OPINION FEED

Shooting At Navy Yard

1 day ago

Putin and Obama

2 days ago

191 Comments

Putin and Obama

2 days ago

166 Comments

Obama's Jail

6 days ago

116 Comments

United We Stand

last week

88 Comments

Obama Foreign Policy

4 days ago

36 Comments

Shooting At Navy Yard

1 day ago

25 Comments

Tulsa and 911

5 days ago

Editorial: The 'special interest' in the special session was Oklahoma

By World's Editorials Writers on Sep 12, 2013, at 2:28 AM  Updated on 9/12/13 at 3:17 AM



Editorials

Editorial: AA workers again waiting for resolution

The 6,300 employees at the American Airlines Maintenance Facility in Tulsa could use some certainty, but they're going to have to wait.

Editorial: Was background check on Navy shipyard shooter thorough?

The loss of 12 lives, 13 counting the suspect, in the Navy shipyard shootings Monday is tragic. With each killing spree the natural reaction is to search for the motive or the psychological reason for such a horrific event.

Gov. Mary Fallin tied the final ribbon around the special legislative session Tuesday, signing all 23 bills that the Legislature sent to her.

The week-long special session restored common-sense lawsuit reform measures originally passed in 2009, when Gov. Brad Henry signed them into law.

The measures protect people doing business in the state without giving away the rights of people with legitimate cases.

Earlier this summer, the Oklahoma Supreme Court declared the 2009 laws unconstitutional largely because many of them were rolled into one statute - violating the state Constitution's ban on multiple-topic legislation.

The special session unwound the big law into bite-sized pieces, all of which passed.

The most contentious piece of the puzzle was the so-called certificate of merit bill, which requires a relevant expert certify the viability of any negligence claim that is likely to require expert testimony.

The Supreme Court killed previous versions of that law, finding that they were unconstitutional barriers to the courts and "special legislation," both of which are unconstitutional.

Backers of the latest version say they've fixed those problems.

Expect challenges to that new law and other elements of the special session's work. Attorneys in the Legislature essentially promised as much.

They proclaimed the special session as the special interest special session.

We suppose the nature of "special interests" is a matter of perspective.

Our judgment: The special session was short, efficient and necessary. The result is a return to the way things have been running for years. And the only special interest that was being protected was the future growth and prosperity of Oklahoma.
Original Print Headline: Something special
Editorials

Editorial: AA workers again waiting for resolution

The 6,300 employees at the American Airlines Maintenance Facility in Tulsa could use some certainty, but they're going to have to wait.

Editorial: Was background check on Navy shipyard shooter thorough?

The loss of 12 lives, 13 counting the suspect, in the Navy shipyard shootings Monday is tragic. With each killing spree the natural reaction is to search for the motive or the psychological reason for such a horrific event.

COMMENTS

Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories. You can either sign in to your Tulsa World account or use Facebook.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free. To comment through Facebook, please sign in to your account before you comment.

Read our commenting policy.


Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free.

Read our commenting policy.

By clicking "Submit" you are agreeing to our terms and conditions, and grant Tulsa World the right and license to publish the content of your posted comment, in whole or in part, in Tulsa World.