Last fortnight’s news – for the two weeks ending 2025 07 20

Here’s a couple of weeks’ worth of interesting items from the news here in North Texas. No musical accompaniment this time, though we did spend a lot of time today listening to the late, lamented Asylum Street Spankers.

From Dallas:

From Fort Worth:

From Dallas County:

From Tarrant County:

From the suburban cities and towns:

From the suburban counties:

From throughout the North Texas region:

Local editorials and op-eds:

And miscellaneous news (including museums and zoos):

Last week’s news – week ending 2025 07 06

Mondays are the day I usually set aside to write these posts, but I was distracted yesterday by the news out of Kerrville. This week’s post was brought to you by the music of Tangerine Dream.

News from Dallas:

News from Fort Worth:

News from Dallas County:

  • KERA: Family of man who died of water intoxication in Dallas County jail files civil rights lawsuit. Spencer Swearnger died in 2023 after drinking an excess of water from his cell toilet. He had mental health problems and might have been suicidal. But, also, his was the third water intoxication death at the jail since 2020. Just because the Dallas County Jail isn’t as awful as the Tarrant County Jail doesn’t mean it’s good.
  • DMN: People are being held in Dallas County jail weeks beyond sentences amid systemic failures. This is a consequence of the problems with the county’s case management system, which was installed back in 2023. I appreciate that the Sherriff can’t release people without the proper paperwork, but the jail either needs to get on the same system as the court or to get an API connected so they can get orders in a timely fashion. This is not acceptable and I’m unhappy that my tax dollars are paying both to keep people in jail beyond their time and for the settlements that are coming because former inmates are quite properly suing over being held in the jail too long.
  • KERA: State commission sanctions Dallas judge Amber Givens. She was sanctioned for allowing her coordinator to impersonate her back in 2019 and admonished over actions she took in cases she’d been recused from, which gets into a rabbit hole about local court scheduling and overloaded dockets. This is not the first time I’ve seen Givens’ name attached to headlines about problems in her court. She’s probably due to be primaried.

News from Tarrant County:

News from the suburbs:

News from the suburban counties:

In other regional news:

Some editorials in local outlets:

Miscellaneous news:

Last week’s news – week ending 2025 05 25

Let’s jump in with some news from Dallas …

… and then on to Fort Worth …

… and then to Dallas and Tarrant Counties …

… and the suburbs and suburban counties

… and the region at large …

… and other interesting things I read about the area or the state.

Last week’s news – week ending 2025 05 18

This is my first shot at something I’ve wanted to do for a while: a weekly catch-up on interesting local news. I’ve done this kind of thing for a friend for several years now, but what interests his readers isn’t always what I think would interest someone from Dallas or Fort Worth. Bear with me as I get my hands around what local news looks like to local readers.

Dallas news:

Fort Worth news:

Dallas County news:

Tarrant County news:

News from the suburbs and suburban counties:

Regional news (including some stories from the Lege):

Cop Shop

We’re down to the wire on deciding who the next Chief of Police here in Dallas will be. There are three external candidates and two internal candidates, including the interim chief, in the middle of the meet-and-greet part of the proceedings. It’s not clear which of the internal candidates has an advantage; Interim Chief Igo has his fans on City Council (and apparently a slogan: “I go with Igo”) but he’s also been under fire from Attorney General Ken Paxton for comments that suggested he wouldn’t slavishly follow the Trump administration’s lead in harassing (possibly) undocumented folks.

For all that the applicants seem enthused about the job, it comes with downsides. Prop U still requires the city to hire about an additional 1000 officers, where the current plan for the next year calls for hiring only 300 more. So there’s a lawsuit coming from the Dallas HERO folks, as mentioned in a KERA article below. At the same time, the city has been struggling with planning a new police academy and whether or not it should be tied to the University of North Texas Dallas campus. The city’s current facilities need replacement even without considering hiring and training an additional 1000 officers. And continuing arguments about the location have jeopardized state funding, though the city and the state now seem to be on the same page.

So wish whoever gets the job good luck, because they’re going to need it.

Sources:

Prop U: the rubber hits the road

We’re starting to see the fallout of the passage of Prop U in the November election last year. Currently there are about 3,000 police officers in Dallas. The formula for police vs population in Prop U means we need about another 900. That’s a lot of new cops in a time when it’s hard to hire, even with the additional money DPD will get from the required distribution of city monies under Prop U.

DPD says it can add about 300 officers this year, plus more space for its academy. City Council originally wanted to recommend 250 new officers, but after some debate has settled on asking for 325. You’ll note that that’s adding ten percent of the existing force, which is a lot. DPD’s culture needs to change, but uncontrolled change isn’t ideal either.

That said, if DPD doesn’t bring on new officers quickly, some resident, probably someone connected to Monty Bennett and Dallas HERO, is going to sue the city. The loser of that lawsuit is going to be the citizens and taxpayers of Dallas. Meanwhile, the DMN’s editorial board thinks that since the people passed Prop U, the city needs to get creative and get more new officers in the door by any means necessary, especially financial incentives. That money will have to come from somewhere. One source the city has identified is the Office of Community Care, which provides social services to Dallas residents. It’s going to lose about $5 million to DPD. Monty Bennett is getting exactly what he paid for.

Sources: