© 2025 Public Radio Tulsa
800 South Tucker Drive
Tulsa, OK 74104
(918) 631-2577

A listener-supported service of The University of Tulsa
classical 88.7 | public radio 89.5
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • A bill that allows the Oklahoma Museum of Popular Culture more avenues for funding is moving through the state legislature. Frank Lloyd Wright’s only realized skyscraper, Price Tower in Bartlesville, is set to be auctioned through a Chapter 7 bankruptcy sale in May.
  • Tulsa County Commissioners are hiring a person to manage the newly formed Office of Government Efficiency and Transparency. The city’s Asian American Affairs commissioners want Tulsa’s Islamic community to have greater input into their efforts. The Justice Department has announced a surge of FBI resources to address violent crimes in Indian Country.
  • A tornado tore through Owasso this morning. The state agency that coordinates certified mental health clinics across Oklahoma says it’s freezing funding.
  • A city councilor says Tulsa’s alternatives to traditional first response are on the chopping block. A Tulsa-born man with fast feet is going for gold. The outlook for renewable energy in Oklahoma.
  • - The federal government has threatened to close the Bureau of Indian Affairs office in Pawhuska. - Charges have been dropped against one of three Sperry students accused of sexual assault.- A protest opposing Tesla owner Elon Musk popped up in Tulsa over the weekend. - A renowned and sometimes controversial artist is in Tulsa researching Oklahoma’s complex history. - Oklahoma's governor bans a Chinese-based AI.
  • A tulsa commission is opposing a state bill that would automatically charge undocumented immigrants accused of other crimes with a felony. Beto O’Rourke and Steve Schmidt visit Tulsa to organize. Two additional measles cases have been reported in Oklahoma.
  • Gov. Stitt announces Oklahoma's newest member of the Supreme Court. Clinicians are now helping Tulsa’s 911 dispatchers. One of Oklahoma's U.S. Senators discusses the federal deficit.
  • The Tulsa Housing Authority is facing a crisis. A Democrat has announced a run for Oklahoma's governor in 2026.
  • Defense attorneys for two Sperry high schoolers are considering taking their case to a higher court following a ruling that said the teenagers can still be charged as adults.
  • Tulsa’s U.S. congressman is reportedly in El Salvador. Workers at a Green Country Veterans Affairs hospital are worried about potential federal budget cuts. The head of Tulsa’s public library system says local branches won’t be hurt by federal cuts. Tulsa’s mayor wants to bring city hall to your corner of town.
51 of 32,314