Oklahomans fear eviction spike as federal moratorium expires journalrecord.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from journalrecord.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Rebecca Najera | Oklahoma Watch Jul 25, 2021 1 of 5
A child sits on the steps of an east Tulsa apartment complex June 15 reading a flyer that has information about rental assistance.
Whitney Bryen / Oklahoma Watch
Terra Atkins talks to tenants at an apartment complex in east Tulsa about rental assistance that could help them stay in their apartment after the national eviction moratorium expires. The tenant does not speak English, but her teenage daughter translated for her and Atkins left a flyer with information in Spanish.
Whitney Bryen / Oklahoma Watch
Terra Atkins, a tenant rights leader, reads an eviction notice taped to the door of an apartment complex in east Tulsa. A national eviction moratorium kept landlords from evicting tenants who didnât pay their rent during the pandemic. But it did not protect tenants from being evicted for other reasons that are laid out in their lease.
Oklahomans Fear Eviction Spike As Federal Moratorium Expires publicradiotulsa.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from publicradiotulsa.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Petersburg resident Mikey Fuller experiences a dream come true while bringing awareness to the LGBTQ+ community.
Have you ever had the pleasure of watching the Mighty Wurlitzer organ rise out of the orchestra pit at Virginia s grand motion picture palace The Byrd Theatre?
It s a magical moment and sight to behold in Richmond s Carytown district.
The Mighty Wurlitzer is one of about 40 surviving instruments in their original installation out of more than 2000 made by the Rudolph Wurlitzer Company between 1914 and 1942.
Fuller is one of less than 20 organists that has performed a live Mighty Wurlitzer show.
The theatre pipe organ, designed as a “one-man orchestra” to accompany silent movies, was installed when The Byrd was built in 1928.
Correction: This story originally included an incorrect phone number for Broken Arrow Ministry of Compassion. The story has been corrected.
One of Tulsa Countyâs final distributions of federal CARES Act funding is going to assist people who have fallen behind on their utility bills because of COVID-19.
County commissioners earlier this month approved $3.5 million for a utility relief program proposed by Allied Communities of Tulsa Inspiring Our Neighborhoods, or ACTION. The organization works with churches and other nonprofits to address problems in the community.
ACTIONâs Bob Moody said that after the organization advocated for the county to establish a rental assistance program using CARES Act funds, a utility assistance program seemed like a natural extension.