Measure creating minimum standards for county jails clears Oklahoma Senate
OKLAHOMA CITY — Senators on Monday passed legislation that they said will clearly outline the minimum standards for which all county jails should operate.
Sen. Darrell Weaver, R-Moore, said Senate Bill 595, which creates the Oklahoma Jail Standards Act, was developed as part of an agreement between the Oklahoma Sheriffs' Association and the state Department of Health.
The over-40-page bill requires that detention facilities operated by counties, cities and towns be inspected at least once a year to ensure compliance and requires those facilities to have staff available to perform sensitive functions during the inspections. It also requires that the state's commissioner of health set rules to implement the provisions.
Under the measure, detention facilities can require a temporary emergency waiver after natural or man-made disasters if an inspection would cause an undue hardship, but any entity must include justification of why they qualify and a plan for caring for impacted inmates.
It also requires the Health Department to review plans for new detention facilities or substantial remodels.
Weaver said the bill gives the state's 77 counties 'some level of standards' within their jails.
The measure cleared the Senate 46-0. The measure heads to the House for consideration.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
28-07-2025
- Yahoo
Oklahoma's education department wants to hide resignation letters. They've always been public.
State Superintendent Ryan Walters' name plate and gavel sit on the meeting table of the Oklahoma State Board of Education on May 23, 2024, in Oklahoma City. (Photo by Nuria Martinez-Keel/Oklahoma Voice) Ryan Walters and his merry band of administrative leaders should not be operating the State Department of Education like their own private fiefdom, oblivious to the laws that govern public access. Yet our state superintendent and those leaders he's entrusted to serve us appear to be happily doing just that in denying access to one of the most basic records that's long been released through our state's Open Records Act — resignation letters. And Attorney General Gentner Drummond's office, which is supposed to help enforce open records laws, has strangely — and inexplicably — been sitting on the sidelines like a stupified observer as this continues to play out. Walters has seen a number of senior employees exit stage left for greener pastures. He also leads an agency whose administrators have proven that they're not the strongest champions of laws that govern public access. After all, they lost a lawsuit that accused agency leaders of violating First Amendment rights related to public meeting access and face another that contends the Education Department is not complying with the Open Records Act. The latest dustup involves a request Oklahoma Voice filed earlier this year seeking access to all employee resignation letters submitted since Jan. 1. The agency issued a blanket denial, citing a provision of law that it claims bars the release to protect employee privacy and one that allows public bodies to keep documents private if they pertain to an internal personnel investigation. As far as we can tell, there's no indication that any of these employees are subject to any investigation, and for any state agency to inaccurately cite a provision of law inferring such would be reckless and potentially damaging to someone's reputation. One would also hope that there weren't personnel investigations into multiple high-level employees because that would indicate Walters' is making really bad hires. Normally resignation letters are as dry as parched earth, and pretty much every other state agency I can think of typically releases them without issue. Even the State Department of Education used to do so without batting an eye. I've never seen a blanket denial like this. That's why it's so odd that the Department of Education has chosen this hill to die on, and that Drummond's office, which lawmakers have empowered to help the public fight for open records access, has sat idly by, seemingly wringing its hands. A recently leaked scathing resignation letter may shine some light on why the Education Department is so reluctant to release them. The Education Department's former chief compliance officer wrote in her resignation letter that the agency has 'fundamental operational issues' and 'senior leadership attitudes' that will need to be addressed in order to 'achieve the outcomes that Oklahoma students deserve.' She also leveled accusations of 'manipulation of school accreditation and deleting employee review processes,' but did not include specifics. In short, the letter portrays a very unflattering portrait of the inner workings of an agency that receives over $3.8 billion in annual state appropriations and raises questions about its operational integrity. That's something the public deserves to know. And it's why the access to resignation letters should be an undisputed right. Our state is one that believes — or at least used to — that 'people are vested with the inherent right to know and be fully informed about their government.' And that access to government records helps Oklahomans 'efficiently and intelligently exercise their inherent political power.' That's straight from the state's Open Records Act. It's also why Oklahoma agencies have done the right thing and provided resignation letters without argument, particularly for high-ranking officials. It boggles the mind that the Attorney General's Office, which is supposed to have a public records ombudsman to fight for public access, has refused to intervene in this issue and insist upon their release. It's even stranger because last year, Drummond took a swipe at Walters following what he called an 'alarming number of complaints' of his agency's poor compliance with the state's records act and sent a sign he wasn't going to stand for it. But ahead of the publication of our story highlighting our records battle, the Attorney General's Office and its 'public access counselor' refused to comment or address our complaint because of a pending lawsuit involving a single resignation letter. I could see not releasing a single letter that's subject to litigation, but to allow an agency to issue a blanket denial to withhold all undisputed ones is nuts. There seems to be no reason Drummond couldn't have advocated to release the rest. Unless, that is, his office wants to keep our government shrouded in secrecy or he doesn't believe the public should view resignation letters written by public employees. The fight over resignation letters at the state Department of Education proves why lawmakers need to further strengthen public access laws, not water them down. If there's any lingering doubt that these are public, maybe they need to spell it out. This also highlights how critical strong advocacy from the Attorney General's Office is in this realm. Because it's never a good idea to give a government bureaucrat absolute power to determine if the public is entitled to records. In the wrong hands that power can lead to unintended consequences, making government less accountable and accessible to the very people it is supposed to serve. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
28-07-2025
- Yahoo
July's hot topics: Ryan Walters, public broadcasting are columnists' top takes
Summer temperatures are starting to heat up, and education has been a hot topic in July. Our guest columnists and our editorial team have had takes on state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters' mandate that schools fund free meals for all students, his call for a "wokeness test" for teachers and other topics. On Ryan Walters ANOTHER MESS: Walters is pushing a brand-new unfunded mandate ― trying to slash administrator pay and meddle with school breakfast and lunch programs. Guest columnist Mark McBride says he and everybody he talks to are fed up with Walters' nonsense. YOUR TAKE: Was Walters acting within his authority to threaten reprisals against school districts that failed to provide free lunches? Readers speak out. CLASS CLOWN?: Oklahoma Voice's Janelle Stecklein writes that Walters apparently has no idea — nor a care for — what providing free lunches is going to cost. He looks like a bumbling public official in his free food stunt. WAKE-UP CALL: Walters wants to withhold teaching certificates from applicants who do not pass a "wokeness test." This isn't what we need, our editorial team writes. On other education topics BIG LEAGUE BARRIERS: For Oklahoma City to remain on the rise, guest columnist Brent Bushey writes, we must bring the same bold commitment to our public schools that we brought to building an NBA championship team. QUIET CRISIS: Porn, weed use are hurting our boys, guest columnist K. John Lee writes. It's time to speak up. This isn't about nostalgia or moral panic. It's about neuroscience, accessibility and the quiet crisis stealing our boys' identity and ambition. On national topics SAVE PUBLIC TV, RADIO: The people's antidote to lawmakers' failures? Keep the 'public' in public broadcasting and fund statewide programming ourselves, our editorial team writes. A Todd Pendleton cartoon tackles the topic of PBS, NPR funding cuts being approved by Congress. Will Elmo be just another casualty of the GOP culture war? MORAL UNRAVELING: Guest columnist Kama Garrison, a former USAID employee in Washington, D.C., writes about the grief she is experiencing after losing her job with USAID — not just for a career, but for values and the moral compass she thought we all shared — truth, service and compassion. PULPIT POLITICS?: Despite a change in IRS tax code, political choices should be determined by each individual conscience, not the church, writes the Rev. Poulson Reed. Want more Viewpoints? Sign up for the Public Square newsletter here. This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: July's hot topics were Ryan Walters, public broadcasting | Opinion Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
16-07-2025
- Yahoo
Lawmakers discuss eliminating property tax during fall study
OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) – Oklahoma state senators will discuss 74 interim studies during the fall at the State Capitol. At least two senators have requested to discuss ways to eliminate property taxes. Tax reform was a hot topic at the Capitol during the session. Recent legislation led to cuts to state income and grocery taxes. Senators David Bullard (R-Durant) and Shane Jett (R-Shawnee) have requested interim studies to evaluate ways to reform the tax, which funds schools, law enforcement, and roads. Lawmakers agree on Oklahoma budget, could see income tax cut 'We're looking at what is a sound and meaningful way to make sure that we're protecting the property owners and we're also properly investing in the services that they care about,' said Jett. Bullard said he has already started collecting data on ways to replace property taxes. He said one idea would be with a consumption tax, which is a tax that a person pays when they spend money, rather than when they earn it.'With a consumption tax, if we can move that way when the economy's up, there's no end to how much they could get in revenue coming in,' said Bullard. 'The problem is going to be what do you do when it's down.' Bullard said there would be a risk because of the ebb and flow of that type of tax as a solution. According to the Tax Foundation, in 2024, Oklahomans paid an average of $914 in state and local property taxes per capita. It was among the lowest in the nation. New Jersey had the highest property taxes, with people there paying $3,539 per capita. Democratic Senator Julia Kirt (D-Oklahoma City) questions why the state would want to eliminate a reliable form of funding for something that was uncertain.'Tell me the five-year plan. Tell me the 10-year plan, because we better be looking down the road,' said Kirt. 'What are [Oklahomans] willing to give up? Are they willing to give up having a county jail? Are they willing to give up having sheriffs if they need help in rural Oklahoma? I don't think they are.' Interim studies at the Capitol are expected to get underway in the coming weeks. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword