Tulsa News: Bail Revoked, Public Safety Spending, Holiday Recycling Tips, and More Local Updates
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We start with breaking news from the Tulsa County Courthouse downtown. Two News Oklahoma reports that a judge revokes the bond for Rachel Odom, the Tulsa woman accused of murdering her ex husband earlier this year. Prosecutors say she violates bond conditions by sending luxury gifts to family members she is ordered not to contact, and she is now back in the Tulsa County jail on North Denver Avenue while attorneys argue over her medical care and competency.
At City Hall on East Second Street, the Tulsa Flyer reports that our City Council approves more than four point eight million dollars in mid year public safety spending. Most of that, about three point four million, goes to a new police records system, and just over a million covers police and jail overflow costs. Another three hundred thousand supports the city’s Mobile Crisis Response Team, which means we should see more mental health support on our streets in the new year.
As we step outside this morning around Riverside Drive or up on Cherry Street, we are dealing with chilly, seasonable air, light winds, and dry skies. We stay cool through the afternoon with clouds increasing, but no major weather issues for travel or shopping. Tonight looks cold but quiet, with a similar pattern tomorrow before a slight warmup early next week.
On the holiday front, KTUL reports the City of Tulsa is reminding us to recycle carefully. Cardboard boxes and plain wrapping paper can go in our blue carts, but ribbons, bows, tinsel, and Christmas lights need to go in the gray trash carts. Live trees can be cut into four foot sections and left at the curb on our regular trash day, or dropped at the city mulch site on North 145th East Avenue.
In real estate and jobs, local agents say east Tulsa and south Tulsa continue to see steady listings, with average home prices hovering in the mid two hundreds. Employers along the Highway 169 corridor are still posting hundreds of openings, especially in warehouse, health care, and customer service roles, offering hourly wages in the mid to upper teens.
For sports fans, we have hockey at the BOK Center tonight. The Tulsa Oilers host the Allen Americans for their Peanuts Christmas game, with doors at five thirty and the puck dropping just after seven.
Looking ahead, we have neighborhood light displays from Brookside to Maple Ridge, holiday concerts at the Tulsa PAC, and community events in Guthrie Green through the weekend, giving us plenty of reasons to get out if we bundle up.
On the crime front, Tulsa police report a relatively calm past twenty four hours, with officers responding mainly to property crimes and a few domestic calls, but no major new public safety threats.
For a feel good story, the city’s mulch site program means our old Christmas trees can be turned into free mulch for Tulsa residents, helping our parks and gardens long after the holidays are over.
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