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 Schumann joins OK Policy board: University of Oklahoma-Tulsa President John H. Schumann has joined the Oklahoma Policy Institute’s board of directors. Dr. Schumann has served as OU-Tulsa’s president since 2015 after earlier appointments with the university as an associate professor, director of its residency program, and vice chair of education for the Department of Internal Medicine. [Journal Record $] In The News What it means to be a Top 10 state, according to Gov. Kevin Stitt: On the campaign trail, Kevin Stitt vowed to make Oklahoma a Top 10 state — a lofty goal by any means considering state-by-state rankings often show the Sooner State falling behind. Ahniwake Rose, executive director of the Oklahoma Policy Institute, said she's hopeful Stitt's upcoming State of the State speech will include more details about what it means to be Top 10 and the state metrics guiding his decision making. [The Oklahoman] Making it count: Members of the Ardmore area Census Complete Count Committee gathered Thursday morning to discuss strategies to help insure as many people as possible participate in the upcoming 2020 Census. Jasha Lyons Echo-Hawk, community census builder with Together Oklahoma, explained that the Census Bureau’s push for more online surveys is not convenient for everyone, and they need person to person interaction with the census takers. [The Ardmoreite] Capitol Insider: 2020 Legislation Filed: Lawmakers will consider more than 4,000 bills and joint resolutions when they return to the Capitol for the start of the 2020 legislative session. Dick Pryor and eCapitol's Shawn Ashley discuss what lies ahead. [KGOU] Dining on steak dinners to sack lunches: Lobbyists spent more than $600,000 buying meals for Oklahoma legislators and other public officials last year, treating them to steak dinners, sack lunches and breakfast buffets on behalf of clients seeking to influence public policy. [The Oklahoman] Quote of the Day “What you’re seeing in Oklahoma, and what you’ve seen for the past 10 years now, is that we’re cutting services. We’re never going to get to the Top 10 if we don’t start having a conversation about how we can invest more in our people.” Number of the Day 502 Number of emergency certified teachers in Oklahoma elementary education (grades 1-8). This is the highest concentration of emergency certified teachers throughout the state. Policy Note We have a solution for the opioid epidemic. It’s dramatically underused: Medications like methadone, as well as buprenorphine and naltrexone, are considered the gold standard of care for opioid addiction. Studies show that the medications reduce the mortality rate among those patients by half or more, and keep people in treatment better than non-medication approaches. Yet rehab facilities in the U.S. often treat medications with skepticism or even scorn, while embracing approaches with little if any peer-reviewed scientific evidence, like the bench. [Vox] Oklahoma Policy Institute 907 S Detroit Ave, Suite 1005 Tulsa, OK 74120 (918) 794-3944 info@okpolicy.org Unsubscribe | | |