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  • City officials are planning to apply a financing mechanism they’ve commonly used for commercial development to build more housing. Leaders of Tulsa’s public school district are split on adopting a controversial state-mandated rule.
  • - Gov. Kevin Stitt is trying to get a federal lawsuit from the Muscogee Nation against the city of Tulsa dismissed. - Oklahoma State University will lay off a dozen staff members working for a non-profit foundation following a scathing audit report. - The field for the 71st District Republican primary contains a familiar candidate and a newcomer. - City officials toured a new senior center that wants to expand to include housing.
  • Wildfires have caused the greatest destruction outside of Tulsa, but that doesn’t mean the city’s firefighters haven’t been busy. One of Oklahoma's U.S. Senators claims $30 billion in improper payments by Medicaid. Those stories and more from KWGS News.
  • Tulsa is dismissing a traffic case against an Osage citizen in what could be another victory for tribal sovereignty in Oklahoma. The state executes its first death row inmate in 2025. Tulsa's mayor has ramped up rhetoric about the governor over tribal issues. Bird lovers gather in Claremore at an event dedicated to the feathered friends.
  • A crowd gathered Wednesday outside of Tulsa City Hall to protest the looming deportation of legal U.S. resident. Oklahoma State University is expanding its medical center in Tulsa.
  • Tulsa's city auditor is asking residents to give feedback. Gov. Stitt is boasting of a "Texodus." Poetry and visual art transform downtown Tulsa this week.
  • - A community psychiatric outreach program in Tulsa will continue to get funding for now. - The chief of a local volunteer fire department wants Gov. Kevin Stitt impeached. - Local and state education leaders don’t seem worried about how a proposed dismantling of the U.S. Department of Education would affect their schools.- Looming federal cuts to Medicaid left one state senator sounding the alarm. - A couple in a small Oklahoma town is trying to save a piece of Americana.
  • - President Trump’s tariffs have generated economic uncertainty throughout the country, including within Tulsa’s city government.- The first cohort of Tulsans have completed their neighborhood academy courses.- Tulsa’s public transit authority is set to operate nine new electric buses by the end of July.
  • City officials are looking to prevent violent crime in Tulsa before it happens. Tulsa county is seeking a manager to head the “Office of Government Efficiency & Transparency.” It’s the end of Arbor Week in Oklahoma.
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