logo
Login Subscribe
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinions
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Public Notices
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
      • Opinions
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Public Notices
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
Stitt cabinet member learned of his firing via social media during poultry pollution lawsuit hearing
news
December 11, 2024
Stitt cabinet member learned of his firing via social media during poultry pollution lawsuit hearing
By CLIFTON ADCOCK Clifton@readfrontier.com

Gov. Kevin Stitt fired Oklahoma Secretary of Energy and Environment Ken McQueen via social media on Tuesday, halfway through the first day of a federal court evidentiary hearing in Tulsa on the state’s decades-long lawsuit against several Arkansas poultry companies on degradation of the Illinois River watershed.

Stitt fired McQueen, who became one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit when Stitt appointed him to the cabinet post in August 2022, for attending the hearing, he said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“I am disappointed that Ken McQueen would join AG Drummond, former AG Drew Edmondson and environmentalists in opposition to Oklahoma farmers and landowners by appearing at a court hearing today in his capacity as Secretary,” Stitt posted around noon. “This nearly two-decade-old case is a radical left attempt at backdoor regulation through litigation. I’ve fired him from his position as Secretary of Energy and Environment and Director of the Department of Energy effective immediately.”

McQueen, who remained at the hearing for the rest of the day sitting in the jury box, said he learned of his firing from the social media post. McQueen said neither Stitt nor his aides ever instructed him not to attend the hearing, and the firing came as a surprise.

As one of the plaintiffs in the case, Mc-Queen said he felt it was his duty to attend the hearing.

“At the end of the day, I feel I need to be true to myself and my statutory obligations,” McQueen said. “Oklahoma has a lot to do for water quality.”

The original lawsuit, filed in 2005 by then-Attorney General Drew Edmondson, listed then-Secretary of Energy and Environment C. Miles Tolbert as co-plaintiff against the poultry companies.

McQueen is a former oil and gas executive for Williams Company and WPX Energy. He was appointed as Secretary for New Mexico’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department in 2016 and was appointed EPA Region 6 Administrator under President Donald Trump in 2019.

McQueen said he has been visiting the Illinois River for decades, and has seen the environmental harm caused by phosphorus flowing into the river from chicken litter produced in the area.

“I can see the degraded conditions of the river that’s happened in my brief 50 years of visiting,” he said. “It’s unfortunate it’s taken so long to get a reasonable resolution.”

The hearing, which is expected to last several more days before Judge Gregory Frizzell, who in January 2023 issued a ruling that the poultry industry had contributed to polluting the Illinois River watershed and gave the state and the companies until March that year to come to an agreement. That deadline came and went, and the poultry companies are now arguing that the findings from the trial — which ended in 2010 — were stale and that the situation had changed. The state disagreed, and the purpose of the evidentiary hearing is to determine whether that is true..

Earlier this year, Stitt signed a bill shielding poultry companies from lawsuits for pollution, as long as they have an approved nutrient management plan. Stitt’s Secretary of Agriculture Blayne Arthur also wrote a letter to the court in September asking Frizzell to soften his approach to the case, echoing the poultry industry’s arguments about information in the case being out of date.

Following the lunchbreak during Tuesday’s hearing, Attorney General Gentner Drummond announced to the court that McQueen had been fired by Stitt because “he had the audacity” to attend the hearing.

Frizzell seemed surprised by the announcement. Citing the expansion of oil and gas drilling in New Mexico during McQueen’s time heading the state’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department and as an oil and gas executive, Frizzell cracked “You’re no longer a running dog of capitalism, it seems.”

Asked by The Frontier what he plans to do next, McQueen said “It may be time to sit on my back porch and enjoy my grandkids.”

Prior to announcing McQueen’s firing, Stitt’s office announced Jeff Starling as his new cabinet secretary for energy and environment. Starling served as an attorney for Oklahomabased Devon Energy Corp., and most recently was an executive for Lagoon Water Midstream.

After Tuesday’s hearing, Drummond said he had concerns about Mc-Queen’s firing, that he was doing his statutory duty by attending the hearing, and praised his work as secretary of energy and environment.

Asked why he thought Stitt chose to fire Mc-Queen, Drummond said “Water doesn’t make political donations. Poultry does.”

Tuesday’s hearing saw three witnesses for the plaintiffs take the stand — Grand River Dam Authority water quality administrator Ed Fite, Nautical Adventures Scuba owner Tim Knight and Oklahoma Water Resources Board environmental programs manager for lake and wetland monitoring Julie Chambers, who testified they had observed negative changes in water clarity, algae blooms and phosphorus content in Lake Tenkiller, the Illinois River and its state-designated scenic river tributaries since the end of the trial in 2010.

Drummond said plaintiffs have four more witnesses to call and will likely finish with their witnesses by the end of the week, though the court has booked Dec. 16 to Dec. 20 for additional testimony.

However, it will likely be several more years before the issue is resolved, McQueen said, since poultry companies are likely to appeal the case.

Rae of Sunshine hosts Autism Awareness Festival in Eufaula
A: Main, news
Rae of Sunshine hosts Autism Awareness Festival in Eufaula
By Shauna Belyeu General Manager 
April 22, 2026
Rae of Sunshine brought families together for a day of connection, activity and awareness during its first Autism Awareness Festival in Eufaula. The event, organized by owner Desirae Parish, for whom ...
A: Main, news
Suspect accused of striking patrol car, fleeing deputies before arrest
By Shauna Belyeu General Manager 
April 22, 2026
A McIntosh County man was arrested April 16 on a complaint of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, according to a probable cause affidavit. Steven Wayne Smith, 54, of Checotah, was taken into ...
Monty Guthrie named District 10 Superintendent of the Year
A: Main, news
Monty Guthrie named District 10 Superintendent of the Year
April 22, 2026
The Oklahoma Association of School Administrators (OASA) is pleased to announce Monty Guthrie of Eufaula Public Schools as the 2026 OASA District 10 Superintendent of the Year. Guthrie will be recogni...
Checotah daycare case moves forward in district court
A: Main, news
Checotah daycare case moves forward in district court
By Shauna Belyeu General Manager 
April 22, 2026
A Checotah couple accused of abusing children in an in-home daycare appeared April 16 in McIntosh County District Court for a preliminary hearing before Associate District Judge Brendon Bridges. Jacob...
A: Main, news
Election Board hears contest in county commissioners race
By Shauna Belyeu General Manager 
April 22, 2026
The McIntosh County Election Board heard testimony at 10 a.m.Thursday, April 16, in a contest of candidacy filed against District 1 County Commissioner candidate Jeffery Coleman (McIntosh County sheri...
Chamber honors local businesses, leaders at annual banquet
A: Main, news
Chamber honors local businesses, leaders at annual banquet
April 22, 2026
The Eufaula Area Chamber of Commerce celebrated a night of food, fellowship and recognition on Thursday, April 16, during its annual banquet at Dobber’s, bringing together community members, business ...
ePaper
google_play
app_store
Editor Picks
Eufaula High School Drama Club forges new tradition with inaugural Hansard Awards
news
Eufaula High School Drama Club forges new tradition with inaugural Hansard Awards
April 22, 2026
This spring, Eufaula High School is bridging the gap between the gridiron and the stage. The EHS Drama Club is proud to announce the debut of the Hansard Awards, a new tradition honoring the enduring ...
Autism Awareness Festival fun
news
Autism Awareness Festival fun
April 22, 2026
and sweets from High Class Goods. For Laura Park, who is new to the area, the event left a lasting impression. “It was such a great event,” Park said. “It really meant a lot to see something like this...
Marketing is a conversation, not a megaphone
news
Marketing is a conversation, not a megaphone
By ALICE CANADA 
April 22, 2026
Welcome back to Marketing on Main Street. If you are joining us for the first time, you can catch up on previous columns on the Cookson Hills Publishers blog at Cookson. News. In this series, we focus...
news
Texanna Lady Crafters
April 22, 2026
Cookies, cakes and pies…oh my! Hot dogs and yard sale, a shopper’s delight. The TLC event is just around the corner. May 1 and 2 from 10 a.m.- 3:30 p.m.. Items for yard sale are too numerous to list a...
1968 and now: When space united a divided nation
commentary
1968 and now: When space united a divided nation
April 22, 2026
Stop me if you’ve heard this one. In the months after a very contentious election, our nation seems more divided than at any time since the decade before the Civil War. The new Republican president is...
Facebook

THE EUFAULA INDIAN JOURNAL
100 N. 2nd Street
Eufaula, OK 74432

(918) 689-2191

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 THE EUFAULA INDIAN JOURNAL

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy