Oklahoma News
Cutting out property taxes would hurt schools, counties, assessor says: If state lawmakers eliminate property taxes without replacing the $5.7 billion in revenue now paying for local government services, it will drastically hurt public schools, counties, law enforcement and "essential constitutional services," Oklahoma County Assessor Larry Stein said. Rural Oklahoma would be especially hard hit even if taxes were cut, Stein said. [The Oklahoman]
Republicans Push Back on Data Centers in Oklahoma, Other States: Republican state legislators in several states want to pause new data center construction, a break with President Donald Trump and most congressional Republicans. [Oklahoma Watch]
- Lawmakers advance bills to shield residents from data center utility costs [The Oklahoman]
Oklahoma's high SNAP error rates could be costly for taxpayers. Here's how it might impact your wallet: Oklahoma taxpayers could pay the price for the state's high food stamp error rates, but that's likely a last resort. Changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act could cost the state an extra $270 million next year, according to State Auditor Cindy Byrd. SNAP provides upwards of $125 million a month in food benefits to more than 684,600 Oklahomans in need. [Tulsa Flyer]
Many of those fighting Oklahoma's fires this week are volunteers: Firefighters have been battling blazes across the Panhandle and the northwest part of Oklahoma for days now. The majority of them aren't getting paid. [KOSU]
State Government News
Bills to rein in home insurance costs fail to advance in Oklahoma Legislature: Two bills aimed at reining in soaring home insurance costs went down in flames Thursday, but Democrats and Republicans agreed that the state cannot afford a legislative punt on the issue. The bills, Senate Bill 1444, and Senate Bill 1438, both authored by Sen. Julia Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, failed to advance through the Senate Business and Insurance Committee. [Tulsa World]
Oklahoma's highest criminal court adopts AI rule: The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, the state's highest criminal court, adopted a new rule on Wednesday regulating the use of generative artificial intelligence in court filings. The move has prompted the Oklahoma County District Court to consider following suit. [The Journal Record]
- Oklahoma court adopts new rule for AI use in legal filings; how it works [The Oklahoman]
Legislative roundup
- Oklahoma lawmakers want to make dewormer drug ivermectin available over the counter [KOSU]
- House committees pass bills on school prayer, reading [Oklahoma Voice]
- Lawmakers nix attempt to allow guns in the Oklahoma Capitol [Oklahoma Voice]
- Session Watch: Week Three [Oklahoma Watch]
- House passes retro funding bills on Throwback Thursday [Tulsa World]
Opinion, This Week in Oklahoma Politics: New budget numbers, student-led protest punishment, state worker pay and more (podcast): The panel talk about new budget numbers for state lawmakers for the 2027 fiscal year starting in July, a fiscal impact for the House Speaker's literacy legislation coming in at about $75 million and Mustang Public Schools suspending 122 students for participating in ICE protests. They also discuss the Trump Administration's Department of Justice asking Oklahoma election officials for confidential voter information and a new study showing state workers make 50% less in pay than their private sector counterparts. [KOSU]
Federal Government News
'A lot of drama.' What to expect at big Trump-governors White House showdown: A historically bipartisan affair, the National Governors Association winter meeting in Washington, DC, has only gotten more political. This time around, Trump initially tried to only invite GOP governors to meet with him during the conference. Pressure from the governor of Oklahoma – Kevin Stitt, the Republican chair of the NGA – caused the president to mostly back off. though not without criticism. [USA Today via The Oklahoman]
- 'Politics is in such a weird time right now,' Stitt says of pressure from 'fringes' [Tulsa World]
Trump wields abortion clinic law against church demonstrators, providers still fear violence: The Trump administration is using a law Congress passed in the 1990s after a wave of deadly violence at abortion clinics to prosecute demonstrators and reporters who were at a immigration-related church protest in Minneapolis last month. [Oklahoma Voice]
How groups in Oklahoma are responding to the EPA's repeal of greenhouse gas finding: Last week, the Environmental Protection Agency announced it is eliminating the agency's 2009 endangerment finding. The scientific standard found key greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide and methane, are a threat to public health. [StateImpact Oklahoma via KOSU]
Lankford to visit ICE detention centers: Oklahoma's senior U.S. senator says he will be touring Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities, though he doesn't plan on bringing media and he's giving advance notice. [Public Radio Tulsa]
- Lankford: Americans must 'set tone' for rest of the world [Tulsa World]
- Immigration enforcement, AI and space testing center land on Lankford's priority list [The Oklahoma Eagle]
Tribal Nations News
The People vs. AI: Two Oklahoma women were featured in the cover story about their work against a proposal to rezone a 5,500-acre Muscogee Nation ranch into a technology park in order to build a hyperscale data center. Jordan Harmon and Mackenzie Roberts objected to the proposal both for its potential strain on local resources and what the project stood for. [Time Magazine]
Cherokee Nation invests $2M into new north Tulsa community center offering food, classes and more: Meals for seniors, job fairs and a third space for people to call home are all possibilities at a new north Tulsa Cherokee community center. Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said opening the $2 million center was a defining moment for both him and the people he represents. [The Oklahoma Eagle]
- Cherokee Nation opens north Tulsa community center [Tulsa World]
Voting and Election News
Oklahoma GOP candidates for governor speak at forum. How to watch: Republican candidates for Oklahoma governor introduced themselves to Oklahoma voters at a forum at Randall University in Moore Thursday night, Feb. 19. [The Oklahoman]
Primary Function: Governor debate set for GOP primary: In partnership with KSWO 7News, NonDoc is hosting a 2026 Oklahoma gubernatorial debate ahead of the Republican primary election at 5:45 p.m. Thursday, May 28, on the campus of Cameron University in Lawton. [NonDoc]
Opinion: Some misunderstand. SQ 836 is not anti-political party: At its core, SQ 836 is about fairness, transparency and voter inclusion. It ensures that every Oklahoman who helps pay for an election has the right to participate in that election. It does not abolish political parties, weaken them or silence their voices. In fact, it could give political parties more meaningful influence than they currently have. [Caedmon Brooks / The Oklahoman]
Education News
Tulsa Public Schools confirms potential administrative layoffs: Facing an anticipated multi-million dollar shortfall and a confirmed four-digit enrollment drop, Tulsa Public Schools has begun notifying about 50 employees that their positions will be recommended for elimination at the end of the current school year. [Tulsa World]
- Tulsa Public Schools confirms potential layoffs ahead of anticipated budget shortfall [Tulsa Flyer]
Audit of Hofmeister's education department finds no wrongdoing but highlights systemic problems: An audit of the State Department of Education under former Superintendent Joy Hofmeister, requested by Gov. Kevin Stitt, found no evidence of financial wrongdoing. [KOSU]
Opinion, former Rep. Mark McBride: How to build an educational system that works: During a conversation with Oklahoma historian Bob Burke, our talk drifted into education. From there, it moved to former Gov. Dewey Bartlett and Francis Tuttle — what they did, what they started and why it lasted. What began as storytelling turned into something more serious. It raised a simple question that stayed with me after I left: How did Oklahoma once build an education system that worked — and endured? That question sent me back to do a little research. [Former Rep. Mark McBride / The Oklahoman]
Health News
Oklahoma ranks 47th in the nation for women's health. See the numbers: Oklahoma is ranked as one of the worst states in the nation for women when it comes to health, insurance and more, according to recent data. [The Oklahoman]
Criminal Justice News
Editorial: Our prisons are terrible. We need a big, bold plan: To have one of the nation's worst correctional systems is a big problem, one that state leadership is just nibbling at around the edges, unwilling or unable to make the commitment to move in a big way to solve. [The Oklahoman]
Housing & Economic Opportunity News
OIC-Oklahoma County celebrates 60 years of putting 'people first': Back when there was only one computer in the building, an instructor at the Opportunities Industrialization Center of Oklahoma County realized that her students needed to become computer proficient to prepare for an evolving job market. [The Oklahoman]
Economy & Business News
Oklahoma energy industry faces challenges as companies relocate to Texas: The Petroleum Alliance of Oklahoma has issued a warning to state lawmakers following the relocation of major energy companies to Texas, urging them to address legislative issues impacting the oil and gas industry. [KOCO]
Community News
'Jesus loves immigrants.' Christian clergy call for immigration reform: A group of Christian clergy this week urged elected leaders to enact policies leading to "just and compassionate" immigration reform in the wake of what they deemed divisive rhetoric surrounding immigrants and immigrant families being torn apart, as the federal government's immigration enforcement crackdown continues. [The Oklahoman]
Pew study shows low trust in media amid evolving news landscape: Fifty-seven percent of adults from across the United Stares say they have low confidence in journalists to act in the public's interest, according to a study released by the Pew Research Center this month. [The Journal Record]
Local Headlines
- Tulsa mayor nominates 3 for Tulsa Housing Authority Board as 2021 audit released [NonDoc]
- Tulsa trash-to-energy plan to burn medical waste fuels opposition [Tulsa World]