MIssion
The mission of the Office of the State Treasurer is to serve the people of Oklahoma by providing sound banking and investment services, reuniting individuals and businesses with their unclaimed property, and promoting economic opportunities in a fiscally responsible and efficient manner while adhering to the highest professional and ethical standards.
Inside the Oklahoma State Treasurer's Office
MISSION
The mission of the Office of the State Treasurer is to serve the people of Oklahoma by providing sound banking and investment services, reuniting individuals and businesses with their unclaimed property, and promoting economic opportunities in a fiscally responsible and efficient manner while adhering to the highest professional and ethical standards.
The Oklahoma State Treasurer provides for the safe and efficient operation of state government through effective banking, investment, and cash management. The position of state treasurer, the chief elected financial officer of the state, is held by Todd Russ, who assumed office on January 9, 2023.
The state treasurer has the following specific statutory and constitutional responsibilities:
1. Receiving, depositing, and disbursing all state funds;
2. Investing temporary surplus funds;
3. Investing specific funds for other state agencies where authorized;
4. Requiring banks to furnish collateral sufficient to secure deposits of state and other public funds;
5. Paying of interest on the state's bonded debt and the redeeming of the debt at maturity;
6. Maintaining a safekeeping operation for securities owned by various state agencies, and those securities pledged as collateral to other state agencies;
7. Processing and distributing all State checks (known as warrants);
8. Administering the Business Link and Agricultural Link Programs; and
9. Administering the Unclaimed Property Program.
More than $22 billion dollars is deposited each year at the state treasurer's office. This includes state tax revenues, such as income tax and gross production tax receipts; federal funds, such as matching funds for highway construction; and other tax revenues, such as the motor fuel tax, which are collected by the state but then apportioned to the counties and cities.
The treasurer has no power to impose taxes or set tax rates. Rather, the treasurer's job is to make sure all the public's money is properly accounted for once it has been collected or distributed.
The treasurer processes approximately 8.4 million state warrants each year. All warrants are reviewed by the State Treasurer when they are presented to the State of Oklahoma for payment to insure that only those warrants that are proper to pay are authorized for payment. In addition, the state treasurer processes approximately 3.1 million electronic fund transfers.
To earn additional revenue for Oklahoma , the treasurer invests money which is not immediately needed to fund government operations. The office has an average of $5 billion of taxpayers’ money in its investment portfolio. The treasurer's investments are strictly governed by Oklahoma statutes and the treasurer's investment policy.
The following information is provided pursuant to Oklahoma Statutes, Title 74, Section 3106.4.
What personally identifiable data does the Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office collect and store?
The Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office collects and stores personally identifiable data as part of its legal duties. This information may include, but is not limited to name, birth date, place of birth, Social Security number, official state- or government-issued driver license or identification number, alien registration number, government passport number, and employer or taxpayer identification number.
How is this information stored by the Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office?
To protect your personally identifiable data from unauthorized access and use, we use security measures that comply with the law and are provided by the Office of Management and Enterprise Services/Information Services Division. These measures include computer safeguards and secured files and buildings, and are in accordance with the State of Oklahoma’s Information Security Policy.
With whom does the Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office share this personally identifiable data?
The Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office shares personally identifiable information as permitted or required by law with third parties. For example, the Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office shares information with other state agencies that assist the Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office in carrying out its legal duties.