Children's Legislative Agenda Unveiled for 2026
Advocates Focus on Economic Well-Being, Education, Health, and Family & Community

As lawmakers prepare for the 2026 session of the Oklahoma Legislature, they will have the collective wisdom of child advocates from across the state in their hands.
The Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy (OICA) has unveiled the “Children’s Legislative Agenda” for 2026, a document containing recommendations to raise the quality of life for Oklahoma’s children.
“Oklahoma ranks a dismal 46th among the states when it comes to overall child well-being,” said Joe Dorman, OICA’s CEO. “During our Fall Forum, child advocates from every corner of Oklahoma came together to examine why our state ranks so poorly and to make recommendations on what needs to be done to raise that ranking.”
Using the Annie E. Casey’s KIDS COUNT Data Book, the annual examination that ranks states, advocates developed a comprehensive plan to present to Oklahoma’s lawmakers. Using the four overall areas of KIDS COUNT – Economic Well-Being, Education, Health, and Family and Community – those at Fall Forum made formal recommendations to the OICA Board of Directors. The board then finalized the recommendations going to Oklahoma’s representatives and senators for consideration during next year’s session of the Legislature.
Under Economic Well-Being, the recommendations include:
· Improving affordable housing programs.
· Expansion of family leave and access to affordable childcare.
· Making the state’s child tax credit refundable.
· Support for the Oklahoma Child and Adolescent Survivor Initiative.
In Education, advocates suggested:
· Expansion of quality afterschool programs for all grades.
· Requiring trauma-based education for future teachers.
· Creating and funding reading improvement programs like those that have worked in Ohio, Indiana, and Mississippi.
· Limit emergency teacher certifications.
· Promote free Pre-K for three-year-olds across the state, while protecting the childcare subsidy and existing programs for preschool children.
· Proactive outreach by school personnel to reduce chronic absenteeism and to require schools to develop plans to address the problem.
Under Health, the recommendations include:
· Access to prescription lock boxes to prevent accidental access to dangerous prescriptions drugs.
· A child-safe approach to TCH gummies and other products through age-appropriate packaging, lock bags, or per item dosages.
· Expansion of the “Food is Medicine Act” to allow food to be covered by Medicaid.
· Prohibit smoking in a motor vehicle while in the presence of a minor.
· Expand human trafficking mitigation and victims’ services.
· Expand and fund access to mental health care in communities and in schools.
Recommendations under Family and Community include:
· Creation of child courts modeled after Texas to provide consistent rulings and quicker decisions on child dispositions.
· Create protections and compensation for minors associated with monetized online content.
· Increase the use of GPS tracking for Victim’s Protection Order (VPO) enforcement by changing statute from “convictions” to “findings of guilt.”
· Eliminate the requirement for a jury trial for termination of parental rights, creating a different review, either by judge or administrative process, similar to most other states.
· Establish minimum age for court jurisdiction.
· Fund and sustain family resource centers to increase services such as resource referral, transportation, and other vital services, especially for more supervised visitation programs to increase accessibility for non-custodial parents.
OICA will also continue to work on issues presented in previous agendas, including the increase of support payments for foster families, as authored by lawmakers last session.
“Oklahoma’s rankings in the 2025 KIDS COUNT DATA BOOK are extremely low, so much work is in store for us as a state,” Dorman said. “A great amount of work went into developing these recommendations, but we realize this is only the beginning.
“We call upon our lawmakers to carefully consider these recommendations, which come from advocates who truly have the ‘boots on the ground’ working every day to improve the lives of Oklahoma’s children.”
The full Children’s Legislative Agenda is available on the OICA website at https://tinyurl.com/2026OICACLA.
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