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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.
Tulsa Parks and Recreation is a department of the City of Tulsa with 135 parks covering roughly 6,553 acres.
News Release: Mar. 4, 2025
Located in Chamberlain Park, between Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and North Hartford Avenue and between East 46th and 56th Streets North, the Jane A. Malone Center offers the surrounding neighborhood and community a place to come together for healthy exercise, recreation and community enrichment. The Jane A. Malone Center includes a weight room, gym with a full-size basketball court and bleachers, an arts and craft room, kitchen, a multi-purpose room, and a separate annex building with kitchenette and bathrooms.
The Public Oversight Committee for the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Graves Investigation will continue their discussion virtually Thurs., Jan. 28 at 5:30 p.m. Researchers from the physical investigation team will provide details in the next phase of the exhumation process at Oaklawn Cemetery.
Mayor G.T. Bynum and the Community Service Council hosted more than 300 business, nonprofit, faith-based and community leaders at the A Way Home for Tulsa Strategic Planning Kickoff Thursday, February 21, 2019. Event participants learned about various causes of homelessness before an interactive feedback session. The information gathered today, along with research, focus groups and other citywide feedback tools will guide Tulsa’s most comprehensive plan for preventing homelessness.
We need a driver to help our women get to their appointments. We have a ministry vehicle for volunteers to use.
City of Tulsa Animal Welfare is taking proactive measures to stop the spread of canine distemper virus. Starting Friday, May 6, TAW will be closed indefinitely while it works to treat animals and prevent further spread.
The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Graves Investigation will continue next week in the city of Tulsa. Three sites were originally identified for initial scanning based on data and historian reports from the 2001 State Commissioned Report of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
The test excavation to uncover potential mass graves from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre within the Sexton area at Oaklawn Cemetery, where an anomaly was previously discovered, concluded today. Following eight days of searching, findings indicate no evidence of human remains are present in the excavation area.
Starting Monday, July 13, the City of Tulsa will resume the test excavation for the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Graves Investigation with the University of Oklahoma - Oklahoma Archaeological Survey (OAS) on July 13 at Oaklawn Cemetery. The test excavation is expected to take three to six days. Each day, work will begin around 7 a.m. and end at approximately 3 p.m. depending on the heat. On the first day of work, the team will conduct site preparations and begin the initial soil removal. The full test excavation is expected to begin on Tues., July 14.