OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — With six weeks left in the 2014 session, behind-the-scenes negotiations among the House, Senate and governor's office are ramping up on how to plug a $188 million hole in the budget and fund education, public safety and child welfare. The problem is a lack of revenue to appropriate on a growing list of priorities for all three sides that includes increased funding for common education, pay raises for some state workers and more money to fund the Pinnacle Plan, a series of sweeping child-welfare reforms within the Department of Human Services. The estimated increase in the cost of benefits for public school teachers and support personnel is about $60 million, while pay hikes for some of the lowest-paid state workers comes with an annual price tag of about $35 million or more. Sen.