Salty, oily drinking water left sores in their mouths. Oklahoma refused to find out why.
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In “Salty, oily drinking water left sores in their mouths. Oklahoma refused to find out why,” Frontier reporter Nick Bowlin traces complaints of oilfield contamination, examines how regulators responded and explains why key questions remain unanswered.
08.03.2026 00:44
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As data centers boom in Oklahoma, so does water demand
From Pryor to Stillwater and Muskogee, local officials say supplies are sufficient, even as Google alone used more than 1.1 billion gallons in a single year.
From Pryor to Stillwater to Muskogee, Oklahoma is courting massive data centers.
But keeping those servers cool requires huge amounts of water.
Our latest reporting found Google’s Pryor facility alone used over 1.1 billion gallons in one year.
What happens as more projects come online?
05.03.2026 17:12
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Sign up for our emails to go behind-the-scenes with our reporters. In tonight’s email, you’ll hear from @maddykeyes.bsky.social about her investigation into declining federal funding for crime victims in Oklahoma (story linked downthread)
04.03.2026 20:59
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One advocate said it feels “weird ... to hope for crime to happen so we can get funding."
Sixty-three fewer organizations in Oklahoma received VOCA funding in 2025 than in 2018. And most organizations that received funding over that period experienced a cut.
03.03.2026 22:47
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Some victim-service organizations are being forced to cut staff, reduce services, and double caseloads when people need help most.
“We shouldn’t have to work so hard to make sure that kids — families — are getting these services,” Abbott House's Anna Adkins said.
03.03.2026 22:47
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VOCA funding in Oklahoma went from over $29M in 2018 to just about $10.3M in 2025, meaning 5,000+ fewer victims served by local programs.
03.03.2026 22:47
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Groups that serve victims of crime in Oklahoma face shrinking funding
Oklahoma organizations serving abused children and domestic violence survivors have lost up to 80% of their federal support, even as demand continues to rise.
Organizations that help children, domestic violence survivors & other victims once relied heavily on federal funds from the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA). But that money has dropped dramatically since 2018.
03.03.2026 22:47
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Oklahoma nonprofits that support victims of crime are facing severe funding cuts — even as demand for their services soars. Here’s what you need to know.
03.03.2026 22:47
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Purged: Oklahoma’s Toxic Wastewater
Across Oklahoma, oilfield wastewater has continued to surface from the ground — even as regulators failed to contain it. This investigation examines how oversight fell short, how contamination spread ...
Across Oklahoma, oilfield wastewater has continued to surface from the ground — even as regulators failed to contain it. This investigation examines how oversight fell short, how contamination spread and how families were left to navigate what's left.
03.03.2026 16:38
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Groups that serve victims of crime in Oklahoma face shrinking funding
Oklahoma organizations serving abused children and domestic violence survivors have lost up to 80% of their federal support, even as demand continues to rise.
@readfrontier.bsky.social “You’re talking about some of the most vulnerable people in our communities."
Oklahoma organizations serving abused children & domestic violence survivors have lost up to 80% of their federal support, even as demand continues to rise. www.readfrontier.org/stories/grou...
03.03.2026 14:48
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As data centers boom in Oklahoma, so does water demand
From Pryor to Stillwater and Muskogee, local officials say supplies are sufficient, even as Google alone used more than 1.1 billion gallons in a single year.
Google’s massive data center in Pryor is an important part of the company’s cloud and artificial intelligence infrastructure. But it takes a lot of water to keep the data servers cool. The Pryor center used enough water in one year to fill about 1,666 Olympic-size swimming pools.
26.02.2026 03:05
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Outcry over 73-day prison stay spurs push to tighten Oklahoma early release program
Norman resident Sara Polston was released a few months into her eight-year prison sentence for a crash that left Micaela Borrego with a traumatic brain injury. The case is fueling a legislative effort...
A prison release after just 73 days could reshape Oklahoma law.
A Norman woman sentenced to prison for a DUI crash that left a young woman with a traumatic brain injury was quickly released through the state’s GPS monitoring program.
New reporting by @readfrontier.bsky.social
25.02.2026 22:07
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As data centers boom in Oklahoma, so does water demand
From Pryor to Stillwater and Muskogee, local officials say supplies are sufficient, even as Google alone used more than 1.1 billion gallons in a single year.
Oklahoma is racing to become a data center hub.
But there’s a question looming over every development:
What about the water?
Our investigation found massive server facilities already using huge volumes — with more projects on the way.
Read the story:
24.02.2026 17:47
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Outcry over 73-day prison stay spurs push to tighten Oklahoma early release program
Norman resident Sara Polston was released a few months into her seven-year prison sentence for a crash that left Micaela Borrego with a traumatic brain injury. The case is fueling a legislative effort...
Norman resident Sara Polston was released a few months into her seven-year prison sentence for a crash that left Micaela Borrego with a traumatic brain injury. The case is fueling a legislative effort to prevent people convicted of similar crimes from qualifying for GPS-monitored early release.
24.02.2026 16:05
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“We’ll be one of the largest customers of the city water so we believe (the) city can make revenue from our operations to cover the (water line) extension cost,” the CEO of a mid-sized crypto mining firm wrote to Muskogee city officials.
The facility used ~150mm gallons last yr.
23.02.2026 19:59
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More excellent reporting from @readfrontier.bsky.social and @propublica.org on what happens when the public, legislators, and regulators grapple with the legacy of historic oil and gas pollution and toxic wastewater, the amount of which only grows by the day.
18.02.2026 23:30
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