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The Greenwood Art Project, a public art initiative of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission, opened with a host of activities featuring local and international artists, led by artists Rick Lowe and William Cordova. The Greenwood Art Project seeks to raise awareness of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and destruction of the historic Greenwood District including Black Wall Street, one of the most prominent Black-owned business districts in the United States during the early 1900s.
Today, municipalities in Tulsa County received a major disaster declaration from FEMA to help residents financially impacted by recent weather events.
After four days, the second test excavation for graves from the 1921 Race Massacre at Oaklawn Cemetery concluded. At least 12 coffins holding human remains have been found where anomalies were previously detected. It is still to be determined whether the burials are associated with the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, as further efforts to determine the identities of those remains and their causes of death continue to be explored.
Press Release: May 24, 2024
City of Tulsa offices will be closed on Monday, September 5, for Labor Day. Refuse and recycling will be collected. Please read more for a full list of services affected.
The Mayor’s Office of Resilience and Equity is hosting a virtual Equity Dialogue on Tuesday, January 17, from 6 – 7:30 p.m. to coincide with the National Day of Racial Healing.
Through the Vision Tulsa Public Schools Safety First Initiative, increased safety improvements are starting at many local schools in the Tulsa area.
Three Improve Our Tulsa public meetings are scheduled to receive comments on the revised proposal for the renewal of Improve Our Tulsa, the City’s basic streets and infrastructure program. During the meetings, Mayor Bynum and Tulsa City Councilors will give an overview of the latest Improve Our Tulsa proposal including district specific projects. Following public comments, the City of Tulsa will host an “open house” event with department heads and elected officials to answer resident questions and have one-on-one conversations about the proposal and projects.
On October 13, Mayor G.T. Bynum announced James Wagner will serve as the Director of the City’s Working In Neighborhoods (WIN) Department effective immediately. Wagner, the current Finance Director for the City of Tulsa, is assuming the WIN role following the passing of longtime City of Tulsa employee and former WIN Director Dwain Midget. Wagner will also serve as the interim Finance Director while the City follows its process to fill the Finance Director position.
A dozen Tulsa high school students will leave the traditional classroom behind in the spring semester, which began today, to be part of an urban classroom at City Hall, where academics meet the real world and the city itself becomes the text.
Read the latest update for the City's winter weather response and service impact.
Unused or expired prescription medications are a public safety issue, leading to accidental poisoning, overdose and abuse. A prescription drug take-back event is scheduled for residents to properly dispose of unwanted medications and prescription drugs on Saturday, October 29, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at several Tulsa area locations.
Mayor G.T. Bynum released this statement following the passing of TPD Sgt. Craig Johnson while in the line of duty. “In this moment of terrible loss for our city, I can’t help but think of John 15:13: “No one has greater love than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” Sergeant Craig Johnson lost his life protecting the lives of every Tulsan.
The City of Tulsa is currently working on 120 waterline breaks due to record-breaking temperatures. Due to this unprecedented event in the history of our water supply and distribution system, the number of waterline breaks and customers letting faucets drip, the City’s water storage tank levels are low which could compromise emergent public safety and healthcare needs. To address storage tank levels, the City of Tulsa will have 35 crews (14 City crews and 21 contract crews) in the field working to address waterline breaks.