Governor Mary Fallin seated at a desk bearing the Great Seal of Oklahoma, signing Senate Bill 239 into law on June 10, 2015. Chase Morris's father stands to her right, holding a framed portrait of Chase.
Bill signing, Oklahoma State Capitol, June 10, 2015. Governor Mary Fallin signs Senate Bill 239 — the Chase Morris Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Act — into law. Chase's father holds his portrait at right.
2015  ·  Senate Bill 239

The original Act.


Senate Bill 239 of the 2015 Oklahoma legislative session was authored by two physician-legislators: Senator Ervin Yen, M.D., an Oklahoma City cardiac anesthesiologist representing Senate District 40, and Representative Doug Cox, M.D., a Grove emergency physician representing House District 5. It was reportedly the first time in Oklahoma legislative history that two practicing physicians co-authored a bill.

The bill moved through committee with bipartisan support and passed both chambers of the Legislature without significant opposition. Governor Mary Fallin signed it into law in a ceremony in the Blue Room of the Oklahoma State Capitol on June 10, 2015. Chase's family was present, with his portrait. The law took effect on July 1, 2015 and is codified at Title 70, Section 24-156 of the Oklahoma Statutes.

What the original Act required

SB 239 required the Oklahoma State Department of Health and the Oklahoma State Department of Education to jointly develop sudden cardiac arrest information for distribution to schools statewide. The legislation was deliberately educational rather than mandatory. As Mike Morris told the press at the time: "It is not a mandate for screening — it's an educational bill."

The Act required schools to provide an information sheet on sudden cardiac arrest to student athletes and their parents, to be reviewed and signed prior to participation in athletic activity. The bill contemplated annual review of the materials and addressed the role of school personnel in recognizing the warning signs.

Why "educational rather than mandatory" mattered

The decision to write an educational bill rather than a screening mandate reflected a careful reading of the political and clinical landscape. Universal mandatory screening of student athletes is not, even today, the position of the American Heart Association, which has cited cost and the risk of false positives as concerns. Parent Heart Watch — the national umbrella organization for SCA prevention nonprofits, of which the foundation is a member — issued a formal statement in February 2026 reaffirming its position against mandatory ECG screening, while supporting screening that is voluntary, well-informed, and properly resourced.

The Chase Morris Foundation's position is consistent with that consensus: screening should be available, accessible, and well-informed; legislation should empower families and educate schools, not mandate medical decisions over the heads of either. SB 239 reflects exactly that position.

Liability protection for schools

Subsection (J) of the codified Act provides that the law creates no civil liability for schools, school districts, or their employees for actions taken in good faith to comply with its provisions. This was an important provision for legislative passage and remains an important provision for ongoing compliance. Schools are protected when they distribute the materials, when they recognize warning signs, and when they respond to a cardiac event in accordance with their emergency response plan.

Citation

Senate Bill 239, 1st Session of the 55th Oklahoma Legislature (2015). Signed by Governor Mary Fallin, June 10, 2015. Effective July 1, 2015. Codified at 70 Okla. Stat. § 24-156.


2024  ·  Senate Bill 1921

Nine years later: the Act, strengthened.


In the 2024 session of the Oklahoma Legislature, Senator Paul Rosino (R-Oklahoma City) introduced Senate Bill 1921 — a substantial expansion of the original Chase Morris Act. The new legislation reflected nine years of evolving best practice in cardiac emergency preparedness, the lessons of the January 2023 on-field cardiac arrest of NFL safety Damar Hamlin, and the recommendations of the NFL-led Smart Heart Sports Coalition that emerged in its wake.

SB 1921 was passed by the Oklahoma Legislature and signed into law by Governor Kevin Stitt. It became one of thirteen state sudden cardiac arrest laws enacted across the United States during 2024.

What SB 1921 added

The 2024 amendment built four substantive new requirements onto the original Act:

  1. Annual sudden cardiac arrest training for school athletic coaches, athletic trainers, and school nurses. The training must be delivered by a state-approved provider and must include recognition of warning signs and field response.
  2. A signed Athlete & Parent Information Sheet on sudden cardiac arrest, jointly developed by the Oklahoma State Department of Health and the Oklahoma State Department of Education and made available in both English and Spanish, to be reviewed and signed before athletic participation.
  3. A district-level cardiac emergency response plan at every Oklahoma school district, including coordinated procedures for responding to an on-site cardiac event.
  4. Automated External Defibrillator (AED) availability at every school site, contingent on funding from federal, state, or private donation sources. This provision tracks the recommendations of the federal HEARTS Act, signed by President Biden in December 2024, which created a Department of Health and Human Services grant program for school AEDs.

Together, these provisions move Oklahoma from an educational baseline to one of the more comprehensive state frameworks for sudden cardiac arrest preparedness in American public schools.

Citation

Senate Bill 1921, 2nd Session of the 59th Oklahoma Legislature (2024). Sponsored by Sen. Paul Rosino. Signed by Governor Kevin Stitt. Amends 70 O.S. § 24-156.

Authors and signatories

The Oklahomans behind the Act.

[ Sen. Yen ]
Co-author, SB 239 (2015)

Senator Ervin Yen, M.D.

Cardiac anesthesiologist and former Oklahoma State Senator representing Senate District 40 (Oklahoma City). Co-author of the original Chase Morris Act with Rep. Cox — the first time in Oklahoma history two practicing physicians co-authored a bill.

[ Rep. Cox ]
Co-author, SB 239 (2015)

Representative Doug Cox, M.D.

Emergency physician and former Oklahoma State Representative representing House District 5 (Grove). Chase's home community was within Rep. Cox's district. He attended the bill signing ceremony in 2015 and the foundation's first heart screening at Metro Christian Academy in Tulsa.

[ Sen. Rosino ]
Sponsor, SB 1921 (2024)

Senator Paul Rosino

Oklahoma State Senator representing Senate District 45 (Oklahoma City). Sponsor of the 2024 legislation that strengthened the original Chase Morris Act by adding annual training requirements, district cardiac emergency response plans, and provisions for school AEDs.

[ Gov. Fallin ]
Signed SB 239 — June 10, 2015

Governor Mary Fallin

27th Governor of Oklahoma (2011–2019). Signed the original Chase Morris Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Act into law in a ceremony in the Blue Room of the Oklahoma State Capitol on June 10, 2015, with Chase's family in attendance.

[ Gov. Stitt ]
Signed SB 1921 — 2024

Governor Kevin Stitt

28th Governor of Oklahoma. Signed the 2024 strengthening of the Chase Morris Act, expanding the law's scope to include training, response plans, and AED provisions.

Federal recognition

A senator's letter, weeks after his own loss.


On December 16, 2013 — five months after the foundation's incorporation, and thirty-six days after Senator Jim Inhofe lost his own son in an aviation accident — the senior senator from Oklahoma wrote the foundation a letter on official Senate letterhead. He wrote, in part:

"We have this in common: we've both lost loved ones, and I understand your grief. I applaud you for the work you are doing with the Chase Morris Foundation." Senator Jim Inhofe — December 16, 2013

The letter is preserved in the foundation's archives. It was written in the immediate aftermath of the senator's own bereavement — a measure of grace from a man who had lost his son and still found time, that month, to encourage another grieving family. Senator Inhofe served Oklahoma in the United States Senate until his retirement in 2023. He died on July 9, 2024, at age 89.