Oklahoma News Oklahoma again ranks poorly for child well-being, annual report says: Oklahoma children continue to fare more poorly overall than their peers in other states, according to an annual report released Monday. "The net result is that far too many children in our communities live in poverty, have unhealthy lives, and are behind the educational outcomes of their peers in other parts of the country," said Gabrielle Jacobi of the Oklahoma Policy Institute, the state's host agency for KIDS COUNT. [Tulsa World] - While it did improve some, Oklahoma still ranks low for child well-being in new report [The Oklahoman]
- The kids are not all right: Oklahoma ranks near the bottom in terms of child well-being [Fox 25]
- Survey: Oklahoma ranks 40th in child well-being and 45th in education [KFOR]
- 2022 KIDS COUNT Report Shows Oklahoma Ranks 40th for Child Well-Being, Still Lags Nation [OK Policy]
State's first post-election audit completed: Oklahomans can be confident their vote in the June 28 primary election was counted correctly. The Oklahoma State Election Board completed its first post-election audit on July 28. There was no discrepancy between the manual audit totals and the certified election results, the election board reported early last week. There was no discrepancy between the manual audit totals and the certified election results, the election board reported early last week. [Oklahoma Watch] State Government News Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, Joy Hofmeister differ on turnpike expansion plan: While Stitt has praised the long-range ACCESS Oklahoma plan launched under his administration, state schools Superintendent Joy Hofmeister is calling for an audit of the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority and says more toll roads are not the answer to the state's infrastructure needs. [The Oklahoman] State sues vendor over handling of education funds: The Stitt administration has made good on its threat to sue a Florida company it hired to administer a federal education program that the U.S. Department of Education says was mismanaged. [Tulsa World] Voting and Election News Citing old abuse claims, Okla. GOP women call on Sean Roberts to end labor commissioner bid: Five female legislators are calling on a candidate for state labor commissioner to drop out of the race after allegations that he abused and mistreated his ex-wife resurfaced. Roberts, R-Hominy, is challenging incumbent Labor Commissioner Leslie Osborn. The two candidates will face off in the Aug. 23 GOP runoff primary. [The Oklahoman] New Change Research poll finds Oklahoma voters are souring on Gov. Kevin Stitt: A Change Research poll of 2,079 likely voters in Oklahoma shows voters are souring on Stitt. The poll finds his approval rating has fallen 12 points this year. [Fox 25] Red River runoff: Reid faces Maynard in House District 21: The two Republicans running to become the next representative from House District 21 in the Durant area grew up on opposite sides of the Red River. Cody Maynard is a church accountant who originally hails from Texas, and Dustin Reid is a Choctaw Nation employee who has never lived outside Oklahoma, a factor Reid says "carries a lot of weight" in his mind. [NonDoc] Criminal Justice News 61 Oklahoma lawmakers call for hearing in Glossip case: Dozens of Oklahoma lawmakers say they support an evidentiary hearing in the case of an Oklahoma death row inmate, who has proclaimed his innocence for decades. Earlier this year, Texas-based law firm, Reed Smith, agreed to independently investigate the case for free. After 3,000 hours of work and a nearly 350-page report, they determined "no reasonable jury would have convicted Richard Glossip." Investigators pointed to flawed interrogations, lack of crime scene logs, and something more disturbing. [KFOR] More than one-third of Oklahoma's lawmakers are asking the state's attorney general to support a request for a new hearing to review the case of a death row inmate who claims he is innocent. [The Oklahoman] Oklahoma prisons director Scott Crow to retire in October: Scott Crow, the director of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections, announced Monday he is stepping down. Crow will retire Oct. 31. His departure was announced as the state prepares for 25 scheduled executions, expected to last through the end of 2024. [The Oklahoman] In his 26 years with the Oklahoma Department of Corrections, Crow has served in several capacities, including inspector general, administrator of field operations and chief of operations. [Tulsa World] Oklahoma group awarded grant for 'fair chance' hiring efforts: The Just Trust has awarded grant money to several organizations in Oklahoma as a part of criminal justice reform efforts. One such group in the state, the Oklahoma County Criminal Justice Advisory Council, is using the grant to connect job seekers with criminal records to careers. [Fox 25] Note: OK Policy also was awarded a grant from The Just Trust to support its Open Justice Oklahoma program. Economy & Business News OKC shows strength in tech sector job creation: Oklahoma City posted 1,764 new tech jobs in July, showing strength as an "under the radar" market in an industry still flexing muscle nationwide, according to a new report on tech sector job creation. [The Journal Record] Canoo reports loss of $164 million in second quarter: Second-quarter losses for electric vehicle start-up Canoo, which has production plans for Oklahoma, increased 46% percent on Monday. The company reported a loss of $164.3 million, or 68 cents per diluted share, compared to a loss of $112.5 million, or 50 cents per diluted share, over the same period a year ago. [Tulsa World] Education News 'The turnover has been huge': Oklahoma schools dealing with mass exodus of teachers: As schools open their doors to kids, there is a mass exodus of teachers fleeing Oklahoma classrooms for good. FOX 25 put a call out to educators leaving the profession to learn what is driving them to the breaking point. [Fox 25] Western Heights school board recognizes, decries searing district audit: After months of delays and legal action from the state, the Western Heights Board of Education acknowledged an annual audit that uncovered deep financial issues in the southwest Oklahoma City school district, but a presentation of the report turned combative. [The Oklahoman] Oklahoma voters to choose which Republican will move ahead in race for state superintendent: Two weeks from Tuesday, voters will choose which Republican should move ahead in the race for state superintendent. One of the issues dominating the primary race is how to disburse state education funding. [KOCO] General News After film session incident, Cale Gundy 'accepts accountability' and resigns from OU: Longtime University of Oklahoma assistant football coach Cale Gundy has resigned owing to a film-session incident when he read aloud from a player's tablet and uttered a racial slur. [NonDoc] "In that circumstance, a man of character accepts accountability. I take responsibility for this mistake. I apologize." [ESPN] |