Ryan Walters steps down from nonprofit role that drew scrutiny

OKLAHOMA CITY — Incoming State Superintendent of Schools Ryan Walters has tendered his resignation from the helm of a nonprofit whose donors include advocates for education privatization and charter schools. 

Lee Denney, former state representative and current board member of Every Kid Counts Oklahoma, confirmed in a text message Sunday that Walters had resigned from the nonprofit. 

It’s still unclear when Walters’ resignation will take effect and Denney declined to answer follow-up questions. She said an official statement is expected Monday morning. 

Walters is set to be sworn in Monday, January 9. He did not respond to a request for comment. 

Following the election, Every Kid Counts Oklahoma’s board voted 3-2 to allow Walters to continue running the organization until a replacement could be found, Denney confirmed. She said that the group planned to name an interim director on Monday. 

Every Kid Counts Oklahoma paid Walters at least $120,000 in 2021, according to records obtained by The Frontier and Oklahoma Watch. The organization reported Walters’ position as CEO as a full-time, 40-hour-a-week job. A financial disclosure form Walters filed with the Oklahoma Ethics Commission does not list his salary from the group.

By statute, the state superintendent of public instruction receives a salary of $124,373.

Walters won his race for state superintendent in November by nearly 15 percentage points. He campaigned on a message of helping implement private school vouchers and against critical race theory and what he called “left-wing indoctrination” in Oklahoma public schools.  

Though Every Kid Counts Oklahoma does not reveal its largest donors, a joint investigation by The Frontier and Oklahoma Watch last year found that much of the organization’s funds come from national school privatization and charter school expansion advocates, including the Walton Family Foundation, the primary charitable outlet of the heirs to Walmart founder Sam Walton, and an education group founded by billionaire industrialist Charles Koch.

The Arkansas Community Foundation, a statewide charitable organization that allows donors to choose groups or projects to donate to, gave more than $1.2 million to Every Kid Counts Oklahoma in 2020 and another $1.2 million in 2021, tax records show. The grants were reported “to support EKCO’s general operations as they quarterback and broaden an education coalition of local and national partners to focus on high-quality education and reform.” Donations to EKCO were among the organization’s largest and among a few based outside of Arkansas.


Published in partnership with Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier under Creative Commons licenseFree Press publishes this report as a collaborative effort to provide the best coverage of state issues that affect our readers.


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Reese Gorman Is A Political Reporter Based In Oklahoma City. Contact: [email protected] // [email protected] // (210)268-8694

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A Veteran Investigative Reporter Who Has Covered Eastern Oklahoma for more than 15 Years, Clifton Joined The Frontier In April 2017. He Has Covered Numerous Issues From Criminal Justice To Politics For Publications Including The Tulsa World, The Oklahoma Gazette, And Oklahoma Watch. Clifton Can Be Reached At [email protected]. Follow Him On Twitter @Cliftonhowze

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Jennifer Palmer has been a reporter with Oklahoma Watch since 2016 and covers education. Contact her at (405) 761-0093 or [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter @jpalmerOKC