Your search for "permit" returned 1379 results. Showing results 751 through 775.
Mayor G.T. Bynum and the Tulsa Performing Arts Center Trust signed an agreement creating an historic partnership that will allow for the future growth of the Tulsa Performing Arts Center (PAC) while creating an enhanced experience for PAC visitors.
News Release: Oct. 24, 2024
Restore Hope Ministries has been selected by the City of Tulsa and Tulsa County as the lead agency to administer $19.6 million in critical federal funding to provide much needed rent and utility relief to Tulsa City and County residents. The Emergency Rental and Utility Assistance Program (ERAP), under guidelines set forth by the U.S. Department of the Treasury, will help landlords and tenants by paying past due rent, utilities (water, gas, and electric) and, in some cases, forward rent for up to three months to ensure housing stability.
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.
Press Release: February 13, 2025
Mayor G.T. Bynum has named Keri Fothergill as Chief Administrative Officer for the City of Tulsa effective July 25. Fothergill will serve in Mayor’s Bynum’s cabinet and manage the Customer Care, Human Resources, Information Technology, Municipal Courts and Working in Neighborhoods departments.
Team snow plowing continues this morning following overnight snowfall, with City of Tulsa street crews working to get the remaining snow off the main roadways in preparation for more snowfall later today and tonight.
Mayor G.T. Bynum shared the 2019 Office of the Mayor Annual Report Wednesday morning, which consists of programs and projects his Administration has worked on the past year to help Tulsa become a globally competitive city.
On June 5, Tulsa was announced as a winner of the Cities of Service Experience Matters competition. With support from AARP, Cities of Service will work with Tulsa and five other cities to develop volunteering initiatives that address public problems related to the drivers of poverty.
The Public Oversight Committee for the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Graves Investigation met virtually on Sept. 14 at 5:30 p.m. to receive an update from the physical investigation committee regarding the initial test excavation and additional geophysical research conducted at the Clyde Eddy site within the Oaklawn Cemetery.