Oklahoma News Senate passes private school tax credits; House leader open to negotiate: The Oklahoma Senate on Thursday approved tax credits for families of private-school and home-school students, a major goal of school choice supporters but legislation the leader of the House said will require more negotiation. Senators also approved a public school funding increase and a teacher pay raise in a separate bill. [The Oklahoman] - 'Game-changing opportunity for education': OK Democrats call for clean teacher pay bill [OKC Fox 25]
- Stitt, McCall speak at school choice rally at state Capitol [Tulsa World]
- After Senate OKs gutted education bills, speaker vows the House shall not pass [Tulsa World]
- Oklahoma Senate approves education spending, reform bill [CNHI via McAlester News-Capital]
Oklahoma's only secure-care facility for youth faces 42% staff vacancy rate, growing overtime costs: Administrators say staff are frequently working 12-hour shifts, and though they try to avoid them, 16-hour shifts are sometimes necessary. Forty-eight out of 115 front-line positions are currently open. [The Frontier] State Government News Oklahoma Lawmakers Are Watering Down a Bill That's Supposed to Help Domestic Violence Survivors: Given the Oklahoma House's unanimous support for the Domestic Abuse Survivorship Act, Oklahoma justice advocates are now trying to convince state Senators to revert back to the original language allowing for retroactive resentencing. [Mother Jones] Oklahoma House passes 4 bills easing alcohol laws: Oklahoma's pending updated alcohol laws have been met with a lot of praise, with a few things slipping through the cracks. Four bills, HB 1392, HB 2178, HB 2843, and SB 809, are working through the Oklahoma House and Senate and could change distribution laws, lower the age restriction for sealed alcohol, and clarify what wineries and small brewers are allowed to sell. [KTUL] Podcast: Dean Davis censure, education bills, Superintendent Ryan Walters and more: KOSU's Michael Cross talks with Republican Political Consultant Neva Hill and Civil Rights Attorney Ryan Kiesel about the censure of Representative Dean Davis after the Broken Arrow Republican was arrested on charges of public intoxication and the State Senate amending and passing education bills from the House causing a stalemate between the chambers. [This Week in Oklahoma Politics / KOSU] Federal Government News Republican energy bill clears House, but dead on arrival in Senate. Here's how Oklahoma reps voted: The U.S. House approved energy legislation on Thursday that was a top priority for the new Republican majority seeking more oil and gas production on public land and fewer obstacles for pipelines. [The Oklahoman] EPA proposes new Superfund site in northeastern Oklahoma: The EPA announced a proposed new Superfund site at Oklahoma's Fansteel Metals, Inc. Covering 105 acres in Muskogee on Cherokee Nation land, the facility contains radioactive and toxic materials that could threaten the health and safety of people living nearby if not properly contained. [KOSU] Tribal Nations News Cherokee Nation delegate Kimberly Teehee to speak at Tulsa Press Club PageOne luncheon: Tim Landes, TPC board member and Tulsa People digital editor, will moderate a conversation with Kimberly Teehee on the state of Native American affairs at the local and federal level. Guests are encouraged to participate in the question and answer portion of the luncheon. [Tulsa World] Voting and Election News OKC City Council, county clerk elections April 4. Where to vote. Who are the candidates?: Residents in the Oklahoma City area will have the chance to vote in local races for city council and county clerk Tuesday. [The Oklahoman] Health News City, state leaders break ground on 'historic' psychiatric hospital in Tulsa: A symbolic groundbreaking ceremony was held Thursday for a new psychiatric hospital that is expected to reduce mental health-related emergency room visits, incarcerations and homelessness across the Tulsa area. [Tulsa World] Education News Oklahoma legislative action take toll on trans kids, parents, teachers: Transgender and nonbinary Oklahomans say the political front against them — with schools at the epicenter — has taken a toll, and even graver possibilities lie ahead with legislation that could limit access to gender-affirming health care. [The Oklahoman] - The forces behind anti-trans bills across the U.S. [Axios]
Edmond parents respond to ruling that quarantine protocols violated students' rights: Parents responded Thursday to the state Supreme Court saying Edmond Public Schools violated students' rights with quarantine rules. In 2021, parents filed a lawsuit against the superintendent and school board saying their kids were excluded because of COVID-19 protocols. [KOCO Oklahoma City] General News Buttigieg visits OKC to highlight focus on airspace safety, reliability: The aviation industry is facing its most transformative decade since the introduction of the jet engine, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Thursday on a visit to Oklahoma City. [The Oklahoman] - U.S. Secretary of Transportation visits Oklahoma City, highlights aviation industry [KOSU]
Oklahoma Local News - Matt Hinkle, Thuan Nguyen vying for OKC Ward 5 in hotly contested runoff [NonDoc]
- Tulsa airport working to fight human trafficking through federal Blue Lightning Initiative [Tulsa World]
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