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Oklahoma CareerTech officially opened a new Skills Centers School System facility in Vinita Monday in what Lt. Gov. Matt Pinnell called “the definition of a win-win for the state of Oklahoma.”
Read moreThe city council made it official Tuesday night, voting formally to seek federal Bureau of Outdoor Recreation funds to help purchase 20 acres of land which will be adjacent to the proposed site for Seminole’s new intermediate school. Council members approved a plan of acquiring the land in a special meeting Sunday night, which involves the city purchasing 20 acres of land to be used as a municipal park and as a playground for the school, and the city’s school system acquiring five acres next to the proposed park for construction of the school. At a cost of one dollar.
Read moreAn investigation of Epic Charter School’s finances determined inexplicably poor budget management, misguided enrollment projections, a lack of transparency and too few questions asked all contributed to a fiscal crisis last school year.
Read moreOklahoma Children’s OU Health has performed an innovative new pediatric contrast-enhanced voiding urosonography (ceVUS) procedure, marking a milestone in the hospital’s expanded contrast- enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) program that increases access to safe, radiation-free imaging for children.
Read moreThe National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) Small Business Optimism Index rose 0.5 points in December to 99.5 and remained above its 52-year average of 98. Of the 10 Optimism Index components, two increased, three decreased, and five were unchanged. An increase in those expecting better business conditions primarily drove the rise in the Optimism Index. The Uncertainty Index fell 7 points from November to 84, the lowest reading since June 2024.
Read moreLocal Band Students Pass Challenging Audition
Read moreSeminole County’s unemployment rate edged up in November as compared to September, the Oklahoma Employment Security Commission (OESC) reported Friday.
Read moreSenate Democratic Leader Julia Kirt has filed a trio of bills for the 2026 session to make insurance rates in Oklahoma more affordable. Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, said her bills were the result of stories from her own constituents about challenges they faced as well as from Oklahomans across the state. Kirt said those concerns were backed up by an interim study she held last fall on insurance rates.
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