Tulsa Local Pulse

Tulsa Local Pulse: Gray Skies, Job Growth, and Weekend Arts

3 min · 6 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Tulsa Local Pulse: Gray Skies, Job Growth, and Weekend Arts

Descripción

Good morning, this is Tulsa Local Pulse for today. We wake up to a gray and wet start across Tulsa. News On 6 and KJRH meteorologists say scattered showers and a few rumbles of thunder move through most of the day, with highs in the upper 70s and a muggy feel. That rain may slow us down on the Broken Arrow Expressway and I 44, and outdoor plans around Gathering Place or LaFortune Park may need a backup plan. The good news is storms stay below severe levels, and by Sunday we see more dry breaks with warmer temps into the low 80s. From city hall, we keep our eye on budget talks that shape our daily life. Councilors are working on adjustments for street repairs and public safety, and there is ongoing discussion about funding for road work along Yale and Memorial, plus support for bus service on Peoria. These choices affect how we get to work, how long we sit in traffic, and how quickly first responders reach us. On the job front, local recruiters report Tulsa metro unemployment hovering around 4 percent, with health care, logistics, and aerospace still hiring. Major employers near the airport and along Highway 169 are posting dozens of openings in maintenance, nursing support, and warehouse work, many starting near 18 to 20 dollars an hour. In real estate, area Realtors say we sit on roughly 2 thousand active listings, with a typical Tulsa home now around the mid 200 thousand dollar range. Homes near midtown, Cherry Street, and around Brookside still move quickly, while newer builds near Owasso and Bixby draw families looking for space and newer schools. Culturally, we have a busy weekend despite the rain. The Mecum auto auction continues at the SageNet Center at Expo Square, bringing classic car fans to 21st and Yale. Downtown, live music fills the Arts District tonight, with local bands playing small stages near Cain’s Ballroom and along Main Street. The Tulsa Performing Arts Center hosts evening shows that give us an indoor option if storms linger. For schools, several Tulsa Public Schools and Union seniors are being recognized this week for state academic awards and scholarship signings, along with strong performances from spring sports teams wrapping up their seasons. On the crime front, Tulsa police report a fairly routine overnight period, with a few arrests on DUI and property crimes, and ongoing investigations into recent burglaries near 11th Street and Lewis. Officers ask us to keep cars locked and porch lights on, especially with rainy weather reducing visibility. A small feel good note to end on. Volunteers along the Arkansas River trail organize a cleanup this morning, rain ponchos and all, showing again how our community steps up to keep our shared spaces welcoming. Thanks for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Tulsa Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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321 episodios

Portada del episodio Tulsa Local Pulse: Gray Skies, Job Growth, and Weekend Arts

Tulsa Local Pulse: Gray Skies, Job Growth, and Weekend Arts

Good morning, this is Tulsa Local Pulse for today. We wake up to a gray and wet start across Tulsa. News On 6 and KJRH meteorologists say scattered showers and a few rumbles of thunder move through most of the day, with highs in the upper 70s and a muggy feel. That rain may slow us down on the Broken Arrow Expressway and I 44, and outdoor plans around Gathering Place or LaFortune Park may need a backup plan. The good news is storms stay below severe levels, and by Sunday we see more dry breaks with warmer temps into the low 80s. From city hall, we keep our eye on budget talks that shape our daily life. Councilors are working on adjustments for street repairs and public safety, and there is ongoing discussion about funding for road work along Yale and Memorial, plus support for bus service on Peoria. These choices affect how we get to work, how long we sit in traffic, and how quickly first responders reach us. On the job front, local recruiters report Tulsa metro unemployment hovering around 4 percent, with health care, logistics, and aerospace still hiring. Major employers near the airport and along Highway 169 are posting dozens of openings in maintenance, nursing support, and warehouse work, many starting near 18 to 20 dollars an hour. In real estate, area Realtors say we sit on roughly 2 thousand active listings, with a typical Tulsa home now around the mid 200 thousand dollar range. Homes near midtown, Cherry Street, and around Brookside still move quickly, while newer builds near Owasso and Bixby draw families looking for space and newer schools. Culturally, we have a busy weekend despite the rain. The Mecum auto auction continues at the SageNet Center at Expo Square, bringing classic car fans to 21st and Yale. Downtown, live music fills the Arts District tonight, with local bands playing small stages near Cain’s Ballroom and along Main Street. The Tulsa Performing Arts Center hosts evening shows that give us an indoor option if storms linger. For schools, several Tulsa Public Schools and Union seniors are being recognized this week for state academic awards and scholarship signings, along with strong performances from spring sports teams wrapping up their seasons. On the crime front, Tulsa police report a fairly routine overnight period, with a few arrests on DUI and property crimes, and ongoing investigations into recent burglaries near 11th Street and Lewis. Officers ask us to keep cars locked and porch lights on, especially with rainy weather reducing visibility. A small feel good note to end on. Volunteers along the Arkansas River trail organize a cleanup this morning, rain ponchos and all, showing again how our community steps up to keep our shared spaces welcoming. Thanks for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Tulsa Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

6 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Tulsa Local Pulse: Warm Start, School Fraud Charges, and Happy Critmas Weekend

Tulsa Local Pulse: Warm Start, School Fraud Charges, and Happy Critmas Weekend

Good morning, this is Tulsa Local Pulse for June 5, 2026. We are waking up to a warm and mostly cloudy start, with highs near 87 and lows around 72, and we are looking at a decent chance of showers by tomorrow, so outdoor plans today around Gathering Place, River Parks, and downtown should stay flexible. According to KJRH, today stays dry for most of the day, but the weekend turns wetter, so we want listeners to keep an eye on Friday night and Saturday events. In local government news, the biggest public issue this morning is accountability in Tulsa Public Schools. According to KOSU, state and county officials have charged three people in a fraud case tied to the district, and that is likely to keep attention on oversight and spending in the days ahead. For daily life, that kind of story matters because it shapes how families view trust in public institutions and how leaders talk about transparency. On the jobs front, Tulsa keeps showing steady hiring across health care, hospitality, construction, and logistics, with employers still looking for workers who can start quickly and handle in person shifts. In real estate, the market remains active, and buyers are still seeing pressure on affordable homes near midtown and the east side, especially around 71st Street, Peoria, and Memorial, where inventory is moving faster than many expect. For business and culture, the weekend is starting to fill up. The Tulsa Flyer says the three day cycling celebration Happy Critmas rolls through the Blue Dome District today, moves into the Arts District tomorrow, and finishes with a big ride downtown, which should bring energy and traffic near downtown Tulsa and Boston Avenue. The Tulsa Regional Chamber also has its State of Inclusion event coming later this month at the Renaissance Tulsa Hotel near 68th and 107th East Avenue, showing that business and civic groups are already planning ahead. In sports and schools, we are still following Tulsa area summer athletics and end of year school news, while Tulsa Public Schools is also on the calendar beat as families look ahead to summer schedules and district updates. Public safety is quieter in the last day than in recent headlines, but that ongoing fraud case is the main crime and enforcement story tied to Tulsa right now. We do not have a major new citywide alert this morning, so we are watching for any fresh police updates around I 244, downtown, and the highways that carry the day’s traffic. We also have one feel good note. A busy Friday in Tulsa usually means a lot of people choosing local, from coffee shops near Cherry Street to food spots along Route 66, and that hometown momentum is part of what keeps the city moving. Thanks for tuning in, please subscribe, and this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Ayer2 min
Portada del episodio Tulsa Local Pulse: Storm Recovery, Tulsa Tough Returns, and Community Support

Tulsa Local Pulse: Storm Recovery, Tulsa Tough Returns, and Community Support

Good morning, this is Tulsa Local Pulse for Thursday, June 4, 2026. We wake up today still taking in the scenes of damage from the deadly tornado outbreak that swept across parts of the Tulsa area earlier this week, with national outlets showing destroyed homes and debris fields on the west side and in neighborhoods near Highway 97. Crews are out along West 41st and Southwest Boulevard clearing power lines and trees, and we’ll want to give utility and street teams extra room as they work. Local officials say damage assessments are ongoing and some families are still displaced, so we keep them in our thoughts as recovery continues. Weatherwise, we get a calmer day. Forecasters call for warm, humid air with a chance of a pop-up shower in the afternoon, but no severe storms expected. That means our outdoor plans should be in good shape, though we may want to keep water handy and take it easy in the heat. At City Hall, public notices reported in the Tulsa World this week include new bid requests for regional infrastructure projects, reflecting continuing investment in surrounding communities that affects our commutes and job opportunities. As we look ahead, Tulsa Flyer reminds us that the June 16 statewide primary is coming up, with early voting starting June 12, so we may want to plan now if we need to vote early. In city life, Saint Francis Tulsa Tough gears up for its 20th year this weekend. Tulsa Flyer lays out the schedule, with Friday racing in the Blue Dome District starting midafternoon around 2nd and Cincinnati, Saturday action in the Arts District near Guthrie Green and Cain’s Ballroom, and Sunday’s famous Cry Baby Hill scene above Riverside Drive near South Jackson and 13th. Music, food trucks, and a family fun zone along Riverside promise a big weekend of bikes and block-party energy. For families today, Philbrook Museum hosts Storytime in the garden this morning from 10 to 10:30, free for members and included with admission, a nice option if we want something calm and kid-friendly after a tense weather week. On the cultural calendar, Oklahomans for Equality is preparing its 2026 Equality Gala later this month, themed Mechanica, one of the group’s largest fundraisers, showing continued momentum in our downtown and East Village community spaces. On schools, Tulsa Public Schools’ district calendar shows we’re in summer break mode, with families watching for upcoming athletic camps and enrichment programs that help students stay active and engaged. In the job and housing market, local listings this week show several hundred open roles in health care, aerospace, and energy around midtown and near the airport, and roughly a few hundred homes on the Tulsa market, many in the two to three hundred thousand dollar range, as buyers and renters navigate higher costs but steady inventory. Crimewise, Tulsa police report several property and domestic calls over the last day, but no widely reported major new public-safety alerts overnight. Investigations into storm-related emergencies and earlier violent incidents continue, and officers remind us to watch for downed lines, dark intersections, and to check on neighbors, especially seniors. Looking ahead, we also have the Equality Gala at the end of the month and more neighborhood events tied to Tulsa Tough, giving us chances to volunteer, support local nonprofits, and reconnect after the storms. One feel-good note to end on: community groups and churches around town are organizing donation drives for families affected by the tornado damage, collecting clothes, toiletries, and gift cards, a reminder of how strong and generous this city can be when our neighbors are hurting. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check-in. This has been Tulsa Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

4 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Tulsa Local Pulse: May 21st - Storms Ahead, Streetlights Coming, Community Strong

Tulsa Local Pulse: May 21st - Storms Ahead, Streetlights Coming, Community Strong

Good morning, this is Tulsa Local Pulse for Thursday, May twenty first, twenty twenty six. We start this morning with our weather, because it shapes everything we do today. Forecasters on Tulsa television stations are tracking strong storms sliding through Green Country overnight into this morning, with the heaviest rain focused to our northwest. Here in the Tulsa metro, including downtown, midtown, and South Tulsa along Yale and Memorial, we face scattered showers and a few storms through the morning drive, with a chance for brief heavy rain and gusty winds. The tornado risk stays low, but we stay weather aware, especially during the afternoon window from about two to nine. After today, storms become more spotty Wednesday and Thursday, with lower chances of severe weather. At City Hall, Mayor Monroe Nichols continues his Community Conversations series after that South Tulsa event at Union High School’s Multipurpose Activity Center on South Mingo. One key takeaway is the city’s plan to add roughly twelve hundred new streetlights across four priority areas, aiming to improve safety along major corridors and neighborhood arteries. We can expect to see crews working around major streets like Peoria, Admiral, and sections of 61st as those projects roll out in the new budget year. Emergency management officials are also busy today. The Tulsa County Local Emergency Planning Committee meets this morning at the James O. Goodwin Health Center, looking at hazardous materials preparedness and coordination among first responders. That matters for all of us living near industrial sites and major freight routes like Highway 75 and I 44. On the jobs front, local recruiters report steady hiring in health care, aerospace, and logistics, with dozens of openings posted this week around the airport, the Port of Catoosa, and downtown hospitals. In real estate, agents say listings across midtown and South Tulsa are holding near recent levels, with typical three bedroom homes still averaging in the mid two hundreds, and well priced properties around Brookside and near Riverside Drive moving quickly. Culturally, we have plenty to look forward to over the next few days. Downtown venues and the Tulsa Arts District are hosting live music and small festivals going into the weekend, and local theaters are rolling out late spring productions, giving us good indoor options if storms flare during the evenings. In schools and sports, area high school teams are wrapping up spring seasons, and local districts are celebrating graduation week, with ceremonies spanning from North Tulsa to Union and Broken Arrow, bringing families together citywide. On the public safety front, Tulsa police continue routine overnight patrols, with no major citywide emergencies reported so far, but they remind us to secure vehicles, especially in busy areas near apartment complexes and shopping centers. We close with a feel good note. Neighborhood groups from North Peoria to South Lewis are organizing cleanups and food drives this week, continuing that sense of community that keeps Tulsa strong, even on stormy days. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so we can stay connected. This has been Tulsa Local Pulse. We’ll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

21 de may de 20263 min