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Committee advances more than a dozen bills, including measures on juvenile staffing, elector oaths and sheriff commissary funds

April 14, 2026 | 2026 Legislature OK, Oklahoma


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Committee advances more than a dozen bills, including measures on juvenile staffing, elector oaths and sheriff commissary funds
The General Government Committee heard and advanced a large docket of Senate bills in a single session, moving a mix of administrative, public-safety and education-related measures to the next stage.

Highlights from the session:
- SB 18-05 (Office of Juvenile Affairs request): Prohibits juvenile detention facilities, group homes and post-adjudication treatment programs from using temporary staffing services that were found not to be subject to open-records requests; committee voted 'do pass' (recorded 13 ayes, 1 nay) and declared the bill due passed.

- SB 14-91 (presidential electors): Specifies that a replacement elector takes the same oath as other electors; members asked whether penalties exist for 'faithless electors' and the presenter said she was not aware of a penalty; committee voted 'do pass' (recorded 10 ayes, 4 nays).

- SB 21-18 (sheriff commissary funds): Authorizes sheriffs to use abandoned commissary funds (uncashed checks, unused debit balances) for departmental needs similar to existing phone-money practices; sponsor said the measure mirrors current practice; committee voted 'do pass' (recorded 13 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB 12-65: Extends municipality ordinance publication deadlines from 15 to 30 days; committee voted 'do pass' (13 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB 2,154: Requires cities to notify lien holders with outstanding maintenance balances to enable lien resolution; committee voted 'do pass' (13 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB 21-74 (amended): Recreated the Fire Marshal Commission with membership changes to add business and restaurant representatives; committee voted 15 ayes, 0 nays on the amended bill.

- SB 17-75: Local-control measure related to traffic enforcement and so-called speed traps; committee voted 16 ayes, 0 nays.

Several other bills listed on the agenda were laid over or advanced without extensive debate; the chair warned many bills remain and scheduled additional committee time for the following days. Most measures were declared "due passed" and will move toward floor consideration as the session progresses.

The meeting concluded with scheduling notes and adjournment.

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