State Government News
Calls for Walters to be held accountable grow after insulting comments, possible Open Meeting Act violation: Legal experts tell News 4 the events of Wednesday's Oklahoma State School Board meeting are unprecedented, and should alarm anyone with power to hold State Superintendent Ryan Walters and the Oklahoma State Board of Education accountable. [KFOR]
- 'Disappointing': State Board of Education denies 3 lawmakers attendance in executive session [NonDoc]
- AG's office looking into potential Open Meeting Act violation during State Board of Education meeting [Public Radio Tulsa]
- Attorney general to investigate possible violation of law at Oklahoma education board meeting [Oklahoma Voice]
- Education Watch: Board of Education denied lawmakers entry to executive session [Oklahoma Watch]
- 3 State Lawmakers Shut Out Of Closed-Door OSDE Meeting [News 9]
- Oklahoma Board of Education stalls on decision to allow lawmakers in executive sessions [Fox 25]
- Opinion: Remember the board members enabling State Superintendent Ryan Walters [Ginnie Graham / Tulsa World]
Details of new Oklahoma medical marijuana program kept top secret, even from Legislature: Details are not currently being shared with the public, though a report will be available to lawmakers later this year, a spokesperson said. [Oklahoma Voice]
'A detriment for me to step aside': Todd Hiett resists calls to resign: A defiant Todd Hiett, the chairman of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, said Wednesday that allegations he got blackout drunk and groped an energy industry employee at a conference in Minnesota will not cause him to resign from office. [NonDoc]
- Democrats push for impeachment of Todd Hiett amid misconduct allegations [Journal Record]
Opinion: State Superintendent Ryan Walters confusing vanity with leadership: When those around a leader are silenced and repressed out of fear of retribution, we are not witnessing leadership but coercion. During a decade as a Marine Corps officer, I learned that authentic leadership is earned, not seized. It is founded on trust, not fear. Dictators, despotic bosses and abusive authority figures are not leaders but impostors. [Rob Miller / Tulsa World]
Federal Government News
Federal government to pay $100.6 million to Oklahoma farmers for discrimination: Tens of thousands of farmers or would-be farmers who say they suffered discrimination when they applied for assistance from the U.S. Department of Agriculture will get one-time payments that total about $2 billion from the federal government. [Oklahoma Voice]
Tribal Nations News
What we know about new U.S. report into Native American boarding schools: The United States ran more than 400 boarding schools aimed at assimilating Native American children, and at least 973 children died at the schools. Those details are part of a new federal report on the destructive boarding school era, which lasted for more than a century until the 1960s. The U.S. government compelled generations of Native children to attend the schools, where they often faced violence and trauma, federal officials confirmed. [The Oklahoman]
Oklahoma tribes continue repatriation efforts with new NAGPRA guidelines: New guidelines for the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act mean Oklahoma tribal nations are renewing efforts to reclaim cultural items. [KOSU]
Voting and Election News
Candidates for Tulsa mayor reveal more about themselves ahead of Aug. 27 election: The five mayoral candidates on the Lorton Performing Arts Center stage Thursday night did not say much startling, but they did reveal a little more about themselves. [Tulsa World]
- Meet the Tulsa mayor candidates: Why they are running and opinions on city's biggest issues [Tulsa World]
- State settles lawsuit with Tulsa company, mayoral candidate over undelivered masks purchased during pandemic [Tulsa World]
'Sheriff showdown': Chris Elliott, Tyler Cooper clash in Wagoner County runoff: As Oklahoma's Aug. 27 runoff election date approaches, incumbent Wagoner County Sheriff Chris Elliott is pushing back against accusations from challenger Tyler Cooper while making his own allegations that the Board of County Commissioners placed his wife on administrative leave as political retribution. [NonDoc]
Health News
Oklahoma County officials move forward with Behavioral Care Center construction: This week, the Oklahoma County Board of County Commissioners unanimously voted to break ground on a Behavioral Care Center to operate in tandem with the county jail, without a site for that jail nailed down. [KOSU]
Housing & Economic Opportunity News
Oklahoma Tenant Unions Give Voice to Renters' Concerns: In Oklahoma, tenant unions are slowly taking root and growing in numbers and power. In a state ranked sixth worst for evictions, Oklahoma renters have few protections and little power individually. [Oklahoma Watch]
Education News
Bixby Superintendent Responds To Criticism From State Superintendent Walters: Bixby Superintendent Rob Miller responded to State Superintendent Ryan Walters, who called him a liar at Wednesday's state Board of Education meeting. The dispute between the two stems from Title I funding allocations. Miller says preliminary figures should have been provided in the Spring, but districts have still not received them as schools prepare to start. [News on 6]
- 'They Were Juvenile': Bixby Superintendent Responds To Walters Comments [News on 6]
Tulsa Public Schools touts rising test scores, new leadership: Tulsa Public Schools administration has new blood and is praising other shake-ups. TPS Superintendent Ebony Johnson gave her monthly update to the State Board of Education Wednesday morning. [Public Radio Tulsa]
Community News
City of Tulsa creates commission to explore race massacre reparations: Tulsa officials announced Thursday the city will form a commission to explore how to give reparations to victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. [Public Radio Tulsa]
A Greenwood summer camp is teaching kids about Black history before and after 1619: A group of elementary school students put on a series of performances Wednesday at the Greenwood Cultural Center to highlight what they learned during a summer program based on The New York Times' 1619 Project. [Public Radio Tulsa]
Local Headlines
- On the cusp for 50 years: Why isn't Capitol Hill one of OKC's thriving historic districts? [The Oklahoman]
- A $1 billion stadium district may be coming to Lower Bricktown [The Oklahoman]