For the Children: Advocacy works

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The second deadline for the Oklahoma Legislaturewasreached on Thursday, March 14 and many bills have fallen by the wayside. For the bills being tracked by the Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy (OICA), our total has dwindled from650atthebeginningofthe session to a total of 216 remaining “alive” in the process.

Now, for a House bill to be alive, it must have passed the House of Representatives and been sent to the Senate; for Senate bills to remain alive, they must have been passed by senators and sent to the House of Representatives. OICA now focuses our attention on the remaining positive bills moving through the system, and we will shed light on more of those in the coming weeks. This includes the programs supported through legislative appropriations, the allocation of state dollars to agencies which deliver services.

Amid that deadline week, OICA held our first Advocacy Day of the session in conjunction with our Chili Cook-off in the State Capitol parkinglot.EntrantsintheCook-off included lawmakers, child advocates, and organizations who spent the morning cooking, serving, and networking with fellow advocates, lawmakers, and staff.

We had our largest number of competitors enter this year with 18 chili chefs sharing their talents, and wehadmanyCapitolemployeesand agency staff join us to promote the good things going on for children in Oklahoma and the issues we are facing.

All the bills we promoted to lawmakers during our Advocacy Day, which were mentioned in this columnlastweek,passedthroughto thenextstep;ourthankstolawmakers who supported these initiatives. You can see those at https://oica. org/speaking-for-children-in-adeadline- week/ Congratulations go to Sean Cummings for his winning chili entry, both through the judges and with the people’s choice vote. Tulsa Union School Board Member Joey Reyes and his wife Lyndsey won second place, and my entry finished third. The best lawmaker entry went to Rep. Danny Sterling, and the best theme went to the law firm of Maples, Nix and Diesselhorst. Special thank you to our judges, Justice Noma Gurich, Judges Thad Balkman and James Siderias, and OETA reporter Susan Cadot!

Sean’s wife, Cathy, passed away recently and the fund established in memoriam to pay school lunch debts was a recipient of half of the fundsraisedbypeople’schoicedonations, with the other half going to the Donna Nigh Foundation.

Much appreciation goes to the sponsors, including the Cherokee Nation as our top-level sponsor and to Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin, Jr., and Cherokee First Lady January Hoskin for serving as our honorary co-chairs for the event.

Lawmakers in both the House of Representatives and Senate have elected their leaders-designate who will assume their leadership roles in November following the General Election. Congratulations go to Republican Speaker of the House-designate Kyle Hilbert and RepublicanPresidentProTemporedesignate Greg McCortney. I have had the pleasure of collaborating with both gentlemen through the years and look forward to their continued support for positive children’s policies.

Finally, this week, thanks to the OklahomaCommissiononChildren and Youth and Birthright Living Legacy for hosting a Fatherhood Summit in Tulsa. The presenters and conversations certainly motivated the attendees, and I expect positive legislative goals will come from this.

Getting fathers more involved in the lives of their children in most cases is something which provides greater opportunities for future success for the child. I will share more on this as suggestions and policy recommendations arise.

OICA strongly supports all these bills. We are also keeping an eye on several bills our Board and Advocacy Committee feel are not in the best interest of Oklahoma’s children. I will highlight those issues in the coming weeks.The Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy was established in 1983 by a group of citizens seeking to create a strong advocacy network that would provide a voice for the needs of children and youth in Oklahoma, particularly those in the state’s care and those growing up amid poverty, violence, abuse and neglect, disparities, or other situations that put their lives and future at risk. Our mission statement: “Creating awareness, taking action, and changing policy to improve the health, safety, and well-being of Oklahoma’s children .