Tulsa Technology Center is a wonderful asset for the Tulsa metro area. On a relatively small millage (13.33 mills) and no bond issues, the district built and maintains six modern campuses and offers training for an extensive range of careers. The district suffered a significant setback with extensive tornado damage to the North Peoria campus on March 6, 2026. Republican incumbent Jim W. Baker is running for re-election to a 7-year term to the board of the Tulsa Technology Center. Baker serves Office 7, which covers the southern part of Tulsa County, including Bixby, Glenpool, Jenks, and most of Tulsa south of 81st Street, and the portions of Okmulgee and Wagoner counties in the Tulsa Tech district. Baker has been the board member for District 7 since 1988. The election is April 7, 2026. There are two candidates; Baker is being challenged by school teacher Matthew McAfee. Scott Gaspar offered this tribute to Jim Baker on his Facebook profile:
Over 40 years ago, I met Dr. Jim Baker in high school through his DECA class (Distributive Education Clubs of America)--a student organization designed to prepare young people for careers in marketing, finance, hospitality, and management. I signed up mostly because it sounded like an easy class that let me leave school early every day. Classic teenage thinking. What I actually found--and what thousands of others who crossed paths with Dr. Baker discovered--was something far more powerful: a life-changing experience that still shapes how I approach life and business today. Dr. Baker's class had a completely different culture, so different that many other teachers openly criticized it. We weren't just taught to think about things; we were taught to do them. When a topic came up, we didn't stop at classroom theory. Dr. Baker brought in real-world examples and connected us directly with the professionals involved. The level of engagement was unlike anything I had ever experienced in school. Assignments required us to call or meet with actual business owners, bankers, and entrepreneurs. We developed real business plans, financial forecasts, and marketing strategies. We learned the genuine work ethic needed for success after graduation. We used technology and research tools to explore business processes, accounting, and marketing far beyond any textbook. Dr. Baker introduced us to an entirely new culture of education--and we embraced it. We worked hard on presentations and built meaningful, lifelong relationships with business leaders. For the first time, we truly understood the realities of work, the challenges of building a business, and the sacrifices successful people make. In the 1980s, Dr. Baker was already teaching Career and Technical Education (CTE) before the term even existed. I've followed his career ever since. He carries that same culture of responsibility, accountability, and real-world focus wherever he goes. He's not a polished politician--he has zero tolerance for nonsense--but his record is extraordinary. His credentials are outstanding, his experience vast, and most importantly, he has produced thousands of living success stories: professionals and business owners across Oklahoma and the United States who credit him with changing their trajectories. Dr. Baker played a pivotal role in transforming what we kids of the '70s and '80s jokingly called "the high school with ashtrays" (Tulsa Vo-Tech) into one of the premier Career Technology institutions in the country. Today, Tulsa Tech offers cutting-edge programs in cybersecurity, radiology, aviation, biotechnology, and much more. He has led the modernization and expansion of outdated 1960s- and '70s-era facilities without relying on the large, burdensome bond measures common in other public school districts. (Tulsa Tech is a public school district.) The entire community has benefited. Dr. Jim Baker is running for re-election on April 7th. These school board elections are poorly publicized and typically see very low turnout. In District 7, only about 2,000 votes are usually cast out of more than 96,000 eligible voters. Dr. Baker faces a well-funded opponent in [Matthew] McAfee, whose background includes teaching at Edison and a short-lived bookstore venture in Mother Road Market that closed after a couple of years. McAfee left teaching in 2019, with no subsequent public employment record listed, yet he presents this as qualification to manage Tulsa Tech's $335 million+ budget. His campaign has been active, with events and a strong volunteer team. If you live in the Tulsa area, Dr. Baker has almost certainly touched your life--through the skilled nurse who cared for you in the ER, the IT professional who keeps your systems secure, the aircraft technician who maintains the plane you fly on, the firefighter who protects your community, or the entrepreneur who runs your favorite restaurant. Countless graduates credit their success to the education they received at Tulsa Tech under his leadership. I encourage everyone to vote in school board elections, even if you don't have children in the system. The graduates of Tulsa Tech become the professionals we all rely on every day. While these races have become increasingly political, experience, results, and vision should still matter most. Please do your own research and vote based on track record. If you've ever visited a Tulsa Tech campus, hired one of its excellent graduates, or benefited from its programs, I hope you'll support Dr. Baker on April 7th so this proven culture of excellence can continue. Whether you're in District 7 or not, please share this. Dr. Baker has given more than 40 years of selfless service to our community and proven leadership at scale. Chances are, someone you know has been positively impacted by his work. Let's make sure it continues. If you would like to learn more about Jim, visit his website: https://drjimbaker.com/ Here are some additional details:Baker is a registered Republican voter. 21 years ago, when he was running for his third full term, I published a statement from his campaign, with the note that his campaign advisor, whom I met at Republican county headquarters where we were both volunteering to get out the vote for the 2004 election, called Baker the conservative in the race. You can find Baker's campaign contribution and expenditures filings at the new Oklahoma Ethics Commission Local Campaign Finance Transparency Portal. Unfortunately, the Ethics Commission is still allergic to permalinks for individual candidates or reports, but if you'll go to the portal, you can search the name Baker and find his filings to date. Baker has raised $8,130 and spent $6,300. Matthew McAfee is also a registered Republican, although his wife is a registered independent. Matthew McAfee was registered as an independent when the couple lived in the Yorktown neighborhood in Midtown, prior to their move to south Tulsa and Tulsa Tech District 7 in February 2023. The couple owned Eleanor's Bookshop in the Shops at Mother Road Market at 11th and Lewis from the Shops' opening in September 2020 until December 2022, when they opted to close the store after the birth of their first child earlier in the year. They wrote at the time that "there weren't enough hours in the day" for parenthood, small business ownership, and full-time jobs as public school teachers. On his campaign website, McAfee writes that he attended Jenks Public Schools and Victory Christian School, is a deacon at First Presbyterian Church, and moved south so that their children could attend Jenks Southeast Elementary where he went to school. His website does not list his current employment, but a Facebook post indicates he is a Community School Coordinator for the Union Public Schools 6th Grade Center, which is confirmed on the Union district website and the 6th Grade Center website. His wife Kelsey is a Career Connect advisor for Union High School. McAfee's bookshop began as a pop-up at Mother Road Market, won a competition to get one of the spaces in the Shops at Mother Road Market, then received funding from a Kiva loan under the trusteeship of the Lobeck Taylor Family Foundation. According to this Tulsa Kids article, Eleanor's Bookshop was named to honor Eleanor Roosevelt. McAfee has yet to file a contribution and expenditures report, but I have a suspicion that former Democrat Mayor Kathy Taylor's name will be on it. The bookshop's Facebook feed often highlighted children's books written from a progressive perspective, such as this Election Day 2020 post advertising Jill Biden's children's book about Joe Biden and Kamala Harris's Superheroes Are Everywhere and a post promoting a book featuring the poem read at Biden's inauguration. Does this represent McAfee's personal politics, or was it a facade to ingratiate himself with his landlord and benefactor? Based on Scott Gaspar's testimonial and Dr. Baker's many years of experience in vocational education, and in light of indications of his opponent's leftward leanings, I'd vote to re-elect Dr. Jim W. Baker to the Tulsa Tech board.If you would like to research his opponent, [Matthew] McAfee, here is his website: https://sites.google.com/view/mcafee-for-tulsa-tech/home Please share, comment, and most importantly participate in this election.
- Holds a Doctorate from OSU in Occupational Adult Education
- Expanded Tulsa Tech to multiple campuses
- Added dozens of new career paths to the Tulsa Tech offering
- Embedded career tech programs into Tulsa high schools
- Helped build state of the art facilities
- Attracted industry-leading instructors
- Vision of Excellence Award
- Tulsa Tech Hall of Fame
- Oklahoma All-State School Board Member
- Former Jenks Teacher of The Year
- Former Oklahoma Marketing Teacher of The Year
- Former Oklahoma Career Tech Teacher of The Year
- Former Region IV Career Tech Teacher of The Year
- 40 Years of law enforcement service as a reserve officer
- FEMA certified
- March 28, 2026 at 06:49PMRe-elect Jim W. Baker to the Tulsa Tech board
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