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Officials: $414 Million School Bond Isn t A Political Issue

Updated May 25, 4:35 p.m. Officials from around Tulsa are urging voters to pass a $414 million bond package on June 8th for Tulsa Public Schools.     The bond package includes $3.9 million to complete HVAC improvements started with CARES Act money In a press conference today between Tulsa Regional Chamber, Green Country Workforce, and a citizens bond committee, the link between healthy schools and a strong economy was highlighted. Michael Neal is the President and CEO of the Tulsa Chamber. Our local school systems develop the workforce of tomorrow, Neal said. They provide a pipeline that companies need. This vote is more controversial than usual. In a Facebook post on May 6th, the Republican Party of Tulsa urged voters to reject the bond, citing a distrust of superintendent Deborah Gist.

Tulsa Race Massacre survivors demand reparations for Black Wall Street

100 Years After the Tulsa Massacre, What Does Justice Look Like?

100 Years After the Tulsa Massacre, What Does Justice Look Like? https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/25/magazine/tulsa-race-massacre-1921-greenwood.html Sections 100 Years After the Tulsa Massacre, What Does Justice Look Like? In 1921, a white mob attacked the Greenwood district of Tulsa, killing hundreds of Black people and destroying the neighborhood. Justice has never been served. Can it still be today? Lessie Benningfield Randle, a 106-year-old survivor of the Tulsa massacre.Credit.Rahim Fortune for The New York Times May 25, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET As dusk was falling on Sept. 16, 2016, callers began dialing 9-1-1 to report that a Lincoln Navigator had been abandoned on 36th Street North in Tulsa, Okla.

Tulsa Public Schools: $414 Million Bond Isn t A Political Issue

  The bond package includes $3.9 million to complete HVAC improvements started with CARES Act money Today in a joint press conference with Tulsa Regional Chamber, speakers pressed the idea that a healthy education system supports a strong economy. Michael Neal is the President and CEO of the Tulsa Chamber.    Our local school systems develop the workforce of tomorrow, Neal said. They provide a pipeline that companies need.   This vote is more controversial than usual. In a Facebook post on May 6th, the Republican Party of Tulsa urged voters to reject the bond, citing a distrust of superintendent Deborah Gist.   Tensions have risen between Republicans and Gist since the start of the pandemic. While Governor Kevin Stitt pushed for a return to in-person learning last year, Gist delayed. Students in Tulsa went back to school in February. 

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