Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows
Committee advances a slate of sunset extensions and approves education rules
Loading...
Summary
The Administrative Rules Committee quickly advanced multiple sunset‑extension bills for boards and advisory committees and approved Department of Education rules (HJR 1088); most bills passed unanimously or by large margins.
The Administrative Rules Committee cleared a series of routine sunset‑extension measures and a rules approval resolution during a single session.
Representative Lowe presented Senate Bill 17‑21 to extend the sunset for the Oklahoma Advisory Council on Indian Education to July 1, 2029, and require appointees to represent tribes or tribal education; the committee adopted the bill and the clerk announced 10 ayes, 0 nays.
Representative Hall presented Senate Bill 14‑33 to require agencies to publish guidance documents alongside statements that the guidance lacks the force of law; the committee adopted the measure with a recorded 12 ayes, 0 nays. Chair/vice‑chair led the committee through additional sunset extensions, including SB 12‑80 (apportionments of the excise tax on oil and gas), SB 14‑55 (board of governors for architects, landscape architects and interior designers), SB 14‑56 (boards of tests for alcohol and drug influences), SB 14‑59 (Oklahoma Abstractors Board), SB 14‑63 (polygraph examiners), SB 14‑65 (board for professional engineers and surveyors) and SB 14‑66 (advisory committee on midwifery). Most of the bills passed unanimously or nearly unanimously; for example, the clerk recorded 13 ayes and 0 nays for SB 12‑80 and 12 ayes, 0 nays for SB 14‑65. SB 14‑61 (OETA) passed on a recorded 7 ayes, 5 nays.
The committee also approved HJR 1088, a resolution accepting rules proposed by the Department of Education and related education agencies; the vote was recorded as 11 ayes, 1 nay. After covering the sunset slate and rules, Representative Kendricks reviewed remaining bundles to be scheduled (business and commerce; energy and agriculture; health‑related bundle including the Health Care Authority, Department of Health and Department of Human Services) and adjourned the meeting.
Votes at a glance (as announced in committee):
- SB 17‑21 (Oklahoma Advisory Council on Indian Education) — 10 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑33 (guidance documents disclosure) — 12 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 13‑16 (administrative‑rules rotating review) — committee recommendation to pass (see separate article) - SB 12‑80 (excise tax apportionments on oil & gas) — 13 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑55 (board of governors: architects/landscape architects/interior designers) — 12 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑56 (boards of tests for alcohol and drug influences) — 12 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑57 (construction industries board) — 11 ayes, 1 nay — advanced - SB 14‑59 (Oklahoma Abstractors Board) — 12 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑61 (OETA) — 7 ayes, 5 nays — advanced - SB 14‑63 (polygraph examiners board) — 12 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑65 (engineers and surveyors licensure) — 12 ayes, 0 nays — advanced - SB 14‑66 (advisory committee on midwifery) — 10 ayes, 2 nays — advanced - HJR 1088 (approval of Department of Education rules) — 11 ayes, 1 nay — advanced
Representative Kendricks said the committee expects to run additional bundles and major rule resolutions in one or more brief meetings over the next one to two weeks.
