-
A summary of local and regional news from Public Radio Tulsa.
-
The measure threatens to cut state funds to entities that “knowingly” serve Oklahomans without legal immigration status. And while it explicitly exempts healthcare providers, law enforcement and public schools, Hays failed to provide an example of any organization actively violating his measure that he would like to stop.
-
“For every time that we say that it’s OK to question someone’s immigration status is another time a child or a person is getting threatened because of the way that they look,” said Patrick, who had previously walked out of a committee meeting because she found the ordinance offensive.
-
A tornado watch is in effect until 6 p.m. for Tulsa County and surrounding areas.
-
The state released an initial report Wednesday on the death of Nex Benedict.
-
More than half of Route 66 runs through tribal land, touching 13 reservations throughout the country. But the route has been marketed with stereotypes of Native Americans in years past.
-
A summary of local and regional news from Public Radio Tulsa.
-
The number of students taking tribal languages has grown by the thousands in public schools
-
The ex-police officer is the first in the nation to face harsher penalties under the 2022 reauthorization of the original act.
-
That appeal hinges on the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2020 McGirt v. Oklahoma decision, which affirmed the Muscogee Nation’s reservation was never disestablished, and its lands remain under tribal jurisdiction.
-
Tulsa's transit system unveiled its rebranding to the public at a ceremony.
-
A bill to raise Oklahoma teachers’ salaries for a second year in a row is dead, but other wage-boosting measures are still advancing at the state Capitol.