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Week In Review

For the week of Monday, March 9, 1998 - Thursday, March 12, 1998

(Most of the work in the Legislature occurred on the floors of the House and Senate as workers rushed to beat the March 12th deadline for passing bills out of their house of origin. The next deadline is March 26th. It requires committees to take action on bills of the opposite house.)

 

Monday, March 9th
  • Governor Keating signed HJR 1093, placing a one-year moratorium on the licensing of hog feeding facilities. Legislative leaders are hoping to rescind the moratorium later this session when comprehensive hog and poultry regulations are approved. Meanwhile, the special joint legislative committee on animal waste met to continue work on the substantive legislation.

  • The Senate approved SB 793 by Senator Lewis Long which proposes a $60 million reduction of the state unemployment tax. The legislation would also increase benefits for unemployed workers.

  • The Senate approved SB 1120 by Sen. Ged Wright. The legislation would provide a sales tax exemption on certain purchases to private golf courses which are open to the public.

  • The Senate approved SB 997 which would allow sexual assault victims to assume pseudonyms in certain court documents in an effort to protect their privacy rights. The legislation by Sen. Sam Helton requires the District Attorneys Council to develop and distribute a special pseudonym form to law enforcement agencies.

  • The Senate approved legislation prohibiting the transfer of chamber loaded firearms in a vehicle on a public roadway. SB 1049 also requires any person carrying a firearm in a vehicle to immediately make its presence known if detained by a peace officer.

  • The Senate approved SB 1129 which would create an uninsured motorist identification database program to be administered by the Department of Public Safety. The legislation would help track and verify motorists who had not complied with the compulsory liability insurance requirements.

  • The Senate approved SB 1137 which would require the State Historical Society to establish an Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History in observance of the state centennial in 2007.

  • The House Public Health Committee approved the so-called optometrists bill. SB 1192 would allow optometrists to perform certain kinds of laser surgery which had been struck down in a recent lawsuit.

  • The House approved a bill revamping travel procedures for state officials and employees. HB 2602 by Rep. Russ Roach would require that frequent flyer credits got to state agencies, not employees for personal use. He contends the legislation would save up to $6 million a year.

 

Tuesday, March 10th
  • The Senate approved SB 1175 which would implement new regulations on animal feeding operations in Oklahoma. The measure focuses primarily on swine farms and is a companion bill to another piece of legislation focusing on the chicken industry. Among other things, SB 1175 would address standards for waste lagoon construction, watershed analysis and odor abatement, increased setback requirements and an indemnity fund for waste clean up. Senate author Paul Muegge said he believes the one-year moratorium on hog farms could be lifted after the latest measure is enacted. Meanwhile, a special joint committee on animal feeding operations continued its deliberations on recommendations issued by a gubernatorial task force.

  • The Senate approved SB 1426 which would revamp the higher education system in Tulsa. The legislation by Sen. Charles Ford would make OU and OSU the lead universities there, create a graduate research center in Tulsa and make Rogers University a four-year school in Claremore. The Senate has already approved legislation authorizing a freestanding, four-year school in Tulsa.

  • The House approved the so-called optometrist bill, sending it to the Governor for his signature. The legislation would allow optometrists to perform certain types of laser surgery, a practice which had been struck down by a recent court decision.

  • The House approved HB 3207 which would allow companies to claim of portion of their job training expenses as a credit on their state income tax returns.

  • The House approved HB 2532 which would require state agencies to allow employees to submit proposals for improving agency operations before contracting to privatize such a function.

  • The House approved HB 2533 which would add the executive director of the Oklahoma Public Employees to the OSEEGIB board.

  • The House approved HB 2975 which would permit municipalities to remove weeds on agricultural property if they presented a traffic hazard.

 

Wednesday, March 11th
  • The Senate approved SCR 50, a concurrent resolution which addresses the recent intervention of the federal courts into state tax issues. The move is in line with other states which have are petitioning Congress for a constitutional amendment that would prohibit federal courts from ordering the state to levy or increase taxes.

  • The Senate approved SB 984 which would create an exemption from county and municipal inspection fees for rural water districts and non-profit corporations.

  • The Senate approved SB 832 creating the Telemedicine Advisory Council.

  • Acting on information obtained through an Open Records Act request, Senator Lewis Long accused the State Regents for Higher Education of circumventing the open meetings and open records acts in their drafting of a Tulsa higher education plan. The Regents held closed door meetings at a private office building and a ranch near Guymon to formulate a proposed shake-up at Rogers University in Tulsa. According to their internal memos, they also directed that public documents be kept "confidential" during the process. Senator Long is seeking an explanation.

  • The House approved a bill which would prohibit partial birth abortions in Oklahoma. Under HB 2542, physicians who perform such a procedure could be fined $10,000 or imprisoned for up to two years, unless it is done to save the life of the mother. The measure passed 98-0.

  • The House approved the so-called "Assisted Suicide Prevention Act." HB 2440 would allow family members and other to seek injunctive relief against any person who is believed to be about to violate a state law prohibiting suicide.

 

Thursday, March 12th
  • The House approved a replacement measure for the "truth-in-sentencing" measure approved by last year's Legislature. The latest proposal would authorize prison time for more crimes than the original law and no longer restrict judges to a complex sentencing matrix to determine prison terms. It would delay implementation of truth-in-sentencing until January of 1999. The new law is supposed to go into effect in July. House leaders have not revealed the price tag of their latest proposal, but it is expected to cost more than $200 million to implement.

 

Other News
  • Two national, non-partisan organizations gave Oklahoma low tax rankings. According to the National Conference for State Legislatures, Oklahoma ranks 42nd in per capita state and local tax burden and 37th in tax burden as a percent of personal income. NCSL said Oklahoma was "a low tax state by national standards."

    The Washington, DC-based Tax Foundation, meanwhile, ranked Oklahoma 45th in per capita tax burden and 41st in tax burden per $1,000 of personal income. The latter rankings were used more current data than NCSL.

  • Statewide employment increased by almost 3 percent in January. According to the Oklahoma State Employment Commission, the state added 39,200 new jobs from January of '97 to January of '98. Oklahoma City and Tulsa accounted for 24,500 of those jobs.

  • State revenue collections were down during the month of February, 9.2 percent below official estimates. The Office of State Finance blamed the decline on expedited tax refunds.