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Dubbed Tulsa Remote, the program is sponsored by the George Kaiser Family Foundation, whose website for the initiative has received more than 6,000 applications since it went live earlier this month, according to Ken Levit, the executive director of GKFF.

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Levit said Tulsa Remote is part of a broader strategy of making the community more vibrant and inclusive and boosting its economic development by energizing and diversifying its businesses. “I am surprised and elated by the response, by the enormous amount of momentum out of the box,” he said.

According to Labor Department statistics, the Tulsa metro area has an unemployment rate of 3 percent, ranking 110th out of all areas, but still below the national rate of 3.7 percent.

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“Tulsa and other small cities are having an increasingly hard time competing for highly educated and skilled workers, who mostly prefer the largest 5-6 metro areas,” Jenny Schuetz, a fellow in the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution, said. One advantage that larger metros enjoy is what she described as “thick” labor markets, in which multiple companies that hire specific types of workers exist within a given city. So engineers or product developers, for instance, can switch employers without having to leave a major city. That’s harder to pull off when a person lives in smaller areas, she said.

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To qualify for Tulsa Remote, applicants must be at least 18 years old and employed with a company that allows them to work remotely. Entrepreneurs who do not reside in Tulsa County can also apply. The total package of $10,000 spread out over a year covers $2,500 for moving expenses, monthly payments of $500 to help cover rent and $1,500 after living in Tulsa for one year, according to Levit. “There are other benefits that make the offer even richer, which include about $300 per month in additional rental assistance,” Levit said. Applicants will go through a video interview and visit the city before they are made an offer.

The remote employees and entrepreneurs who move to Tulsa will also receive free co-working space to do business, offered by 36 Degrees North, in downtown Tulsa, according to Levit.

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Several other cities offer major incentives to people willing to relocate, according to CNBC. Students who have graduated in the past 10 years with a degree in a STEAM program (science, technology, engineering, art or math) can get up to $15,000 from the Community Foundation of St. Clair to pay off their student loans if they move to St. Clair, Mich., where the joblessness rate is 3.9 percent. The Hamilton Community Foundation in Hamilton, Ohio, offers recent college graduates up to $5,000 to relocate if they have already secured a job there. The area has an unemployment rate of 3.7 percent. And in New Haven, Conn., people can get $10,000 in interest-free loans on their first home. The unemployment rate there is 3.9 percent. To encourage residents to plant even deeper roots, families could be eligible for $40,000 for in-state college tuition, if their children graduate from public school in New Haven.

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“Our Come Home Program has helped change the narrative around talent attraction and retention for recent college graduates,” said Randy Maiers, president of Community Foundation of St. Clair County. “We continue to receive more applications than we can fund. I think we’ve received more than 50 applications and our selection committee has approved 11.”