Oklahoma had licensed more than a half-million public shelters in the mid-'60s, like this one in Post Office in Sapulpa.
Fallsroad / Flickr
Oklahoma had licensed more than a half-million public shelters in the mid-'60s, like this one in Post Office in Sapulpa.
Fallsroad / Flickr
When tornado sirens sound, Oklahomans are on their own.
State leaders encourage people to stay put where they are. But that’s a big change from days many Oklahomans can still remember, when community shelters were seen as crucial to protecting the public from a very different type of disaster.