That's one way to do it. Good for them
I got a buddy who I run a business with in Florida who has been looking to relocate out here. This might just do it.
Amazon was given an average of $48,000 per job by northern VA and NYC.
Compare that to the Kaiser foundation giving $10,000 per job for people to move their job to Tulsa.
No. But Tulsa has so much potential it’s unreal. The state has been holding so much back. If Tulsa plays its cards right, it could easily become a sprawling cosmopolitan metropolis that has suburban development encompassing Grand Lake.
It is pretty sad when you have to start paying people to move to your town.
But you have to admit, in reality that’s what would happen if Tulsa boomed. The potential is there. Port city. Very impressive arts and philanthropist mentality, close to proximity to another potential major city in the making(Bentonville), and beautiful geographical features(a similarly most attractive cities have that OKC lacks).
Suburbs are where most people want to be.
I'd do it.
Woah. Are you looking into a crystal ball that allows you to see several hundred years into the future? This is crazy. Grand lake is an hour and a half away (85+ miles) and Bentonville is 2.5 hours (115 miles) away.
This distance is comparable to suggesting someone live in Colbert Oklahoma (Lake Texoma) and commute into Dallas. Dallas has a metro population 7.5 times larger than Tulsa. No one lives at that lake and commutes an hour and a half to work in Dallas. There's nothing north of McKinney but fields for 50 miles.
Yeah Grand Lake is a stretch.
Tulsa is not a port city in the classic sense, it did not develop around a port, that was added a century and a half later enough miles away from the well established core of the city it pretty much is a suburb. If Tulsa was not already regionally important the entire river management project that allows barge traffic on the Arkansas river may not have happened at all or might have not extended into Oklahoma.
The Arkansas was treated as a nuisance more than an asset up until recently. It didn't have barge traffic and frequently flooded so it was the perfect place to build refineries. The city had the foresight to preserve the banks for parkland which only in the past couple decades have become popular with rebuilt trails and running and biking.
The original plan for the navigation system actually had the terminus in Tulsa but when there were cost overruns they decided to eliminate two of the locks and instead divert into the Verdigris River to Catoosa which is at a lower elevation than Tulsa thus not requiring additional locks and bridge modifications.
It's called incentives and every city does it. The only difference here is it is private money and instead of targeting companies it targets individual entrepreneurs. According to this TW article it has already received over 1,000 applicants...for 25 openings.
https://www.tulsaworld.com/homepagel...1fa58a1d8.html
I am from Colbert and I remember in the MID 60's people were driving to Richardson (north Dallas) to work at Texas Instruments.
Actually, the towns of Melissa and Anna are booming like crazy. I have a relative that lives in a new subdivision outside Melissa and commutes to the Federal building in downtown Dallas. They wanted several acres so they shot for the burbs. TxDOT has expanded capacity of Central Expressway (US75) all the way up to near Van Alstyne. She likes the commute -- she drives into the city to the northernmost Dart rail stop and takes the light rail from there all the way to a stop about a block away from her office.
Plutonic panda is dreaming big, I like it. even if Tulsa doesn’t ever extend out to Grandlake it’s those types of ideas that move the city forward. And in regards to the port, I’ve met several folks who work for companies that have a Facility out there, and it is a major major asset for the Tulsa area manufacturing industry.
Fun fact; The port of Catoosa is actually in Tulsa city limits. Or municipal fence line as Wikipedia puts it.
http://www.incog.org/mapping/Corp%20...Limits2010.pdf
Move to Tulsa for 10k? No.
No.
Oh, you don't get it in a lump sum...
Nvm.
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