Kateleigh Mills
Kateleigh Mills joined KOSU in March 2018, following her undergraduate degree completion from the University of Central Oklahoma in December 2017.
While studying journalism and professional media, she worked with the UCO’s journalism staff to reinvent the campus newspaper for a more multimedia purpose – joining with the campus radio and television stations for news updates and hosting public forums with campus groups.
The Edmond-raised reporter was editor-in- chief of her college newspaper when it won the Society of Professional Journalism award for Best Newspaper in Category B. Mills also received the Oklahoma Press Association Award for ‘Outstanding Promise in Journalism’ at the Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame event in 2017.
She is very excited to have joined KOSU in Oklahoma City to provide news to all Oklahoma residents.
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Oklahoma lawmakers are pushing through legislation aimed at Oklahoma’s medical marijuana industry. These efforts come after Oklahomans voted down recreational cannabis last month.
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Results from the April 4 elections found that in Oklahoma’s Panhandle, one vote made all the difference.
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Oklahoma politicians are speaking out about the historic indictment of former President Donald Trump.
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A bill to require backseat passengers under 16 to wear a seat belt passed in the Senate earlier this week.
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Recreational cannabis won’t be legal in Oklahoma.
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In the months leading up to Oklahoma’s election on the legalization of recreational cannabis, Oklahoma purged tens of thousands of voters from its rolls due to inactivity or duplicate registrations.
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Selling cannabis has become a big business in Oklahoma. But, that business could be changing if voters approve State Question 820 next week.
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A state task force addressing the backlog of untested rape kits was renewed by Gov. Kevin Stitt Wednesday after it briefly dissolved due to inaction.
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Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt has taken his re-election as a mandate from conservative voters: grow school choice, cut taxes and ban gender-affirming care for transgender minors.
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The first Monday in February marks the beginning of the Oklahoma legislative session. And Oklahoma lawmakers are gearing up to consider more than 3,000 bills.