Contentious merger pushed
by: BARBARA HOBEROCK World Capitol Bureau
2/21/2008 12:00 AM
A measure would
combine the state
Medical Examiner's
Office and the OSBI.
OKLAHOMA CITY -- A
Senate panel passed a measure Wednesday that would
merge the state Medical Examiner's Office with the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, despite concerns that
such a move could hurt criminal prosecutions.
Oklahoma County District
Attorney David Prater told
the Senate Appropriations
Committee that he thinks the
Medical Examiner's Office
should be independent of another agency.
Prosecutors would start
with a strike against them at
trial if the Medical Examin
er's Office was under another
law enforcement agency and
jurors wondered about the
medical examiner's independence, Prater said.
Senate Bill 1709 by Senate
Co-President Pro Tem Glenn
Coffee, R-Oklahoma City,
passed the Senate Appropriations Committee 10-6.
Coffee said, "I'm very disappointed that so much of the
criticism of this proposal
seems to impugn the integrity
and professionalism of the
Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation and calls into
question OSBI's ability to provide fair and impartial oversight of the chief medical examiner."
Another bill by Coffee, SB
1698, would merge most of
the functions of the Criminal
Justice Resource Center into
the Oklahoma State Bureau
of Investigation. The panel
passed SB 1698 by a 13-3 vote.
The committee also passed
a measure that would create
an Office of Accountability
and Innovation within the
Legislative Service Bureau.
SB 1865, also by Coffee, calls
for the newly created entity to
conduct regular performance
audits of agencies and review
the effectiveness of tax incentives, among other things. It
would have an initial cost of
about $1 million. SB 1865
passed the committee 16-0.
The committee also approved SB 1870 by Sen. Mike
Johnson, R-Kingfisher, which
would remove the 3 percent
growth trigger on additional
funding for roads and bridges. The move would result in
$50 million in new funding for
transportation.
A similar measure, SB 1396
by Sen. Brian Bingman, R-Sapulpa, also passed. That bill
would remove the growth
trigger and also would redi
rect existing motor vehicle
taxes from the general revenue fund to roads and bridges
over a five-year period.
Bills passed by the Appropriations Committee are
headed to the full Senate.
The House General Government and Transportation
Committee, meanwhile,
passed House Bill 2551 by
Rep. Guy Liebmann, R-Oklahoma City, which would remove the revenue growth
trigger, as well. Without the
trigger's removal, roads
would get $17.5 million.
Meanwhile, the Senate
Rules Committee killed Senate Joint Resolution 33 by
Sen. Randy Brogdon, R-Owasso, which called for a public
vote on setting term limits for
statewide elected officials, except for the governor, who already is term-limited.