Texas

The White House, with a fountain surrounded by a circle of flowers.

Three presidential debates, one VP debate scheduled ahead of 2024 election

BY: - November 20, 2023

WASHINGTON — The Democratic and Republican nominees for president would debate three times next year if both candidates agree to a schedule released Monday by the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates. “The United States’ general election debates, watched live worldwide, are a model for many other countries: the opportunity to hear and see leading candidates […]

The awning of the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington DC features carved figures from mythology.

U.S. Supreme Court considers case dealing with gun rights and domestic violence

BY: - November 7, 2023

WASHINGTON — U.S. Supreme Court justices during Tuesday’s oral arguments seemed to lean toward upholding a federal law that prevents the possession of firearms by a person who is subject to a domestic violence protective order. Liberal and conservative justices appeared to side with the Biden administration’s position that the 1994 federal law is in […]

Silhouettes of people in graduate caps and gowns.

No more attending classes: These community colleges let students learn at their own pace.

BY: - October 24, 2023

Jaqueline Yalda, who has been a campus police officer at El Paso Community College in Texas for a decade, sought a promotion earlier this year. But first, the department required her to complete a college-level course in criminal justice. It had been many years since Yalda had taken any college classes. And at age 38, […]

A construction worker on a scaffold outside of a concrete building.

A historic housing construction boom may finally moderate rent hikes

BY: - October 18, 2023

Read more Stateline coverage of how communities across the country are trying to create more affordable housing. An unprecedented surge in the nationwide construction of new housing — mostly apartments — may finally be making a dent in fast-rising rents that have been making life harder for tenants. More than 1.65 million housing units were under […]

A person hangs gold balloons on a fence that spell out "Happy First Day of School."

As migrants arrive, some schools need more buses, books and bilingual teachers

BY: - October 10, 2023

On a pretty fall day in Massachusetts last week, Morad Majjad began work by checking in with a middle school nurse to see if he was needed as a translator. By the time the day was over, Majjad — whose title is family liaison for the West Springfield school district but who is better described […]

A small child pulling children's books off a bookshelf.

First Amendment advocates fight growing number of U.S. book bans

BY: - October 4, 2023

WASHINGTON — One of Thomasina Brown’s favorite books is a memoir about a girl who deals with the grief of losing her father and struggles with her sexual identity. Brown, a 16-year-old student at Nixa High School in Nixa, Missouri, said in an interview that she felt a connection with the book, as she grieved […]

A teacher in a classroom holds up a piece of paper in front of a student, partly obscuring her face.

Shaken by post-pandemic disruptions, some states take a harder line on school discipline

BY: - September 25, 2023

Parents in Boone County, Kentucky, were outraged this past January when a ninth grader who had been suspended a year earlier for threatening violence against his fellow students returned to class as soon as his punishment time was up. The parents packed a school board meeting, excoriating the county superintendent and other officials for the […]

A child sitting on the shoulders of an adult holds two flags -- those of the United States and India -- in her mouth, on opposite sides of her face.

States see influx of migrants from India, Venezuela and China

BY: - September 14, 2023

NEW YORK — A late-pandemic surge of new arrivals from India, Venezuela and China, reflecting people with legal visas and those fleeing across the United States’ southern border seeking asylum, helped bring more than 900,000 new immigrants to the U.S. between 2021 and 2022, according to a Stateline analysis of new census data to be released Thursday. Florida […]

Two women stand behind a blurred woman speaking at a microphone.

Lawsuit over Texas abortion ban could be a model in other states

BY: - August 2, 2023

Read more Stateline coverage on how states are either protecting or curbing access to abortions. AUSTIN, Texas — A lawsuit in Texas asserting that the state’s abortion ban imperils women by dissuading doctors from ending dangerous pregnancies could provide a template for similar challenges across the country. Texas is one of 14 states that banned abortion after […]

A mother and son in tie-dyed T-shirts, sitting down and holding hands. The son wears an orange cap backwards.

Laws banning gender-affirming treatments can block trans youth from receiving other care

BY: - July 28, 2023

In some states, new laws banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth are dissuading health care providers from offering mental health services and other medical care that isn’t explicitly banned by those laws. In the first few weeks after Mississippi’s law went into effect in February, nurse practitioner Stacie Pace said she was fielding calls and […]

Three men, the one on the left in a law enforcement uniform, sit behind a black-draped table with a sign saying "one pill kills." A seal with the word "Texas," with each letter between the five points of a gold star, is projected on a screen behind them. The screen is flanked by the flags of the United States and Texas.

States stiffen penalties for fentanyl, despite public health concerns

BY: - July 20, 2023

As they struggle to reduce drug overdose deaths, policymakers across the United States are embroiled in a heated debate over creating and increasing criminal penalties related to fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid that’s up to 100 times more potent than morphine. Legislators pushing the new wave of criminal penalties say the laws will deter drug […]

University students walking to class, with the famous tower at the University of Texas rising behind them.

Restricting college tenure could hurt state economies, many warn

BY: - June 12, 2023

Daniel Brinks, who chairs the government department at the University of Texas at Austin, doesn’t usually have a tough time recruiting professors. After all, UT is one of the best research universities in the country, located in a high-tech boomtown with a thriving music scene, a warm climate and first-rate enchiladas. But this year, in […]