Oklahoma

The Impact Project synthesizes publicly available data about the impacts of government change.

State Dashboards provide a snapshot of impacts to states, including the size of the federal workforce, federal dollars, a profile of probationary workers, and impacts to federal programs.

Dashboards will change as the data does, and you may find areas that need updating. Please reach out via [email protected] if you would like to support our work, share data, or provide feedback.

Click here to download state data.

Federal Workforce in Oklahoma

Total Workforce

1,847,403

Federal Workforce

41,867

Probationary Federal Workforce

3,658

Sources: OPM.gov (Mar. '24); Census.gov (Dec '24); BLS.gov (Feb. '24)

Federal Funding & State Revenue

Historically, federal dollars have accounted for about a quarter to a third of state revenue. The COVID-19 Pandemic increased those numbers. Approximately 30.29% of the State's 2019 budget came from federal funding, and 42.84% of 2022's budget.

Sources: Pew Trusts; Census.gov; NBER.gov

Summary of State Dots

Action Oklahoma Stories
Defense6
Economy & Employment9
Education4
Emergency Services, Public Safety & Law Enforcement6
Energy40
Food & Agriculture20
Housing2
Humanities & the Arts1
Infrastructure4
International Development2
Natural Resources, Environment & Public Lands20
Overarching22
Public Health & Healthcare33
Research & Academic Research5
Social Services22
Total 196

Last Updated: 4/23/2025

DOGE Data Summary

According to DOGE data, 24 contracts, 32 grants and 12 leases have been terminated in Oklahoma.

Top Federal Occupations in Oklahoma

This table provides a snapshot of federal occupations in this state. Click here for descriptions of these occupations.

Probationary employees include those employed by a federal agency for a year or less by March, 2024. For some agencies, the probationary period last longer (2-3yrs). In most cases, the probationary period restarts when a worker is promoted.

Occupation Total Employees Probationary Employees
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT1900204
SHEET METAL MECHANIC1803192
NURSE1690201
MISCELLANEOUS ADMINISTRATION AND PROGRAM147951
MANAGEMENT AND PROGRAM ANALYSIS145536
AIRCRAFT MECHANIC1409137
VETERANS CLAIMS EXAMINING1345145
ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING114361
LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT111544
MEDICAL SUPPORT ASSISTANCE848163

Sources: OPM.gov (2024)

Top Federal Employers in State

State Agency Non-probationary Probationary Total
OKDepartment Of The Air Force16183138117564
OKDepartment Of Veterans Affairs653711877724
OKDepartment Of The Army43164474763
OKDepartment Of Transportation32001803380
OKDepartment Of Defense24201632583

Sources: OPM.gov

Impacted Funding for Food Programs

This summarizes cuts from only a few of the food-related programs impacted by funding changes since January 2025.

The LFS program awards money to states to buy local foods for schools and childcare institutions, and the LFPA program provides funding for state, tribal and territorial governments to buy food produced within the state or within 400 miles of delivery destinations. Both programs have been cancelled.

State, Tribe, or Territory Local Food for Schools (FY25) Local Food Purchase Cooperative Agreement (FY25)
Oklahoma$10,900,211$4,903,569

Top 5 Counties with Federal Workers

County Federal Employees
Oklahoma County29314
Comanche County3990
Tulsa County3943
Muskogee County3296
Pittsburg County1862

Sources: BLS.gov

Potentially Impacted Federal Programs

Oklahoma administers several federally supported social programs. These programs collectively play a crucial role in supporting the well-being of Oklahoma residents by addressing essential needs ranging from healthcare and nutrition to financial assistance and housing support.

Examples include:

Due to federal budget cuts in 2025, some of these programs have already been impacted, and others may be impacted in the future.

State Map

Federal Cuts Tracker
Rural Counties
  •   Rural Counties
Indigenous Lands
  •   Indigenous Lands
Majority Non-White Areas
  •   Majority Non-White
Poverty Areas
  •   Poverty Rate >= 20%
Number of Federal Workers by Congressional District
  •  0 - 4,000
  •  4,000 - 7,000
  •  7,000 - 10,000
  •  10,000 - 15,000
  •  15,000 - 25,000
  •  25,000 - 35,000
  •  35,000 - 50,000
  •  >50,000
Number of Federal Workers by County
  •  0 - 50
  •  50 - 100
  •  100 - 250
  •  250 - 500
  •  500 - 1,000
  •  1,000 - 5,000
  •  5,000 - 10,000
  •  >10,000
Circle Outlines
  •   Statewide Impact
  •   Location-Specific
future 1

Future Analysis

Check back for deeper dives into this data, including consideration of these questions:

  • How do these changes impact local and state economies?
  • How are local and state governments, NGOs, and businesses responding to federal changes? What gaps are they filling, and what gaps remain?
  • How is federal government change evolving over time?

Download Full Data Set

Access a comprehensive Excel file containing all the data shown on this page. This downloadable resource is ideal for further analysis, reporting, or presentations.

quotes

“And so, if they have already made significant investments in programs with the understanding that the federal government was going to be there to provide additional support, and that support is now withheld then that perhaps can push individuals into leaving farming altogether.” - Anonymous