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Generally Speaking
News
February 15, 2024
Generally Speaking

Oklahoma is in the throes of an epidemic, and it is called fentanyl.

A synthetic opioid, fentanyl is as addictive as it is deadly. It is 50 times stronger than heroin, cheap to produce – and destroying families. Six years ago, Oklahoma suffered 50 fentanyl-related deaths. By 2022, that number had skyrocketed to 619, accounting for the vast majority of fatal opioid overdoes in the state. While final figures for this past year are not yet known, we do know there were 317 fentanyl deaths in the first five months of 2023 alone. Moreover, fentanyl is an equal-opportunity killer, impacting communities of every kind.

With the second session of the 59th Oklahoma Legislature underway, lawmakers are considering myriad bills to help address the needs facing our state. Among the most important, I believe, relates to the Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substances Act. Senate Bill 1280, which seeks to modify elements of several felony offenses, is designed to address Oklahoma’s fentanyl crisis.

Authored by Sen. Darrell Weaver, SB 1280 gives prosecutors the ability to hold accountable those who are fueling the fentanyl crisis. Specifically, the measure adds language defining lacing drugs with fentanyl as manufacturing. It also classifies the unlawful manufacturing of set amounts of controlled dangerous substances, including fentanyl, as aggravated manufacturing. Classifying this crime as manufacturing moves the criminal liability from the street dealer or fentanyl user up the chain to the drug kingpins peddling this poison to Oklahomans.

As my Organized Crime Task Force finds and shuts down illegal marijuana grow operations across the state, agents are finding that fentanyl is being distributed along with blackmarket marijuana. In fact, the prevalence of illegal marijuana being harvested in our state means that the contraband of choice along the nation’s southwest border is now fentanyl. The border crisis is very real and it is having catastrophic consequences on public safety in Oklahoma.

Part of the problem is that fentanyl is obscenely lucrative for drug cartels. One gram, roughly the weight of a single Sweet & Low packet, can produce 500 pills at a cost of about 10 cents. On the street, each pill sells for between $10 and $20. As a result, fentanyl is often added to other illegal narcotics to make them more affordable and powerful.

The Senate Public Safety Committee recently passed SB 1280, which means it will now go to the full Senate for a vote.

I appreciate the work of our state lawmakers to enhance public safety in our state and to ensure our law enforcement agencies and prosecutors have the tools they need to protect Oklahomans.

Mary Isham retires from USPS
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Mary Isham retires from USPS
By LADONNA RHODES STAFF WRITER 
May 8, 2025
Mary Isham retired last week after 20 years with the Checotah Post Office. She started her career with USPS Dec 25, 2004. “I was a stay-at-home mom of four kids until my youngest started school,” Isha...
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Community invited to Memorial Day Service at Greenlawn Cemetery
May 8, 2025
Honoring All Veterans Friday, May 23 at 5 p.m. Veterans Park in Checotah Free Hotdog & Hamburgers Games and Fellowship Compliments of the McIntosh County DAV The DAV Chapter 3 Mc-Intosh County will ho...
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Checotah Schools Dates to Remember
May 8, 2025
May 9 – Kindergarten Graduation May 16 – CIS Track Meet on Football Field May 16 - 9th-12th Awards Assembly at 9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. at PAC May 16 – Emerson Ramsey Talent Show (MS/HS) from 1:30 -2:30 p.m....
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Early voting May 8, 9
May 8, 2025
On May 13 there will be a general election for State Senate District 8 and for Green Country Tech Center Proposition. Early voting for those two elections will be at the Mc-Intosh County Courthouse fr...
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Pooches paraded at Art and Bark in the Park
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Pooches paraded at Art and Bark in the Park
By LADONNA RHODES STAFF WRITER 
May 8, 2025
The first annual Art and Bark in the Park presented by the Checotah Art Guild was a great success! Visitors had fun choosing outfits and accessories to put on their dogs from the large selection provi...
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Journalism edged out by Sovereignty in the Kentucky Derby
May 8, 2025
The Kentucky Derby was a soggy but sensational race this year as Journalism and Sovereignty went neck and neck to a sloppy finish with Sovereignty taking the crown. Fulfilling a dream decades in the m...
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Lake 10 feet above normal, and rising
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Lake 10 feet above normal, and rising
By JERRY FINK MANAGING EDITOR 
May 8, 2025
Water release rate: 39,429 cubic feet per second More than seven inches of rain have fallen during the past week. That, coupled with severe rainfall north and west of McIntosh County, has swollen the ...
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Checotah Band Spring Concert and Spaghetti Dinner Fundraiser May 8
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Checotah Band Spring Concert and Spaghetti Dinner Fundraiser May 8
May 8, 2025
The Checotah Band Spring Concert is May 8 and will be a Spaghetti Dinner Fundraiser. Dinner will be served at 5 p.m. in the HS Cafeteria and then the concert begins at 6 p.m. in the PAC. The bands hav...
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Eastern Oklahoma Library System receives $20,000 grant
May 8, 2025
MUSKOGEE – The Eastern Oklahoma Library System is pleased to announce it has received a $20,000 grant from the Carolyn Watson Rural Oklahoma Community Foundation Fund at the Oklahoma City Community Fo...
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Olivia Shackelford receives Youth Prevention Award
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Olivia Shackelford receives Youth Prevention Award
By LADONNA RHODES STAFF WRITER 
May 8, 2025
Olivia Shackelford became a member of Youth Action for Health Leadership (YAHL) to make a difference in her school and oh what a difference she had made! Olivia affectionately known as Livy to her fri...
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Free 5K and Community Fun Run
May 8, 2025
Join the fun on Saturday, May 24 for a free 5k and Community Fun Run, hosted by Neighbors Building Neighborhoods. Preregister for “Just Glow With It” to save your spot and for a free event t-shirt and...
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