There’s a new Superfund site in Oklahoma. The site covers 105 acres in Muskogee on Cherokee Nation land.
For three decades, Fansteel Metals Incorporated processed uranium ore into metals for electrical circuits. The radioactive and toxic leftovers were stored in waste pits and ponds on the site. Radioactivity has already seeped into the site’s soil and groundwater and poses a threat to the nearby Arkansas River.
In January, Gov. Kevin Stitt wrote a letter to the EPA requesting Fansteel be added to the National Priorities List of Superfund sites. The EPA announced its intentions to list the site in March and finalized it this week.
Fansteel is Oklahoma’s 18th Superfund site on the National Priorities List. These sites receive federal funds to clean up industrial waste that endangers nearby people and the environment.
Over $22,000 of state money went to fund the creation of an anti-teacher union video from Oklahoma’s State Department of Education.
According to documents StateImpact obtained from an open records request, $22,500 was paid to Texas-based Precision Outreach LLC to make this video:
The video was unveiled at a May State Board of Education meeting and was part of what State Superintendent Ryan Walters calls a “public awareness campaign” about teachers’ unions. It features speakers from the National Education Association’s 2022 conference, footage from Walters’ interview with Fox News, and an interview with the author of a young adult LGBTQ+ book. It also included a video from Texas and another from Pennsylvania defending pedophiles - it’s unclear what the connection is to Oklahoma teacher unions.
The state money was used for video production, onsite shooting, use of equipment, and post-production editing.
An Oklahoma City woman who claims her arm was broken by police officers after entering her home without a warrant in 2020 will receive $200,000 in a settlement.
A federal court judge ordered the guardian of 77-year-old Ruby Jones to be paid $200,000 in a settlement with Oklahoma City.
Jones claims police entered her home in August of 2020 without a proper warrant during a search for her mentally ill son, Chauncey Jones, who had called in a bomb threat earlier that day. According to the police report, Jones’s son threw a knife when an officer entered the house.
The lawsuit filed after the incident said an officer handcuffed Jones and pulled her arm upward and at an angle “beyond its physical capabilities.” She then fell to the floor and was ordered to walk to the patrol car outside.
The settlement is made without the city admitting liability in the incident.
Oklahoma Human Services announced a $12.5 million grant this week to support the availability of affordable and nutritious foods after the COVID-19 pandemic impacted access. StateImpact’s Jillian Taylor has more.
The food insecurity grant will be funded by an allocation of recovery funds from the American Rescue Plan Act.
Applicants must be programs like food pantries, distribution centers and other nonprofits addressing food insecurity. Funding can be used to make physical improvements or purchase equipment to increase the distribution and storage of food.
Grant amounts will be based on the needs of applying programs and the number of applicants. Programs in census-designated food deserts or low- to moderate-income areas with less access to supermarkets will be prioritized. Applicants must fill out a grant interest form on the department’s website by Oct. 6.
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