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Committee advances broad slate of bills on parks, education, health, infrastructure and public safety

April 21, 2026 | 2026 Legislature OK, Oklahoma


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Committee advances broad slate of bills on parks, education, health, infrastructure and public safety
A House committee on Tuesday moved forward a broad package of bills covering parks funding, education, infrastructure, public safety and administrative cleanups.

Key actions and outcomes:

- SB44: Presented by Representative Fett Geter; extends a sales‑tax exemption to contractors serving nonprofits. Committee reported it do‑pass (24 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB248: Presented by Representative Cain; directs proceeds from sales/transfers/leases of tourism property to state park maintenance and capital consistent with the agency’s five‑year plan. Reported do‑pass.

- SB1360: A numeracy bill for the Department of Education (described as Pro Tem Moore’s); members questioned funding mechanics and reimbursement procedures; committee reported it do‑pass (25 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB985: Codifies the local food‑for‑schools program and authorizes ODAF to expand locally produced food in schools; reported do‑pass (26 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB1204: Requires three days of paid bereavement leave for school district employees; reported do‑pass (23 ayes, 2 nays).

- SB1239: Retains CRB internal apportionment for at‑risk bridges and shifts certain collections through Service Oklahoma; reported do‑pass (26 ayes, 0 nays).

- SB1307, SB1390, SB1400, SB1405, SB1428, SB1732, SB1832, SB1859, SB1989, SB2018 and SB1427: A mix of statutory cleanups, sunset extensions, administrative provisions, fee adjustments, and program authorizations; each was reported do‑pass, typically unanimously or with a single nay as recorded in the transcript.

Most bills drew brief sponsor presentations and limited floor questioning; several items were described as technical or non‑fiscal revisions. Where members asked substantive questions—on SB1360 funding mechanics and on SB2143’s use of aerial imagery for assessment—sponsors said details would be worked out before floor consideration.

Votes were announced by the chair and recorded in the committee staff tally for the record. Several tallies in the transcript are explicit (for example, SB44: 24 ayes, 0 nays; SB1239: 26 ayes, 0 nays). For one item (SB237 amendment) the transcript records the vote as “17 I 88,” a phrasing that is garbled in the record and flagged for confirmation with official committee minutes.

What’s next: Bills reported do‑pass will be scheduled for floor consideration where further amendment or votes may occur. The committee adjourned following the last item.

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