Vol. 6 No. 24 | June 17, 2026

Courts

Supreme Court of Oklahoma

Court of Criminal Appeals

Court of Civil Appeals

Dispositions Other than by Published Opinions

The Supreme Court of Oklahoma Court Calendar

The Supreme Court of Oklahoma is in session year round, unless otherwise noted. The court regularly schedules conferences on Mondays and other days as needed.

Member Transitions

Notice Of Judicial Vacancy

More

The OBA Midyear Conference Starts Today, Walk-Ins Welcome

The OBA Midyear Conference begins today! The conference, which will run through June 19 at the OKANA Resort in Oklahoma City, has valuable sessions for every lawyer, allowing the opportunity to obtain all 12 MCLE credits for the entire year, including 2 hours of ethics.

WALK-INS WELCOME
Online registration has closed, but walk-in attendees are still welcome and encouraged. Throughout the conference, attendees will hear from many insightful speakers who will provide practical tools and updates on 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.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS
The OBA Midyear Conference could not take place without the support from our sponsors. This year’s sponsors include:
Premium Sponsor: Oklahoma Attorneys Mutual Insurance Co.
Speaker Sponsor: Phillips Murrah PC, sponsoring Herb Rubenstein’s sessions
Silver Sponsor: Argent Trust
Bronze Sponsors: Dispute Resolution Consultants, Alliant Insurance Services, Smokeball, Clio, LexisNexis, Destination CLEs, Garden Wealth Management
Scholarship and Special Event Sponsors: Oklahoma Bar Foundation and Oklahoma Attorneys Mutual Insurance Co.
Charging Station Sponsor: Legal CMO Now
Thursday Morning Yoga and Juice Bar Sponsors: Hall Estill, OBA Lawyers Helping Lawyers Assistance Program Committee and the OBA Young Lawyers Division

We can't wait to see you at the conference!

OBA To Launch New and Improved Public Website

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In just a few weeks, the OBA will launch a new and improved version of the association's public website, www.okbar.org. The new site offers improved search features and will be easier for OBA members and the public to use and navigate. OBA members will be able to view section, committee and governance information as well as the Oklahoma Bar Journal, classified ads and more. Links to your MyOKBar accounts and MCLE information will remain easily accessible through the new website. More details coming soon!

Don't Forget To Submit Your 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!

Featured CLE

Management Assistance Program 1 (1)

Can Your Law Firm Run When Your Best Employee Is on Vacation?

By OBA Management Assistance Program Director Julie Bays

Summer vacations can reveal whether a law office has systems or simply has very capable people remembering how everything works.

Every firm has those tasks that “only one person knows how to do.” That may work most days. But it becomes a risk when that person is out of the office, on vacation, sick or caring for a family member, or leaves the firm. The lawyer may know the legal strategy. The staff member may know how the billing gets finalized, where the templates are stored, how conflict checks are handled, which court notices require immediate action and which recurring deadlines are easy to miss.

That kind of institutional knowledge is valuable. But it should not live only in one person’s memory.

A good summer project is to identify the most important recurring tasks in your office and make sure at least two people know how each one is handled. Start with the basics: client intake, conflict checks, calendaring, e-filing, billing, trust accounting procedures, document naming and storage, mail handling, client communication, file closing and backup procedures.

Then write down the steps while the person who knows the process is doing the work. That is often much easier than trying to recreate the process from memory later. You do not need to create a giant office manual no one will read. A short checklist, a shared procedure document or a task template may be enough to prevent confusion.

This is especially important for solo and small firm lawyers. In smaller offices, one person’s absence can disrupt the entire workflow. A lawyer may not realize how much depends on one staff member until that person is gone for a week.

This kind of planning is not just about convenience. It improves client service, reduces the risk of missed deadlines, supports supervision and helps the law office continue providing competent legal services when someone is unavailable. It also makes vacation more realistic. Lawyers and staff are more likely to take needed time away when they know the office has a reliable system for keeping work moving.

Before the next vacation begins, ask a simple question: “What would be difficult for someone else to handle if I were gone next week?” The answers will show you where to begin.

A helpful Attorney at Work article, "Got a Process for Your Processes? Create Law Firm SOPs in 5 Easy Steps," explains how to begin creating standard operating procedures for recurring law office tasks.

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.

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