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Tulsa Human Rights Commission approves letter urging council to unify nondiscrimination language
Summary
The Human Rights Commission voted to send a letter to Tulsa City Council urging adoption of a unified human-rights ordinance that would align protections across public accommodations, housing and other city codes; commissioners approved minor amendments to clarify complaint access and offer the commission as a resource to council.
The Tulsa Human Rights Commission voted August 18 to approve a letter to the Tulsa City Council backing a proposed ordinance that would unify nondiscrimination language across public accommodations, housing and other city codes.
The motion to approve the draft — which commissioners said reflects the consensus in the commission's June discussion and the working group's recommendations — passed with a friendly set of amendments. Commissioners agreed to add brief factual language about how the commission oversees the local human-rights complaint process, and a short line saying the commission is available as a resource to councilors as they consider the ordinance.
Commissioners framed the letter as a measured step to inform council debate. Vice Chair Commissioner France described the goal as aligning “the anti-discrimination language that’s in the housing and employment and public accommodations…
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