
Texas Leads the Way Against Noncitizen Voting
Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson reminds Texans of measures the state takes to stop noncitizen voting.

Uvalde City Officials End Battle Over Shooting Records
The city’s release ends a legal battle with news outlets, but other government agencies are withholding materials.

Crews begin Demolishing Sutherland Springs Church
Some families wanted to preserve the sanctuary, which became the scene of the deadliest church shooting in American history.

TxDOT Delivers $156 Million to Transit Agencies Across Texas
New funding from the TxDOT will help provide access and expand service for people to get to important destinations.

Meta to Pay Texas $1.4 Billion for Using Facial Recognition
Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the Facebook parent company in 2022, claiming it had used personal biometric data without permission.

Texas Water Board Details How It Will Spend $1 billion for Water Infrastructure Projects
About $45 million will go to Texas towns with fewer than 1,000 residents — a boon for municipalities without a viable tax base.

DPS K-9 Tracks Down Fugitive
DPS K-9 Bona and her handler helped track down a fugitive wanted for murder after a miles-long manhunt in rural Frio County.

DPS Seized Approximately 12 Pounds of Fentanyl
The DPS seized approximately 12 pounds of suspected fentanyl after a Texas Highway Patrol Trooper stopped a vehicle.

Federal Utility Program Favors Cold-Weather States Over Texas
The program helps low-income people with heating and cooling bills, but advocates say it disadvantages Texas and other warm-weather states, even though extreme heat is a key cause of weather-related deaths.

Why Texas’ Mass Power Outages Continue to Happen
Repairing electricity infrastructure after storms usually costs customers. So could strengthening it before the next weather event.

Texas Judge Orders School District to Release Uvalde Records
A group of news organizations including The Texas Tribune had sued for access to the records.

President Joe Biden to speak in Austin
The President’s visit will commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Texas Abortions Down to an Average of Five a Month
Before Roe v. Wade was overturned two years ago, the monthly average was around 4,400.

Tropical Storm Alberto Didn’t Deliver Enough Rain
The region's two major reservoirs are at record-low levels.

Major Settlement with Wireless Carriers
Texas reached a $10.22 million settlement with major wireless carriers for deceptive and misleading advertising practices.

AG Paxton Advises Texas Schools on the Application of Title IX
Texas AG issued an advisory to Texas schools detailing the application of Title IX in light of a recent legal victory.

Medicaid Fraud Control Unit Takes Down Health Care Fraud Scheme
Attorney General Paxton's Medicaid fraud control unit takes down $70 million health care fraud scheme.

AG Paxton Leads Coalition Challenging the Federal Government for Overstepping Authority and Forcing Costly “Green Energy” Transition on States
AG Paxton is leading a coalition of 19 states to challenge the FERC decision to adopt rules that would force the Biden Administration’s costly and inefficient “green energy” transition onto states.

Paxton Sues to Prevent Foreign Laborers More Rights than American Workers
Paxton sued the Biden Administration’s DOL over a new regulation that aims to give foreign nationals working in American agriculture more rights than American citizens.

Paxton Secures Major Win Blocking “Transgender” Policies into Schools
Paxton has won a major victory against the Biden Administration’s DOE, stopping its attempt to rewrite Title IX to force Texas schools to adopt radical “transgender” policies in violation of state and federal law.