-
The 2024 season presents an opportunity for the Rangers to be the first team to win back-to-back World Series titles in nearly 25 years.
-
"Sugar Land" dives into the story of the 95 bodies discovered when construction began on a new school in Sugar Land, Texas. The award for the podcast will be presented in May.
-
Starbucks workers at Denton's 2300 S. Loop 288 store voted to unionize with a 16-4 vote on Monday evening to become the 20th Starbucks location in Texas to join Starbucks Workers United, according to a news release.
-
It did not specify the focus of the investigation, but Nehls said it was related to his campaign’s finances.
-
The 2-1 decision came late Tuesday from a three-judge panel at the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. It keeps the state of Texas from enforcing the law, known as SB 4, as the legal challenge against it continues in federal court.
-
Fort Worth City Council approved a $150,000 settlement to dismiss a police misconduct lawsuit filed against the city and one of its former police officers.
-
Saturday’s FC Dallas game will see the return of MLS referees with the Professional Soccer Referees Association after a lockout that banned them from games in the midst of contract negotiations.
-
Thousands of Texans with intellectual disabilities live in group homes. The group home system is struggling to retain workers under the low base wage the state legislature set last year.
-
Broadnax resigned as Dallas' city manager last month. City Council will finalize his hiring at a meeting April 4. It's unclear how much he will make.
-
The structure fire at a vacant church near Dallas Love Field temporarily impacted runway traffic Tuesday afternoon.
-
"We Were Once a Family," Roxanna Asgarian's expose of Texas' adoption system, won the National Book Critics Circle Award for best work of non-fiction.
-
An unknown ransomware group is demanding $700,000 from the Tarrant Appraisal District, after a network disruption last week took the district’s systems offline.
-
The Grapevine Housing Authority and two of its top officials have been accused of violating the Fair Housing Act.
-
National LGBTQ+ organization PFLAG won a temporary injunction blocking Texas from demanding information on trans kids.