Tenants, landlords urge reform on Oklahoma’s eviction laws

The Associated Press - October 3, 2020 12:13 pm

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma lawmakers have come under pressure to reform the state’s eviction laws.

The Tulsa World reports that Oklahoma courts last year handled 44,612 eviction cases, with more than 1,200 tenants a month receiving eviction notices in Tulsa County alone. Tulsa has the 11th highest eviction rate in the country.

Advocates for tenants and landlords testified before a House committee hearing on Thursday. They suggested standardizing eviction rules statewide; allowing eviction records to be expunged after a certain amount of time; extending how long tenants have to respond to an eviction notice; and giving tenants a right to legal counsel during an eviction hearing.

 

Latest Stories

No. 9 OU women remain unbeaten with 88-58 victory over UNLV

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Senior Skylar Vann scored 15 points and her sister, freshman Zya Vann,...

Bryce Thompson scores 17 points and OSU beats Miami 80-74 in the Charleston Classic

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Bryce Thompson scored 17 points, Marchelus Avery had 15 points and eight...

Freshman Jeremiah Fears, Duke Miles propel OU to 84-56 victory over East Texas A&M

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Freshman Jeremiah Fears finished with 20 points, Duke Miles scored 19, and...