This Week in Sand Springs (6/10 - 6/17/18)

Monday

  • 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sand Springs Boys' Basketball Camp
    • Ed Dubie Field House
      500 North Adams Road

Tuesday

  • 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sand Springs Boys' Basketball Camp
    • Ed Dubie Field House
      500 North Adams Road
  • 6:00 p.m. Sandite Quarterback Club meeting.
    • Memorial Stadium team room
      500 North Adams Road
  • 6:00 p.m. OK House District 66 Candidate Forum.
    • Charles Page Library
      551 East 4th Street
  • 6:00 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. Open Wrestling Practice - All Ages. 
    • Charles Page High School
      500 North Adams Road

Wednesday

  • 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sand Springs Boys' Basketball Camp
    • Ed Dubie Field House
      500 North Adams Road
  • 7:00 p.m. The Anchormen free concert.
    • First Church of the Nazarene
      516 North Cleveland

Thursday

  • 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sand Springs Boys' Basketball Camp
    • Ed Dubie Field House
      500 North Adams Road
  • 6:00 p.m. Sand Springs Small Business Coalition meeting.
    • Pratt Library
      3219 East 113th West Avenue
  • 6:00 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. Open Wrestling Practice - All Ages. 
    • Charles Page High School
      500 North Adams Road

Friday

  • 6:30 a.m. 23rd Annual CPHS Varsity Dance Golf Tournament.
    • The Canysons at Blackjack Ridge
      1801 North McKinley
  • 6:00 p.m. Mayor's Cup Softball Tournament.
    • Admission $5 or equal value in non-perishable food items/school supplies. 
    • To enter your team contact 918.693.1484.
    • Will Ramsey Softball Complex
      2500 South River City Park Road
  • 7:00 p.m. Stories of Haiti with missionaries Michael and Baylee Wilson.
    • Word of Life
      1402 North 81st West Avenue 
  • 7:30 p.m. Halo Jordan free concert with Jim Barritt and Roger Rister.
    • 5 West Outpost
      5 West 41st Street

Saturday

  • 8:00 a.m. The Priesthood bike club Men's Breakfast.
    • Angus Church
      4401 South 129th West Avenue.
  • 1:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Tulsa Parade of Homes
    • The Glens at Shenandoah - WSB Homes.
      424 East 48th Street
    • Stone Creek Estates III - Concept Builders.
      5326 Skylane Drive
    • Teal Ridge - Concept Builders. 
      1813 East 43rd Street
    • Teal Ridge - Gibson Homes.
      4314 Teal Ridge Road
      4308 South Woodland Avenue
  • 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Pokemon Go! Community Day
  • 7:30 p.m. Halo Jordan free concert with Jim Barritt, Roger Rister, and Mark Staggs.
    • 5 West Outpost
      5 West 41st Street

Sunday

  • Father's Day
  • 1:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Tulsa Parade of Homes
    • The Glens at Shenandoah - WSB Homes.
      424 East 48th Street
    • Stone Creek Estates III - Concept Builders.
      5326 Skylane Drive
    • Teal Ridge - Concept Builders. 
      1813 East 43rd Street
    • Teal Ridge - Gibson Homes.
      4314 Teal Ridge Road
      4308 South Woodland Avenue

Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

House District 66 candidates focus on education at Sand Springs Chamber forum

Left to right: Jadine Nollan, Angela Graham, Brian Jackson, Emily Delozier. Not pictured: Rusty Rowe.

All five candidates for Oklahoma House District 66 spoke at a forum sponsored by the Sand Springs Chamber of Commerce Monday afternoon at the Tulsa Tech Sand Springs campus. 

Three Republicans and two Democrats spoke on issues ranging from infrastructure to mental health, but the focal point of the luncheon was the state of public education funding. 

Democrat Angela Graham is a Pre-K teacher, lifelong Sandite, and Charles Page High School graduate. 

"We have a broken legislature...that has chosen to stop fighting for us," says Graham, who is running on a heavy education platform and hopes to bring raises to Oklahoma teachers and support staff.

Additionally she wants to see all Oklahomans with health insurance, and wants to reduce statewide incarceration particularly among the female population. A big point for Graham is to undo Oklahoma’s “right-to-work” status and strengthen labor unions.

Democrat Rusty Rowe is a former restaurateur, owning and operating Mod's Coffee and Crepes in downtown Tulsa for seven years before closing shop in December of last year. He lives with his wife of ten years and two children in northwest Tulsa. 

"I decided to run because I feel like our current group of legislators have been given opportunities to invest in teachers, students, working class people, and small business owners like myself, and it seems like they often put the needs of their donors before the needs of their people," said Rowe. "I want someone who's listening to the entire district. Not just the Republicans, not just the Democrats - everybody."

"I've been talking to a doctorate of economics...a mayor, city officials, the chief of police, city planners, teachers, school administrators - to make sure that when I say something, it's been researched and I have some teeth to it. I'm not just armchair quarterbacking things."

Current Sand Springs City Councilman and former Senate District 37 candidate Brian Jackson is running as a Republican. Jackson is the Development Manager at Junior Achievement of Eastern Oklahoma and his wife is a public school teacher in Sand Springs. His daughter also attends Sand Springs Public Schools. 

"We need a representative that doesn't give up, that will go against the political parties and remember it's about the people," says Jackson.

Jackson was censured by the Republican Party of Tulsa County during the 2016 Senate race for vowing to support Democratic candidate Lloyd Snow against Republican incumbent Dan Newberry, who Jackson considered to be anti-education. The Oklahoma Republican Party's State Central Committee voted in May to uphold a ban preventing Jackson from accessing the OKGOP Datacenter Program.

Republican Emily Delozier is a fourth generation Sandite with a Bachelor's degree in business from the University of Tulsa and three Associate of the Arts degrees from Tulsa Community College. 

Delozier spoke in opposition of raising taxes, and in favor of consolidating school districts to eliminate administrative overhead and return education dollars to the classroom. 

Incumbent Republican Jadine Nollan is a lifelong Sandite and former Sand Springs Board of Education member. She spoke regarding her past eight years in office and the difficulties the legislature has overcome during her tenure.

"When I was elected in 2011, our country was in a national recession...Oklahoma went into an oil bust...we had pensions that were failing...we had crumbling roads and bridges...we had a worker's compensation system that was one of the most expensive in the nation, we had a capitol building that had been neglected and was unsafe," said Nollan. "We were not tracking any of our tax credits, evaluating them, measuring them, or monitoring them at that point...We had a revenue problem and we were not going to be able to cut our way out of it, though a lot of people still believe that we could."

Nollan pointed to the Oklahoma Incentives Commission, the Energy Stabilization Fund, the Governor's Closing Fund, a revamp of the worker's compensation system, the rainy-day fund, an eight-year plan for transportation, and the Capitol remodel as legislative successes.

According to Nollan, State pension funds are all nearing solvency and the Oklahoma Tax Commission is developing a real-time dashboard to measure and monitor tax credits online. 

Nollan holds a 93% rating from the Research Institute for Economic Development, a 100% rating from the National Federation of Independent Businesses, a 50% rating on The Oklahoma Constitution conservative index, a 100% rating from Oklahomans for Life, a 59% rating from the American Conservative Union, a "Pro-Public Education" assessment from Oklahoma Parents and Educators for Public Education, an "F" on the Sierra Club environmental scorecard, and an "A" on the Oklahoma Second Amendment Association scorecard. 

All candidates but Delozier vowed not to sign the Oklahoma Taxpayers United referendum petition overturning a historic revenue bill passed this past legislative session to fund teacher pay raises. If the petition garners 42,000 signatures by July 18, a State Question will appear on the November ballots asking Oklahoma voters to veto the package. 

HB1010xx is expected to raise $447 million in annual revenue by increasing the gross production tax to 5% on all new oil wells, increasing the cigarette tax by $1 per pack, increasing the gasoline tax by three cents, and increasing the diesel tax by six cents. The money is intended to fund pay raises averaging more than $6,000 for Oklahoma public school teachers.

An opinion published by the Oklahoma Attorneys General states that if HB1010xx is overturned, teacher pay raises will remain intact, but the funding mechanism will be removed and legislators will have to find other ways to back the raises. 

Not only has Delozier signed the petition she is also an active member of Oklahoma Taxpayers Unite and has copies of the petition available for signatures. 

"You don't want something that's going to raise the price of all goods," said Delozier. "It's not good for Oklahoma. We still have people trying to get on their feet and get a job. You can't raise the price of hauling everything and not expect to raise the price of everything."

The primary election will be held June 26th with the deadline to request absentee ballots set for June 20th at 5:00 p.m. Early Voting will be the 21st-22nd from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and the 23rd from 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. 

This Week in Sand Springs (6/3 - 6/10/18)

Monday

  • 11:30 a.m. Sand Springs Chamber of Commerce Open Forum - House District 66 candidates.
    • Tulsa Tech - Sand Springs Campus
      924 East Charles Page Boulevard
  • 6:00 p.m. Sand Springs Parks Advisory Bord meeting.

Tuesday

  • 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. 1st Tuesday on the Triangle.
    • Free Concert featuring Stormy Miller with Brian Parker and Let Slip The Dogs.
    • Sand Springs Triangle Park
      4 East Broadway Street

Friday

  • 7:00 p.m. Friday Flicks: "Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle."
    • Case Community Park
      2500 South River City Park Road

Saturday

  • 7:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. 28th Annual Kids' Free Fishing Derby.
    • Sand Springs Lake
      1401 East Park Road
  • 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Open Hike Day.
    • Keystone Ancient Forest
      160 Ancient Forest Drive
  • 2:00 p.m. 15th Annual Sand Springs Rotary Bass Tournament.
    • Keystone Lake - Prairie View Boat Ramp

Sunday

  • 2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. Tulsa Boys' Home Equine Demonstration.
    • Tulsa Boys' Home
      2727 South 137th West Avenue

Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

New trail soon to begin along Highway 97 in south Sand Springs

The Park Road Trail connecting Adams Road with the Sand Springs Lake is nearing completion. 

Sand Springs, OK - The City of Sand Springs announced Thursday that a new trail improvement project is scheduled to begin next week. The HWY 97 Trail Extension Project is funded in part by the Oklahoma Department of Transportation and is designed to connect Sand Springs' vast trail network from 34th Street to 41st Street in south Sand Springs. All of the trail's routing will align on the eastern side of HWY 97.

"This is an important link for trail connectivity," stated City Engineer Derek Campbell. "As we move toward even greater trail synchronization with existing trail segments in Sand Springs, this link allows trail users to navigate in our town from north to south in a safe, well planned route."

The trail's construction is slated to commence on Monday, June 4, and should last 120 calendar days, barring any weather delays. The trail surface will be ten (10') foot wide and will be constructed of concrete. During the trail's construction there will be temporary closures at some commercial entrance drives which are connected to HWY 97. The construction plans instruct the contractor to keep at least one lane of each entrance open at all times during the work.

Citizens may have recently noticed the nearly completed Park Road Trail project, which also serves to better trail access within the community.

For information, photos and project updates on this trail project and other improvements around the Sand Springs community please follow the City of Sand Springs page on Facebook.

This Week in Sand Springs (5/27 - 6/3/18)

Monday

  • Memorial Day.

Saturday

  • 7:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Chipper Days.
    • Bring tree limbs up to 2 inches in diameter to the Street Department for free chipping. Free wood chips and firewood while supplies last. City water/refuse bill required.
    • 8620 West 21st Street.

Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

Friday is voter registration deadline for State Primary Election

(Oklahoma City) – The deadline to register for the June 26 State Primary Election is fast approaching, Oklahoma State Election Board Secretary Paul Ziriax said Tuesday.

Voters have until Friday, June 1 to register to vote, change their address or update other registration information before the Statewide Primary. 

Voter registration forms, used to change any registration information, can be downloaded from the Oklahoma State Election Board’s website at http://elections.ok.gov. They are also available at county election boards, post offices, tag agencies, libraries and some other public locations. 

Voters must either register in person or mail their registration forms and have them postmarked before the deadline. 

The State Primary Election will allow voters to pick the nominees for various federal, state and county offices for November’s General Election. State Question 788, which would legalize medical marijuana, is also on the Statewide Primary ballot. In primary races with more than two candidates where no one receives a majority of the votes, runoffs will be held Aug. 28.

Oklahoma’s primary system is typically closed, meaning only those registered in the party can vote in the party’s elections. But the law allows recognized parties to notify the State Election Board if they would like to let Independents vote in their primaries. Democrats have chosen to allow Independents to vote in their primaries and runoff primaries in 2018 and 2019. Independents cannot vote in Republican or Libertarian primaries.

Independent voters who want to vote a Democratic ballot will be able to request one at their polling location or by indicating they would like to receive such ballots via mail when they make an absentee ballot request.

Voters can check their party affiliation, polling place and other registration information, view a sample ballot and track absentee ballots using the Online Voter Tool on the State Election Board’s website. It can be accessed at http://elections.ok.gov

Proposed golf course cell tower draws controversy at City Council

Monday night's monthly Sand Springs City Council meeting focused heavily on a controversial cell tower in the works at the Canyons at Blackjack Ridge golf course.

The municipal golf course owned by the City has been approached by Branch Communications, who wants to build an 85-foot cellular tower for AT&T on golf course property. The "stealth tower" is designed to resemble a pine tree and would not obstruct fairways.

According to Branch VP Mark Kenser, AT&T previously had an antenna atop the McKinley Water Tower for twenty years, but was denied a lease renewal.

Kesner said the company has been looking for a location for a new tower for two years, but has been severely limited due to topography and zoning restrictions. 

According to Kesner, the tower needs to be within a half-mile of its current location, and very little of that area is usable. Multiple private land owners have been approached, but none were interested in leasing or selling property. 

Kesner says AT&T would prefer to build a 150 ft. tower but dropped to eighty due to Municipal and citizen aesthetic concerns. 150 feet would be necessary to maintain current coverage, and eighty feet will offer the poorest coverage allowed by federal regulations. 

Several citizens spoke in opposition to the tower due to the obstruction it would impose on the natural view. Bill Denton, a residential developer, was concerned about the impact the tower will have on his property value and ability to sell homes.

Realtor Diane Robbins said she owns enough land for a thirty-plot subdivision, which already has a preliminary plat. She was also concerned about the impact the tower would have on property value. Realtor Dana Box echoed Robbins' comments.

Former City Councilman Dean Nichols spoke on behalf of Councilwoman Patty Dixon, who was absent due to a family medical emergency. According to Nichols, Dixon was firmly against the tower but was unable to be present for the vote.

Nichols also asserted that the income the City will be receiving from AT&T is far less than it should be when compared to what other companies have been known to pay. If the agreement with Branch is approved, the City will lease the property for $1,200 per month.

According to City Attorney David Weatherford, the question on the agenda was specifically regarding whether or not the tower was an appropriate use of land, and did not actually affirm a contract with the company. 

City ordinances require Antenna and Supporting Structures go through a Specific Use Permit process to prevent objectionable uses of land where zoning wouldn't specifically prohibit the placement of said equipment. 

If the tower is built, it would also have room to hold up to three additional carriers.

In other news:

Municipal Judge Tom Askew administered the Oath of Office to three new police officers. Jerrod Raglin, William Paarmann, and Cody Ziegler were sworn in with the Sand Springs Police Department.

Council unanimously approved a supplemental appropriation of $207,250 from the Water Utility Fund to pave the parking lot at Jerry Adair Baseball Park in Case Community Park. Voters approved the project as part of a general obligation bond package in 2017, but the bonds have yet to be sold to fund it. 

Council unanimously passed an ordinance allowing the City Municipal Court to try misdemeanor drug offenses, rather than sending them to the County for prosecution. Police Chief Mike Carter believes offenders will get more contact and help at the local level.

Council unanimously voted to greenlight a pilot program for traffic signage in residential neighborhoods. The City will begin placing signs with parking restrictions at the entrances to housing additions rather than along the streets. 

Council unanimously approved $382,249 for the purchase of a new wastewater vacuum/jet rodder truck. Citizens voted to fund the purchase in a November 2017 general obligation bond issue.

Council unanimously approved a $50,000 contract with Crawford & Associates for accounting and consulting services. 

Council unanimously approved a $34,160 contract with Arledge and Associates, P.C. to audit the City finances. 

Council unanimously approved the 2018 Sand Springs Police Department Policing Plan. 

Council unanimously approved an increase of $32,835 to an existing $317,179 contract with Sapulpa Digging, Inc. for the 2018 Sanitary Sewer Line Rehabilitation Project. 

Council unanimously approved a $54,305 one-year extension to an existing agreement with the Metropolitan Tulsa Transit Authority for bus transit services in the Sand Springs area. 

Council unanimously approved the Final Plat for the Rivercrest Addition, a fourteen-lot 4.82-acre subdivision near East 31st Place and South 113th West Avenue.

Council unanimously voted to appoint Mike Burdge, Brian Jackson, and Patty Dixon to the the Council Appointment Committee.

Council unanimously voted to appoint Burdge, Dixon, and Jim Spoon to the Council Finance and Development Committee. 

Council unanimously voted to appoint Dixon, Spoon, and Christine Hamner to the Council Legislative Committee. 

Council unanimously voted to appoint Hamner, Beau Wilson, and Phil Nollan to the Council Public Works Advisory Committee.

Council unanimously voted to appoint Arron Montross and Kathe Crapster to the Parks Advisory Board. 

Council unanimously voted to appoint Burdge to the Indian Nations Council on Governments (INCOG) Board of Directors with City Manager Elizabeth Gray as an alternate. 

Council unanimously voted to appoint Burdge to the INCOG General Assembly with Gray as an alternate.

Council unanimously voted to appoint Burdge to the INCOG Legislative Consortium with Gray as an alternate.

Council unanimously voted to appoint Jackson to the INCOG Tulsa Metropolitan Area Transportation Policy Committee.

Council unanimously voted to appoint Wilson to the Sand Springs Economic Development Authority Trust. 

Council unanimously approved the Fiscal Year 2019 Master Fee Schedule. 

The Sand Springs Municipal Authority meeting was held after City Council.

Municipal Trustees unanimously approved a thirty-year ground-lease contract with Ullrich Aviation at $3,531.33 per year for fifteen T-Hangars at Pogue Airport.

Trustees unanimously voted to appoint Joe Stephenson and David Kvach to the Airport Advisory Board.

Trustees unanimously voted to appoint Elizabeth Gray and Derek Henley to the Sand Springs/Sapulpa Joint Board. 

This Week in Sand Springs (5/20 - 5/27/18)

Monday

Tuesday

  • 7:30 a.m. Breakfast with County Commissioner Karen Keith.
    • Crescent Cafe
      3417 South 113th West Avenue

Wednesday

  • 8:30 a.m. Garfield Elementary 4th Grade Awards Assembly
    • Garfield Gymnasium
      701 North Roosevelt Avenue

Saturday


Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

Tulsa restaurateur Rusty Rowe campaigns for Oklahoma House District 66

On Monday, April 9th, nearly two hundred female attorneys descended on the Oklahoma State Capitol building to lobby on behalf of public educators. Among them was University of Tulsa student Colleen McCarty, whose trip to Oklahoma City inspired her husband, Rusty Rowe, to make the drive two days later. 

Rowe, 35, took the opportunity to file for candidacy in the race for State Representative of District 66. He will take on Angela Graham in the Democratic primary on June 26. Sandite Pride News recently sat down for an interview with Rowe.

Rowe and McCarty will celebrate their tenth anniversary in July. The two have a six-year-old daughter and an eighteen-month boy. The couple owned and operated Mod's Coffee and Crepes in downtown Tulsa for seven years before closing in December. During his time in the restaurant industry Rowe was Vice President on the Art Deco District Owners Association Board for six years. 

"I've been running other peoples' restaurants and my own restaurants for fifteen years and I never really had time to jump into the political realm. This is the first time everything really lined up and I felt a calling to do more than I've been doing."

Rowe identifies as a moderate, and has voted for both republicans and democrats in recent elections. "If it's a good idea, I don't care if there's an 'R' or a 'D' next to your name. It should be supported and fleshed out." 

"I don't think they did enough," said Rowe, regarding the most recent legislative session.

Last month Governor Mary Fallin signed into law House Bill 1010xx, creating $447 million in new revenue and generating an average pay raise of $6,100 for public school teachers.

"The only reason it's historic that it got that much, is because of how much they've cut out of education," claims Rowe. "They lowered the budget 28%, and now they're bragging about raising it 19%. That's not an accomplishment."

Education isn't the only department to take a hit in Oklahoma. According to the Oklahoma Policy Institute, the Fiscal Year 2017 budget is 15% less across the board than the budget for 2007 when adjusted for inflation. In that stretch of time, Oklahoma public school enrollment has risen by 50,000.

"We don't have reliable revenue sources anymore. You need to be investing in things that bring in money. If you don't have a good education system, you don't have people getting good-paying jobs and buying things. That's our two biggest sources of revenue, income tax and sales tax."

Rowe was also wary of HB3375, legalizing craps and roulette at tribal casinos, and an increased cigarette tax included in HB1010xx. "I'm happy for any revenue streams, but we're counting on people's addictions to fund our state, while battling addiction. It doesn't seem sustainable."

Consolidation of school districts is a cost-saving solution often proposed by Oklahoma conservatives, and is something Rowe is at least willing to consider.

"I think we need to look at everything, every aspect of it. Look at what other states have done that have had success. Base it off proven policies, not just armchair quarterbacking."

"I'm not opposed to looking at how many superintendents we have over how many schools. There's probably consolidation that would help. I don't want to consolidate actual schools, because a lot of time schools are the identity of the town."

"But, if there's a superintendent that could be over multiple schools and the data proves that it would not hurt the schools and would save money to do that, I think that's worth looking into."

Criminal Justice Reform was another cornerstone of Rowe's concerns. 

"We need to up revenues everywhere we can, and a lot of the time that's not raising taxes. My father went to drug court for a DUI. He would get called in randomly for tests to see if he had anything to drink. It removes the danger he posed, but it kept him in his community. If he would have went to prison, when he got out he wouldn't have his apartment, he wouldn't have his job, and he'd be in poverty."

"Instead of making him a tax burden forever and making us pay to house him, he continued to work, continued to buy groceries, continued to generate income tax, continued to generate sales tax, and continued to pay into the system and into his community."

Regarding medical marijuana, Rowe believes it should legalized and regulated similarly to any other prescription medication. Not a recreational marijuana advocate, he is open to legalization with regulations similar to those leveled against cigarettes and alcohol.

Rowe is a big proponent of social services due to his own familial reliance on government assistance during his childhood.

"My parents got a divorce and my mom raised my brother and me. She had to use Emergency Infant Services to get me diapers and formula. She had to use Domestic Violence Intervention Services. She's an extremely strong person. She asked for help when she needed it, and she was able to work her way up to not needing it anymore."

Rowe wants to bring reform to government assistance programs and introduce sliding scales for assistance based on income, so recipients don't need to maintain low income to receive help. 

He splits with his party on minimum wage, believing that the "Fight for $15" campaign is unrealistic and should be somewhere closer to $10-12.

"I owned a small business. Mom and Pop shops can't afford to pay somebody $15 an hour. You're going to shut down small businesses, bigger businesses are going to automate half their workforce, so you've just had a big net loss of jobs."

Rowe believes in ending tax incentives for the wind energy industry now that farms have been built throughout the state. 

"When I owned a restaurant, I wouldn't put my best-selling menu item on sale. People are already buying that. You take the new one that you want people to get interested in, and you put that on sale. And that sale only lasts a certain amount of time."

He also wants to raise gross production tax on new oil wells to 7% and wants the government to avoid subsidizing dips in the oil industry. 

"It's not the government's job to bail out your company because you didn't do what other companies have to do and pivot. Take your welders that are used to building pipelines, have them build wind farms. Take your engineers that are used to building loops, have them start working on solar efficiency. A company needs to be smart and start investing in that other stuff."

"People are different, but there are some core things that we all share. We all want safety for ourselves and our family. We all want the opportunity to pursue our own happiness. These are common things that both sides want."

Of the 125 legislative seats up for election this year, nineteen candidates filed completely unopposed and 99 filed unopposed within their party. Three Republicans filed for the District 66 seat, including incumbent Jadine Nollan. 

All five candidates for District 66 will be speaking at the Sand Springs Chamber of Commerce Open Forum on June 4th at Tulsa Tech's Sand Springs campus at 12:00 p.m. Rib Crib will be catered in and RSVP is required. Contact kristen@sandspringschamber.com to reserve your seat. 

This Week in Sand Springs (5/13 - 5/20/18)

Sunday

  • Mother's Day

Monday

  • Sand Springs Board of Adjustment Meeting CANCELED.
  • 4:00 p.m. Sand Springs Planning Commission Meeting.

Tuesday

  • 4:30 p.m. Sandite Freshman/Summer Baseball Tryouts.
    • Sandite Baseball Complex
      412 West 55th Street
  • 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Paint your own Blue Dog - fundraiser.
    • Cost $25/person.
    • Northwoods Fine Arts Academy
      1691 Old North Road
  • 6:00 p.m. Sand Springs Cultural and Historical Museum Trust Authority Meeting.
  • 6:30 p.m. Charles Page High School Band Banquet
    • Charles Page High School Cafeteria
      500 North Adams Road

Wednesday

  • 4:00 p.m. Sand Springs Development Authority Meeting.
    • Agenda not available by press time.
    • Sand Springs Municipal Building, Room 203
      100 East Broadway

Saturday

  • 6:00 a.m. 3rd Annual Wounded Veterans of Oklahoma Fishing Derby.
  • 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Open Hike Day.
  • 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Pokemon Community Day.

Sunday


Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

Sam Childers presented Outstanding Citizenship Award, Burdge reelected as Mayor

Sam Childers was posthumously recognized with the John M. Hess Award for Outstanding Citizenship at Monday evening's Sand Springs City Council meeting. Childers' daughter was on hand to receive the award.

Childers served on the Sand Springs City Council, Municipal Authority, Citizens' Water Study Committee, Planning Commission, and the Pogue Airport Advisory Board over several decades. He passed away in January of this year.

An early backer of the Keystone Ancient Forest campaign, Childers donated land to the conservation and has a trail named in his honor. The Childers family trust recently pledged to donate $7,500 for the naming rights to a visitors' center planned at the preserve. 

Municipal Judge Tom Askew administered the oath of office to Councilors Beau Wilson, Brian Jackson, and James Spoon, who were recently elected to three-year terms ending May 2021. 

Mike Burdge was unanimously reelected to a one-year term as Mayor for the thirteenth time since taking office in 1996. Phil Nollan was unanimously elected to his first one-year term as Vice Mayor. 

City Manager Elizabeth Gray presented each member of City Council with a small commemorative memento in recognition of their hard work. City Council is an elected volunteer position and members do not receive compensation. 

In other news:

Council unanimously approved $45,065.00 for the purchase and installation of a new Court Management software system at the Billie A. Hall Public Safety Center, funded by a 2017 public safety bond.

Council unanimously approved $49,512.00 for the purchase of fifteen Noptic NV3 cameras with LED spotlights for police patrol cars, funded by a 2017 public safety bond.

Council unanimously approved $25,420.70 of public safety bond funds for the purchase of an IRecord Universe IP Turnkey Recording System. The system will be installed at the Billie A. Hall Public Safety Center interview rooms.

Council unanimously approved $137,715.21 of general obligation bond funding for the purchase of new Network Infrastructure and Firewall hardware.

Council unanimously approved a $190,332.00 agreement with Craig and Keithline for services relating to infrastructure planning at the Sheffield Crossing Development. 

Board of Education approves new wrestling and girls' basketball coaches

The Sand Springs Public School District Board of Education presented more than twenty awards during their Monday night regularly monthly meeting.

Remington Wagner was presented with a Sandite Spirit Award in recognition of her All-Region Cheer Team achievement. Wagner is signed to cheer at Southwestern Christian University next year and will study Kinesiology. 

Colt Savage was presented with a Sandite Spirit Award for his success with the boys' basketball team. Savage concluded his high school career as a four-time All Conference player and was named the 2017-2018 Oklahoma Basketball Coaches Association Player of the Year for Region 7. He led his team in scoring for two seasons and averaged 20.58 points per game as a senior. He will play for the University of Central Oklahoma next season. 

Eric Savage was presented with a Pacesetter Award in recognition of his success with the Sandite Basketball Team. Savage wrapped up his fifth season as Head Coach with the first State Tournament appearance for Sand Springs since 1963 and was named the Frontier Valley Conference Coach of the Year. He holds a 65-62 record in Sand Springs and a career record of 370-155. After winning three 5A State Titles at Tulsa Memorial High School, he took over a Sandite program that had only won one game the year before. 

Jeff Cooper was presented with a Pacesetter Award. Cooper was awarded the Oklahoma Basketball Coaches Association "Friends of Basketball" award and was named the Region 7 Junior High Coach of the Year.

Barbie Jackson was presented with a Pacesetter Award for her work with the Sand Springs Education Association during the last legislative session and teacher walkout. "(Jackson) worked tirelessly to keep everyone informed," said Board member Krista Polanski. "Barbie has a big heart and she puts all of her heart into everything she does."

Shawn Beard, Sherry Durkee, Karen Biggs, Laura Hamilton, Ernie Kothe, Angelia Noel, Nancy Ogle, Sean Parker, Sherry Pearson, Renee Plant, Russell Ragland, Danese Tanner, Stan Trout, Kristin Arnold, Rob Miller, and Greg Morris were all presented with Sandite Coins of Excellence for their work during the teacher walkout. 

Superintendent Sherry Durkee spoke on the difficulty the schools are facing regarding the teacher pay raise package passed by the Oklahoma Legislature during the last session. 

The political action group Oklahoma Taxpayers Unite has filed a veto referendum petition to put House Bill 1010xx to a vote of the people. If the petition garners 41,000 signatures by July 18, Oklahoma voters will decide whether to approve or veto the bill, which provides funding for a $6,100 average pay raise for Oklahoma teachers. 

HB1010xx is expected to raise $447 million in revenue by increasing the gross production tax to 5% on all oil wells, increasing the cigarette tax by $1 per pack, increasing the gasoline tax by three cents, and increasing the diesel tax by six cents. 

If the petition succeeds, the question of whether to approve HB1010xx won't appear on ballots until the November election. With the school year beginning in August, schools are waiting on an Attorney General ruling on whether or not the districts should enact teacher raises for this school year.

If schools enact raises in August and voters reject HB1010xx in November, it would create a massive revenue shortage for districts across the state. Teacher pay raises will cost the Sand Springs district nearly $3 million in the next school year.

In other news:

Charles Page High School will host a new interior design program in partnership with Tulsa Tech during the next school year. 

Superintendent Durkee said she's pleased with the applicant pool the district recently had for several high profile positions. The District recently began accepting applications for Head Girls' Basketball Coach, Head Wrestling Coach, Head Volleyball Coach, and Assistant Superintendent of Curriculum. 

The Board approved the hiring of new Head Coaches for Wrestling and Girls' Basketball.

Tobey Nightingale will take over the Lady Sandite Basketball team after coaching Hennessey High School to a 9-16 record at the 3A level last season. The Lady Sandites are coming off an 18-8 season and back-to-back State Tournament appearances. 

Jarrod Patterson will take over a Sandite Wrestling program that placed third in the State Tournament in 2018 and won State and Dual State titles in 2017. The Sandites finished last season with a 13-4 dual record and won 25-straight duals over two seasons. 

Ryan Skaggs, owner/operator of Precision Outdoor Services, spoke regarding the bidding process for lawncare services in the school district. According to Skaggs, his company underbid the existing provider by $6,000, but his competitor was allowed to rebid to undercut Precision. Skaggs called on the district to go to a sealed bidding process in the future. 

The district is in the process of implementing "Crisis Go," an emergency system that alerts staff, students, parents, and law enforcement of any potential threat on campus. Durkee expects to have the system fully online by the next school year. 

Assistant Superintendent Rob Miller is in his last month with the Sand Springs district and will be taking over as Superintendent of Bixby Public Schools on June 1st. 

The Charles Page Class of 2018 graduation ceremonies will be held Saturday, May 12th at 7:30 p.m. at the Oral Roberts University Mabee Center.

This Week in Sand Springs (5/6 - 5/13/18)

Monday

  • 8:00 a.m. Sandite Tennis Regionals (A).
    • Union Intermediate High School
      7616 South Garnett Road
      Broken Arrow, OK 74012
  • 8:00 a.m. OSSAA 6A Golf State Tournament.
    • Forest Ridge Golf Club
      7501 East Kenosha Street
      Broken Arrow, OK 74014
  • 8:30 a.m. 38th Annual Frank R. Rhoades Golf Classic.
    • Benefiting Tulsa Boys' Home in Sand Springs.
    • The Patriot Golf Club
      5790 North Patriot Drive
      Owasso, OK 74055
  • 12:00 p.m. Sand Springs Chamber of Commerce Open Forum.
    • Tulsa Tech - Sand Springs Campus
      924 East Charles Page Boulevard
  • 7:00 p.m. Sand Springs City Council meeting.
  • 7:00 p.m. Sand Springs Board of Education meeting.

Tuesday

  • 8:30 a.m. 38th Annual Frank R. Rhoades Golf Classic.
    • Benefiting Tulsa Boys' Home in Sand Springs.
    • The Patriot Golf Club
      5790 North Patriot Drive
      Owasso, OK 74055

Thursday

  • 5:30 p.m. Sand Springs Airport Advisory Board Meeting.

Friday

  • 8:00 a.m. OSSAA 6A State Tennis Tournament.
    • Oklahoma City Tennis Center
      3400 North Portland Avenue
      Oklahoma City, OK 73112
  • 10:00 a.m. OSSAA 6A State Track Meet.
    • Yukon High School
      1777 South Yukon Parkway
      Yukon, OK 73099
  • 7:00 p.m. Movie on the Lawn: "Coco"
    • Case Community Park
      2500 South River City Park Road

Saturday

  • 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Hike With Your Dog Day!
  • 8:00 a.m. OSSAA 6A State Tennis Tournament.
    • Oklahoma City Tennis Center
      3400 North Portland Avenue
      Oklahoma City, OK 73112
  • 11:00 a.m. 2nd Annual Sand Springs Women's Chamber Tea Party
    • First Presbyterian Church
      222 North Adams Road
  • 12:00 p.m. OSSAA 6A State Track Meet.
    • Yukon High School
      1777 South Yukon Parkway
      Yukon, OK 73099
  • 7:00 p.m. Charles Page High School Graduation.
    • Mabee Center
      7777 South Lewis Avenue
      Tulsa, OK 74171
  • 10:00 p.m. Senior Celebration.
    • Case Community Center
      1050 West Wekiwa Road

Sunday

  • Mother's Day.

Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

This Week in Sand Springs (4/29 - 5/6/18)

Sunday

  • 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. 2nd Annual Country Craft Show
    • Pleasant Valley Farms
      2350 West 71st Street South

Monday

  • 8:00 a.m. Sandite Golf Regionals (A)
    • Bailey Ranch Golf Course
      10105 Larkin Bailey Boulevard
      Owasso, OK 74055
  • 8:00 a.m. Lady Sandite Tennis Regionals (A)
    • Union Intermediate High School
      7616 South Garnett Road
      Broken Arrow, OK 74012

Tuesday 

  • 7:00 p.m. Clyde Boyd Middle School Band Spring Concert
    • Clyde Boyd Middle School - Auditorium
      305 West 35th Street

Wednesday

  • 8:40 a.m. - 9:20 a.m. Welcome to the Sixth Grade meeting
    • Sixth Grade Center
      305 West 35th Place South
  • 9:00 a.m. Girls Golf State Championship (A)
    • Hillcrest Country Club
      1901 Price Road
      Bartlesville, OK 74006
  • 12:30 p.m. Sandite Baseball vs. Sapulpa (Regionals)
    • Owasso High School
      12901 East 86th Street North
      Owasso, OK 74055
  • 3:00 p.m. Sandite Baseball vs. Owasso (Regionals)
    • Owasso High School
      12901 East 86th Street North
      Owasso, OK 74055

Thursday

  • National Day of Prayer
    • 7:00 a.m. Sand Springs Ministerial Alliance prayer meeting
      • Word of Life
        1402 North 81st West Avenue
    • 8:00 a.m. Sand Springs Small Business Alliance prayer meeting
      • Triangle Park
        4 East Broadway
  • Time TBA - Sandite Baseball Regional Tournament Day Two
    • Owasso High School
      12901 East 86th Street North
      Owasso, OK 74055
  • 9:00 a.m. Girls Golf State Championship (A)
    • Hillcrest Country Club
      1901 Price Road
      Bartlesville, OK 74006

Friday

  • 100 Mile Yard Sale
  • 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sandite Soccer Booster Club Yard Sale
    • 3 East 32nd Place
  • 11:00 a.m. Sand Springs Chamber of Commerce Annual Golf Tournament
    • The Canyons at Blackjack Ridge
      1801 North McKinley Road

Saturday

  • 100 Mile Yard Sale
  • 7:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Chipper Days
    • Free chipping of tree limbs up to 2 inches in diameter.
      Free mulch and firewood while supplies last.
      Must bring water bill as proof of residency. 
    • Sand Springs Street Department
      8620 West 21st Street
  • 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sandite Soccer Booster Club Yard Sale
    • 3 East 32nd Place
  • 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Open Hike Day
  • 9:30 a.m. Sandite Track & Field Regional Tournament (A)
    • Tahlequah High School
      591 Pendleton Street
      Tahlequah, OK 74464
  • 1:30 p.m. Tulsa Boys' Home Run for the Roses

Sunday

  • 1:00 p.m. Tulsa Jolt Jackpot Golf Classic
    • The Canyons at Blackjack Ridge
      1801 North McKinley Avenue

Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

Sand Springs City Council plans for major infrastructure, new commercial development

The former Gerdau steel mill is now prime commercial real estate being marketed by the City of Sand Springs.

The City of Sand Springs moved forward with plans for a major expansion and improvement project on Main Street at Monday night's City Council Meeting.

The passage of Resolution No. 18-41 authorized the City to deposit $944,748 with the Oklahoma Department of Transportation as the City's 20% share of the project. 

The Design Agreement dates back to 2008 and the project will finally go to bid in August. Sand Springs Project Administrator T.J. Davis expects to see dirt work begin by the end of the year.

Main Street will be reconstructed from Third Street to its current terminus at 404 South Main Street, and will be extended west to a new intersection at Highway 97. 

A frontage road will also be constructed from Main Street to the Highway 412 on-ramp at Lincoln Avenue. 

Council also passed a resolution regarding the development of Sheffield Crossing, a plot of land recently purchased by the City with the goal of retail and commercial development. 

The eighteen-acre development is located West of Highway 97 between Morrow Road and the Arkansas River. Much of the land will be preserved with the goal of attracting a home improvement store such as Lowe's or Home Depot, but City leadership will consider other proposals in the meantime.

The passage of Ordinance No. 1316 declares the land as surplus and authorizes the City to sell the property at Council and Manager's discretion. 

Council also passed Ordinance No. 1317 declaring as surplus a fourteen-acre plot of land on the Southwest corner of 129th West Avenue and West Wekiwa Road, also with the goal of commercial development. 

In Other News: 

  • Council unanimously voted to reappoint Municipal Judge Michael King and Assistant Judges R. Jay McAtee and Thomas Askew to two-year terms. 
  • Council unanimously voted to reappoint Larry Johnston to a three-year term on the Board of Adjustment.
  • Council unanimously voted to reappoint Patty Dixon to a three-year term on the Planning Commission.
  • Council unanimously voted to reappoint Ronald Cloud to a three-year term on the Parks Advisory Board.
  • Council unanimously voted to cast votes for Ponca City Manager Craig Stephenson and Bartlesville City Manager Mike Bailey to serve on the Oklahoma Municipal Assurance Group Board of Trustees for a three-year term.
  • Council unanimously voted to approve the Fiscal Year 2019 Budget.
  • Council unanimously approved the use of $293,177.00 for the purchase of new Public Safety software. The funding for the software comes from the passage of a November 2017 General Obligation Bond. The system will cover Computer Aided Dispatch, Records Management, Mobile computing, Automatic Vehicle Location, Jail Management, Property and Evidence, and more. 
  • Council approved an ordinance requiring the spaying/neutering of dogs and cats over six months of age, with a hobbyist exemption for show animals. Hobbyists will be allowed to keep up to six unfixed animals on their property at a given time, with a $20 annual permit.
  • Council approved the final plat for Stone Crest Addition, a 14.726-acre subdivision on 41st Street across from Westwood Estates. 
  • Council approved a final payment of $52,642.14 to CMSWillowbrook for the installation of an LED light system under the Main Street overpass. The total cost for the project was finalized at $85,987.14. 

This Week in Sand Springs (4/22 - 4/29/18)

Monday

  • 8:00 a.m. Lady Sandite Tennis Tournament (A)
    • Union Intermediate High School
      7616 South Garnett Road
      Broken Arrow, OK 74012
  • 7:00 p.m. Sand Springs City Council Meeting

Tuesday 

  • 7:30 a.m. Breakfast with County Commissioner Karen Keith 
    • Crescent Cafe
      3417 South 113th West Avenue
  • 8:00 a.m. Sandite Tennis Tournament (A)
    • Union Intermediate High School
      7616 South Garnett Road
      Broken Arrow, OK 74012
  • 8:30 a.m. Lady Sandite Golf at Regional Tournament (A)
    • Muskogee Country Club
      2400 North Country Club Road
      Muskogee, OK 74403
  • 12:00 p.m. No. 17 Lady Sandite Softball vs. Norman (Regional Tournament)
    • Southmoore High School
      2901 South Santa Fe Avenue
      Moore, OK 73160
    • First game loss, play No. 3 Southmoore at 1:20 p.m.
      First game win, play winner of Southmoore vs. Norman at 2:40 p.m.
  • 6:00 p.m. Sandite Baseball vs. Southmoore (A)
    • Southmoore Baseball Stadium
      2901 South Santa Fe Avenue
      Moore, OK 73160
  • 7:00 p.m. Sandite Spring Concert
    • Charles Page High School - Auditorium
      500 North Adams Road

Thursday

  • 8:00 a.m. SCORE Women's Leadership Breakfast 
    • Crescent Cafe
      3417 South 113th West Avenue
  • 5:00 p.m. Sandite Baseball vs. Booker T. Washington (A)
    • Booker T. Washington High School
      1514 East Zion Street
      Tulsa, OK 74106
  • 6:00 p.m. Sand Springs Education Foundation Hall of Fame Banquet
    • Ed Dubie Field House
      600 North Adams Road
  • 6:00 p.m. Lady Sandite Soccer vs. Capitol Hill (H)
    • Memorial Stadium
      600 North Adams Road
  • 6:30 p.m. Pop with a Cop
    • Sand Springs Municipal Building
      100 East Broadway
  • 8:00 p.m. Sandite Soccer vs. Capitol Hill (H)
    • Memorial Stadium
      600 North Adams Road

Friday

  • 1:00 p.m. Inaugural Diamond Girls Classic golf tournament
    • The Canyons at Blackjack Ridge
      1801 North McKinley Road
  • 4:00 p.m. Sandite Baseball vs. Southmoore (H)
    • Sandite Baseball Complex
      412 West 55th Street
  • 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Audition for Little Old Ladies In Tennis Shoes
    • Central Ninth Grade Center
      14 West 4th Street

Saturday

  • 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Open Hike Day
  • 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. 2nd Annual Country Craft Show
    • Pleasant Valley Farms
      22350 West 71st Street South
  • 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Student Art Contest
    • Triangle Park
      4 East Broadway
  • 4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.  Audition for Little Old Ladies In Tennis Shoes
    • Central Ninth Grade Center
      14 West 4th Street
  • 6:30 p.m. Blue Dog: The What & Why
    • Case Community Center
      1050 West Wekiwa Road

Sunday

  • 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. 2nd Annual Country Craft Show
    • Pleasant Valley Farms
      2350 West 71st Street South

Add your event to our weekly newsletter. Email SanditePrideNews@gmail.com

  • Free for nonprofit/free/charitable events.
  • Free for Sandite Pride Partners.

Governor Mary Fallin Signs Bill Barring Sex Offenders from Living Near Their Victims

OKLAHOMA CITY – Governor Mary Fallin today signed a bill that helps protect victims from their sex offenders.

Fallin signed House Bill (HB) 1124, which prohibits sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet and loitering within 1,000 feet from their victims’ homes.  Under current Oklahoma law, sex offenders are banned from living near places like schools and playgrounds, but it does not apply to a sex offender living near his or her adult victim.

The measure passed unanimously in both chambers: 92-0 in the House of Representatives and 44-0 in the Senate.

HB 1124, named the “Justice for Danyelle Act of 2018,”  takes effect Nov. 1. It is named after Danyelle Dyer, of Bristow, whose attacker moved next door to her last year.

Rep. Kyle Hilbert and Sen. James Leewright filed the legislation. In the meantime, Dyer and her family went to court and obtained a protective order, and the offender was ordered to move.

“Victims shouldn’t have to worry about their sex offenders moving in next door,” said Fallin. “I appreciate Representative Hilbert and Senator Leewright for responding quickly to this situation and coming up with a logical solution to this issue. If we have laws keeping sex offenders from parks and day care centers, it’s common sense that they shouldn’t be allowed near their victims.”

"I am incredibly proud of the courage Danyelle Dyer showed to bring this issue to light,” said Hilbert. “Thanks to her advocacy, no victims in Oklahoma will ever endure what her and her family went through ever again. Thank you Governor Fallin for signing HB 1124 and standing up for the rights of victims across the state.”

“Through her bravery to come forward, Danyelle helped bring this dangerous loophole to our attention as well as other states that also haven’t addressed this needed zone of safety,” said Leewright. “Her advocacy will help protect others from continuing to be victimized emotionally on a daily basis knowing their attacker is so close.”

Governor Mary Fallin Signs Human Trafficking Bill

OKLAHOMA CITY – Governor Mary Fallin signed a bill targeted at preventing human trafficking Wednesday.

House Bill (HB) 2651 permits Oklahoma’s public safety commissioner to choose training material from Truckers Against Human Trafficking for education purposes for drivers applying for Class A, B or C commercial licenses. The material includes training on recognizing, preventing and reporting human trafficking. The public safety commissioner is required to regularly review and update the training to ensure it is up to date on changes and trends in human trafficking. 

HB 2651, authored by Rep. Steve Vaughan, chairman of the House Transportation Committee, and Senate Majority Whip Frank Simpson, passed unanimously in both the House of Representatives and Senate. It takes effect Nov. 1.

“This is an effective and efficient way to make our commercial drivers more aware about signs of human trafficking and how to report,” said Fallin. “By understanding the signs and symptoms of trafficking, they can help our law enforcement stop human trafficking on our highways and in our community. Our state’s location as a crossroads positions the Oklahoma City metropolitan area as a hotbed for human trafficking activity. The intersections of major interstate highways like I-35, I-40 and I-44 mean human traffickers move sex slaves and others involved in forced labor through Oklahoma City.”

“Human trafficking is the fastest growing crime in our country and Oklahoma is a prime target,” Simpson said. “Truck stops are the perfect place for traffickers to move their goods and as transfer points for transporting their victims. If trained in what to look and listen for as well as what to do, truckers can be instrumental in recognizing and stopping these crimes.”

“Oftentimes we overlook the importance of how many trucks travel our roads and highways every day,” Vaughan said. “Because of this bill, inside every cab of those trucks is a trucker who has become more aware of human trafficking. It is great to have eyes in the cab and boots on the ground to help eliminate this problem. I was pleased to be asked to author this bill on the House side for the people of the great state of Oklahoma.”

Senate approves work requirements for Medicaid recipients

OKLAHOMA CITY – To strengthen Oklahoma families and the state’s economy, the Senate approved legislation Wednesday to establish work or training requirements to participate in the SoonerCare Medicaid program. House Bill 2932, authored by Sen. Adam Pugh and Rep. Glen Mulready, would instruct the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA) to seek waiver authority to modify Medicaid eligibility criteria to require documentation of the same education, skills, training, work or job activities currently required by the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

“This bill follows direction from the federal government to help those Medicaid recipients who are working-aged and able-bodied get back into the workforce and become a self-sufficient, contributing member of society. It will align SoonerCare qualification requirements with those already in place for Oklahoma’s SNAP,” said Pugh, R-Edmond. “I grew up extremely poor and my mom, who was a single parent, worked three jobs to support our family. I would work as many jobs as necessary to take care of my family. This will encourage Medicaid recipients to take some personal responsibility in getting the education or job training they need to support themselves and their families.”

The bill would mirror federal Medicaid law and SNAP by exempting from the new eligibility requirements those individuals who are 19 years of age or younger or over 60 years old, pregnant, medically-certified as physically or mentally unfit for employment, or who are a parent or caretaker of a dependent child under a year old.

According to the OHCA, there are approximately 106,600 Oklahomans who are a part of the parent/caretaker group receiving Medicaid coverage who are able-bodied/working-aged adults 19 to 64 who are not pregnant, disabled or blind. Thirty-two percent of those recipients were male and 25 percent were two adults living in the same home and both receiving Medicaid coverage. An analysis by the agency of SoonerCare members covered in FY’17 found that around 8,000 out of those 106,600 would not have met any of the exemptions outlined in the bill.

Currently, more than 600,000 Oklahomans receive SNAP benefits (formerly known as food stamps) each month. In FY’17, there were more than one million Oklahomans enrolled in SoonerCare Medicaid with nearly 796,000 SoonerCare recipients in March 2018. OHCA also noted there are nearly 81,000 SoonerCare recipients who also receive SNAP benefits.

The coauthor of the measure, Sen. Paul Rosino has been a strong advocate for the federal government’s push to get states to create work requirements for eligible Medicaid recipients.

“I applaud the Governor for championing these work requirements and my colleagues in the Senate and House for supporting them. This will provide these individuals with the tools, whether through education or job training, to help better their lives to be able to support themselves and their families,” said Rosino, R-Oklahoma. “We must break the cycle of government dependence that is getting worse with each generation. Since getting into office, personal responsibility and work requirements for able-bodied adults 19 to 64 has been one of my top priorities. I will continue to advocate for and support any legislation that helps strengthen Oklahoma families and our economy by helping more people become independent and self-sufficient.”

The bill now returns to the House for final consideration. Besides being approved by the Governor, the new eligibility requirements would have to also be approved by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Sand Springs dedicates Inez Kirk park in honor of former City Manager

The City of Sand Springs rededicated the City-Garden Park at 101 East Broadway Street in honor of former City Manager Inez Kirk.

Kirk was the City Manager for Sand Springs from 1977 to 1986 and died in office on January 23, 1986.

Kirk's family and friends planted a pink rose bush in honor of her nickname, the Iron Rose. A group of more than thirty family members, friends, and former coworkers turned out to honor her and celebrated her life with her favorite candy, licorice. 

"This park is very special to me," said current City Manager Elizabeth Gray. "I came here and prayed before I went in for my interview (for City Manager)." 

"I remember what Sand Springs used to be compared to what it is today," said Mayor Mike Burdge. "Inez was very instrumental in changing the character and the integrity of government in Sand Springs. 

The Soccer Complex at Case Community Park was named in her honor for many years, but City leaders decided it would be more appropriate to recognize her with the park next door to the City Hall building she worked at. 

"Mom loved her family, and the people at City Hall were also her family. She loved each and every one," said Kirk's daughter, Pat McConnell. "Her passion was for this city. I can tell you that mom would be overwhelmed by the fact that the City has chosen to honor her like this, and she would be amazed at how many people still remember her and talk about her."