Articles
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Higher Education, Law & Principles
OCPA praises court for protecting students from OSU retaliation
OCPA President Jonathan Small praised an order from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit that preserves the right of students to challenge the constitutionality of Oklahoma State University policies without being identified by name.Staff | February 12, 2024
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Higher Education, Law & Principles
Court order protects students from OSU retaliation
OSU argued that students should be forced to reveal their identities if they challenge the university’s policies on free speech. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit disagreed, siding with the students.Ray Carter | February 9, 2024
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Budget & Tax
Tax policies have consequences
Instead of punishing those who have been successful, states should adopt policies that make it easier for more people to find that same success.Curtis Shelton | February 7, 2024
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Budget & Tax
Oklahoma lawmakers take bold stance for working families
By voting to cut Oklahoma’s personal income tax immediately, members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives have demonstrated they understand the financial pressures bearing down on working families across our state.Jonathan Small | February 7, 2024
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Education
Oklahoma schools using virtual days to poach teachers, cook records
At some Oklahoma public schools, more than one in four school days are occurring online rather than in person, effectively generating bogus attendance records for schools, helping districts poach teachers from schools that do provide in-person instruction, and producing as little as 30 minutes of teaching per day even as taxpayers are funding full school days, according to state lawmakers.Ray Carter | February 6, 2024
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Law & Principles
Bill mandating arbitrary DHS investigation of parents should be killed
Legislation that would subject Oklahoma parents to a Department of Human Services background check if they homeschool their children, or even move to another school district, should be killed.Staff | February 6, 2024
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Law & Principles
Governor notes Oklahoma ‘reservations’ not normal
In this year’s “State of the State” address, Gov. Kevin Stitt bluntly noted that those supposed reservations in Oklahoma have no relationship to Native American reservations in other states.Ray Carter | February 6, 2024
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Budget & Tax
Stitt: Time to put income tax on path to zero
In his sixth “State of the State” address, Gov. Kevin Stitt urged lawmakers not only to cut taxes but also to put the personal income tax on the path to full elimination over time.Ray Carter | February 5, 2024
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Education
Widowed mother of three among Oklahoma school-choice beneficiaries
Widowed mother Emily McDonald is raising three children, including a son with autism, on a modest income. When her daughter started to be bullied in kindergarten and came home crying nearly every day, Emily knew she had to make a change.Ray Carter | February 5, 2024
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Budget & Tax
Oklahoma senators sign tax-cut pledge
A dozen Oklahoma state senators, who represent a combined one million Oklahomans, have signed a pledge to cut the state income tax this year.Staff | February 5, 2024