Lacy Wulfers has diverse work experience in various communication roles. Lacy is currently the Director of Communications for the Parish of Christ the King at the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tulsa & Eastern Oklahoma. Prior to that, they worked as the Director of Marketing and Communications and Communications Manager at the Gilcrease Museum at The University of Tulsa. Before that, they held roles as an Account Supervisor and Senior Account Executive at Saxum. Additionally, they worked as a Communications Specialist at Tipton Communications, an Account Coordinator, Graduate Fellow, and Public Relations Intern at Saxum, a Graduate Assistant at the University of Oklahoma, a Communications and Media Relations Intern at Susan G. Komen for the Cure, a Media Relations Intern at the University of Oklahoma Athletics Department, and an Events Coordinator and Public Relations Intern at the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. Throughout their career, Lacy has gained experience in various areas of communication, including marketing, strategic planning, research, writing, media relations, and budget management.
Lacy Wulfers earned a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism with a focus on Public Relations from the University of Oklahoma in 2010. Lacy went on to obtain a Master of Education in Intercollegiate Athletics Administration at the same university from 2010 to 2011.
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Roman Catholic Diocese of Tulsa & Eastern Oklahoma
The Diocese of Tulsa is comprised of the following 31 counties in the eastern part of Oklahoma: Adair, Atoka, Bryan, Cherokee, Choctaw, Coal, Craig, Creek, Delaware, Haskell, Hughes, Latimere, LeFlore, McCurtain, McIntosh, Mayes, Muskogee, Nowata, Okfuskee, Okmulgee, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Payne, Pittsburg, Pushmataha, Rogers, Sequoyah, Tulsa, Wagoner and Washington. There are 78 parishes and/or missions in the 26,417 square miles of the diocese. A Diocese is a portion of the People of God, which is entrusted to a bishop to be nurtured by him with the cooperation of his priests (canon 369). The Diocesan Bishop enjoys legislative, executive, and juridical authority (canon 391). He is the chief pastor and leader of the diocese. He is the principal dispenser of the mysteries of God, and he strives constantly that Christ's faithful entrusted to his care may grow in grace through the celebration of the sacraments, and may know and live the paschal mystery (canon 387). The Diocesan Bishop, mindful that the salvation of souls is the supreme law of the Church (canon 1752), fosters and coordinates the work of the laity and urges the faithful to assume their proper roles in the life of the Church. The Diocesan Bishop exercises his responsibilities with the assistance of the members of his cabinet, through the offices in the diocesan curia (chancery), and through parishes and institutions in the Local Church.