Wednesday, June 30, 2021

[In The Know] Lawmakers ask about prison closure | Pandemic relief drove income growth | Mental health needs in prisons, jails

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. Some stories may be behind paywall or require subscription. OK Policy encourages the support of Oklahoma's state and local media, which are vital to an informed citizenry. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and click here see past editions.

Oklahoma News

State leaders discuss ‘significant impact’ of closing William S. Key prison: On May 13, the same day that the Oklahoma Legislature announced its annual budget agreement, the Oklahoma Department of Corrections created a “draft” proposal to close the William S. Key Correctional Center in Fort Supply, a small town in northwest Woodward County that relies heavily on the prison for jobs and economic activity. [NonDoc] Public safety and corrections officials answered questions Tuesday from Oklahoma lawmakers on the planned closing of William S. Key Correctional Center in Fort Supply. According to the Department of Corrections, there are currently 414 inmates at the prison, not even 40% of its capacity. [Public Radio Tulsa] Tricia Everest, Gov. Kevin Stitt’s secretary of public safety, said William S. Key Correctional Center in Fort Supply is a 19th century prison that needs more than $30 million in immediate repairs. She said closing the 1,100-bed prison about 15 miles northwest of Woodward, is “right and proper,” but acknowledged officials bungled the communication. [CNHI via Enid News & Eagle] Everest said the decision to close the prison was a pragmatic one based on the state's decreasing prison population and a buildup of deferred maintenance costs at the facility. [The Oklahoman]

She spent six months in an Oklahoma jail waiting for mental health treatment: Grace Franklin, who has no prior criminal record, would instead spend most of the next six months locked inside the Stephens County jail with her case in legal limbo, unable to understand the charge against her or assist an attorney with her defense. She joined a long waiting list of mentally ill people held in jails across Oklahoma found incompetent to stand trial. [The Frontier]

COVID-19 stimulus checks help fuel Oklahoma income growth, analysis shows: The federal government has made more than $10 billion in direct payments to Oklahomans during the pandemic, with about half of that coming since President Joe Biden took office in January. Stimulus payments from the American Rescue Plan Act have been made to 1.97 million Oklahomans through June 3 and have totaled $4.9 billion, according to the IRS. [The Oklahoman]

  • Federal aid crucial to OKC schools' $857 million budget [The Oklahoman]

Health News

COVID-19: Health officials urge awareness of different virus symptoms as delta variant looms: Health officials are urging residents to be aware of new symptoms possible under a quick-spreading COVID-19 variant as it marches down the Interstate 44 corridor from southwestern Missouri to the Oklahoma City metro area. [Tulsa World] Some of the most commonly reported symptoms with the more-contagious delta variant — which was first identified in India and is now spreading in the U.S. — include headache, sore throat, runny nose and fever, said Dr. Dale Bratzler, the University of Oklahoma’s chief COVID-19 officer. [The Oklahoman]

  • Experts say delta variant of COVID-19 is more contagious but fully-vaccinated people have less to worry about [The Oklahoman]
  • Text messages may boost vaccination rates, study says [USA Today]
  • COVID continues in Comanche County, vaccine rates stay low [The Lawton Constitution]

National blood shortage continues to strain local health centers; donors still sought: When mass casualty incidents like the June 12 shooting that killed one and injured 13 others in Austin, Texas, occur, local blood needs can often be supplemented by neighboring regional organizations. A national blood shortage has left most regional providers unable to spare much, however. [Tulsa World] The Oklahoma Blood Institute is urging potential donors to give immediately with blood supplies down to an emergency low level. [Public Radio Tulsa]

State Government News

Term-limited Oklahoma lawmaker to run for state treasurer: A term-limited Republican state House member from Cordell said Tuesday he plans to run for Oklahoma state treasurer. Rep. Todd Russ, 60, is a longtime banker who is finishing his sixth term in the House, where he represents parts of five western Oklahoma counties. [AP News] Earlier this month, Oklahoma County Clerk David Hooten announced plans to run for treasurer. Treasurer Randy McDaniel previously announced he would not seek reelection in 2022. [The Oklahoman]

New law allows bottle service for small businesses, effective Thursday: House Bill 2726 introduces language into the Oklahoma Alcoholic Beverage Control Act allowing Oklahoma small businesses to offer bottle service to customers. Supporters said bottle service has become more popular in other states, especially with young people, and this will allow Oklahoma businesses to remain competitive. [The Lawton Constitution]

Seed-to-sale: Restraining order in place for medical marijuana business requirement until further court action: An Okmulgee County judge has agreed to keep a temporary order in place that prevents enforcement of a state contract with an out-of-state medical cannabis seed-to-sale contract provider. [Tulsa World]

Education News

OKCPS to spend $2 million on revamped school resource officer program: The Oklahoma City School District Board of Education approved a budget of $2 million for its School Resource Officer contract with the Oklahoma City Police Department (OKCPD) for the next school year starting July 1. Eighteen OKCPD officers will be SROs in the program. [OKC Free Press]

OU community members fear potential negative financial impact on low-income students following tuition increase: The OU Board of Regents’ June 22 decision to increase tuition costs by 2.75 percent following three years without increases has been met with disapproval from both students and faculty. [OU Daily]

Oklahoma Local News

  • University of Oklahoma Health promises better service, more research with hospital merger [The Oklahoman]
  • City of Tulsa urges caution after thousands of police reports, personal data leaked [The Black Wall Street Times]

Quote of the Day

“The jails are the long term hospitals now for people with diagnosed mental illness."

-Marilyn Welton, whose son  has been arrested dozens of times and has been in and out of jail over the past 30 years while battling mental illness. Her family is launching a new nonprofit to provide advocacy and legal support for people with severe mental mental illness.  [NonDoc]

Number of the Day

64%

Percentage of children under age 6 with all parents in the labor force in Oklahoma. Lack of available childcare is a major expense that impacts parents and caregivers returning to the workforce

[Source: KIDS COUNT]

Policy Note

Dollars and Sense: Affordability of Childcare: Quality childcare is a two-generational approach to economic opportunity that offers benefits for many working parents and their young children. It can boost work productivity for parents and serves as an effective intervention for children, improving kindergarten readiness and future school success. [Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

You can sign up here to receive In The Know by e-mail.

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

empowered by Salsa

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Oklahoma lawmakers request 209 interim studies | Attorney General selection near | Plan to reduce homelessness in OKC | More [In

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. Some stories may be behind paywall or require subscription. OK Policy encourages the support of Oklahoma's state and local media, which are vital to an informed citizenry. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and click here see past editions.

Oklahoma News

Oklahoma lawmakers request 209 interim studies: Friday was the deadline for state legislators to submit requests for interim studies on specific issues, and they have requested 209. House members are seeking 135 studies, while senators want 72. The topics range from oversight of district attorney’s offices to laws governing landlords and tenants to the criteria for impeaching the state superintendent. [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma ranks among bottom 10 states in 2021 child well-being report: Oklahoma ranks among the bottom 10 states in the nation for child well-being, according to a new annual report released last week. The state rose three places from the previous year’s rankings, from 45th to 42nd, according to the new Kids Count report, which is produced by the Annie E. Casey Foundation and evaluates states in four categories: economic well-being, education, health, and family and community. The report shows some improvements in Oklahoma’s child well-being measures, said Gabrielle Jacobi, child well-being analyst at the Oklahoma Policy Institute. But other states are improving too, at faster rates. [The Oklahoman] OK Policy: Smart policy decisions can help improve Oklahoma’s dismal child well-being outcomes.

'Brief, rare and nonrecurring': Oklahoma City's plan to reduce homelessness: A 118-page plan to help end homelessness released by the Oklahoma City Mayor's Task Force on Homelessness looks to tackle problems service providers admit are complex. Dan Straughan, executive director of the Homeless Alliance, said one way the plan does this is looking at root causes. "Until you address the issues that contribute to poverty, you're not going to be able to effectively address the issues that contribute to homelessness," Straughan said. The plan, filled with multiple strategies and potential solutions, comes after a two-year evaluation of city resources and needs. The goal was "to develop the strategy to make homelessness in the community brief, rare and nonrecurring," according to the document. [The Oklahoman]

State Government News

Capitol Insider: Attorney General Selection Near: Normally, summer is a slow time at the state Capitol, but there was a lot of activity this week, including movement toward the appointment of a new State Attorney General. KGOU's Dick Pryor and eCapitol's Shawn Ashley discuss in the latest Capitol Insider. [KGOU]

State now accepting applications for $1,200 job-acceptance incentive: State officials began accepting applications Monday for a $1,200 incentive offered to those finding jobs recently or in the near future. Gov. Kevin Stitt’s Back-to-Work Initiative will be available to the first 20,000 qualified applicants. Stitt announced May 17 that he was canceling the state’s participation in temporary federal pandemic-related unemployment benefit programs, including a $300 weekly payment, effective this past Sunday. [Tulsa World]

  • Thousands of Oklahoma have applied for $1,200 back-to-work incentive [KOCO]

Oklahoma Hopes to Be Newest Hub for Electric Vehicles: The recent announcement about Oklahoma landing a new electric vehicle (EV) manufacturing plant is confirmation that the state is poised to be a potential big player in the EV market space, Oklahoma Commerce Director Brent Kisling believes. [Governing]

Sen. Nathan Dahm wants 18- to 20-year-olds included in Oklahoma's constitutional carry provisions: A Tulsa-area state senator filed legislation Monday to lower the age for those carrying weapons under Oklahoma’s 2019 “constitutional carry” law to match the minimum voting age. [Tulsa World]

Democratic leaders weigh successes, challenges of 2021 session: A panel of prominent state Democratic legislators say they can point to their achievements in their recent legislative session and that, going forward, their voices will be heard, despite being outnumbered. [The Journal Record]

Safety Analysis: Alcohol, Driver Age More Likely To Be Factors In Serious Crashes Locally: Federal traffic consultants have been working with INCOG on a local road safety plan, and their review of crash data has revealed some areas of focus for the region. When the City of Tulsa is excluded, alcohol was involved in nearly 20% of crashes in Creek, Osage, Rogers, Tulsa and Wagoner counties where someone was seriously injured or killed. Statewide, that proportion is 13%. [Public Radio Tulsa]

Federal Government News

House transportation bill includes millions for Oklahoma highway projects: Oklahoma’s congressional delegation requested earmarks for highway projects totaling $55 million, which will be part of a massive transportation bill headed to the House floor for an anticipated vote today. Three of Oklahoma’s U.S. representatives, Tom Cole, Stephanie Bice and Frank Lucas, originally had been seeking nearly $190 million to fund 13 highway projects in their districts. [Gaylord News / NonDoc]

Health News

State Health Department Sends Alert To Health Providers Asking For Immediate Action On Variants: On June 22nd the Oklahoma State Department of Health sent out an alert via its emergency health network asking labs and providers across the state for positive tests of COVID-19 to use for variant identification. According to the emergency network's website, an alert is classified as the “highest level of notification. This usually refers to an immediate threat to the OSDH community and requires immediate action.” [Public Radio Tulsa]

  • Oklahoma Guard troops to transition out of COVID-19 response [AP News]
  • Oklahoma is reporting an average to jump to 226 infections per day in the past week. [KOSU]
  • From the ventilator to vaccinated: How an Oklahoma COVID-19 survivor beat vaccine hesitancy [The Oklahoman]

Criminal Justice News

Research Firm Says Report On TPD Community Policing Coming Around October: The Tulsa Police Department expects a review of its community policing efforts will be done in mid-fall. Nonprofit research firm CNA was chosen for the evaluation last year, and it is currently nearing release of an online survey and coordinating meetings with community stakeholders. Capt. Shellie Seibert is TPD's liaison to CNA. She told city councilors last week they are looking forward to receiving the report, but that won't be the end of the process. [Public Radio Tulsa]

Economic Opportunity

Local organization addresses period poverty through free menstrual products: A local organization fighting period poverty has donated more than 10,000 menstrual products since March, a need experts say is often overlooked but widely felt. Period poverty is a lack of access to menstrual products, which Period OKC advocate Jen Green said can lead to missed days of school or work, and contributes to anxiety and depression. [The Oklahoman]

Economy & Business News

KC Fed: Employee shortages slowing growth: In June, employee shortages slowed growth in the services sector and drove increased automation in the manufacturing sector for the U.S. Federal Reserve’s 10th District, which includes Oklahoma. Based on data and responses collected June 16-21, 2021, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City issued reports that reveal that June 2021 saw record-high input and selling prices, driven by increased demand, limited workers, high materials costs and supply chain disruptions. [The Journal Record]

The long road to recovery for OKC’s live music industry: Last year, in the thick of the pandemic, bars and venues across the country struggled with questions of when and how to reopen. Some, like the Tower Theatre, attempted the occasional, strictly regulated event. [NonDoc]

Livesay Orchards in Porter experiencing unprecedented peach shortage: Typically around late June, Livesay Orchards in Porter could have 40 varieties of peaches ready to be sold at its farm market and retail stores. Right now, they have about six. Livesay Orchards co-owner Kent Livesay can only blame one thing: low temperatures. In particular, the abnormal frost of April 21. [Tulsa World]

Fireworks shortage: Early birds get the boom as supply chains struggle to match demand: Tulsans looking to fire their own patriotic pyrotechnics will need to work fast this year. Several local suppliers said supply issues have led to a fireworks shortage ahead of Independence Day. [Tulsa World]

Education News

‘A waste of time’: Western Heights community frustrated by lack of board action: The Western Heights Public Schools Board of Education was expected to enter executive session during today’s special meeting and hold confidential communications with attorney Jerry Colclazier, who is representing the district in a lawsuit against the State Board of Education. However, Colclazier did not attend the meeting, prompting board members to skip the agenda item and leaving some community members frustrated. [NonDoc

General News

Bullet Found In Remains In Search For Tulsa Massacre Victims: A bullet has been found in a set of human remains that were exhumed during a search for victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, a search team member said Friday. Nine sets of remains have been examined and the bullet was found in the shoulder of a man, forensic anthropologist Phoebe Stubblefield said. Other parts of the man’s remains showed similar signs of trauma, including to the head. [The Oklahoma Eagle / AP News]

Oklahoma Local News

Quote of the Day

"Until you address the issues that contribute to poverty, you're not going to be able to effectively address the issues that contribute to homelessness"

–Dan Straughan, executive director of the Homeless Alliance, speaking about Oklahoma City's plan to help end homelessness. [The Oklahoman]

Number of the Day

$292.1 million

Dollars lost to Oklahoma's economy by prematurely ending federal pandemic unemployment benefits

[Source: United States Congressional Joint Economic Committee]

Policy Note

Acts of Congress and COVID-19: A Literature Review on the Impact of Increased Unemployment Insurance Benefits and Stimulus Checks: The COVID-19 pandemic has kept economists busy analyzing many aspects of economic side of the coronavirus impact. This note is meant to present an overview of what economists have analyzed regarding the implications of two of the main components of the CARES Act that affect individuals: the increased UI benefits and the stimulus checks. Taken together, these two components have been effective at providing stimulus and lowering poverty. [Federal Reserve System]

You can sign up here to receive In The Know by e-mail.

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

empowered by Salsa

Monday, June 28, 2021

[In The Know] Coming spike in evictions? | Expanding the School Counselor Corps | Struggle to find childcare

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. Some stories may be behind paywall or require subscription. OK Policy encourages the support of Oklahoma's state and local media, which are vital to an informed citizenry. Click here to subscribe to In The Know and click here see past editions.

New from OK Policy

Is it good for the children? (Capitol Update): Several years ago, some business and community organizations in Kansas decided to urge policymakers in making decisions to ask the question, “Is it good for the children?” The question in some political circles might bring hoots of scorn as not hard edged enough for serious public policy. On the other hand, we have a governor who talks about making Oklahoma a “top 10” state. We have a way to go. [Steve Lewis / Capitol Update]

Oklahoma News

How Oklahoma evictions might spike after July: A federal freeze on most evictions that was enacted last year is scheduled to expire July 31, after the Biden administration extended the date by a month. The moratorium, put in place by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in September, has been the only tool keeping millions of tenants in their homes. Many of them lost jobs during the coronavirus pandemic and have fallen months behind on their rent. [AP News]

The long, winding road to Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma: More than a decade after President Barack Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law, low-income Oklahomans are about to benefit for the first time from one of the health-care reform’s signature provisions. Starting July 1, Medicaid expansion will take effect in the state. Estimates show more than 200,0000 previously ineligible adults will be able to enroll in the state’s Medicaid program, known as SoonerCare. [Oklahoma Watch]

‘Kids are suffering’: School Counselor Corps to expand mental health services: On the first day of summer school for Okmulgee Public Schools, high school principal LuVona Copeland noticed multiple students exhibiting signs of anxiety. On day two, a few more students were showing signs. [NonDoc] OK Policy: The School Counselor Corps can help Oklahoma students, who experience trauma at higher rates than students in any other state. 

Oklahomans struggle to find daycare as centers closed during the pandemic: As state officials ratchet up pressure on Oklahomans to return to the workforce, some families are struggling to find child care in a post-pandemic world. Oklahoma now has 200 fewer licensed child care facilities than in 2019, according to records obtained by CNHI News. Experts said the average Oklahoma child care facility is licensed to care for 7 to 10 children. [CNHI via Norman Transcript]

Oklahoma sees uptick in COVID-19 cases as faster-spreading delta variant alarms officials: Oklahoma is seeing COVID-19 cases tick up again, a trend that’s alarming health leaders in the state as the more transmissible delta variant is taking hold in parts of the country. As of Wednesday, there were more than 1,500 active cases of COVID-19 in Oklahoma, according to the state Health Department. That’s about a 14% increase from last week. [The Oklahoman]

  • Oklahoma COVID case count rise in June prompts strong push for sequencing as Delta variant emerges [Tulsa World]
  • For kids too young for a COVID-19 shot, what’s safe this summer? Oklahoma doctors weigh in [The Oklahoman]
  • Virus update: 9 charts that show how Oklahoma is coping with COVID-19 [Tulsa World]
  • Oklahoma is reporting an average of 197 infections per day in the past week. [KOSU]

Health News

Northwest Oklahoma is a 'maternity desert': Teirna Adair was six minutes from the hospital when she gave birth to her daughter in the parking lot of Sunset Plaza. She and her husband, Eric Cantrell, already had driven almost an hour from their home to deliver their third child. [Enid News & Eagle]

State Government News

Oklahoma passes $1.5 billion in marijuana sales. But how is the marijuana tax getting used?: Oklahoma's medical marijuana industry has exploded. Oklahomans spent more than $1.5 billion on medical marijuana since it became legal to buy in 2018, according to an analysis of the latest tax collection figures from the Oklahoma Tax Commission. That level of retail means the state collected more than $110 million from the 7% marijuana tax, and another $138 million was levied in state and local sales taxes, according to the most recent data that includes May 2020. [The Oklahoman]

Oklahoma lawmaker among those concerned for marijuana patients after recent court ruling: An appellate court’s opinion that the odor of cannabis establishes probable cause for criminal activity has some, including at least one state lawmaker, concerned about law enforcement going forward. Rep. Scott Fetgatter, R-Okmulgee, said the ruling related to a 2019 Tulsa County traffic stop “goes to show Oklahoma still has a long way to go in working on regulations for the legal medical marijuana industry.” [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma jobless rate drops; new stipend to be available: The Oklahoma Employment Security Commission on Friday reported a drop in the state’s jobless rate in May, even as the numbers of initial unemployment claims and the moving average of initial claims rise. [AP News]

Pandemic communications upgrade lets Stitt reach residents, national audiences more easily: Gov. Kevin Stitt’s office used $70,000 in COVID-19 stimulus funds to install a dedicated audio and video network connection at the Oklahoma state Capitol so the governor could more easily address the public in the event of an emergency. Now, Stitt uses that technology to do live local and national TV interviews, including a growing number with conservative news outlet Fox News. [The Oklahoman]

Oklahoma is going to levy taxes and fees on electric car owners. Here's why: Faced with a future where cars need less (or no) gasoline, Oklahoma will collect additional taxes and fees from people who drive electric cars. The decision to levy taxes and fees on electric vehicle drivers was made by legislators is in an effort to recapture lost revenues from the state's gasoline tax. [The Oklahoman]

Q&A: Mr. Stitt goes to Washington in ‘best trip’ yet: After Monday’s meeting of the state Board of Equalization, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt answered questions from reporters about a variety of topics, including state financial matters, his recent trip to Washington, and whether he’d like to go back in 2025 as president. [NonDoc]

Toll collectors to be reassigned as turnpikes transition to cashless: The Oklahoma Turnpike Authority is working with employees losing jobs as the system goes cashless. The agency is phasing out its option to pay tolls with cash, replacing that with a PlatePay system in the next four to five years. [Tulsa World] OTA Executive Director and State Transportation Secretary Tim Gatz said safety is the primary factor behind phasing out cash. [Public Radio Tulsa]

Federal Government News

How the delayed Census has affected redistricting: Oklahoma’s legislature also needed to pass new maps before the end of its legislative session this spring to avoid sending the mapmaking process to a bipartisan commission. So like Illinois’s legislature, Oklahoma’s also employed ACS data to draw new lines and passed them in May, with the caveat that lawmakers might amend them in a special session after receiving full redistricting data. [Five Thirty Eight]

U.S. Supreme Court backs refineries in biofuel waiver dispute: The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday made it easier for small oil refineries to win exemptions from a federal law requiring increasing levels of ethanol and other renewable fuels to be blended into their products, a major setback for biofuel producers. The justices overturned a lower court decision that had faulted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for giving refineries in Wyoming, Utah and Oklahoma extensions on waivers from renewable fuel standard (RFS) requirements under a law called the Clean Air Act even though the companies' prior exemptions had expired. [Reuters]

Tribal Nations News

CNHS leaders encourage citizens to apply for SoonerCare under new Medicaid expansion: For Cherokee Nation citizens, CN Health System leaders are encouraging citizens to sign up for benefits and have been working to get citizens signed up in the month of June. Officials said the Medicaid expansion allows citizens additional access to health care. [Cherokee Phoenix]

Rocky Barrett re-elected to 10th term as Citizen Potawatomi Nation chairman: The Citizen Potawatomi Nation Election Committee released the unofficial results of its 2021 tribal election Saturday, which included the race for tribal chairman and CPN Legislature elections for District 1 and District 4, which lie outside Oklahoma. [NonDoc]

'See us as people:' Osage citizens work with 'Flower Moon' filmmakers to ensure authenticity, accuracy: The Water Bird Gallery pops with color as the history and culture of the Osage Nation combine in a charmingly beautiful mix of offerings. In the middle of the store is owner Danette Daniels, making friends out of new visitors. She’s a chatty, self-styled ambassador welcoming newcomers to her hometown and tribal nation. [Tulsa World]

Criminal Justice News

Police reform panel makes oversight proposals: Members of the mayor's police reform task force say police department oversight should be independent, transparent and open to more community members, with the power and resources to conduct thorough investigations. [The Oklahoman]

Highway Patrol protocols for reporting serious encounters and deadly force leave gaps: In the most serious of law enforcement encounters, Oklahoma Highway Patrol protocols leave opportunities for gaps in reporting and documentation that invite questions about accountability and transparency. The Tulsa World filed litigation against OHP in October to compel the agency to adhere to a lawsuit the newspaper won in 2010 in which the state courts declared use-of-force records to be public and mandated their release. [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma City police to release video sooner: Oklahoma City police will release body-worn camera footage of many "critical" incidents such as police shootings within 10 days, according to an order issued by the chief. The new policy fills a gap that has facilitated police department decisions to keep video of controversial incidents from the public for months, despite calls for transparency. [The Oklahoman]

As policing becomes ‘a job less than a career,’ retention challenges paramount for Tulsa agencies: “It’s never been a more difficult time to be a police officer.” Jeff Downs, president of the local Fraternal Order of Police, was quoting a speaker at a recent FOP conference, but he said he agrees. Law enforcement agencies across the nation are losing manpower to resignations among younger officers, making recruitment even more important amid the challenge of finding applicants. [Tulsa World]

  • As market boom helps surge of retiring officers, Tulsa finds police jobs harder to fill [Tulsa World]

Economy & Business News

Grand reopening: As museums open and live performances return, local economy begins recovery: Tulsa Ballet was preparing for the opening night performance of its final production of the season when the company received news for which it had been waiting 15 months. No masks. [Tulsa World]

July 4 travel expected to be up 40% from last year: July 4 holiday travel is expected to increase 40% compared to last year, reaching the second-highest travel volume on record for the period, the AAA auto club said. [Tulsa World]

Education News

Thousands of Oklahoma kids stayed in virtual school. What will they do next?: All Oklahoma districts welcomed students back for face-to-face classes at least one day a week before the end of the school year. But some students learned from their home from the first day of school to the last. [The Oklahoman]

General News

Oaklawn search ends with exhumation of 19 sets of remains; at least one bears signs of violence: Archeological work ended Friday at Oaklawn Cemetery with those searching for unmarked burials from Tulsa's 1921 race massacre reporting the exhumation of 19 sets of remains, one of which showed obvious signs of trauma. [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma Local News

  • Development, rather than ridership, a measure of success for Oklahoma City streetcar [The Oklahoman]
  • Tulsa Transit survey explores public interest in new service options [Tulsa World]
  • 'Out and proud': OKC Pride Alliance show goes on despite canceled parade [The Oklahoman] | [OKC Free Press]
  • Celebration of Pride propelled renewed enthusiasm and commitment to broader community support [Tulsa World]
  • Western Heights superintendent suspended, school district in turmoil [The Oklahoman]

Quote of the Day

"I think finding child care right now is quite difficult. I anticipate what you’ll see is more parents, maybe dropping out of the workforce, particularly women."

-Rachel Proper, president of the Oklahoma Child Care Association, speaking about the shortage of daycares in Oklahoma as a result of the pandemic [CNHI via Norman Transcript]

Number of the Day

84,054

The number of Oklahoma workers impacted by the state cutting off federal unemployment benefits.

[Source: The Century Foundation]

Policy Note

Fact Sheet: What’s at Stake As States Cancel Federal Unemployment Benefits: On May 4, 2021, Montana Governor Greg Gianforte announced that his state was backing out of federal pandemic unemployment benefits, including the $300 per week supplement (PUC), Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) for gig workers and others not eligible for UI, and Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) for the long-term unemployed. Governors from South Carolina, Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Iowa, Indiana, Idaho, Georgia, Missouri, Ohio, Wyoming, Mississippi, Arkansas, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia and North Dakota quickly followed suit and more could follow. This fact sheet outlines the damage that these governors will inflict upon their most vulnerable populations (especially workers of color) and their economy by making this rash decision, and the potential harm to the recovery if more of the nation’s governors were to take a similar step. [The Century Foundation]

You can sign up here to receive In The Know by e-mail.

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

empowered by Salsa

Sunday, June 27, 2021

[Weekly Wonk] Oklahoma lags in child well-being | Still waiting for SQ 781 promised investments | Celebrating Medicaid expansion


What’s up this week at Oklahoma Policy Institute? The Weekly Wonk shares our most recent publications and other resources to help you stay informed about Oklahoma. Numbers of the Day and Policy Notes are from our daily news briefing, In The Know. Click here to subscribe to In The Know.

This week's edition of The Weekly Wonk was published with contributions from Communications Intern Lilly Strom.

This Week from OK Policy

KIDSCOUNT 2021: Smart policy decisions can help improve Oklahoma’s dismal child well-being outcomes: Oklahoma children need housing, food, health care, educational opportunities, and stable, nurturing environments to succeed. These essentials, however, are out of reach for many Oklahomans as the result of poverty, structural racism, and other barriers. Oklahoma’s disparities for child well-being were evidenced by Oklahoma’s low overall rank (42nd) in the 2021 KIDS COUNT Data Book, released on Monday. [Gabrielle Jacobi / OK Policy] | [News Release]  

Policy Matters: Investments needed to improve Oklahoma child well-being: For a state that prides itself as family-focused, Oklahoma’s child well-being outcomes sure don’t back that claim. Oklahoma children, on balance, are doing far worse than their national peers in nearly every wellness category. In fact, a new report this week showed Oklahoma remains entrenched in the bottom 10 nationally for our children’s health and well-being. [Ahniwake Rose / Policy Matters]

Five years later: Voters still waiting for SQ 781’s investments in mental health, substance use disorders: SQ 780 and its companion measure, SQ 781, were designed in the justice reinvestment mold: reduce spending on prisons, and invest those savings into treatment services for things like substance abuse and mental illness. SQ 780 helped to accomplish the first goal, but the 2021 legislative session marked the third budget without a corresponding investment that voters demanded. Though the Legislature has again failed to fund the treatments that SQ 781 statutorily required, we know that justice reform has measurably reduced the prison population and that mental health remains severely underfunded. There’s no getting around the fact that sustainable progress in public safety will require a much greater investment in substance abuse and mental health services than lawmakers have shown an appetite for so far. [Ryan Gentzler / OK Policy]

Reducing Oklahoma’s excessive reliance on incarceration (Capitol Update): Underfunding its corrections system brought prison riots and landed Oklahoma in federal court in the 1970s. The same could happen again. In a press release last Friday, Rep. Humphrey said an officer shortage leaves prison staff and the inmates themselves unsafe. [Steve Lewis / Capitol Update]

OK Policy to host June 30 event to celebrate Medicaid expansion, provide resources for Oklahomans: Thanks to voter-approved Medicaid expansion, more than 100,000 Oklahomans will finally have health care coverage starting on July 1. To celebrate this historic milestone, Oklahoma Policy Institute is hosting a June 30 event to reflect on the journey to this point and how it will positively impact our state moving forward. [Miguel Rios / OK Policy]

OK Policy expands policy, data work through new hires, realignment: The Oklahoma Policy Institute has hired four new staff members to expand its work in child well-being, health care and revenue, and data analysis, as well as elevated two staff members to take new organizational roles, including helping manage policy initiatives for a new criminal justice collaborative. [OK Policy]