State Government News In the Wake of School Choice Financial Scandals, Legislature Pursues Tax Credits Over Vouchers: Financial scandals at a pandemic relief voucher program and an online charter school demonstrated the risks of directly handing parents state dollars to educate their children. Now, the Oklahoma Legislature is pursuing a tax credit plan as its main vehicle for funding private and home school students this session — which some say has more accountability baked in. [Oklahoma Watch] McCall doubles down on education bills, Treat fires back: One day after a pair of education funding and reform bills advanced with amendments out of Senate committees, Oklahoma House Speaker Charles McCall doubled down Tuesday on his ultimatum that his proposals not be changed by the opposite chamber. An hour later, Senate President Pro Tempore Greg Treat fired back, saying he would not "give into threats." "We're not going to give into bullying," said Treat. [NonDoc] - Oklahoma House, Senate at impasse over education bills on teacher pay, tax credits [The Oklahoman]
- Oklahoma House, Senate leaders continue clash over teacher pay, tax credit bills [Tulsa World]
- Oklahoma House, Senate at odds over education legislation [Journal Record]
Panasonic said to be interested again in Oklahoma factory: Oklahoma Senate leader Greg Treat and other lawmakers said Tuesday that Project Ocean came back to the Oklahoma Department of Commerce to seek an incentive package that's currently worth nearly $700 million in capital investment rebates. The funding has been in limbo over the past year after both Panasonic and then Volkswagen chose other locations to build electric vehicle battery manufacturing plants. [The Oklahoman] Federal Government News Lankford renews warnings about foreign land ownership: U.S. Sen. James Lankford on Tuesday renewed alarms over foreign ownership of U.S. agricultural land, noting that such interests expanded their Oklahoma holdings from 321,000 acres in 2011 to nearly 1.7 million a decade later. [Tulsa World] Tribal Nations News Cherokee Nation gives $7.8 million to area school districts: At its first in-person distribution event since 2020, officials with the Cherokee Nation gave away $7.8 million in car tag revenue to public school districts and charter schools from across northeastern Oklahoma on Tuesday. [Tulsa World] Health News Some Edmond Santa Fe students, staff are testing after potential tuberculosis exposure: At least some students and staff at Santa Fe High School are being tested to see if they've been exposed to tuberculosis, health officials confirmed Monday. [The Oklahoman] Criminal Justice News New delay sought for Glossip execution: Oklahoma's top prosecutor and attorneys for death-row inmate Richard Glossip have asked a court again to delay Glossip's upcoming execution while his attorneys seek to have his conviction overturned. [Journal Record] Economic Opportunity Bipartisan group of Senators want to get honest about Oklahoma's economic development: A new bipartisan Senate committee will look at what Oklahoma needs to do to improve its economic development. The committee will hear from the Department of Commerce and many regional chambers of commerce. [KFOR Oklahoma City] OKC council votes to give housing authority $55M to renovate, build affordable housing: The Oklahoma City Housing Authority will use the money, along with about $400 million in other private and public funds, to redevelop at least 1,500 units of its current public housing. It also will create more than 600 new units of both supportive and workforce housing units — all part of a plan it first presented to the city council for consideration as a MAPS 4 project in July 2019. [The Oklahoman] Oklahoma Local News - TPS District 1 candidates both criticize state voucher push [Public Radio Tulsa]
- Recent bond vote shapes Norman school board runoff [NonDoc]
- In debate, Edmond Ward 1 City Council candidates find plenty to agree on [NonDoc]
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