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Headlines: Oklahoma tornado damage, General Election Day and Oklahoma Gazette returns

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Local headlines for Monday, November 4, 2024

Oklahomans are cleaning up after weekend tornadoes. (KOSU)

Weather turns from drought to possible flooding. (Tulsa World)

Few Oklahoma have flood insurance. (Tulsa World)

What to know about Election Day. (NewsOK)

Study shows Oklahoma typically has the worst voter representation. (NewsOK)

Stillwater voters are deciding on how to power a data center. (KOSU)

OKC and Tulsa transit provide free rides to the polls. (KOSU)

“Souls to the Polls” event held in OKC. (NewsOK)

Voters face multiple decisions on tomorrow’s ballot. (Tulsa World)

New voter registration numbers show growing independent voters. (NewsOK)

Tulsa leadership is changing regardless of who win. (Tulsa World)

Latino groups work to get out the vote. (KOSU)

Oklahoma tribes hope initiatives improve voter turnout. (KOSU)

Logan County sheriff holds secret meetings to “reboot” the government. (NewsOK)

AG Drummond fires lawyer hired by Stitt. (NewsOK)

The dean of OSU’s veterinary school steps down amid probation. (Tulsa World)

Research at OU focuses on teacher retention. (Tulsa World)

Superintendent Ryan Walters’ letter to Harris faces pushback. (NewsOK)

A Life Church member has a recommendation for Walters to have free bibles. (NewsOK)

DHS requests an audit of its childcare grant program. (Oklahoma Voice)

Officials are raising concerns about dams in Oklahoma. (Tulsa World)

New information shows east Tulsa data center could be a Meta facility. (Tulsa World)

Oklahoma City gets nearly $1M grant for a transit-oriented plan. (NewsOK)

Anti-violence programs in OKC receive Department of Justice funding. (NewsOK)

New book shows Trump not the first to declare “America First”. (Tulsa World)

Thanksgiving food drives begin on Saturday. (Tulsa World)

The “Oklahoma Gazette” is coming back to newsstands. (KOSU)

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