Tulsa Pauses Data Centers, Schools Cut Jobs, Community Rallies for Change
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概要
We start with breaking news from City Hall that affects us all. Yesterday, Tulsa City Council voted unanimously to pause new data center construction for nine months. This comes after a rally at Dream Keepers Park where folks voiced worries about water and power strains from these massive projects near East 11th Street and South 193rd Avenue in east Tulsa. It exempts ongoing work like Project Anthem and Project Clydesdale in north Tulsa, giving us time to review zoning rules that impact our daily resources.
Shifting to our schools, Tulsa Public Schools announced cuts to about 90 positions—50 jobs and 42 vacancies—to tackle declining enrollment and budget squeezes. Superintendent Dr. Ebony Johnson says it saves $3.5 million, starting with admin roles, but current staff stay through June 30 while we recruit teachers. This hits home as families plan for next year.
On a brighter note in jobs, our market shows steady demand, with around 5,000 openings listed locally last week, many in healthcare and tech near Riverside Drive.
Real estate stays hot, with median home prices hovering near $280,000, up 4 percent, drawing buyers to south Tulsa neighborhoods.
Weather-wise, mild temps in the low 60s today with scattered showers could dampen outdoor plans, so grab that umbrella for errands along Route 66. Outlook calls for clearing skies by evening.
Sports fans, catch the Tulsa Golden Hurricane softball team battling Oklahoma State Cowgirls this afternoon—tune in for live highlights.
New business buzz includes a fresh coffee shop opening on Cherry Street, boosting our cultural scene with live music nights ahead.
Looking ahead, join the community cleanup at River Parks Saturday, and dont miss the Tulsa Arts District First Friday events tomorrow evening.
Quick school shoutout: Booker T. Washington High School debate team took first at regionals.
Crime report from the past day stays calm—no major incidents, just a routine arrest near 71st and Memorial for theft, with police urging vigilance on public safety.
And a feel-good story: Neighbors rallied to repair playgrounds at Kendall-Whittier Elementary, strengthening our community bonds.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for daily updates. 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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