This email “phishing” scam attempts to scare consumers by claiming they have committed identify theft and are facing prosecution and significant jail time, in an email that purports to be signed by the Attorney General.
All in State
This email “phishing” scam attempts to scare consumers by claiming they have committed identify theft and are facing prosecution and significant jail time, in an email that purports to be signed by the Attorney General.
An online survey of 1,291 teachers by the Charles Butt Foundation shows more teacher dissatisfaction as Texas school districts scramble to attract talent.
Hemp advocates promised the Texas Legislature the crop was drought resistant. The 2022 drought has proven otherwise. And farmers are abandoning the nascent market.
Today, students in Uvalde return to classrooms for the first day of school, just 15 weeks after the deadliest school shooting in Texas history.
After protesters solicited donations to distribute posters to schools across the state in Arabic, state Sen. Bryan Hughes sent a letter to the Texas Education Agency clarifying his legislation requiring schools to display signs with the national motto.
Cotton is Texas’ largest crop, and industry experts say they expect just half the normal annual yield — which will drive up costs for consumers.
Police have had to eject hundreds of people from encampments. They still struggle to tell many of them where to go.
The company maintains that the bullet train is still being developed but declined to provide details about the path forward.
Some parents and community members are calling for more school district employees to be fired and for the state to raise the minimum age for buying an assault rifle.
U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, who cited the Second Amendment in his decision, stayed the ruling pending appeal.
Texas now has three significant bans on the books, setting up a potential legal battle.
Uvalde school officials have faced mounting pressure to fire Arredondo, who received much of the blame for the delay in confronting the shooter during the May 24 massacre at Robb Elementary.
Four systems have expressed informal interest in an affiliation with the East Texas school.
Paxton recognized 11 AAGs of the year from the Child Support Division for their commitment to Texas children.
Paxton joined a multistate letter to the U.S. EPA opposing its potential adoption of NAAQS for greenhouse gases under the CAA, which the multistate coalition describes as “equal parts imprudent and legally flawed.”
Paxton joined a Florida-led amicus brief filed in the Atlanta-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit seeking to affirm a successful challenge to the CDC Transportation Mask Mandate.
The USDA has awarded the Texas HHSC a federal grant of more than $400,000 to further the agency’s fraud prevention efforts for the SNAP.
The 2003 law enacted sweeping lawsuit reforms that limit the amount of damages plaintiffs collect.
The rate increase will help replenish a state fund to maintain and operate cellphone networks in rural Texas.
O’Rourke confronted a heckler at a campaign event Wednesday who laughed while he was talking about the Uvalde school shooting.