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Category: Your Money
A new path to affordable homeownership opens in north Tulsa’s Flat Rock Ridge development
The new neighborhood in north Tulsa aims to lower barriers to homeownership with payment assistance, incentives, construction and community investment.
Here are the cost of living bills still standing as Oklahoma legislative session barrels forward
Many of the bills on the Flyer’s radar met an early fate but others targeting health care, immigration and more live on.
Oklahoma seniors could get a pass on property taxes if lawmakers sign off on this resolution
But Tulsa County Assessor John Wright says the government’s efforts to make up for that lost money might put strains on your wallet in other ways.
Tulsa drivers see gas prices jump amid oil spike following U.S. strikes on Iran
A gallon of regular gasoline is now just under $3 at many pumps across the city. Drivers say the increase was noticeable.
More SNAP changes are here. Here’s what you can and can’t buy with Oklahoma food stamps.
The state is implementing new restrictions on soft drinks and candy Feb. 15. That means thousands of items cannot be purchased with SNAP benefits.
There may be more pros than cons to paying with cash for medical procedures in Oklahoma
A retired surgeon has a guide to navigating costs at 15 Tulsa hospitals. Here’s what it could mean for you.
From the emergency room to your living room: Saint Francis launches new at-home care program
St. Francis Health System is collaborating with CommunityCare for its hospital-at-home program for chronically ill patients.
LIFE Senior Services offers free tax help to Tulsa’s elderly community
It’s open to anyone over 60 years old and making a total income less than $69,000 a year.
‘By the grace of God’: Tulsa day cares caught between raising rates and keeping doors open
Fewer Oklahoma families will qualify for child care help in 2026 — and funding is already dropping. Tulsa’s neighborhood providers are feeling the squeeze.
SNAP freeze showed fragility of food access. Tulsans want to help you grow your own.
Growing food can cost you next to nothing — if you’re willing to be resourceful.
What in the TIF? This is how Tulsa uses taxes to fund development projects.
The Flyer got into the weeds to understand tax increment financing so you don’t have to.
