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Senate Health and Human Services Committee advances broad package of bills, including birth certificate clarification and medical‑marijuana edible limits
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Summary
The committee advanced a series of bills on April 21, moving bills on early childhood, birth‑certificate rules, death‑certificate corrections, medical‑marijuana edible restrictions, mentoring programs, juvenile safety plans and multiple DHS and health measures; most measures passed largely without extended debate.
The Oklahoma Senate Health and Human Services Committee advanced a slate of bills covering health, child‑welfare and administrative matters during its session.
Notable actions - Nomination: The committee advanced the governor’s nominee, Christie Fisher of Norman, to the Board of Examiners for Speech‑Language Pathology and Audiology for a three‑year term (08/17/2029). The nominee spoke of family experience with speech therapy and the shortage of adult speech services; the committee recorded 8 ayes and 2 nays.
- House Bill 1225: Senator Bergstrom presented HB 1225 to clarify that Oklahoma law prohibits gender‑identity amendments on birth certificates; sponsor said the language responds to current litigation and was drafted with the Attorney General’s office. Senators asked how many Oklahomans would be affected and whether the Department of Vital Records had been consulted; the sponsor said the bill clarifies existing law, is not expected to change impact, and had no fiscal effect. The committee advanced the bill 9–3.
- House Bill 3931: HB 3931 (death‑certificate corrections) was advanced 12–0; sponsor said it would allow corrections beyond one year with appropriate documentation and was brought at the request of a funeral director to address a constituent case.
- House Bill 4454: HB 4454 would add packaging and content restrictions on medical‑marijuana edible products to make them less attractive to children; the sponsor cited increased calls to the Oklahoma Poison Center and associated emergency cases. The committee passed the bill 12–0.
- Other bills advanced without extensive debate: HB 1979 (early childhood task force, advanced 11–0), HB 3849 (mentoring children of incarcerated parents, 12–0), HB 1746 (juvenile safety plans, 12–0), HB 3720/HB 3722 (local food sales threshold change, amendment adopted, 12–0), HB 4275 (case managers and peer specialists employment flexibility, 12–0), HB 4300 (DHS technical clarifications for childcare, 12–0), and a package of bills presented by Senator Stanley including Medicaid reimbursement for cognitive assessments and juvenile‑detention medication funding (various roll calls recorded; most unanimous or near‑unanimous).
Procedural notes and next steps: Most measures the committee advanced will proceed to further legislative stages (additional committee referrals or floor consideration). Where roll‑call tallies were recorded, the clerk’s counts are noted above. The chair said additional executive nominations remain to be scheduled and adjourned the committee.
Details about votes and motions are drawn from committee roll calls and sponsor explanations as presented at the hearing; fiscal impacts were generally reported as none by sponsors where mentioned.
