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Inside Fort Worth’s December 2022 grand opening of a wastewater treatment plant, the mood was celebratory.
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Following increased reports of missed trash collections in Fort Worth, city staff are proposing revisions to their $479 million contract with Waste Management that would no longer require the company to hire minority- and women-owned businesses.
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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.
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Parks and Wildlife officials were trying to stop chronic wasting disease from spreading out of the Kerr Wildlife Management Area.
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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.
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Dozens of people were treated for hypothermia during the recent freeze.
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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.
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A proposed ordinance making its way to the city council would create a two-year pilot program allowing approved residents to grow specific native vegetation in their yards
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Dallas and Fort Worth school districts are steadily announcing campus reopenings, even as temperatures remain near or below freezing across North Texas.
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Fort Worth ISD’s school buses are going green — though the familiar yellow paint color will remain the same.
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This year’s Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend will bring severe weather to much of Texas, including dangerously low temperatures that could fall into the low teens.
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North Texas could see winter storm weather conditions next week with a chance for snow or ice.
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From the moment Erin Schallhorn heard about the city of Fort Worth’s plans to build a stormwater detention pond near her Arlington Heights home, she could see her neighborhood’s future washing away.
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Amid record-setting temperatures last summer, Fort Worth officials felt the heat from residents upset over a growing problem: the amount of litter along the city’s roadways.