Oklahoma Corporation Commission Race
Denise Bode was elected to this seat in 2004, but resigned in 2008, two years before her term expired. Dana Murphy won a Special Election to fill the remainder of the term. Murphy of Edmond won reelection in 2010 for a full six year term. Murphy, 56, is running for election to another six-year term. She is a Republican and since no other Republicans filed for the post, she moves on to the General Election.
Murphy attended Oklahoma State University (OSU) and graduated with a bachelor's degree in geology. After practicing as a geologist for ten years, she obtained her law degree at Oklahoma City University. She has more than 22-years experience in the petroleum industry including owning and operating a private law firm focused on oil and gas title, regulatory practice and transactional work and working as a geologist. Prior to being elected commissioner, she served for almost six years as an administrative law judge at the Commission.
State Reresentative. Richard Morrissette is seeking the Democrat nomination for Corporation Commissioner. Morrissette has represented House District 92 in south Oklahoma City for 12 years in the Oklahoma House of Representatives and could not run for reelection due to legislative term-limits. In a statement announcing his candidacy, Morrissette noted his campaign will promote consumer protection for all Oklahomans. "I will serve everyone: consumers and businesses, ratepayers and utilities and their stockholders, homeowners and energy producers. We are all Oklahomans."
In February, Morrissette organized a town hall meeting concerning earthquakes which featured environmental activist Erin Brockovich. Morrissette and Brockovich urged Oklahomans to get active to stop the increasing number of earthquakes. Morrissette has been a vocal critic of Gov. Mary Fallin and the Corporation Commission and their handling of the earthquake and disposal well issue. "It's time for the Corporation Commission to protect the interests of all citizens of Oklahoma, not just a select few," said Morrissette following the earthquake forum on the campus of the University of Central Oklahoma. "This commission is responsible for regulating public utilities and the energy industry -- two industries upon which Oklahoma depends for daily needs and, to a great extent, our economic development. We all need a voice on the Commission that will bring focus back to protecting citizens and enforcing responsible energy policies."
Commissioner Murphy has been intensely involved in the earthquake issue at the Commission. "The issue of earthquakes became a critically important issue for me in the past few years, because it affects public safety, property, the environment as well as the oil and gas industry." says Murphy. The commissioner said it is a complicated issue and that it is important for the Commission to follow the science and be proactive. She notes that not all injection wells cause earthquakes, but some may increase the risk for induced seismicity. "There's many factors. It has to do with the fault systems. It has to do with core pressure in the reservoirs. It has to do with the size of the reservoir," says Murphy.
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