-
Some students face criminal charges, suspensions and even expulsions for participating in pro-Palestinian protests and encampments. Their reason? A "just cause."
-
The vote Tuesday would have set new boundaries for a public improvement district that will fund improvements to the median park along Lamar Boulevard.
-
Lewisville resident Irvin Walker was among the seven injured victims in last year's Allen Premium Outlets shooting. He's still on the long path to physical and mental recovery.
-
Dallas bond money will go to maintenance of cultural facilities, but it won’t fix everything. The city has logged $133.2 million in needed repairs.
-
Mayor Gerard Hudspeth said he plans to focus his final term on city issues such as homelessness.
-
Frisco civil service and collective bargaining measured appeared to fall short in Saturday's election and two Allen city council races may be headed for runoffs.
-
Early voting results indicate that all 10 propositions in a $1.25 billion bond package appear headed for approval
-
Mauricio Galante was elected to the open race for Arlington City Council District 1 representing North Arlington and Bowie Hogg, District 7 council member, won his re-election bid.
-
Opal Lee spent years fighting for the recognition of June 19 as a national holiday.
-
A Fort Worth judge allowed a conservative activist to pursue a lawsuit which alleges the Anti-Defamation League falsely linked him with QAnon.
-
About 10% of registered voters are expected to cast ballots, meaning you will be speaking for many of your neighbors who are not voting.
-
The high court ruled against two municipal power company workers who said they were fired because they blew the whistle on a city council member who leaked allegedly confidential documents to the Denton Record-Chronicle.
-
Police in Dallas won't pursue criminal charges from a seven-year-old sexual assault claim against Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, according to a television report Thursday.
-
Officially, only one person has caught the illness during the current outbreak. But with limited testing, cases could be flying under the radar.