• Contact
Friday, April 10, 2026
  • Login
Oklahoma Business Voice
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Aerospace
    • Childcare
    • Education
    • Energy & Environment
    • Federal
    • Film & Television Industry
    • Finance
    • Health Care
    • Innovation
    • Issues Affecting Oklahomans
    • OBV One-on-One
    • Opinion
    • Politics & Elections
    • Taxes & Budget
    • Tech
    • Tribal
    • Workforce Development
    U.S. inflation accelerates to 3.3% in March

    U.S. inflation accelerates to 3.3% in March

    House passes FY27 budget with record education funding

    House passes FY27 budget with record education funding

    Groups sound off after judge rejects Illinois River poultry settlements

    Groups sound off after judge rejects Illinois River poultry settlements

    Oklahoma’s AI moment: adoption rises as lawmakers write early guardrails

    Oklahoma’s AI moment: adoption rises as lawmakers write early guardrails

  • Sign UpNEW
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Aerospace
    • Childcare
    • Education
    • Energy & Environment
    • Federal
    • Film & Television Industry
    • Finance
    • Health Care
    • Innovation
    • Issues Affecting Oklahomans
    • OBV One-on-One
    • Opinion
    • Politics & Elections
    • Taxes & Budget
    • Tech
    • Tribal
    • Workforce Development
    U.S. inflation accelerates to 3.3% in March

    U.S. inflation accelerates to 3.3% in March

    House passes FY27 budget with record education funding

    House passes FY27 budget with record education funding

    Groups sound off after judge rejects Illinois River poultry settlements

    Groups sound off after judge rejects Illinois River poultry settlements

    Oklahoma’s AI moment: adoption rises as lawmakers write early guardrails

    Oklahoma’s AI moment: adoption rises as lawmakers write early guardrails

  • Sign UpNEW
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!
No Result
View All Result
Oklahoma Business Voice
No Result
View All Result
Home News Innovation
Kane backs update to Oklahoma’s incentive‑review process

Kane backs update to Oklahoma’s incentive‑review process

Luke Reynolds by Luke Reynolds
March 23, 2026
in Innovation, News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

OKLAHOMA CITY (OBV) — Rep. John Kane says a pair of incentive-evaluation updates moving through the Legislature would strengthen transparency, clarify strategic goals and ensure Oklahoma’s tax tools keep pace with economic changes. 

HB 3942 and SB 1990 refine how the state reviews economic incentives by adding new reporting requirements and expanding the analysis the Incentive Evaluation Commission must conduct each year. The bills require comparisons to other states, assessments of whether incentives align with Oklahoma’s long-term economic strategy, and clearer evaluations of whether programs actually influence business behavior. 

Kane said the legislation builds on a framework created in 2015, when lawmakers established the state’s formal incentive-evaluation process. He said the system has performed well over time and that the new bills simply codify practices that have already proven valuable. According to Kane, understanding whether incentives achieve their intended results is essential before the state continues investing in them.  

“If we’re going to give tax incentives, it’s imperative that we understand what the benefits are coming to the state,” he said. “Are we accomplishing what that tax incentive was set up to accomplish?” 

He emphasized that reviewing incentives against shifting economic realities is critical. Kane said some programs that were strong fits decades ago may no longer serve the state’s strategic needs, especially as industries rise and fall. He pointed to aerospace as an example of how targeted, long-term economic planning can pay off.  

“Who would have dreamed aerospace would be where it is today,” he said, noting the industry’s growth from an aspirational goal into a major economic driver. 

The legislation also strengthens the link between evaluation and decision-making. Kane said the updated reports will now move directly to the Legislative Office of Fiscal Transparency, giving lawmakers a clearer picture of whether programs create measurable economic returns.  

The goal, he said, is to ensure incentives are held to the same standards as any other public investment.  

“It’s transparency and accountability,” he said, adding that updating the process does not imply past policies were mistakes. Instead, he said the state must be willing to adapt when conditions change. 

Kane noted that welldesigned incentives can drive job growth and investment, but only if they continue meeting strategic objectives. He said lawmakers need reliable data to determine when a program has reached the end of its useful life. “If they don’t, we need to know, and we need to say we’re not doing that one anymore,” he said. 

He described the bills as modest but necessary adjustments to keep the state’s evaluation framework current. In his view, modernization helps lawmakers ensure they are “still doing things right today that you started many years ago.” 

HB 3942 has passed the House, and SB 1990 has passed the Senate. Both measures continue through the legislative process. 

ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Stitt orders comprehensive review of public school spending

Next Post

Senate passes SB 1338 to make state literacy team permanent

Related Posts

U.S. inflation accelerates to 3.3% in March
News

U.S. inflation accelerates to 3.3% in March

April 10, 2026
House passes FY27 budget with record education funding
News

House passes FY27 budget with record education funding

April 9, 2026
Groups sound off after judge rejects Illinois River poultry settlements
News

Groups sound off after judge rejects Illinois River poultry settlements

April 9, 2026
Oklahoma’s AI moment: adoption rises as lawmakers write early guardrails
News

Oklahoma’s AI moment: adoption rises as lawmakers write early guardrails

April 9, 2026
Walmart, Sam’s Club launch Fight Hunger. Spark Change. campaign in Oklahoma
News

Walmart, Sam’s Club launch Fight Hunger. Spark Change. campaign in Oklahoma

April 8, 2026
Senate passes SB 1990 to tighten review of state business incentives
News

Senate passes general appropriations bill for FY 2027

April 8, 2026
Next Post
Oklahoma State Capitol

Senate passes SB 1338 to make state literacy team permanent

Oklahoma Business Voice

© 2026 Oklahoma State Chamber.
Powered by High Five Media.
Privacy Policy

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • News
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!

© 2026 Oklahoma State Chamber.
Powered by High Five Media.
Privacy Policy

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.