2020 Senate District Boundaries
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2019 Sleg Day54.Pdf
1313 Senate Journal First Regular Session of the Fifty-seventh Legislature of the State of Oklahoma Fifty-fourth Legislative Day, Wednesday, May 8, 2019 The Senate was called to order by Senator Stanislawski. Roll Call: Present: Allen, Bergstrom, Bice, Boggs, Boren, Brooks, Bullard, Coleman, Dahm, Daniels, David, Dossett, Dugger, Floyd, Hall, Haste, Hicks, Howard, Ikley-Freeman, Jech, Kidd, Kirt, Leewright, Matthews, McCortney, Montgomery, Murdock, Newhouse, Paxton, Pederson, Pemberton, Pugh, Quinn, Rader, Rosino, Scott, Sharp, Shaw, Silk, Simpson, Smalley, Standridge, Stanislawski, Stanley, Thompson, Treat, Weaver and Young.—48. Senator Stanislawski declared a quorum present. The prayer was offered by Pastor Jeremy Freeman, First Baptist Church, Newcastle, the guest of Senator Scott. INTRODUCTION Senator Silk introduced his daughter, Isabelle, to the Senate. REPORT OF ENGROSSED AND ENROLLED MEASURES SBs 30, 89, 92, 184, 251, 400, 740, 742, 811, 815, 844, 885, 975 and 1038 were each correctly enrolled and after fourth reading, properly signed and ordered transmitted to the Honorable House for signature of the Speaker. PENDING CONSIDERATION OF HAs HAs to SBs 508, 510, 511 and 701 were rejected upon motion of Senator David, conference requested, and Senate conferees to be named later. 1314 Senate Journal PENDING CONSIDERATION OF HAs HAs to SB 135 were concurred in upon motion of Senator Simpson. SB 135, as amended by the Honorable House, was read at length. On the question of passage of the bill and emergency, the vote resulted as follows: Aye: Allen, Bergstrom, Bice, Boggs, Boren, Brooks, Bullard, Dahm, Daniels, David, Dossett, Dugger, Floyd, Hall, Haste, Hicks, Howard, Ikley-Freeman, Jech, Kidd, Kirt, Leewright, Matthews, McCortney, Montgomery, Murdock, Newhouse, Pederson, Pemberton, Pugh, Quinn, Rader, Rosino, Scott, Sharp, Shaw, Silk, Simpson, Smalley, Standridge, Stanislawski, Thompson, Weaver and Young.--44. -
2020 Legislative Toolkit
2020 LEGISLATIVE TOOLKIT Oklahoma Primary Care Association OKLAHOMA COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS STATEWIDE OVERVIEW 21 health centers in Oklahoma operate 110+ locations across the state WHAT ARE COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS? Community health centers (CHCs), also known as Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) or health centers, are non-profit health care providers that deliver comprehensive primary health care services to medically underserved communities. To best serve their patients, many health centers offer a one-stop-shop of integrated services under one roof like medical, dental, behavioral, vision, transportation, case management, and more. The health center program provides health care to over 28 million individuals in the United States. Health centers have long been a bipartisan solution to concerns about health care access, quality, and cost. Health centers treat all patients regardless of ability to pay. In Oklahoma, where many families and individuals lack access to primary care, health centers provide much-needed cost-effective and preventive services and save the health care system money by preventing expensive, avoidable emergency department visits and chronic illnesses. Health centers use sliding fee scales based on patients’ income, have after-hours coverage, meet extensive performance and accountability requirements, and are governed by patient-majority boards that reflect the communities they serve. From Afton to Guymon and Hollis to Idabel, community health centers create jobs and save lives in every corner of our state. -
Oklahoma State Senate Handout.Mxd
Oklahoma Senate Districts & Member Contact Information 57th Oklahoma Legislature Cimarron Texas Beaver Harper Ottawa Woods Grant Kay Nowata Craig 27 Alfalfa 19 10 29 1 Osage Washington Woodward District Senator Party Capitol Phone Room # District Senator Party Capitol Phone Room # Garfield Noble Rogers 1 Micheal Bergstrom R (405) 521-5561 426 25 Joe Newhouse R (405) 521-5675 414 Mayes Delaware 2Marty Quinn R (405) 521-5555 419 26 Darcy Jech R (405) 521-5545 417 Major Pawnee 34 3 Wayne Shaw R (405) 521-5574 233 27 Casey Murdock R (405) 521-5626 430 Ellis 2 4 Mark Allen R (405) 521-5576 234 28 Vacant 11 5 Joseph Silk R (405) 521-5614 416 29 Julie Daniels R (405) 521-5634 415 Payne Tulsa 37 39 6 David Bullard R (405) 521-5586 443 30 Julia Kirt D (405) 521-5636 514.2 20 35 36 7 Larry Boggs R (405) 521-5604 530 31 Chris Kidd R (405) 521-5563 427 Dewey 3 8 Roger Thompson R (405) 521-5588 537 32 John Michael Montgomery R (405) 521-5567 529.1 21 Kingfisher 25 Wagoner 9 Dewayne Pemberton R (405) 521-5533 429 33 Nathan Dahm R (405) 521-5551 526 33 Blaine Logan 12 Cherokee 10 Bill Coleman R (405) 521-5581 432 34 J.J. Dossett D (405) 521-5566 515.1 18 Adair 11 Kevin Matthews D (405) 521-5598 516 35 Gary Stanislawski R (405) 521-5624 431 Creek 12 James Leewright R (405) 521-5528 425 36 John Haste R (405) 521-5602 445 Roger Mills 13 Greg McCortney R (405) 521-5541 528.2 37 Allison Ikley-Freeman D (405) 521-5600 524 Lincoln Custer 26 22 Okmulgee 14 Frank Simpson R (405) 521-5607 527 38 Brent Howard R (405) 521-5612 536 41 Muskogee 9 15 Rob Standridge -
New Legislators for 2019 Session
New Legislators for 2019 Session District Incumbent New Legislator HD 02 John Bennett (R – Sallisaw) Jim Olsen (R – Roland) HD 03 Rick West (R – Heavener) Lundy Kiger (R – Poteau) HD 06 Chuck Hoskin (D – Vinita) Rusty Cornwell (R – Vinita) HD 10 Travis Dunlap (R – Bartlesville) Judd Strom (R – Copan) HD 11 Earl Sears (R – Bartlesville) Derrel Fincher (R – Bartlesville) HD 14 George Faught (R – Muskogee) Chris Sneed (R – Fort Gibson) HD 15 Ed Cannady (D – Porum) Randy Randleman (R – Eufala) HD 17 Brian Renegar (D – McAlester) Jim Grego (R – Wilburton) HD 18 Donnie Condit (D – McAlester) David Smith (R – McAlester) HD 20 Bobby Cleveland (R – Slaughterville) Sherrie Conley (R – Newcastle) HD 24 Steve Kouplen (D – Beggs) Logan Phillips (R – Mounds) HD 25 Todd Thomsen (R – Ada) Ronny Johns (R – Ada) HD 27 Josh Cockroft (R – Tecumseh) Danny Sterling (R – Tecumseh) HD 31 Jason Murphey (R – Guthrie) Garry Mize (R – Edmond) HD 33 Greg Babinec (R – Cushing) John Talley (R – Stillwater) HD 34 Cory Williams (D – Stillwater) Trish Ranson (D – Stillwater) HD 35 Dennis Casey (R – Morrison) Ty Burns (R – Morrison) HD 37 Steve Vaughan (R – Ponca City) Ken Luttrell (R – Ponca City) HD 41 John Enns (R – Enid) Denise Crosswhite-Hader (R – Yukon) HD 42 Tim Downing (R – Purcell) Cynthia Roe (R – Lindsay) HD 43 John Paul Jordan (R – Yukon) Jay Steagall (R – Yukon) HD 45 Claudia Griffith (D – Norman) Merleyn Bell (D – Norman) HD 47 Leslie Osborn (R – Mustang) Brian Hill (R – Mustang) HD 48 Pat Ownbey (R – Ardmore) Tammy Townley (R – Ardmore) HD 61 Casey Murdock -
Meeting Notice
Oklahoma State Senate 2300 N. Lincoln Blvd. • Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105 • (405) 524-0126 http://www.oksenate.gov REV ISED MEETING NOTICE October 10, 2019 COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION SUBJECT: First Meeting MEETING DATE: Thursday, October 17, 2019 MEETING TIME: 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. LOCATION: Room 535, State Capitol Building Agenda: 1. 9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. - IS 19-68, Senator Gary Stanislawski, Study on Personalized Learning: Designing an education system where every student succeeds a. Susan Patrick, president and chief executive officer, iNACOL b. Brent Bushey, executive director, Oklahoma Public School Resource Center c. Renee Dove, superintendent, Okmulgee Public Schools d. Chris McAdoo, principal, Santa Fe South Pathways Middle College e. Howard Stephenson, former Utah state senator, Upstart 2. 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. - IS 19-67, Senator Gary Stanislawski, Study on State Public Common School Building Equalization Fund a. Micah Ann Wixom, policy analyst, Education Commission of the States b. Carolyn Thompson, chief of government affairs, State Department of Education c. Shawn Hime, executive director, Oklahoma State School Boards Association d. Brent Bushey, executive director, Oklahoma Public School Resource Center e. Chris Brewster, superintendent, Santa Fe South Public Schools 3. Other Business. Education Committee Members: Study Requested By: Senate Staff: Senator Gary Stanislawski, Chair Senator Gary Stanislawski for 19-67 Erin Boeckman, Legislative Analyst Senator Joe Newhouse, Vice-Chair and 19-68 Chris Turner, Attorney Senator David Bullard Leigh Garrison, Fiscal Analyst Senator JJ Dossett Kaycee Valencia, Admin. Assist. Senator Tom Dugger Senator John Haste Senator Carri Hicks Senator Allison Ikley-Freeman Senator Chris Kidd Senator Roland Pederson Senator Dewayne Pemberton Senator Marty Quinn Senator Paul Scott Senator Wayne Shaw Senator Jason Smalley . -
2019-2020 PAC Contributions
2019-2020 Election Cycle Contributions State Candidate or Committee Name Party -District Total Amount ALABAMA Sen. Candidate Thomas Tuberville R $5,000 Rep. Candidate Jerry Carl R-01 $2,500 Rep. Michael Rogers R-03 $1,500 Rep. Gary Palmer R-06 $1,500 Rep. Terri Sewell D-07 $10,000 ALASKA Sen. Dan Sullivan R $3,800 Rep. Donald Young R-At-Large $7,500 ARIZONA Sen. Martha McSally R $10,000 Rep. Andy Biggs R-05 $5,000 Rep. David Schweikert R-06 $6,500 ARKANSAS Sen. Thomas Cotton R $7,500 Rep. Rick Crawford R-01 $2,500 Rep. French Hill R-02 $9,000 Rep. Steve Womack R-03 $2,500 Rep. Bruce Westerman R-04 $7,500 St. Sen. Ben Hester R-01 $750 St. Sen. Jim Hendren R-02 $750 St. Sen. Lance Eads R-07 $750 St. Sen. Milton Hickey R-11 $1,500 St. Sen. Bruce Maloch D-12 $750 St. Sen. Alan Clark R-13 $750 St. Sen. Breanne Davis R-16 $500 St. Sen. John Cooper R-21 $750 St. Sen. David Wallace R-22 $500 St. Sen. Ronald Caldwell R-23 $750 St. Sen. Stephanie Flowers D-25 $750 St. Sen. Eddie Cheatham D-26 $750 St. Sen. Trent Garner R-27 $750 St. Sen. Ricky Hill R-29 $500 St. Sen. Jane English R-34 $1,500 St. Rep. Lane Jean R-02 $500 St. Rep. Danny Watson R-03 $500 St. Rep. DeAnn Vaught R-04 $500 St. Rep. David Fielding D-05 $500 St. Rep. Matthew Shepherd R-06 $1,000 St. -
2020 Sine Die Complete Document
2020 Sine Die Presented by the Oklahoma Municipal League The Oklahoma Municipal League 201 N.E. 23rd Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73105 (405) 528-7515 or (800) 324-6651 www.oml.org June 2020 © 2020 Oklahoma Municipal League, Inc. Published by the Oklahoma Municipal League, Inc. June 2020 Managing Editor: Mike Fina Contributing Writers: Sue Ann Nicely, Jodi Lewis, Missy Kemp © 2020 Oklahoma Municipal League, Inc. SINE DIE TABLE OF CONTENTS Letter from the Director ........................................................................................................................................................... i The Legislative Department ................................................................................................................................................... iii Sine Die – Report Format ........................................................................................................................................................ v Bill Number Index by Effective Date...................................................................................................................................... vii Bills That May Impact Municipal Departments ....................................................................................................................... 1 2020 Legislative Session Overview .......................................................................................................................................... 6 Effective Date of Bills Summary ............................................................................................................................................. -
Oklahoma Policy Review 2017 • Volume 2
Oklahoma Policy Review 2017 • Volume 2 Sponsored by: Education 4 Agriculture 28 Oklahoma’s ESSA Compliance Faces Opposition ���������������������������������������������������5 Impacts of the 2018 Farm Bill On Oklahoma ���������������������������������������������������29 Energy 7 Infrastructure 31 Eliminating Credits and Expanding Access: Paving with a Plan ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������32 Oklahoma’s Equal Opportunity Approach to Energy ���������������������������������������������8 Elections 34 Judiciary 10 Taxation without Representation: Special Elections and Empty Seats �����������35 The Political and Financial Cost of Criminal Justice Reform ������������������������������ 11 Health Care 37 Tribal Affairs 13 Oklahoma’s Vaccine Policy: Why Oklahomans May Be at Risk �������������������������38 Anti-Protest Legislation: The Conflict Between Energy, Environment and Cultural Interests �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 14 Human Services 40 The Effects of Preemptive Measures in The Oklahoma Children’s Code �����������41 Regulatory Affairs 17 The Benefits and Criticisms of Family Leave Mandates ������������������������������������� 18 Budget & Finance 43 The Budget Cycle Continues ������������������������������������������������������������������������������44 Public Safety 20 A Vote on the Emergency: The Dangers and Short Term Solutions Regarding Public Safety Funding ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� -
2020 Legislative Review
2020 Legislative Review Signed into law Budget SB 1922 is the general appropriations bill which appropriates money to all state agencies. Key takeaways for the FY 2021 Budget: State Aid Appropriation – Decrease of 4.58% ($110.8 million); Flexible Benefit Allowance (FBA) – Increase of 6.5% ($32.8 million); Public School Activities- $101 million (No Change); FY 2021 Common Education Budget – Decrease of 2.55% ($78.2 million); Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority Revolving Fund- $30 million transfer to the 1017 fund; FY 2021 Career Tech Budget- Decrease of 3.8%, excluding FBA. HB 4153 outlines how the state Education Department can spend part of the education budget, also known as a “limits” bill. You may see the breakdown HERE. Key takeaways from the bill: • Reading Sufficiency Act will be reduced $1 million, from $12 million to $11 million; • Alternative education funding will be reduced $1 million, from $11 million to $10 million; • Imagine Math is added as a new $1 million line-item. HB 3964 by Rep. Chad Caldwell, R-Enid, and Sen. Gary Stanislawski, R-Tulsa, waives the penalty for the fiscal year that begins July 1, 2019 (FY 2020) for school districts that exceed their statutorily allowed general fund carryover balances. Effective 7/1/2020 SB 1925 by Sen. Roger Thompson, R-Okemah, and Rep. Kevin Wallace, R-Wellston, increases the 2020 budget limits for education. Specifically: payroll, salaries or wages, including tax- sheltered deferment contracts and longevity payments authorized by state statutes from $16,246,097 to $17,042,565; professional and personal services contracts from $70 million to $78,164,577; other operating funds from$2,984,704,957 to $2,988,368,227; expenditure of federal funds from $700 million to $760 million; for a TOTAL INCREASE IN FUNDS from $3,770,951,054 to $3,843,575,369. -
LEGISLATIVE ISSUES REPORT Legislation, Lobbying Advocacy Jennifer James Mccollum, APR Public Relations & Community Development
LEGISLATIVE ISSUES REPORT Legislation, Lobbying Advocacy Jennifer James McCollum, APR Public Relations & Community Development MAY 2018 BUDGET RECAP 2nd SESSION, 56th LEGISLATURE BUDGET RECAP • HB 1010xx | $420 million revenue-raising bill passed during the special session: • Gross Production tax on oil and gas wells goes up from 2 to 5 percent at a $170 million cost to the industry • Motor fuel will cost $.03 more per gallon • Cigarettes will go up $1 per pack • Will pay for teacher, support staff and state employee raises • HB 1011 | Revenue, Taxation • Prohibits taxpayers from claiming $17,000+ in itemized deductions, raising approximately $94 million a year • Larger Internet sellers, such as Amazon, must now collect and remit sales taxes from third-party vendors, raising approximately $20 million a year 2nd SESSION, 56th LEGISLATURE BUDGET RECAP • HB 1086 | Capital Gains • Failed to Pass; Would have ended Oklahoma’s capital gains deduction, raising $100 million revenue for the state • SB 888 | Wind • Bill to create a new gross production tax on wind energy and eliminate paying out refunds on tax credits failed • HB 1024 | State Employees • State employees will receive their first raise in about a decade. Pay increases will range from $700 to $2,000 • State employees wanted a $7,500 across-the-board increase over three years 2nd SESSION, 56th LEGISLATURE BUDGET RECAP • Public Education: Budget now $2.4 billion • Teachers will receive an average increase of $6,000 starting this fall • Schools will share $52 million for support staff raises, $33 million for textbooks and $17 million for general school funding Source • SB 1115 to reduce class sizes, and SB 1104 to prevent lunch shaming failed REPEAL of HB 1010xx REFERENDUM • Definition: A direct vote in which the electorate votes on a particular proposal. -
Ally, the Okla- Homa Story, (University of Oklahoma Press 1978), and Oklahoma: a History of Five Centuries (University of Oklahoma Press 1989)
Oklahoma History 750 The following information was excerpted from the work of Arrell Morgan Gibson, specifically, The Okla- homa Story, (University of Oklahoma Press 1978), and Oklahoma: A History of Five Centuries (University of Oklahoma Press 1989). Oklahoma: A History of the Sooner State (University of Oklahoma Press 1964) by Edwin C. McReynolds was also used, along with Muriel Wright’s A Guide to the Indian Tribes of Oklahoma (University of Oklahoma Press 1951), and Don G. Wyckoff’s Oklahoma Archeology: A 1981 Perspective (Uni- versity of Oklahoma, Archeological Survey 1981). • Additional information was provided by Jenk Jones Jr., Tulsa • David Hampton, Tulsa • Office of Archives and Records, Oklahoma Department of Librar- ies • Oklahoma Historical Society. Guide to Oklahoma Museums by David C. Hunt (University of Oklahoma Press, 1981) was used as a reference. 751 A Brief History of Oklahoma The Prehistoric Age Substantial evidence exists to demonstrate the first people were in Oklahoma approximately 11,000 years ago and more than 550 generations of Native Americans have lived here. More than 10,000 prehistoric sites are recorded for the state, and they are estimated to represent about 10 percent of the actual number, according to archaeologist Don G. Wyckoff. Some of these sites pertain to the lives of Oklahoma’s original settlers—the Wichita and Caddo, and perhaps such relative latecomers as the Kiowa Apache, Osage, Kiowa, and Comanche. All of these sites comprise an invaluable resource for learning about Oklahoma’s remarkable and diverse The Clovis people lived Native American heritage. in Oklahoma at the Given the distribution and ages of studies sites, Okla- homa was widely inhabited during prehistory. -
Journal Header of Some Sort
1083 Senate Journal Second Regular Session of the Fifty-fifth Legislature of the State of Oklahoma Sixty-sixth Legislative Day, Wednesday, May 25, 2016 The Senate was called to order by Senator Fields. Roll Call: Present: Allen, Anderson, Barrington, Bass, Bice, Bingman, Boggs, Brecheen, Brooks, Brown, Crain, Dahm, David, Dossett, Fields, Floyd, Ford, Fry, Griffin, Halligan, Holt, Jech, Jolley, Justice, Loveless, Marlatt, Matthews, Mazzei, Newberry, Paddack, Pittman, Quinn, Schulz, Sharp, Shaw, Shortey, Silk, Simpson, Smalley, Sparks, Standridge, Stanislawski, Sykes, Thompson, Treat, Wyrick and Yen.—47. Excused: Garrison.—1. Senator Fields declared a quorum present. The prayer was offered by Pastor Dwayne Case, Northeast Church of Christ, Oklahoma City, the guest of Senator Pittman. UNANIMOUS CONSENT REQUEST MOTION TO RECONSIDER VOTES Senator Schulz asked unanimous consent, which was granted, to suspend the provisions of Rule 8-32A to allow motions to reconsider votes be disposed of on the same day such notice is served. 1084 Senate Journal PENDING CONSIDERATION OF JCR The JCR on SB 1616 was adopted upon motion of Senator Jolley. SB 1616 was read at length. On the question of passage of the bill, the vote resulted as follows: Aye: Allen, Barrington, Bice, Bingman, Boggs, Crain, Dahm, David, Fields, Ford, Fry, Griffin, Holt, Jech, Jolley, Justice, Marlatt, Newberry, Quinn, Schulz, Sharp, Shaw, Simpson, Smalley, Standridge, Stanislawski, Sykes, Thompson, Treat and Yen.--30. Nay: Anderson, Brecheen, Brooks, Brown, Dossett, Floyd, Halligan, Loveless, Matthews, Mazzei, Paddack, Pittman, Shortey, Silk, Sparks and Wyrick.--16. Excused: Bass and Garrison.--2. The bill passed. SB 1616 was referred for engrossment. PENDING CONSIDERATION OF HAs HAs to SB 1577 were concurred in upon motion of Senator Bingman.