an affordability problem created in large part by policies that favor the wealthiest.”

Fugate pointed to recent economic indicators that paint a troubling picture for working families:

“These numbers tell the real story,” Fugate said. “Oklahomans aren’t struggling because of property taxes. They’re struggling because wages are low, costs are high, and the ‘Stitt Economy’ only works for the wealthiest among us. Changing taxes that are already approved by local voters won’t fix that. Changing a failed governor’s policies will.”

Fugate said lawmakers should focus on policies that raise wages, strengthen families, and grow the middle class, rather than reshuffling long-standing tax formulas that aren’t the source of the problem. Further, attacking high insurance costs will do more in both the short- and long-term to make homes more affordable than attacking a tax system that requires voter approval.

“Oklahomans deserve an economy that works for everyone, not just the top one percent,” he said. “Until we fix that, no amount of property tax gimmicks will make life more affordable.”

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