Your search for "code" returned 1008 results. Showing results 226 through 250.
Mayor G.T. Bynum announced Amy Brown will serve as Tulsa’s Deputy Mayor beginning Jan. 14, 2019. “Amy Brown has one of the best minds I’ve encountered in public service at any level. I’ve worked with her for years, both on the City Council and now in the Mayor’s Office. Over the last two years, she has taken on some of our most challenging projects - from improving the city government as a workplace to establishing the Tulsa Jail. She has proven herself as an adept manager and leader and will make a great Deputy Mayor. I am thankful she has agreed to move into this role,” Mayor G.T. Bynum said.
Results from the City of Tulsa’s 2020 Water Quality Report show that the City’s water system continues to deliver high quality, good-tasting water that is safe to drink and free of bacteria.
Two employees were recognized today for their tireless efforts to improve safety culture at the City of Tulsa. City Star, a City of Tulsa safety awards and recognition program, was awarded to Kelli Canup and Connie Demoret, employees who both work at the City’s Water and Sewer Department.
Monday, May 8, during a special employee recognition ceremony at City Hall, Mayor G.T. Bynum presented a Michael P. Kier Tulsa Blue Award to Pete Cheek for his outstanding service and a City Star Award to Patrick McManus for his work in improving the safety culture at the City of Tulsa.
City Hall, Municipal Court and other City facilities will be closed on Monday, Jan. 18, in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Public safety and mission critical operations, however, will operate as normal. Residents who need assistance with a water or sewer problem may call the following 24-hour emergency numbers: water – (918) 596-9488, and sewer – (918) 586-6999.
The Office of the City Clerk for the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma.
The City has released a Request for Proposals (RFP) for professional services to operate a non-congregate low barrier shelter and case management program.
Tuesday, the City of Tulsa was made aware the persons responsible for the May 2021 City of Tulsa ransomware attack shared more than 18,000 City files via the dark web mostly in the form of police citations and internal department files. Police citations contain some Personal Identifiable Information (PII) such as name, date of birth, address and driver’s license number. Police citations do not include social security numbers.
As the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial approaches, the City of Tulsa stands in remembrance for the lives that were lost and the families of those affected by the racial violence that unfolded in Tulsa 100 years ago. A century after these horrific events, the City of Tulsa, under Mayor G.T. Bynum’s leadership, is addressing the legacy of the Massacre and making unprecedented investments in community-led redevelopment, including the reexamination of the 1921 Graves Investigation.
The third and final community visioning public workshop about the Vision Tulsa project: Arena District Master Plan will be held Wednesday, Sept. 26, from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Tulsa Central Library Pocahontas Greadington Learning and Creativity Center (Lower Level 2), 400 Civic Center.
It’s been one year since Water Distribution implemented its Valve Program, and the City is now in the process of obtaining data on all of the valves in the city – data that tells us what assets are in excellent, good, fair and poor condition so crews can make the most informed decisions regarding the management of Tulsa’s water assets.
Due to a fire at the Tulsa Recycle Transfer Facility (TRT), the City’s contracted recycling process facility, the City of Tulsa will send residential recycling to Covanta’s Trash to Energy Plant while repairs are being made at the TRT facility. Recycling customers should continue to place recycling in the blue cart and trash in the gray cart.
The New Tulsans Welcoming Plan is a comprehensive roadmap for building a more equitable Tulsa while fostering connections between all immigrants and long-term residents.
Tulsa Municipal Court is offering an amnesty session for citizens who have outstanding moving violation citations. The amnesty session falls in line with the Resilient Tulsa Strategy, which helps equip all Tulsans with resources to overcome barriers to thrive. Moving violation amnesty begins Monday, Feb. 24, 2020, and ends Friday, March 6, 2020.
City offices will be closed on Monday, January 16, 2023 in observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
The City of Tulsa’s Mulch Site will be closed until further notice to address a fire in the mulch piles. During this time, residents can bundle limbs and branches and tie them into bundles no more than 2-feet across and 4-feet long, weighing less than 40 lbs., and put them alongside their refuse cart on their regular trash day and crews will pick them up. There is a limit of 15 bags and/or bundles that will be picked up at the curb on a resident’s primary collection day.
Following two years of planning and eight public meetings across the city, three ballot proposals will head to Tulsa residents for a Nov. 12 vote to fund Improve Our Tulsa, the City’s basic streets and infrastructure program.