latest
Fred Combs has been a business owner for over 35 years as an air conditioner contractor, with the exception of six years while serving as County Commissioner and Executive Director of Central Oklahoma Community Action Agency from 2009 to 2015. He has been widowed since 2012, attended Pleasant Grove Schools for 12 years, spent two years at Seminole State College and two years at East Central University majoring in industrial arts. He has always been active while serving his community. He served 13 years on the Pleasant Grove School Board and many other boards through the years. He is currently serving on the Autumn Ridge Senior Housing Board as Chairman and loves helping anyone he can.
Read moreThe namesake of Seminole State College’s E.T. Dunlap Student Union sets a good example by wearing a personal protective mask during the COVID-19 pandemic. The bronze bust is located in the SSC student union, which is currently clos
Read moreThe Seminole County Democratic Party voted unanimously to support the Native American Nations in their legal battle with Governor Stitt over renewing the Tribal Gaming Compact. In a letter to the governor, sent Tuesday, April 15, 2020, they reminded the governor that his comparison of exclusivity rates for Oklahoma with those for New York, Connecticut, and Florida, more affluent areas of the country, is unfair.
Read moreTwo additional positive cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have been confirmed in Seminole County in the latest report from the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) Tuesday morning. This brings the total number of cases in the county to nine, with one death.
Read moreAs a public service to our readers, The Seminole Producer will publish, free of charge, press releases for those who recently filed for public office.
Read moreState’s recovery expected to lag behind nation
Read moreHorses are remarkably adept at injuring themselves, even in the safest environments possible. A bit of knowledge and preparation can help horse owners handle these seemingly inevitable wounds. Always consider the wound’s location and severity, degree of lameness caused and initial first aid steps with any injury. Most commonly, a horse sustains cuts, scrapes and/or abrasions on its legs. Unfortunately, this part of the body has the least amount of soft tissue protection between the skin and such important structures as joints, tendons and ligaments. If a cut involves one of these structures, a small problem can become larger or even life-threatening such as a wound that extends into the joint and infects the joint or a cut that severely damages or completely transects a flexor tendon.
Read moreProtecting workers has long been a priority for business owners, but that responsibility took on new meaning in the wake of the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus in late-winter 2020.
Read more