Articles
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Higher Education
OU Hires Ex-Senator as Lobbyist
Shortly following the December 1 meeting of the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education, the OU Board of Regents met in Norman and voted to approve President David Boren’s appointment of former Oklahoma state Sen. Jonathan Nichols as vice president of governmental relations.Staff Reports | December 20, 2016
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Higher Education
Lawmakers Respond to Regents’ Budget Request
On December 1, the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education voted to seek $957.9 million for fiscal year 2018—an increase of 18.3 percent over the current year’s budget.Staff Reports | December 19, 2016
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Agriculture
Agricultural Regulation a Serious Concern for Producers
Agricultural regulation is an important issue for rural America. The Food and Drug Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are the primary regulators affecting the food supply chain from farm to fork. For row crop and cattle producers that dominate the landscape of the Great Plains, the EPA’s rules have the biggest direct effects. While these regulations are designed to provide many benefits, they come at a cost. Individual regulations are evaluated on cost/benefit grounds prior to implementation, but the costs of the overall regulatory burden on agriculture are not well understood.Levi Russell | December 6, 2016
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Higher Education
State Budget Cuts Don’t Explain Tuition Increases
History is replete with examples of obvious yet incorrect answers. The sun revolves around the earth. Labor inputs determine a good’s value. Now, another example has emerged. In the aftermath of the Great Recession, an obvious—yet ultimately incorrect—explanation for the rise in college tuition has gained currency.Preston Cooper | December 2, 2016
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Education
Oklahomans Want Educational Choices
An honest reading of the public-opinion survey data over the past couple of years shows that Oklahomans favor educational choice.Brandon Dutcher | December 1, 2016
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Education
Why Schools Don't Deliver
I don’t often get great new insights when I read the work of Oklahoma edu-blogger Rob Miller. But I did have an epiphany of sorts when I recently read an article of his arguing that public schools underperform for the same reason the post office does—because meddling politicians are in charge.Greg Forster, Ph.D. | December 1, 2016
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Health Care
Free Market Friday: Policymaking vindication
Oklahoma state legislators get a lot of criticism. That goes with the job, but sometimes criticism becomes downright absurd.Jonathan Small | November 18, 2016
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Education
Coach’s Alleged Acts Raise Questions in Clinton
CLINTON—Phillip Koons has coached football in Oklahoma for more than 20 years. The majority of his time was spent at Tuttle High School where he led the Tigers to two state championships and produced a blue-chip quarterback named Jason White, who would later become a Heisman Trophy winner as an Oklahoma Sooner in 2003.Jay Chilton | November 17, 2016
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Education
Nearly 4 in 10 Oklahoma teachers would choose private or home schooling for their own children
When asked what’s the best educational choice for their own children, one might expect near unanimity from Oklahoma public school teachers. Teachers might favor their own schools not just for reasons of loyalty to one’s employer (Thunder employees don’t cheer for the Warriors), but because they have firsthand knowledge of school quality and safety.Brandon Dutcher | November 17, 2016
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Education
Survey: Most Oklahomans See Educational Choice as a Moral Right
Should parents be allowed to use the tax dollars intended for the education of their child to subsidize the cost of an education at a privately operated school? Most Oklahoma voters say yes, according to a new SoonerPoll Quarterly Poll, with regular church attenders and evangelicals expressing even stronger support.Jay Chilton | November 11, 2016