-
After months of opposition from residents and Tarrant County officials, the company seeking to build a new landfill near Lake Worth rescinded its application for an environmental permit on May 1, according to a state database.
-
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.
-
When the rigs went up just over 300 feet from his backyard, Phil Kabakoff thought he knew what would come next.
-
As the Fort Worth City Council listened to a presentation on the city’s proposed urban forestry master plan, council member Gyna Bivens wanted everyone to understand why it existed in the first place.
-
A temporary injunction was granted by a Dallas district court Tuesday halting a 200,000-square-foot warehouse in a predominantly Black and Latino neighborhood.
-
Coyote sightings uncommon in Arlington park where children were bitten, animal control officials sayArlington's Parkway Central Park was the subject of only two wildlife sightings since 2021, according to Animal Services Manager Ashley Woolnough.
-
Arlington animal service officers captured the coyote Thursday morning
-
With just weeks to finalize Dallas-Fort Worth’s air quality improvement plan, North Central Texas Council of Governments staff have revealed its initial ideas for reducing pollution across the region.
-
Ten Texas counties, including Tarrant, Dallas and Harris, report higher levels of soot pollution than allowed under the EPA’s new rules.
-
To Ranjana Bhandari, executive director of environmental advocacy group Liveable Arlington, the Environmental Protection Agency’s new rules to reduce oil and gas pollution are more than policy changes. The regulations, and what they represent, feel personal to her.
-
Parks and Wildlife officials were trying to stop chronic wasting disease from spreading out of the Kerr Wildlife Management Area.
-
A decade after a legal fight began over a deal to drill for natural gas on city-owned land, Dallas council members are considering a $55 million payout to settle.
-
Dozens of people were treated for hypothermia during the recent freeze.
-
After two failed attempts to file for a scheduled closure of the 80-year-old GAF shingle plant, West Dallas resident Janie Cisneros is suing the city.