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The Oklahoma Transportation Commission approved both a four-year asset protection plan and an eight-year construction plan to maintain and improve the state’s roads and bridges.
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This episode of Focus: Black Oklahoma features a look at police reform recommendations, the push by State Superintendent Ryan Walters to bring PragerU Kids curriculum into K-12 classrooms and an effort to propel Black professionals in Tulsa to the top of the cybersecurity field.
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A state transportation study is examining whether Oklahoma drivers should be taxed per mile instead of at the gas pump.
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Tulsa’s North Peoria Church of Christ used to call Greenwood home. That was before I-244 displaced it and cut through historic Black Wall Street. Democratic State Rep. Regina Goodwin represents the area and attends the church, about its legacy and a planning grant to study the removal of the expressway.
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Thousands of Oklahoma voters in 14 counties cast ballots in a number of elections to determine the future of school bonds, municipal propositions and more.
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Elections from Tulsa to Chickasha will determine the fate of a bevy of local projects next Tuesday.
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The city seeks to reconnect communities separated by the Broken Arrow Expressway.
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The sudden cave-in of part of the busy East Coast highway created an immediate traffic nightmare for drivers. Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro issued a disaster declaration.
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The program is paid for by the bipartisan infrastructure bill and is intended to help guide intercity passenger rail projects. Kansas and Oklahoma Transportation Departments jointly applied earlier this year for the Heartland Flyer Extension proposal.
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U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm and Second Gentleman Douglas Emhoff announced an investment using federal funds to create the Great Plains Center of Excellence on Friday.