
Oklahoma Corporation Commission server issues disrupt filings
Internet and server problems have been creating ongoing disruptions at the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, interfering with the agency’s ability to monitor cases and process required filings over the past several weeks.
Officials confirmed the repeated outages affected internal systems used to manage regulatory activity, including the ability to issue orders and handle daily administrative functions tied to energy and utility cases before the Commission.
ECF and Laserfiche instability forces delay
The agency said a series of interruptions prompted a decision this week to postpone action on several items. In a public notice, the Commission explained that “due to ongoing intermittent server issues resulting in ECF and Laserfiche systems instability,” all daily agenda proposed orders scheduled for Tuesday were moved to Wednesday.
Commission staff indicated the delay was necessary to avoid further complications that could arise if the systems failed during the order-issuing process.
Orders shifted to next day review
The announcement said the Commission would instead consider and issue approved items the following day on a walk-through basis once systems were functioning reliably.
“We apologize for this inconvenience to any affected parties, but the expert advice from our IT personnel is that we would very likely run into system errors in the process of issuing any proposed orders on this date, thereby causing greater remediation efforts to be required,” the notice stated.
State IT teams working to stabilize systems
The Commission said state technology officials are actively working to resolve the instability and restore consistent access to the agency’s servers and filing tools.
“We have been advised that OMES personnel are working diligently to rectify the instability of our systems servers, and expect to process any approved items tomorrow, February 11, 2026, as soon as we are able to confirm our servers are stable,” the late Tuesday update concluded.
The disruptions temporarily slowed the Commission’s ability to process regulatory matters, but officials indicated efforts were underway to return operations to normal as quickly as possible.
