MAKE US YOUR HOMEPAGE | Sunday, November 22, 2009 | WIRELESS CONTACT US | SUBSCRIBER SERVICES | SIGN IN SIGN OUT | MY PROFILE PAGE | MY ACCOUNT

Home > News > Article

Newspaper View Newspaper View      Print this story Print      Email this story Email      Comment Comment      RSS RSS     
Share      Bookmark Bookmark

Trickery about petition alleged

State Rep. Jabar Shumate, D-Tulsa, talks with Regina Goodwin after a Monday press conference at which Shumate criticized an initiative-petition campaign. CORY YOUNG / Tulsa World
 
By RANDY KREHBIEL World Staff Writer
Published: 11/6/2007  1:40 AM
Last Modified: 11/6/2007  1:40 AM

Two area lawmakers say its circulators are deliberately misleading people about its intent.

Two Tulsa-area legislators said Monday that deceptive tactics are being used to gather signatures on an initiative petition that they say targets affirmative action.

Backers of the petition have said it is "anti-preference" but not anti-affirmative action.

"What this is about is fear and hate and misleading information," Rep. Jabar Shumate said Monday morning at a news conference at the Church of the Living God, 1559 E. Reading St.

Shumate said a petition drive worker approached him and "asked if I wanted to end discrimination in government employment," and then offered him a signature sheet.

"When I asked to see more information, she hurried off," he said.

His constituents have told him similar stories, Shumate said, leading him to believe that the campaign's workers are trying to get black people to sign the petition by misrepresenting its intent.

The petition, filed by W. Devin Resides, an Oklahoma City lawyer, acting in conjunction with the California-based American Civil Rights Institute, would place on a statewide ballot an amendment to Oklahoma's Constitution.

The amendment would prohibit preferences in state government based on race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin.

Shumate and others at the news conference, including state Sen. Judy Eason-McIntyre, D-Tulsa,

said the measure's real purpose is to disrupt state government's equal opportunity efforts and to energize conservative voters.

Resides could not be reached Monday for comment.

State officials said when the petition was filed in September that the state has no hiring or contracting preferences.

"We don't have quotas in Oklahoma," Shumate said Monday. "What we do have are excellent equal-opportunity policies."

Shumate said those policies allow state government to evaluate its hiring policies.

The petition's circulators have until Dec. 10 to collect 138,970 signatures.

Shumate said he will introduce legislation next session to tighten disclosure requirements for initiative petitions and allow residents to remove their names from petitions they've signed.


Randy Krehbiel 581-8365
randy.krehbiel@tulsaworld.com


MODERN INITIATIVE-PETITION CONTROVERSIES

1982: Voters approve parimutuel horse racing. A previous effort in 1974 had failed.

1984: County option liquor-by-the- drink approved after two previous efforts failed.

1990: Voters reject an initiative petition to repeal House Bill 1017, an education tax and reform effort. Voters also approve a petition for legislative term limits.

1992: Voters approve an initiative petition to limit the ability of the Legislature to raise taxes.

1994: Voters reject a lottery petition pushed by Gov. David Walters. The same year, voters approve a petition to limit the number of years anyone can serve in Congress. The U.S. Supreme Court later nullified the rule.

1996: Voters reject an initiative petition that would have rolled back property taxes.

2001: Circulators abandon a petition effort to make English the state’s official language.

2002: Voters approve an initiative petition to ban cockfighting. The petition had taken years to survive court challenges.

2005: Voters reject an initiative petition that would have raised fuel taxes for road projects.

2006: A petition dubbed the Taxpayer Bill of Rights is killed by the state Supreme Court. The court rejected many signatures because they were obtained by out-of-state circulators. Also, a petition effort to raise the state’s minimum wage failed to get enough signatures.

2007: The Oklahoma Supreme Court kills an initiative petition that would require 65 percent of education funding to be spent in classrooms. The court said short written descriptions at the top of each signature page did not fairly describe the proposal.

By RANDY KREHBIEL World Staff Writer

Newspaper View Newspaper View      Print this story Print      Email this story Email      Comment Comment      RSS RSS     
Share      Bookmark Bookmark

Reader Comments
       Add your comment

9 comments have been made on this story so far. Tell us what you think below!

Report Comment Reporting Comments

If you see a comment that violates our terms and conditions, please help us by clicking the "Report this Comment" link next to a comment. That will alert the web staff to review the comment. Thank you.  -- Web Editor Jason Collington
 
 
Report Comment
The Oracle, Tulsa (11/6/2007 6:02:06 AM)
To be fair,remove all references to race in hiring practices.
Report Comment
BJ, Tulsa (11/6/2007 6:51:26 AM)
Remove race and gender.

Here's a novel idea.... How about hire by abilities.

Report Comment
Scott, (11/6/2007 9:23:38 AM)
I was approached to sign this a couple weeks ago. There was no trickery involved. When someone says "Affirmative Action," we may conjure up biases and make snap judgements. Presenting the problem with a slightly different wording is justifiable.
Report Comment
whyno, non (11/6/2007 9:26:38 AM)
In an ideal world, guys. Not in this one. Perhaps entities could have boards, represented by multiple races and both genders, who would make the final hiring decisions. Or perhaps materials such as transcripts and certificates could be identified by a number only - nothing by which the person, race or gender could be identified until that person is actually hired. Of course, each time the document is used, it will have to be assigned a different number. Or perhaps all qualified applicants could be subject to a drawing, like a lottery. No computer - just a real, old fashioned draw from the hopper.
Report Comment
Rob, Tulsa (11/6/2007 9:37:55 AM)
I saw a guy standing in front of the Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market on Peoria this weekend confronting every shopper that came out of the store. He gave some brief sales pitch that sounded good. I told him I didn't want to sign anything that I didn't fully understand, but I watched as about 5 other people come out and sign his paper before he'd even finished his pitch. Thus, the signatures are unreliable as they clearly had no idea what they were signing or what the petition was really about. Come on people, don't sign something just because some guy is pressuring you unless you fully understand what you're signing. This is the kind of thing that confuses the political process.
Report Comment
pt, tulsa (11/6/2007 12:24:50 PM)
Anybody who signs anything without chking what its about is a fool.

oh, thats what many of our congressmen do (both parties, though demo's tend to do it a lot more0.

Report Comment
lucy bahle, Oklahoma City (11/6/2007 2:17:23 PM)
I get weary of those thinking Oklahoma voters are too stupid to know what is going on. Every cycle the same old rhetoric. How can someone say this is about fear, hate ect. This is about putting an issue to a vote that people of both genders and many races believe in. Don't like it....get your friends to register to vote and go vote. Decline to sign??? Same old liberal group and slogan that challenges issues all the time. What they really want is to kill the initiative process. The end of the article lists past petitions and there successes. Some pass, others don't. Thank God we have checks and balances!
Report Comment
Jeremy Good, Tulsa (11/7/2007 10:30:47 PM)
The TW seeks to discredit common sense again. Affirmative Action is racism and it promotes the same negative race policies it pretends to address. Only racists consider race. Oklahoma would be well served to remove any and all 'diversity' and 'minority' language from all legislation. The effort to control our country through 'oppressed' minorities has become ridiculous. This petition would be a positive step in returning sanity to our government.
Report Comment
Joseph Paulk, Tulsa (11/10/2007 10:13:54 AM)
I read the petition, liked what I read and then signed it. There was no pressure nor "deceptive tactics" involved.
 

 
Add Your Comment 
In order to post a comment on this article, you must sign in to Tulsaworld.com. If you do not have a site account, you can create an account for free.

 
  
Post Your Comment
 


Most Popular Stories
Comments made yesterday 1,932
Total Comments 897,391
Register to make reader comments

Most Popular Stories




Tulsa World

Home | About Tulsa World | Advertise With Us | Privacy | Usage Agreement | FAQ and Help | Contact Us | Today's Headlines
Copyright © 2009, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved.




Advanced Search