EXPLAINER | Corrections and Clarifications
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Corrections and Clarifications

Our ultimate goal is to be both accountable for our coverage and transparent with our audience. To that end, any StateImpact Oklahoma story that requires a factual correction will be updated to reflect the change, and include an “editor’s note” to say what the nature of the correction or clarification was. For example:

We reported that a student at the for-profit Kaplan University had been seeking a law degree and had not been told that participation in the program would not allow him to take the bar exam in Iowa. We should have made clear that the student was enrolled in a B.A. program in paralegal studies, not in a law degree program.

In addition, all online errors that get corrected will be tagged and aggregated on this page. Email Joe Wertz with your requests for corrections or clarifications.

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Challenges and Progress Cleaning Up One of Oklahoma’s Most Polluted Places

The Tri-State Mining District in northeastern Oklahoma’s Ottawa County was once the world’s largest source of lead and zinc. The mines had closed by the 1970s, but pernicious pollution still plagues what is now known as the Tar Creek superfund site.

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Why Midwest City and Del City Oppose Norman’s Plan to Reuse Wastewater

Norman isn’t the only city that relies on Lake Thunderbird for its water, and Midwest City and Del City would also need to be behind the plan before it goes before the Department of Environmental Quality for approval.

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Update: What StateImpact Is Watching In Oklahoma’s 2015 Legislative Session

There’s only about a month left in Oklahoma’s 2015 legislative session, and if bills haven’t made it out of the chamber they started in by now, they’re dead.

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Norman Mayor and Residents Question Use of City Drinking Water For Drilling

They had a chance to voice their concerns at a city council meeting April 8.

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State Senate Easily Passes Bill that Could Make Mining Permits Harder to Get

SB1184, by Sen. Susan Paddack, D-Ada, would change the permitting process at the state Department of Mines.

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