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The city is asking voters to approve $485.5 million in bonds for street maintenance, park improvements, a new court building and an expansion to its public works campus to keep up with its growing population.
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Pilot Point Police Department Chief Rex Marks retired effectively immediately, the city manager announced on Monday. Two weeks prior, Pilot Point officials discussed low morale and culture deficits in the department.
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An anti-transgender event organized by conservative political activists at a Fort Worth community center April 20 has been canceled after community members raised concerns that it would violate the city’s nondiscrimination policy.
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Local organizers spoke in support of Tarrant County Commissioner Alisa Simmons after County Judge Tim O'Hare told her to "sit there and be quiet."
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Mansfield ISD will allow an ineligible candidate to remain on the ballot for the May 4 election.
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Fort Worth will vote on tax increase for visitors, extra revenue to fund convention center expansionFort Worth voters will go to the polls in May to decide whether to impose a higher tax on visitors.
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After a two-year battle, Denton City Council member Chris Watts received the four votes he needed Tuesday night for Denton to create a public facility corporation — a public-private partnership designed to create the attainable housing that nearly half the households in the city need, according to United Way.
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The Tarrant Appraisal District must do better by taxpayers.
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Argyle ISD produced a 10-year strategic growth plan in 2023. Now it’s putting three bond propositions totaling $511.5 million before local voters to fund the key parts of that plan.
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After more than 38 years, MedStar’s time as the designated EMS provider for Fort Worth is drawing to a close.
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An elections attorney told KERA News the Election Board doesn't have the power to choose how to number ballots.
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The mix of grant funding and financing from the state’s Flood Infrastructure Fund will go towards removing and demolishing old water pumps, renovating and adding new pump stations and improving structural controls in the sump system. The funding will also be used to construct new levees.
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The $5,000 contract is for Noah Betz, the executive director of the Huffines Liberty Foundation and a political strategist.
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For the past several years, out-of-town developers and development-related political action committees donating to the local politicians’ campaigns has been an issue that one council member and former mayoral candidate argued affected the public’s confidence.