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What is Participatory Budgeting?

A democratic process where community members directly decide how to spend public money

⚠ About This Experiment

Tulsa Decides is a community-led experiment, not an official City of Tulsa program. We're testing whether participatory budgeting could work in Tulsa by gathering community priorities and proposals. The ideas generated here will be presented to city leadership as community recommendations—this is about building civic voice, not making binding budget decisions.

How Participatory Budgeting Works

Participatory budgeting (PB) gives residents a direct vote on how to spend public funds. Instead of elected officials making all spending decisions, community members propose ideas, develop projects, and vote on what gets funded.

1
Learn
Understand the budget and community needs
2
Propose
Submit ideas for projects and improvements
3
Vote
Community chooses which proposals to prioritize
4
Present
Winning ideas presented to decision-makers

How Tulsa Decides Voting Will Work

When voting opens in March 2026, registered participants will be able to:

  • Review proposals submitted by fellow Tulsans during the Propose phase
  • Select your priorities by voting for the projects you believe would most benefit Tulsa
  • Build community support by discussing and endorsing proposals you care about

The proposals with the most community support will be compiled into a presentation for city leadership, demonstrating what Tulsans want to see prioritized in future budgets.

Who Can Participate?

  • Tulsa residents (verification via SMS)
  • People who work in Tulsa
  • Anyone invested in Tulsa's future

Real Participatory Budgeting in Action

Participatory budgeting has been successfully implemented in cities across the United States. Here's how it works in practice:

Denver, Colorado
$1-2 Million annually Since 2022 Neighborhood-focused

Denver's "People's Budget" program lets residents in specific neighborhoods vote on local improvements. In 2024, west Denver residents chose from 14 community-generated ideas, with over 2,000 ballots cast. Winning projects included intersection safety improvements ($356K), community gardens ($244K), and park trees ($181K). Residents vote for their top 3 choices, and funding goes to the highest-voted projects.

New York City
$24+ Million annually Since 2011 Citywide program

PBNYC is the largest participatory budgeting program in the U.S. Residents ages 11 and up—regardless of immigration status—can vote on capital projects for schools, parks, libraries, and public spaces. Community members first submit ideas, then volunteer "Budget Delegates" work with city agencies to develop feasible proposals. During Vote Week, New Yorkers choose up to 5 projects they want funded.

What Makes PB Different?

  • Community-generated ideas: Proposals come from residents, not politicians or bureaucrats
  • Transparent process: Everyone can see what's proposed and how votes are counted
  • Direct democracy: Your vote directly determines what gets funded
  • Inclusive participation: Many programs include youth, non-citizens, and traditionally excluded groups

Why We're Running This Experiment

Tulsa doesn't currently have participatory budgeting. We believe it could:

  • Give residents a stronger voice in how tax dollars are spent
  • Surface community priorities that may not reach City Hall
  • Build civic engagement and trust in local government
  • Demonstrate demand for more participatory democracy in Tulsa

By running this experiment, we're gathering data on what Tulsans want and showing city leadership that our community is ready for participatory budgeting.

Ready to Make Your Voice Heard?

Join the experiment and help shape Tulsa's future.

Get Started

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