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As Fort Worth commuters drove down Interstate 30 and Interstate 35 this winter, they might have experienced an unfamiliar sight: green-vested workers picking up litter on weekdays along the roads.
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The proposal stems from a yearslong push for stronger mountain lion protections from Texas conservationists.
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Closing a controversial West Dallas shingle plant may be one step closer as GAF prepares to build a new factory in Kansas. Some residents there don't want it.
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Millions of Texans and many, many visitors are gearing up for a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Here are eight things you should know in preparation for this celestial event.
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A years-long plan to ship some of the nation’s most radioactive types of nuclear waste to rural West Texas remains blocked after a ruling from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
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Texas Standard will be broadcasting live from Kerrville on April 8.
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Fort Worth residents will not be sweeping piles of cicada shells off their driveways later this spring, according to an insect researcher at the University of Texas at Arlington.
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Since it opened just over a year ago, the Denton Community Shelter on Loop 288 has become the only low-barrier 24/7 shelter for the county, as well as all of North Texas, Our Daily Bread Executive Director Wendy McGee told community members, volunteers and city officials at a Monday night community meeting.
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For centuries, people have viewed solar eclipses with alarm. Now we rent cruises and rooftops to see them.
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For a long time, those visionaries who worked toward remaking downtown Arlington into a work-play-live place overlooked one not-so-tiny four-legged consequence of attracting thousands of new residents.
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Friendship-West Baptist Church filed to dismiss its case against the developers who planned to build an industrial warehouse near the church.
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Denton County commissioners voted against creating White Oaks Municipal Utility District near Ray Roberts Lake State Park due to environmental concerns and residents’ opposition during Tuesday’s meeting.
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Brian Daugherty, code compliance director, said his department and Republic Services are focused on education as Arlington transitions to automated garbage collection.
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When the rigs went up just over 300 feet from his backyard, Phil Kabakoff thought he knew what would come next.