Mission

We exist so that no Oklahoma family receives the call we received.

The Chase Morris Foundation works in three areas: education about sudden cardiac arrest in young people; screening programs that bring board-certified cardiologists and the international Seattle Criteria protocol into Oklahoma schools; and policy advocacy that has made our state's laws on cardiac emergency preparedness in schools among the strongest in the nation.

We do this in Chase's name because the condition that took him is one of the most consistently detectable causes of sudden death in young athletes — and because the screening that should have happened did not happen, for him or for the thousands of other young Americans whose families learn this disease's name only after they have lost someone to it.

Origin

Eighty-four days.


Chase Morris died on the night of May 20, 2013. The funeral was four days later. The video shown at the service — assembled by family in the hours after his death — is still publicly available on the foundation's YouTube channel, where it has lived since 2014.

On August 12, 2013 — eighty-four days after Chase's death — Chase's father filed Articles of Incorporation with the Oklahoma Secretary of State. The Internal Revenue Service later recognized the foundation as a tax-exempt public charity under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, with an effective date of exemption retroactive to the date of incorporation. The Oklahoma Tax Commission issued the foundation's sales tax exemption permit in January 2016. The foundation has operated continuously in Oklahoma since.

The decision to begin the work that quickly was, the family says, not a strategic one. The first heart screening — at Metro Christian Academy in Tulsa, the alma mater of the pediatric cardiologist who would guide every screening that followed — happened in the fall of 2014. The second, at Booker T. Washington High School in partnership with Tulsa Public Schools, happened in January 2015. By the spring of 2015 a bipartisan coalition of Oklahoma legislators had introduced the bill that would carry Chase's name. By June of 2015 the Governor had signed it.

None of this was on a plan. All of it became one.

A decade of work

From 2013 to today.

May 20, 2013

Chase Morris dies at age sixteen.

Cause of death, established by autopsy: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Previously undiagnosed.

Aug 12, 2013

The Chase Morris Foundation is incorporated in Oklahoma.

Articles of Incorporation filed with the Oklahoma Secretary of State.

Dec 16, 2013

U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe writes the foundation a letter of encouragement.

Senator Inhofe, who had lost his own son five weeks earlier in an aviation accident, writes on Senate letterhead: "I applaud you for the work you are doing with the Chase Morris Foundation."

Fall 2014

The foundation's first heart screening — Metro Christian Academy, Tulsa.

Approximately 200 students screened. Foundation medical advisor Dr. Matthew T. Kimberling, a Metro Christian alumnus, leads the protocol.

Jan 28, 2015

Second screening — Booker T. Washington High School, Tulsa Public Schools.

Approximately 300 students screened. Oklahoma Insurance Commissioner John Doak speaks at the event in support of the foundation and the upcoming legislation.

Jun 10, 2015

Senate Bill 239 — the Chase Morris Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Act — is signed into Oklahoma law.

Authored by physician-legislators Senator Ervin Yen, M.D. and Representative Doug Cox, M.D. Signed by Governor Mary Fallin. Codified at 70 O.S. § 24-156. Effective July 1, 2015.

2015 — present

Continued screening, education, and advocacy.

The foundation has continued to organize free heart screenings for Oklahoma students, partner with Nick of Time Foundation and Parent Heart Watch on the national stage, and work alongside legislators on the strengthening of Oklahoma law.

2024

Senate Bill 1921 strengthens the Chase Morris Act.

Sponsored by Senator Paul Rosino. Signed by Governor Kevin Stitt. Adds annual sudden cardiac arrest training for coaches, athletic trainers, and school nurses; requires district cardiac emergency response plans; and addresses AED placement at school sites.

A complete legislative history is available on The Chase Morris Act page.

Who runs the foundation

Chase's brothers, and the family he left behind.

Chase Morris, second from left, with his brothers, photographed in black-and-white
Chase, second from left, with his brothers.

The Chase Morris Foundation is, and has always been, a family-led organization. Chase's two brothers — his older brother and his younger brother — are the principal voices of the foundation today. They were the boys who grew up with him. They are the men who carry his name now.

The foundation has been guided since its earliest days by a small board of advisors — physicians, educators, and family — drawn from Oklahoma and beyond. We have been deliberately self-funded for most of our history, which has kept our overhead small and our focus narrow. We have not sought to become a large organization. We have sought to do specific, defensible work in a single state, in the name of one specific son, with a clearly defined mission.

Our advisors and partners are listed elsewhere on this site. Our medical guidance comes from board-certified pediatric cardiology and sports medicine. Our screening protocol is the international standard published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. Our work has been recognized by both U.S. Senators of Oklahoma, the Governor of Oklahoma, the Oklahoma Insurance Commissioner, and a bipartisan supermajority of the Oklahoma Legislature.

We are a small foundation. We have always been a small foundation. The work we have done — and the work we will continue to do — has been disproportionate to our size, and that is by design.

Institutional

The foundation, on paper.

501(c)(3)
Recognized public charity by the Internal Revenue Service. Determined under § 509(a)(2)
EIN 46-4084119
Federal Employer Identification Number on file with the IRS.Effective date of exemption: Aug 12, 2013
OK SOS
Incorporated as an Oklahoma not-for-profit corporation on August 12, 2013.Oklahoma Secretary of State
EXM-14428036-02
Oklahoma Tax Commission Sales Tax Exemption Permit. Non-expiring.Effective Jan 22, 2016
Verification

The foundation's tax-exempt status is independently verifiable through the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search at apps.irs.gov/app/eos using EIN 46-4084119.