Water shortage in Rio Grande Valley will be expensive, study shows
Farmers’ bottom lines are especially vulnerable.
View ArticleQuakes keep shaking up unbothered Karnes County
Residents near Falls City felt more trembling on Thursday morning.
View ArticleSan Antonio prepares for rare total solar eclipse
A good portion of San Antonio will be in the direct path for the total eclipse on Monday, April 8th, 2024
View ArticleNearly 800,000 new U.S. citizens in Texas could cast votes in November
Texas could see thousands of new citizens cast ballots in this year’s November election as the number of immigrants eligible for citizenship in the state nears 800,000.
View ArticleTexas spent nearly $1 million on four flights for migrants, records show
The state of Texas has spent more than $845,000 flying migrants to New York, Philadelphia and Chicago.
View ArticleDeath of San Antonio special education assistant leads to calls for increased...
After the death of Alfred Jimenez, the Northside ISD teachers union says changes are needed to prevent further tragedies.
View Article'Working Beyond The March' event honoring MLK happening this weekend
The event will be held at Pittman-Sullivan Park on the city’s east side on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
View ArticleSaturday rally at San Antonio City Hall to mark two years since the Russian...
The event sponsored by the San Antonio Ukrainian Homestead Project begins at 2 p.m.
View ArticleFederal judge questions Texas 'hubris' over foster care
Judge Janis Jack was presented with new reports of the state's failures in its Child Without Placement issue just days after Texas' attorney's asked to void several parts of her oversight.
View ArticleSan Antonio home prices start 2024 as the most affordable among big Texas cities
San Antonio's existing median home price in January stood at $299,000, according to a report released Friday by the San Antonio Board of Realtors.
View ArticleThree West Texas billionaires are pushing Texas to the far-right
Part one of a conversation with political science professor Brandon Rottinghaus about Texas political mega-donors Tim Dunn, Farris Wilks and Dan Wilks
View Article'Working Beyond the March' event honors the spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Organizers were forced to cancel the original MLK Day march in January due to inclement weather.
View ArticleTwo sixteen-year-old Ukrainian refugees navigate new life in San Antonio
Ivan Romanko and Aksinia Petrovska were only 14 years old when Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
View ArticleThe center of the border conflict: Eagle Pass' Shelby Park is the 'Grave of...
The park is at the center of both the immigration debate and the debate over if Texas can ignore federal authority over border protection. Now, there's a controversy over the park's namesake...
View ArticleRemembering Rep. Frank Tejeda and how he changed San Antonio politics
There are multiple locations in San Antonio named after Frank Tejeda Jr. He was a marine, decorated Vietnam veteran and a San Antonio politician who represented the Texas 28th Congressional District....
View ArticleTrump, Biden to visit Texas in competing border trips Thursday
President Joe Biden will meet with law enforcement in Brownsville on Thursday while former President Donald Trump travels to Eagle Pass.
View ArticleFormer NPR host Michele Norris discusses race in the U.S.
The Race Card Project was started in 2010 by Norris. Since then, citizens across the nation have shared their thoughts on race.
View ArticleU.S. airman dies after setting himself on fire outside the Israeli Embassy
Aaron Bushnell, who was an active duty member of the U.S. Air Force based in San Antonio, Texas, is seen in a video saying "Free Palestine!" after lighting himself on fire.
View ArticleAs legal battles loom, understanding IVF
In vitro fertilization (IVF) is a complex assisted reproductive technology that many couples turn to for growing their families. But the future of IVF is murky after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled...
View ArticleDebt, missed classes and anxiety: How climate-driven disasters hurt college...
Floods, wildfires and hurricanes can have long-term financial consequences for college-age people. As climate change makes disasters more common, more and more students are struggling.
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