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The Law & Education Building will be the first of a three-building complex built on four city blocks in southeast downtown as a joint effort with Fort Worth and Tarrant County to spur business growth and economic development.
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Texas A&M, which currently owns the land downtown, will enter into a ground lease with the city. The city will then develop property on the land alongside a third-party developer, divide it into condominium units, and sublease a portion of those units back to the university until its debts to the city are repaid.
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A Texas A&M economist says the real estate market will likely continue to cool in the coming year.
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Faculty members say Banks could have been more communicative and transparent about a variety of organizational changes she put in motion during her first year as president.
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Melon growers in the Rio Grande Valley were impacted by a hailstorm last month, while other growers have dealt with hot and windy weather.
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The state’s Teacher Retirement System does not adjust its pension payments for inflation.
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Texas was one of just a handful of states found to have an undercount in the latest census.
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Drought, climate change and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have created a volatile market for the staple commodity.
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The construction theme park for kids has teamed up with Texas A&M University's Department of Construction
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The drought could drive up the price of beef. One agronomist explains why, and what farmers might do to adapt.
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Wildfires have burned more than 58,000 acres across the state. At least one person has died and dozens of homes have burned down.
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As Texas universities and colleges begin a fifth semester during the COVID-19 pandemic, many students say they are struggling with uncertainty and an indifference toward school and the future.