Tulsa, St. Thomas More Church
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Oklahoma's history offers a truer, unvarnished portrait of America, with its ambitions, erasures, stubborn beauty and its almost devotional violence.
The Oklahoma Insurance Department’s final pilot of the Strengthen Oklahoma Homes grant application opens on Monday, August 4. The program offers up to $10,000 to help homeowners in eligible zip codes upgrade their roofs to national FORTIFIED standards.
Tulsans ask why they're paying more for gas than Oklahoma City, with no clear economic explanation. Reaction from drivers and insight from an industry expert.
Cities and businesses preparing for the Route 66 centennial next year.The owner of Decopolis is building a new location along route 66, and he says a grant from
It's fun to spend time outside in the summer, but it's also when mosquitoes and ticks are out in full force. The Tulsa Health Department says the rain we've had lately has left a lot of standing water,
It is no coincidence that when Cherokees think about love and caring for one another, we connect immediately to the bond with our children. As we all must look out for one another, our care for children extends to our friends and neighbors throughout northeast Oklahoma.
Tulsa said its police officers will still enforce the law within city limits. That includes the ability to stop, detain and arrest tribal members. Tulsa and the Muscogee Nation have had a cross-deputization agreement since 2006, which allows each Tulsa police to enforce state law on tribal land.
In Tulsa, black residents, who are about 10% of the population, hold on to their proud history of Black Wall Street. In the early 1900s, Greenwood boasted doctors, lawyers, musicians and businessmen.
A Tulsa nonprofit is working to shed light on an often-overlooked piece of the housing crisis—access to stable housing for formerly incarcerated individuals.