Articles
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Education
Free Market Friday: Desperate for thorough journalism
I’m old enough to remember when the “watchdog press” prided itself on keeping an eye on government. So where are the watchdogs when it comes to reporting on the government’s education systems?Jonathan Small | July 15, 2016
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Education, Law & Principles
OCPA Impact Challenges Gist of Boren Penny Tax, SQ 779 Supporters Respond
OKLAHOMA CITY – OCPA Impact, an advocacy organization associated with the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, filed a challenge to the gist of State Question 779, commonly known as the Boren Penny Tax.Jay Chilton | July 8, 2016
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Higher Education
Free Market Friday: Lower-cost college
American consumers have come to expect lower cost and higher quality (think of that miraculous-yet-affordable supercomputer you’re carrying around in your pocket). This week the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, the 1889 Institute, and former Gov. Frank Keating kicked off a conversation meant to bring the lower cost/higher quality dynamic to one place it is conspicuously lacking – higher education.Jonathan Small | July 1, 2016
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Education
SQ 779 Supporter Laments Not Having Money to Send Kids to Private School
OKLAHOMA CITY – When supporters of State Question 779 gathered at the state Capitol on June 24 to promote passage of the ballot initiative, commonly known as the Boren penny tax, one parent lamented her financial inability to send her children and grandchildren to private school.Jay Chilton | July 1, 2016
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Culture & the Family
Oklahoma Pinnacle Plan
The Oklahoma Pinnacle Plan came about as a result of the settlement of a class action lawsuit in 2012.Ed Lake | June 28, 2016
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Culture & the Family
Improvements in Child Welfare System Encouraging
Oklahoma has made a substantial and wise investment over the past four years in improving its child welfare services. I have the privilege of leading the Department of Human Services (DHS) and the opportunity to see and hear stories every day that demonstrate why we do this work with such passion. This work isn’t just about following sound and effective policies and practices; it’s about people—children, families, foster parents, and case workers.Ed Lake | June 28, 2016
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Criminal Justice
Bipartisan Consensus Emerges Around Broken Criminal Justice System
In an age of increasing political polarization, consensus is hard to come by. But sometimes when a problem is so glaring and so damaging on multiple fronts, all of us see the same thing no matter what ideological lens we are peering through. In Oklahoma, criminal justice is one of those issues.Greg Treat | June 28, 2016
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Culture & the Family
Oklahoma Faith Community Steps Up for Children and Families
Merriam-Webster’s dictionary defines “pinnacle” as the point of greatest success or achievement. Pinnacle is the word used to describe the aspirations of Oklahoma’s child welfare system as published in the “Pinnacle Plan” by the Oklahoma Department of Human Services (OKDHS). The Pinnacle Plan is the response to a federal lawsuit against the State of Oklahoma alleging chronic maltreatment of the more than 10,000 children in state custody in the child welfare system. The settlement agreement to end the lawsuit required the state to undertake extensive reforms to improve the child welfare system.Timothy Tardibono | June 28, 2016
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Culture & the Family
Walking the Talk
It started with a tug on our heartstrings. A few years ago, my wife and I began to feel called to foster after being challenged by our pastor, Craig Groeschel, and his wife, Amy. Life.Church consistently reminds its members that we’re called not to be spiritual consumers, but spiritual contributors. Stings a little, doesn’t it? Good. We saw a need, the tug was there, and it was time to act. The way to get started is to quit talking and start doing. So (after a lot of talking) that’s what we did.Matt Pinnell | June 28, 2016
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Criminal Justice
2016 Was a Great Year for Criminal Justice Reform, But There’s More to Be Done
This was a great year in Oklahoma for criminal justice reforms. Not since the passage of Justice Reinvestment legislation in 2012 have we seen such significant measures make it through the legislative process.Adam Luck | June 28, 2016