Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
For Immediate Release: October 8, 2015

Sen. Clark Jolley
Jolley: moving Medical Examiner’s
Office to Oklahoma County Health Department building would save
millions,
help effort to get accreditation back
Sen. Clark Jolley
on Thursday said an agreement has been reached to relocate the
State Medical Examiner’s Office to the Oklahoma County Health
Department building. Jolley said the agreement would result in significant
savings and help the Medical Examiner’s Office to restore
its accreditation.
“This move will result in a savings of millions of dollars,
and we would be able to have those monies go straight back into
education,” said Jolley, R-Edmond. “I’m very grateful
to the Commissioners of the Land Office (CLO) for being innovative
in helping us find a solution that will save state dollars and help
restore our accreditation.”
Gov. Mary Fallin said the announcement was an important step toward
regaining accreditation for the office.
“This action today gives the state a very good option to move
the state medical examiner’s office into a new facility and
out of its old, cramped and dilapidated building,” said Fallin,
who serves as CLO chairman. “It lacks sufficient space for
staff and agency operations, and it can’t be expanded. Today’s
approval is a vital step in winning back accreditation for the medical
examiner’s office, which conducts the important work of determining
the cause of death for victims of violent or suspicious deaths.”
“This is a win-win for the state. With the CLO owning the
building, the lease payments it collects will go directly with other
funds it collects and distributes to public schools and higher education,”
Fallin said.
Under current state law, the Medical Examiner’s Office is
required to be on the campus of the University of Central Oklahoma
(UCO). Jolley has introduced Senate Bill 866 to eliminate this requirement.
“The University of Central Oklahoma, the Regional University
System of Oklahoma, and the State Regents all deserve thanks for
their efforts to find a way to make it work at UCO,” Jolley
said. “UCO President Don Betz and former President Roger Webb
have been great partners in this effort. While all of us would have
preferred to see the synergy between the Medical Examiner, the UCO
Forensic Science Institute and the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation's
Crime Lab, the fiscally conservative approach here is to save the
money and expedite the renovation to get the accreditation back.
I’m pleased to support this fiscally responsible move to support
public safety.”
For more information, contact:
Sen.
Jolley: 405-521-5622

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