Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-19
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: David Bullard Justin Humphrey David Smith David Hardin Tom Gann Rick West Randy Grellner Derrick Hildebrant
1
1
1
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-02
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: Jim Olsen Gabe Woolley
1
1
1
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-24
Author: Jim Olsen
Co-sponsors: Warren Hamilton
1
1
1
1
This legislation would legalize citizens to carry firearms on a vessel on Oklahoma lakes and waterways. This is to clean up language in an antiquated section of law before there was concealed carry. OKGOP platform is clear on protecting our 2nd amendment rights.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-12
Author: Jim Olsen
Co-sponsors: Lisa Standridge Jared Deck
1
1
1
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1
YES!! Thank you!!! "C. No public bodies nor members, officers, or staff of a public body, nor any law enforcement officer or security personnel present at a public meeting shall prohibit a person attending a public meeting may record from recording the proceedings of said meeting by videotape, audiotape, or by any other method; providing, however, such recording shall not interfere with the conduct of the meeting. Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 304 and 309 of this title, the Oklahoma Legislature shall be considered a public body solely for the purposes of this subsection, and legislative committee meetings shall be considered public meetings solely for the purposes of this subsection unless the committee meeting is confidential or lawfully closed to the public. D. In addition to the civil penalties described in subsection B of Section 314 of this title, any person who was unlawfully Req. No. 13996 Page 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 prohibited from recording a public meeting in accordance with this section may bring a civil suit for monetary damages.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Neil Hays
1
1
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-18
Author: Brad Boles
Co-sponsors: Grant Green Rusty Cornwell Mark Chapman Derrick Hildebrant Clay Staires Mike Dobrinski Ally Seifried Amanda Clinton Mickey Dollens Max Wolfley
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Civil Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: Jim Olsen Molly Jenkins
1
1
1
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1
This should be a no-brainer.
If public officials are working for the people, they should never be silenced by nondisclosure agreements about their official duties.
HB 3030 simply says:
This bill:
It does not interfere with:
If lawmakers believe in:
HB 3030 should pass unanimously.
Any opposition to this bill raises a simple question:
What are they trying to hide?
Bill needs to pass!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Criminal Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: Nick Archer Jim Olsen
1
1
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HB 3036 would reduce certain statutory restrictions on where handguns may be carried in Oklahoma by deleting those restrictions from state law.
Law-abiding gun owners are not the problem.
Removes restrictions for carrying handguns on certain property. This bill is an OK2A bill. OKGOP platform is clear on protecting our 2nd amendment rights.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-17
Pending: 🏛 Energy and Natural Resources Oversight 📅 2026-02-25 at 09:00
Author: David Hardin
Co-sponsors: Tom Woods Jim Olsen Rob Hall Chris Sneed
1
1
1
1
1
1
This is long overdue. A good bill.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Molly Jenkins
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Justin Humphrey
1
1
1
1
1
directing the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food, and Forestry to not require livestock to have certain tags; directing the Department to plan
compacts with other states to allow the sale of livestock without certain tags.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-09
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Nick Archer
Co-sponsors: Jonathan Wilk
1
1
1
1
1
Yes, Need to amend to also ban sale of cultivated MILK.
A. For the purposes of this section, the term "cultivated meat" means a meat or meat product that was produced from cultured animal tissue produced from in vitro animal cell cultures outside of the animal from which the cells were derived. B. 1. It shall be unlawful for any person to manufacture, sell, hold or offer for sale, or distribute any cultivated meat product in this state.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Justin Humphrey
Co-sponsors: Chris Sneed
1
1
1
1
1
Requiring all state agencies and public schools to only purchase Oklahoma beef.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-17
Author: Rob Hall
1
1
Great bill!!! (FYI: I liked your other one even better, increasing limits to $1,000.000 plus, but this one is great too!!!)
Current limits on sales of lelss than $75,000 just keeps people from actually growing their business and being able to make a decent living. This is much needed legislation. THANK YOU!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-11
Author: Amanda Clinton
Co-sponsors: Kendal Sacchieri Cyndi Munson Mickey Dollens Andy Fugate Melissa Provenzano Trish Ranson Annie Menz Ellyn Hefner Arturo Alonso-Sandoval Ronald Stewart Ellen Pogemiller Aletia Timmons John Waldron
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1
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1
Directing the OCC to conduct a comprehensive study of“large load” electricity users, examining impacts on:
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-12
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Amanda Clinton
1
1
Would task the Oklahoma Corporation Commission with maintaining a list of all large data centers in the state, including how much electricity and water they use annually. No state agency currently tracks that information.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
1
1
1
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HB 3723 would shift approval power for certain large green energy projects to local elected officials — and potentially local voters — before those projects can be built.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Utilities 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: David Smith Mickey Dollens
1
1
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1
THIS BILL IS CRITICAL
Great: Protects ratepayers from paying for increased power due to high demand facilities
Great: Requires water usage assessment and limits overusage of water from high demand facilities
Great: Prohibits high demand facilities on agricultural land
Great: Prohibits foreign ownership of high demand facilities
Great: Gives local citizens initiative and referendum petition power as provided for by the Oklahoma Constitution
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Business 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: Dusty Deevers George Burns
1
1
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Transportation 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
1
1
1
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Civil Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: David Smith
1
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HB 3727 would bar local governments from spending public dollars on lobbyists, especially former legislators.
The goal is to keep taxpayer funds focused on core services and limit the influence of paid lobbyists using public funds.
An Act relating to lobbying regulation; prohibiting political subdivisions from spending public funds on hiring a lobbyist or paying a nonprofit state association or organization that hires lobbyists.
Yes, please add former members cannot be appointed to positions in Government for 6 years.
"Beginning on January 1, 2027, no former member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives or the Oklahoma State Senate may work or register as a lobbyist until six (6) years after their last term has expired. Former members of the Legislature who have become registered lobbyists prior to January 1, 2027, shall not be eligible for renewal of their registration until six (6) years after their last term has expired."
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Appropriations and Budget Finance Subcommittee 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Tom Gann
1
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Protects property rights
YES!!!! "NEW LAW A new section of law to be codified in the Oklahoma Statutes as Section 22 of Title 31, unless there is created a duplication in numbering, reads as follows: A. Triggering Condition. The provisions of this section shall take effect only upon certification by the Secretary of State that State Question 842 has been approved by the voters. B. Unconditional Ownership Established. 1. Ownership of owner-occupied residential real property in this state shall be absolute and unconditional, subject only to: a. voluntary conveyance, Req. No. 14524 Page 3 b. eminent domain exercised in accordance with constitutional requirements, c. judicial foreclosure arising from voluntary private debt, or d. enforcement of criminal forfeiture pursuant to a final conviction. 2. No state agency, political subdivision, or taxing authority shall treat residential real property ownership as conditional upon payment of any tax, fee, assessment, or charge not expressly authorized by the Oklahoma Constitution. C. Prohibition on Indirect Forfeiture. No governmental entity shall: 1. Impose any substitute tax, assessment, service charge, lien, penalty, or fee that functions to: a. encumber title, b. condition possession, c. compel forfeiture, d. authorize sale for nonpayment, or e. circumvent the elimination of residential ad valorem taxation. 2. Recharacterize property taxes as fees, special assessments, utility surcharges, or occupancy charges for the purpose of enforcing collection through lien or sale. D. Limits on Government Remedies. Req. No. 14524 Page 4 For owner-occupied residential real property: 1. No lien shall attach for nonpayment of any governmental charge unless: a. expressly authorized by the Oklahoma Constitution, and b. unrelated to the former ad valorem taxation of residential property. 2. No forced sale, eviction, or dispossession shall occur based solely on failure to pay a governmental charge arising after the effective date of this section. E. Private Rights Preserved. Nothing in this section shall impair: 1. Voluntary contractual obligations entered into by the owner; 2. Mortgage, deed of trust, or consensual lien rights; 3. Homeowners' association covenants voluntarily accepted by the owner. SECTION 3. NEW LAW A new section of law to be codified in the Oklahoma Statutes as Section 23 of Title 31, unless there is created a duplication in numbering, reads as follows: A. Any owner aggrieved by a violation of this act shall have standing to seek: 1. Declaratory relief; 2. Injunctive relief; 3. Quiet title; 4. Recovery of reasonable attorney fees and costs. Req. No. 14524 Page 5 B. Sovereign or governmental immunity is waived to the extent necessary to enforce this section. SECTION 4. The provisions of this act are severable and if any part or provision shall be held void the decision of the court so holding shall not affect or impair any of the remaining parts or provisions of this act."
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-04
Author: Tom Gann
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1
No foreign government adversary, state-owned enterprise
(SOE), entity, or trust in which a foreign government adversary or
SOE is a beneficial owner shall acquire, hold, or control any
covered land in this state.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Tom Gann
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Under Gann’s proposal, the Legislature and all committees, conference committees, task forces and working groups would be required to:
Also requires lawmakers to file a Lobbyist Impact Statement if they have received campaign contributions, gifts or other benefits from lobbyists connected to legislation they sponsor and mandates that legislators disclose any nondisclosure agreements they sign, and any agreement restricting communication with constituents or legislative deliberation would be void.
Supports openness and transparency in procedural processes
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Tom Gann
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1
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1
"The board shall maintain its records pursuant to the Oklahoma Open Records Act, except those records which are considered private or confidential, and shall post such records on the water district's website if applicable."
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Transportation 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Annie Menz
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-11
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Clay Staires
1
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Government Modernization and Technology 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Mark Chapman
1
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1
Requires companies to decommission data centers within one year once facilities are no longer in use. This decommissioning would include removing all buildings and equipment, disposing of hazardous materials and environmental restoration of the land.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Appropriations and Budget 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Kyle Hilbert
1
1
This should be an emergency bill, and the "in operation" date should be July 2026. Also, if any facility collects federal or state subsidies to build, then they should not receive the tax exemptions.
Amends a 22 page bill passed in 2025 regarding exemption from ad valorem taxation for manufacturing facilities and data centers for 5 years as long as they are "operational" by 1/1/27. The OKGOP platform states we support sunset laws, zero-based budgeting and performance audits to justify government programs.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Gabe Woolley
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1
This should include anyone 65 or older whether or not they have a mortgage on their home. In this day and age, there are many senior citizens that may still carry indebtedness.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Dana Prieto
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1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Economic Development, Workforce and Tourism 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Kendal Sacchieri
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I support SB 1215 because it strengthens transparency when state tax dollars or incentives are used, while still recognizing that private businesses have legitimate proprietary information that should not be exposed. To fully protect both taxpayers and good-faith businesses, the bill would benefit from clearer limits on what qualifies as “proprietary,” clearer guidance on how disclosure decisions are made, and a simple safeguard to prevent nondisclosure from being used to hide the basic use of public funds. These clarifications improve fairness and trust without changing the bill’s intent.
1) Clarify the Boundary Between Public Spending and Proprietary Details
Example: A contract summary would show how much public money is being provided and for what purpose, while keeping internal business details like formulas, supplier pricing, or profit margins private.
Why: Without a clear boundary, agencies may withhold too much information, undermining transparency for taxpayers.
2) Require Consistent Disclosure Standards Across Agencies
Example: Two different state agencies offering similar incentives would follow the same basic disclosure approach instead of one releasing key details and the other withholding nearly everything.
Why: Inconsistent practices can lead to confusion, unequal treatment, and public distrust.
3) Prevent Overuse of “Proprietary” as a Catch-All
Example: An agency could not label an entire agreement as proprietary simply because it involves a private business; only specific business-sensitive portions would qualify.
Why: This prevents the exception from swallowing the rule and protects against secrecy creep.
Who these amendments protect: These amendments protect taxpayers by ensuring they can see how public funds are used, protect businesses by preserving legitimate trade secrets, and protect state agencies by giving clear, consistent guidance that reduces disputes and accusations of favoritism or secrecy.
YES! "A. Except as provided by subsection B of this section, no state governmental entity or public trust having the state as its beneficiary may enter into any agreement with a person, partnership, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, corporation, limited liability company, trust, or other legal entity that would prohibit the state governmental entity or public trust from making disclosure of the terms of any agreement with such entity to make payment to or confer value upon the entity using an incentive, tax credit, direct or indirect payment, grant, or similar benefit Req. No. 2397 offered to the entity if the benefit is provided through the use of state taxes."
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Aeronautics and Transportation 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Kendal Sacchieri
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I support SB 1223 in its effort to clean up and clarify language enacted in Senate Bill 1392 from the 2024 session, which established English-language proficiency requirements for commercial drivers. This bill does not change the intent or scope of the original law, but instead refines unclear language related to how proficiency is demonstrated, how enforcement is applied, and how drivers and carriers are notified and brought back into compliance. By addressing these technical issues early, SB 1223 helps ensure consistent, fair enforcement, improves clarity for both law enforcement and the trucking industry, and strengthens the effectiveness of the underlying safety policy without expanding authority or creating new penalties.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Brian Guthrie
Co-sponsors: Derrick Hildebrant Gabe Woolley
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1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Revenue and Taxation 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: David Bullard
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This legislation would exempt certain firearms from sales taxes during the period of July.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Kendal Sacchieri
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Proposing amoratorium on new data centers until November 1, 2029. Also requires the Corporation Commission to study the potential impacts of data centers on:
I support SB 1488 and its intent to pause large-scale data center development while the state studies impact to water, utilities, property values, and grid reliability. The bill could be stronger with a few clarifications that set clear limits on the moratorium, narrow how new rules can be used, and ensure the study does not quietly turn into a permanent ban or centralized siting authority. These changes keep the bill focused on fact-finding and public protection without changing its purpose.
1) Clear Scope of the Moratorium
Example: Clarify that the pause applies only tonew, large-scale facilities meeting the defined size threshold, not upgrades, maintenance, or expansion of existing operations below that level.
Why: Without a clear scope, the moratorium could unintentionally halt unrelated projects or discourage infrastructure improvements that were never meant to be targeted.
2) Guardrails on Rulemaking Authority
Example: Specify that any rules developed are limited to recommendations and standards informed by the study, not automatic approvals, denials, or siting decisions.
Why: Broad rulemaking authority without limits creates a risk that temporary research authority turns into permanent regulatory control.
3) Study Use and Sunset Clarity
Example: State plainly that the study informs future legislative decisions and does not itself authorize ongoing restrictions once the moratorium expires.
Why: This prevents the study from being used later as justification for indefinite delays or non-legislative regulation.
Who these amendments protect: These amendments protect landowners, local communities, utility customers, and future businesses by ensuring the bill remains a temporary, transparent pause for study—not a backdoor expansion of regulatory power. They also protect the Legislature’s role by keeping long-term decisions in the hands of elected representatives rather than agencies acting beyond the bill’s original intent.
Costly to taxpayers; must be stopped!
YES! Moratorium on Data Centers until study impacts, etc.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 2026-02-26 at 09:30
Author: Warren Hamilton
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1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Health and Human Services 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Julie McIntosh
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1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Julie McIntosh
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A 24 page bill of amendments and new laws regarding Oklahoma Wind Energy Development Act. The primary objections/unacceptable parts are on page 20 regarding 1/4 and 1/2 mile setbacks (should be at least 1 mile) and no county option for residents to opt out. Same bill as SB2123.
Appears to be a duplicate bills of SB 2123 by Frix and SB 1514 by McIntosh and SB 2183 by Seifried...
YES IF increase setbacks, this is not sufficient: "1. The minimum setback for the base of any wind turbine from a nonparticipating landowner’s property line shall be equal to the greater of one quarter (1/4) of a nautical mile or two (2) times the total height of the wind turbine as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip. A nonparticipating landowner may elect to sign a waiver that allows a wind turbine or group of wind turbines to be placed up to one and one-tenth (1.1) times the total height of the wind turbine as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip from the nonparticipating landowner’s property line; 2. The minimum setback from the base of a wind turbine shall be one half (1/2) of a nautical mile from any residential structure that exists at the time the permit application is submitted to the Corporation Commission;
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-24
Author: Warren Hamilton
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1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Shane Jett
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Moral values and common sense.
Employees are prohibited from drinking on the job or being inebriated in the private sector, so why are supposed "servants of the people" allowed to do so? A moral and common-sense refrainment!
Sad that this is necessary, but apparently it is. Thank you for this bill!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Shane Jett
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A court shall not abridge a person’s right to purchase, possess, concealed carry, or open carry a firearm in this state. No court shall require a firearm seized due to a misdemeanor arrest or conviction to be forfeited or destroyed.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Warren Hamilton
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1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Warren Hamilton
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Data centers in Oklahoma may not be directly or indirectly rented, leased, or controlled by a foreign owner. Declares that any current rental or lease agreements would be deemed invalid from the date of adoption. The bill also declared that any current rental or lease agreements would be deemed invalid from the date of adoption.
As long as they can't use the same form to get around, maybe no form and specific requirements.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Shane Jett
1
1
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1
YES!! "C. Any No public body or its members, officers, or staff, nor any law enforcement officer or security personnel, present at a public meeting shall prohibit any person attending a public meeting from recording the proceedings of the meeting by videotape video recording, audio recording, or by any other method; provided, however, such recording shall not interfere with the conduct of the meeting.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Shane Jett
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YES!!! Citizens should be allowed to record public meetings of the legislature!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: David Bullard
1
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1
Yes, BUT need to amend to allow for farmers and ranchers and off grid homesteads to use small scale solar to power wells, electric fences, homesteads, etc.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-09
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jonathan Wingard
Co-sponsors: David Hardin
1
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I support SB 2028 because it expands consumer choice and supports small farmers by allowing limited, direct sales of ungraded raw milk and related products. To strengthen the bill without changing its intent, a few clarifications are needed so producers clearly understand what is allowed, consumers receive consistent notice, and enforcement remains fair and predictable rather than discretionary.
1: Clear Consumer Notice Standard
Example:A producer selling ungraded raw milk posts a simple, visible notice at the point of sale and on containers stating that the product is not inspected or regulated.
Why:Without a clear, consistent notice standard, producers could face uneven enforcement based on subjective judgments about what “notification” means.
2: Defined Scope of “Incidental Sales”
Example:A small farm selling raw milk directly to families understands that “incidental sales” means small-scale, supplemental sales tied to on-farm production—not a commercial retail operation.
Why:Clarifying this prevents confusion and stops future expansion of enforcement that could treat small farmers like large commercial dairies.
3: Limits on Transport Expectations
Example:When a farmer delivers raw milk directly to a consumer, expectations are limited to basic handling consistent with small-scale, direct sales, not commercial-grade transport requirements.
Why:Without clear limits, agencies could later impose costly standards that were never intended for direct, farm-to-consumer sales.
Who These Amendments ProtectThese amendments protect small farmers from arbitrary enforcement, consumers from inconsistent information, and regulators from pressure to stretch the law beyond its intent. Clear boundaries preserve the bill’s purpose while preventing regulatory creep, confusion, and unequal treatment.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Spencer Kern
1
1
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1
Yes, all meat should be labeled with country of origin.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-11
Author: Dusty Deevers
Co-sponsors: Rick West David Bullard Shane Jett Dana Prieto
2
2
2
1
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-23
Author: Spencer Kern
Co-sponsors: Ryan Eaves David Bullard
2
2
1
1
Yes, bans sale of cultivated fake meat.
Need to amend to also ban sale of cultivated MILK.
"1. It shall be unlawful for any person to manufacture, sell, hold or offer for sale, or distribute any cultivated meat product in this state. 2. Any person who violates the provisions of this subsection shall, upon conviction, be guilty of a misdemeanor"
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-09
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jonathan Wingard
Co-sponsors: David Hardin
1
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I support SB 2125 because it expands freedom for small farmers and consumers by allowing the direct sale and advertising of ungraded raw milk and raw milk products. To keep that intent intact while avoiding confusion or misuse, a few clarifications are needed around third-party sales, labeling consistency, the emergency clause, and the definition of “incidental sales”. These changes strengthen the bill without changing its purpose.
1) Clear Limits on Third-Party Sales
Example: If raw milk is sold at a farmers market or through a third party, the consumer should be able to clearly identify the original farm that produced it, and the producer should remain responsible for how it is handled and represented.
Why: Without clear limits, third-party sales could blur responsibility and create enforcement confusion if something goes wrong.
2) Consistent, Plain-Language Labeling
Example: Every container sold should clearly state that the product is raw or unpasteurized, list the date it was filled, and plainly disclose that it is not inspected or regulated.
Why: Clear and consistent labels ensure consumers understand what they are buying and reduce the risk of disputes or claims of deception.
3) Narrow the Emergency Clause
Example: The bill could take effect on a standard timeline rather than immediately, unless a clear and specific public safety need is identified.
Why: Using emergency clauses when there is no immediate threat can set an unnecessary precedent and weaken public trust.
4) Clear Definition of “Incidental Sales”
Example: Incidental sales should be clearly understood as small-scale sales connected to what a farm actually produces each month, not ongoing or high-volume distribution that looks like a commercial operation.
Why: Without a clear meaning, the exemption could be stretched beyond its intent and used as a loophole by large or industrial-style sellers.
Who These Amendments Protect
These amendments protect small farmers by reducing the risk of unfair enforcement, protect consumers by ensuring transparency and informed choice, and protect the state by preventing regulatory creep or confusion as the market grows. The result is a clearer, fairer system that honors the bill’s intent while guarding against abuse.
This bill is THE BEST raw milk bill this session!
-Great: Allows all raw milk to be advertised
-Great: Allows raw milk to be transported off farm
-Great: Allows 1500 gallons of raw milk to be sold per month** (This bill increases raw milk sales from 100 gallons a month to 1500 gallons a month, however, there should be NO limits on sales of raw milk, this restricts farms from making a decent living and limits their ability to be competitive, and appears to be unconstitional favoring of certain industries over small business....see below.)
-Great: removes ALL raw milk producers from the egregious Oklahoma Milk Products Act!!!
(To be even better, get with Rep Hardin and amend to add language allowing off farm sale to restaurants, feed stores, and farmers markets.)
***HR 8374 "The Interstate Milk Freedom Act" proposed in Congress will allow the interstate sale of raw milk. When it is enacted, the state of Oklahoma will be putting raw milk farms at a disadvantage in the USA by limiting their sales of raw milk per month and prohitibing them from their constitutional right to freedom of speech (advertising their legal product) under current regulations of the Oklahoma Milk Products Act.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Randy Grellner
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YES! Make real food accessible and profitable for farmers
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Randy Grellner
1
1
1
1
1
This bill needs to be heard in committee for the will of the people!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-24
Author: David Bullard
Co-sponsors: George Burns
1
1
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Oklahoma should not destroy it's natural beauty to satisfy Texas power needs!
This bill helps to protect the Kiamichi river from being taken for a hydroelectric dam in order to take the power to Texas, likely for the massive AI data centers going in there. Please vote FOR this bill to protect Oklahoma!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Ally Seifried
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A 24 page bill of amendments and new laws regarding Oklahoma Wind Energy Development Act. The primary objections/unacceptable parts are on page 20 regarding 1/4 and 1/2 mile setbacks (should be at least 1 mile) and no county option for residents to opt out.
Appears to be a duplicate bills of SB 2123 by Frix and SB 1514 by McIntosh and SB 2183 by Seifried...
YES IF increase setbacks, this is not sufficient: "1. The minimum setback for the base of any wind turbine from a nonparticipating landowner’s property line shall be equal to the greater of one quarter (1/4) of a nautical mile or two (2) times the total height of the wind turbine as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip. A nonparticipating landowner may elect to sign a waiver that allows a wind turbine or group of wind turbines to be placed up to one and one-tenth (1.1) times the total height of the wind turbine as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip from the nonparticipating landowner’s property line; 2. The minimum setback from the base of a wind turbine shall be one half (1/2) of a nautical mile from any residential structure that exists at the time the permit application is submitted to the Corporation Commission;
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-24
Author: Jonathan Wingard
Co-sponsors: Kevin West Jim Shaw Gabe Woolley Casey Murdock David Bullard George Burns Warren Hamilton Shane Jett Jack Stewart Dusty Deevers Randy Grellner Kendal Sacchieri Brian Guthrie Lisa Standridge Julie McIntosh
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Limits government overreach for ‘emergencies’ which has been used too frequently in recent years attempting to bypass our constitutional protections.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-24
Author: John Pfeiffer
Co-sponsors: Brent Howard
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This bill reduces the penalty for elected officials who are in violation of the act. Any violations should be increased.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-17
Author: Kenton Patzkowsky
Co-sponsors: Brent Howard John George
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Creates a revolving fund for the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) for all funds related to the testing of biosolids. A MORATORIUM would make much more sense and won't cost the taxpayer $1,300,000.00.
Absoutely NOT!!! The DEQ has claimed this was safe for over 40 years, has told individuals in their sludge districts that they "have to protec the beneficial use of biosolids" and that their priority is the water of "cities and towns, NOT people on rural water."
Why are we giving them perpetual money for new toys and testing and more salaries, when they have FAILED to do their job on this for the last 40 years! You don't reward bad behavior!!
They will never stop this madness if their budget is tied to keeping it going. HORRIBLE BILL. Shame on the authors and anyone voting for the continuing poisoning of Oklahomans for profit!!!
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-17
Pending: 🏛 Energy and Natural Resources Oversight 📅 2026-02-25 at 09:00
Author: Rob Hall
Co-sponsors: Julie McIntosh Chris Sneed
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HB3720 even after the amendment continues the pattern of incremental regulatory expansion over small and home-based food producers while framing the bill as “modernization.”
While the substitute raises the annual sales cap, it simultaneously:
This shifts cottage and local food producers further into a centralized regulatory model and regulatory risk for small businesses that operate on thin margins.
The structure of the bill aligns with global “food system modernization” frameworks that prioritize standardized compliance, credentialing, and oversight. Over time, this model disproportionately benefits larger, capital-backed producers while gradually pushing small, family-scale operations out of the market.
Bottom line:
HB3720 embeds permanent regulatory mechanisms that expand government oversight and increase barriers to entry. This bill grows government authority and undermines true food freedom, small-business resilience, and local enterprise.
Great bill, thanks for the amended language!!! This bill increases sales limits from $75,000 to a viable business with One Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($1,500,000.00).
There is an 8 hour class available online that is required. This is a fair tradeoff for being able to actually make a living with your business, and not egregious at all. I would ammend the bill to specify that the class is FREE, just to make sure it doesn't end up being cost prohibitive. (And, I'm O.K. with that if it means I don't have hair in my food.)
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-09
Author: Anthony Moore
Co-sponsors: Dave Rader Nick Archer
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I'm at page 6 and not wasting my time reading the rest of this bill. HARD NO.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-11
Author: Darcy Jech
Co-sponsors: Nicole Miller
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This appears to be nothing more than authorization for mass surveillance of Oklahoma citizens. This isn't protecting citizens--it is Big Brother monitoring them.
This is a slippery slope into a surveillance state. Also, there’s the potential to get false positives by misreading the plates. We do not want more cameras
Protecting road workers is important, but SB 1434 does so by sacrificing privacy and expanding surveillance. Safety can be addressed through other means, that are already available.
Think flock cameras here; this is the surveillance state in play - very bad bill!
In my opinion this is a bad bill. Law enforcement should monitor these sites and issue citations for violators.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-10
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Casey Murdock
Co-sponsors: Carl Newton
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Setback is not nearly far enough for nonparticipating landowners.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-05
Author: Lonnie Paxton
Co-sponsors: Trey Caldwell Ally Seifried Kristen Thompson
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SB 2 is not truly local- or people-driven.
It’s a stop down policy wrapped in local language.
If the goal is to empower communities, approval authority should start and end locally, not be conditioned on a top-down framing.
Suggestion: Amend HB 3723 to let the state set minimum health, safety, and transparency standards, while clearly preserving final approval with local governments, including the ability to impose stricter rules or deny projects. Minimums should be a floor, not a ceiling, with no state preemption of local authority.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-12
Author: Nikki Nice
Co-sponsors: Jim Grego
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This bill creates yet another council. This also increases the tax burden on the people by paying for the members' travel expenses.
Yes, connecting farmers to consumers, doesn't allocate any funds, the board serves without pay. But, there should be ag producers on the board from each corner of the state to accurately represent the farmers and districts.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-23
Author: Casey Murdock
Co-sponsors: Carl Newton
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Everything about this bill is wrong. It penalizes entrepreneurs and costs them money. If people don't want to buy UNPASTURIZED fresh from the farm milk without GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE AND REGULATIONS, THEY DON'T HAVE TO BUY IT! LEAVE THE LITTLE GUYS ALONE to make a living with people who want to do business with them as is.
SB 2071 shifts the regulatory and financial burden onto small farm operations without clear public benefit. By expanding who is regulated under the milk law and increasing fees, it creates a system that benefits larger, commercially scaled producers and puts smaller, family-based farms at a competitive disadvantage. This structure makes it harder for local, small-scale producers to remain viable unless they “pay to play” under a heavier regulatory regime.
A bad bill Why incorporate limits?
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-18
Author: Casey Murdock
Co-sponsors: Carl Newton
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This would limit the number of eggs a producer can sell each month, this is governmental overreach. Until this language is removed, this bill should not move forward.
Current Law only allows ungraded eggs to be sold ON the farm. This law would allow farmers to also sold direct to the consumer on the farm, at a farmers’ market, or otherwise off the farm direct to the consumer.
That is better than current restrictive laws (see link below), HOWEVER, this bill then goes on to limit the sale of eggs to 150 eggs per month, that's JUST 12.5 DOZEN eggs!
AMEND to take away the limit on sales, then this bill is great.
chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://ag.ok.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Bringing-Farm-to-Market-2022.pdf
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Avery Frix
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A 24 page bill of amendments and new laws regarding Oklahoma Wind Energy Development Act. The primary objections/unacceptable parts are on page 20 regarding 1/4 and 1/2 mile setbacks (should be at least 1 mile) and no county option for residents to opt out.
Appears to be a duplicate bills of SB 2123 by Frix and SB 1514 by McIntosh and SB 2183 by Seifried...
YES IF increase setbacks, this is not sufficient: "1. The minimum setback for the base of any wind turbine from a nonparticipating landowner’s property line shall be equal to the greater of one quarter (1/4) of a nautical mile or two (2) times the total height of the wind turbine as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip. A nonparticipating landowner may elect to sign a waiver that allows a wind turbine or group of wind turbines to be placed up to one and one-tenth (1.1) times the total height of the wind turbine as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip from the nonparticipating landowner’s property line; 2. The minimum setback from the base of a wind turbine shall be one half (1/2) of a nautical mile from any residential structure that exists at the time the permit application is submitted to the Corporation Commission;
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Casey Murdock
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This bill creates yet another council.
Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-10
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Casey Murdock
Co-sponsors: Carl Newton
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Last Action: None
Date: 2026-02-03
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture and Wildlife 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Mary Boren
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Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Molly Jenkins
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Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Rusty Cornwell
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Bill adds: 4. One-half (1/2) mile from the property line of an adjacent property
Last Action: None
Date: 2025-03-05
Author: Rick West
Co-sponsors: Shane Jett
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Yes, allows donkey milk to be advertised like goat milk.
However, need to amend
"B. For purposes of this section, incidental sales of goat milk or donkey milk are those sales where the average monthly number of gallons sold does not exceed one hundred (100)." Change this line to
"B. For purposes of this section, there are no limits on the incidental sales of raw milk in this state."
HR 8374 "The Interstate Milk Freedom Act" in Congress will allow the interstate sale of raw milk. When it is enacted, the state of Oklahoma will be putting raw milk farms at a disadvantage in the USA by limiting their sales of raw milk per month.
(Preferably, cow milk would also be allowed to be advertised, unfortunately this effort has been stricken down repeatedly.)
Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-13
Pending: 🏛 Rules 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Neil Hays
Co-sponsors: Tom Woods
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Yes: Must study impacts to water and groundwater, adds setbacks to wind turbines "d. one and one-half (1 1/2) nautical miles from any residential home, or e. forty (40) nautical miles from any lake with a normal level surface area that is in excess of ten thousand (10,000) surface acres. 2. For any wind turbine tower that exceeds five hundred (500) feet in height, the setback distance specified in subparagraphs a, b, c, and d of paragraph 1 on this subsection shall be three (3) nautical miles.
Last Action: None
Date: 2025-05-05
Author: Brad Boles
Co-sponsors: Grant Green Denise Hader
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Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
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Our OKGOP platform is in clear opposition to these subsidies.
Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Energy 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: Warren Hamilton
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Yes: Setbacks to wind turbines "4. Three (3) nautical miles from any nonparticipating property lines."
Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Appropriations and Budget Finance Subcommittee 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
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Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-04
Pending: 🏛 Agriculture 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: Jim Shaw
Co-sponsors: Shane Jett
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HB 1726 would significantly change how Oklahoma handles biosolids by banning their use and requiring reporting and cleanup.
It’s aimed at protecting environmental and public health, but also raises logistical and cost concerns for municipalities and wastewater treatment facilities.
Last Action: None
Date: 2025-02-05
Pending: 🏛 Judiciary 📅 Not Scheduled
Author: David Bullard
Co-sponsors: Tom Gann
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Last Action: None
Date: 2025-05-27
Author: Julie Daniels
Co-sponsors: Daniel Pae
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HB 1453 isn’t a one-sentence bill — it involves legal procedures around property owned by foreign individuals or entities, divestment requirements, penalties, and enforcement by the AG.
Its progress and details will matter a lot for landowners, legal professionals, and policymakers concerned about foreign ownership in Oklahoma.