This story was initially printed by The nineteenth.
The day after the supreme court docket leak, Andrea Gallegos had already began to cancel sufferers’ appointments.
A draft opinion that might overturn Roe v Wade, the 1973 choice that assured entry to abortion, had been printed on-line and verified by the court docket. Within the aftermath, Gallegos, the administrator for Tulsa Ladies’s Clinic, an Oklahoma-based abortion supplier, wasn’t fearful about Roe – at the very least, it wasn’t the very first thing she was fearful about. To her, there was an even bigger, extra quick menace: a six-week abortion ban the Republican governor was anticipated to signal any day now. The regulation, a direct copycat of a prohibition in impact in Texas, was anticipated to outlive authorized challenges. It might take impact instantly.
Tuesday morning got here and went. The governor hadn’t signed. Possibly, Gallegos thought, that they had extra time. A number of extra sufferers might get abortions. So she added just a few again on the schedule for the subsequent day – sufferers who have been past six weeks pregnant, who quickly is likely to be unable to get an abortion in Oklahoma.
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That very same night, to little fanfare, Governor Kevin Stitt signed into regulation the six-week abortion ban. The state supreme court docket declined to dam the ban. If the clinic noticed their sufferers on Wednesday, they risked civil lawsuits with a penalty of as much as $10,000.
So Gallegos did what she had dreaded. She started calling again sufferers who have been previous six weeks pregnant. The scheduled appointments must be canceled. In the event that they wished to hunt an abortion, she advised them, they need to look some other place – Kansas, New Mexico or, a bit additional away, Colorado.
“We knew he was going to signal it. However there was nonetheless this second of shock,” she mirrored per week later. “He actually signed it. That is actual.”
Oklahoma’s six-week abortion ban, Senate Invoice 1503, is just the second within the nation to enter impact. Texas, the primary, has had its ban in place since 1 September. The affect of Oklahoma’s ban could possibly be seismic in Texas and Oklahoma – final fall, Oklahoma emerged because the state that Texans looking for abortions have been most certainly to journey to for care. Some drove lots of of miles, spending hundreds of {dollars} to make the journey. Already, clinicians in Oklahoma try to plan methods to assist their sufferers get to clinics in neighboring Kansas. However there are limits to what they’ll do.
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And even entry at six weeks will not be anticipated to final lengthy. Final week’s draft leak has chilled abortion suppliers throughout the nation, confirming what many had anticipated for months. Except one thing dramatic shifts, the court docket will most likely overturn Roe in a matter of weeks. When that occurs, states may have the facility to ban abortion totally. And in each Oklahoma and Texas, that may occur. They’re among the many 13 states which have handed what are often called set off legal guidelines – laws crafted to ban abortion virtually immediately as soon as Roe is struck down.
For a lot of, the draft choice put a post-Roe actuality into sharp readability. However for clinicians in Oklahoma, like in Texas, the second is already right here. And few persons are paying consideration.
“There’s sort of this view of those states as disposable – that there aren’t useful those who dwell right here,” stated Kailey Voellinger, who runs the Belief Ladies clinic in Oklahoma Metropolis. “It seems like we’re afterthoughts.”
For the reason that new six-week ban took impact, neither President Joe Biden nor his press workplace has put out an announcement about Oklahoma’s new regulation, regardless of publicly condemning comparable bans handed in Texas and Idaho, and criticizing different Oklahoma bans that haven’t but taken impact. (Idaho’s six-week ban has been blocked by its state supreme court docket.) The Division of Justice – which sprang into motion when Texas’s six-week ban took impact – has been equally quiet.
And within the meantime, sufferers hold calling the state’s 4 clinics for appointments.
Belief Ladies and Tulsa Ladies’s Clinic are nonetheless offering the service. Those that are offering care are solely seeing sufferers as much as six weeks of being pregnant, however sufferers properly past which might be nonetheless calling to hunt abortions. Many be taught in regards to the new six-week ban solely on that preliminary telephone name.
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“There’s a whole lot of shock and disbelief from sufferers, reacting like, ‘What do you imply I’ve obtained to exit of state?’ ‘That’s loopy, I can’t afford to take off work, I can’t depart my children that lengthy, how am I supposed to try this?’” Gallegos stated.
Sufferers are offended, Voellinger stated. “I’ve had two workers folks inform me they obtained off the telephone with a affected person who was like, ‘Nicely, what am I imagined to do? Kill myself?’
“Individuals are exasperated and don’t know what to do,” she added.
Within the clinics, the shift has been stark. Proper up till the six-week ban took impact, appointments had been booked stable, the ready rooms stuffed with Texans and Oklahomans. Abortion appointments have been booked two to 3 weeks out.
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That has modified since final week. However within the days after the six-week ban took impact, the Tulsa Ladies’s Clinic carried out abortions for eight sufferers, after which 10 the subsequent day. That represented about half the individuals who got here in for abortions, Gallegos stated. The remainder thought they have been inside six weeks of being pregnant, however realized on the clinic they have been too far alongside. On the third day after the ban, 20 sufferers – two-thirds of the individuals who had booked an appointment – have been capable of get the abortions that they had sought.
There are not any extra Texans coming for care. And the tight timeline of six weeks, Gallegos added, signifies that the sufferers who’re coming for abortions have barely had time to consider their choices. They’re being pressured to hurry, typically with out the luxurious of even an additional day.
“It’s terrible to have to inform the sufferers, ‘You’ll be able to finally do what it’s worthwhile to do, however in case you don’t do that as we speak you don’t have the choice any extra,’” she stated.
The shift has been comparable at Belief Ladies, which had, till April, been overwhelmed by sufferers touring from Texas. Then final month, the looming menace of an Oklahoma abortion ban had brought on the clinic to cease providing abortions for a number of weeks. On 22 April, with no ban but in impact, they slowly resumed scheduling abortions – and, the next week, noticed near 50 abortion sufferers over three days.
Then SB 1503 was signed. Now the clinic sees possibly three sufferers a day. They’re sending the remainder to Belief Ladies’s different clinic, in Wichita, Kansas, 160 miles (257km) away. Workers are touring there as properly to assist. Already, the Kansas clinic is booked stable by way of Could.
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Beginning subsequent week, Belief Ladies is planning to experiment with a brand new mannequin, the place they carry out sonograms and different preliminary work for sufferers on the Oklahoma clinic, after which assist them drive to Kansas to select up medicine abortion drugs – an additional two hours within the automobile. However these drugs are solely given to sufferers inside their first trimester. And a few sufferers, Voellinger acknowledged, received’t have the ability to get from Texas or Oklahoma all the way in which to Kansas.
Even earlier than the supreme court docket guidelines on Roe – a choice is anticipated this summer time – Oklahoma might ban virtually all abortions. The state legislature has nonetheless not acted on one other Texas-inspired abortion ban: a invoice that additionally depends on civil litigation however that, not like the legal guidelines energetic in Oklahoma and Texas, would ban abortions beginning at fertilization, with slim exceptions. The invoice has handed in Oklahoma’s home, and an amended model has handed the senate – Oklahoma’s home must challenge yet another ultimate approval of the amended ban earlier than sending it to the governor’s desk. That vote has not been scheduled.
If that invoice passes, Tulsa Ladies’s Clinic, which solely does abortions, and whose affiliate clinic is in Texas, would most likely shut down. Belief Ladies and Deliberate Parenthood would cease offering abortions, pivoting as an alternative to emphasise different healthcare companies and probably offering non-abortion assist to their Kansas-based clinics.
Day-after-day is precarious, Voellinger stated.
“The vibes are just about identical to, ‘Nicely, we’re right here till we’re not, and that’s the most effective we are able to do.’”
The Oklahoma Sooners will open the 2025 softball season on Feb. 6 against the CSUN Matadors in San Diego. After a historic season, Oklahoma faces a lot of turnover after losing a number of fixtures in the lineup to graduation.
The Sooners certainly aren’t lacking for talent, however, as a trio of players were named to Softball America’s preseason All-American teams on Tuesday.
Sophomore outfielder Kasidi Pickering and Utility/DP Ella Parker were named to Softball America’s first team. Newcomer Abby Dayton was named to the second team.
Parker led the Oklahoma Sooners with a .415 batting average from the utility role. She also had 13 home runs and 62 RBIs as a true freshman. Parker hit .500 over Oklahoma’s final four games to clinch their fourth-straight national title.
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Pickering hit .389 with 12 home runs and 51 RBIs as a true freshman for the Sooners. In the Women’s College World Series final against Texas, she had home runs in both games against the Texas Longhorns to win the championship.
Abby Dayton is one of a number of impact transfers for the Oklahoma Sooners this season. She led the Pac-12 in batting average, hitting .431 and also had an on-base percentage of .510 for the Utah Utes.
The Oklahoma Sooners will have a new look, but led by this trio of stars, the defending national champions will be ready to compete in the SEC.
More: 5 Oklahoma Sooners included in Softball America’s top 100
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Report Card: Oklahoma lets second-half lead slip, falls to Texas A&M
With 17:00 minutes left in the second half, No. 17 Oklahoma led No. 10 Texas A&M 51-33, and with 19 seconds remaining, Zhuric Phelps hit a three-pointer to give the Aggies an 80-78 lead. That score ultimately held, handing Oklahoma a tough loss and dropping them to 13-2 (0-2) on the season, despite leading by as many as 18 points in the second half, getting 34 points from Brycen Goodine, and facing a Texas A&M team without its best player, Wade Taylor.
The first half was all about Brycen Goodine, who put together one of the most impressive halves from a Sooner in recent memory. He tallied 21 points on 6-8 shooting from deep, propelling Oklahoma to a 39-30 halftime lead. The Sooners shot the ball extremely well early, but things fell apart after the break.
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The second half belonged to Phelps, who hit the game-winning three. Phelps, a career 26.1% three-point shooter, erupted for 28 points in the second half alone, including six three-pointers. He finished with 34 points on 11-25 shooting from the field and 6-10 from behind the arc. Despite Goodine’s stellar performance and Oklahoma’s strong start, the Sooners couldn’t withstand Texas A&M’s furious comeback.
Well, here’s the Report Card from Oklahoma’s loss despite: 1) getting 34 points from Goodine, 2) leading by 18 in the second half, and 3) facing a Texas A&M team without its leading scorer.
Offense: D-plus
Good or bad first? Let’s start with the bad.
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In the final eight minutes of the game, Oklahoma made just two (!) field goals. If you’re looking for a “How to Blow a Lead MasterClass,” scoring only twice in crunch time is Lesson 1.
It was those last eight minutes — where the Sooners simply couldn’t get anything going — that cost them the game. That collapse makes it hard to fully appreciate their solid first half, when things were actually clicking.
Oklahoma shot an impressive 14-24 (58.3%) from deep, 25-46 (54.3%) from the field, and 14-17 (82.4%) from the free throw line. They put up 39 first-half points and were firing on all cylinders offensively. But when it mattered most — those crucial final eight minutes — they completely imploded.
Starting Five: C-minus
Let’s start with Jeremiah Fears, who logged only 21 minutes. Fears finished with 13 points, four rebounds, four turnovers, and three assists while shooting 4-8 from the field, 1-3 from behind the arc, and 4-5 from the free throw line. There were plenty of freshman moments, but it felt like his reduced minutes prevented him from finding a rhythm—something that became evident when Oklahoma turned to him as a potential hero late in the game.
Duke Miles added 8 points on 2-6 shooting from the field and 2-4 from deep, along with three rebounds, three assists, and three turnovers in just 20 minutes. Meanwhile, Kobe Elvis was a non-factor offensively, scoring 0 points in 27 minutes. He shot 0-3 from the field and 0-2 from beyond the arc but did record eight assists, most of which were to Goodine. Despite the assists, Elvis struggled with the physicality of the game and contributed little else.
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Jalon Moore played 33 minutes and contributed 11 points on 4-6 shooting from the field and 2-3 from deep, along with four rebounds, three turnovers, and two blocks. Sam Godwin added 6 points, five rebounds, and three blocks in 26 minutes while shooting 3-5 from the field.
Overall, it was a rough night for the starting five. Fears had his freshman struggles, Elvis couldn’t handle the physicality, and while Miles and Moore were solid, neither had standout performances.
Bench: A-plus
The Sooners got an incredible 34 points out of Goodine on 10-14 shooting from the field and 9-11 from behind the arc. He also shot 5-6 from the free-throw line. Goodine was on fire from the jump, knocking down six of his three-pointers in the first half. He put together one of the best shooting performances ever seen by a Sooner, in fact, tying Mookie Blaylock and Hollis Price for the fourth-most three-pointers in a game in Oklahoma history. After a rough showing from the bench against Alabama, this performance from Goodine was exactly what the team needed.
Additionally, Mohamed Wague had a solid first half, playing 12 quality minutes before only seeing two minutes in the second half. He scored 2 points, added two rebounds, one assist, and a block. His biggest struggle was not being able to playmake off the short roll, but aside from that, his first half was encouraging.
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Oklahoma got 34 points from Goodine, solid minutes from Wague, and good contributions from Glenn Taylor, who scored 2 points on 1-1 shooting from the field. Overall, it was a strong performance from the bench, which makes this loss even more puzzling.
Ball Security: F
Arguably the main reason Oklahoma lost this game was turnovers. A team that has been solid at taking care of the ball all season long imploded, committing 18 turnovers—twice as many as their opponent. Beating a top-10 team while turning the ball over 18 times is incredibly difficult, and it wasn’t just in the second half where turnovers haunted this team. Despite getting 21 points from Goodine, Oklahoma led by just nine at halftime.
That was, in large part, due to turnovers, as they gave the ball away eight times in the first half. The turnovers made it difficult for the Sooners to extend their lead. Pair those eight first-half turnovers with Phelps’ explosive second half performance and Oklahoma’s inability to score more than two field goals in the final eight minutes, and you have the recipe for a tough loss.
Oklahoma’s guards collapsed when Texas A&M ramped up their pressure in the second half, leading to an influx of turnovers and ultimately contributing to the defeat.
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5 winterization tips to prevent frozen pipes in your home
Frozen pipes can burst and lead to costly repairs. Follow these tips to prevent your pipes from freezing this winter.
A local winter shelter has hundreds of beds for people experiencing homelessness, but the number of people seeking overnight shelter quickly swelled as freezing temperatures descended, a spokeswoman said on Wednesday.
Taylor Self, communications director for the Homeless Alliance said the organization’s winter shelter, which opened in 2023, offers overnight shelter from November through March 31. Self said the Homeless Alliance leaders anticipated more people would seek safety and warmth at the shelter, 1601 NW 4, as temperatures plummeted in recent days, and their expectations were borne out.
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More: Oklahoma braces for potential heavy snow as winter storm threatens southern U.S.
“The great thing about it is it’s open nightly, and it’s open seven nights a week, so no matter the temperature, we’ve got space for up to 300 adults, and we also have space for pets and personal belonging storage,” she said.
“We’ve got space for up to 300, and when it was warmer in November and December, we were still seeing about 200 roughly, each night. Once the temperatures really started to drop, we’ve been seeing over 350 folks, especially since Monday, and I expect we’ll see it again, especially with the possible snow in the forecast tomorrow.”
Leaders at several other shelters also said they were meeting the need as people began seeking respite from temperatures dipping below freezing.
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Annie Perkins, development and marketing manager for The Salvation Army Arkansas and Oklahoma Division Central Oklahoma Area Command, said the overnight shelter at The Salvation Army Center of Hope, 1001 N Pennsylvania, offers 120 beds for men, women and families, and it consistently stays full throughout the year.
Perkins said shelter guests check in about 3 p.m. each evening and are typically required to leave about 7 a.m., but they are allowed to remain at the shelter during the day during freezing weather.
More: Oklahoma City’s first permanent winter shelter is now open to house 300 during cold months
“We are incredibly blessed to be able to offer emergency shelter and know that it’s of dire importance during this time of the year, and so we’re grateful for the community support,” she said.
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Alex McGowan Rayburn, community engagement director at Sisu Youth Services, said the organization offers five emergency weather beds at its drop-in center for young people seeking shelter when the weather dips below freezing. She said the drop-in center has been full each night this week.
A single mother with an infant and two other young children was among families welcomed to an emergency shelter set up at a downtown Oklahoma City church this week.
The Rev. Katie Churchwell, dean of St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, said the church opened on Sunday as an overflow shelter for families like the mom and her young trio. The church at 127 NW 7 began offering emergency shelter during freezing temperatures two years ago and, in April, the Oklahoma City Council gave its official approval for the house of worship to serve as a temporary cold weather shelter.
More: St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral officially approved as cold-weather shelter in OKC
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Churchwell praised the church volunteers, particularly Stephanie Jensen, a staff member serving as shelter coordinator, who had worked to get the shelter open on Sunday and continue to help in the ensuing days.
“We’ve got our outreach center to equip our families with items that they need, like shoes and things like that, and then, of course, space to sleep, to eat,” she said.
“It’s just been beautiful to see how many people have just given themselves to care for people in these really extreme moments.”
Churchwell said she was happy to report that the single mom was at the church for only a short time before more permanent shelter was found for them at City Rescue Mission. She said there were many partnering agencies working together to meet the needs of such families, offering things like housing and education for the children.