Attorney General Greg Abbott filed a legal challenge on Monday against the Environmental Protection Agency, saying the agency’s rejection of Texas’ pollution-permiting system constitutes “improper overreach by the federal government.”
July 2010
On the Records: Sheriffs’ Endorsements Similar to Obama-McCain Map [Updated]
Most of the gubernatorial endorsements today by Texas sheriffs โ though not all โ map to the 2008 presidential election results.
TribBlog: Deported With Disabilities
U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents with mental disabilities have been mistakenly deported because they were unable to effectively defend themselves, according to a study released by the American Civil Liberties Union and the non-profit Human Rights Watch.
TribBlog: Suing for Access
Statewide disability group ADAPT of Texas and the Texas Civil Rights Project commemorated the 20th anniversity of the Americans with Disabilities Act today by filing more than 20 lawsuits across the state โ targeting inaccessibility in restaurants and municipal buildings.
TribBlog: The 51st State
How can Texas rank last in the nation โ 51st โ in the percentage of adults with high school diplomas, and simultaneously rank 22nd in the percentage attending at least some college?
The Brief: July 26, 2010
It’ll likely be Gov. Rick Perry on the defense in this week’s round of Your Murky Business Dealings Make You Unfit for Office.
Access and Accommodation
Today is the 20th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which has been hailed as a Bill of Rights for people with disabilities. Nathan Bernier of KUT News talked to one of the architects of the legislation, Dr. Lex Frieden, a professor of at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston who has been partially paralyzed since 1967. “Life has changed signficantly,” Frieden says.
The Map: The Giant Still Sleeps
Nearly 37 percent of the state’s population of nearly 25 million is Latino, but only about 1.2 million Latinos who were registered to vote in 2008 cast ballots. Pinpointing when the emerging majority group in Texas will begin wielding its power at election time is no small feat. Scores of campaigns, party activists and interest groups spend millions of dollars each year trying to determine what will happen when that day comes.
Hunger Pains
Advocates accuse the state of fudging the number of processed food stamp applications to show greater success than is occurring.


