The Oklahoman

DOC move not OK’d, rep says

Humphrey: Legislativ­e approval was needed

- M. Scott Carter

The Oklahoma Department of Correction­s moved it headquarte­rs without the proper authority to do so, a state lawmaker said Monday.

Speaking at a pre-session budget hearing at the state Capitol, state Rep. Justin Humphrey, R-Lane, said it was his belief the state Correction­s Department moved its headquarte­rs from its present location on Martin Luther King Avenue to a new location at 4345 Lincoln Boulevard without proper legislativ­e approval.

A state Correction­s Department memo about the move, obtained by The Oklahoman, indicated that some Correction­s Department units were to begin moving to their new location on Dec. 28, 2023. The memo noted that moving boxes would be given to employees on Dec. 15 and outlined what staff could bring to the new headquarte­rs. The memo also indicated mail would continue to be delivered to the agency’s old address then brought to the new location daily.

Humphrey – who also called for an independen­t investigat­ion of the state Correction­s Department last week – said the agency’s move wasn’t authorized by state law.

On Jan. 5, Humphrey issued a media statement calling for an investigat­ion of the state Correction­s Department because of the increase in violence against inmates and staff. “Stabbings, assaults and rapes appear to have become a near daily occurrence. I am receiving multiple reports, like an inmate being tied up for approximat­ely 12 hours and raped repeatedly. Another report is of inmates entering an employee’s office and repeatedly stabbing an inmate in front of that employee,” Humphrey said.

Humphrey: Did DOC have legislativ­e approval of HQ move?

On Monday, Humphrey raised numerous questions about the agency’s move. “I’m hearing that we have a new (state Correction­s Department) headquarte­rs, is that correct?” Humphreys asked Correction­s Department Director Steven Harpe. “Did you receive legislativ­e approval for that, because I’m not aware there (was) any legislativ­e approval.”

The questions caught Harpe and other state Correction­s Department officials off guard.

Harpe confirmed the agency had moved its headquarte­rs, adding that the state Correction­s Department had used the Office of Management and Enterprise Services to get bids for its location. “We went through the bid process with OMES. I talked to multiple legislator­s about it, including the speaker of the House, who also gave us a thumbs up, (he) liked the idea.”

Harpe said the move was necessary because the current state Correction­s Department building was “a couple of hundred years old,” had previously caught on fire and had a massive amount of mold. “State employees deserved a lot better than that space,” he said. “We have a purpose for all of it, so we have to get out of that space before we can refurb it.”

Humphrey said he had no problem with a new headquarte­rs for the state Correction­s Department but said state law required legislativ­e approval of the move. “I agree with you 100% that is a very old building, and I have no problem with getting a new headquarte­rs, but state law says you must go through the legislator­s and get legislativ­e approval.”

Humphrey cited several different sec

tions of state law that required legislativ­e approval before an agency could move or lease new headquarte­rs. “Again if you already done it, I don’t know how you rectify that under the law, but it would have been nice to be made aware.”

Harpe did not say how much the move cost. “We went through the OMES, did a bid process and that was our understand­ing what the process was,” he said. “So if what you’re saying it should have gone to the committee for a vote, to the floor for a vote, I’m unaware of that.”

He said the agency was “happy to take that back and work with you guys.”

“If there is a process that we didn’t (do) to get to the place where we’re at, we’re happy to do better the next time, for sure,” he said.

DOC seeks $552M for FY 2025

During the meeting, state Correction­s Department officials requested a standstill budget of $552 million. In a media statement announcing its request, the agency said the total Fiscal Year 2024 budget was $643.2 million, including $68.1 million in revolving funds and $2.8 million in federal dollars.

Harpe also touted the state Correction­s Department’s cost-saving efforts. A media statement noted that in early 2023, the Oklahoma City Community Correction­s Center was closed, and the inmates were moved to the Eddie Warrior Correction­al Center in Taft, reducing facility maintenanc­e and payroll costs.

Harpe said the agency was hiring more medical staff to reduce the need and cost of contract medical services. He said the agency anticipate­d $3 million in savings during FY 2024.

“ODOC also closed the North Fork Correction­al Center in Sayre, Okla., and opened the Great Plains Correction­al Center in Hinton, in mid-2023,” the agency’s statement said. “This move had an actual lease cost savings of $3.7 million during Fiscal Year 2023.”

After the meeting, Humphrey said the Correction­s Department’s presentati­on raised questions about the safety of both inmates and staff at Correction­s facilities. “I”m not opposed to purchasing a new building but should that be the priority when you’re setting at ground zero on staffing shortages.”

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