『Tulsa Data Center Debate Heats Up as City Considers Moratorium』のカバーアート

Tulsa Data Center Debate Heats Up as City Considers Moratorium

Tulsa Data Center Debate Heats Up as City Considers Moratorium

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概要

Good morning, this is Tulsa Local Pulse for Saturday, March 14. We kick off with breaking news from City Hall, where the Metropolitan Area Planning Commission is gearing up to discuss a year-long moratorium on data centers next week, sparked by opposition to the massive Project Anthem campus at East 11th Street and the Creek Turnpike. East Tulsa groups like the Indigenous Environmental Network held a town hall at Pancho Anaya Park last night, urging residents to voice concerns over water use and rising costs that hit our daily lives hard. This could reshape development in our neighborhoods.

Shifting to public safety, Tulsa Police arrested a man yesterday linked to a string of vehicle burglaries across the city, using stolen credit cards and pawning goods, according to department reports. Theyre also spotlighting Flock Safety cameras, with over 100 deployed citywide, helping recover nearly 4 million in property since 2022, though some councilors raise privacy flags from last years protest investigations. Stay vigilant with your vehicles, especially near Riverside Drive.

On sports, FC Tulsa hosts San Antonio FC tonight at 7 p.m. at ONEOK Field, our home opener after a strong conference title last season. And lace up for the 42nd St. Patricks Day Run this morning at RunnersWorld Tulsa on South Peoria Avenue, with proceeds supporting Special Olympics Oklahoma.

Weather-wise, mild temps in the low 60s today with partly cloudy skies make it perfect for events, but watch for gusty winds near 20 miles per hour that could stir dust along the Arkansas River. Outlook stays dry through Monday.

New business buzz includes The First 48 wrapping production here after a decade with TPD. Job market shows steady openings around 5,000 listings locally, rounded up, focused on tech and healthcare. Real estate sees eastside homes averaging 280,000, up slightly amid data center talks.

Mark your calendars for community events: data center moratorium vote March 18 at City Hall. Quick nod to Beggs Middle School staying closed through the year after last years EF-3 tornado, but Tulsa schools report solid basketball wins this week.

For a feel-good lift, east Tulsan Janeth Bernal joined neighbors to protect her familys water supply, showing our voices matter.

Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and remember to subscribe. This has been Tulsa Local Pulse. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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