Robby Korth
Prior to that, he was StateImpact Oklahoma's education reporter from October 2019 to November 2022.
Robby grew up in Ardmore, Oklahoma and Fayetteville, Arkansas, and graduated from the University of Nebraska with a Journalism degree. He has reported for several newspapers, most recently covering higher education and other topics for The Roanoke Times in southwest Virginia. While there, he co-created the podcast Septic, spending a year reporting on the story of a missing five-year-old boy, the discovery of his body in a septic tank a few days after his disappearance, and the subsequent court trial of his mother. Although the story was of particular interest to residents in Virginia, the podcast gained a larger audience and was named as a New and Noteworthy podcast by Apple Podcasts.
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The governor’s office argues Attorney General Gentner Drummond “badly misapplied” the state’s dual office holding laws in a recent opinion that prompted resignations of two Stitt cabinet officials.
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Oklahomans went to the polls on Super Tuesday to choose their party nominees for president, while some voters had county proposals to vote on.
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Oklahomans will head to the polls on Tuesday to choose their party’s candidate for President, while voters in some counties will consider alcohol law changes, sales tax extensions and more.
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Voters in 57 counties across Oklahoma went to the polls on Tuesday to consider school bonds, city councilors and a new state representative for West Edmond.
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OKC voters overwhelmingly threw their support behind the new facility and approved a new home for the Oklahoma City Thunder in the coming years.
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Voters in Broken Arrow school district and Skiatook took to the polls Tuesday.
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The Oklahoma Highway Patrol appears to be abandoning decades of precedent of honoring many tribal nation car tags.
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Following the news that Michelin plans to wind down operations at its Ardmore plant, city leaders are going before the Oklahoma Senate.
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Moody’s had previously said the state had a stable credit rating. They upgraded that to positive in mid-October.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt’s vetoes of a pair of compacts with the state’s tribal nations by Oklahoma’s legislature will not stand.