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. | New from OK Policy In The News Oklahoma State Regents seek funding increase for higher education: The Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education are asking lawmakers for a $125 million budget increase during the 2020 legislative session. The regents voted unanimously Thursday morning to pass a budget request that would increase the state’s appropriation to colleges and universities to $927 million. The request, formally called the system’s “budget needs,” serves as a wishlist. Historically, state lawmakers have not granted the requests. [KOSU] OK Policy: A recent report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities found that higher education funding cuts have had numerous negative impacts on students and their families. Mother to be freed after 15 years in prison for father’s abuse: A domestic violence survivor will walk free on Friday, her lawyer said, after spending 15 years in prison for failing to report that her boyfriend was also abusing their children. Her boyfriend, Robert Braxton Jr., who pleaded guilty to child abuse, received a 10-year suspended sentence and was released on probation after having served two years in jail [New York Times] Tondalao Hall's sentence drew attention to Oklahoma's harsh sentencing laws. [The Oklahoman] OKCPD wants to hire a scientist to analyze internal data: The Oklahoma City Police Department has created a new position that will analyze mountains of data with the goal of making the department more efficient. OKCPD has data analysts, but the focus is on crime statistics. This job instead would sift through the millions of lines of information produced in the administrative side of the department, like fleet management, computer-aided dispatch, records management system and investigator caseload. [The Oklahoman] Muscogee (Creek) primary results stand, for now: On Thursday morning, Muscogee (Creek) Nation District Court Judge Jeremy Pittman dismissed a motion from Principal Chief candidate Bim Stephen Bruner to allow tardy absentee ballots to be included in the count from Saturday’s primary election. [Tulsa World] Native American woman hopes to make history with first US Congress seat: Giving a Native American tribe a seat in Congress would “send a huge message” to the world, the woman poised to make history as the first delegate to formally represent an indigenous community in the U.S. House of Representatives has said. The right of the Cherokee Nation, home of the largest U.S. tribe, to take a seat in Congress dates back to treaties signed in the 18th and 19th centuries. [Reuters] Honoring Native American Heritage Month in Oklahoma: November is a significant time for the Cherokee Nation and other tribal nations across the United States. This is the time that we commemorate Native American Heritage Month. Long before there was a United States, Native people on this continent were thriving. [CNHI] Quote of the Day "I’m hoping that I’ve paved the way for the men and women coming behind me to know that they can get their pardon, that just because they wear the label of felon doesn’t mean that it has to stop them from accomplishing anything." -Rhonda Bear, a criminal justice reform advocate who was pardoned by Gov. Stitt on Thursday [Public Radio Tulsa] Number of the Day 26,000 The estimated number of children living with incarcerated parents in Oklahoma in 2017 Policy Note Researchers say there’s a simple way to reduce suicides: Increase the minimum wage: Since 2000, the suicide rate in the United States has risen 35 percent, primarily because of the significant increase in such deaths among the white population. There are hints that these deaths are the result of worsening prospects among less-educated people, but there are few immediate answers. But maybe the solution is simple: pursue policies that improve the prospects of working-class Americans. Researchers have found that when the minimum wage in a state increased, or when states boosted a tax credit for working families, the suicide rate decreased. [Washington Post] Oklahoma Policy Institute 907 S Detroit Ave, Suite 1005 Tulsa, OK 74120 (918) 794-3944 info@okpolicy.org Unsubscribe | | |