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The Oklahoma Department of Corrections has spent millions on body cameras with the stated goal of increasing transparency, but is refusing to release recordings to the public.
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State Democrats said they filed what they thought was the appropriate paperwork, later stating it was a "miscommunication."
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Governor Kevin Stitt on Tuesday criticized the Trump administration for its elimination of wind energy projects across the country.
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As a result, all party primary elections will be closed to the over 487,900 registered independent voters in the upcoming elections.
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When a Tulsa woman left a voicemail thanking the crisis workers who helped pull her out of homelessness, violence and addiction, staff at COPES said it arrived at a moment when their services and future face growing strain.
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Oklahomans still lack a date for when public access to the state’s system that tracks election, lobbying and campaign finance will be restored, nearly three months after it was taken offline for updates.
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In a social media post, Rep. John Waldron, D-Tulsa, wrote he's been pushing himself too hard and was resigning "for personal reasons."
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TPS officials have repeatedly said the bond package, if passed by voters, would not raise tax rates.
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For the first time, Ada is building a day center where people who are homeless have a place to hang out and to get resources, a reflection of a trend in rural Oklahoma of more people having a harder time staying in stable housing.
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The city of Tulsa is challenging an Arkansas agency’s modification of a Northwest Arkansas treatment plant’s permit that discharges into the watershed that supplies the Oklahoma city’s drinking water.
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TCC aims to join a growing number of community colleges across the U.S. offering lower-cost bachelor's programs for their students.
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Kaylee Rains-Saucedo is pictured here with her two children. The Oklahoma City business owner and her husband are evaluating their options as insurance premiums rise and subsidies are eliminated.