Kateleigh Mills
Kateleigh Mills was the Special Projects reporter for KOSU from December 2019 to January 2024.
Mills oversaw the KOSU Texting Club, one of the tools KOSU uses to directly engage with community members on issues in Oklahoma. She wass the producer for KOSU's Audio Diaries podcast, which was created in 2020 as a non-narrated project dedicated to telling the lived experience of Oklahomans during the coronavirus pandemic. Mills was also a contributor to America Amplified, an engagement journalism project, during the 2020 election year.
Mills was also an alum and mentor of NPR's Next Generation Radio Project.
She started her public radio career as a news assistant and All Things Considered host for KOSU from March to December 2018. She then spent about a year as a host and reporter for KWBU in Waco, Texas.
Mills completed her undergraduate degree in Professional Media at the University of Central Oklahoma in December 2017.
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In Oklahoma, 1 in every 766 households are facing foreclosure — ranking the state 15th in the country for homes that could be impacted in the near future.
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Oklahoma Ethics Commission Executive Director Ashley Kemp has been in her position as executive director for seven years. But her time at the state’s political campaign watchdog agency is coming to an end.
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There are elections in seven counties scattered around the state — almost all for propositions related to municipal government or schools.
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A report by Cannabis Public Policy Consulting, which was ordered by the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority, reveals several key findings about the state’s medical marijuana industry.
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Strong storms producing at least three tornadoes over the weekend ravaged Oklahoma, knocking out power and leaving a path of destruction in their wake.
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Chef Andrew Black of downtown Oklahoma City's Grey Sweater restaurant is getting the prestigious James Beard Foundation Award for Best Chef: Southwest.
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Owning or leasing an older property can reveal a disturbing history. A new law in Oklahoma targets discriminatory language in real estate covenants.
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These last few months have been a difficult time for homebuyers in the state, and many are faced with a tough decision: buy or wait?
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According to the Oklahoma Climatological Survey’s Mesonet, both Cleveland and McClain Counties have already broken records for the number of tornadoes in a calendar year.
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Lawmakers in both the House and Senate voted to override a Governor’s veto that would have led to the end of Oklahoma’s public television broadcaster, OETA. They also took up other measures the governor had refused to sign into law, passing them without his support.