A pair of bills aimed to lower prescription drug costs for Oklahomans cleared a legislative hurdle today, said Senator Tom Adelson.
Adelson, A Democrat from Tulsa and author of the two measures, said the vote was an important step forward in the battle to reduce prescription drug costs.
read more. The State Senate has approved a bill to provide Oklahoma nursing homes with postings of sex offender notifications. Senator Debbe Leftwich is principal author of the SB 870. Leftwich said the bill was designed to give families greater peace of mind.
The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Military and Veterans Affairs, Senator Randy Bass, said a bill providing a $250,000 life insurance policy for Oklahoma guard members cleared another legislative hurdle today as it passed out of the Senate with bi-partisan support.
read more. The second phase of a study of women inmates in Oklahoma has just been released by the Commission on Children and Youth. The study focused on women inmates with children.
Senator Debbe Leftwich was principal author of SJR 48, which called for the study. Leftwich said while not surprising, the findings were nothing short of “disturbing.”
A Democratic proposal that will cut taxes by $402 million over the next four years won approval in the State Senate Wednesday.
The Helping Oklahomans Prosper Economically proposal is targeted to benefit working families, retirees and small business, said Senator Jay Paul Gumm, author of the proposal.
"This isn't another tax cut for the rich. HOPE cuts taxes the most for the people who can afford them the least," said Gumm, a Democrat from Durant.
State Senator Debbe Leftwich, D-OKC has won full Senate approval for a measure that would ban campaign contributions inside the State Capitol. Leftwich said the measure passed unanimously.
“I think this is an important day for ethics in Oklahoma. I am very happy that everyone in the chamber agreed that this is the right thing to do,” Leftwich said.
A measure that would have required candidates for office to pickup their campaign signs along state road and highway right-of-ways with 15 days of an election failed in the State Senate Wednesday morning.
“The state spends $4 million a year picking up trash on roadsides. State lawmakers, other elected officials and candidates shouldn’t be contributing to that problem,” said Senator Kenneth Corn, author of Senate Bill 603.
“I am thrilled that Speaker Hiett has agreed to serve as House author of Senate Bill 745, which contains the Higher Education bond package created by the presidents of the state’s colleges and universities.
“He has promised to grant the bill a hearing the House. As House author, he has the ability to move it through the process quickly and send it to Governor Henry’s desk with the same unanimous support it received in the Senate.
“As part of an agreement with Speaker Hiett, I have also signed on as author of his Higher Education bond proposal.
A measure that would close a loophole that allowed a former Republican lawmaker to receive his legislative salary while locked up in jail is one step closer to becoming a law.
Senate Joint Resolution 5, by Senator Jay Paul Gumm, easily cleared the Senate Tuesday on a unanimous 45-0 vote. The measure was forwarded to the House of Representatives.
The resolution would give Oklahoma voters a chance to put in the state constitution language that prevents any state legislator from being paid while locked up on a misdemeanor conviction.
A bill to require an alphanumeric sequence rather than computer-generated numbers for Oklahoma driver licenses or identification cards has won Senate approval. Sen. Clark Jolley is principal author of the measure.
“If you look at an Oklahoma driver’s license and a Social Security number, you can’t distinguish the two. Since numerous businesses now require your driver license number for financial transactions, I believe it is imperative that we are able to simply glance at the number and be able to distinguish it from a Social Security number,” explained Jolley, R-Edmond