Vol. 6 No. 23 | June 10, 2026

More

One Week Until the Midyear Conference: Register Today!

The OBA Midyear Conference is only one week away! The conference, set for June 17-19 at the OKANA Resort in Oklahoma City, has valuable sessions for every lawyer. Attendees can choose from a variety of CLE topics, including practice management, ADA compliance and accessibility, using AI in your practice, ethics, substantive law updates and everything in between, allowing the opportunity to obtain all 12 MCLE credits for the entire year, including 2 hours of ethics.

Throughout the conference, attendees will hear from many insightful speakers who will provide practical tools and updates, helping you sharpen your skills.

Honor Your Colleagues: Submit OBA Award Nominations by June 30

For decades, the Oklahoma Bar Association has recognized attorneys across the state who demonstrate professionalism, ingenuity and excellence in the legal field with prestigious OBA Awards, many of which are named after trailblazers in the legal field.

If you know an attorney who fits the bill, consider nominating them for an OBA Award! The OBA Awards Committee is now accepting nominations for the 2026 OBA Awards, and this year's honorees will be recognized during the OBA Annual Meeting in November.

Nominations are due by June 30. Nominate a friend or colleague today!

From the Bar Journal | Event Contracts and the 2026 Wagering Loss Limitation

"In 2026, some gamblers may find themselves owing federal income tax on a number that feels wrong. The reason is a small numeric change: For taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2025, amended Internal Revenue Code (IRC) §165(d) no longer allows gambling losses to offset gambling winnings one-to-one. Rather, the code will now permit a deduction for only 90% of aggregate wagering losses (including certain wagering-related expenses), even though losses remain deductible only up to wagering gains. Thus, for high-volume bettors, the statute can now decouple taxable results from economic results."

YLD News | Building a Professional Reputation Early in Your Legal Career

"For many young lawyers, the first years of practice are focused on learning the mechanics of the profession – drafting motions, conducting research and navigating unfamiliar procedures. In the midst of this learning curve, it is easy to assume that professional reputation is something that develops later in a career. In reality, a lawyer’s reputation begins forming from the very first day of practice. The habits young attorneys develop early – how they handle assignments, communicate with colleagues and respond to challenges – often shape how others perceive them for years to come."

Featured CLE

Management Assistance Program 1 (1)

Turn Down the Noise in Your Inbox

By OBA Management Assistance Program Director Julie Bays

Lawyers receive a lot of email. Client messages, court notices, opposing counsel, calendar reminders, newsletters, vendor updates, bar communications and automated notifications all arrive in the same place. Even useful information can begin to feel like clutter when the inbox is already full.

That is why Catherine Sanders Reach’s article, “Silencing Your Noisy Inbox, Part 1,” is such a helpful reminder. Ms. Reach discusses practical ways to reduce inbox noise, including Focused Inbox in Outlook, Gmail categories, rules and filters, unsubscribe options and changing notification settings for accounts that send too many alerts. Her broader point is especially useful: First, identify what kind of email is creating the noise, then use the right tool to manage it.

That matters because not every email that appears to come from an organization is the same type of communication. Some messages are official announcements or newsletters. Others are automated notifications from discussion forums, committees, sections or online communities a lawyer has joined.

For OBA members, this distinction is important. Courts & More is a weekly email from the Oklahoma Bar Association that shares updates from the OBA and the courts and other information intended to help lawyers improve the quality of their legal services.

In contrast, MyOKBar Communities can produce very different levels of email traffic. Some communities are relatively quiet, while others produce a steady stream of discussion emails. If you belong to an active community, those individual messages can quickly begin to overwhelm your inbox.

The good news is that you have control over the emails you receive. MyOKBar Community notification settings can be adjusted. Members may choose to receive individual emails, switch to a daily digest or reduce notifications for specific communities. For busy lawyers, the daily digest may be the best compromise. You still receive the benefit of section and committee discussions, but the messages are gathered into a more manageable format.

This approach lets you reduce inbox noise without disconnecting from useful professional conversations. Email fatigue is not just about the number of messages. It is about whether the right information reaches you at the right time, in a format you can use.

So before deciding that “all these emails” are too much, take a few minutes to adjust the settings on the emails you can control. For MyOKBar Communities, consider changing active communities to a daily digest or turning off emails for communities you prefer to check manually. Then keep the messages that help you stay informed, competent and connected.

HOW TO CHANGE YOUR MYOKBAR COMMUNITY EMAIL SETTINGS

  1. Log in to your MyOKBar account at okbar.org
  2. Click on MYOKBAR Communities under the MyOkBar links on the right
  3. Select the section or committee you want to receive fewer emails from
  4. Click on the green Settings button next to the name of the section or committee
  5. Click on the blue button under EMAIL NOTIFICATIONS
  6. Choose Real Time, Daily Digest or No Email

The Oklahoma Bar Journal is a publication of the Oklahoma Bar Association. All rights reserved. Copyright© 2026 Oklahoma Bar Association. Statements or opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Oklahoma Bar Association, its officers, Board of Governors, Board of Editors or staff. Although advertising copy is reviewed, no endorsement of any product or service offered by any advertisement is intended or implied by publication. Advertisers are solely responsible for the content of their ads, and the OBA reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy for any reason. Legal articles carried in the Oklahoma Bar Journal are selected by the Board of Editors. Information about submissions can be found at www.okbar.org.

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.