Winamp Logo
StateImpact Oklahoma Cover
StateImpact Oklahoma Profile

StateImpact Oklahoma

Inglés, Economic, 1 temporada, 256 episodios, 0 horas, 0 minutos
Acerca de
StateImpact Oklahoma reports on education, health, criminal justice, and the intersection of government and everyday Oklahomans. StateImpact Oklahoma is a collaboration of KGOU, KOSU, KWGS and KCCU.
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma higher ed workers navigate gaps in paid parental leave: lawmakers say it’s time to fix that

A growing list of Oklahoma colleges and universities are offering their workers paid parental leave. But it’s still a minority. The momentum comes after Oklahoma mandated maternity leave for state employees and teachers last year. Lawmakers say it's time for the state to intervene for higher education workers.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
17/10/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A growing number of Oklahoma schools are adopting digital hall passes for safety, student accountability

Oklahoma schools use technology apps to manage everything from attendance to grades to parent communications. And now, a growing number of districts are updating hall passes to the digital age. They say the new tech is helping them curb behavioral issues that have spiked since the pandemic.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
10/10/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Convicted of murder as a teenager, Wayne Thompson hopes for a second chance at freedom

He was 15 when he killed his sister’s abuser. Even after years of good conduct, the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board has rejected recommending him for release.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
3/10/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Surgery during ‘rocket attacks’: Ukrainian doctors train at OU Health to provide reconstructive care

As the war between Russia and Ukraine rages on, Ukrainian physicians are tending to a historic volume of patients with complex head and neck injuries from missile attacks and rocket blasts. OU Health is teaching some of these surgeons reconstructive techniques they can take back home.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
19/9/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'We’re ready for the fight': Southeast Oklahomans push back on proposed hydropower project

Many Southeast Oklahomans are gearing up to fight a proposed hydropower project that could displace hundreds of people. For this week's StateImpact Oklahoma in-depth, KOSU's Graycen Wheeler has more on the project and the response from residents and officials."Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
12/9/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

New investments in CareerTech aim to provide relief for booming waitlist, agency hopes for more

Oklahoma CareerTech oversees 29 technology centers across 60 campuses statewide. It takes about 500,000 yearly enrollments and offers courses to students in about 400 school districts and adults.And about 7,500 students are sitting on a waitlist to get in.To tackle the waitlist, the Oklahoma Legislature allocated $26.7 million in new one-time funds for the agency this year. The money was recently disbursed to schools and is now being used across the state for facility upgrades, expanded programming and more.CareerTech Director Brent Haken is grateful for the boost, but he cautions against considering it a windfall that would fully eliminate the waitlist. He plans to return to the legislature next year with the same pitch — that increasing base funding is the only way to fully reach the thousands of Oklahomans hoping for a spot in a CareerTech program.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
5/9/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Help wanted: Oklahoma works to lower barriers to long-term care careers

Recruiting long-term care CNAs can be challenging, and fighting consistent turnover is costly. But groups in Oklahoma are finding ways to invest in these workers’ education and futures.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
29/8/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Painting brighter futures: OKC schools partner with community for mediation, mentorship

Oklahoma students face many barriers to high school graduation, even more so since the pandemic. But educators at two Oklahoma City area high schools have teamed up with a new community organization to tackle root causes of student behavioral issues.Because of the efforts of educators and nonprofits, communities are finding solutions to help young people in Oklahoma City avoid violence and turn their lives around.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
8/8/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How one rural hospital hopes to be an oasis in Oklahoma’s maternity care desert

The farther a woman has to travel to receive maternity care, the greater risk they have of maternal morbidity and adverse infant outcomes.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
1/8/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

From caves to caterpillars: How Oklahoma schools are working to beat the ‘summer slide’

“Summer slide” is the phenomenon of students losing ground academically during the summer break. It usually refers to learning loss in reading and math, though other areas of child development can be affected, like behavior.On average, students lose about 20% of their school-year gains in reading and 27% in math.StateImpact visited two Oklahoma schools that provide free, multi-week summer programming to see how districts hope to make a dent in learning loss.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
18/7/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'This is going to kill us': Oklahoma nursing homes brace for new federal staffing mandate

Oklahoma nursing homes are preparing for staffing rules finalized in April by the Biden administration, meant to improve safety and quality of care in long-term care facilities.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
11/7/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What to expect in the coming months as La Niña impacts Oklahoma's weather

Far out in the Pacific Ocean, the latest El Niño cycle is at an end, and La Niña is expected in the coming months. But what does that mean for Oklahoma’s weather?Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
20/6/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Lawton officials attempt to mitigate East Cache Creek issues amid growing concerns

After a TikTok video went viral about water pollution in East Cache Creek, City of Lawton officials have explained their plan to restore water levels.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
13/6/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact Oklahoma wraps up the 2024 legislative session

StateImpact education reporter Beth Wallis and health reporter Jillian Taylor talk with managing editor Logan Layden about some of this year's legislative highlights.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
6/6/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma’s transition to managed Medicaid brings new benefits, challenges

More than 600,000 Oklahomans on Medicaid are now seeing their care coordinated by private insurance companies. Proponents say the change incentivizes preventative care, and its rollout has been going well. But, it has caused problems for some Oklahomans on Medicaid and smaller providers.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
30/5/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Edmond ‘bike bus’ puts a healthy spin on kids’ school commute

Keeping kids active and healthy can be an uphill battle, especially in the age of smartphones, video games and other distractions. A new volunteer initiative in Edmond is getting kids’ hearts pumping — and their wheels turning.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
23/5/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma schools need bus drivers and are straining to fill the gaps

Statewide, Oklahoma public schools are experiencing a shortage of bus drivers — and they’re struggling to adapt.StateImpact analyzed every public school district in Oklahoma and found that of the 400-plus schools with hiring listings accessible on their websites or that answered a superintendent survey, over 40% showed open driver positions. About a quarter of the 80 surveyed superintendents said they or other school administrators drive a bus. Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
16/5/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma’s transition to managed Medicaid happened and what’s next

Most of Oklahoma’s Medicaid population is transitioning to managed care. This means that instead of the Oklahoma Health Care Authority paying providers directly, it’s paying private companies to coordinate some enrollees’ care. Proponents say the new system incentivizes better preventative care, which could cost the state less in the long run.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
2/5/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma immigrant communities rally in face of state policy to arrest people in country illegally

As a crisis continues on the U.S. Southern Border, Oklahoma lawmakers are among counterparts from about a dozen states taking things into their own hands. For StateImpact, Lionel Ramos reports on their efforts and the backlash they face from immigrant communities.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
25/4/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The end of pandemic-era federal dollars may mean the end for the school programs it funded

In Tulsa, there are about 450 after-school programs at risk of shrinking to just 75 once ESSER funds are gone.One of those programs is an after-school gardening club at Tulsa Public Schools' Eugene Field Elementary. There, each participant gets a garden box to plan, decorate, plant and harvest from throughout the school year.Schools across the country may be on the brink of making tough calls once these "pennies from heaven" run out.
18/4/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

First over-the-counter birth control pill offers family planning amid Oklahoma’s abortion ban

Opill, which was approved by the FDA last July, is the nation’s first over-the-counter birth control pill, and it’s hitting pharmacy shelves now.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
11/4/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Eclipse brings tourism and challenges as Oklahoma goes under the shadow of the Moon

Any point on the globe can expect to see a total solar eclipse about once every 400 years. This Monday, it’s far southeast Oklahoma’s turn.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
3/4/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What education measures are still alive at the 2024 legislative session’s halfway point?

Lawmakers are at the halfway point in this year’s legislative session, and just a fraction of the education bills filed at the top of the session have survived big legislative deadlines. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis spoke with Oklahoma Voice education reporter Nuria Martinez-Keel about the bills that still remain on the legislature’s radar.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
28/3/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma social workers face barriers in getting licensed, a bill could help them get to work faster

This legislative session, lawmakers are working with faculty from OU’s School of Social Work and Oklahoma Healthy Minds Policy Initiative, advocating for Oklahoma’s requirements to be reduced to 3,000 hours.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
27/3/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma paraprofessionals provide critical student services — but many are barely making ends meet

School support staff received a statewide pay raise after the 2018 Oklahoma Teacher Walkout, but while teacher pay remains a major legislative priority, support staff pay hasn’t. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis reports many paraprofessionals, who often provide critical support to students with disabilities, live paycheck to paycheck.
7/3/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Watchdog agency failed to perform required inspections at elite Oklahoma high school plagued by culture of harassment

An Oklahoma Watch investigation last year revealed a pervasive culture of harassment at an elite Oklahoma high school. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis spoke with Jennifer Palmer, the reporter behind the story, about a recent update: the agency responsible for addressing those issues failed to perform required inspections for 16 years.
22/2/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What to expect from Oklahoma lawmakers on healthcare in 2024

Abortion restrictions, the ongoing opioid crisis and access to mental healthcare are in focus this legislative session. Jillian Taylor is StateImpact Oklahoma’s health reporter, and spoke with managing editor Logan Layden about what to expect from lawmakers in 2024.
14/2/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What to expect from Oklahoma lawmakers on education in 2024

The state legislature is back in session, and there’s no hotter topic than education policy. StateImpact education reporter Beth Wallis talked with StateImpact managing editor Logan Layden about what to expect from lawmakers in 2024.
7/2/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma’s Education Department awarded teachers life-changing bonuses — and created a nightmare for some by demanding them back

The Department of Education overpaid at least $290,000 in teacher bonuses and is working to claw back the money mere months after it was distributed. Nine teachers have been issued demands for repayment, and five additional teachers are under review.
25/1/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Shawnee enacts no sit, no lie ordinance as future for homeless residents is uncertain

At least 150 of Shawnee's 30,000 residents are homeless. And because of an ordinance enacted this month, life might be getting a little more difficult for some of the community’s most vulnerable residents.
18/1/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The road ahead for Tulsa Public Schools: five months into Walters’ mandated improvement plan

No district in Oklahoma is under the State Board of Education’s microscope quite like Tulsa Public Schools. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis and OPMX’s Max Bryan have this update on how TPS’ state-mandated improvement plan is going so far and the work that lies ahead.
4/1/20240 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact Oklahoma on the year that was and what's next

2023 is coming to a close, and it’s been an eventful year for StateImpact Oklahoma’s reporters. Managing editor Logan Layden talks with the team about highlights of this year and what to expect in 2024.
21/12/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahomans are navigating the ‘chaos’ of SoonerCare unwinding

Over 300-thousand Oklahomans have lost SoonerCare coverage as state agencies remove ineligible people after a pandemic pause. StateImpact’s Jillian Taylor has more on how confusion around the Medicaid unwinding process is affecting members.
13/12/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Tulsans regrow urban tree canopy after summer’s severe weather

Severe weather damaged thousands of trees in the Tulsa area earlier this year. A million cubic yards of green waste was collected, and many trees were bent or broken. StateImpact’s Britny Cordera reports on how the community is coming together to regow the city’s uban tree canopy. 
7/12/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'This is their story': Why a teacher in Osage County wants to teach Killers of the Flower Moon

The new Killers of the Flower Moon movie is sparking a conversation about Oklahoma’s difficult history. But those conversations in schools are complicated by Oklahoma’s law limiting lessons that make students feel uncomfortable about their race or sex.
30/11/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma schools turning to the new, old way of teaching students to read

The science of reading is returning to the limelight, and Oklahoma schools and universities are using those techniques to teach literacy to the next generation.
16/11/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma doesn’t mandate sex ed, some churches are trying to fill the gaps

Some Oklahoma churches are providing comprehensive sex ed to fill gaps in a state that doesn’t require it in schools.
2/11/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

An Oklahoma non-profit uses Hip-Hop to increase mental health awareness

A local non-profit is hosting rap battles and other events to advocate for mental health awareness in Oklahoma. The organization called SoulBody Cyphers is working to destigmatize conversations around mental health and cultivate a community of MC’s.
26/10/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What Oklahomans need to know about student loan repayment

This month, millions of Americans will have to make student loan payments after a three-year pandemic era pause. But since 2020, there have been some big changes made to the repayment system, and StateImpact’s Beth Wallis is here to break it down.
19/10/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How is the first commercial rollout of COVID-19 vaccines going in Oklahoma?

After its recent FDA approval, the CDC recommended everyone six months and older get an updated COVID vaccine. But getting it hasn’t been easy for some Oklahomans, with appointments canceled day of due to insurance snags and issues finding a place that carries it.
12/10/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Butterflies are on the move, and Oklahomans are keeping track of them in monarch conservation effort

Monarch butterflies, like many insects and birds, migrate twice a year, in the spring and in the fall.According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, before the weather gets cold, monarchs travel over two thousand miles from North America to central Mexico to hibernate.
5/10/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What does it mean for Oklahoma to partner with PragerU?

Earlier this month, State Superintendent Ryan Walters announced a partnership with conservative nonprofit media group, PragerU. Existing PragerU Kids content now populates the state’s social studies website, and Walters says PragerU and the State Department of Education are collaborating on an Oklahoma-specific curriculum. So what is PragerU? StateImpact spoke with parents, teachers, legislators and Walters to find out.
28/9/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma trans youth, providers face uncertainty in gender-affirming care access

A bill in Oklahoma banning all forms of gender-affirming care for trans youth was paused by Oklahoma’s attorney general amid litigation from the ACLU of Oklahoma. Now, trans youth and providers are coping with all the uncertainty.
21/9/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

OKC community comes together to collect data on impact of urban heat islands

More than 250 volunteers collected temperature and air quality data around Oklahoma City through a community science project in August to study urban heat islands. StateImpact’s Britny Cordera reports the NOAA funded project could help the city prepare for extreme heat.
13/9/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma schools adapt recreational activities to sweltering summer heat

Faced with the dangers of excessive heat, educators around the state are getting creative to keep kids safe and cool while still providing recreational opportunities.
7/9/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact Oklahoma welcomes health reporter Jillian Taylor

StateImpact Oklahoma’s health coverage informed listeners through the COVID-19 pandemic, the state’s voter-mandated expansion of Medicaid, and the opioid epidemic. StateImpact managing editor Logan Layden introduces us to Jillian Taylor, the new reporter continuing the work to tell health stories that impact you, your community and the entire state.
30/8/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'I’m talking about what’s best for the Greenwood area': What the removal of a highway could do for Black Wall Street

Tulsa’s North Peoria Church of Christ used to call Greenwood home. That was before I-244 displaced it and cut through historic Black Wall Street. StateImpact’s Britny Cordera talked with State Rep. Regina Goodwin, who represents the area and attends the church, about its legacy and a planning grant to study the removal of the expressway.
24/8/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What you need to know as Oklahoma’s state board of education weighs Tulsa Public Schools’ accreditation

Next Thursday, the State Board of Education will consider changing the accreditation status of the state’s largest school district, Tulsa Public Schools. This comes after over a year of remarks from State Superintendent Ryan Walters targeting the district. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis and Public Radio Tulsa's Max Bryan break down what’s behind the battle for TPS.
17/8/20230 minutos, 1 segundo
Episode Artwork

Private landowners in Oklahoma are stepping up to preserve habitat for prairie chickens

Rebecca Jim owns a mile and a half acreage just north of Vinita, Oklahoma, at the northern edge of the Cherokee Nation. She inherited this land from her family who used to ranch cattle here. She said her land is longer than it is wide, perfect for bringing back prairie chickens. She is turning two fields on the land into prairies to bring back prairie chickens.
10/8/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Big Bonuses, Bigger Risks: Oklahoma’s New Teacher Sign-On Bonus Program Raises Concern

Signing bonuses of as much as $50,000 are what Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters said is needed to attract new and retired teachers to the classroom.That’s also what makes his new bonus plan a risky policy. StateImpact's Beth Wallis teamed up with Oklahoma Watch education reporter Jennifer Palmer for this story.
22/6/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact breaks down Oklahoma's 2023 education budget

StateImpact’s Logan Layden sat down with education reporter Beth Wallis for a breakdown of what education measures Oklahomans are going to get for their money after a contentious 2023 legislative session.
1/6/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘We will strive to survive the Ryan Walters time’: Oklahoma superintendents respond to Walters’ claims, rhetoric

Walters repeatedly emphasized his focus on open communication with superintendents around the state. But when StateImpact sent out a survey to those superintendents, a much more complex picture emerged.
25/5/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The battle for Oklahoma education funding

The Oklahoma legislature has been deadlocked for weeks as it hashes out a plan for education funding. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis sat down with Oklahoman newspaper education reporter Nuria Martinez-Keel to talk about the events at the Capitol that led up to this moment.
11/5/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Health secretary's ouster gives a look into "frustration" between the Senate and Gov. Stitt

The governor and the Legislature have been at odds over the state’s Medicaid agency, the Oklahoma Health Care Authority. That fight came to a head last week, when the Senate booted the agency director from his Secretary of Health position. StateImpact’s Catherine Sweeney talks with Tres Savage, the editor of nonprofit outlet NonDoc, about what led lawmakers to reject Secretary Kevin Corbett's re-instatement.
4/5/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

OU’s swatting event was a hoax, but the trauma it caused was real

Run. Hide. Fight.Those were the words that ended the first of several text updates from OU’s emergency alert system on the night of April 7. The Norman Police Department had received calls that appeared to be coming from OU’s campus. The caller told police there was a shooting at the Bizzell Memorial Library and that one of the caller’s friends had been shot. And in secondary calls to Norman dispatch, gunshots can be heard. But as it turns out, it was a swatting incident — that is, a big hoax.
27/4/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma nursing schools ramp up admissions amid worker shortage

The state ranks 46th in the nation for nurses per capita, and of course, the pandemic has only made that worse. But all along, one of the major contributing factors to that shortage has been nursing school. There are a finite number of slots offered, and Oklahoma hasn’t had enough. Why? It’s complicated.
19/4/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Five years after the Oklahoma Teacher Walkout, the stakes are higher than ever

Even though funding measures advocated for by 2018 Oklahoma Teacher Walkout participants were stymied largely by Republican lawmakers, Oklahoma’s GOP is now authoring record-level education funding measures that include teacher raises, along with a slew of labor rights bills for educators. But the funding bills are far from a done deal — in fact, due to a disagreement in how those bills should operate, there could be no deal at all.
6/4/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact Oklahoma discusses the state's newly extended postpartum Medicaid benefits

Oklahoma offers pregnant residents special Medicaid coverage. That coverage used to last only 60 days after delivery, but under a new policy, that coverage will run for a full year instead. StateImpact’s Logan Layden and Catherine Sweeney discuss how the policy will affect thousands of new parents in Oklahoma.
30/3/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A proposed ban on gender-affirming care for minors would affect Oklahoma adults too

House Bill 2177 is making its way through the statehouse. It purports to ban gender-affirming care for children and teens in Oklahoma. Supporters say children and teens aren’t equipped to make life-altering health decisions for themselves. One provision says no health facility receiving state funds can administer gender-affirming care to anyone of any age. Another provision would ban insurance companies from covering gender-affirming care, again, for all Oklahomans, no matter how old they are.
23/3/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Trans Oklahomans find community through music amid heightened anti-queer rhetoric in legislature

Recent pushes from the Oklahoma legislature to target queer issues in schools and medicine have mobilized some Oklahomans to fight back. The Transgender Action Choir is one group lifting their voices to speak up.
16/3/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma legislation would require insurance companies to cover high-tech medical screenings called biomarker tests

Biomarker testing is a tool that doctors use to get a clearer picture of a medical problem — often cancer. Providers and patients say it can be difficult to get insurance companies to cover it. Oklahoma lawmakers are working to change that. 
8/3/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Will Oklahomans vote to be the 22nd state to legalize recreational marijuana?

Voters are just days away from deciding whether Oklahoma will legalize recreational marijuana. But results of similar ballot initiatives in Arkansas and Missouri could help predict the fate of State Question 820. KOSU's Xcaret Nuñez reports for StateImpact Oklahoma.
2/3/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma's mismanagement of federal education funds could leave $18 million on the table

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. Due to the state’s handling of its previous round of funding, Oklahoma now has nearly $18 million of federal education funding sitting untouched — and time is running out to spend it. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis sat down with Oklahoma Watch education reporter Jennifer Palmer for a recap of just what happened with the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief Fund.
23/2/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Another pandemic relief policy is ending, making groceries even more expensive for low-income Oklahomans

During the pandemic, the federal government started giving extra help to families who use the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — often called SNAP or food stamps. Officials were trying to make sure families could still put food on the table during the sudden economic downturn. But when Congress passed its big omnibus bill in December, they nixed the extra help, putting a sudden expiration date on three years of emergency payments. The roughly 700,000 Oklahomans who have benefitted from SNAP monthly are set to see a big decrease in their food aid.
16/2/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘Never took a sick day in seven years’: Oklahoma teacher moms and the realities of no paid maternity leave

Karli Myers is a first-time parent and an English teacher at Sapulpa High School. And without any sick leave left to take, Myers had to return to her classroom the previous day, cutting short her time at home with Luke. That’s because public schools in Oklahoma aren’t mandated by the state to offer paid maternity leave to school faculty and staff — even though three out of four teachers in Oklahoma are women.In a push to combat the state’s record teacher shortage by attracting and retaining more educators, one bill unveiled by Oklahoma Senate Republicans in January seeks to give moms like Myers some relief.
9/2/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact talks with Secretary of Health Kevin Corbett about Oklahoma's pivot to managed Medicaid

Oklahoma’s Medicaid program, SoonerCare, is on its way to profound change. StateImpact’s Catherine Sweeney talked with its director, Secretary of Health Kevin Corbett, this week about the transition to managed care.
2/2/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A decade of scandal at Epic Charter Schools

As more news emerges about embezzlement schemes at Epic Charter Schools, it might be difficult to keep up with the saga. That’s why StateImpact’s Beth Wallis asked Oklahoman newspaper reporter Nuria Martinez-Keel to get us up-to-speed on the last decade of Epic’s scandals. Martinez-Keel covers education at The Oklahoman and has been with the publication for four years.
26/1/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Methamphetamine is killing more Oklahomans than any illicit drug. A collaborative in Tulsa models how the communities can fight the epidemic.

In 2013, Tulsans accounted for only about 13 percent of the state’s methamphetamine treatment admissions. In 2020, that figure climbed to one-third of the state’s admissions. That year, local nonprofits, treatment centers, law enforcement and government officials announced a collaborative, community-based initiative to help Tulsans find access to recovery services.
19/1/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'A learner of learners': Staving off the "deprofessionalization' of Oklahoma's teachers

Oklahoma’s teacher shortage led to a record-breaking 3,780 emergency teaching certifications issued in 2022. From 2001-2018, Oklahoma’s enrollment in university education programs dropped by 80%. As the state's schools struggle to fill classrooms with teachers holding standard teaching certificates, provisionally certified teachers have had to step in to fill the gap. But do students lose out when hiring traditionally certified teachers becomes a luxury this teacher-strapped state can’t afford?
12/1/20230 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

State data paints a dire picture of Oklahoma teenagers' mental health

State data released this year showed half of the teens who participated in an annual survey checked yes on the traditional depression symptom of feeling so sad or hopeless for two weeks in a row that they lost interest in usual activities. It found that in 2021, nearly one in four respondents had contemplated suicide in the past year. Among girls, that rate was closer to one in three.
22/12/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Methamphetamine may not be the center of attention, but it's killing more Oklahomans than any other drug.

Billion-dollar lawsuits and prestige television shows have made the opioid epidemic impossible to overlook. But it is far from the only drug epidemic the country — and Oklahoma — are facing. Overdose deaths from opioids, including prescription drugs as well as illicit forms of fentanyl, have increased over the past few years, likely because of struggles amid the pandemic. But one drug in particular is killing Oklahomans at an even higher rate: methamphetamine.
15/12/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Pt. 2: ‘Disasters that define us’: Examining Northeast Oklahoma’s patchwork of flood protections

Heavy rains in May 2019 revealed major disparities in flood protections across Oklahoma. While residents in Tulsa benefitted from decades of flood preparations, smaller communities lack the infrastructure and resources to keep the waters at bay. In the second of a two-part series with OPMX’s Graycen Wheeler, StateImpact’s Beth Wallis reports on how one riverside community came together to take care of each other.
9/12/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Pt. 1: ‘Disasters that define us’: Examining Northeast Oklahoma’s patchwork of flood protections

As climate change continues to raise the stakes of severe flooding events, some Oklahoma communities are prepared to weather the storm, and some aren’t. During the extreme flooding of May 2019, communities were put to the test. In the first of a two-part series in partnership with StateImpact’s Beth Wallis, OPMX’s Graycen Wheeler reports on how two neighboring cities responded to disaster.
8/12/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How social media affects the ways two Tulsa teenagers get their news

Nathalie Valero and Elodie Musungayi are Tulsa teenagers who spoke about how social media is amplifying youth voices and how it impacts mental health for them and their peers. KOSU reporter Kateleigh Mills went to Tulsa to speak with them.
1/12/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'It had to be more than just teachers and their families voting': Oklahoma educator responds to election outcome

Leading up to the midterms, throngs of teachers and education advocates rallied around democratic candidates for governor and superintendent. But after the ticket went to Gov. Kevin Stitt and Education Secretary Ryan Walters, some of those teachers are thinking about leaving the state altogether. Jami Jackson-Cole is a fifth grade teacher at Duncan Public Schools and manages the Oklahoma Edvocates Facebook page, which is a community of thousands of teachers and parents around the state. StateImpact’s Beth Wallis spoke to her about how Oklahoma teachers are looking at the road ahead.
17/11/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact Oklahoma reporters react to midterm election results

Unlike some other states, Oklahoma’s midterm election results are in the books. The results have big implications for education, health, and the environment in our state. Managing editor Logan Layden discussed what the outcome means with the StateImpact Oklahoma reporters. 
10/11/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The Adderall shortage has made its way to Oklahoma.

Workforce problems, federal regulations and an increase in demand are creating a shortage of ADD and ADHD medications. Local medical providers started seeing an issue this summer. There are ways around the shortage, but they involve jumping through hoops.
2/11/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma lawmakers tried to limit four day school weeks, but they’re hanging on in rural communities

Four day school weeks have become more common across  Oklahoma over the last decade. Lawmakers have tried to limit the practice. But as StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports, the rural districts that use them are fighting to keep them.
27/10/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

When Oklahoma voters choose a governor in November, they'll be voting on the future of SoonerCare.

The governor's race has had plenty of hyper-partisan debates, but one major issue falls away from party politics. Gov. Kevin Stitt wants to fundamentally alter the state's Medicaid program. His plan would bring in private-sector insurance companies to manage the no-cost health insurance that covers 1.3 million Oklahomans. The gubernatorial election will determine whether he gets to. Democratic challenger Joy Hofmeister argues that Stitt's plan to partially privatize SoonerCare simply funnels money into insurance companies' profits, and that the state should instead invest in health infrastructure directly.
20/10/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What more can be done to save the Lesser Prairie-Chicken?

In June 2021, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to list the Lesser Prairie-Chicken on the Endangered Species List — a move that would’ve triggered significant federal protections for the imperiled grouse. However, the Service has yet to finalize its proposal to do so, despite its June 2022 deadline. If the bird does get listed, industries will be required to mitigate their development impacts through conservation measures. But if the delay continues or the bird is never listed, advocates say this rare, dancing bird is running out of time.
13/10/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Alumni gather at Oklahoma City's old Northeast High School to honor 1970 student activism

A group of alumni from the former Northeast High School in Oklahoma City returned to their alma mater this weekend to remember their old school and activism many engaged in more than 50 years ago. StateImpact’s Robby Korth tagged along. Listen to his story below.
10/10/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How important is education in Oklahoma’s race for governor?

As Governor Kevin Stitt gears up for his challenge from State Superintendent Joy Hofmeister in November, StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on what effects education policy could have on the race.
6/10/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

As pandemic response wanes, Oklahoma schools adapt to the end of universal free lunch

Over the past year, pandemic relief efforts have been winding down. One of the first to go: universal free lunch for public school students.For more than two years during the pandemic, the waivers from the U.S. Department of Agriculture meant all kids qualified for free breakfasts and lunches. It saved families with one child hundreds of dollars per year, and for families with multiple kids, it saved thousands. It meant families who might qualify for free or reduced lunches didn’t have to handle paperwork, and no students had to navigate lunch debt.But Congress decided to let the program lapse. Across Oklahoma, schools are figuring out how to help families weather the change.
29/9/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Where should we put our country's nuclear waste? StateImpact Oklahoma goes underground to find out

More than 2,000 feet underground in Carlsbad, New Mexico, sits the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP).  WIPP is the country’s only deep geological repository for nuclear waste of any kind — the U.S. doesn’t have a permanent repository for high level waste like spent nuclear fuel . But its other claim to fame is it’s also a case study in “consent-based siting,” which is the practice of getting community buy-in for nuclear storage sites.Now, a $3 million research project led by the University of Oklahoma’s Institute for Public Policy Research is aiming to develop a new framework for consent-based interim siting of spent nuclear fuel. As the nation’s nuclear waste storage crisis becomes increasingly more imminent, researchers hope they can craft policy that will incentivize communities to volunteer themselves as interim storage sites. 
15/9/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Plaintiff: challenging Oklahoma's transgender bathroom ban 'just the right thing to do'

Three Oklahoma students are suing the state over its law that bars transgender students from using the bathroom corresponding with their gender identity.Andy Bridge is the lead plaintiff. The suit argues Senate Bill 615 is unconstitutional and should be overturned.Bridge and his parents, Aysha Prather and Eli Bridge, sat down with StateImpact Oklahoma reporter Robby Korth to share why they think it was an important step to take.
9/9/20220 minutos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact answers some common questions about HB 1775

StateImpact has gotten many questions about House Bill 1775, Oklahoma’s so-called critical race theory ban. So education reporter Robby Korth tried to address the most common ones. Here he is talking with Logan Layden about answering those frequently asked questions.
8/9/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Sharing Indigenous Oklahoma stories at Field Museum exhibit ‘really inspiring’ for Stilwell students

Stateimpact is on a tour around Oklahoma to gather voices, stories and more from youth. Education reporter Robby Korth and KOSU engagement reporter Kateleigh Mills talked with two Stilwell High School students about their art and how they fit in as Cherokee in Oklahoma.
1/9/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A new wastewater monitoring program means Oklahoma doesn't have to rely solely on testing to find COVID and monkeypox.

Researchers at the University of Oklahoma started developing a monitoring program in 2020. Now, they're working with state health officials to scan for about a dozen pathogens — including COVID, monkeypox and West Nile Virus.
25/8/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘Something that can’t be replaced’: What a turnpike project could mean for Oklahoma wildlife

The ACCESS Oklahoma Turnpike project from the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority is a 15-year, $5 billion project to build several turnpike routes in central, southern and northeastern Oklahoma. Residents in the paths of these turnpike extensions who regularly see deer grazing in their yards and eagles soaring overhead are wondering, what’s going to happen to all the wildlife and the facility that takes care of them? And how far does the law go to protect them?
18/8/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Texas students help make up for enrollment losses at Oklahoma colleges

As Oklahoma colleges struggle to maintain enrollment, they’re increasingly turning to other places to recruit new students. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports the top target is the Sooner state’s neighbors to the south.
11/8/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

In StateImpact conversation, Tulsa high schoolers ask peers ‘Will you accept me as I am?’

StateImpact is on a listening tour with Oklahoma’s youth. And we’ve brought along our microphones. StateImpact’s Robby Korth and KOSU’s Kateleigh Mills talked to a couple of Tulsa high school students about race, gender and how they interact with their peers at school.
4/8/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma allows abortions in life-threatening situations, but how much danger is enough?

Several states that banned abortion created exceptions for medical emergencies, but the laws fail to make clear which conditions qualify for the exception. That leaves room for interpretation, which has already caused delays in life-saving care.
28/7/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma educators don’t shy away from difficult conversations at Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial & Museum event

As lawmakers, parents and school boards debate what kids should or shouldn’t learn in the classroom, teachers are still trying to find ways to lead tough conversations. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on a day a couple dozen educators at the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum spent figuring out just that.
26/7/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Pt. 2, Sustaining sustainability: The waste problem in Oklahoma’s cannabis industry and the innovators at the helm of change

One Oklahoman is taking it on herself to chip away at the mountains of packaging waste left by the booming industry. Taylor Davis, a 28-year-old Edmond resident, drives hundreds of miles every week to pick up tubs full of pop-top drams, glass jars, tiny cardboard boxes and Mylar bags from dispensaries around the state. Since February, she’s held these recycling drives at dispensaries all over Oklahoma, which she advertises on her Instagram, @RecycleYourEmpties. She said everywhere she goes, she meets people who just can’t bring themselves to toss piles of packaging into a landfill. 
22/7/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Pt. 1, Sustaining sustainability: The waste problem in Oklahoma’s cannabis industry and the innovators at the helm of change

With Oklahoma’s medical marijuana scene growing rapidly, industry professionals and cannabis patients are feeling the weight of packaging waste. But a lack of recycling infrastructure and an unwillingness to raise prices for sustainable packaging have left Oklahoma unprepared to handle the growing mountains of plastic packing the state’s landfills.
21/7/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Tulsa teenagers discuss how to be allies to their friends during uncertain times

StateImpact is on a listening tour with Oklahoma’s youth. And we’ve brought along our microphones. KOSU’s Kateleigh Mills and StateImpact’s Robby Korth talked to a couple of Tulsa teenagers about being allies for their friends, following the news and about their own roles as Oklahomans.
14/7/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Two more COVID strains have made their way to Oklahoma. Here's what to know.

The health department confirmed that two new variants account for about 40 percent of new cases. And according to state data, the number of officially reported cases per week doubled in June. StateImpact's Catherine Sweeney talked with Dr. David Holden, the president of the Oklahoma State Medical Association, about how contagious these variants are and what risk factors Oklahomans should be considering.
7/7/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'When a right is created by the Supreme Court, it can go away': What overturning Roe could mean for contraception access, sexual privacy and marriage equality

In the recent Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health decision, Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey were struck down. In his opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote three previous rulings that used the same constitutional mechanism as Roe and Casey had been decided erroneously and should be reexamined. StateImpact Oklahoma reporter Beth Wallis interviewed Kathleen Tipler — an OU political science professor who specializes in gender, sexuality and the law — to understand how the Dobbs decision could impact other precedents related to contraception, sexual privacy and marriage equality.
30/6/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

For years before the Saint Francis shooting, health workers have experienced on-the-job violence at alarming rates.

And they say the pandemic has made it worse. One national survey of nurses found 44 percent of them experienced physical abuse at work in early 2020.
23/6/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma City teenagers ask policymakers not to ‘downplay' their experiences

StateImpact is on a listening tour with Oklahoma’s youth. And we’ve brought along our microphones. Two recent high school graduates from Oklahoma City - Aspen Harrod and Ahmari Sango - talk about their comfort levels in the classroom, how they fit in society and representation.  StateImpact’s Robby Korth talked with them in late May.
16/6/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Tulsa mass shooting reignites gun policy debate in Oklahoma

On the afternoon of June 1, a man walked into a local gun store and bought an AR-style rifle. A few hours later, he used that rifle and a handgun he’d purchased two days before to kill four people at a Tulsa medical center before turning the gun on himself.This came just a week after an 18-year-old bought an AR-style rifle and days later massacred 19 children and 2 teachers in Uvalde, Texas. And that came a little over a week after an 18-year-old, who had previously threatened a murder-suicide at his high school, purchased a semiautomatic rifle and killed 10 people in Buffalo.As mass shootings continue to make headlines around the country, advocates for gun reform in Oklahoma have a long and uncertain road ahead.
9/6/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Critics say Oklahoma’s abortion and Critical Race Theory crackdowns rely on fear

Under the state's new abortion bans, are Oklahomans allowed to donate to abortion funds? Are they allowed to advise patients on their options in other states? The slew of contradictory bills passed this year weren't explicit. Vague laws leave residents wondering what’s legal and what isn’t. Opponents argue that is by design.
2/6/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘It’s utterly ridiculous:’ trans Tulsa students react to Oklahoma’s school bathroom ban

Governor Kevin Stitt on Wednesday signed a bill to bar transgender students from using the bathroom corresponding with their identity. StateImpact's Robby Korth and KOSU's Kateleigh Mills went to Tulsa the day the bill was sent to the governor for a conversation with three trans high schoolers. The teenagers talked about identity and how political conversations surrounding the bathrooms they use affect them.
26/5/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Substitute shortage persisted even after Oklahoma school closures slowed down

Earlier this year a teacher shortage in Oklahoma forced hundreds of school districts to close their doors because of a lack of substitutes to fill in for educators out with the coronavirus. But StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports even though it’s no longer in the headlines, the substitute teacher shortage persists.
19/5/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'Oklahoma doesn't want us': Families grapple with looming displacement from turnpike

On February 22, Governor Kevin Stitt announced plans for the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority to embark on a $5 billion, 15-year project to expand Oklahoma’s turnpike network. Two families facing displacement from the turnpike project told their stories to StateImpact’s Beth Wallis. In Part 2, you’ll hear the story of Darla and Cedric LeBlanc, a Norman family whose home and horticulture business sits in the path of the proposed South Extension route. Beth Wallis visited the family’s home, where they were hosting an Easter egg hunt.
13/5/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'That home is sacred to me': Norman woman joins fight against turnpike

On February 22, Governor Kevin Stitt announced plans for the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority to embark on a $5 billion, 15-year project to expand Oklahoma’s turnpike network. The effort to expand the turnpike loop around Oklahoma City south and west, through the Moore and Norman areas is raising concerns about water quality, the preservation of wildlife, property rights and even the rare rose rock. But for some, it’s personal. In Part 1 of this 2-part piece, you’ll hear the story of Lisa Meyer, a Norman resident whose home sits by the path of the proposed South Extension route. The home was built by her husband Paul to accommodate their late son Clinton, who lived with disabilities until his death in 2008. Lisa is also active in the newly formed turnpike opposition group, Pike Off OTA.
12/5/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma already ranked among the highest in the country for sexually transmitted infections. The pandemic likely made it worse.

The newest round of CDC numbers sound bad. No. 11 for chlamydia. No. 5 for gonorrhea. No. 4 for syphilis. these high rates — revealed in the CDC’s STI data for 2020 — aren’t new for Oklahoma. But local experts believe the pandemic worsened STI rates in much the same way that it worsened other health outcomes.
5/5/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier teamed up to investigate an $18 million no-bid contract between Oklahoma and a Florida company

A joint investigation by nonprofit news outlets Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier found that Governor Kevin Stitt and his now-Secretary of Education Ryan Walters pushed $18 million to a Florida company called Class Wallet to distribute CARES Act funds. StateImpact’s Robby Korth spoke with one of the authors of that article, Clifton Adcock, about his work on the story.Read the full story here: https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/stitt-gave-families-8-million-for-school-supplies-in-the-pandemic-they-bought-christmas-trees-gaming-consoles-and-tvs/
2/5/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact wants to hear from marginalized Oklahoma youth

In Oklahoma, culture wars can feel exhausting to marginalized youth. So StateImpact’s Robby Korth and KOSU’s Kateleigh Mills are embarking on a listening tour and they’re bringing microphones. Now, they need your help.
29/4/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘I love a place that hates me,’ how two transgender Oklahoma teens navigate current events in their home state

StateImpact is on a listening tour with Oklahoma’s youth. And we’ve brought along our microphones. In the first session, two transgender high school juniors from Tulsa share how they feel about their education and their place in the state. Their names are MJ and Dominik, and they sat with StateImpact’s Robby Korth earlier this month.StateImpact’s Robby Korth and KOSU’s Kateleigh Mills produced this story as part of the America Amplified initiative using community engagement to inform and strengthen local, regional and national journalism. America Amplified is a public media initiative funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.If you are an organization that works with youth and would like to schedule a listening session with StateImpact and KOSU call 405-896-4327. That’s 405-896-4327.
28/4/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Striking gold in the green rush: entrepreneurs tap into Oklahoma's weed economy

The economic impact of Oklahoma’s blossoming industry reaches far beyond cannabis business owners — from packaging and banking partners to storefront landlords and thousands of employees. But as for state and local revenue from cannabis taxes, officials hesitate to characterize the industry as a silver bullet to the state’s economic woes. Hear the story of one entrepreneur who struck gold in Oklahoma's green rush.
21/4/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How property tax protests are hurting Oklahoma schools

Oklahoma schools have an $80 million problem. That’s how much money county assessors say local governments are owed in taxes but are currently held in escrow amid protests. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on a property tax fight that’s hurting schools.
14/4/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma abortion laws would send providers to prison for up to a decade and further strain on out-of-state clinics

Oklahoma lawmakers are in a mad dash to eradicate abortion in Oklahoma, passing a slew of bills to restrict — and in some cases, even criminalize — the procedure. These laws now stand a better chance of going into effect, and that if they do, will have a major impact on the region, not just Oklahoma.
6/4/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Memory loss, debilitating fatigue and more: Oklahomans share their experiences with long COVID symptoms

Even though cases are down, thousands of Oklahomans are still dealing with COVID symptoms. As many as one in three who are infected with the virus will continue to have symptoms for weeks — or even months — after recovery.StateImpact talked with more than a dozen Oklahomans about their experiences with long-term COVID symptoms. What did those symptoms look like? To be honest, the experiences were all over the map, but there were a few things that came up time and again: lung issues, heart issues, brain fog — and frustration. Listen for more.
31/3/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Long-embattled, rare beetle offers hope of new discoveries

The rare American Burying Beetle could hold the key to new medical treatments and novel meat preservation methods. But these beetles are facing threats that could wipe them out of Oklahoma — and perhaps most of the country. And some conservationists say the government hasn’t done enough to protect the dwindling population of ABBs.
24/3/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What does school choice look like in rural Oklahoma?

Oklahoma Republicans are split on Senate Bill 1647. The measure would give private school families vouchers to pay for tuition. But many rural state lawmakers say school choice in their towns is different. So, StateImpact’s Robby Korth went to one small town to see. What does school choice look like in rural Oklahoma?
17/3/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Psychedelic mushroom research could soon be legal in Oklahoma

Research into how psychedelic mushrooms could help patients with mental health conditions is gaining momentum, even in Oklahoma. Some state lawmakers are interested in the idea — if it helps veterans.
10/3/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The road to electric: Oklahoma navigates transition to embracing electric vehicles

This new frontier of electric vehicles in Oklahoma isn’t without its challenges — accessibility, range anxiety, infrastructure and competing in a state with a historic reliance on oil and gas production. But Oklahoma is paving the road ahead by building out its charging network and rethinking its motor fuel tax structure.
3/3/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact Discusses: Critics argue Oklahoma's lethal injection protocol could constitute cruel and unusual punishment — and that the state shouldn't be allowed to hide the details behind it

Oklahoma secrecy laws allow the state to obscure where it gets lethal injection drugs. Given the state's track record, the critics say, that shouldn't be the case. StateImpact Editor Logan Layden talks with health reporter Catherine Sweeney about the state's controversial protocol, the drugs it uses to execute Oklahomans, and the secrecy laws that obscure where officials buy them.
27/2/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma’s classroom curriculum bans affect Black educators and families

For the last year Oklahoma Republicans have derided Critical Race Theory as a racist way of teaching that discriminates against white students. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports it’s been a difficult debate to watch for at least one Black father and scholar of the subject.
24/2/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

"There's going to be a real blip." Medical professionals are concerned about delayed routine screenings and their long-term effects.

Residents have been missing out on cancer screenings, diabetes management and other services that prevent and detect disease.
16/2/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'A world of wounds': Decline in grasshopper populations offers window into consequences of climate change

For the last two decades, the grasshoppers of the Konza Prairie Biological Station in Manhattan, Kansas, have been declining significantly — even as their main food source, grass, has nearly doubled in abundance. Researchers analyzed decades of grass samples and found that increased CO2 and climate change have caused these plants to become less nutritious. And this process — nutrient dilution — is happening all over the world.
10/2/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Amid noisy controversies Oklahoma school librarians do their best to create ‘informed citizens’

The books in Oklahoma school libraries don’t end up on the shelves by accident. A few parent groups and legislators are trying to limit what appears in school libraries. StateImpact's Robby Korth reports on how librarians decide which books are available to kids.
3/2/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Medicaid, marijuana, and culture wars: StateImpact Oklahoma discusses the upcoming legislative session

The Oklahoma Legislature is back in session on February 7th. Managing editor Logan Layden led a discussion with the StateImpact Oklahoma reporters on what they'll be covering, including how to deal with Medicaid expansion, new regulations on the marijuana industry, and the influence of state government on what's taught and read in schools.
27/1/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Newly released records shed light on issues in Oklahoma's public health lab and pandemic center

When Gov. Kevin Stitt announced in October 2020 that his administration would soon move the state’s Public Health Laboratory from Oklahoma City to Stillwater, opposition came quickly. The Frontier’s Kassie McClung and Kayla Brand partnered with StateImpact and spent more than a year requesting emails, invoices and other documents related to the public health lab and the state’s newly Pandemic Center for Innovation and Excellence. 
20/1/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The Omicron variant is hitting Oklahoma hard and creating troubles unseen in earlier surges

Oklahoma recorded some of its highest daily case counts of the pandemic in the past week. You wouldn’t think so, just looking around. Virtually no mask mandates in businesses or cities. Many employers requiring in-person work. Schools and universities welcoming all of their students back to the physical classroom. But health officials say new issues have cropped up this time: more dire work shortages, new causes for vaccine hesitancy and hospitals already strained by other viruses.
13/1/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Unintended consequence of SQ 780 may impact access to drug treatment courts

Drug treatment courts help those charged with drug and alcohol offenses straighten out their lives, with documented success, such as with former Oklahoma Sen. Cal Hobson. But efforts to reform the state’s criminal justice system are causing unintended consequences for the program. 
6/1/20220 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Even with green light, few Oklahoma schools are requiring masks

Fewer Oklahoma schools are requiring masks in their classrooms than at any point during the pandemic. In a conversation with StateImpact Managing Editor Logan Layden, education reporter Robby Korth says going into the spring 2022 semester that already dwindling number could get even smaller.
16/12/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma City's arts scene is growing, but rising rents and COVID fallout are squeezing its artists

Population growth, short housing supply and slow wage growth are threatening the city's affordability. Artists, who suffered lost gigs and fewer opportunities throughout the pandemic, are feeling the strain.
8/12/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘It's like WPA Money’: How federal COVID-19 relief funds are helping schools make infrastructure improvements

Federal relief money for the coronavirus has injected more than $1 billion into Oklahoma’s public schools. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports that in many places, it’s giving schools a chance to catch up on much needed infrastructure improvements.
2/12/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Politics dial up intensity at Oklahoma school board meetings

School board meetings used to be pretty boring. But now they’ve become a battleground over big political topics like the coronavirus and race. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports with The Oklahoman’s Nuria Martinez-Keel on what’s happening at these meetings in Oklahoma.
11/11/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma's cafeterias have been hit hard by the coronavirus

A national food shortage means lunchrooms across Oklahoma are short on much of what they need to serve students. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on the efforts child nutrition employees make to ensure kids are fed.
4/11/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma's recent COVID-19 hospitalization spike created a strain on oxygen — and not just for hospitals

As thousands of Oklahomans battled COVID-19 in ICUs earlier this year, hospitals’ demand for liquid oxygen skyrocketed. The strain highlighted supply chain and infrastructure challenges inside and outside the medical system.
27/10/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

ACLU lawyer discusses challenge to Oklahoma’s critical race theory ban

Earlier this week, the ACLU announced it would lead a coalition of civil rights and educational groups suing Oklahoma over its controversial critical race theory ban in federal court. StateImpact’s Robby Korth talked with ACLU of Oklahoma legal director and attorney Megan Lambert about the legal action.
21/10/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma School for the Deaf welcomes new, more inclusive Bison mascot

Host: Earlier this month Oklahoma School for the Deaf unveiled a fresh logo featuring their new Bison mascot. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports the Bison name flips a new page in the storied history of Oklahoma’s school for deaf students.NEWSPAPER CLIPPING PAGE FLIPRK: John Reinenger is thumbing through a book of old newspaper clippings. The pages are from his days as a student at Oklahoma School for the Deaf here in Sulphur, a school that competed under the name Indians in his time. He’s speaking here through an interpreter.REINENGER (through interpreter): It brings back a lot of memories. Definitely nostalgic. So yeah. I feel very, very closely connected to OSD. It’s like my second home, really. (11)RK: The Midwest City man has a son here. His parents met here. He is a 2000 graduate. But there was one thing his mother Sylvia told him not to do at school.REINENGER: My mother told me never to dress like in costume as an Indian, like any kind of Indian costumes. (06)RK: John and his mother are both citizens of the Muscogee Nation. And people did dress up in costume regularly at football games and pep rallies. REINENGER: I mean, I didn't honestly really think much about it. And then as life went on and I've gotten older, then I've looked at it and realized, Ooh. [air sucking grimace] Yikes. OK. (08)RK: There’s been a community-wide realization here as well. The Indians mascot was officially retired this year and replaced with the Bison. Superintendent Chris Dvorak.DVORAK: It really kind of came to a head where there were some serious conversations within the administration that had links to alumni. And we just got the sense that the time is now, you know, we can we really need to have a serious conversation. The writing is on the wall. (18)RK: So he tasked OSD alum and director of student life Trudy Mitchell with creating a task force and leading the charge toward a new mascot. She spoke to StateImpact through an interpreter.MITCHELL: The change is needed. I'm excited that it's going to be something new, it's going to be a new vision for our school. (08)RK: Mitchell met and spoke with dozens of alumni about the potential for change. It wasn’t well received at first, but she says, after several discussions many in the community have come around to the idea. MITCHELL: Oh we had lots of options. We had painted horse, a T. Rex, a Tasmanian Devil. There was an eagle. RK: But more than two-thirds ended up voting for Bison. Oklahoma School for the Deaf was hardly alone in its use of an Indigenous-themed mascot in Oklahoma. A StateImpact review of school nicknames found at least 75 public school districts - almost 15 percent - use Indigenous themed mascots. Corey Bunch, Education Services executive director for Cherokee Nation, says that can be hurtful.BUNCH: The chants from opposing teams and the slogans that kind of are associated with the mascots and the imagery they can quickly get carried away. And they just don't represent Native people.  (14)RK: The movement to change offensive names is gaining momentum in western states. Laws in Washington and Colorado passed this year are compelling schools to stop using Indigenous-themed mascots. Such a bill has not even been introduced in Oklahoma - the state with the highest proportion of Native Americans in the lower 48. BUNCH: Certainly, Cherokee Nation nor other tribal nations are out twisting anybody's arm, telling them that they ought to change their mascots. But when we are asked we are certainly happy to participate. (13)RK: Individual districts are considering changes. Tulsa Union recently announced it would change its nickname. Tulsa Public Schools is looking at changing mascots at some sites as well. Bunch served as an advisory member for the review boards at both districts. And he says he always wants to advocate for...
14/10/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma urgent cares face cutbacks and shutdowns amid ongoing COVID-19 pandemic strain

In a weekly update to state agencies, the Oklahoma State Department of Health warned that strain has led to cutbacks. It reads, in part, "Urgent care centers are reporting decreased hours or are shutting down due to inability to serve patient volume or redirect staff to other facilities to support increase in patients." Like all other health providers, the centers are experiencing staff shortages, high demand and burnout.
5/10/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

White House COVID-19 response adviser talks boosters with StateImpact Oklahoma

Dr. Cameron Webb is the senior policy adviser on COVID-19 equity on the White House’s response team. After federal regulators approved Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine for booster doses, Webb talked with StateImpact about who should get the third dose and why.
30/9/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Santa Fe South was the first district to implement a mask mandate in Oklahoma this fall. Here’s how it’s going

A growing number of schools around Oklahoma are starting to mandate masks in their hallways, with opt out provisions. StateImpact’s Robby Korth takes us inside the first public school in Oklahoma to require masks this semester.
23/9/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma medical groups expand free therapy program for doctors amid COVID-19 fallout

Dr. Mary Clarke says there's an age-old problem: doctors don't talk about their own problems. She is the president of the Oklahoma State Medical Association. That group saw trouble coming. Doctors, who already tend to struggle with mental health, started dealing with something plaguing all of us for the past 18 months: the pandemic. Financial struggles, family separation and more created even more risk factors for the state's physicians.
16/9/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Coronavirus pandemic causes lagging kindergarten and pre-k enrollments

Early childhood education is something Oklahoma has traditionally done well. But as parents fear the effects of COVID-19 on their youngest children, the state is seeing a steep drop in the number of students enrolled in Pre-K and kindergarten programs. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on the decline.
9/9/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

An Oklahoma teacher shares her battle with the coronavirus

As the school year started in August, cases of COVID-19 among teachers and students grew across Oklahoma. StateImpact's Robby Korth and KOSU's Kateleigh Mills spoke with an Oklahoma City metro teacher named Anna about her experience catching the coronavirus and missing more than a week of classes.
2/9/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma adds basic dental coverage to Medicaid amid a dire lack of care

About every other person in Oklahoma can't get dental insurance. Nonprofits scramble to fill in the gaps, caring for people who come in with broken teeth, painful abscesses and worse. State officials took a major step in ramping up access this year, opening preventative coverage to adults enrolled in SoonerCare.
25/8/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Hofmeister: school boards ‘best suited to address’ masking in schools

The Biden administration lashed out at Oklahoma’s policies limiting mask wearing in a letter to Gov. Kevin Stitt and state schools superintendent Joy Hofmeister Wednesday. StateImpact’s Robby Korth sat down with Hofmeister to discuss its contents and Oklahoma City Public Schools’ masking requirement rules, Thursday.In a statement sent by a spokesman, Gov. Stitt says Oklahomans want to make their own decisions about whether their children should wear masks in school. "The fact that President Biden is focused on telling Oklahomans how to parent their kids while he turns his back on the American citizens trapped by terrorists in Afghanistan is another example in his pattern of poor judgment.”
20/8/20210 minutos, 1 segundo
Episode Artwork

As a new school year starts, StateImpact is tracking COVID-19’s impact

School is in session across Oklahoma, even as the pandemic continues to rage and the Delta variant impacts more and more children. Managing editor Logan Layden sat down with StateImpact reporters Robby Korth and Catherine Sweeney for a discussion on the disruptions already occurring. 
19/8/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Wrongful convictions leave unhealed wounds

People who are personally affected when justice is denied will never think about the state's courts and law enforcement in the same way. StateImpact’s Quinton Chandler reports wrongful convictions can do long lasting harm and change how individual Oklahomans view the criminal justice system.
12/8/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

"Unheard of:" Rare summer RSV surge fills Oklahoma children's hospitals

As the school year draws nearer, COVID-19 is not the only disease putting pressure on Oklahoma’s children’s hospitals. Across the state, kids are being admitted amid an unseasonable surge in respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV. With demand already high, a back-to-school spike in COVID-19 could create a strain on pediatric beds.
4/8/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How one Oklahoma school district is using the state’s Counselor Corps to improve mental health accessibility

Oklahoma is making a big bet on helping students in the wake of a year interrupted by the coronavirus with mental health supports. StateImpact’s Robby Korth travels to Poteau to report how the district is leveraging a $35 million program to hire hundreds of counselors in schools across the state.
29/7/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Architectural-engineering firm aims to fix Oklahoma County’s constitutionally challenged jail

An advisory group hired consultants to find structural solutions to some of the Oklahoma County's Detention Center's longest running problems.
22/7/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A decade in the making, Medicaid expansion takes effect in Oklahoma

More than 100,000 Oklahomans have already enrolled in the program, which provides health coverage to low-income adults.
15/7/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What Oklahoma teachers need to know about the state’s so-called ‘Critical Race Theory’ ban

House Bill 1775 was supposed to do a lot of things: Ban critical race theory, ensure white students aren’t shamed for actions of their ancestors and limit difficult conversations in the classroom. But the actual effects are unclear. StateImpact’s Robby Korth sat down with Oklahoma State School Boards Association attorney Brandon Carey to discuss what the new law means for educators and students.
8/7/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘We should know’: Glossip supporter, Oklahoma lawmaker wants more scrutiny in death row cases

An Oklahoma lawmaker's belief that an innocent man is on death row inspired him to call for the creation of a special unit to review death penalty convictions.
1/7/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma schools boost summer offerings to combat negative effects of COVID-19 on learning

A school year like no other has now led to a summer like no other for Oklahoma students. StateImpact’s Robby Korth traveled to Stillwater to see how schools are incorporating fun and going back to basics to get students ready for a more typical fall.
24/6/20210 minutos, 1 segundo
Episode Artwork

"It's all about meeting people where they are:" Oklahoma legalizes clean needle exchange programming

When a constituent first came came in to advocate for needle exchange programming, Oklahoma State Rep. Carol Bush wasn't sure what to think. That didn't sound like the kind of policy likely to succeed in Oklahoma's deeply conservative statehouse. She and other supporters focused on the policy's public safety benefits and leaned on famous Republicans who have supported similar legislation, including former Vice President Mike Pence.
17/6/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Health officials are hopeful Medicaid expansion and new safe syringe program will curtail Oklahoma's Hepatitis C deaths

Oklahoma continues to rank top three in the nation for Hepatitis C deaths, but health officials are hopeful recent policy changes will help reverse the trend. Hepatitis C — a viral liver infection — is a problem nationwide. It’s the most prominent chronic blood-borne infection and leading cause of liver transplants. It can cause many complications, including cancer. 
11/6/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma paid for more addiction treatment and providers say its saving lives

The state partnered with substance abuse treatment providers to eliminate a counter productive wait time people struggling with addiction had to bear to get into treatment. Providers say the change is giving people a better chance to live.
3/6/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma continues to battle teacher shortage, but pandemic hasn’t caused a mass exit yet

As the academic year winds down, schools are already looking toward the next one. It’s bound to be more normal. But as StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports there’s also bound to be thousands of new teachers in Oklahoma’s classrooms.
27/5/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

"History in the making:" Thousands of volunteers turn out for Oklahoma's COVID-19 vaccine effort

Oklahoma has administered nearly 3 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine. Like all other states, it has done so free of charge to residents. That is possible largely because thousands of volunteers pitched into the effort.
21/5/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘Every day is a great day’: Women in Oklahoma prisons encourage people struggling through the pandemic

A nonprofit helped women in two state prisons connect with strangers during the coronavirus pandemic. The women recounted their struggles and offered advice.
13/5/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

StateImpact gets a haircut: Oklahoma City barber talks about covid effects while trimming ungroomed reporter’s hair

StateImpact’s Robby Korth didn’t get a haircut for over a year because of the coronavirus pandemic. But, more than two weeks after getting fully vaccinated, he takes us inside Carwin's Shave Shop for his much needed trim.
6/5/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma’s only school for children experiencing homelessness fought through the coronavirus pandemic

Attending school remotely has been an inconvenience for students and parents, and a major burden for many. For children experiencing homelessness, it’s all but impossible. 25-thousand Oklahoma children didn’t have a permanent home - before the pandemic. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports how the state’s only school tailored specifically for homeless students is handling the crisis.
22/4/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma prisons ahead in vaccinations but advocates say earlier access could have saved lives

Over half of Oklahoma’s state prisoners are at least partially vaccinated against the coronavirus. Prisoner advocates say incarcerated people needed access sooner than the state authorized.
15/4/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Empty appointments at mass vaccination sites mark a new priority: hesitant and hard-to-reach Oklahomans

The people who are willing and able to travel out to mass vaccinations sites have already done it. The vaccine program is entering a new chapter: reaching Oklahomans who are either vaccine hesitant or facing barriers.
9/4/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma charter school leader explains lawsuit that has ‘seismic effect’ on education funding

A lawsuit settlement between Oklahoma’s State Board of Education and The Oklahoma Public Charter School Association will greatly change the way public schools are funded. StateImpact’s Robby Korth spoke to Chris Brewster, President of the charter school organization and superintendent of Santa Fe South in Oklahoma City about the genesis of the lawsuit and school funding.
1/4/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

OU Physicians and Blue Cross Blue Shield Oklahoma's rate dispute could force thousands to find a new doctor

The two companies surpassed a year of negotiations and never reached an agreement. Come July, the two could be out of network.
25/3/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma spring assessments aim to measure learning loss during pandemic

Spring assessment tests are an annual spring tradition in Oklahoma. But this year, they'll look quite a bit different. StateImpact's Robby Korth goes to Calumet to see how a school that normally thrives is prepping.
18/3/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma lawmakers introduce now-traditional abortion bills in a changing political environment

The proposed abortion policies don’t vary much from past versions, but they could have a better shot at implementation because of shifts on the U.S. and Oklahoma supreme courts.
4/3/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Educating students at El Reno's Hillcrest Elementary

In part two of a story about what in-person school looks like in Oklahoma, StateImpact’s Robby Korth takes us to Hillcrest Elementary School in El Reno. The district has gone to great lengths to make in-person schooling work. This story was produced by KOSU’s Kateleigh Mills.
25/2/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

'Kids need to be in school' In-person Learning in El Reno, Oklahoma

The vast majority of Oklahoma students are attending school in person. But what does that look like? StateImpact’s Robby Korth visited El Reno High School to find out.
25/2/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma lawmakers propose targeted criminal justice reforms

Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform’s main goal this session is to bring Oklahoma’s prison sentences more in line with the national average.
19/2/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma moves forward on partially privatizing Medicaid amid opposition

SoonerSelect — otherwise known as managed care — will shift $2 billion in Medicaid funding to four private health insurance companies, tasking them with coordinating care for about 700,000 Oklahomans. Opponents are concerned the program was designed hastily, that it will reduce health access for low-income Oklahomans instead of improving it, that the $2 billion in contracts faced no legislative oversight, and that Oklahoma’s past attempts to implement full managed care failed miserably.
12/2/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

The Oklahoman and StateImpact explain the various meanings of the term 'ghost students'

In Kevin Stitt’s State of the State Address, the governor brought a new definition for the term “ghost students” to the mainstream. StateImpact’s Robby Korth and The Oklahoman's Nuria Martinez-Keel explain Stitt’s new definition and its effects on education funding policy.
8/2/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma educators are at frontlines of remembering Tulsa Race Massacre

The Tulsa Race Massacre was famously forgotten in Oklahoma history classes for decades. But as the 100 year anniversary of the tragedy approaches, StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports keeping that memory alive is as important as ever in the state’s schools.
4/2/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

2021 Legislative Preview

The state Legislature’s session was badly disrupted last year by the pandemic . It’s back starting Monday, and faces a long list of pressing issues and unfinished work from 2020. StateImpact health reporter Chatherine Sweeney, education reporter Robby Korth, and criminal justice reporter Quinton Chandler met with Republican Oklahoma Senate President Pro Temp Greg Treat to talk about his priorities before the gavel drops next week, and share their thoughts on where lawmakers are focusing their attention.
28/1/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Federal prisoners complain a private prison in Oklahoma isn’t following COVID-19 safety guidelines

Federal prisoners threatened by the COVID-19 pandemic complain they and other prisoners weren’t quarantined after having contact with infected people. They also say staff often don’t wear masks.
21/1/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

WahZhaZhe, Tsalagi, Español. No matter the language Covid creates challenges for immersion learning in Oklahoma

Immersion learning works like this: students come to school and they learn in two languages, usually English and something else. But COVID-19 has made teaching at these schools difficult. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports with Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton.
14/1/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma health officials choose rapid coronavirus vaccination over rigid phase model

Deputy Commissioner of Health Keith Reed says it allows for quicker vaccinations, which fights community transmission and paves the way for larger vaccine supply shipments.
13/1/20210 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Protecting Oklahoma Alzheimer's patients from the coronavirus comes at a price

Throughout the pandemic, long-term care facilities have had to implement lockdowns. For Alzheimer’s and dementia patients, the isolation used to protect their physical health can further damage their brain health.
17/12/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Did George Floyd’s death affect Oklahoma’s elections?

Black Lives Matter protesters urged Oklahomans to go to the polls after Minnesota police killed George Floyd. Did the energy felt in street protests translate into Oklahomans' polling places?
11/12/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

As Oklahoma's syphilis rate among women increases, cases in babies grow with it

Syphilis seemed all but eradicated in Oklahoma. Then, until about six years ago, it was reported only in men having sex with men. Cases among women grew more than eight fold from 2014 to 2018. Now, cases detected in babies are on the rise, too.
3/12/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma medical experts tackle state's "mixed messages" on coronavirus

Members of the Healthier Oklahoma Coalition want to communicate with the public directly on hospital and ICU capacity, worker shortages and more.
26/11/20201 minuto, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Masking rules a patchwork in Oklahoma schools

StateImpact's Robby Korth reports on how masking rules are applied unevenly in Oklahoma's schools. A survey conducted by the State Department of Education last month found about 80 percent have some rules requiring masks in place. However, only about half of the state’s schools require masks in the classroom. Many policies simply apply to buses or hallways during passing periods.
19/11/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

State superintendent says she would have implemented Oklahoma schools masking mandate 'a long time ago'

Oklahoma state schools superintendent Joy Hofmeister says it’s impossible to know what school will look like in the near and distant future. But, she tells StateImpact’s Robby Korth wearing masks and taking the virus seriously are critical to getting to a place where safe in person schooling is again the norm.
19/11/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Early release dates for Oklahoma prisoners just got pushed back

The state prison population is projected to grow an additional 3.6% in two years because the state Department of Corrections eliminated a method of shortening prisoners’ sentences.
13/11/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma health officials say that without renewed federal funding, coronavirus testing could dwindle, harming response

Oklahoma has been using federal coronavirus relief funding to ensure everyone can get tested for free without requirements, such as symptoms or a known exposure. That helps public health agencies track and fight spread. That funding expires Dec. 31, and officials are urging Congress to replace it.
10/11/20200 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma public health officials continue opposition to statewide mask mandate

As Oklahoma's coronavirus figures continue their upward trend, public health officials say statewide mask mandates are not on the list of potential mitigation efforts.
10/11/20200 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma Engaged: Vote rejecting State Question 814 places Medicaid expansion responsibility on the Oklahoma Legislature

Oklahoma voters rejected State Question 814. It would have taken payments away from the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust, which funds public health measures like tobacco cessation and cancer research, and put them toward Medicaid expansion. The state is expected to see a $1 billion infusion of federal health funding, but has to put in about $150 million first. Without that TSET funding, lawmakers will have to find another source.
6/11/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma teenagers want their voices heard to make the world 'a better place'

Most high school students in Oklahoma can’t vote, yet the presidential election will have a tremendous impact on them. So, Oklahoma Engaged, with the help of youth civic engagement non-profit Generation Citizen, decided to talk directly to them. StateImpact’s Robby Korth guides listeners through their conversation.
30/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Fewer Oklahoma educators running for legislative offices

Two years after Oklahoma educators walked out of their classrooms and stormed the state Capitol, fewer teachers are running for state legislative seats. This year, more than 50 education candidates launched campaigns for legislative seats, down from 112 candidates who ran in 2018, according to figures from the Oklahoma Education Association. In an Oklahoma Media Center story supported by Oklahoma Engaged and The Walton Family Foundation, StateImpact's Robby Korth and The Oklahoman's Carmen Forman talk about why those numbers have shifted.
26/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Epic Virtual Charter Schools’ cloudy future leaves families searching for clarity

Turmoil has swirled around Epic Virtual Charter Schools for years. But StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports a state audit has intensified calls to take action against the school and its for profit management company. And that’s clouded the future for the more than 60,000 students who attend Oklahoma’s largest school district. This COVID-19/education reporting is made possible by a grant from the Walton Family Foundation.
22/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma Engaged: State Question 814 has a history

State Question 814 would route money away from a public health and tobacco cessation program, using it to pay for Oklahoma's Medicaid expansion. This pitch isn't new, nor is the attempt to divert money out of the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust, otherwise known as TSET.
21/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How to bring care to mental health emergencies

Oklahoma City Police are trying new ways to help people in crisis cope with their illness' and potentially get faster access to care.
10/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Gov. Kevin Stitt announces new public health laboratory

A brief summary of this episode
9/10/20201 minuto, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A syphilis outbreak creates yet another strain on Oklahoma's public health system

In the midst of a historic pandemic and the onset of flu season, Oklahoma public health workers have another emergency to address. Statewide, syphilis cases among women have grown by more than 850 percent in four years. In south-central Oklahoma's Carter County, the case rate has grown by 900 percent since last year. Public health specialists tackle everything from raising awareness, preparing care providers and containing the spread.
9/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

‘We are still human beings’: Oklahoma prisoners, officials adjust as COVID-19 spreads

The Department of Corrections is drawing heavy criticism for its steep rise in COVID-19 cases. Most of the 3,175 total cases recorded as of Sept. 23. were first reported in the past month.
6/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma City mental health emergencies outpace police trained to handle them

Mental health calls have nearly doubled for Oklahoma City’s police force in six years. Police and policy makers say officers shouldn’t be involved in most of the calls at all.
6/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma’s college campuses continue to be coronavirus hotspots

A September surge of COVID-19 cases in Oklahoma is largely a result of the coronavirus’ spread on college campuses. StateImpact’s Catherine Sweeney and Robby Korth report on how cases have spread in college towns.
1/10/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma's Medicaid expansion vote wasn't as simple as urban versus rural

Oklahoma voters approved Medicaid expansion via State Question 802 in June. Six of Oklahoma's 77 counties approved the measure, and those counties were largely the state's most urban. Soon, conventional wisdom attributed the vote breakdown to the urban-rural divide.. However, The Oklahoma Policy Institute dug into the data and found there was more to it than that. Here, StateImpact's Catherine Sweeney interviews Oklahoma Policy's Carly Putnam.
24/9/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma health experts: COVID-19 also attacks the heart

More than half of the Oklahomans who have died from COVID-19 complications had an underlying heart condition. Health experts said that the state's high rate of heart disease is not the only factor.
18/9/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A month into the fall semester, StateImpact has tracked hundreds of COVID-19 cases in Oklahoma schools

Since classes started this semester StateImpact’s Robby Korth has been tracking COVID-19 cases in schools across Oklahoma. So far he’s identified almost 200 school districts where a case has been publicly announced. Korth spoke with StateImpact Managing Editor Logan Layden about the tracking project.
10/9/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Tempers flare after Oklahoma County sends CARES money to jail

A nonprofit leader hoped Oklahoma County would use some of its $47 million CARES Act grant to help people facing eviction. But the state’s most populous county is planning to spend the bulk of that relief package on its problematic jail.
3/9/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

COVID-19 worsens Oklahoma's decades-old nursing shortage

The United States entered a nationwide nursing shortage in 2001, and Oklahoma has been in one since. There aren't enough slots in nursing programs, many graduates take jobs out of state, and retention is difficult. Then the U.S. entered the worst pandemic in a century.
24/8/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma schools COVID-19 guidelines are widely ignored by many rural districts

The Oklahoma State Board of Education refused to pass a plan that featured a masking mandate and required pivot to distance learning amid rising case numbers of the coronavirus. Instead, they opted to make a thorough plan simply a recommendation. The result, few school districts are following the state's guidelines as they reopen for school.
24/8/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

A former Oklahoma prisoner struggles to find his feet during the pandemic

The pandemic threatens former prisoners’ access to resources they need to build stable lives. Offices that issue legal identification have closed for part or the majority of the pandemic.
14/8/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Lessons learned in Oklahoma’s interrupted semester will be critical to delivering instruction this fall

A growing number of school districts across Oklahoma are already pivoting to distance learning because of the continued spread of the coronavirus. The decisions aren’t made easily, as evidenced by hours long meetings and narrow votes by local school boards. More could - and if cases don’t fall will - move online. So how did that move go last spring and what lessons can schools learn?
6/8/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma State University took his name off a building, but Alfalfa Bill Murray can still be found across the state

Few people have had a bigger impact on Oklahoma than early governor and framer of the state’s constitution Alfalfa Bill Murray. But StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports Murray’s racist beliefs are now sparking conversations to change the way Oklahomans remember him today.
30/7/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Researcher: Covid-19 infection rates 5 times higher in U.S. Prisons

Data analyzed by a Johns Hopkins University researcher suggests people incarcerated in state and federal prisons are at higher risk of catching Covid-19 and of dying from the disease.
23/7/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Defund police vote exposes deep divisions in Norman

Norman is the only one of Oklahoma’s three largest cities where leaders were swayed to redirect funding after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
23/7/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Tulsa educators share five tips for how teachers, parents can talk about race with kids

In the wake of Black Lives Matter activism across the country, teachers are re-emphasizing their role in leading discussions about racial justice. StateImpact’s Robby Korth spoke with Tulsa Public Schools Manager of Equity Content Denita White and Hawthorne Elementary School third grade teacher Katherine Maloney about how to talk to children about race.
9/7/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Pandemic isolates Oklahoma domestic violence victims

Covid-19 made it harder for some domestic violence victims to find safety from their abusers. Victim advocates also fear they may experience more severe violence in their isolation.
6/7/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Stilwell High School students explore their town’s history in podcast that was a finalist in NPR student challenge

The NPR student podcast challenge had 2,000 entrants from across the country. But one project from high school seniors in Stilwell, a Northeastern Oklahoma town with 4,000 people, stood out as one of only a dozen finalists. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on the podcast that was a finalist for a prize.
26/6/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma Arts Institute moves off Quartz Mountain and into students’ living rooms

Each summer hundreds of the state’s elite arts students travel to Quartz Mountain, on the picturesque outskirts of the Wichita Mountains in southwest Oklahoma for the Oklahoma Arts Institute. But this year the normally two week arts program was moved online and shortened because of the coronavirus. StateImpact’s Robby Korth reports on how the selective arts program made the move.
25/6/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma City Black Lives Matter requests more robust, transparent police oversight

Residents of Oklahoma City often don't hear the details surrounding complaints against police and the investigations they prompt. Black Lives Matter activists are calling for independent probes of police investigations.
18/6/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma City leaders to reconsider police oversight following protests denouncing racial disparities

Thousands of Oklahomans demanded change after an unarmed black man was killed by police in Minneapolis. Protesters in Oklahoma City especially criticized its police department's relatively high number of killings of black residents. City leaders are considering some of the protesters' demands.
11/6/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma child care leaders share how they’ve dealt with positive COVID-19 cases

The call from the health department still sticks in Gabrielle Moon’s mind. There was a positive case of the coronavirus at St. Luke’s Children’s Center. Moon, the center's executive director, and other childcare leaders share what they've learned from handling this case and others.
11/6/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Here's what school could look like for Oklahoma schools next fall

The coronavirus will change school next semester. StateImpact Managing Editor Logan Layden spoke to education reporter Robby Korth about a school year that will likely look a little more normal, but will still be unfamiliar.
28/5/20200 minutos, 1 segundo
Episode Artwork

As coronavirus spreads, Oklahoma's largest jails could increase testing

An outbreak of Covid-19 in the Comanche County jail underscores how vulnerable jail populations are to the disease. Officials in the state's two largest counties are considering increasing testing in their jails to make sure they don't have their own outbreak.
22/5/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Digital ceremonies, drive-ins and delays mark Oklahoma high school graduation celebrations

The novel coronavirus has changed a lot of graduation plans throughout Oklahoma. Normally, a community’s staple spring event, the global pandemic has altered plans. Districts across Oklahoma are taking a wide range of approaches to honor graduates.
14/5/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma Covid-19 testing in question as positive cases spike in other states’ prisons

Thousands of prisoners across the country are infected with Covid-19. The more states test, the more cases they find. Some question whether Oklahoma's Covid-19 testing policies have revealed the true number of state prisoners carrying the disease.
7/5/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma prison chief discusses Covid-19 testing in state prisons

The Oklahoma Department of Corrections decides which prisoners to test for Covid-19 on a cases by case basis. So far, two prisoners have tested positive for Covid-19.
30/4/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

COVID-19 is changing the way Oklahoma schools are educating English learners

A brief summary of this episode
23/4/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma school districts conduct distance learning without the internet

Monday was a new kind of first day of school in Oklahoma: the first one back since schools shuttered after spring break to combat the spread of COVID-19. Many school districts are turning to the internet to conduct instruction. But for 167,000 Oklahoma students that isn't an option. So, school districts are getting creative to deliver the instruction to kids.
9/4/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma drug court judges are afraid saving people from Covid-19 might mean losing some to addiction

Oklahoma drug courts are adapting to reduce physical contact during the coronavirus pandemic, but they say they're paying a price. Social distancing is disrupting and routines human connections that give stability to people fighting addiction.
3/4/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How the University of Oklahoma moved its classes online

A brief summary of this episode
26/3/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma schools and jails brace for the COVID-19 pandemic’s spread

Oklahoma schools and county jails are looking for ways to keep the coronavirus pandemic at bay.
19/3/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Loosening gun regulations may put more firearms in Oklahoma classrooms

Because nobody with the state is keeping track, it’s difficult to know how many school districts across Oklahoma have armed teachers. Despite that, state lawmakers want to loosen regulations on training requirements for teachers armed in schools. They hope, ushered in by a piece of legislation currently under consideration, fewer regulations will lead to more guns in schools.
12/3/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma Lawmakers consider a raise for hundreds of prison employees skipped over last year

State officials want to help hundreds of corrections employees who didn't get a raise last year. It's unclear if a bill that could fix the problem will be approved.
5/3/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma colleges get creative to support mental health treatment as need grows

With 80 percent of college students reporting anxiety or depression, schools have to find a way to help students. StateImpact's Robby Korth spends time in Stillwater and Norman to see how Oklahoma's two biggest universities are approaching mental wellness for their students.
27/2/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma leaves behind top incarcerator title but prison population may keep growing

Oklahoma has reduced it’s imprisonment rate but the criminal justice experts say they expect the prison population to continue growing in the next six years.
26/2/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

$13 million in limbo while Stitt, tribes battle

Compacted tribes are sending their gaming money to the state of Oklahoma, where it will be held while courts decide on tribal-gaming compacts. StateImpact’s Robby Korth and KOSU’s Kateleigh Mills talk about what will happen to the money and who might be affected.
13/2/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma's identification of gifted Native students could serve as a national model

Minority students are far less likely to be recognized and included in gifted and talented programs across the country. But in Oklahoma, Native American students are recognized in the same numbers as white students. StateImpact’s Robby Korth visits a program in Tahlequah to ask why getting into gifted and talented classes is so important.
6/2/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Issues to watch during Oklahoma's 2020 legislative session

StateImpact reporters combed through 4,500 pieces of legislation. Here are some trends they found.
30/1/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma prisoners struggle to find stable housing after release

Stable housing options are limited for people leaving Oklahoma prisons. People running transitional housing options that offer a temporary residence where people can get on their feet say they can't completely meet the demand.
24/1/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Here's what happened to $829 million Oklahoma was awarded to treat opioid addiction

Oklahoma is entitled to $829 million from settlements with drug companies or court orders. But so far, none of the money has been spent on opioid addiction treatment. Here’s where the money stands for each company or group.
16/1/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Shorthanded mental health groups prepare for high caseloads after nation’s largest commutation

Following the nation's largest commutation, the state and community nonprofits are preparing to help several hundred people released from prison in the same day.
10/1/20200 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Rural Oklahoma parents, teachers gear up for four-day school week fight

Four-day school weeks have become a popular recruiting tool for cash-strapped rural school districts across Oklahoma. But new rules created because of changing state law mean that the shortened school weeks could end. Parent and teacher activists are taking a fight to the capitol to try to save the four-day school week across the state.
19/12/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma’s vaping rules may tighten as scrutiny persists

A push toward a healthier state by the Oklahoma governor may mean more vaping laws.
12/12/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma doesn't screen for dyslexia, the most common learning disability

In the classroom, no matter the support, living with dyslexia is simply a challenge. Oklahoma teachers are often blind to dyslexic students because of a lack of resources and direction for educating young people with the neurological learning disability. People with dyslexia often have trouble with word recognition, spelling and phonics.
5/12/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Q&A: Researchers hope data can help Tulsa police avoid using force

Researchers from two universities asked Tulsa police for help understanding how U.S. police officers decide to use force on civilians. The university researchers believe their findings can help Tulsa police in their encounters with the public.
21/11/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Life after being released in Oklahoma’s record commutation

After being released in the nation's largest commutation on record, one man is picking up the pieces of his life. Warren Rawls wants to give up criminal life, find a job and be a father to his children. It's his sixth time leaving prison and he's determined it will be his last.
14/11/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

How Oklahoma’s new health laws will affect you, from short-term health policies to eye clinics

At the beginning of November, hundreds of new laws took effect in Oklahoma, including a big change to short-term health policies and new locations for eye clinics.
7/11/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

People with disabilities unsheltered in tornado alley

Despite experiencing some of the most severe weather events in the nation, there are no state laws requiring storm shelters in Oklahoma. Public shelters have largely been closed - leaving people with disabilities without a safe option​ during storms.
31/10/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

As Oklahoma’s permitless carry law looms, Kansas may tell us what to expect

Some Oklahomans are afraid a new law that allows most adults to carry guns in public will be a public safety disaster. But, one sheriff from Oklahoma's northern neighbor Kansas, says a similar law hasn't been a problem for his state.
24/10/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Advocates push Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma

Expanding Medicaid in Oklahoma would extend health insurance to thousands of people - and an estimated $100 million dollar price tag.
17/10/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Disagreements leave new Oklahoma criminal justice program in limbo

A pretrial release program helped Rogers County decrease its jail population, but the program had to shutdown after disagreements over who to release led its staff to quit.
11/10/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Five Oklahoma hospitals collapsed – what happened?

An interview with Lauren Weber, the Midwest correspondent for Kaiser Health News, regarding her reporting on a pattern of controversial businesses practices that lead to big profits for hospital management companies - and the closure or bankruptcy of eighteen rural hospitals. 
25/9/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

What’s the best way to run a jail?

Oklahoma County government officials and civic leaders want change at the Oklahoma County Jail. Now, a group given oversight of the jail plans to change its management. 
20/9/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma seeks to address lawyer shortage for abused and neglected children

State law requires children taken into state custody in cases of neglect and abuse be given their own attorneys to advocate for their needs and protect their rights in court. Parents have a right to a separate attorney. But, it’s often hard to pair children with qualified attorneys. So the Oklahoma Supreme Court created a new task force to look for ways to improve the system.
6/9/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Sovereign Community School Is Part of a Larger Movement

Sovereign Community School is new charter school in Oklahoma City with a focus on Native American culture and identity. It’s also part of a movement of tribes and tribal citizens using publicly funded, privately run schools to take control over the education of Native children. 
23/8/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Raising the Kindergarten Age In Oklahoma May Leave Some Children Out

A controversial proposal in the Oklahoma state legislature would delay the age kids would be eligible to start kindergarten and put Oklahoma on-trend with dozens of other states. But some childhood experts say the trend may not serve Oklahoma kids well.
14/8/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Medical boards lack process for opioid complaints

The ongoing court case against opioid manufacturer Johnson & Johnson highlighted the role that doctors, and the medical boards who regulate them, have played in the continuing public health crisis.
9/8/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

State Officials: Impossible to Track Epic’s Alleged ‘Ghost Students’

Epic Charter Schools is being probed by state and federal law enforcement for manipulating student and embezzling state funds. Will regulators be able to close the loophole Epic appears to be exploiting? 
25/7/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Pain meds as public nuisance? Oklahoma tests a legal strategy against opioid maker Johnson & Johnson

The first lawsuit in the country seeking to hold a pharmaceutical company responsible for the opioid crisis is currently awaiting a verdict in Oklahoma state court.
18/7/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Requiring Schools To Teach Climate Change Risks Backlash In Oklahoma

As Oklahoma reconsiders what students should learn in science class, climate change is top of mind for some. But requiring public schools to teach kids about the subject could prompt pushback from legislators, school administrators and parents. 
12/7/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Feds may claw back millions from Oklahoma’s opioid settlement

The federal government is seeking its slice of Oklahoma's recent $270 million settlement with Purdue Pharmaceuticals, and the bill could be millions of dollars.
5/7/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

Oklahoma dams near expiration dates as scientists predict more extreme weather

Oklahoma has more than 4,700 dams. At least 30 percent of these flood control structures are at the end of their 50-year design life. With climate change expected to bring more heavy precipitation, can they hold up?
27/6/20190 minutos, 0 segundos
Episode Artwork

In Oklahoma, lawsuit options limited when prisoners claim constitutional rights violations

The Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled in 2018 that the Legislature has the authority to block lawsuits against local and state governments operating jails and detention centers. The ruling follows legal actions the spawned after an Oklahoma man was badly beaten in a county jail. 
20/6/20190 minutos, 0 segundos