Committee advances a package of bills on economic incentives, business filings and professional licensure
Loading...
Summary
The committee heard and cleared multiple bills, including HB 12 77 on job-search rules, bills easing real-estate touring rules and removing a sunset on enterprise-zone incentives, updates to corporate law, an interstate compact for athletic trainers, and business-registration and LLC technical changes. Vote tallies are included where recorded.
The committee heard a sequence of bills and cleared them for the next stage of the legislative process.
Key actions recorded in the transcript:
• HB 12 77 — Presented by Representative Hill as an update relating to OESC and job-search expectations (urban examples: 10–12 searches/week; rural: about 3). The committee voted 8–0 to pass the measure.
• SB 12 17 — An OREC-request bill presented by Representative Osborne to allow prospective buyers to tour homes without signing a contract. Representative Bransett raised concerns about potential conflicts with the DOJ/NAR settlement and the risk of steering. The committee passed the bill, recorded as 7–1.
• SB 18 26 — Presented by Representative Osborne to eliminate the sunset on the Oklahoma Enterprise Zone Incentive Leverage Act; passed 8–0 in committee.
• SB 18 24 — Representative Banning described updates to Oklahoma's General Corporation Act (mirror language to House Bill 3498); passed 8–0.
• SB 18 13 — Described by Representative Ford as an interstate compact enabling mobility for licensed athletic trainers while preserving state regulatory authority; recorded as passing with one nay (7–1).
• SB 13 26 — Representative Hall presented updates to self-storage facility law; committee recorded the bill as passed (7–0 recorded in the transcript).
• SB 19 37 — The Taxpayer Dollars Protect Workers Act (see separate article). After extended debate, the bill passed the committee 5–2.
• SB 16 41 — Representative Straum asked that LLC articles of organization filed with the secretary of state include an email address; the committee cleared the bill to pass. The transcript's roll-call text for the vote is unclear and the tally is not specified.
Several of the bills were passed with unanimous or near-unanimous support and little debate; SB 19 37 drew the most discussion and was the only item in the transcript with extended exchanges and explicit industry concern. The committee adjourned after the last item.
