In The Know is your daily briefing on Oklahoma policy-related news. Inclusion of a story does not necessarily mean endorsement by the Oklahoma Policy Institute. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and see past editions. | In The News Personal income tax collections drive solid general revenue fund report: General fund revenue beat estimates by 5 percent in October, mostly because of a much-higher-than-expected contribution from personal income tax. Deposits to the general fund, the state’s primary operating account, totaled $553.1 million, or $26.1 million above projections and $33 million above the same month a year ago. The strong overall total was achieved despite an 8 percent shortfall in sales tax, which along with individual income tax is one Oklahoma’s two major revenue sources.[Tulsa World] DPS asks for $220 million for next budget: The Oklahoma Department of Public Safety wants a $220 million budget for the next fiscal year. Commissioner John Scully made the request Tuesday to a State House/Senate Budget Committee. The increase would be about $7 million more than the current budget for the department. [Public Radio Tulsa] Oklahoma has few online privacy laws, group says: Oklahoma ranks low when it comes to online privacy protections, according to a nationwide analysis of laws by Comparitech. State law only includes four of the 20 benchmarks set by Comparitech, which is a consumer-focused company that provides information and tools to help people compare tech services. [The Oklahoman] Dozens apply to lead Oklahoma legislative transparency office: More than two dozen people applied to lead a new state budget office that will give Oklahoma legislators greater oversight of state agency spending. State lawmakers on the committee overseeing creation of the new office will be able to see all of the applications, but applicant details will not be publicly released. [The Oklahoman] Lawsuit: Grady Co. jail violated several laws, state jail standards in man’s death: The family of a man who died after he was found unresponsive in the Grady County Law Enforcement Center in 2017 has filed a civil lawsuit against the trust that oversees the jail, its trustees and several jailers. The suit, filed Tuesday in Grady County District Court, alleges officials and staff violated several state laws and jail standards, and were deliberately indifferent to the man’s needs while he was in crisis. The lawsuit also alleges jailers used excessive force against the man. [The Frontier] Town Hall focuses on redistricting: People Not Politicians, an Oklahoma coalition, hosted a town hall meeting to discuss a petition they are spearheading to get on the 2020 Oklahoma ballot. The petition is centered around creating an independent commission that would be responsible for redrawing both state and congressional voting districts after the U.S. Census population count, which occurs every decade. [Norman Transcript] Quote of the Day "Instead of incarcerating the individual, we want to get down to the root cause and provide the proper treatment, which will also increase the safety in our communities and reduce the prison population." -Theodis Manning Sr., a Midwest City pastor who teaches inside the Department of Corrections [The Oklahoman] Number of the Day 92,443 Total number of American Indian and Alaskan Native children in Oklahoma in 2018 — 10 percent of total Oklahoma child population Policy Note Note: November is Native American Heritage Month Oklahoma Policy Institute 907 S Detroit Ave, Suite 1005 Tulsa, OK 74120 (918) 794-3944 info@okpolicy.org Unsubscribe | | |