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Senate advances and passes a slate of bills on education, regulation and veterans programs
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Summary
The Oklahoma Senate on April 15 advanced and passed numerous bills on final reading, including measures extending a school cellphone ban, restricting nitrous oxide sales to minors, joining a federal scholarship tax-credit program and a package to inventory agency rules.
The Oklahoma State Senate on April 15 advanced and passed a large group of measures covering education, public safety, taxation and administrative rules.
On education policy, House Bill 1276, which extends a prohibition on cell phones in K–12 classrooms after a one-year trial, passed 41–5 after senators cited improved classroom engagement and enforcement experience. Senator Seifried, the bill sponsor, told colleagues the trial produced 'positive effects' in districts that adopted and enforced the policy.
Public-safety legislation included House Bill 1933, sponsored by Senator Weaver, to prohibit sales of certain recreational nitrous oxide products to people under 18. Weaver framed the bill as "common-sense" legislation following a teen death in the Tecumseh area; family members of that case were recognized in the gallery during the session.
On taxation and education funding, House Bill 3704 authorizes Oklahoma to participate in a new federal tax-credit program for contributions to scholarship-granting organizations. Sponsors explained the Tax Commission would administer the state implementation; Minority Leader Kurt pressed for safeguards and accountability during a lengthy question-and-answer exchange. Senators were told federal rules prevent taking a federal tax credit and a full charitable deduction for the same contribution.
Other bills passed included measures to extend the Oklahoma Advisory Council on Indian Education (House Bill 3006), create a Route 66 centennial specialty license plate (House Bill 3147), expand veterans-related donation options on state tax returns (House Bill 3044), and require agencies to inventory and justify administrative rules (House Bill 4319). Several bills were advanced and passed as emergency measures, allowing immediate effect.
Votes at a glance (selected): - Senate Bill 2184 (duplicate sections/statutory cleanup): passed 46–0 and declared an emergency measure. - House Bill 1276 (classroom cellphone prohibition): passed 41–5; emergency measure. - House Bill 1933 (nitrous oxide sales restrictions): passed 45–0. - House Bill 3704 (participation in federal scholarship tax-credit program): passed 38–8. - House Bill 4319 (agency rule authority and inventory): passed 46–0.
The Senate recessed and adjourned to 9:30 a.m. on Thursday, April 16.
