The 2013 session resulted in an overhaul of the workers' compensation system, funding for relief and recovery efforts in response toa 2013 tornado outbreak, and employee development initiatives to improve care at veteran care centers.
Budget - HB 2301 contained the state budget that began July 1, 2013 and ends July 1, 2014.
Abortion - HB 1361 requires 48-hour written notice to parents before a minor has an abortion.
Abortion - HB 2226 requires a prescription foremergency contraception to women under the age of 17.
Criminal procedure - HB 1068 enables those convicted of violent crimes to request DNA testing of evidence.[3]
Disaster recovery - SB 249 transfers $45 million from the constitutional reserve fund to fund relief and recovery efforts resulting from the2013 tornado outbreak.
Education - HB 1658 revises state A-F grading system scoring.[3]
Income tax cut - HB 2032 reduces the top income tax rate from 5.25 percent to 5 percent on 2015 and sets up a mechanism to cut the rate to 4.85 percent in 2016 if the total revenue growth in the 2016 fiscal year is equal to or greater than the fiscal impact of the 0.15 percent tax cut; funds Capitol repairs.[4]
Infrastructure planning - HB 1910 forms Long-Range Capital Planning Commission with goals to repair theOklahoma State Capitol and develop an eight-year plan to address the maintenance of state assets.
Smoking - SB 501 gives municipalities and counties the right to ban smoking on government property and makes state property smoke-free.[6]
Workers' compensation - SB 1062 moves the state from a court-based workers’ compensation system to an administrative system, allowing for more timely processing of claims and reducing the adversarial nature of the process for both workers and employers.[7]
Veteran care - SB 228 creates employee development initiatives at veteran care centers to improve care.[8]
Government reform - HB 2201 privatizes CompSource Oklahoma, an agency which provides workers' compensation insurance to private business, into a private insurance company
Drugs - HB 1783 prohibits automatic refills on products containinghydrocodone
Welfare reform - SB 887 prevents those convicted of illegally transferringfood stamp benefits from enrollment in the program
Public safety - HB 1871 grants federally-recognized Indian tribes' law enforcement agencies the power to enforce state law
2013 Special Session
Lawsuit reform - SB 1x provides for an affidavit of merit for negligence lawsuits that are required to include expert testimony if necessary for the case.[9][10]
2014 Legislative Session
Budget - SB 2127 contained the state budget that begins July 1, 2014 and ends July 1, 2015.
Abortion - HB 2684 bans the off-label use of the drug RU486. The drug is used during the first seven weeks of a pregnancy to induce an abortion.
Education - HB 2625 modifies the Reading Sufficiency Act by allowing a student reading proficiency team to recommend promotion for a student who fails a reading test. The district superintendent would ultimately decide to promote or retain the student based on their recommendation. The legislation would also allow students to use a screening assessment at any point prior to the third-grade reading test to qualify for promotion.
Income tax cut - SB 1246 gradually lowers Oklahoma’s top income tax rate from 5.25 percent to 4.85 percent over several years, if general revenue increases during that time. Under the legislation, the top personal income tax rate will fall to 5 percent in Fiscal Year 2016 or later when state revenue projects are greater than projections in the previous year. The rate will further fall to 4.85 percent at a minimum of two years after the first cut, if revenue increases again.
Pension reform - HB 2630 switches new state employees who participate in the Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System to a 401(k)-style defined contribution plan. Under the new plan, workers contribute between 3 and 7 percent of their salaries into the retirement system and receive a dollar-for-dollar match from the state. Participants can become 20 percent vested in the retirement system after one year and are completely vested after 5 years. Employees could also leave their jobs and receive their contributions back plus a percentage of the state’s contribution. The defined-contribution system would take effect Nov. 1, 2015.
Insure Oklahoma - SB 700 would have redirected $50 million on state tobacco tax money to fund Insure Oklahoma program, which provides insurance for low-income Oklahomans.[2]
Trooper pay raise - HB 2145 would have given Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers a 16 percent pay raise.[11]