OKLAHOMA CITY – A new law allows felons a “Fresh Start”.
OKLAHOMA CITY – A new law allows felons a “Fresh Start”.
The new law gives people with felonies on their records the opportunity to seek occupational licensing for a number of professions as long as the crimes are not violent or sexual in nature.
State Rep. Zack Taylor (R-Seminole) is author of House Bill 1373, known as “Fresh Start,” which took effect Nov. 1. The measure reforms occupational licensure in conjunction with criminal justice reform.
“This will give people that have made mistakes in their past a second chance at professional licensing,” Taylor said. “This doesn’t hide a person’s criminal record or require a business to hire them, but it does remove the barrier of restrictive licensing in many cases.”
The law applies to most licensed trades, he said.
The new bill requires the state entity charged with oversight of occupational licensure to explicitly list the specific criminal records that would disqualify an applicant for a particular occupation, and allows for a denial of licensure only for a conviction of a crime that substantially relates to the practice of that occupation and poses a reasonable threat to public safety.
The measure also specifies that disqualification for a criminal conviction may last for a period no longer than five years, as long as the crime is not violent or sexual in nature and there have been no convictions within that five-year period.