Voting for our priorities (The Norman Transcript)

By Molly Roberts Ok, let me see if I’ve got this straight. When the federal government ended its program of providing $13-$16 million in surplus equipment each year to fire departments, our state and congressional leaders immediately began working on… Read more [More...]

Definition of a ‘public’ college continues to change in Oklahoma, nationally (The Oklahoman)

By The Oklahoman Editorial Board WHAT does it mean to be a “public” college? Once upon a time, it meant that states provided significant financial support, which kept a cap of sorts on tuition and fees paid by students and… Read more [More...]

Think Globally, Innovate Locally (Dissent Magazine)

By Amy Hanauer Denial and indifference are two of the main congressional responses to the inequality, economic stagnation, and climate change that threaten America. But progressives can take heart in the creative, often inspiring initiatives flourishing in patches across the… Read more [More...]

Oklahoma is winning its Medicaid standoff with the feds — for now (The Washington Post)

By Jason Millman Oklahoma is one of about two dozen states that hasn’t expanded Medicaid — and it’s tangled in a unique standoff of sorts with the Obama administration. Oklahoma and the federal agency overseeing Medicaid are still wrestling with… Read more [More...]

Oklahoma Health Care Authority board leaders make tough choices over where to cut Medicaid services for some of the poorest residents (The Oklahoman)

By Jaclyn Cosgrove The word “difficult” was used throughout Thursday’s board meeting of the state’s Medicaid agency, as leaders discussed millions of dollars in cuts that had to be made to balance the agency’s budget for the coming fiscal year.… Read more [More...]

Recipe for Disaster: The high cost of ‘tough on crime’ (Red Dirt Report)

By Mindy Ragan Wood SHAWNEE, Okla. — Oklahoma appears to be racing towards a disaster. With overcrowded and understaffed prisons, questions are being raised that may lead to judicial and prison reform. From the “tough on crime” laws that win… Read more [More...]

Another legislative assault on Oklahoma’s Promise scholarship program (The Oklahoman)

By The Oklahoman Editorial Board OKLAHOMA’S Promise has helped thousands of students attain college degrees. For many of these lower- and middle-income students, higher education would have been out of reach without this taxpayer-funded scholarship program. So why would lawmakers… Read more [More...]

Old friends face off in Oklahoma wind farm debate (Tulsa World)

By Casey Smith Blue Mound is the highest point on Frank Robson’s Craig County cattle ranch and was once, he says, one of the highest points in the Cherokee Nation. Robson, who runs a commercial real estate business in Claremore,… Read more [More...]

On budget, Oklahoma lawmakers’ rhetoric, reality conflict (The Oklahoman)

By The Oklahoman Editorial Board THE Republicans who hold a supermajority in the Legislature often claim they want to reduce the size of government. When they announced the latest state budget, legislative leaders declared it reduced spending by $102.1 million.… Read more [More...]

Oklahoma budget games: Less is more, more or less (Oklahoma Watchdog)

By Patrick B. McGuigan OKLAHOMA CITY — If analysts on the right and the left are to be believed, the Oklahoma Legislature managed to produce a state budget for the coming year that is both dishonest and impenetrable. Jonathan Small,… Read more [More...]