Google Has Maimed Texas Press, New Report Says

Over the last decade and a half, the American press has been bloodied and battered, pushed to the end of its rope by vulture capitalism, evolving technology and economic shocks like the 2008 housing crisis. There was a time when it was hard to own a newspaper and not make…

Churches Cancel Worship Services, Move Online in Response to Coronavirus

As events are canceled across the city and businesses instruct employees to work from home due to COVID-19, another facet of life was affected last weekend: religion. All over the DFW area, houses of worship suspended in-person services, with some moving to virtual, livestreamed services. This left many pondering what…

Well, Reruns Are Better Than Nothing: 10 Games to Watch This Weekend

Things, as you’ve surely noticed, are getting weird. Thursday brought a cascade of bad news, from the critical — the U.S. still isn’t testing nearly enough people for the coronavirus — to the mundane — sports, basically all of them, are canceled for the foreseeable future. Dallas, Texas, the United…

Dallas Hit With 5 Additional Coronavirus Cases, Community Transmission

Coronavirus well and truly landed in Dallas Thursday night. Five additional Dallas County residents tested positive for the virus, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said. Importantly, one of those five who tested positive has no known travel history. Dallas has crossed a key threshold — the virus has been passed…

Robert Wilonsky Is Quitting The Dallas Morning News

Robert Wilonsky’s column Thursday in The Dallas Morning News will be his last as the paper’s full-time city columnist. After more than 30 years working for the Observer, LA Weekly and the Morning News, Wilonsky is moving on. He’s taking a new day job as the communications director for Dallas’ Heritage…

Dallas ISD Gears Up for Coronavirus Threat

As Dallas ISD students and their parents get ready to head off for spring break, the district is working on a plan to keep everyone safe once they get back. The district’s spring break is next week, and officials are asking parents to fill out forms detailing any domestic or…

Dallas County Set to Count Missing Votes Today

Given the results of last week’s primary in Dallas County, whatever’s in the mystery boxes discovered by county elections officials last week isn’t going to matter. While a few races were close, none of them were close enough that they’re going to be swung by adding 44 vote centers’ worth…

Coronavirus Arrives in Dallas County

Dallas County reported its first case of the novel coronavirus after an out-of-state traveler tested “presumptive positive” for the disease, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins announced Tuesday afternoon. Jenkins described the person as “a 77-year-old out-of-state traveler with extensive travel history” and said the person is being treated at a Dallas-area…

Two More Cases of Coronavirus Confirmed in Collin County

The wife and child of a Frisco man who tested “presumed positive” Monday for the novel coronavirus have also tested positive for the disease, Collin County officials said Tuesday. County officials said the man traveled to Silicon Valley for business in late February. Santa Clara County, California, has been the…

Volunteers Add Some Pizzazz to Pioneering Downtown Bike Lane

On Friday, organizers from the city and several nonprofits met with a dozen volunteers outside the Dallas Farmers Market. They were there to inaugurate the city’s newest civic enhancement: its “first-ever protected micro-mobility facility,” as it’s been referred to by planners. In other words, a bike lane — which now…

What Can Dallas Teach the Rest of the Country About Coronavirus?

During the United States’ last big infectious disease crisis, Dallas went first. On Sept. 30, 2014, Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian national who’d recently traveled to Dallas, tested positive for Ebola, setting off weeks of fear and uncertainty. Two nurses who treated Duncan, Nina Pham and Amber Vinson, also contracted…

The Worst Candidates To Survive the Texas Primary

Many, many good candidates won their primaries last week in Texas. This story is not about those candidates. No, this story is about all the bad candidates — some with bad ideas, some with questionable moral compasses and some who are just washed up — who managed to survive Tuesday,…