Sunday, May 10, 2026

LET 'EM VOTE!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


VETTING ILLEGALS


by Steve Fair

 On Friday May 8th, the Oklahoma State Senate took the day off.  Senate Pro Tem Lonnie Paxton, (R-Tuttle) said the Senate had gotten their work done early and had outpaced the State House in hearing bills.  Paxton said the Senate is largely done with the 2026 session.  The Oklahoma legislature, according to the state constitution, must complete their work by May 29th.  Not all GOP Senators believe their work was done. 

Ten GOP state senators posted a photo on social media showing them sitting at their desks in the Senate chamber. 

Rep. Josh West, (R-Grove) said House leadership met with Paxton and Sen. Julie Daniels (R-Bartlesville), the Senate Floor Leader, and thought they had agreed to run bills every day last week.  "We stuck to our commitment," West said.

Two of the bills the Senate refuses to hear is HB# 4422 and HB# 4423, the so-called SECURE acts.  These bills have been advocated by the Trump administration to deal with illegal immigrants receiving taxpayer funded benefits.  The two bills would require state agencies such as the Department of Human Services (DHS) and the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA) to use the federal SAVE system to ensure only eligible individuals receive benefits like SNAP and Medicaid. 

The Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program is a secure, online service operated by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) that allows federal, state, and local agencies to verify an applicant's immigration status or U.S. citizenship. It is used to determine eligibility for benefits, licenses, and services.  Three observations:

First, like a pancake, every story has two sides.  Paxton has expressed concern the verification rules in the two bills would create a "chilling effect" among undocumented parents. He fears illegals would stop applying for essential benefits like SNAP, Medicaid, and TANF, leaving their citizen children without vital healthcare and nutrition assistance.

Paxton argues the SAVE system mandate could deter pregnant, illegals from seeking prenatal healthcare services. He says a baby in the womb deserves protection regardless of the mother's legal status.  "We shouldn't have kids starving to death because of what the parents said or what the parents did or didn't do," Paxton said. 

Those are valid arguments and every state Senator should seriously consider them before they vote.  But Paxton should allow the bills to the floor.  Let the merits of both sides be debated and a vote taken.  Too often legislation is not allowed to the floor because the leadership are afraid of the outcome.  If the majority of the majority Party members want to vote on these two bills, let 'em vote.

Second, taxpayers are tapped out.  With rising consumer costs, inflation, and increased tax burden, the working folk paying the bills don't need to be footing the bill for benefits for non-citizens.  But that doesn't mean there are not people who need help.

The sad fact is that many individuals eligible for government benefits don't apply.    Whether it's because of stigma/shame, or pride and independence, those who really need the help will not ask.  Many of those are taxpayers whose paycheck is gone before the week is over.  They shouldn't be expected to pay the bill for those who entered the U.S. illegally when they are struggling. 

Third, the current economic climate presents an excellent opportunity for Christians to really practice 'love their neighbor' and walk the walk. Instead of looking to government to solve a problem, maybe believers should be looking in the ditch like the Good Samaritan in Luke 10.

It's a reality they will be scammed, conned, duped, and fleeced by those seeking help.  But no more than they are being bamboozled by an incompetent government claiming expertise vetting illegals. 

On Wednesday, Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt issued an executive order (EO) mirroring exactly what HB# 4422 and HB# 4423 would do if passed and signed into law.  The EO will likely face a lawsuit. 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Open Records request timing is suspect!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


WEAPONIZING OF FOIA!


by Steve Fair

In 1966, Congress passed the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).  It established the legal presumption government records are accessible to the public.  Up until the FOIC was enacted, a request for a government record required the requestor to demonstrate a specific "need to know."  The FOIA explicitly applies only to government agencies under the executive branch and requests are to be handled within 20 days. 

After the FOIA became law, many states followed suit and passed similar laws.  The Oklahoma Open Records Act (OORA) was added to the books in 1985 with the following stated purpose: "As the Oklahoma Constitution recognizes and guarantees, all political power is inherent in the people.  Thus, it is the public policy of the State of Oklahoma that the people are vested with the inherent right to know and be fully informed about their government."  OORA has been added to and amended several times in the last 40 years, but the stated purpose has remained consistent.

This past week, Oklahomans for Transparency in Government (OTG) sued Oklahoma State Treasurer Todd Russ.  OTG alleges Russ did not respond or recognize an open records request from March 16th.  OTG wants records on the state's contract with 'Way2GoCard," a debit card/direct deposit program for state employees.  OTG claims an unnamed whistleblower says Gateway Bank is involved.  Governor Kevin Stitt founded Gateway Mortgage, which merged with the bank.  OTG says using Gateway could be a conflict of interest.  They claim they have reached out to the treasurer's office three times with no response.  Russ said two status reports were provided and the request was “overly broad.” His office has reached out to the Attorney General’s Office for guidance.  Three observations:

First, the people have a right to know.   The secrecy by government agencies during the Cold War triggered the federal FOIA.  Democrat California Congressman John Moss led a bi-partisan campaign to make the FOIA law.  The people got tired of the lack of accountable by arrogant bureaucrats and elected officials.  FOIA's stated purpose was to allow citizens, journalists, and civic organizations to uncover waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government.   FOIA has increased accountability because all too often, people only do what is inspected, not what is expected. 

Oklahoma government agencies should be willing to comply with reasonable requests for records, but therein lies the issue- who determines what is reasonable? 

Russ said about OTG's request: “As written, the request is overly broad and encompasses thousands of records. Based on its language, the Office is unable to identify with reasonable specificity the records being sought. The hours required to fulfill the request are likely in the hundreds, as documents must be reviewed for personal identification, information and other sensitive material requiring redaction under the law.” 

Second, open record laws have been weaponized.  Many open record requests are made simply to harass, overwhelm, intimidate, and hassle public officials.  Broad, excessive, duplicate requests are made not for transparency, but as a tool of disruption.  Those requests cost taxpayers millions of dollars each year.  The goal of those type requests is not accountability/transparency- it's chicanery/trickery. 

Third, if Gateway is involved, that should be disclosed.  Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt founded Gateway and has reportedly placed his ownership into a trust to avoid conflicts of interest, but he still retains ownership of the company.  No laws may have been broken even if Gateway was used, but citizens have a right to know the truth.

The timing of OTG's lawsuit is suspect.  Russ is up for re-election and has drawn a Republican opponent.  There appears to be no direct link between Russ' opponent and the OTG request, but expect politics to come to play.  With a June 16th primary looming, expect a hit piece on Russ to be in your mailbox soon.  Recognize it for what it is- politics.