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  • Results for the Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education election are in, and concern over State Superintendent Ryan Walters was a driving factor in how some cast their votes. Survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre bring their case before the Oklahoma Supreme Court. The state attorney general fights a taxpayer-funded religious charter school opening. Oklahoma prepares for the solar eclipse next week.
  • Tulsa braces for severe weather, Ryan Walters accuses the left and the media of peddling a political agenda through Nex Benedict's death, Tulsa Public Schools holds three school board elections, Enid voters consider whether to remove a city commissioner with white supremacist ties, and the Oklahoma City Thunder clinches its first playoff berth in four years.
  • Voters head to the polls to decide the fate of three Tulsa Public Schools board seats, the reparations lawsuit for survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre goes before the Oklahoma Supreme Court, the county health department looks forward to a conference to address racist stigmas in health care, and a major player in Epic Charter Schools' alleged racketeering scheme testifies.
  • A music venue in Broken Arrow is one step (or two steps, as one leader puts it) closer to completion, city councilors discuss what they and the mayor should be paid, the governor spars with the state attorney general over an opinion that impacts his cabinet, a prominent Tulsa official attends President Biden's State of the Union address, and residents defeat plans for townhomes in their midtown neighborhood.
  • Local prosecutors decide to not file charges in Nex Benedict's death, Bartlesville considers changes to its city council terms, a couple is charged in a homicide in north Tulsa, livestock recover after several wildfires in Oklahoma, and a group led by Tulsa's congressman suggests raising the age U.S. citizens can draw from Social Security.
  • Gov. Kevin Stitt signs a bill that will criminalize unauthorized immigration. After weeks of feedback, USPS decides to move some of Tulsa's mail processing functions to Oklahoma City. Sulphur takes stock of millions of dollars of property damage following the weekend tornado outbreak. A Tulsa city councilor who was arrested last week is charged with misdemeanor assault.
  • State officials approve millions in relief money for tornado victims, Gov. Kevin Stitt shares his views on tribal sovereignty during a visit to Tulsa, the Oklahoma City Thunder's playoff run comes to a close as the state's college softball teams surge, and Oklahoma State University's first osteopathic medicine class graduates.
  • Barnsdall and the town's school district recover from the EF-4 tornado that tore through the area Monday night, officials fire the director of Tulsa County's Family Center for Juvenile Justice, the Oklahoma City Thunder prepare for the second game of the NBA Western Conference Semifinals, and city council updates Tulsa's code to address people who block pedestrian traffic.
  • On Tax Day, OPMX's Robby Korth surveys how Oklahoma's tax burden stacks up against that of other cities. The Oklahoma Legislature's incoming house speaker aims to bring stability to the role, and his colleagues plan to bring forward legislation that would prosecute undocumented immigrants. The Oklahoma City Thunder earn the number one seed in the Western Conference.
  • Oklahoma prepares to execute its first death row prisoner of 2024. A United States senator joins the fight to keep Tulsa's USPS center fully operational. Authorities search for a teenager last seen in Tulsa on Sunday. A Tulsa Public Schools board member discusses his re-election. State lawmakers consider removing absenteeism as a factor on school district report cards.
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