Attorney Chris Howard presented a proposal proposing a narrowly tailored statute to allow the Oklahoma Commission on Children and Youth to intervene in deprived‑child cases for specified purposes when a child’s legal representation or the court process fails to protect the child’s best interest. Howard framed the change as a form of insurance for children who otherwise have no effective recourse in rare, high‑risk cases.
Howard told the commission he has reviewed appellate activity and concluded that only about two‑thirds of appeals include an advocate brief filed on a child’s behalf in some jurisdictions and that representation outside major counties can fall short; he cited examples where failure to file adequate briefs affected permanency outcomes. He argued OCCY could be given narrow, time‑sensitive authority to intervene in a small number of cases or to lift systemic issues that affect many children.
Several commissioners and agency leaders expressed reservations. Some said OCCY’s current statutory mandate does not include serving as a party in litigation and that adding such duties would require clear statutory amendments, legislative support and resources. Others worried about workload, the burden of reviewing appeals or cases across all counties, and the potential for adding parties to already complex dockets. Several commissioners suggested limited pilot approaches, referral pathways, stronger accountability for existing child‑representation systems, or partnerships with DA offices and non‑profit child‑advocacy attorneys rather than adding OCCY as a party.
Howard said he viewed the change as a narrowly used tool that would be invoked rarely, but commissioners did not reach consensus and asked staff and stakeholders to study the issue further. The commission did not take a formal vote to request legislation at the Sept. 1 meeting.