According to Build By Design, Tulsa County has been impacted by seven multicounty or even multistate disasters since 2011 that have resulted in more than $1 billion in losses each.
Tulsa, OK
Right Now
- Humidity: 55%
- Feels Like: 91°
- Heat Index: 91°
- Wind: 12 mph
- Wind Chill: 86°
- UV Index:
- Sunrise:
- Sunset:
- Dew Point: 68°
- Visibility: 10 mi
Today
Tonight
Tomorrow
Next 12 Hours
Wind: NNE @ 12 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 51%
Wind Chill: 87°
Heat Index: 92°
UV Index: 6 High
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 12 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 42%
Wind Chill: 91°
Heat Index: 94°
UV Index: 9 Very High
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 12 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 36%
Wind Chill: 93°
Heat Index: 95°
UV Index: 10 Very High
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 9 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 32%
Wind Chill: 95°
Heat Index: 97°
UV Index: 10 Very High
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 9 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 30%
Wind Chill: 97°
Heat Index: 98°
UV Index: 9 Very High
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 10 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 29%
Wind Chill: 97°
Heat Index: 99°
UV Index: 6 High
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 10 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 29%
Wind Chill: 97°
Heat Index: 98°
UV Index: 4 Moderate
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 10 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 30%
Wind Chill: 96°
Heat Index: 98°
UV Index: 2 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 9 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 31%
Wind Chill: 95°
Heat Index: 96°
UV Index: 1 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 7 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 37%
Wind Chill: 91°
Heat Index: 93°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 5 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 44%
Wind Chill: 87°
Heat Index: 89°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: NNE @ 3 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 51%
Wind Chill: 84°
Heat Index: 86°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dollywood patrons fled the park as floodwaters gushed throughout the walkways and spilled into the parking lot where social media images show patrons helping each other wade through knee-deep water.
The Earth recently reached the hottest day ever measured. And in the absence of federal heat rules for workers, some employers are taking it upon themselves to protect employees.
When it comes to extreme weather, people generally look to America's hurricane- or earthquake-prone coasts and say that’s where the danger is. But not always.
HOUSTON — The return of soaring heat in Houston on Tuesday deepened the misery for millions of people still without power after Hurricane Beryl crashed into Texas and left residents in search of places to cool off and fuel up in one of the nation's largest cities.
Forecasters say a long-running heat wave that has already shattered previous records across the U.S. will persist, baking parts of the West with dangerous temperatures that will soar into the 100s. The scorching weather will also hold the East in its hot and humid grip throughout the week.
Sizzling sidewalks and unshaded playgrounds are a danger for catastrophic burn injuries as air temperatures reach new summer highs in desert cities like Phoenix and Las Vegas.
Last week, a storm with similar wind speeds left around 20,000 in the Tulsa area without power early on a Wednesday morning.
The road closure, reported just before 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, is about 23 miles north of Tulsa.
Thousands died last year from heat-related illnesses. Here’s how a landmark rule would protect the rights of employees.
Hurricane Beryl turned into a monstrous Category 5 storm after making landfall in the southeast Caribbean, killing at least two people. What is its projected path?
The Tulsa area saw about an inch of rain early Wednesday after 20 consecutive days with only scant precipitation. Then the sun came back.
After about an inch of rain and wind gusts up to 70-80 mph, dangerous heat and humidity follows Wednesday afternoon with the feels-like temperature nearing 110 degrees.