Oologah, Bixby, and Sapulpa 2026 municipal elections

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Three municipalities in the Tulsa metropolitan area have council seats and a proposition on the April 7, 2026, ballot. Here is a brief account of each with my recommendations.

Oologah, Town of, Proposition (5% hotel tax increase): No. There is nothing about this election on the town's website or Facebook page, which suggests an intent to slide this past the voters unawares. The town has an existing lodging tax, but no hotels or motels. Taxes shouldn't be on an April ballot where voters have no other reason to go to the polls, and for that reason alone it should be defeated.

City of Bixby, Ward 4: Brad Girard (R) (i). I haven't found any complaints about eight-year incumbent Girard, currently the councilor serving as mayor. His opponent is Jake Rowland, also a registered Republican, who has filed for state representative and school board in the past. Rowland has posted about running for office, but hasn't posted anything about his reasons for running.

Sapulpa City Council:

Sapulpa has elections for three seats on its City Council. In Ward 1, appointed incumbent Democrat Elizabeth Reeder-Nicolas is challenged by Republican Mike Harris, pastor of Beams of Light Church in Sapulpa. There was a third candidate, Brandon Mull, owner of Water Street Tattoo, but he was eliminated in the February primary, just 10 votes behind the second-place candidate. (Nicolas got 74 votes, Harris 71, Mull 61.) Mull has endorsed Nicolas.

In Ward 3, Republican incumbent Alexander Hamilton faces Republican challenger Charlie Leroy Harrison, owner of Beverly Fine Jewelry. In Ward 5, Republican incumbent Davood Mortazavi, owner of Steak & Eggs restaurant, has a Republican challenger in Kent Glesener, a professional engineer, owner of Paradigm Construction and Engineering and co-founder of Shofar International Foundation.

Sapulpa Firefighters IAFF Local 194 has endorsed Nicolas and Mortazavi. The Sapulpa FOP has also endorsed Nicolas and Mortazavi. They did not make any endorsements in Ward 3.

There has been a huge ruckus in the Ward 5 race. A troublemaker printed off copies of an article about sharia law by Christie Glesener, co-founder of Shofar International Foundation, and then stapled a slip of paper to it calling attention to Mortazavi's exotic name, implying that there was a danger that he might impose Islamic law on Sapulpa.

(Here is a four-page, text-only version of Christie Glesener's article on sharia law from 2011.)

Mortazavi came to America from Iran as a child in 1983, one of many Iranian families that came to the United States after the 1979 Islamic Revolution to take refuge from the tyrannical regime of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Steak and Eggs restaurant, owned by Davood and his brother Jerry, features Veterans Hall, a separate dining room decorated with portraits of local veterans and available for free as a meeting place for local civic groups.

Christie and Kent Glesener have denounced the distribution of the article and insist that they were not involved in any way. Christie Glesener directly denied involvement in response to a Facebook post by a relative of Mortazavi.

Micah Choquette of the Sapulpa Times reported on the controversy in the Monday episode of the newspaper's podcast, but also reported on the recent final determination in a U. S. Department of Labor case against Paradigm Construction and Engineering, the firm owned by the Gleseners. The company has been debarred from federal contracts for three years because of violations of the Davis-Bacon prevailing wage act, misclassification of employees, and failure to pay overtime. The Gleseners made a final appeal to refer the case to the Secretary of Labor for review, but that appeal was denied on March 6, 2026. The DOL Wage and Hour Division (WHD) case number is 16-01093/94, and the Office of Administrative Law Judge case number is 2017-DBA-00010, and the Administrative Review Board case number is 2023-0054. Running a case search with any of those numbers will turn up a docket report tracing the case's history from 2017 to 2026. Here are links to the Administrative Law Judge's denial of summary judgment from August 27, 2020, the Administrative Law Judge's Decision and Order from August 28, 2023, Administrator's Response Brief from May 10, 2024, and the Decision and Order from January 30, 2026. However much one may disagree with the Davis-Bacon Act, if you're going to be a federal contractor, you had better obey the law and adhere to all the federal regulations that apply and are spelled out in your contract. If you screw up, best to admit fault and bring your practices into compliance.

Sapulpa Times has a playlist of interviews with candidates for Ward 1 and Ward 5. (Ward 3 candidates declined to be interviewed.) Included in the playlist is an interview with Central Tech Superintendent Kent Burris discussing the proposed permanent millage increase for the Career Tech district, which also appears on the April 7 ballot.

Here is a map of Sapulpa council districts. Ward 1 is the oldest section of Sapulpa, mainly between Main and Mission. Ward 3 is the southernmost district. Ward 5 covers mainly newly annexed areas east of Polecat Creek or north of Hilton Road.

I can appreciate the frustration that many Sapulpans have, particularly Sapulpans with businesses on Dewey Avenue (Route 66), with city decisions that have blocked access to their businesses, and the feeling that city government cares more about a few blocks of downtown while neglecting the rest of the city.

My recommendations:

Sapulpa, City of, Ward 1: Mike Harris (R)
Sapulpa, City of, Ward 3: Alexander Hamilton (R) (i)
Sapulpa, City of, Ward 5: Davood Mortazavi (R) (i)

MORE:

In Friday's episode of the Sapulpa Times webcast, Micah Choquette interviewed Carla Gunn, an incumbent councilor who is not on the ballot, and he makes the claim that a councilor's perspective on national issues is irrelevant to city issues, a claim that Gunn heartily endorses. I have often endorsed local candidates with whom I disagree on national issues, in part because of the populist horseshoe on issues like sales taxes for entertainment facilities, historic preservation and zoning, cronyism, and, recently, data centers -- where people on the left and right find common cause in opposition to chambercrats and developers who have a financial interest in city government decisions. Still, national political alignment is a clue to political philosophy, and cooperation with immigration enforcement is a recent and compelling example of a national issue with local impact.

In a Facebook reel Sapulpa businessman Gary Box supports incumbents and defends Flock cameras. My comment: "If you're clean, why care?" is a terrible way to look at surveillance and data collection. If the data exists, an insider can abuse it, or hackers can grab it. Keep in mind the old Soviet saying, "Show me the man, and I'll show you the crime." If insiders wanted to smear a critic or a whistleblower, Flock gives them a lot of material that could be twisted for that purpose.

A couple of good comments on the cliquishness of city politics, this one from Kevin Emmons to Brandon Mull

Good luck! A hundred years of people sitting behind desks making decisions with no real skin in the game is very hard to overcome. Then couple that with the fact that the inner circle of politics seeks to promote and reward itself for false accomplishments and you start to understand the machine you're up against. It gets tiring seeing awards being handed out to organizations and government agencies that have completely failed their communities. Oh you invested millions of dollars you did nothing to earn on a field of dreams and your inner circle nominated you for an award, isn't that cute?

And from Brandon Mull himself:

If my running for a council seat hasn't shown you exactly why I need to be in there yet, then you aren't paying attention. I want the best possible future for the town and ALL of the people here and am getting character attacks from those that want to be in the cliques sooo very bad yet are still standing on the porch not allowed inside.

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This page contains a single entry by Michael Bates published on April 6, 2026 11:39 PM.

Broken Arrow 2026 bond issues and sales tax increase was the previous entry in this blog.

2026 Oklahoma School Board general election: BatesLine ballot card is the next entry in this blog.

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