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Cleveland County detention officers failed to perform safety checks at the jail where two women died in December, according to a health department investigation
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Lawmakers were high on this organization’s ability to catch fraud and boost registration. The GOP majority soured amid debunked claims of privacy violations and partisan influence.
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A bill intended to protect some tenants from being evicted for complaining about substandard living conditions faces a deadline in the Oklahoma Legislature.
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A decades-long quirk in map making and state boundaries is inching toward a solution after Oklahoma's Red River Boundary Commission met for the first time in years.
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A calculation error created a months-long delay in the 2022 school report cards, which still have not been released to the public.
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Lawmakers promised to clear Oklahoma’s 13-year wait for disability services but a caregiver shortage means families still don’t have the help they need.
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Oklahoma lawmakers spent last summer vetting hundreds of applications for funding from the latest round of federal coronavirus relief and allocated more than $1.6 billion in the fall. But some are frustrated with the executive branch’s slow pace of sending the money to agencies and other grantees.
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House Speaker Charles McCall said the differences between the treatment of felony-indicted Republicans and Turner are a matter of time and place. Turner’s Democratic colleagues see a double standard.
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Oklahoma voters will decide on March 7 if they want to expand the state’s medical marijuana market to adult recreational users 21 and older.
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At the end of January, Oklahoma’s new Attorney General, Gentner Drummond, announced he would change course on a high-profile debacle involving Secretary of Education and now State Superintendent Ryan Walters — and lots of federal money.