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Senate Health and Human Services committee advances slate of nominees, raises questions about jurisdiction and facility safety
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Summary
The committee advanced multiple board and executive nominations to the full Senate — most by unanimous committee votes — while members flagged procedural questions about congressional-district representation for board seats and discussed safety improvements at juvenile facilities.
The Oklahoma Senate Health and Human Services Committee advanced a slate of nominees to the full Senate during its final HHS meeting of the year.
Nominees approved with little or no opposition included Michael Vaughn to the Oklahoma Board of Licensed Alcohol and Drug Counselors (committee recorded 12 ayes, 0 nays), Tina Frazier to the State Board of Licensed Social Workers (12–0), Dr. Tanya Martin and Dr. Edgar M. Boyd to the Board of Examiners for Speech‑Language Pathology and Audiology (each 12–0), Dr. Christopher Thurman to a health‑workforce role (12–0), home‑inspector reappointments Samuel Hallbrick (transcript uses both “Harbrick” and “Hallbrick”) and Robert Whip Jr. (each 12–0), and Dr. Gabriel Pittman to the State Board of Health (12–0). The committee advanced Sharon (Shell) Millington to serve as director of the Office of Juvenile Affairs by 10 ayes, 0 nays after questions about facility security.
Several procedural and oversight points surfaced during the hearing. Committee members asked why home‑inspector appointments were appearing before HHS; the chair explained late filing of nominations required vetting by the committee to get nominees to the Senate floor. The chair also clarified a statutory residency limit: no more than two members of a given board may be residents of the same congressional district at the time of appointment, though the statute does not require each district be represented.
On juvenile‑justice issues, nominee Sharon Millington described steps taken to address staff and youth safety at the secure treatment facility in Tecumseh, including bringing in a crisis response team, increasing pay for direct‑care staff and adopting nationally recognized de‑escalation/restraint training. Senator Higgs pressed for details on local law‑enforcement partnerships; Millington praised cooperation with the Pottawatomie County Sheriff’s Office and local police.
What’s next: Each confirmed nominee will proceed to the full Senate for a final confirmation vote. Committee staff will clarify congressional‑district representation for certain boards before floor consideration, and several presenters offered to supply follow‑up details at the committee’s request.
