The proposed agreement announced this week would resolve any disputes the states have about their obligations under the Compact.
All in State
The proposed agreement announced this week would resolve any disputes the states have about their obligations under the Compact.
The judgment included a fine to Uber for failure to have secure data practices.
The tech giant has unlawfully captured and used the biometric data of millions of Texans without properly obtaining their informed consent to do so.
Secretary of State Scott, following his legal duty, compares voter registration information with citizenship information to help guarantee that only U.S. citizens are eligible to vote.
Hal Harrell said his decision to leave the district after 31 years in education was “not made lightly and was made after much prayer and discernment.”
Eager to bring new jobs to their towns and boost their tax base, rural Texas counties are courting companies that produce cryptocurrencies.
The suit was brought by five civil rights groups that sought to hold Texas accountable if it disenfranchised naturalized citizens.
Lawyers for the state argue they didn’t know the attorney general would be served at home.
Local governments in Texas have spent the summer preparing their budgets for next year, wrestling with inflation and a law that prohibits them from raising property tax revenues beyond 3.5% without voter approval.
The case revolves around the Hillsborough Area Regional Transit Authority (HART), a publicly funded transit system, that refused to allow Young Israel of Tampa to advertise its “Chanukah on Ice” program.
Texas ranks last among states in access to health care and has the highest rate of uninsured people in the country. Two longtime doctors in rural Henderson County created a homegrown safety net to fill the gap.
Abbott directed the Department of Public Safety to boost efforts to collect intelligence on cartels and investigate gangs in Texas that support drug and human smuggling.
The State Bar of Texas brought the complaint after the aide worked on a suit to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in four states.
If railroad companies and workers can’t resolve their dispute by Thursday night, the country could see its first railroad strike in 30 years.
A University of Texas at Austin professor has sued Texas A&M University claiming a new faculty fellowship program discriminates against white and Asian male candidates.
The state’s top law enforcement agency also told USA Today that seven officers have now been referred to its internal affairs division, including two who are command staff.
The Chapter 313 program was designed to draw business to the state, but critics say it lacks accountability and unduly burdens taxpayers.
Title IX requires colleges and universities to strive for equality between sexes in their athletic departments. Along with this requirement, there has been a judicially recognized possibility that perfect equality may not practicably be achievable.
The two victims of a Thursday shooting at Uvalde Memorial Park are being treated in San Antonio hospitals. Abbott’s decision to send in DPS comes as the agency faces questions over its role in the May 24 shooting at Robb Elementary School.
A commission tasked by the Texas Legislature to recommend new ways to fund community colleges is suggesting the state fund schools based on how successful students are at completing programs in high-demand fields and transferring to universities to continue their education.