Monday, January 31, 2022

[In The Know] Military medicals teams coming to state | Large state budget offers unique opportunities | Students share ideas to

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

Largest state budget since 2010 should benefit Oklahoma workers says policy group: Emma Morris, an analyst for the Oklahoma Policy Institute, said at the group’s budget summit Thursday that Oklahoma’s Legislature will have the most amount of money to appropriate since 2010. The projection for fiscal year 2023, she said, is over $10 billion. “We have the opportunity to take care of each other,” said Morris. [Public Radio Tulsa

Watch OK Policy's 2022 State Budget Summit: Learn about the state’s current fiscal circumstances, what we might expect during this year’s legislative session, where we can improve OK’s budget and tax system, and download materials and reports referenced during the summit.

Oklahoma News

Military medical teams coming to Oklahoma to support hospitals during COVID-19 surge: Three military medical teams will be coming to Oklahoma City by early February to support hospitals struggling during the omicron COVID-19 surge, a Health Department spokeswoman confirmed Friday. One Army medical team will work with OU Medical Center, and two Air Force medical teams will work with Integris Health in Oklahoma City, spokeswoman Erica Rankin-Riley said in an email. "All three teams should be in the state by early February," she said. Details about exactly when and how many military members will be supporting the hospitals weren't available Friday. [The Oklahoman

  • Doctors warn against treatment misinformation, offer home guidance as COVID-19 hospitalizations crush records [Tulsa World
  • COVID-19 rises again in Oklahoma’s long-term care facilities [The Journal Record
  • 'Coming in Waves' COVID-19 still unfolding as 2-year anniversary draws near [Enid News & Eagle]
  • Oklahoma ranked 'most unsafe state' as COVID hospitalizations hit records [The Black Wall Street Times
  • Practicing Medicine in a Pandemic: St. Mary's CEO urges Enid, area residents to keep up with their health [Enid News & Eagle]
  • State health department to distribute N95 masks to pharmacies [The Lawton Constitution]
  • Editorial: Hospital strain now at its worst as omicron peaks [Editorial / Tulsa World
  • (Audio) Headlines: COVID-19 impacts 911, school board elections & winter weather coming [KOSU

Health News

'Risk to public safety': OKC 911 dispatcher shortage leads to fear of life or death mistakes: A chronic worker shortage at the Oklahoma City 911 Communications Center has led to understaffed shifts, mandatory overtime for exhausted dispatchers and a fear among some that critical mistakes will be made during an emergency, according to emails obtained by The Oklahoman and interviews with employees who asked not to be named out of fear of retaliation. [The Oklahoman

State Government News

ODFA director has ‘every confidence’ utility bill securitization will be approved: The director of the Oklahoma Development Finance Authority told his board Friday that he expects the state Supreme Court to validate OG&E’s proposal for up to $800 million in ratepayer-backed bonds intended to securitize and pay off massive debt accrued during the historic February 2021 winter storm. [NonDoc

Rapid revenue rebounds seen in Oklahoma, other states: State and local governments lost at least $117 billion of expected revenue early in the pandemic, according to an Associated Press analysis, but many are now awash in record amounts of money, boosted partly by federal aid. In Oklahoma, December gross receipts of $1.4 billion and 12-month receipts of $15.2 billion both marked all-time highs for state revenues, state Treasurer Randy McDaniel reported recently. [The Journal Record

OK Policy in the News: The state will likely have more money to spend than usual next fiscal year, and a think tank says it ought to go to working Oklahomans. [Public Radio Tulsa]

One thing both political parties can agree on: Eliminating Oklahoma's 4.5% grocery tax: Bipartisan support is mounting for Oklahoma to eliminate the state sales tax on groceries. Legislative leaders on both sides of the aisle have pre-filed bills ahead of the upcoming legislative session to undo the state's 4.5% tax on milk, bread and other groceries. [The Oklahoman

OK Policy in the News: “(Eliminating the grocery sales tax altogether) would harm Oklahoma’s ability to provide the public services upon which we all rely, especially considering the considerable cuts in state revenue during the past two decades,” said Emma Morris, a health care and revenue analyst with Oklahoma Policy Institute, speaking on efforts to eliminate the grocery sales tax [CNHI via The Duncan Banner]

Energy leaders seek incentives from lawmakers: Industry leaders discussed a few revisions and updates to state law this year, at an event hosted by the Oklahoma Energy Producers Alliance at the Oklahoma Capitol on Wednesday. But a spokesman for the Oklahoma attorney general at the event focused his comments on how the industry might be affected by the state’s continued battle for regulatory authority in the wake of the McGirt decision. [The Journal Record]

Hamilton: Treat’s bill would be bad for students and state: When the Senate or House leader champions an idea, its odds of becoming law skyrocket. That’s why public school supporters leaped to Defcon 1 after Senate President Pro Tem Greg Treat recently introduced legislation aimed at expanding vouchers – the steering of public dollars into private education. [Column / The Journal Record

'It takes so much effort to get a law changed': Why the Wildlife Department wants authority over licenses, fees: Two bills proposed in the state Legislature would give the Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission, the governing body of the Wildlife Department, the authority to change licenses and fees through administrative rules, just as it currently does with the agency's hunting and fishing regulations. However, the only way to change licensing and fees is through the legislative process. [The Oklahoman

Oklahoma bill would provide CPR, first aid training to new, expecting mothers: One Oklahoma lawmaker wants new and expecting mothers to be taught basic lifesaving skills. When a longtime friend lost her baby, State Senator Jessica Garvin, R- District 43, wanted to help save other families from that heartache. [KTUL

Federal Government News

'Serve our country, not turn a quick buck:' Stock trades by members of Congress targeted: Sentiment is building in Congress to put new restrictions on stock trading by lawmakers, as potential conflicts of interest draw more scrutiny. Bills have been introduced in the House and Senate that would prohibit trading of individual stocks by members and spouses and require many assets to be put into blind trusts. [The Oklahoman]

Lankford returns from border trip, addresses issues facing immigration: Upon return from the Texas-Mexico border on Saturday, U.S. Sen. James Lankford expressed frustration with the Biden administration's handling of immigration on the country's southern border while characterizing the plight of border patrol officials on the ground. [The Oklahoman

(Audio) Capitol Insider: U.S. Supreme Court Moves Closer To Resolution Of McGirt-related Legal Matters: While rejecting 32 of the 33 petitions filed by the State of Oklahoma regarding its 2020 decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma, the U.S. Supreme Court set an April hearing date for further consideration of the effect of the decision on the federal Major Crimes Act. [KGOU

Tribal Nations News

Catholic leaders exploring history, legacy of Oklahoma Catholic Indian boarding schools: A Native American woman stood to face a group gathered after Sunday Mass at a small Pottawatomie County Catholic church recently. How would they feel if they were forbidden to pray the rosary or the Hail Mary, she asked. What if they were prohibited from making the sign of the cross? [The Oklahoman] "The congregation was not ready to hear what we have to say," she said while standing in the church foyer. [The Oklahoman]  

Voting and Election News

Multimillion-dollar school bond packages on the ballot in Bixby, Catoosa, Jenks: Voters in Bixby, Catoosa and Jenks are all being asked to consider multimillion-dollar school bond packages on Feb. 8. Bixby Public Schools is putting forward two propositions totaling a combined $114.7 million. It would extend the district’s current millage rate through 2029. [Tulsa World

Criminal Justice News

'Almost a different person': Post-prison program sets Resonance grad on track to turn her life around: Lewis’ transition to life after prison is about to take its next step forward. Having recently graduated from a Resonance six-month re-entry program, she’s preparing soon to move out into her own apartment. [Tulsa World

The Justice Files: Remains of 1921 Tulsa Massacre to be identified at Utah DNA lab: This summer, a commission and the city of Tulsa exhumed several bodies from a mass grave found at a local cemetery. It began the process to identify if they actually died in the race riot. Last month, the commission awarded a Utah-based forensics laboratory to use the DNA to help identify the bodies. [ABC 4

Court again rejects appeal of Oklahoman in beheading: The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals has again rejected claims by a death row inmate in the beheading of a co-worker. The court denied claims for post-conviction relief by Alton Alexander Nolen, 37, that included what his attorneys said was new information about his mental illness. [AP

Woman released from 107-year prison sentence now fights challenge to freedom post-McGirt: A Broken Arrow woman is fighting to remain free after her felony convictions linked to a deadly hit-and-run crash were overturned and she was released from a 107-year prison sentence. [Tulsa World

'Tiger King's' Joe Exotic resentenced in murder-for-hire case: Joe Exotic was resentenced Friday to 21 years in federal prison after a judge refused to consider his complaints about his murder-for-hire conviction. The former Oklahoma zookeeper's new punishment is only one year less than his original sentence. [The Oklahoman]

Economic Opportunity

How much does it cost to evict someone? Tulsa officials want to know: Hoping to find better ways to support local landlords and avoid evictions, Tulsa officials are collecting data on how much it costs to remove a tenant. The Tulsa Authority for Economic Opportunity and Housing Solutions have launched a survey to ask landlords how much they typically spend during an eviction, from paying courts fees to preparing a unit to be leased again. [Tulsa World

Education News

Hofmeister convenes student advisory council: High school students across Oklahoma met virtually with State Superintendent of Public Instruction Joy Hofmeister on Tuesday to share concerns and offer suggestions on how to improve access, equity and outcomes in schools beyond the pandemic. This is the seventh consecutive year Hofmeister has convened her Student Advisory Council, a group of juniors and seniors to assist her and the Oklahoma State Department of Education in matters of policy. [Norman Transcript

  • Rural Students Concerned Over Resources For Virtual Learning [News 9
  • COLUMN: Oklahoma students have solid ideas about improving their schools [Column / Enid News & Eagle
  • Viewpoint: Improving Oklahoma education outcomes starts with respect toward educators [Opinion / The Oklahoman

Legislature will consider a new system for authorizing charter schools in Oklahoma: Every Oklahoma charter school could soon have a new authorizer if a bill before the Oklahoma legislature this session becomes law. A measure introduced by the chairman of Oklahoma’s Senate Education Committee would overhaul the way charter schools are overseen in the state. [KGOU

COVID variant 'like a tornado' in Enid schools as case numbers decline: Though the state continues to grapple with more cases each day, the worst may be over in Enid schools for the new wave of the COVID-19 variant that’s ripped through Oklahoma’s school systems, forced schools to close and worsened an existing substitute shortage. [Enid News & Eagle]

'I'm just ready to go in': New Western Heights superintendent eager to return: Western Heights Public Schools’ newest top official said the district’s decline has been “heartbreaking” but is eager to continue the turnaround. [The Oklahoman

Quote of the Day

“We all know a jug of milk costs a whole lot more than in 1990, but the (Sales Tax Relief Credit) to offset that price hasn’t caught up.”

– Emma Morris, Health Care and Revenue Policy Analyst at the Oklahoma Policy Institute, speaking about the need to strengthen the state's grocery sales tax credit [Public Radio Tulsa]

Number of the Day

2.8%

Estimated percentage decrease in the state's uninsured rate (as of Aug. 31, 2021) following three months of the state enrolling residents in expanded Medicaid coverage.

[Source: Oklahoma Policy Institute]

Policy Note

Thanks to Oklahoma voters, the state is already reaping the benefits of Medicaid expansion: When voters approved State Question 802 in June 2020, they knew the benefits that Medicaid expansion would bring to Oklahoma. They understood that it would bring a $1.3 billion dollar federal investment, generate $15.6 billion in economic activity and $489 million in tax revenue, and create more than 27,000 new jobs. They recognized that healthier Oklahomans are better parents, workers, and community members. [Oklahoma Policy Institute]

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Sunday, January 30, 2022

[Weekly Wonk] Oklahoma lags in budget transparency | State Budget Summit Video & Resources | More


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 from OK Policy

Friday, January 28, 2022

[In The Know] COVID hospitalizations topple records | State carries out first execution of 2022 | Grocery sales tax | More

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

The Oklahoma Policy Institute's 8th State Budget Summit: If you missed OK Policy's 2022 State Budget Summit, we have made a recording available on our website along with resources that were referenced during the event. You can also find a recording on our YouTube channel. Learn about the state’s current fiscal circumstances, what we might expect during this year’s legislative session, and where we can improve OK's budget and tax system. [2022 State Budget Summit Recording and Materials]

Policy Matters: Budget process should be inclusive, deliberative: When it comes to crafting the annual state budget in Oklahoma, the process seems to come down to, “What do we have left?” rather than, “What could we accomplish if we had the resources?” Or at least that’s how the budget process seems to play out, because in reality very few people – even most lawmakers – aren’t involved in drafting the state budget. But as is the case with many of Oklahoma’s foibles, it doesn’t have to be this way. [Ahniwake Rose / Journal Record

Oklahoma News

State of Oklahoma carries out Donald Grant execution: Officials with the Oklahoma Department of Corrections announced this morning that the state had completed the execution of Donald Grant, a man with a history of mental illness who admitted to committing a 2001 double murder in Del City. Grant becomes the third man Oklahoma has put to death since resuming executions late last year. [NonDoc

  • Oklahoma first to execute in 2022, kills Donald Grant [The Black Wall Street Times
  • Oklahoma executes Donald Grant, the third death row inmate to be killed since the state resumed capital punishment [KOSU]
  • Oklahoma kills schizophrenic man in first execution of 2022 [Public Radio Tulsa
  • Oklahoma AG says 'zero complications' in nation's first 2022 execution of OSP inmate Grant [CNHI via Enid News & Eagle]
  • Oklahoma executes man for 2001 slayings of 2 hotel workers [Tulsa World
  • Governor Stitt has the power to stop executions [The Black Wall Street Times
  • Death penalty opponents gather following Donald Grant execution [The Oklahoman

'We have never seen death like this before': Providers overwhelmed, COVID hospitalizations keep toppling records in Oklahoma: The human toll of the pandemic on health care providers can be as overwhelming as COVID-19 is right now to Oklahoma hospitals — and the answer to both harms is vaccination, a local doctor said Thursday. COVID-19 hospitalizations are at all-time highs in Tulsa County and Oklahoma with the state’s latest data release Thursday, toppling records set in COVID’s original and delta variant waves. [Tulsa World]

  • Oklahoma breaks all-time record for COVID hospitalizations [KGOU
  • State, county health departments will move away from contact tracing for COVID-19 [The Oklahoman]  
  • When will COVID-19 cases peak in Oklahoma? Here’s what our sewage can tell us [The Oklahoman
  • Oklahoma's rate of COVID hospitalizations worse than ever as data indicates latest peak is ending [Tulsa World]

State lawmakers consider eliminating grocery sales taxes: Emma Morris, a health care and revenue analyst with Oklahoma Policy Institute, said the best bet for lawmakers would be to strengthen and increase the existing sales tax relief credit, which also is known as the “grocery tax credit.” In place for more than 30 years, the credit is intended to offset sales taxes for groceries in low-income households by providing a $40 tax rebate per household member, she said. It applies to those who make $50,000 or less. [CNHI via The Duncan Banner

Health News

Medical school addressing need for rural physicians: As the inaugural class at the Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee Nation prepares to start clinical rotations this July, Dr. Natasha Bray, interim dean for OSU-COM’s Cherokee Nation Campus, is excited to see the results of years of planning.  “It’s fun to see things that you have theoretically talked about for a lot of years begin to become real for a student.”  [The Journal Record

OHCA: 150k Oklahomans to lose Medicaid coverage after pandemic: The Oklahoma Health Care Authority says 150,000 people will lose SoonerCare over the next approximately year and a half. CEO Kevin Corbett told state lawmakers during an appropriations subcommittee hearing Wednesday that OHCA received more than a billion federal dollars during the pandemic but that money came with requirements. [Public Radio Tulsa

State Government News

State Board of Education hears report on HB 1775, recommendations for Western Heights: Two complaints alleging violations of HB 1775, which bans the teaching of certain concepts about race and gender in Oklahoma public schools, were received by the State Department of Education between September and December. During today’s State Board of Education meeting, the general counsel for the Board of Education, Brad Clark, said the complaints came from Tulsa and Talequah Public Schools and have been dismissed by the OSDE. [NonDoc

  • Public comment period for Oklahoma’s new rules on talking about race in the classroom available through next week [KGOU
  • School board candidate lashes out at LGBTQ books, Critical Race Theory [The Black Wall Street Times

Oklahoma's Supreme Court could disrupt OG&E's $760 million storm cost plan. Here's how: A former state legislator is asking Oklahoma's Supreme Court to delay considering whether or not bonds can be sold that Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co. customers would retire as a way to handle the regulated utility's fuel costs during February's winter storm. [The Oklahoman] Customers of Oklahoma Natural Gas will be paying an extra $7.80 per month for the next 25 years under a plan approved Tuesday by the three-member Oklahoma Corporation Commission. [Oklahoma Watch

  • (Audio) Higher gas bills, McGirt v. Oklahoma, Congressman Lucas challenger and more [KOSU]

Amid a housing industry boom, renters are paying more for substandard homes: In Oklahoma, two new bills would change the game for renters seeking repairs. A bill in the Oklahoma Legislature would make landlord retaliation illegal, and another would improve the outlook for renters forced to make urgent repairs themselves. [Big If True]

Oklahoma lawmaker pushes for adult-sized changing tables at welcome centers: Rep. Mickey Dollens, D-OKC, has pushed legislation that would make visiting Oklahoma Tourism Information Centers easier for travelers living with disabilities. [KOCO

Republican lawmakers file dozens of bills to curb vaccine mandates in Oklahoma: While similar proposals didn’t get a hearing last year, GOP lawmakers are hoping a more nuanced approach will help their legislation gain traction. [The Frontier]  

Oklahoma Senate leader wants to ban abortions 30 days after a woman's last period: The Republican leader of the Oklahoma Senate wants to prohibit abortions 30 days after the start of a pregnant woman's last menstrual cycle. [The Oklahoman]

Oklahoma bill would allow voters to vote out unopposed incumbents: A state lawmaker filed a bill that aims to give Oklahomans a voice regardless of whether an incumbent legislator has an opponent. [KOKH

Lawmaker seeks $300 million Race Massacre restitution fund: In legislation filed last week, state Rep. Regina Goodwin, D-Tulsa, is asking for a $300 million "Tulsa Race Massacre Victims' Compensation Revolving Fund" to dispense "reparations for damages to persons and property" during the events of May 31-June 1, 1921. [Tulsa World]

Prater outlines investigation as indicted O’Donnell blames ‘woke left,’ hints at Hunter history: Indicted with his wife Dec. 17 on allegations that he amended a tag agency law for their family’s direct financial benefit, Rep. Terry O’Donnell (R-Catoosa) has blamed his prosecution on “Democrats” and “Oklahoma City operatives.” [NonDoc

Federal Government News

Biden confirmed he will nominate a "qualified" Black woman to Supreme Court: Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer has heard the noise and heeded the call. Now, he’s stepping down, making way for President Biden to follow through on one of many campaign promises. [The Black Wall Street Times

Tribal Nations News

Merger creates largest tribally owned bank in the U.S.: When First National Bank & Trust, owned by the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, entered into an agreement to acquire MidWest Community Financial Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary, The First State Bank, in June, the deal made First National Bank & Trust the largest tribally owned bank in the United States.  Now, several months into the acquisition, which represented Oklahoma’s largest merger-and-acquisition transaction in banking since 2016, First National is already anticipating that it will become a “billion-dollar bank” within the next 24 months. [The Journal Record

Voting and Election News

Poll workers are needed for upcoming election: The help wanted sign is up at the Tulsa County Election Board. Area school board and bond elections are set for February 8th. Tulsa County Election Board Secretary Gwen Freeman says she has, as of last count, over 90 openings. There will be 222 precincts open that day and each precinct will need three election officials. [Public Radio Tulsa

Oklahoma City mayor election central: All about the 2022 candidates and more: As the Oklahoma City mayoral campaign heads toward the Feb. 8 election date, candidates are increasingly making their positions known. After the Feb. 8 general election, if no candidate receives a majority vote, a runoff will be held April 5 between the two candidates receiving the most votes. [The Oklahoman

Criminal Justice News

Ten criminal justice bills worth tracking this legislative session: Bills aimed at easing the reentry process for Oklahomans incarcerated received strong bipartisan support in 2021.  The Senate and House unanimously voted to enact the Sarah Stitt Act, which directs the Department of Corrections to ensure prisoners obtain state-issued identification cards prior to their release. [Oklahoma Watch

In case of stillborn baby, appeals court orders judge to consider child neglect charge: Over the objections of the presiding judge, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals on Thursday took the highly unusual step of telling a district court to consider a new charge against a defendant because the original charge was dismissed. [The Oklahoman]

Economic Opportunity

State's unemployment claims continue to drop: Initial unemployment claims in the state declined by nearly a quarter from the previous number during the week ending Saturday, according to a government report. [Tulsa World

Tulsa's rental assistance to 'pause' applications and tackle current requests: After distributing nearly $34 million in less than a year, Tulsa’s federally funded rental assistance program will stop taking new applications to avoid running out of money before meeting all the existing requests, officials announced Wednesday. [Tulsa World

Economy & Business News

Further diversification of local economy among goals for 2022 Tulsa Regional Chamber chair: Tulsa’s road to success in the next decade must be paved, in part, by economic diversification. That was among the messages conveyed Wednesday by Hillcrest President and CEO Kevin Gross, who was inaugurated as 2022 board chair of the Tulsa Regional Chamber. [Tulsa World]

Fortune 500 companies invest in wind in Oklahoma: Fortune 500 companies like McDonald’s, Walmart and Starbucks working to cut “carbon footprints” are among corporate investors in renewable energy being produced in rural Oklahoma. [The Journal Record

Education News

Teaching tech to teachers is a STEM need: Workers in most fields increasingly must be able to use technology to do their jobs. The growing need for STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education can be challenging for teachers trying to prepare their students for the future job market. [The Journal Record

Quote of the Day

"(Eliminating the grocery sales tax altogether) would harm Oklahoma’s ability to provide the public services upon which we all rely, especially considering the considerable cuts in state revenue during the past two decades.”

– Emma Morris, a health care and revenue analyst with Oklahoma Policy Institute, speaking on efforts to eliminate the grocery sales tax [CNHI via The Duncan Banner]

Number of the Day

4

Oklahoma's corporate income tax rate, which is tied for the second lowest in the nation with Missouri.

[Source: Tax Foundation]

OK Policy Report: Focus on Transparency is a new report from the Oklahoma Policy Institute shows that Oklahoma is among the nation’s least transparent states when engaging its residents during the development of the annual state budget. 

Policy Note

Boosting Incomes and Improving Tax Equity with State Earned Income Tax Credits in 2021: The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is designed to boost low-wage workers’ incomes and offset some of the taxes they pay, providing the opportunity for lower-income families to move toward meaningful economic security. The federal EITC has kept millions of Americans out of poverty since its enactment in the mid-1970s. Over the past several decades, the effectiveness of the EITC has been amplified as many states have enacted and expanded their own credits. [ITEP]

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Wednesday, January 26, 2022

[In The Know] Oklahoma among least transparent budget process | 'Level of finality' in McGirt standing | COVID situation 'dire'

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.

NOTE: Our "In The Know" newsletter will be on hiatus on Thursday, Jan. 27, while OK Policy hosts the 8th State Budget Summit. If you have not yet registered for the the State Budget Summit, there's still time. [Click here to learn more and register]

New from OK Policy

Oklahoma among least transparent states for state budget process, new OK Policy report shows: A new report from the Oklahoma Policy Institute shows that Oklahoma is among the nation’s least transparent states when engaging its residents during the development of the annual state budget. The latest report on Oklahoma’s budget transparency showed that during the 2021 Legislative Session, Oklahoma lawmakers unveiled the Fiscal Year 2022 budget (for the year starting July 1, 2021) in mid-May during the last weeks of session. This provided Oklahomans — and even many legislators — only three days between the public unveiling of the $7.7 billion budget and Gov. Stitt’s approval three days later. OK Policy’s new “Focus on Transparency” report serves as a companion to the organization’s “A Better Path Forward,” a comprehensive analysis of the state’s budget and tax system that the organization released in fall 2021. [OK Policy

Oklahoma News

Anoatubby cites 'finality' as US Supreme Court rejects 32 McGirt petitions: The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected 32 petitions filed by Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor asking justices to revisit their 2020 decision that the Muscogee (Creek) Nation was never disestablished. Chickasaw Nation Gov. Bill Anoatubby said the court’s action “establishes a new level of certainty and finality” to the decision in the McGirt v Oklahoma case and the related cases affirming five other reservations in Oklahoma. [The Oklahoman

Gas bills going up: Commission OK's ONG's $1.357 billion in costs from February cold snap: The Oklahoma Corporation Commission approved a financing order on Tuesday linked to the securitization of $1.357 billion in Oklahoma Natural Gas costs arising from the extended cold spell in February. [Tulsa World

  • Divided Corporation Commission approves order to hike natural gas bills $7.82 a month to help pay for storm recovery [The Oklahoman
  • OCC approves monthly charge for ONG customers to pay for February 2021 winter storm [Enid News & Eagle]
  • Supreme Court should stop securitization racket [Editorial / NonDoc

Health News

Watch Now: 'A dire situation': Overwhelmed hospitals set record for COVID patients locally: Saying hospitals are “overwhelmed,” Tulsa Health Department Executive Director Bruce Dart called the situation “dire” as Tulsa County set a record Tuesday for overall COVID-19 hospitalizations. Dart said it’s too soon to know whether cases have hit their peak here or are still climbing. [Tulsa World

  • Some Oklahomans are now eligible for fourth dose of COVID-19 vaccine [The Oklahoman
  • (Audio) Long Story Short: A Looming Nursing Home Mandate, School Enrollment Changes, A Criminal Justice Survey [Oklahoma Watch

OSDH: Much work to be done if agency wants to leave ‘trailing edge of public health’: The Oklahoma State Department of Health says it’s at the beginning of a major overhaul. Speaking to a state Senate appropriations subcommittee today, Interim Commissioner Keith Reed said the agency has been working with a consulting group for the past year on “reimagining vision, mission and values.” [Public Radio Tulsa

  • Partnership brings more medical services to north Tulsa [Tulsa World]

State Government News

Oklahoma Senate Pro Tem introduces bill to pave the way for school board recall elections: A bill introduced by Senate Pro Tem Greg Treat would allow communities to organize recall petitions of school board members. Senate Bill 1582 would allow people to recall school board members with signatures from 10% of residents living in a district who voted in the previous election. [KGOU

Oklahoma Republicans and Democrats push to end grocery tax: The Oklahoma legislative session kicks off in less than a month and both Republicans and Democrats submitted bills seeking to end the grocery sales tax. State Representative Melissa Provenzano, D-District 77, said if the bill gets emergency approval, we could see grocery bills go down by this summer. Rep. Roberts, R-District 36, said in a press release, "We currently have a surplus in funds and revenues are up, so now is the time to bring this much-needed relief to Oklahoma families." [KTUL

Former Oklahoma state senate leader will get his law license reinstated: A former Oklahoma state lawmaker who was convicted in 2012 for taking a $12,000 bribe in exchange for his influence on legislation will get his law license reinstated. [KOSU]

Tribal Nations News

Cherokee Nation announces new $1M film incentive in Oklahoma: From editing and acting to piloting a drone and setting up cameras, Ryker Sixkiller has found multiple roles to play in the Oklahoma film industry. Now, his tribe is expanding its investment in the industry, with the Cherokee Nation Film Office unveiling plans for a new incentive program offering up to $1 million in annual funding for productions filmed within the Cherokee Nation in northeastern Oklahoma. [The Oklahoman

  • Tulsa earns praise as one of top 2022 places for moviemakers [Tulsa World

Voting and Election News

OKC mayoral debate features policy talk, criticism of ‘No Show Holt’: Three of the four candidates for Oklahoma City mayor took to the debate stage at The Auditorium at The Douglass tonight covering a variety of topics ranging from potholes to policing and municipal services to MAPS 4. [NonDoc] Jimmy Lawson, Carol Hefner, and Frank Urbanic each participated in an hour-long event that mostly involved candidates taking turns answering questions instead of debating. [OKC Free Press] However, with [incumbent] Holt's only onstage presence being his photograph sitting on an empty podium, mayoral hopefuls took turns expressing frustration with his absence. [The Oklahoman

Criminal Justice News

Appeals court paves the way for 2 more Oklahoma executions: A three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver denied the inmates’ motion in a ruling on Monday. The decision paves the way for the state to carry out the executions of Donald Grant, 46, on Thursday and Gilbert Postelle, 35, on Feb. 17. [AP News]

Education News

(Audio) Listen Frontier: Oklahoma’s ‘Guest Educator’ program: In 2020, former McAlester Public Schools teacher Ryan Walters was appointed as the youngest Secretary of Education in Oklahoma’s history. Earlier this month, with schools ravaged by the COVID-19 pandemic and the highly infectious omicron variant, Gov, Kevin Stitt announced the Guest Educator Program. [The Frontier

Oklahoma public school students weigh in on third year of pandemic learning, other school issues: As the tug-of-war over pandemic-related school closures, safety mandates and emergency funding use continues among lawmakers, parents, school boards, superintendents and even courts of law, a group of Oklahoma high school students weighed in on Tuesday. [Tulsa World]

Oklahoma Local News

  • 'Focus: Black Oklahoma': critical race theory, anti-segregation, health and wellness [KOSU
  • Oklahoma students talk about learning Tulsa Race Massacre, Black Wall Street history in schools [Tulsa World

Quote of the Day

Oklahoma’s budget discussions focus on “What can we afford?” when they should focus on “What should we do?”

– From OK Policy's new "Focus on Transparency" report that shows Oklahoma is among the least transparent states for state budget process [OK Policy]

OK Policy Report: Focus on Transparency is a new report from the Oklahoma Policy Institute shows that Oklahoma is among the nation’s least transparent states when engaging its residents during the development of the annual state budget. 

Number of the Day

9.2%

Percentage of family income that sales and excise taxes represent for the lowest 20% of Oklahoma families. By comparison, Oklahoma families with income in the 80th to 95th percentile (average annual income of $127,900) pay about 3.6% of their family income towards sales and excise taxes.

[Source: ITEP]

Policy Note

How do state and local sales taxes work?: Forty-five states and the District of Columbia levy general sales taxes that apply (with some exemptions) to all goods and certain services. Thirty-seven states (including, Alaska, which has no state tax) also allow general sales taxes at the local level. Most states apply separate sales taxes to particular goods, including tobacco, alcohol, and motor fuels. [Tax Policy Center]

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Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

Oklahoma Policy Institute Oklahoma Policy Institute  

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