
Juan Pablo Garnham / Texas Tribune
Urban Affairs ReporterJuan Pablo Garnham reports on urban affairs for the Texas Tribune and is based in Dallas. In the past, he worked as senior producer for the podcast In The Thick, editor of CityLab Latino and City Hall reporter for El Diario in New York. He has also taught at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY. He is from Santiago, Chile. Read more about Juan Pablo.
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Phoenix Morgaine doesn't want to move, but a “for rent” sign has been in the front yard of her Belton home for more than a month. Her landlord had already…
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More than 700 new coronavirus cases were reported in the Amarillo region Saturday, as results from targeted testing at meatpacking plants came…
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Evictions and debt collection proceedings can resume in Texas next week, the Texas Supreme Court has ordered, after the court temporarily put both on hold…
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Dallas City Manager T.C. Broadnax announced Friday morning that 500 municipal employees will be furloughed through at least July 31 as the city faces…
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As Texas restaurants and retail stores began welcoming customers back through their doors last week, a few dozen people walking the hallways of this…
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Shanice Al Khlifat’s day-to-day life has become a series of efforts to hang on. The 28-year-old is trying to find a stable job after losing two since the…
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Texas Eateries, Retailers And Other Businesses Can Reopen Friday. Here's The Rules They Must Follow.Gov. Greg Abbott’s plan to reopen Texas will allow some businesses — like retail stores, restaurants, movie theaters and malls — to open as early as…
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The Texas Supreme Court extended the moratorium on eviction procedures until May 18, offering a few more weeks of relief to renters otherwise expected to…
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Texans living in more than 8,800 rental properties can now find out if they are protected from eviction proceedings and financial penalties for not paying…
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Carly Eaves had to choose between paying for food or covering the electricity bill. She chose food.Eaves, of Santa Fe, was laid off from her job as a…
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As Texans adjust to life under orders to stay at home during the new coronavirus pandemic — and scramble to cover expenses with incomes that were…
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While city leaders in Texas are trying to slow down the novel coronavirus pandemic, their financial officers are already warning about the damage a new…