Archival Corrections and Clarifications
Corrections and clarifications after October 21st, 2020 are available here.
The Texas Tribune is committed to accuracy in its reporting and welcomes information about errors or omissions that warrant correction or clarification. Email corrections@texastribune.org.
Correction, Oct. 16, 2020: This story originally stated that there is a deadline to request a mail-in ballot application. There is not, but completed applications must be received by Oct. 23. Swamped with voter requests, the Texas secretary of state's office has become a focus of frustration
Correction, Oct. 16, 2020: A previous version of this story said that early voting began Monday in Texas. It began Tuesday. Democrats overwhelm Republicans in latest fundraising period for Texas' hottest U.S. House races
Correction, Oct. 15, 2020: A previous version of this story said NRG Stadium would serve as Harris County's election headquarters. In fact, NRG Park, home to NRG Stadium, is the county's headquarters. Harris County tried to make voting easier during the pandemic. Texas Republicans fought every step of the way.
Clarification, Oct. 14, 2020: Due to an editing error, it was initially unclear whether adult males from Mexico made up 56% of single adult migrants or total migrants apprehended in 2020. They made up 56% of the total migrants apprehended in 2020. The same is true of men from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, who made up 64% of the total number of migrants apprehended in 2019. Border apprehensions down sharply in 2020 but spiked in September
Clarification, Oct. 12, 2020: Texas' 2nd Congressional District was not among the seats that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee originally prioritized flipping this election cycle in Texas, but Democrats believe it is within reach following Crenshaw's narrow victory in 2018. An earlier version of this story suggested the district was not a Democratic target. Watch: Houston-area congressional candidate Sima Ladjevardian says district dynamics have "completely changed"
Correction, Oct. 12, 2020: The poll result on how Texans intend to vote was asked of likely voters, not registered voters. And the margin of error on that result is +/-3.25 percentage points, and not +/- 2.83 percentage points, as was presented in an earlier version of this story. Texas voters have serious concerns about voting and the 2020 election, UT/TT Poll finds
Clarification, Oct. 10, 2020: Texas House candidate Celina Montoya raised more money than her Republican opponent, state Rep. Steve Allison, during the most recent campaign finance period. But Allison received more in-kind contributions. A previous version of this story mentioned Montoya’s money advantage, but not Allison’s advantage with contributions overall. How down-ballot candidates could help Democrats flip Texas
Correction, Oct. 9, 2020: This story misstated which kind of business reopenings or expansions required county officials’ approval under Gov. Greg Abbott’s Oct. 7 order. Reopening bars requires county officials’ permission. Expanding operations of other businesses, like restaurants, does not necessitate sign-off from county leaders. As El Paso sees record-high coronavirus infections, leaders say residents aren’t taking pandemic seriously enough
Correction, Oct. 9, 2020: Due to an editing error, this story originally stated that two aides who reported Attorney General Ken Paxton to law enforcement had resigned. One resigned and one was placed on leave. In new email, senior aides say Ken Paxton used power of his office to benefit political donor Nate Paul
Correction, Oct. 8, 2020: Due to an editing error, the initial headline on this story misquoted U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. He said he's "not really happy" with Paxton, not "really not happy." U.S. Sen. John Cornyn says he’s “not really happy” with the way Ken Paxton has run the Texas attorney general’s office
Correction, Oct. 7, 2020: The initial headline on this story misstated the subject of the court's decision. The ruling applies to applications for mail-in ballots, not mail-in ballots themselves. Harris County can't send mail-in ballot applications to all registered voters, Texas Supreme Court rules
Correction, Oct. 6, 2020: This story misstated when Amanda Murray said in an interview that she didn't know about a federal eviction moratorium. The interview was last week, not this week. Texas tenants are still struggling to stop evictions a month after federal moratorium was announced
Correction, Oct. 6, 2020: This story included an incorrect description of the reason why Shaun Lucas was arrested in connection with Jonathan Price’s death. The Texas Department of Public Safety gave reporters the incorrect terminology on Oct. 5. The agency revised its statement on Oct. 6 to say Lucas’ actions were not “objectively reasonable” instead of saying they were not “objectionably reasonable. Texas police officer arrested on suspicion of murder in fatal shooting of Jonathan Price
Correction, Oct. 5, 2020: This story misstated when President Donald Trump tweeted that he plans to soon return to the campaign trail. Trump tweeted that comment Monday, not Friday. President Donald Trump leaves hospital after being treated for — and downplaying — COVID-19
Correction, Oct. 2, 2020: The summary of this video gave an incorrect timeline for when Gina Ortiz Jones became a 2020 candidate for the 23rd Congressional District. Jones filed to run before U.S. Rep. Will Hurd announced his retirement, not after. Watch Tony Gonzales, Gina Ortiz Jones debate as they vie to replace U.S. Rep. Will Hurd
Correction, Oct. 1, 2020: This story gave an incorrect surname for the president of the Texas State Teachers Association. She is Ovidia Molina, not Ovidia Morales. Texas updates coronavirus case totals in schools, but the data remains limited and murky
Correction, Sept. 26, 2020: Due to an editing error, this story incorrectly stated that George Floyd was shot and killed by police officers. He died in police custody when a Minneapolis officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes. Texas woman says she was fired by Whataburger for wearing a Black Lives Matter mask
Correction, Sept. 25, 2020: This article misspelled the name of the Supreme Court justice who died Sept. 18. She was Ruth Bader Ginsburg, not Ruth Bader Ginsberg. Donald Trump to nominate Amy Coney Barrett to U.S. Supreme Court, reports say
Correction, Sept. 25, 2020: This story misspelled Hays County. It is not Hayes County. Coronavirus restrictions and remote learning may hamper college student voter turnout
Correction, Sept. 25, 2020: This story misstated how a bill to protect the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe electronic bingo facility moved through Congress. The U.S. House of Representatives passed the bill in July 2019; it was not filed in July 2019. Native American tribes in Texas rally to increase voter turnout
Correction, Sept. 25, 2020: This story misquoted U.S. Rep. Michael Cloud. He said that the "extreme left" wants to "burn down the system," not "burn down the house." Texas Republicans avoid criticizing Donald Trump for his electoral integrity comments
Correction, Sept. 24, 2020: Due to an editing error, this story misstated when Christopher Andre Vialva was pronounced dead. It was 6:46 p.m. Eastern, not 7:46 p.m. As part of revived federal death penalty, Christopher Vialva executed for Texas double murder
Correction, Sept. 22, 2020: This story misstated the number of immigrants in the United States who were brought here as children and remain under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. There are more than 643,000 DACA recipients in the U.S., not 12 million. U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw calls expanding mail-in voting “playing with fire” despite rarity of voter fraud
Correction, Sept. 22, 2020: Due to an editing error, this article previously referred to the Austin American-Statesman as the Austin-American-Statesman. Trump says new TikTok headquarters could land in Texas, but questions about the deal remain
Correction, Sept. 22, 2020: This coronavirus data tracker included incorrect numbers for cumulative statewide tests on Sept. 14, 15 and 16. On Sept. 14, there had been 5,671,966 tests statewide, not 5,637,040. On Sept. 15, there had been 5,729,318 tests, not 5,671,966. On Sept. 16, there had been 5,780,424 tests, not 5,729,318. In addition, the tracker included an incorrect number of total cases on Sept. 21 because of a Department of State Health Services error in reporting Bexar County’s backlogged cases. There were 1,742 cases statewide on Sept. 21, not 1,732. There were 2,078 backlogged cases in Bexar County, not 2,088. Texas approaching 15,000 coronavirus deaths as cases, hospitalizations decline from July's record highs
Correction, Sept. 20, 2020: Due to an editing error, the summary of this article misspelled the name of the Supreme Court justice who died Friday. She was Ruth Bader Ginsburg, not Ruth Badger Ginsburg. From abortion access to immigration, the battle over the open Supreme Court seat will affect Texas for a generation
Correction, Sept. 17, 2020: This story misspelled the name of a federal agency. It is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, not the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. State releases numbers showing low Texas public school infection rates, but the data is limited
Correction, Sept. 14, 2020: This story originally misspelled the name of a new political adviser for the Biden campaign. It's Jerry Philips, not Jerry Phillips. The name was misspelled in a news release that the campaign provided to the Tribune. Biden campaign adds more staff in Texas
Correction, Sept. 11, 2020: This story included a quote with incorrect information about broadband internet access. It should have said that one in four people over 65 do not have access to broadband internet. It initially said, incorrectly, that one in four people over 65 have access to broadband internet. Lawmakers call on Gov. Greg Abbott to plan to expand broadband access as pandemic worsens disparities
Correction, Sept. 10, 2020: This story incorrectly stated that the University of Texas at Austin reported three coronavirus clusters in an on-campus dorm. The clusters are in undesignated locations in the West Campus area. UT-Austin says it will require only student ticket holders to test negative for COVID-19 before Saturday’s football game
Correction, Sept. 9, 2020: This story included incorrect information about Amber Reynolds. Her brain injury occurred at birth, not when she was 5. Texans with developmental disabilities in state homes still don’t have visitors. Their parents worry they don’t know why.
Correction, Sept. 8, 2020: This story misstated when T.C. Broadnax released his statement about U. Reneé Hall remaining through the end of the year. It was released Tuesday, not Thursday. Dallas Police Chief Reneé Hall resigns following criticisms of protest response
A Sept. 2, 2020 story, "Texas Supreme Court temporarily blocks Harris County from sending mail-in ballot applications to all its voters," misspelled the name of the Harris County clerk in one instance. It's Chris Hollins, not Chris Collins. Due to an editing error, the summary text below the headline originally said the county had planned to send mail-in ballots to voters. It was going to send applications for ballots, not ballots themselves.
An Aug. 27, 2020 story, "Hurricane after hurricane wreaked havoc in Orange, Texas. Finally, residents say they got a break." used an incorrect first name for Robert Sepulvado.
Two Aug. 26, 2020 stories, "As Hurricane Laura heads for Southeast Texas, officials scramble to evacuate and shelter people during a pandemic" and "Hurricane Laura in Texas: Storm nears Category 5 strength as Gulf Coast braces for what's expected to be 'catastrophic' damage," misnamed the Texas Division of Emergency Management.
An Aug. 21, 2020 story, "After recount, Tony Gonzales is still winner of GOP runoff for U.S. Rep. Will Hurd's seat," mistakenly said Raul Reyes was a former Navy cryptologist backed by Will Hurd and the House GOP leadership. Those descriptors apply to his opponent, Tony Gonzales.
An Aug. 21, 2020 photo caption for the story, "The Democrats' national convention shone a spotlight on Texas' emerging bench — beyond the Castros and O'Rourke," misspelled Lina Hidalgo's name.
An Aug. 11, 2020 story, "Gov. Greg Abbott says Texans must be vigilant to slow the spread of coronavirus," misquoted Gov. Greg Abbott by omitting an ellipsis. He said, "The most important thing that I could convey today is that even though the numbers of COVID-19 have improved ... COVID-19 still spreads across this region and across the country just as fast as it did in July."
Due to an error in state reporting, an Aug. 7, 2020 story by Meena Venkataramanan and Carla Astudillo, "Coronavirus outbreak at Houston-area nursing home kills 17 residents," misstated that Cimarron Health and Rehabilitation in Corpus Christi had 27 deaths, the most of any nursing home in the state. After the story ran, the state revised the data to reflect that Cimarron had seven deaths as of July 23.
An Aug. 7, 2020 story by Raga Justin, "Texas A&M can't remove Sul Ross statue without the Legislature's approval, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton says" misspelled the name of state Rep. John Cyrier.
An Aug. 7, 2020 story by Patrick Svitek, "Local GOP officials poised to select Texas' newest member of Congress replacing John Ratcliffe in atypical election," erroneously stated that U.S. Rep. Lance Gooden represents the 4th Congressional District. Gooden represents the 5th Congressional District.
An Aug. 6, 2020 story by Sarah R. Champagne and Emma Platoff, "Texas to allow limited visitation in nursing homes with no active coronavirus cases," said inside visits would be allowed at long-term care facilities. Inside visits will only be allowed at assisted living facilities, but not nursing homes. Both are considered long-term care facilities.
An Aug. 6, 2020 story by Alex Samuels, "Inside the Trump campaign’s effort — and struggle — to win over Black voters in Texas," misstated the organizer of the Black Voices for Trump event. It was the McLennan County GOP, not the Trump campaign.
Due to an editing error, a July 31, 2020 story by Cassandra Pollock, "I truly thought last Friday was gonna be my last," says Texas lawmaker who was hospitalized for coronavirus" misspelled the name of state Rep. Tony Tinderholt.
On July 30, 2020, the Texas Department of State Health Services said an “automation error” caused the agency to incorrectly add approximately 225 deaths to the overall coronavirus death count; a subsequent quality check by Department of State Health Services epidemiologists revealed COVID-19 was not the direct cause of death in these cases. Due to the state’s previously incorrect data, updates and recalculations were made to data in several Texas Tribune stories. The numbers and charts in these stories have been updated to account for this error and are current as of July 30:
- “It cost me everything”: Hispanic residents bear brunt of COVID-19 in Texas, July 30, 2020
- Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for people of color, July 30, 2020
- TribCast: Texas revises coronavirus death tally as school reopening chaos continues, July 29, 2020
- Coronavirus cases in Texas nursing homes more than doubled in July. Families say the state still isn't testing enough., July 28, 2020
- Conservative think tank leader says schools should reopen since most Texans dying from COVID-19 are elderly or Hispanic, July 28, 2020
- Texas’ count of coronavirus deaths jumps 8% after officials change the way they tally COVID-19 fatalities, July 27, 2020
- Texas coronavirus tracker, updated daily
A July 29, 2020 story by Abby Livingston, "Colleagues feared U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert would catch COVID-19. Sure enough, he did." misspelled the name of U.S. Rep. Jodey Arrington.
A July 29, 2020 story by Patrick Svitek and Mitchell Ferman, "Trump rallies oil and gas workers in the Permian Basin against Democrats ahead of the November election" misspelled Permian Basin.
A July 29, 2020 update to a story by Raga Justin, "UT-Austin is considering only filling its stadium to 25% capacity when football resumes Sept. 5" incorrectly represented the date the University Interscholastic League issued its guidelines for high school athletics. This mistake was due to an editing error.
A July 28, 2020 story by Alex Samuels, "Conservative think tank leader says schools should reopen since most Texans dying from COVID-19 are elderly or Hispanic" had a headline that called the Texas Public Policy Foundation a GOP think tank. The conservative foundation is nonpartisan.
A July 24, 2020 story edited by Ross Ramsey, “Corpus Christi, already a coronavirus hot spot, braces for Tropical Storm Hanna,” misidentified the National Hurricane Service and misspelled the name of Tropical Storm Hanna, both due to editing errors.
A July 14, 2020 story by Julián Aguilar, "This asylum seeker fled to Texas to escape violence, only to test positive for coronavirus while fighting deportation," misstated when Katty re-entered the United States to seek asylum.
A July 17, 2020 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Texas will allow schools to keep classrooms closed longer than previously ordered" misstated the reopening plans of Northside and North East ISDs.
A July 15, 2020 story by Stacy Fernández, "Texas A&M System will provide free COVID-19 tests, but it’s a mixed bag for other schools," listed the wrong days that the University of Texas at Arlington's coronavirus testing operations would be open.
A photo caption in a July 16, 2020 story by Raga Justin, "Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says "there is no shutdown coming" as coronavirus cases surge," originally misstated when Gov. Greg Abbott held a press conference on steps to reopen Texas businesses. The press conference was in April.
A photo caption in a July 16, 2020 story by Patrick Svitek and Cassandra Pollock, "With high-stakes election season looming, Texas GOP Chair James Dickey faces formidable opposition," originally incorrectly identified both people pictured as James Dickey. Dickey is on the left and Allen West is on the right.
A July 16, 2020 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Dallas County says public and private schools can’t have in-person classes through Sept. 7," misstated when Dallas County health officials announced required classroom closures. It was Thursday.
A July 13, 2020 story by Valeria Olivares, "China sanctions U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, other officials in retaliation for U.S. sanctions," misstated the number of U.S. officials sanctioned by China. It's four, not five.
A July 10, 2020 story by Juan Pablo Garnham, "Ted Cruz said his Nike boycott was exerting free speech, but says people boycotting Goya Foods are silencing speech," misstated Julián Castro's experience in public office. He is a former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
A July 9, 2020 story by Jeremy Schwartz and Perla Trevizo, "Eroding private border wall to get an engineering inspection just months after completion," was clarified to reflect that U.S. District Judge Randy Crane instructed the parties to work out details of an inspection and fixes to the privately funded border wall.
A July 9, 2020 story by Reese Oxner, "Watch: MJ Hegar, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate, discusses her policies and chances ahead of runoff election," spelled MJ Hegar's name wrong in one instance.
The headline of a July 7, 2020 story by Stacy Fernández, "State Fair of Texas canceled for 2020 because of coronavirus," misstated the name of the state fair.
Due to an editing error, a photo caption in a July 5, 2020 story by Eddie Gaspar, Allie Goulding, Eddie Seal and Jordan Vonderhaar, "How Texans celebrated July Fourth during the coronavirus pandemic," misidentified Lake Austin.
A July 2, 2020 story by Shannon Najmabadi and Miguel Gutierrez Jr., "“How many more are coming?” What it’s like inside hospitals as coronavirus grips Texas’ Rio Grande Valley," misspelled the name of Chris Van Deusen, spokesperson for the Department of State Health Services.
A June 29, 2020 story by Meena Venkataramanan, "The Texas GOP convention will gather thousands of people indoors without a mask requirement. One of its sponsors is the Texas Medical Association," misspelled the name of Texas Medical Association president Diana Fite.
A June 29, 2020 story by Juan Pablo Garnham, "Officials in Texas' big cities say their public testing sites are being strained. Austin has begun to limit who can be tested." misspelled the name of interim Travis County Judge Sam Biscoe.
A June 27, 2020 story by Meena Venkataramanan, "Texas Republicans move forward with plans for an indoor convention in Houston, the state's biggest coronavirus hot spot" misspelled the name of Texas Democratic Party spokesman Abhi Rahman. It also misstated how often the convention occurs. It's every two years.
A June 17, 2020 story by Valeria Olivares, "Bexar and Hidalgo counties require face masks in businesses as coronavirus surges. Other Texas leaders consider similar measures," has been updated to clarify that new mask rules in Austin allow for businesses to be fined up to $1,000.
A June 15, 2020 story by Elvia Limón, "As Texas coronavirus hospitalizations rise, local officials can recommend precautions but they can't enforce many of them," misstated what action Austin and Travis County officials took after coronavirus hospitalizations there rose. That increase prompted officials to to move to stage 4 of their risk-level guidance.
A June 12, 2020 story by Raga Justin, "UT-Austin football players demand school rename buildings named after racist figures, donate to Black Lives Matter," incorrectly referred to John Reagan as a former Confederate general. Reagan was a Confederate postmaster general.
A June 10, 2020 story by Sarah Champagne, "Texas reports largest single-day increase in coronavirus cases," incorrectly stated which day Texas hit that mark, it was Wednesday.
A June 10, 2020 story by Clare Proctor and Juan Pablo Garnham, "Houston officials increase police budget as Dallas and Austin officials consider decreases in wake of police brutality protests," misspelled the name of Dallas City Council member Omar Narvaez.
Due to an editing error, a June 4, 2020 story by Patrick Svitek, "Four Texas GOP county leaders share racist Facebook posts, including one juxtaposing an MLK quote with a banana," misspelled Nueces County.
Between May 27 and May 30, 2020, our live coronavirus updates incorrectly stated our formula for calculating the average daily infection rate. On three of those days, we also had a slightly different positive rate, but have updated our numbers to reflect the state's methodology. This incorrect language was also used in our tracker and was updated on June 3, 2020.
A June 2, 2020 story by Clare Proctor, "Dallas mayor blamed "outsiders" for violence at protests. But almost everyone arrested was from North Texas." incorrectly stated Pleasant Grove is a suburb outside of Dallas. It is a neighborhood in Dallas.
A Nov 7, 2019 story by Davis Rich and Cassandra Pollock, Texas cleared homeless camps Wednesday. On Thursday, residents were already back.," gave the incorrect name for the highway near the temporary living space. It's U.S. Highway 183.
The series "Coronavirus: the pandemic through Texans' eyes," incorrectly stated Maxwell Norman's age in the April 30, April 15, and April 8 installments. He is 8.
A May 6, 2020 story by Julián Aguilar, "Texas DACA recipients working on pandemic's front lines await Supreme Court ruling," included a caption that misspelled the name of Josue Tayub.
A May 1, 2020 story by Juan Pablo Garnham, "Texas halted evictions, giving renters some relief. But what happens when the moratorium ends?" misstated the number of number of dollars invested in San Antonio's housing program.
An April 30, 2020 story by Lomi Kriel, Vianna Davila and Edgar Walters, "Texas still won't say which nursing homes have COVID-19 cases. Families are demanding answers," included a caption that originally misstated where David Aguirre’s mother, Estela, died.
An April 28, 2020 story by Stacy Fernández, "Texas restaurants, retailers and other businesses can reopen Friday. Here's the rules they have to follow." misstated the threshold for how many coronavirus cases a rural county can have to be able to allow businesses to open up with 50% capacity instead of 25%.
An April 22, 2020 story by Kiah Collier and Ren Larson, "Coronavirus put her out of work, then debt collectors froze her savings account," misstated the title of Susan Shin. She is the legal director of the New Economy Project.
An April 22, 2020 story by Sami Sparber, "Texas will not release information about coronavirus clusters at state-run homes for Texans with disabilities," incorrectly identified which state supported living centers were confirmed by state officials to have at least one case of COVID-19.
An April 17, 2020 story by Anna Novak and Mitchell Ferman, "Here’s how the coronavirus is impacting Texas’ economy," listed state sales tax revenue incorrectly. The amounts are in billions of dollars.
An April 8, 2020 story by Stacy Fernández and The Texas Tribune staff, "Coronavirus: The pandemic through Texans’ eyes," misstated the amount of food the CitySquare Food Pantry has given out before and after the pandemic began.
An April 8, 2020 story by Stacy Fernández, "Food banks rely on donations from grocery stores. But as Texans rush stores, grocers have less to give," misstated the amount of food the CitySquare Food Pantry gave out before the pandemic began.
An April 2, 2020 story by Kiah Collier, Perla Trevizo and Vianna Davila, "Despite coronavirus risks, some Texas religious groups are worshipping in person — with the governor's blessing," incorrectly referred to the governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat.
A March 31, 2020 staff report, "Coronavirus in Texas 3/31: State reports 3,266 cases and 41 deaths; Paxton gets temporary victory on abortion ban," included a brief that misstated the name of Dallas City Manager T.C. Broadnax. Another brief, on the military disclosure of cases, was updated to note that the Joint Base San Antonio website had reported at one point that 28 military personnel, dependents and retirees had tested positive.
A March 26, 2020 story by Alexa Ura, "Hidalgo County breaks out the megaphones in scramble to salvage census push," misstated the name of Tomas Martinez.
A March 25, 2020 story by Edgar Walters, "Texas cancels controversial Medicaid contracts after complaints of subjective scoring," misstated which program has a contract value of roughly $19.2 billion.
A March 17, 2020 story by Naomi Andu, "Texas coronavirus cases prompt Gov. Greg Abbott to activate National Guard," incorrectly stated the last time the Texas National Guard was activated.
A March 15, 2020 story by Emma Platoff, "At Fort Worth church where the pastor has coronavirus, "thanks be to God" for Facebook Live," misstated the name of the pastor's wife. Parishioners refer to her as "Mother Amy."
A March 9, 2020 story by Sami Sparber, "Texas Democrats are trying to draw LGBT Republicans snubbed by state GOP leaders," incorrectly spelled Paul von Wupperfeld's name.
A March 2, 2020 story by Allyson Ortegon, "How do I participate in Libertarian or Green party primaries?", incorrectly stated who filed a lawsuit over Green Party candidates' eligibility to appear on the ballot.
A Feb. 27, 2020 story by Edgar Walters, "Advocates say expanding Medicaid could help the homeless. Greg Abbott says he's weighing block grant options." incorrectly reported a Kaiser Family Foundation estimate of the number of uninsured Texans who could receive coverage under a Medicaid expansion.
A Feb. 25, 2020 story by Abby Livingston, "Bernie Sanders stokes question for Texas Democrats: How would his nomination affect their down-ballot plans?," misstated the number of Texas congressional seats that national Democrats are targeting. The number is seven.
A Feb. 21, 2020 story by Mandi Cai, "Here's how many Texans are voting early in the 2020 primaries in the state’s biggest counties," did not include mail-in ballots returned before Feb. 18 in the early voting figures displayed for Bexar County.
A Feb. 20, 2020 story by Emma Platoff, "In Democrats’ low-information judicial primaries, gender and ballot names may drive voters’ decisions," misstated the Texas Supreme Court seat for which Gisela Triana and Peter Kelly are vying. They are competing for the Place 8 seat.
A Feb. 18, 2020 story by Megan Menchaca, "Watch the U.S. Senate Democratic primary debate," misstated where the debate could be watched. The debate is being streamed online across 12 TV stations, but only KVUE is carrying a portion of the debate live on TV.
Due to an editing error, a Feb. 13, 2020 story by Edgar Walters, "Texas improperly picked winners for contracts worth $10 billion, health insurers argue," incorrectly stated the year that a memo released by Texas Health and Human Services recommended that UnitedHealthcare, based on its application scores, receive contracts in four regions of the state.
A Feb. 13, 2020 story by Ross Ramsey, Patrick Svitek and Chris Essig, "Texas 2020 Hotlist: The most competitive races in this year's primaries," gave the incorrect number of the district where candidates are vying to replace state Rep. Poncho Nevárez. It's House District 74.
A Feb. 4, 2020 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "A Texas sales tax rule hinges on a question: What’s local?," incorrectly included a reference to Home Depot. HD Supply, a former Home Depot affiliate, sources its internet sales in New Braunfels for sales tax purposes; Home Depot does not.
A Feb. 4, 2020 story by Megan Menchaca, Here's how Texas Democrats dole out their 261 delegates in the presidential primary, misstated the number of Democrats in the Texas congressional delegation. There are 13. The story also misstated the number of Texans on the Democratic National Committee. There are 20.
A Jan. 31, 2020 story by Raga Justin, University of Texas' poorest incoming freshmen to receive $20,000, laptops and more starting this fall, was updated to clarify that Dell Inc. and Dell Foundation are two separate entities.
A Feb. 3, 2020 story by Raga Justin, Texans, tell us about your experiences with hair discrimination in schools, incorrectly stated the punishment DeAndre Arnold received for his hair.
A Jan. 27, 2020 story by Stacy Fernández, Texas officials say all four suspected coronavirus cases tested negative, misspelled the name of spokesman for Texas Department of State Health Services Chris Van Deusen.
A Jan. 23, 2020 story by Naomi Andu, CBD products are everywhere in Texas since the state legalized hemp. Experts warn: buyer beware., incorrectly stated how Texas criminally classified hemp before the state's hemp law was passed.
A Jan. 16, 2020 story by Abby Livingston, Texas Sens. Ted Cruz and John Cornyn back new North American trade deal to replace NAFTA, incorrectly stated Texas is the state with the longest border with another country. Alaska has a longer border with with Canada. The story also misstated the Senate vote count on the measure. The Senate approved the agreement 89-10.
A Jan. 16, 2020 story by Juan Pablo Garnham, "In San Antonio, rent is rising but wages aren’t," misspelled a San Antonio City Council member's name, misstated the name of a task force, wrongly portrayed how certain low-income earners were classified, misstated how many affordable housing units existed for a specific income bracket in 2005 and misstated the existence of certain affordable housing units in 2016. The council member was Roberto Treviño. The Mayor's Housing Policy Task Force compiled the report referenced in the story. The affordability of housing units were determined by household income. In 2005, there were 14,000 more units considered affordable for households making between $14,780 and $29,561 than there were households in that income bracket. In 2016, there were 2,400 fewer units considered affordable for households making between $14,780 and $29,561 than there were households in that income bracket.
A Jan. 13, 2020 story by Julián Aguilar, "Gov. Greg Abbott, a Catholic, draws criticism over new refugee ban from Texas' Catholic bishops," misstated when Abbott declared immigration enforcement legislation Senate Bill 4 a priority. It was in 2017.
A Jan 10, 2020 story by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Why you should treat elected officials like your dog," misidentified the nationality of Enrique Iglesias. He is Spanish.
A Jan. 2, 2020 story by Juan Pablo Garnham, "In rural Texas, people experiencing homelessness lead 'masked' lives outside of public view," misstated the location of Stephenville. It's about an hour west of Fort Worth.
A Dec. 20, 2019 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "A 2020 holiday fantasy for Texas officeholders looking to 2022," referred incorrectly to the Republican primary lost by three sitting statewide officials: That happened in the 2014 GOP primary for lieutenant governor.
A Dec. 18, 2019 story by Stacy Fernández, "An estimated 390,000 Texans might lose access to food stamps under new Trump policy," provided the inaccurate estimate for the number of Texans who could be kicked off SNAP under the proposed rule changes.
A Dec. 16, 2019 story by Stacy Fernández, "Midland County officials just found a missing ballot box. It may change the result of a $569 million bond election," provided the wrong number for how many votes the bond issue failed by on election night, and incorrectly stated how the recount was initiated.
A Nov. 12, 2019 story by Mandi Cai and Stacy Fernández, "Texas had seven mass shootings over 10 years. Meanwhile, gun control has loosened statewide.," did not specify that campus carry applies only to those licensed to carry a concealed weapon and incorrectly characterized the law regulating weapons in places of worship. That law clarified the rights of licensed handgun owners to carry weapons in places of worship. The total number of people injured in the 2009 Fort Hood shooting was also incorrect. It is 31.
A Nov. 27, 2019 T-Squared by Bobby Blanchard, “T-Squared: Regina Mack is returning to The Texas Tribune,” incorrectly stated the number of people who move to Texas every day. It is roughly 500 people.
A Nov. 25, 2019 story by Davis Rich, "Prison health care costs are higher than ever in Texas. Many point to an aging prison population," misstated one of the university providers that provides medical services at Texas prisons. It is Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center.
A Nov. 18, 2019 story by Tiana Woodard, "Here’s a list of Texas organizations that are helping the homeless," misstated the kind of shelter ATX Helps plans to build. It is a temporary housing facility for those experiencing homelessness as they transition into permanent housing.
An Oct. 28, 2019 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: A race for Speaker of the Texas House? Not so fast," misstated the tenure of Tom Craddick, R-Midland, as speaker of the House. He was speaker for three terms.
An Oct. 24, 2019 story by Chase Karacostas, "Texas voters could give cancer research organization $3 billion in November," misstated the surname of Wayne Roberts. This story was also updated to provide more clarity on Karlee Steele's surgery.
An Oct. 16, 2019 story by Patrick Svitek, "Five takeaways from third-quarter fundraising reports in Texas' congressional races,”misidentified the top Democratic fundraiser in the third quarter in the 31st District. It was Donna Imam.
An Oct. 16, 2019 story by Abby Livingston, "U.S. House, including most Texas members, votes in disapproval of Trump's Syria actions,” incorrectly stated the number of Republican U.S. House members from Texas who voted against the measure. Seven opposed the resolution.
An Oct. 15, 2019 story by Davis Rich, "Early voting in Texas’ constitutional amendment election starts Monday. Here’s what voters will decide,” incorrectly described Anna Núñez's former job at the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and omitted one of the candidates for House District 148.
An Oct. 10, 2019 story by Stacy Fernández, "Texas sheriff at White House briefing: If criminal immigrants are released, “drunks” will “run over your children,” mischaracterized statements by Tarrant County Sheriff Bill E. Waybourn, who said undocumented immigrants with criminal convictions would be a threat to the public.
An Oct. 2, 2019 story by Chase Karacostas, "Texas road congestion is hitting a breaking point. Are voters ready to approve more public transit spending?" misstated the sales tax rate that the transit authority in San Antonio receives. The article also incorrectly stated the year of a previous Capital Metro bond election.
A Sept. 30, 2019 story by Acacia Coronado, "Federal government awards three contracts for 65 new miles of border fencing in South Texas," incorrectly stated the location of existing fencing erected by the federal government. The fencing is along the entire U.S.-Mexico border.
Due to an editing error, a Sept. 30, 2019 story by Patrick Svitek, "U.S. Rep. Mac Thornberry will not run for reelection, marking the sixth recent GOP retirement in Texas," originally misstated the number of Texans in Congress from the class of 1994. Thornberry is the only remaining Republican in the class.
A Sept. 27, 2019 story by Chase Karacostas, "Impeachment, the 2020 election and more Texas Tribune Festival highlights," incorrectly stated the number of African-American Republican members of Congress. U.S. Rep. Will Hurd is the only black Republican member of the U.S. House.
A Sept. 25, 2019 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Seeking election in Texas can be lonely, especially in the beginning," misstated the year when Chris Bell was the Democratic Party's nominee for governor. It was in 2006.
A Sept. 24, 2019 story by Acacia Coronado, "Fearing deportation, immigrants are dropping Medicaid over misinformation about Trump's new policy," incorrectly stated the type of medical benefits that an immigrant who was quoted in the story was applying for. She plans to apply for a program for which undocumented immigrants are eligible.
A Sept. 19, 2019 story by Abby Livingston and J. Edward Moreno, "In a fight over agriculture funding, U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela calls GOP Texan "a racist Christian pretender," included incorrect information about a change some members of Congress wanted to see at the DCCC. The story has been updated to say that they called for the chairwoman to replace the executive director of the DCCC with a person of color.
A Sept. 16, 2019 story by Stacy Fernández, "University of Texas Rio Grande Valley to provide free tuition for students with household incomes under $75,000," gave an incorrect number of undergraduates at the university.
A Sept. 16, 2019 story by J. Edward Moreno, "Another budget fight looms this month in Congress centering on border wall funding," initially misspelled the name of Maria Jeffrey, a strategist for U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz.
A Sept. 10, 2019 story by Stacy Fernández, "Texas has the most people without health insurance in the nation — again," incorrectly stated a federal judge's ruling on the Affordable Care Act, which invalidated the law.
A Sept. 2, 2019 story by Acacia Coronado, "Odessa shooter failed gun background check, Gov. Greg Abbott says," incorrectly stated one of the exceptions to the NICS background check requirement. Holding a state license to carry a handgun is an exception to the requirement.
A Sept. 1, 2019 story by Acacia Coronado and Alex Samuels, "Death toll in Midland-Odessa mass shooting climbs to eight, including the shooter," cited a CNN story that reported the gunman was arrested for criminal trespass and burglary. The gunman was actually charged with criminal trespass and evading arrest, the network reported in a later version of its story. Due to an editing error, a previous version of the story also incorrectly stated the location of the movie theater where the gunman was killed. It is in Odessa.
An Aug. 26, 2019 story by Emma Platoff, "Gov. Greg Abbott selects former appeals court judge Jane Bland for Texas Supreme Court," misstated the margin of former appeals court judge Jane Bland's loss to Gordon Goldman in 2018. She lost by less than two percentage points.
An Aug. 22, 2019 story by Lara Korte, "After Harvey surprised thousands with unexpected flooding, new law aims to better inform homebuyers," incorrectly stated the new home sales disclosures required under a new state law. The law expands disclosure requirements to include whether a home is located in a 500-year floodplain, a flood pool, in or near a reservoir and whether the home has flooded before.
An Aug. 19, 2019 by Neena Satija, "How judicial conflicts of interest are denying poor Texans their right to an effective lawyer," incorrectly stated that Travis County judges resisted expansion of the county public defender’s office. In fact, the judges supported a blended system that would retain the managed assigned counsel system and expand the public defender’s office. The story also incorrectly stated that a criminal investigation of Ray Espersen by the Travis County District Attorney's office was still pending. In fact, the investigation has been closed.
An Aug. 15, 2019 story by Julián Aguilar, "Farewell, Madame President: Diana Natalicio retires after 31 years as UT-El Paso's leader," incorrectly stated Natalicio's last day at UTEP, which was Wednesday, Aug. 14.
An Aug. 13, 2019 story by Juan Pablo Garnham, "Greg Abbott said San Antonio could teach Austin how to help homeless people. Experts disagree," incorrectly said Austin's homeless-related ordinances were approved unanimously. Although the ordinances related to sitting or lying in public places and aggressive confrontation were indeed approved unanimously, two council members voted against the camping ordinance.
An Aug. 13, 2019 story by Lara Korte, "Texans get ready for beer to go and booze delivery," misstated the name of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission.
An Aug. 6, 2019 story by Riane Roldan, "Here's everything you need to know about Texas gun laws," was clarified to indicate under what circumstances it has been illegal in Texas to carry handguns in churches, synagogues, and other places of worship.
A July 31, 2019 story by Jolie McCullough, "Harris County agreed to reform bail practices that keep poor people in jail. Will it influence other Texas counties?" misstated the frequency of potential "open-hours" courts in Harris County. Such courts would be once a week.
A July 15, 2019 story by Kiah Collier, "Can the “masters of the flood” help Texas protect its coast from hurricanes?" incorrectly stated the year that Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Truth was released. It came out in 2006.
A July 12, 2019 story by Lara Korte, "'The federal government has really dropped the ball': Texas lawmakers express concern about conditions for migrants in U.S. custody," misstated when the Texas Health and Human Services Commission may enter federal facilities.
A June 28, 2019 story by Adam Willis, "Here's what's in the $4.6 billion border aid bill passed by Congress," misstated the vote by which the Senate passed its border aid bill. The vote was 84-8.
A June 27, 2019 story by Lara Korte, "Texas is trying to limit public money from going to abortion providers. Some fear other health services could get cut" — misstated the political affiliation of state Rep. Donna Howard of Austin. She is a Democrat.
A June 10, 2019 story by Elizabeth Byrne, "The Texas governor accused people of lying about Texas' maternal mortality rate. The critics relied on the state's own bad data.," misidentified the number of women a 2016 study found to have died from pregnancy-related complications in 2012. The study found that 147 women died, though that number was later determined to be based on faulty data.
A June 5, 2019 story by Patrick Svitek, "Beto O'Rourke's proposed election reforms seek to simplify voting registration, get big money out of politics," misstated how many policy proposals O'Rourke has released as a presidential candidate.
A May 28, 2019 story by Elizabeth Byrne, "'Safety is at risk': Future of Texas plumbers' licensing and regulation uncertain after legislative impasse," misstated what the Texas plumbing code is based on. The state code is based on both the Uniform Plumbing Code, a policy developed by the International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, and the International Plumbing Code, which comes from the International Code Council.
A May 26, 2019 story by Shannon Najmabadi, "The property tax reform package is heading to Gov. Greg Abbott's desk,"included an incorrect word in a quote from state Sen. José Rodríguez.
A May 9, 2019 story by Kiah Collier, "Renewable energy proponents brace for last-minute attack on tax breaks for wind and solar," incorrectly stated that legislation hasn't been filed that would strip renewables from the Chapter 312 and 313 programs. Such legislation has been filed, but has failed to gain traction.
A May 3, 2019 story by Edgar Walters, "After Supreme Court ruling, Texas bills would bring in $850 million in online sales tax," incorrectly described two bills as implementing a new sales tax levy on out-of-state sellers. Texas law already levies a sales tax on such sellers; the bills would create a new mechanism for collecting the tax.
A May 2, 2019 story by Elizabeth Byrne, "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton joins fight targeting Texas State Bar," gave the incorrect amount of future funding the University of Houston will seek for its medical school. It's $20 million over the next eight years.
An April 17, 2019 story by Carlos Anchondo, "A creek flowing to the Colorado River turned black. Now the state has sued the alleged polluter," included an incorrect date for the temporary restraining order against Inland Environmental and Remediation. The order was issued April 12.
An April 8, 2019 story by Alex Samuels, "After high school shooting, Texas campuses could soon have more armed marshals," misidentified one of the Democrats who voted in favor of Senate Bill 244.
A March 29, 2019 story by Gabe Schneider, "Meet the small El Paso publishing house behind the book Beto O'Rourke co-wrote about legalizing pot," inaccurately described how Chris Evans, Beto O'Rourke's spokesman, characterized O'Rourke's conversations with the Byrds prior to the publication of a book O'Rourke co-wrote.
A March 27, 2019 story by Arya Sundaram, "Three Texas abortion bills pass committees, gaining momentum in Senate," misidentified the lawmaker who visited a facility that contracts with providers that refer pregnant women and adoptive parents to social services.
A March 27, 2019 story by Julián Aguilar, "Hundreds of agents will be pulled from ports of entry to help El Paso border Patrol process undocumented immigrants" incorrectly stated the number of undocumented immigrants held in the Border Patrol's El Paso sector. The correct number is about 3,500.
A March 27, 2019 story by Edgar Walters, "The Texas budget is up for debate in the House. Here are four things to know," misidentified the lawmaker who authored an amendment about domestic terrorism.
A March 20, 2019 story by Patrick Svitek, "Beto O’Rourke's campaign received 128,000 'unique contributions' in the first 24 hours," misstated the number of individual donors Bernie Sanders' campaign reported for the first 24 hours of his campaign.
A March 13, 2019 analysis, "Analysis: Is Beto O’Rourke the bomb or just a bottle rocket?," misstated Sema Hernandez' name.
A March 1, 2019 analysis, "Analysis: How the Texas Senate handles David Whitley could reverberate for years," misstated the number of absent senators it would take to put the nomination in the hands of the Senate's 19 Republicans; the 19 would constitute two-thirds if 28 of the Senate's 31 members were present.
A Feb. 21, 2019 story, "Texas officials call it "property tax relief" — but legislation won't lower tax bills or decrease budgets," incorrectly characterized state lawmakers' role in reducing the state share of school funding.
A Feb. 19, 2019 story, "A state report says a Texas inmate died from heat last year. Prison officials contest that finding," incorrectly listed the hometown for state Sen. José Menéndez as a result of an editing error.
A Feb. 14, 2019 story by Arya Sundaram, "Shutdown deal includes language to protect a butterfly sanctuary and other landmarks from border barrier," incorrectly stated the budget for border fencing in the Rio Grande Valley in the 2018 federal budget. The correct amount is $641 million.
A Feb. 13, 2019 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Here’s your property tax cut, maybe. Heads up — it’s expensive." misstated a proposal to lower school property taxes; the legislation would compress those taxes by 10 cents, or to 90 cents per $100 property valuation, whichever is higher.
A Jan. 14, 2019 story by Brandon Formby, "Domestic abusers can trap their victims with financial debt. This Texas bill seeks to provide a way out," incorrectly described the legal work that Carla Leticia Sanchez-Adams did on behalf of Cheryl.
A Jan. 9, 2019 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: A Texas House speaker’s first act is to put together a list," incorrectly included the House Committee on Defense and Veterans' Affairs in the list of committees with empty chairmanships.
A Dec. 12, 2018 story by Andrew Eversden and Abby Livingston, "U.S. House passes farm bill to relief of Texas farmers, SNAP proponents" incorrectly stated, due to an editing error, the number of Texas Congressional delegates and the number of those who supported the Farm Bill.
A Dec. 4, 2018 story by Alexa Ura and Aliyya Swaby, "San Antonio ISD is innovating to integrate its schools. Is it leaving some behind in the process?" was updated to clarify the extent of San Antonio ISD’s enrollment loss.
A Nov. 30, 2018 story by Ross Ramsey, "Former President George H.W. Bush dies at age 94," put Dan Quayle in the wrong state; he represented Indiana in the U.S. Senate.
A Nov. 29, 2018 story by Alex Samuels, "Three weeks after election, Texas Democrat concedes to state Rep. Morgan Meyer in tight race," incorrectly stated the deadline for candidates to request a vote recount.
A Nov. 14, 2018 story by Carlos Anchondo "Reef restoration projects aim to bolster Texas' record-low oyster population" incorrectly stated that both reef restoration projects will be paid for by funds from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill settlement.
An Oct. 31, 2018 story by Kathryn Lundstrom "A Texas Board of Education seat hasn’t flipped since 2010. Will that change in 2018?" included incorrect information about Suzanne Smith's fundraising based on incorrect data posted with the Texas Ethics Commission.
An Oct. 26, 2018 story by Matt Zdun, Texas' largest counties have nearly doubled voter turnout so far compared to 2014, incorrectly stated Renée Cross’ title. She is the senior director of the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston.
An Oct. 22, 2018 story by Abby Livingston, Will Donald Trump's Houston rally for Ted Cruz motivate Republicans — or Democrats?, misstated the size of Houston's television market. It is the second largest in the state.
An Oct. 11, 2018 story by Kiah Collier, Jamie Smith and Rachel Levens, As oil and gas exports surge, West Texas becomes the world's 'exteraction colony,' incorrectly stated how much student enrollment has grown at the Ector County School District. It's up 14 percent over six years.
An Oct. 10, 2018 story by Emma Platoff, Catholic dioceses in Texas to release names of clergy "credibly accused" of sexually abusing minors, contained a typo in the headline. The names of clergy released by the dioceses will be those "credibly accused" of sexual abuse.
An Oct. 10, 2018 analysis by Ross Ramsey, Analysis: Texas’ school finance problem in one pesky chart, didn't account for population growth as part of the constant-dollar spending on public education. That spending grew 15.6 percent — not 18.9 percent — from 2010 to 2019.
A Sept. 27, 2018 analysis by Ross Ramsey, Analysis: For state Sen. Charles Schwertner, bad news and a trickle-down effect, incorrectly said Donald Trump beat Hillary Clinton in Tony Dale's HD-136; in fact, Clinton narrowly beat Trump.
A Sept. 24, 2018 story by Andrew Eversden, Texas farmers on edge as $430 billion farm bill runs up against deadline, incorrectly stated when term limits would force U.S. Rep. Mike Conaway to relinquish his chairmanship of the House Agriculture Committee. House Republican term limit rules would allow him to stay in the role until 2020.
A Sept. 9, 2018 story by Kathryn Lundstrom, Beto O’Rourke leads Ted Cruz by 2 among likely voters in U.S. Senate race, new poll finds, incorrectly described the poll as having a margin of error; Ipsos online polls' precision is measured using a "credibility interval.
An August 28, 2018 story by Emma Platoff, Report: Toddler died after contracting infection at ICE family detention facility, misspelled the name of the mother who says her child died after leaving ICE custody. Her name is Yazmin Juárez.
An August 23, 2018 story by Brandon Formby, Nearly 10 percent of Texans displaced by Harvey still haven't gone home, survey says, incorrectly stated the number of Texans who have not returned home after Harvey. Eight percent of survey respondents said they have not returned to where they lived before the storm.
An August 22, 2018 analysis by Ross Ramsey, Analysis: So far, there’s not much to handicap in the race for Texas House Speaker, said Speaker Gib Lewis resigned; in fact, he decided not to seek another term.
An August 17, 2018 analysis by Ross Ramsey, Analysis: Texas Tech’s regents ran off one of the rare good guys in politics, said John Sharp was a former land commissioner; he was a railroad commissioner.
An August 2, 2018 story by Natalia Alamdari, In Wimberley, a fight bubbles up over sewage and a beloved swimming hole, incorrectly stated the elected status of Mac McCullough. He no longer serves on the Wimberley City Council. The story also misstated the area that Aqua Texas serves. The area includes a part of the city of Wimberley north of Cypress Creek.
A July 23, 2018 story by Emma Platoff, As Thursday deadline approaches, reunification remains uncertain for hundreds of migrant families, gave the wrong age range for immigrant children who need to be reunited with their parents by the July 26 deadline. The children are 5 and older.
A July 23, 2018 story by Natalia Alamdari, State lawmaker to Trump: Don't overlook Mexican water treaty, was updated to clarify that Mexico and the United States have decreased water deliveries to each other during drought under a 1906 water treaty.
A July 17, 2018 story by Matthew Choi, Police interventions spike in Texas schools after shootings in Santa Fe and Parkland, gave an incorrect title for Matthew Novosad. He is a former vice president of the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas.
A July 11, 2018 story by Matthew Choi, "'No question, it's going to hurt': Trump trade war with China worries Texas agriculture," misstated Texas' export value to China. Texas exported about $16 billion in goods to China in 2017 and imported more than $42 billion from China.
A July 11, 2018 story by Matthew Choi, "Guns chill free speech, UT-Austin professors will argue at federal appeals court," gave an incorrect spelling for Max Renea Hicks.
A June 29, 2018 story by Natalia Alamdari, "Hays County residents fear the fight to protect their water was all for nothing," incorrectly described Goforth. It is a special utility district.
A June 29, 2018 story by Claire Parker, "Justice Kennedy's retirement won't just shape the U.S. Supreme Court — it could also reshape the U.S. Senate race in Texas," incorrectly identified the U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke's party. He is a Democrat.
A June 28, 2018 story by Matthew Choi, "As San Angelo air base prepares to receive immigrant children, residents ask, 'How can we help?'", misidentified the operator of a migrant housing facility.
A June 26, 2018 story by Brandon Formby, "Feds remain mum on whether there is a plan to reunify parents and children who are seeking asylum," was updated to correct Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch's name and to clarify that the majority of separated immigrant families are asylum seekers.
A June 21, 2018 story by Kiah Collier, "Amid immigration debate, feds moving ahead with land seizures for South Texas border wall," incorrectly stated U.S. Rep Henry Cuellar's committee membership. He is a member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security.
A June 20, 2018 story by Aura Bogado, Patrick Michels and Vanessa Swale of Reveal and Edgar Walters of The Texas Tribune, "Separated migrant children are headed toward shelters that have a history of abuse and neglect," was updated to note that a Texas Health and Human Services Commission spokesman said it was not up to the state to make contracting decisions rather than licensing decisions about shelters for immigrant children.
A June 13, 2018 story by Julián Aguilar, "A grandmother seeking asylum was separated from her disabled grandson at the border. It’s been 10 months," initially said Matheus da Silva Bastos' parents live in the U.S. legally. His mother currently lives in the U.S. legally.
A June 7, 2018 story by Aliyya Swaby, " More standardized testing woes in Texas? A high-performing school says over 100 students got zeros on essays" was updated to note that a Lamar CISD teacher looked at copies of essays — not the test booklets — for the students who received zeros.
A June 6, 2018 story by Matthew Choi, "Beto O’Rourke says he’s “very, very proud of my mom” after Ted Cruz brings up her tax fraud case," incorrectly said Melissa O'Rourke pleaded guilty to a tax violation. Her store was charged as a corporate entity.
A May 24, 2018 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Texas education agency penalizes testing vendor over STAAR glitches," incorrectly said that the Texas Education Agency was seeking a company to replace Educational Testing Service after its current contract ends.
A May 22, 2018 story by Abby Livingston, "Dan Crenshaw, Chip Roy, Michael Cloud among Republican congressional runoff winners," misidentified the district that Lance Gooden and Bunni Pounds competed in. They are in the 5th Congressional District.
A May 18, 2018 story by Cat Cardenas, "Little-known state agency causes controversy as chief judge forces resignation" incorrectly stated the number and gender of the patients who made allegations against a doctor. Two patients made allegations.
A May 14, 2018 story by Texas Tribune Staff, "Meet the candidates in the Texas primary runoffs," included incorrect fundraising numbers for Julie Oliver and incorrect information about state Rep. Jim Murphy’s tenure in the Texas House.
A May 10, 2018 story by Brandon Formby, "A trailblazer in Dallas, Lupe Valdez strives to prove herself on a statewide stage," included incorrect fundraising numbers for Andrew White.
A May 9, 2018 story by Abby Livingston, "How Joe Barton's downfall led to two competitive Texas races," incorrectly described the announcement U.S. Rep. Joe Barton made late last year. He announced his plan to not seek re-election.
A May 4, 2018 story by Patrick Svitek, "In NRA speech, Trump promises to protect gun rights — and endorses Texas politicians," misidentified the title of U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer. He is U.S. Senate minority leader.
A May 2, 2018 story by Brandon Formby, "5 things to know about the National Rifle Association's convention in Dallas," incorrectly stated Alice Tripp’s affiliation with the NRA. Tripp said she is not an employee of the group, but she is a member.
An April 29, 2018 story by Patrick Svitek, "Democratic statewide candidates get tough questions from Latino youth," misspelled Karla Quiñones' name.
An April 18, 2018 story by Abby Livingston, "New poll finds race between Ted Cruz and Beto O’Rourke 'too close to call'," incorrectly stated U.S. Rep's Beto O'Rourke's support among Texas voters in the Quinnipiac Poll.
An April 16, 2018 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Texas school administrators warn they need money for likely spike in special education," incorrectly reported the date the TEA will send a finalized special education plan to the federal government. The plan will be sent by April 23, 2018.
An April 11, 2018 story by Ross Ramsey, Analysis: Texas GOP ignores young voters with LGBT snub, gave the incorrect hometown for state Rep. J.M. Lozano. He's from Kingsville.
An April 10, 2018 story by Cat Cardenas, "Texas General Land Office releases plan for $5 billion in disaster relief," was updated to clarify that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban development allocated the funds in November and to more clearly explain the action plan approval process.
An April 10, 2018 story by Emma Platoff, "Problems reported with Texas' STAAR exam — again," misstated how a student can advance to the next grade after failing a STAAR test. If a student doesn't pass on the third try, he or she cannot advance to the next grade unless a committee of his or her educators and parents unanimously agrees to promote the student.
An April 2, 2018 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Changing the Texas Senate, a special election at a time," misstated U.S. Rep. Gene Green's title. The Houston Democrat is a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
A March 5, 2018 story by Emma Platoff, "Nearly a year after UT stabbing, mother of slain student wants to fight knife laws," misstated the number of Texas House representatives who voted against House Bill 1935. Three members voted against it.
A March 2, 2018 story by Abby Livingston, "Amid national controversy, Houston Democrats hustle votes in 7th Congressional District," misquoted Lizzie Pannill Fletcher. What she actually said was “Houston is a small town and a big city."
A March 2, 2018 story by Texas Tribune Staff, "11 Texas congressional primary races to watch," misspelled the name of Jana Lynne Sanchez, a Democratic candidate for the 6th Congressional District.
A Feb. 26, 2018 story by Aliyya Swaby, After federal probe, parents say Texas districts lack funding, staff to help kids with dyslexia, was updated to more accurately reflect that students with different levels of dyslexia are eligible for special education.
A Feb 23, 2018 story by Sydney Greene and Cassandra Pollock, "We asked all 38 Texans in Congress about gun control after the Florida school shooting. Ten answered," incorrectly described the question The Texas Tribune asked the Texas members of Congress related to assault rifles.
Due to an editing error, a Feb. 22, 2018 story by Emma Platoff, Jury finds state Sen. Carlos Uresti guilty of 11 felonies, leading to calls from Democratic colleagues to resign, gave an incorrect hometown for state Sen. José Rodriguez. He is from El Paso.
A Feb. 20, 2018 story by Jolie McCullough, In rare move, Texas parole board recommends clemency for death row inmate Thomas Whitaker, gave an incorrect year for the last time the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommended clemency for a death row inmate. It was 2009.
A Jan. 30, 2018 story by Edgar Walters, "Despite sunny economy, Texas budget forecast is dreary," incorrectly said that the Internet Tax Freedom Act passed by Congress caused a $144 million loss in state revenue. It caused a $440 million loss in state revenue.
A Jan. 24, 2018 video by Justin Dehn, "Texas medical cannabis cultivator and dispensary has first harvest," was updated to refer to Compassionate Cultivation as one of the first Texas-licensed medical cannabis cultivators and dispensaries.
A Jan. 23, 2018 story by Cassandra Pollock, "In rural North Texas, GOP House primary pits Freedom Caucus member against superintendent," was updated to clarify the number of precinct chairs on the Hood County Republican Party's executive committee who voted in favor of a "no confidence" resolution against Jim Largent.
A Jan. 18, 2018 story by Alex Samuels, Hey, Texplainer: What would a government shutdown mean for Texas?, incorrectly said that the headquarters for NASA are in Houston.
A Jan. 17, 2018 story by Marissa Evans, "A shrinking number of rural Texas hospitals still deliver babies. Here's what that means for expecting moms," was updated with a more accurate count of the number of hospitals that have applied for special classifications for neonatal and maternal care, and added a statement from the Department of State Health Services about the fee.
A Jan. 4, 2018 story by Dave Harmon, "Four months after Hurricane Harvey, four major questions about recovery for 2018," was updated to more accurately explain the Army Corps of Engineers' assessment of the integrity of the Addicks and Barker reservoirs.
A Jan. 4, 2018 story by Patrick Svitek, "Texas House candidate says probation for pipe bomb stems from blowing up tree stumps," incorrectly described Texas House candidate Chris Evans as having been convicted for possessing a pipe bomb. He received deferred adjudication for the offense.
A Dec. 15, 2017 story by Emma Platoff, "A Texas House candidate mocked a sheriff on social media. Did he violate the law?" incorrectly referred to former Dalworthington Gardens Police Chief Bill Waybourn as the police chief in March 2016.
A Dec. 12, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Disability rights advocates call for Texas to halt education data mining contract," misspelled the name of Penny Schwinn, the TEA's deputy commissioner of academics.
A Dec. 6, 2017 story by Alex Samuels and Emma Platoff, "How repealing net neutrality could hurt small Texas businesses," misstated the number of employees in Erin Young's company. This story was also updated to clarify Young's concerns about the impact of repealing net neutrality.
A Dec. 5, 2017 story by Giulia Afiune, "Survey: Hurricane Harvey victims still struggle to find housing, pay bills," incorrectly named one of the organizations that conducted the study. It is the Kaiser Family Foundation.
A Dec. 4, 2017 analysis by Ross Ramsey,"Analysis: What state government can learn from college football," was updated to correct the first name of the head football coach at the University of Texas at Austin: He is Tom Herman.
A Nov. 29, 2017 story by Jolie McCullough, "Here's what's happening in Harris County now that the sheriff issues bail bonds," was updated to add more context regarding the bond failure data released from Harris County. It also was corrected to more accurately qualify the bond failure rate provided by the county.
A Nov. 16, 2017 story by Brandon Formby, “Amid blowback over accounting maneuver, TxDOT drops financing idea for several toll projects,” was updated to note that toll revenues could be used as a source of financing for new managed toll lane projects.
A Nov. 16, 2017 story by Brandon Formby, “TxDOT eyeing accounting trick to get around toll road prohibition,” was updated to note that toll revenues could be used as a source of financing for new managed toll lane projects.
A Nov. 14, 2017 story by Alexa Ura, Morgan Smith, Jolie McCullough and Edgar Walters, "At the Texas Capitol, victims of sexual harassment must fend for themselves," included incorrect information about which sexual harassment policies at the Texas Capitol were outdated. Only the House's policy references an agency that no longer exists.
A Nov. 7, 2017 story by Katie Riordan, "Buda voters decide whether to reintroduce fluoride to tap water," gave incorrect information about what the federal government considers to be the optimal level of fluoride in water to prevent cavities.
A Nov. 3, 2017 story by Cassandra Pollock, "The Brief: With two congressmen stepping down, all eyes are on their seats in 2018," misspelled Jenifer Sarver's name.
An Oct. 30, 2017 story by Brad Wolverton of NerdWallet, "Kicking in doors and crushing credit: How a Texas-based retailer torments customers," misspelled Branden Vigliotti's name.
An Oct 20, 2017 story by Matthew Watkins, "A $10,000 degree that freshmen are discouraged from pursuing," misidentified the name of the degree offered through the affordable online program. It's a degree in organizational leadership.
An Oct. 17, 2017 story by Abby Livingston and Patrick Svitek, "Some Texas Republicans in Congress again outraised by challengers," gave incorrect information about which candidate in Texas' 2nd District had more cash on hand. U.S. Rep. Ted Poe had the cash-on-hand advantage.
An Oct. 10, 2017 story by Jim Malewitz, "Hegar: Harvey response will strain Texas budget, shouldn't slow economy," included an incorrect figure for the amount of money lawmakers left unappropriated during the most recent legislative session.
An Oct. 10, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Hey Texplainer: Is Texas removing Confederate markers from the state Capitol?", included an incorrect year for when Gov. George W. Bush signed legislation directing the State Preservation Board to plan an African American monument. He signed it in 1997.
An Oct. 6, 2017 story by Morgan Smith, "How much has been raised for Harvey relief — and how's it being spent?" incorrectly stated the amount of money JJ Watt's Harvey relief fund has raised. It has raised $37 million.
An Oct. 5, 2017 story by Abby Livingston and Matthew Choi, "Abbott and Texans in Congress request $18.7 billion more in Harvey aid," misidentified U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran's title.
An Oct. 2, 2017 story by Matthew Choi, "More than 400,000 Texans' insurance at risk after Congress fails to renew CHIP," incorrectly reported the number of children who don't qualify for Medicaid and receive CHIP benefits and incorrectly stated the percentage of uninsured children nationwide in 1997.
A Sept. 29, 2017 story by Shannon Najmabadi, "Texas denies state was target of election-related hacking by Russia," initially included incorrect information. Due to an editing error, the story misidentified the official who denied a 2016 request by a Russian official.
A Sept. 14, 2017 story by Kiah Collier of the Tribune and Lisa Song and Al Shaw of ProPublica, "EPA won't release benzene levels collected post-Harvey; private tests show elevated levels," incorrectly stated that a Texas Commission on Environmental Quality air monitoring unit was capable of collecting data in real time. It does not have that capability.
A Sept. 13, 2017 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Early omens of a very conservative GOP primary," initially put Todd Staples in the wrong office; he was agriculture commissioner, not railroad commissioner, when he ran for lieutenant governor in 2014.
A Sept. 8, 2017 story by Abby Livingston, "U.S. House sends Harvey aid bill to Trump – despite 4 Texans voting against it," initially misidentified U.S. Rep. Sam Johnson's hometown.
A Sept. 12, 2017 story by Kiah Collier and Neena Satija, "Post-Harvey, Houston officials hope Congress is up for funding Ike Dike," incorrectly listed U.S. Sen. John Cornyn as one of the officials who signed a letter to President Trump urging federal funding of the coastal spine. Cornyn supports the project but did not sign that letter.
An Aug. 31, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Texas districts preparing to take in students displaced by Harvey," incorrectly described federal requirements for providing displaced students with transportation. The law requires school districts to take in students displaced by a disaster and provide them with free meals. A student who decides to stay in their original school district must be provided with transportation.
An Aug. 28, 2017 story by Alana Rocha, "New Texas law means Harvey victims have good reason to file claims by Friday," was updated to note that penalties for insurance companies over late payments for weather-related insurance claims only happen when policyholders file a lawsuit.
An Aug. 17, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Who’s to blame for your rising property taxes? Here’s what Texans think," misstated how spending an additional $1.8 billion in state funds on public education would automatically affect local school district property tax rates.
An Aug. 8, 2017 story by Morgan Smith, "Texas House passes bill restricting insurance coverage of abortion," misidentified state Rep. Chris Turner's hometown.
An Aug. 2, 2017 story by Brandon Formby, Kirby Wilson and Aliyya Swaby, "In Texas House, property tax proposals range from minor tweaks to abolishment," misidentified the author of House Bill 72.
An Aug. 2, 2017 story by Matthew Watkins, "What it means for Texas colleges if Trump targets affirmative action," incorrectly said that Midwestern State University considers the race of its applicants during the admissions process, based on information from a university-produced report.
An Aug.2, 2017 story by Abby Livingston, "U.S. Rep. Mike Conaway staking legacy on passing politically tricky farm bill," misidentified the university where Brian May is currently president due to an editing error.
A July 23, 2017 story by Jim Malewitz, "Texas Senate panel targets mail-in ballot fraud after high-profile case," included an incorrect vote count for Senate Bill 5.
A July 21, 2017 story by Alexa Ura and Emma Platoff, "Senate committee passes 'bathroom bill' after 10 hours of testimony," gave an incorrect first name for Tom Noonan of Visit Austin. The story also spelled Casandra Matej's name wrong.
A July 18, 2017 story by Morgan Smith, "As Abbott launches ambitious special session, ill will flows between Straus, Patrick," incorrectly described the number of dueling press conferences Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Joe Straus held at the end of the 2017 regular legislative session.
A June 30, 2017 story by Jim Malewitz, "Texas Supreme Court rejects Tea Party challenge to campaign finance laws," included an imprecise explanation of a piece of the court's opinion dealing with the definition of a political committee.
A June 29, 2017 story by Andy Duehren, "The Texas solar industry is growing. Could a trade case end that?" incorrectly described 7X Energy's operations.
A June 27, 2017 story by Giulia Afiune, "Hey Texplainer, do I still need to get my car inspected every year?" included the incorrect bill number. The correct bill number is Senate Bill 1588.
A June 13, 2017 story by Patrick Svitek, "Paxton gets new judge in securities fraud case," misstated when Harris County District Judge Robert Johnson graduated from Texas Southern University's law school. He graduated in 2001.
A June 7, 2017 story by Matthew Watkins, "In a year of cuts, the Legislature boosted aid for Texas college students," misidentified when the Texas House chose to add more money for TEXAS Grants. It proposed a $87 million increase before passing its version of the budget. The story also misidentified the program overseen by Garrett Groves. It's the Economic Opportunity Program at the Center for Public Priorities.
A May 31, 2017, story by Abby Livingston, "Cornyn bets on Congress sending health care bill to Trump this summer," misspelled the name of the radio station that interviewed U.S. Sen. John Cornyn.
A May 23, 2017 story by Sanya Mansoor, "Bill on certification pits doctors against hospitals," incorrectly described the physician certification process in Texas.
A May 22, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Texas might keep the standards, cut funding for Abbott's pre-K program," was updated to clarify the schedule of state funding for pre-kindergarten.
A May 20, 2017 story by Sanya Mansoor, "School lunch bill revived as an amendment; no longer mandatory," incorrectly identified Rep. Diego Bernal as Senate Bill 725's author. He is the House sponsor.
A May 19, 2017 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Property tax relief doesn’t equal extra money in your pocket," gave incorrect numbers about the rollback election threshold in the House version of Senate Bill 2; as it came out of committee, the bill would leave that threshold where it is now — at 8 percent.
A May 18, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "House backs proposal requiring seat belts on school buses," gave incorrect information about which school buses would be required to have seat belts under a legislative proposal. The story also said — incorrectly — that schools would not be allowed to opt out.
A May 16, 2017 story by Brandon Formby, "Lawmakers resume efforts to provide Texans with toll road relief," misattributed a quote from Larry Gonzales to another legislator, Larry Phillips.
A May 15, 2017 story by Cassandra Pollock, "House panel approves bill requiring parental consent for minors to join unions," misstated the membership of UFCW in Texas. Between 1,500 and 2,000 minors belong to the union statewide, not a single chapter.
A May 15, 2017 story by Morgan Smith, "In private meeting, Sid Miller says hog poison safeguard no 'doable,'" misstated the number of acres that Bruce Hunnicutt owns and leases. He owns 600 acres and leases 2,400.
A May 11, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Senate panel tacks "school choice" provision onto education finance bill," misstated the financial impact that Sen. Larry Taylor's version of House Bill 21 would have on a state aid program for certain school districts. His version would keep the grant program at $159 million over the next two years.
A May 11, 2017 story by Patrick Svitek, "Senate committee advances straight-ticket voting ban," and a May 8, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Bill to abolish “one-punch” voting approved in Texas House," incorrectly said when House Bill 25 could be in effect. If passed, it would be in effect for the 2018 election.
A May 5, 2017 story by Alex Samuels and Brandon Formby, "House defeats bill that would’ve allowed the expansion of toll road projects," incorrectly stated that House Bill 2861 included a planned toll road project for a stretch of Interstate 35 north of Austin.
A May 5, 2017 story by Sanya Mansoor, "Texas House passes bill to make it harder to sue over weather damage," included the incorrect date for when House Bill 1774 would take effect. If signed into law, HB 1774 would take effect on Sept. 1.
A May 4, 2017 story by Julián Aguilar, "Lawsuit over sanctuary cities bill is just a matter of time, opponents say," incorrectly said that the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund sued Texas over the state's voter ID law. MALDEF was not involved in the voter ID lawsuit.
A May 2, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Texas House passes measure to reduce handgun license fee," incorrectly identified the bill being voted on. The legislation is Senate Bill 16.
An April 26, 2017 story by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Today’s hated business tax is tomorrow’s property tax relief," originally said the trigger for a franchise tax cut would be growth over a year; it should have said growth over a biennium.
An April 18, 2017 story by Cassandra Pollock, "The Q&A: Carrie Thompson," was updated to accurately state Carrie Thompson's prior experience as a conservation practitioner.
An April 18, 2017 story by Abby Livingston, "For Texans in U.S. House, 2018 landscape begins to take shape,"incorrectly described attorney and author Regina Montoya's current profession.
An April 14, 2017 story by Marissa Evans, "Women's health providers say Trump-backed measure won't affect Texas — yet ," suggested women's health providers in Texas were likely to be affected by a federal measure President Trump signed. They would only be affected by the measure if future federal Title X funding gets funneled through a state agency.
An April 11, 2017 story by Marissa Evans, "Texas lawmakers seek to ensure no state funds reach abortion providers," has been updated to make clear that Rep. Matt Rinaldi's proposal was an amendment to an amendment by Rep. Drew Springer.
An April 10, 2017 story by Neena Satija, "Has the Top 10 Percent Rule impacted diversity at UT-Austin? It's complicated," was updated to say that Hispanic and black students fare worse than white and Asian applicants when admissions decisions are left to UT-Austin.
An April 10, 2017 story by Jackie Wang, "David's Law" would criminalize cyberbullying, mandate school policies," incorrectly described lawmakers' plans for the state budget.
An April 8, 2017 story by John Jordan, "The House takes up the budget: a day in pictures," incorrectly referred to State Rep. Charlie Geren as a 20-year veteran of the Texas House.
An April 6, 2017 story by Marissa Evans, "Texas families fear closure of state homes for people with disabilities," incorrectly characterized the waiting list James Meadours is on. He is on a waiting list for community-based programs.
An April 6, 2017 story by Matthew Watkins, "Texas lawmakers might let community colleges offer bachelor's degrees," was updated to add Tyler Junior College to the list of schools allowed to offer bachelor's degrees. TJC was authorized by the Legislature to offer a bachelor's of science degree in dental hygiene in 2015.
An April 5, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Four things Texans want the Legislature to know about special education," gave an incorrect number of days that the Texas Legislature meets.
An April 4, 2017 story by Johnathan Silver, "Senate passes court security bill named in honor of Austin judge who was attacked," was updated to clarify that an attacker shot at Judge Kocurek outside her home and she was injured by shrapnel.
An April 4, 2017 story by Sanya Mansoor, "Outlook good for statewide texting-while-driving ban, key lawmakers say," mischaracterized the potential penalties in the texting-while-driving ban bill that passed the Texas House.
An April 3, 2017 story by Jim Malewitz, "Years after Rick Perry defunded the Public Integrity Unit, Texas may revive part of it," incorrectly described the Texas Senate's handling of a proposal to fund a statewide prosecuting unit in Travis County focused on fraud cases.
In the April 3, 2017 verson of The Brief, an item was updated to note that the bills being heard on April 3 would provide landowners with more information about their rights and how the eminent domain process works, though the bills are not necessarily aimed at the high-speed rail proposal.
A March 30, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Despite concerns, Texas legislators push to regulate powdered alcohol," incorrectly identified the high school Andrea Marquez attends. It also stated Texas could become the first state to pass regulations for powdered alcohol, but Colorado has already implemented such measures.
A March 28, 2017 story by Cassandra Pollock, "Senate committee considers adoption legislation," misspelled the name of Marci Purcell.
A March 27, 2017 story by Sanya Monsoor, "Businesses divided in support of high-priority insurance bill," incorrectly identified incorrectly identified one of the business leaders supporting the legislation as former presidential candidate Ross Perot Sr. It is his son, Ross Perot Jr.
A March 21, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "School choice bill proponents, foes debate what's best for families," incorrectly said that Sen. Royce West was the only senator present at Tuesday's committee hearing who opposed the bill.
A March 20, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Stolen after Super Bowl in Houston, Tom Brady's jersey recovered in Mexico," misstated the location of the 2015 Super Bowl. The game was played in Glendale, Arizona.
A March 17, 2017 analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: State boosts local accountability while eroding local control," misstated the threshold for school property tax rollback elections.
A March 15, 2017 story by Sanya Mansoor, "Texas House passes statewide ban on texting while driving," mischaracterized the potential penalties in the version of the texting-while-driving ban bill that passed the Texas House.
A March 9, 2017 story by Matthew Watkins, "Lawmakers to take another look at cutting back free tuition program for veterans' kids," incorrectly stated the amount universities are reimbursed for the Hazlewood program. Last year, the state reimbursed universities for about 20 percent.
A March 9, 2017 story by Alex Samuels, "Advocates urge Texas House panel to amend fetal remains bill by outlawing abortion," incorrectly said that a representative for Texans for Life said House Bill 35 didn't go far enough.
A March 9, 2017 story by Jolie McCullough, "Bill to bar death penalty for mentally ill faces uphill battle" incorrectly spelled the name of mental health advocate Greg Mensch.
A March 7, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "House leader announced $1.6B funding plan" incorrectly stated that House Bill 21 would add funding for high schools and non-professional staff. It would fund those through the basic funding formula, which determines how much money school districts get from the state per student.
A March 2, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby and Sanya Mansoor, "After Huberty's comments, school cohice advocates lobby state Republican Party," incorrectly attributed comments to Randan Steinhauser. The comments were made by Brendan Steinhauser.
A Feb. 25, 2017 story by Mariana Alfaro, "Texas proposal would keep cities from restricting short-term home rentals," included incorrect information about an Austin ordinance. It also gave incorrect information about how Galveston would be affected by the legislative proposal.
A Feb. 20, 2017 story by Mariana Alfaro and Sanya Mansoor, "Most Texans in Congress not planning in-person town halls over recess," mischaracterized U.S. Rep. Michael Burgess' past experience with hosting town halls.
A Feb. 14, 2017 story by Jackie Wang, "Texas may still be giving state-funded pension to convicted elected officials," misstated the number of government officials who have fulfilled the minimum requirements to collect retirement pay despite various convictions. The Tribune identified 27 such officials.
A Feb. 14, 2017 story by Cassandra Pollock, "Study: A quarter of Texas public schools no longer teach sex ed," misspelled the name of education activist Alice Linahan.
A Feb. 9, 2017 story by Abby Livingston and Patrick Svitek, "Texas Democrats begin to plot out strategy for 2018 midterms," misidentified U.S. Rep. Pete Sessions' congressional district.
A Jan. 30, 2017 story by Marissa Evans, "Texas lawmakers fired up about state CPS and foster care woes," said that CPS' "priority one" children are those younger than 6. In fact, though priority one children are often under 6, a "priority one" case can involve a child of any age about whom CPS has received a serious report. The error also appeared in three other stories (on Oct. 26, 2016; Dec. 2, 2016; and Jan. 14, 2017), which have also been corrected.
A Jan. 30, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "School choice bill pitches savings accounts, tax credit scholarships," misidentified Charles Johnson, executive director of Pastors for Texas Children.
A Jan. 24, 2017 storyby Brandon Formby, "Report: Texas bullet train, Dallas-area rail line among Trump's transportation priorities," incorrectly described the source of a document outlining President Trump's transportation priorities. The document came from Trump's transition team, according to the Kansas City Star.
A Jan. 24, 2017 story by Aliyya Swaby, "Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick calls for House, Senate vote on school choice this session," said that Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick was expected to file school choice legislation, but the lieutenant governor cannot file legislation himself.
A Jan. 20, 2017 story by Alexa Ura, "After GOP Appeal, Texas Supreme Court agrees to take up same-sex marriage case," initially gave an incorrect description of the court's previous decision not to take up the case. That decision was made with only one justice dissenting.
A Jan. 20, 2017, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Spinning numbers in lawmakers’ proposed budgets,"originally said the Texas House directly called its plan "property tax relief," which it did not. The House's proposed education budget relies on about $1.5 billion less in property-tax driven local funding than the Senate proposal.
A Jan. 13, 2017, story by Aliyya Swaby, "Texas educators criticize discrepancies between new A-F and past ratings," incorrectly said that McGregor ISD got a preliminary grade of D in the category of college and career readiness. The district got a preliminary grade of F.
A Jan. 10, 2017, story by Alex Samuels and Marissa Evans, "Report: State Rep. Dawnna Dukes' case headed to grand jury next week," mischaracterized an Austin American-Statesman report about the charges state Rep. Dawnna Dukes could face as part of an investigation by the Travis County District Attorney's office.
A Dec. 30, 2016, story by Brandon Formby, "Texas Rangers launch criminal probe into Dallas' pension shortfall," initially said incorrectly that a spokesman for the Dallas mayor said no one was in the mayor's office on Friday, the last weekday before the New Year's holiday.
A Dec. 23, 2016, story by Aliyya Swaby, "School finance, testing fiasco topped 2016 education news," misrepresented the timeline of the Fort Worth ISD bathroom policy and Obama administration directive.
A Dec. 15, 2016, story by Marissa Evans, "Backers hopeful Texas ready to screen welfare recipients for drug use," said that Sen. Jane Nelson's 2015 TANF legislation passed out of the Senate. It was left standing in the Health and Human Services Committee.
In a Dec. 8, 2016, update to the Texas Public Schools Explorer, by Ryan Murphy and Annie Daniel, the AP/IB participation and performance and dropout rates were originally presented incorrectly as being from the 2015-2016 school year. They are for the 2014-15 school year. Also, the ACT and SAT scores were incorrectly presented as being for the 2015-16 school year. They are from the class of 2015.
A Dec. 6, 2016 story by Julián Aguilar, "Immigration detention centers will continue operating despite judge's ruling," incorrectly identified which company was granted a license. It was the GEO Group.
A Nov. 28, 2016 story by Elena Mejia Lutz and Edgar Walters, "Texas moving forward with budget cuts for disabled kids' therapy services," originally stated that Texas had quietly announced it would soon enact cuts of therapy services for disabled children. The Health and Human Services Commission emailed the news to several reporters.
A Nov. 21, 2016, column by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Live by the party, die by the party," mischaracterized legislation by Rep. Chris Turner, regarding tallying straight-ticket votes — but not abolishing them.
A Nov. 18, 2016, column by Ross Ramsey,"Analysis: Texas political changes in the wind — or the snow blower," incorrectly said the governor would temporarily appoint someone to fill an empty congressional seat; in fact, a House seat would remain open until filled in a special election.
A Nov. 9 2016, story by Luke Whyte and Annie Daniel, "Here's where Texas voters turned out and where they didn't," using information provided by the Texas Secretary of State, included incorrect turnout rates for Terry county.
A Nov. 10, 2016 story by Aliyya Swaby, "New Republican on State Board of Education keeps mum on creationism," incorrectly described creationist language in Texas' science curriculum standards.
A Nov. 7, 2016 story by Marissa Evans, "Senate panel proposes $75.3 million to start fixing Child Protective Services," initially said the Senate's proposal was to provide $75.3 million to start fixing the state's foster care system. The proposal is targeted at providing caseworker raises and funding for new hires.
An Oct. 26, 2016 story Marissa Evans, "'Beat on me,' foster care chief tells lawmakers. And they do," misidentified the source of information from a survey of Texas Child Protective Services' caseworkers.
An Oct. 25, 2016 story by Bobby Blanchard, "Early voting is breaking records in Texas’ 10 biggest counties," included incorrect dates for early voting and Election Day.
An Oct. 20, 2016 story by Marissa Evans, "When grandparents step in, state often doesn't help," misidentified the mother of Mercedes Bristol's grandchildren.
An Oct. 20, 2016 story by Patrick Svitek, "Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick doubles down on school choice fight," was updated to clarify that Patrick continued to push for border security in his speech, not additional border security funding.
An Oct. 19, 2016 story by Alex Samuels, "The Brief: Some in Texas GOP agree on "rigged" election claim", attributed an incorrect title to Manny Garcia. He is the deputy executive director of the Texas Democratic Party.
An Oct. 18, 2016 story by Kiah Collier, "Texas House digging in heels for school voucher fight," was has been updated to clarify that state Rep. Marsha Farney is leaving office after losing a Republican primary election to a pro-school choice candidate.
An Oct. 12, 2016 story by Jim Malewitz, "Paxton sues Brownsville over fee on plastic bags," using information circulated by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office, inaccurately described Brownsville's $1 per-transaction fee. It is not a $1 per-bag fee.
An Oct. 11, 2016 story by Patrick Svitek, "At San Antonio Fundraiser, Trump Attacks Paul Ryan for 'Disloyalty,'" was updated to clarify comments by Donald Trump regarding House Speaker Paul Ryan's election strategy as Republican Mitt Romney's running mate in 2012.
An Oct. 9, 2016, story by Matthew Watkins, "Texas Universities Want to Make it Easier to Transfer From Community Colleges," incorrectly stated the status of the engineering academy at Blinn College in Brenham. It has already opened.
An Oct. 5, 2016, story by Jolie McCullough, "Execution of Man Who Killed Neighbors First in Months," said that two other executions were scheduled for 2016, as listed on the Texas Department of Criminal Justice website. There is only one other execution scheduled this year, according to a department spokesman.
An Oct. 1, 2016, story by Elena Mejia Lutz, "Texas Officials Want Money to Investigate Student-Teacher Relationships," incorrectly said the State Board of Education can sanction superintendents. It is the State Board of Educator Certification.
A Sept. 24, 2016, story by Jim Malewitz, "Starr: Sexual Assault at Baylor Not 'an Endemic Problem',"has been updated to reflect that Starr's in-depth interview at the Texas Tribune Festival was not his first since leaving Baylor.
A Sept. 15, 2016, story by Alex Samuels, "Lawmakers Frustrated Over Costs to Pay Off Tolls," originally stated that the estimated toll road debt was $36.7 million. It's actually $36.7 billion. This story also stated that the cost to retire toll debt was an increase over a previous study's estimate, but that study didn't include certain "comprehensive development agreements" that had been approved.
A Sept. 9, 2016, story by Nicole Cobler, "Texas Lawmaker's Tweet References Old Comments on Rape, Pot," incorrectly said that all of the online comments made by state Rep. Jonathan Stickland were made when he was a teenager.
In our "Unholstered" project, an error in our data counted an officer and individual who were involved in a shooting we had previously determined was not an officer-involved shooting (the incident was removed before publishing). There were 880 officers who fired their weapons at 737 people.
An Aug. 28, 2016, story by Abby Livingston, "A Decline in Texas Power Looms in Washington," said incorrectly that the chairman of the House Rules Committee is subject to term limits.
An Aug. 24, 2016, story by Edgar Walters, "Health Insurers' Exit Spells Trouble for Obamacare in Texas," said incorrectly that Oscar Health Insurance was leaving the Texas marketplace. It should have said Oscar is leaving the marketplace in North Texas but will continue to offer Affordable Care Act coverage in San Antonio.
An Aug. 23, 2016, story by Alexa Ura, "Texas Leading Suit Over Federal Transgender Health Policy," misidentified the District Court for the Northern District of Texas.
An Aug. 23, 2016 story by Kiah Collier, "Embattled STAAR Test Vendor Facing $20 Million Fine," listed the wrong amount of a STAAR testing contract. It is $280 million, not $340 million.
An Aug. 22, 2016 story by Jim Malewitz, "Lawmakers Push Back on Railroad Commission Overhaul Proposals," misidentified a lawmaker who was quoted criticizing a Sunset commission recommendation to increase bonding for abandoned oil wells. It was Sen. Van Taylor, not Sen. Larry Taylor.
An Aug. 15, 2016, story by Madeline Conway, "The Q&A: Baker Harrell," the interview subject misspoke in identifying the percentage of adult Texans who are overweight or obese.
An Aug. 9, 2016, story by Kirby Wilson, "Trump Calls NAFTA a 'Disaster.' Texas Republicans Beg to Differ," incorrectly identified the University of Texas at Austin’s Texas Politics Project.
An Aug. 9, 2016, story by Aneri Pattani, "Here's Why Texas Students Wait Weeks for Basic Mental Health Services," said incorrectly that House Speaker Joe Straus has suggested the Legislature should limit tuition growth for Texas universities. While Straus did include college affordability on his list of items he wants lawmakers to study this year, regulating tuition isn't mentioned in that list.
An Aug. 5, 2016, column by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: In Voter ID, Redistricting Cases, Justice Takes its Time," mischaracterized the state's position on court-drawn redistricting maps for Congress and the Texas House. The Legislature adopted those maps as state law in 2013.
An Aug. 4, 2016, story by Madeline Conway and John Reynolds, "The Brief: A Consensus on School Finance, Blow it Up," initially included a photo that incorrectly identfied the subject as Ray Freeman.
A July 28, 2016, story by Isabelle Taft, "Rick Perry's Digital Legacy Gives Texas Archivists New Momentum," incorrectly said archivists redact private citizens' names from Perry's papers. In fact, they only redact certain names, such as those of children. The archivists' do redact citizens' personal email addresses.
A July 26, 2016, story by Madlin Mekelburg, "Texas Bullet Train Opponents Hope to Block Project Next Year," included the incorrect political party for U.S. Rep. Blake Farenthold.
A July 20, 2016, story by Matthew Watkins, "Agency Staff: Texas Doesn't Need Any More Traditional Veterinary Schools," misidentified the dean of the A&M College of Veterinary Sciences.
On July 14, 2016, we republished a story from the Center for Responsive Politics on Rick Perry’s financial disclosures that incorrectly concluded that his campaign manager had profited greatly from Perry’s failed campaign for president. Jeff Miller said he did not profit from it; his firm was paid by the campaign and in turn paid other contractors, he said, and he kept none of the money himself. We have pulled the story off of our site.
A July 14, 2016 story by Khorri Atkinson, "Rate of Texas Prison Spending Growth Outpaces Schools,", credited a Texas state agency for a prison statistic that came from the U.S. Department of Justice.
A July 8, 2016 story by Madlin Mekelburg, "Dan Patrick Blames Black Lives Matter Movement for Dallas Shooting," incorrectly quoted Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick's criticism of protesters in Dallas during an interview on Fox News. What he actually said was "What hypocrites!"
A July 7, 2016 story by Matthew Watkins, "Texas Attorney General Calls Professors' Campus Carry Lawsuit 'Baseless'" incorrectly reported the date by which three University of Texas at Austin professors are seeking an injunction of the state's new campus carry gun law.
A June 24, 2016,story by Patrick Svitek, "Does Julián Castro Have the Chops to be Veep?" incorrectly reported the range of time in which St. Louis University professor Joel Goldstein studied the experience of vice presidential candidates from the two major parties.
A June 17, 2016 story by Johnathan Silver, "Court Halts Texas Man's Execution in 'Shaken Baby' Case," incorrectly reported the day the Court of Criminal Appeals halted Robert Roberson's execution.
A June 14, 2016 story by Madlin Mekelburg, "Texas to Tie Car Registration Renewal to Child Support," was updated to clarify that an Attorney General's Office spokeswoman said the agency did not need to seek new legislative approval to begin blocking vehicle registration renewal of some child support evaders as the agency already had the authority under the Texas Family Code.
A June 13, 2016, story by Aneri Pattani, "UT System Should Develop Work Study Program in Houston, Task Force Says," incorrectly said the University of Texas System plans to develop a work study program in Houston. The Houston Advisory Task Force plans to recommend a work study program to the UT System.
A June 2, 2016, story by Madlin Mekelburg and John Reynolds, "The Brief: Abbott Calls for End of State Agency 'Severance'," initially had the incorrect first name for the attorney general's spokesman. His name is Marc Rylander.
A May 30, 2016, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: A Very Early Guide to November’s Competitive Texas Races," initially attached Lloyd Criss to the wrong political party; he is a Democrat.
A May 27, 2016, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: An Expense to Texas Taxpayers That Carries No Explanation," left the impression that Katie Lawhon was forced to resign; she was not.
A May 26, 2016, story by Neena Satija, Ryan McCrimmon and Becca Aaronson, "Texas vs. the Feds: A Look at the Lawsuits," included the wrong year that President Obama took office.
A May 24, 2016, story by Matthew Watkins, "5 Things to Watch For in Tuesday's Primary Runoffs," incorrectly described Senate candidate Dawn Buckingham as an optometrist. She is an ophthalmologist.
A May 19, 2016, story by Madlin Mekelburg and John Reynolds, "The Brief: Texas Justice Lands on Trump's Shortlist for Supreme Court," incorrectly stated that Justice Don Willett made just one tweet in response to the news that he had been included in a list of potential U.S. Supreme Court nominees drafted by presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump. Willett wrote two tweets.
A May 13, 2016, story by Kiah Collier, "Texas Supreme Court Upholds School Funding System," incorrectly stated that May 13 was the first time the Texas Supreme Court upheld the state’s school finance system as constitutional. It was the second time.
A May 1, 2016, story by Edgar Walters, "State Spending More on Mental Health Care, but Waitlist for Beds Grows," originally quoted Andy Keller, president and chief executive of the Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute, as saying state law restricted the ability of social workers and health care providers to do mental health outreach. Keller later clarified it was a state contract that mandated the restrictions, not state law.
A May 1, 2016, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: A Texas Judge Takes Voter ID to Court," misstated the status of the state's voter ID law in federal court; a trial judge overturned the law, but it has remained in effect while the state appealed. Also, an early version of the column did not make it clear that this is the first time Meyers has run for reelection as a Democrat, although he ran and lost a bid for Texas Supreme Court as a Democrat in 2014.
An April 27, 2016, story by Madlin Mekelburg, "Austin Company Poised to Fill Gap if Uber, Lyft Leave," misspelled the name of Galveston spokeswoman Kala McCain.
An April 7, 2016, story by Matthew Watkins and Madlin Mekelburg, "UT Steps Up Security After Body of Student Found on Campus," incorrectly said that Haruka Weiser left UT-Austin's drama building on Monday evening before she was reported missing. Police said she left the building on Sunday night.
An April 5, 2016, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: In Texas Case, Supreme Court Rules Nonvoters are People, Too," did not make it clear that the Constitution requires population to be used when apportioning congressional seats to the states and not when drawing the districts themselves; and that Ginsburg was quoting from a lower court ruling when writing about permissible baselines for drawing state and local legislative districts.
A March 31, 2016 story by Jim Malewitz, "Texas Ag Industry Seeks Swifter Action on Cuban Thaw," incorrectly reported that state Rep. Rafael Anchia accompanied Gov. Greg Abbott on his visit to Cuba. Anchia was part of a separate delegation led by the Texas Department of Agriculture.
A March 29, 2016, interactive by Becca Aaronson, "See How Many Students Texas Public High Schools Sent to UT-Austin," was updated to clarify that the date range of the Texas Education Agency “college ready” data was for the school year 2013-14, while the “economically disadvantaged” and school population data was for the school year 2014-15.
In a Dec. 8, 2015, data app, the Texas Public Schools Explorer by Ryan Murphy and Annie Daniel, the "college-ready" graduate totals were originally presented incorrectly as being from the 2014-2015 school year. They are for the 2013-14 school year.
A March 24, 2016 story by Abby Livingston, "GOP Leader Highlights Women in Congress to Texas Donors," incorrectly identified the number of female Democrats in the U.S. House. The correct number is 62.
A Dec. 14, 2015 TribTalk column by Ann Beeson, "Texas needs smart policies, not a miracle," incorrectly stated the percentage of U.S. job growth Texas was responsible for from 2000 to 2013. The correct figure is 29 percent.
A March 17, 2016 story by Terri Langford, "Judge: Fired Trooper Needs Better Reason To Delay Sandra Bland Lawsuit," incorrectly reported that the Texas Department of Public Safety was still part of a civil rights lawsuit related to Sandra Bland's arrest and death. The agency was named as a defendant last year but dropped from the suit in January.
In a March 17, 2016 data app, "Ballpark Figures," by Annie Daniel, the number for “Total undergraduates” for Texas State University was initially incorrect.
A March 12, 2016 Medill News Service story by Noah Fromson, "Conviction Integrity Units Expand Beyond Texas Roots," gave an outdated number for drug-related exonerations in Harris County since 2014. There had been 76 such exonerations. Also, the story said incorrectly that the Conviction Review Section at the Harris County District Attorney's Office requested DNA testing for hundreds of drug cases. The unit requested lab testing, not DNA testing.
A March 9, 2016 TribTalk column by state Sen. Charles Schwertner, "The (even higher) cost of higher education," incorrectly stated the requirements for passing a state budget in the Texas Constitution. The constitutional provision prevents state spending from increasing faster than the state's economic growth.
A March 7, 2016 story by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Endorsements, Loyalties — and Getting Things Done," incorrectly reported that Jeff Judson was invited to testify at a Senate property tax hearing in San Antonio; he was not invited, but testified as a member of the public.
A March 3, 2016 story by Jim Malewitz, "Texans Remember Late Fracking Magnate's Impact," incorrectly reported that Chesapeake Energy had built the 20-story office building it previously occupied in Fort Worth. Pier 1 built the building, which Chesapeake bought in 2008.
A March 1, 2016 story by Ben Hasson and Aman Batheja, "Cruz, Clinton Lead Among Endorsements from Texas Legislature," included a graphic showing who members of the Texas House have endorsed for president that incorrectly showed four House members supporting U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz: John Lujan, Morgan Meyer, Geanie Morrison and James White.
A Feb. 26, 2016 story by Kiah Collier, "Birth Certificates To Determine Student-Athletes' Gender," incorrectly said current Education Commissioner Mike Morath approved a change in the University Interscholastic League's policy. The policy change was approved last year by Michael Williams, who was commissioner at the time.
A Feb. 24, 2016 story by Alexa Ura, "In Final Weeks, Millions Spent in Handful of Texas House Races," cited the wrong campaign finance report for Texas House candidates Bo French. The numbers have been updated to include those from his 8-day report.
Two Feb. 23, 2016 poll stories by Ross Ramsey — "UT/TT Poll: Clinton Still Leads in Texas, But Margin Has Narrowed" and "UT/TT Poll: Cruz Leads Trump in Texas; Rubio Lags Behind" — were corrected when the pollsters discovered a miscalculation in their margin of error for likely Republican voters. The correct MOE is +/- 4.86 percentage points.
A Feb. 18, 2016 story by Matthew Watkins, "UT-Austin Issues Campus Carry Rules Barring Guns From Dorms," incorrectly stated one of the policies opposed by the group Students for Concealed Carry. The group disagrees with the rule that concealed guns must have an empty chamber.
A Feb. 16, 2016 story by Morgan Smith and Terri Langford, "Texas Sheriffs, Jails on Immigration Front Line," incorrectly stated the percentage of the Texas prison population that is undocumented. The correct number is 4.6 percent.
A Feb. 15, 2016 story by Jacob Sanchez, “The Q&A: Jason Fish,” incorrectly listed the job titles of Fish.
A Feb. 15, 2016 story by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: A Field Guide to the 2016 Texas Primaries," incorrectly stated that State Board of Education member Thomas Ratliff was seeking reelection. He is not.
A Feb. 11, 2016 story by Jamie Lovegrove, "More Than 40 Texas Democrats Endorse Hillary Clinton," listed an incorrect affiliation for Austin ISD Trustee Yasmin Wagner.
A Feb. 9, 2016 story by Johnathan Silver, "Sandra Bland's Mother Expands Lawsuit," incorrectly named Waller County Sheriff R. Glenn Smith as among those named in the expanded lawsuit filed by Geneva Reed-Veal.
A Feb. 8, 2016 story by Matthew Watkins, "In Arlington Race, Challenger Says One Vote Speaks Volumes," incorrectly stated that state Rep. Molly White, R-Belton, voted against House Bill 189. She voted in favor of the bill.
A Feb. 5, 2016 story by Jordan Rudner, "Court of Criminal Appeals Candidates Emphasize Experience," incorrectly stated that Judge Michael Keasler does not have a campaign website. It is www.judgekeasler.com. The story also incorrectly identified Brent Webster. He is a Williamson County assistant district attorney.
A Feb. 2, 2016 story by Abby Livingston, "Race to Succeed Neugebauer Begins to Take Financial Shape," gave incorrect campaign finance figures for Donald May.
A Jan. 28, 2016 story by Jim Malewitz, "Hegar Calls Moody's Dour Texas Budget Report 'Unfounded'" incorrectly stated how much the Comptroller's office projected that the Rainy Day Fund would reach at the end the current biennium. It also incorrectly stated that Comptroller Glenn Hegar's forecast of 2016 and 2017 oil prices were, respectively, $16 and $19 below Moody's forecasts. Hegar's forecasts were above Moody's forecasts by those amounts.
A Jan. 27, 2016 story by Jamie Lovegrove, "Lawmakers Compare Driver Surcharge Program to Debtors' Prison," misspelled the name of Judge Jean Spradling Hughes of the Harris County Criminal Court.
A Jan. 25, 2016, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Legislators Seeking a More Efficient Approach to Jail Policies," misstated the amount of marijuana it takes to trigger an arrest in Dallas County. It is four ounces, not four grams.
A Jan. 24, 2016, story by Jamie Lovegrove, "Clinton Campaign Official Admits Texas Effort Lagging," incorrectly described how many attendees at an event for Hillary Clinton supporters raised their hand to a question asked by Amanda Renteria, the Clinton campaign’s national political director.
A Jan. 22, 2016, story by Edgar Walters, "Candidates Struggle to Stand Out Across Huge Senate District 24," incorrectly said Susan King had been endorsed by the Texas Farm Bureau. That endorsement was for her 2014 race for the Texas House, not for this year's Senate race.
A Jan. 15, 2016, story by Johnathan Silver, “Arraignment Date Set for DPS Trooper Who Arrested Sandra Bland,” incorrectly said Texas Department of Public Safety Trooper Brian Encinia will appear in a Waller County courtroom on March 23 for his arraignment on a perjury charge. The hearing was not an arraignment and it has since been cancelled. The story has been removed from the Texas Tribune site.
A Jan. 14, 2016, story by Jamie Lovegrove, Texas Attorney General Unveils Unit to Fight Human Trafficking, originally said House Bill 10 led to the creation of the human trafficking unit. It should have said House Bill 11 led to the creation of the unit.
A Jan. 12, 2016, analysis by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Greg Abbott's Constitutional Changes Require a Salesman," originally said the Texas House had not voted on a convention of states resolution in 2015. The House approved two such resolutions; none came to a Senate vote.
A Jan. 6, 2016, story by Jordan Rudner, "Dallas Rally Will be Rubio's First Public Campaign Stop in Texas," originally referred to "likely Republican voters" and should have referred to "self-reported registered Republican primary voters."
A Dec. 24, 2015, story by Johnathan Silver and Terri Langford, "Sandra Bland, Jail Standards Top Crime News in 2015," originally said state lawmakers raised the age for offenders to be treated as adults from 17 to 18. That provision did not pass.
A Dec. 17, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "Ruben Hinojosa Wants Ruben Hinojosa's House Seat," An earlier version of this story referred to Jerry Polinard as a political scientist at the University of Texas-Pan American. He is at the University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley.
A Dec. 10, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "Railroad Commissioner Porter Drops Re-election Bid," originally said that candidates have until Dec. 14 file with the Texas secretary of state. Filings are due Dec. 14 to candidates' political parties.
In the Government Salaries Explorer, the salary data for the University of Texas Health Science Center-San Antonio was initially listed incorrectly under the heading for the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
A Dec. 1, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Some Fear Texas Unprepared for Panama Canal Expansion," was updated to reflect that cargo coming through West Coast ports is transported to other parts of the country by freight rail in addition to trucks.
A Nov. 24, 2015, story by Patrick Svitek, "Cruz Criticized For Vote to 'Gut' Intelligence Programs," initially gave an incorrect home state for U.S. Sen. Tim Scott. He is from South Carolina.
A Nov. 24, 2015, story by Alana Rocha, "Statewide Officeholders Staying Put in Austin," said incorrectly that the lieutenant governor is required to live in Austin. The state constitution has no such requirement for the lieutenant governor. The same error also appeared in two other stories that have been corrected: An Oct. 29, 2015 story, "Video: The 7 Ballot Propositions Up to Texas Voters," and an Oct. 19, 2015, story, "Texans Decide on 7 Constitutional Amendments Nov. 3."
A Nov. 22, 2015 story by Morgan Smith, "Who Will Be the Next Texas Education Chief?" initially said that Mike Feinberg is the superintendent of KIPP Houston. He is a former superintendent there.
An Oct. 24, 2015, story by Patrick Svitek, "Cruz Wins Support of Patrick, Former Perry Donors," initially included Kelcy Warren and Roy Bailey on the list of former Rick Perry donors who were expected to be added to the Ted Cruz finance committee. The Cruz campaign said Oct. 26 they included those names on the list in error. The error was repeated in the Oct. 26, 2015 story "The Brief: Cruz Snags a Big Name in His Bid to Win Texas."
An Oct. 22, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "In D.C., Texans Continue to Question Ozone Science," was updated to clarify that Texas Commission on Environmental Quality chief toxicologist Michael Honeycutt accused the EPA of basing its revised ground-level ozone standard on just one study, and cherry-picking the data.
An Oct. 15, 2015, column by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Shifting Numbers in Your Property Tax Bill," initially said that the homestead exemption in a proposed constitutional amendment applies to more than school property taxes. The amendment addresses only school property taxes. And property taxes bring in more money annually than state and local sales taxes; that was flipped in an earlier version.
An Oct. 14, 2015, story by Kiah Collier High Court Might Clarify Water and Surface Rights misstated the makeup of the amicus briefs and the position of the Canadian River Municipal Water Authority.
An Oct. 6, 2015, story by Eleanor Dearman, "Denton Announces Renewable Energy Plan," gave an incorrect share of renewable energy fueling Texas' electric grid.
A Sept. 30, 2015, story by Alexa Ura, "High-Income Texans Find Homes in Public Housing," used figures for the income of families in Olney, Texas, and Pineland, Texas, that reflected how much they made above the income cap to qualify for public housing, instead of their total income.
A Sept. 18, 2015, story by Jordan Rudner, "Trial Begins for Former State Official Accused of DWI," gave an incorrect title for Jack Stick at the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. Stick served as deputy inspector general and chief counsel at the commission.
A Sept. 15, 2015, story by Madlin Mekelburg, "The Q&A: Andrew Lee," misspelled two technical terms – cyclotron and cone beam.
A Sept. 4, 2015, story by Neena Satija, "Workers' Comp Insurer Fined $250,000," initially said that monetary penalties go into an agency's general fund. In fact, they go to the state's general fund.
A Sept. 2, 2015, story by Mose Buchele of KUT News, "Texas Railroad Commission Rejects Quake Study," included Reno Mayor Lynda Stokes' assertion that she had not been invited to a hearing. Upon reviewing her records, she said she was notified, but believed the date of the meeting had changed.
An Aug. 27, 2015 story by Morgan Smith, "Paxton Pleads Not Guilty; Lawyer Quits Case" incorrectly attributed quotes to special prosecutor Brian Wice that should have been attributed to his co-counsel, Kent Schaffer.
The Aug. 27, 2015, edition of The Brief, by John Reynolds, initially misidentified the location of Ken Paxton's court appearance.
An Aug. 25, 2015, story by Matthew Watkins, "Baylor May Face Legal Fallout from Rape Case incorrectly stated that a jury sentenced Sam Ukwuachu to 180 days in jail. A judge imposed the sentence.
An Aug. 21, 2015, story by Matthew Watkins, "A&M Drops Bid To Host Presidential Debate," originally identified the Commission on Presidential Debates as a private group. It is a nonprofit organization that is unaffiliated with the federal government.
An Aug. 20, 2015, story by Terri Langford, "Foster Care Youth Getting State Ombudsman," incorrectly referred to Senate Bill 830 as a House bill.
An Aug. 19, 2015, story by Abby Livingston, "A Different Rick Perry at the Iowa State Fair," incorrectly referred to Rick Perry wearing orthopedic shoes at the Iowa State Fair.
An Aug. 15, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Emergency Centers to Be Included in 'Baby Moses' Law," omitted the name of state Sen. Donna Campbell, R-New Braunfels, as the lead author for Senate Bill 1279.
An Aug. 11, 2015, story by Alexa Ura, Annie Daniel and Mallory Busch, "Planned Parenthood Out of Cancer Screening Program," was updated to clarify how many and the mechanism through which women with cancer are screened by Breast and Cervical Cancer Services providers.
An Aug. 10, 2015, story by Liz Crampton, "Racing Commission Hopes to Stave Off Closure" misstated the affiliation of an attorney to whom a letter was sent. It also said the racing commission was threatened with defunding at a Legislative Budget Board hearing. Those threats occurred during a Senate Finance Committee hearing.
An Aug. 4, 2015, story by Liz Crampton and Ally Mutnick, "Texplainer: If Convicted, Will Paxton Have to Leave Office?" has been updated to further clarify what Texas Election Code says about prohibiting a person from running for a public office if they have been convicted of a felony.
An Aug. 3, 2015, story by Aman Batheja and Jeremy Lin, "Lawmakers Ditch $200 Fee for Lawyers, Doctors, Brokers," initially described Sen. Jane Nelson as a co-author of House Bill 7. She was the Senate sponsor of the bill.
A June 25, 2015, story by Liz Crampton, "Supreme Court Sides With Opponents of Texas Housing Program," A previous version of this story misinterpreted the Supreme Court’s ruling. The court ruled that opponents of the housing policy do not have to prove intentional discrimination to prevail in court. The justices did not weigh in on whether the Texas policy discriminated. They kicked that question to a lower court.
A Jan. 7, 2015, story by Abby Livingston, "John Cornyn Steps Up, Says He'll Spare the Whip," originally included incorrect information about Harry Reid. He is the minority leader of the Senate, not the House.
A July 30, 2015, story by Terri Langford and Liz Crampton, "McCraw Hammered at Hearing on Bland Case," incorrectly attributed the quote "I know the death happened in the jail, but the catalyst for the death clearly happened at the traffic stop," to state Rep. Jonathan Stickland. It was said by state Rep. Garnet Coleman.
A July 24, 2015, story by Terri Langford, Mallory Busch and Annie Daniel, "In Texas Jails, Hanging Most Common Method of Inmate Suicide," listed the wrong number of county jail deaths since 2009. It is 501, not 502.
A July 16, 2015, story by Sophia Bollag, "Texas Needs Federal Money for Uninsured, HHSC Told," was updated to clarify comments by Laura Guerra-Cardus.
A July 14, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "In Pristine Big Bend, a Pipeline Could Run Through It," was updated to clarify that Big Bend Conservation Alliance leader David Keller is carrying out this role as a private citizen and not a Sul Ross State University employee.
A July 10, 2015, story by John Reynolds, "House Appropriations Chairmen, Through the Years," Doyle Willis was mistakenly listed as a chairman due to an error in the reference material. His name has been removed and the copy and graph have been updated.
A July 10, 2015, story by Edgar Walters, "Biomedical Research Turning More to Private Funds," has been updated to reflect University of Texas System Vice Chancellor Patricia Hurn's comments that the UT System has policies to prevent conflicts of interest.
A July 7, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Google Puts Self-Driving Vehicle to the Test on Austin Streets," originally misspelled a Google spokeswoman's name. She is Courtney Hohne, not Honhe.
A June 30, 2015, story by Jolie McCullough and Aman Batheja, "State Won't Track Gay Marriage Numbers," originally stated that there were 313 same-sex marriage licenses issued in Travis County on Friday. There were 313 total marriage licenses issued, and a majority were for same-sex marriages.
The June 26, 2015, edition of The Brief, by Polo Rocha, suggested U.S. Sen. John Cornyn was responding to comments from U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz. He was actually responding to a question about legislative strategy.
A June 15, 2015, story by Terri Langford, "Faces of Death Row," originally said there were 12 inmates who had been on death row for 30 years or more. There are currently 11.
A June 4, 2015, story by Morgan Smith, "Clinton Caps Two Days in Texas With Houston Speech," originally misidentified Frank Branson as Jack Branson.
A May 23, 2015, story by Neena Satija and Jim Malewitz, "OSHA Chief: Fine for Deadly Leak "Petty Cash" for DuPont," was updated to clarify why OSHA didn't fine DuPont the maximum penalty for a repeat violation.
A May 22, 2015, story by Ryan McCrimmon, "Senate Approves State Employee Pension Funding Plan," was updated to clarify the Texas State Employees Union's position on the House Bill 9.
A May 22, 2015, story by Eva Hershaw, "Senate Unanimously Backs "Right to Try" Legislation," said legislation approved by the Texas Senate was headed to the governor's desk. The House must concur with the Senate's amended plan before the legislation goes to the governor's office.
A May 22, 2015, story by Ross Ramsey, "Union Dues Spark an End-of-Session Dispute," misstated John Cole's former employer. He is retired from the Texas AFT.
A May 22, 2015, story by Jay Root, "Bill Increasing Unemployment Taxes Advances," misidentified the spokeswoman for the Texas Workforce Commission. She is Lisa Givens, not Linda Givens.
A May 21, 2015, story by Alexa Ura and Jolie McCullough, "See How Each Texas City Grew From 2010 to 2014," included a chart that incorrectly included four cities, including Houston, on the top 10 list of fastest-growing cities in the U.S.
A May 10, 2015, story by Alexa Ura, "Sylvester Turner's Exit Leaves Void for Democrats," was updated to reflect that the timeline for state Rep. Sylvester Turner's departure from the House has not been set.
A May 7, 2015, story by Alana Rocha and Justin Dehn, "Video: Seeing an Unintended Consequence of CPS Law," was updated to clarify Angela Brown wouldn’t automatically have to leave her position as a school teacher if she were placed on the Texas Child Abuse and Neglect Registry.
A May 7, 2015, story by Morgan Smith, "Pre-K Bill Faces Last Hurdle in Senate Vote," incorrectly said the Legislature cut $300 million in 2011 from grants to help school districts expand pre-K programs. The correct figure is $208 million.
A May 5, 2015, story by Jay Root and Edgar Walters, "Lawmakers, Lobbyists Filmed in Secret Recordings," has been updated. Since publishing the story, the reporters have been unable to verify that John Beria is the real name of the person who identified himself as a spokesman for the American Phoenix Foundation.
A May 1, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "Justices Again Avoid Underground Trespassing Question," originally misidentified Environmental Processing Systems as Environmental Processing Services.
The April 27, 2015, edition of The Brief, by John Reynolds, initially misidentified the committee holding an upcoming hearing on seismic activity.
An April 22, 2015, story by Ryan McCrimmon, "Straus Taps House Team for Budget Negotiations," originally misspelled state Rep. Larry Gonzales' last name.
An April 17, 2015, story by Patrick Svitek, "At Amazon Hub, Abbott Touts Legislative Agenda," was updated to clarify a statement that Amazon executive Mike Roth made to Gov. Greg Abbott.
An April 16, 2015, story by Terri Langford and Aman Batheja, "Failed Hospital Deal Reveals Ties to Janek," incorrectly identified Geo Care lobbyist Gabe Sepulveda as George Sepulveda.
An April 12, 2015, story by Alexa Ura, "Former Mayor to Challenge Hinojosa for Congressional Seat," incorrectly said that all of the Hispanic Texans in the U.S. House were Democrats. One is a Republican. And Villarreal has been mayor for seven years, not 14 years as an earlier version of this story said.
An April 9, 2015, story by Eva Hershaw, "Senate Passes Bill That Would Tighten Spending Cap," incorrectly said that the state's portion of the gas tax would be included in the Senate's proposal to tighten the spending cap.
An April 9, 2015, story by Ryan McCrimmon, "Background Checks Drive Uber Debate," originally misspelled the name of the president of Yellow Cab Austin. He is Ed Kargbo, not Karbo.
An April 8, 2015, story by Matthew Watkins, "Committees Moving on Bills to Limit Tuition Increases," incorrectly said that the number of full-time college students enrolled and the percentage of tenure-track professors teaching lower-level courses were among the “performance measures” included in the bill. Those measures were included in the original bill, but not the version approved by the committee.
A March 30, 2015, story by Jay Root, "Lobbyist-Politicians Targeted in Ethics Bill," originally misspelled the name of a Sunset Valley city councilman. He is Jeff Burdett, not Burdette.
In a March 27, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz and Ryan Murphy, "See How Local Drilling Rules Vary Across Texas," the search tool for drilling ordinances was updated after errors in the Texas Municipal League's data were corrected.
A March 26, 2015, story by Alexa Ura, "Paxton: Court Blocks Benefits for Same-Sex Couples," misstated who would be affected by the Family Medical Leave Act rule change. The change would apply to federal and state employees and some private sector employees, not just federal employees.
A March 20, 2015, story by Edgar Walters, "Rural Hospitals Struggle to Keep Their Doors Open," misidentified a lawyer who worked on hospital bankruptcy cases. His name is Lynn Butler.
A March 18, 2015, story by Edgar Walters, "Texas Sues Feds Over Benefits for Same-Sex Couples," misstated who would be affected by the Family Medical Leave Act rule change. The change would apply to federal and state employees and some private sector employees, not just federal employees.
A March 17, 2015, story by Eva Hershaw, "State Could Pay for Special Needs Students to Transfer," originally misspelled the name of an Arc of Texas official. She is Rona Statman, not Ronda.
A March 11, 2015, column by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: A Distinctive Push for Business Tax Repeal," originally misstated the state's revenue from the franchise tax.
A March 10, 2015, story by Neena Satija, "Endangered Species Expert Heads to Comptroller's Office," incorrectly identified the dunes sagebrush lizard as an amphibian. It is a reptile.
A March 5, 2015, story by Bobby Blanchard, "Abbott's UT Regent Appointees Head to Full Senate," incorrectly said that a majority vote in the Senate is required for the regents' confirmation. A two-thirds majority of the chamber is needed.
A March 2, 2015, story by Neena Satija, "At Hearing, Climate Change Called a "Threat Multiplier," was updated to note that state Rep. Dustin Burrows' question to Katharine Hayhoe about solar and wind energy included a reference to nuclear energy.
A Feb. 25, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Nichols' Car Sales Tax Plan Moves to Senate Floor," initially gave an incorrect sales tax rate for vehicles. Texans pay a 6.25 percent state sales tax on automobiles.
A Feb. 23, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "Combs Lands Position at Texas Public Policy Foundation," was updated to clarify that Combs' position at the Texas Public Policy Foundation is voluntary and unpaid.
A Feb. 17, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Bullet Train Firm Reveals Dallas-Houston Route," initially misspelled the name of a Texas Central Railway official. He is Shaun McCabe, not Sean.
A Feb. 16, 2015, column by Ross Ramsey, "Analysis: Tension is About More Than Border Security," initially said that House Speaker Joe Straus is opposed to allowing concealed handguns on campuses of state colleges and universities. He actually has said he has questions about that proposal.
A Feb. 12, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Otto Touts Plan to Simplify School Finance System," was updated to clarify that a proposal to change the public education funding system would group public school districts into "school finance districts."
A Feb. 6, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz, "For State's Seismologist, Quakes Will Be the Easy Part," initially cited Pearson's job application, which said he made $130,000 per month as a ranch manager. That document contained incorrect information. He made $130,000 per year at the job.
A Jan. 30, 2015, story by Bobby Blanchard, "Molly White Makes Waves, but She's Not the First," originally misidentified Mustafaa Carroll of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. He is Mustafaa, not Mustafa, and he is the executive director of the group's branch in Houston, not Dallas-Fort Worth.
A Jan. 26, 2015, story by Alexa Ura, "GOP Hopefuls Eyeing the Texas Hispanic Vote," incorrectly referred to Jeb Bush's 1998 campaign as a re-election campaign.
A Jan. 22, 2015, story by Terri Langford, Bobby Blanchard and Becca Aaronson, "TxDOT Spends Millions in Tuition Reimbursements," incorrectly said that Casey Haney agreed to pay half of his MBA tuition back to the state. He had initially agreed to pay back half the tuition but later agreed to pay back the full amount.
A Jan. 20, 2015, story by Abby Livingston, "Cornyn, Cruz, Castro Assess State of the Union Speech," incorrectly quoted U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz saying that President Obama could have "told the American people that he hurt them." Cruz said Obama could have "told the American people that he heard them."
A Jan. 15, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Straus: Budget Plan Reflects Fiscal Discipline," initially misstated how much the House base budget allots for the Enterprise Fund and the Emerging Technology Fund. The correct figure is $62 million. It also incorrectly stated how much the House base budget estimates the state student population will grow. The expected figure is about 84,000 students annually.
A Jan. 12, 2015, story by Aman Batheja, "Hegar: 'Moderate Expansion' of Economy is Expected," incorrectly described how the comptroller's office expects $7.5 billion in surplus revenue to be allocated. The surplus money goes toward general revenue.
A Jan. 6, 2015, story by Jim Malewitz and Max B. Baker, "Raw Gas Fuels Worry for Rural Homeowner," incorrectly identified the city of Santo as Santos.
A Dec. 28, 2014, story by Alexa Ura and Edgar Walters, "Battles With the Feds — and at Home — Over Medicaid, Women's Health," incorrectly identified the amount approved by voters to spend on cancer research. That number is $3 billion. The story also incorrectly characterized a state law concerning the CPRIT Foundation as still being in effect. The CPRIT Foundation was dissolved in 2013.
The Dec. 22, 2014, edition of The Brief, by John Reynolds, initially misspelled the last name of the Austin American-Statesman's J. David McSwane on second reference.
A Nov. 20, 2014, story by Neena Satija, Jim Malewitz and Marcos Vanetta, "DuPont Tragedy One of Many Toxic Gas Releases," initially included incorrect information on penalties for environmental violations in Texas. The correct maximum penalty per violation per day is $25,000.
A Nov. 5, 2014 story by Bobby Blanchard, Becca Aaronson and Christine Ayala, "Fresh Faces of the Texas Legislature," incorrectly reported that Mike Schofield was married, and lived in Houston. Schofield is not married and lives in Katy.
Aman Batheja's Oct. 23, 2014 story, "U.S. Senate Debate to be Shown in English and Spanish," gave an incorrect date for when C-Span plans to air the debate. The debate is scheduled to air on C-Span on Wednesday.
Bobby Blanchard's Oct. 8, 2014 story, "Residents Ask for More Time on Controversial Pipeline," misidentified San Antonio Water System Board President Robert Puente and misspelled the name of San Antonio Water System Board Chairman Berto Guerra. It also misspelled the name of the Spanish company Abengoa. Finally, the story gave an incorrect year in which the Vista Ridge pipeline would begin pumping water into San Antonio; the correct year is 2020.
Ayan Mittra's Oct. 4, 2014, story, "2014 TribuneFest: Audio From the Open Government Track," incorrectly identified Center for Competitive Politics President David Keating as Andrew Keating.
Jim Malewitz's Sept. 30, 2014 story, "In Texas, Solar Manufacturer Ramps Up Production," said incorrectly that Mission Solar Energy's solar panel manufacturing plant was the only such plant in Texas.
Edgar Walters' Sept. 25, 2014 story, "Disability Groups Hope Turnover Leads to Reform," said the Sunset Advisory Commission recommended that the state identify five state-supported living centers for closure. The commission has since recommended that the state identify an unspecified number for closure.
Aman Batheja's Sept. 25, 2014 story, "Poll: Texans Don't See Public Transit as a Congestion Cure," using information provided by the Texas A&M Transportation Institute, initially said the poll's margin of error was +/- 3 percentage points. The poll's margin of error is +/- 1.5 percentage points.
Neena Satija's Sept. 24, 2014 story, "Van de Putte: Stop Diverting Transportation Money," incorrectly stated that state Sen. Dan Patrick voted for SJR 1 last summer, which called for asking Texans whether they would allow use of the Rainy Day Fund for future transportation projects..
Terri Langford's Sept. 22, 2014 article, "Federal Judge Hears Closing Arguments in Voter ID Trial," originally misquoted U.S. Department of Justice attorney Richard Dellheim. He called the voter ID law a "serious solution in search of a problem," not a "serious problem in search of a solution."
Emily Ramshaw's Sept. 21, 2014 article, "Straus Says He's 'Awfully Sick' of UT Regents Drama," originally said UT system regents commissioned an external investigation into lawmaker influence in admissions. The UT system, not the regents, commissioned the investigation."
In the Sept. 20, 2014 article, "Liveblog: Environment at The Texas Tribune Festival," two blog posts on the "Texas Vs. EPA" panel incorrectly attributed statements by Jennifer Vanos to Laura Miller.
Christine Ayala and Morgan Smith's Sept. 16, 2014 story, "Texas' New Social Studies Textbooks Under Fire," initially gave an incorrect number of members on the State Board of Education. There are 15 members, not 12.
Jay Root's Sept. 10, 2014 story, "Despite Huge Warchest, Abbott Still Fundraising," misstated the date when Greg Abbott and Wendy Davis will take place in a debate. The debate will be held Sept. 19, not Sept. 20.
Bobby Blanchard's Sept. 9, 2014 story, "Rice University Stays in Top 20 in U.S. News Rankings," initially included incorrect information about Southern Methodist University's rating last year. Also, the story was updated to include additional context of a quote from UT-Austin President William Powers Jr.
Terri Langford's Sept. 8, 2014 story, "Lawyers File Motion To Quash Perry's Indictment," initially indicated that a motion to quash an indictment could not be appealed. It cannot be appealed by the defense.
Jim Malewitz's Sept. 4, 2014 story, "West Texas Solar Plant Comes Online," incorrectly referred to state Sen. Carlos Uresti as a state representative.
Aman Batheja's Sept. 2, 2014 story, "Davis Gearing Up for Promotion of Memoir," misstated the size of the initial printing of Wendy Davis' memoir.
F. Scott McCown's Aug. 27, 2014, article in TribTalk, "How Texas kicked its big drug problem," incorrectly suggested that former state Rep. Mark Strama was the author of House Bill 915 in 2013. The author was state Rep. Lois Kolkhorst.
Aman Batheja and Stephen Smith's Aug. 18, 2014 story, "The Bullet Train That Could Change Everything," incorrectly stated the number of riders in the Tokyo-to-Nagoya line of the Shinkansen system in Japan.
Neena Satija's Aug. 17, 2014 story, "In 1917, Similarities to Gov. Rick Perry's Indictment," incorrectly said that Gov. Jim Ferguson vetoed the entire legislative appropriation for the University of Texas. It should have said that Ferguson vetoed nearly the entire legislative appropriation for the university.
Jim Malewitz and Neena Satija's Aug. 15, 2014 story, "On Climate Rules, Texas Regulators Look Beyond Litigation," misspelled the name of the CEO of Luminant. He is Mac McFarland, not Mac MacFarland.
Eli Okun's Aug. 11, 2014 story, "Some Texas Cities Turn to Higher Water Impact Fees," incorrectly referred to lower water bills reducing the amount of water revenue going into state coffers, rather than local accounts.
Terri Langford and Jay Root's Aug. 5, 2014 story, "Lawmakers Question Perry's Funding of National Guard," reported that there were more than 57,000 immigrants who have come to the United States this fiscal year from Mexico during the current immigration surge. The story should have said that 203,000 immigrants from countries other than Mexico have crossed the United States' southern border this fiscal year and more than 57,000 of them are unaccompanied children.
Eli Okun's Aug. 5, 2014 story, "Perry's Office Defends National Guard Funding," incorrectly said that more than 57,000 undocumented immigrants have crossed the U.S. border in recent months. The story should have said that more than 57,000 unaccompanied children have crossed the U.S. border in recent months.
Jay Root and Becca Aaronson's July 30, 2014 story, "Texas Governor's Race: Analyzing the Money," incorrectly said Richie Ray was opposed to regulation of compounding pharmacies. A spokesman for Ray says he favors "responsible regulation."
Alexa Ura's July 14, 2014 story, "Women Want State’s Help in Pelvic Mesh Fight," indicated that the removal of a mesh implant had left Aaron Leigh Horton's mother bedridden. Horton says it was the implant itself that left her mother bedridden.
Neena Satija's July 16, 2014 story, "In DFW, Little Traction on Improving Air Quality," included an incorrect and abridged transcription of a quote from TCEQ Chairman Bryan Shaw.
Morgan Smith's July 16, 2014 story, "Williams Discusses Decision to Approve Charter," originally misstated when the State Board of Education denied Great Hearts Academy's charter application. The vote took place in November.
Reeve Hamilton's July 15, 2014 story, "In McRaven or Fisher, a New Kind of Chancellor," misstated how long Kay Bailey Hutchison had served in the U.S. Senate. She served for two decades.
Neena Satija's July 13, 2014 story, "Climate Scientists: Texas is Missing an Opportunity," originally included a graphic on sea level rise with certain cities mislabeled.
John Reynolds' July 2, 2014 story, "CliffsNotes on an Ethics Saga," incorrectly described the nature of the complaint filed against Empower Texans. The complaint alleged that the organization failed to register as a PAC, not that it illegally solicited money.
Alexa Ura's June 26, 2014 story, "State Provided 2,000 Vaccines for Child Detainees," initially said that the BCFS International Children’s Shelter in Harlingen was receiving flu vaccines from the state, as indicated by Department of State Health Services officials. BCFS and state officials later clarified that the vaccines are going to the temporary BCFS shelter at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio.
Julián Aguilar's June 23, 2014 story, "Davis Calls for Special Session on Border Surge," initially misspelled the name of the director of the Hidalgo County Health Department. He is Eduardo Olivarez, not Olivares.
Jay Root's June 20, 2014 story, "Texas Worker Safety Hotline Falters" misspelled a Division of Workers' Compensation spokesman's last name. He is John Greeley, not Greely.
Julián Aguilar's June 9, 2014 story, "ICE Asks Shelters in El Paso to House Undocumented Immigrants" initially misstated Ruben Garcia's name.
Terri Langford's June 6, 2014 story, "AG, Lawyers for Hank Skinner Argue Over DNA in Death Penalty Case," misidentified a state district judge. He is Steven Emmert, not Stephen Emmert.
Terri Langford's May 23, 2014 story, "With State Unit Gone, Fuel Tax Fraud Cases Flow To DAs," incorrectly reported that more than 3 trillion gallons of red-dyed, tax-free diesel was sold in Texas. It was 3.3 billion gallons.
Terri Langford's May 15, 2014 story, "Vacant Juvenile Facility Costing $100K Monthly" incorrectly reported that a member of the Legislative Budget Board was from Corsicana.
Cathaleen Qiao Chen's May 13, 2014 story, "HD-105 Runoff Candidates Hope to Claim District for Democrats" incorrectly reported that state Rep. Linda Harper-Brown replaced Dale Tillery in the Legislature; in fact, she got his district number as a result of redistricting. Tillery served in a district in eastern Dallas County.
Mose Buchele's May 5, 2014 KUT radio piece, "Drilling Suit Highlights a Shift in the Fracking Debate," incorrectly stated the author of a study of pollution in South Texas. The study was done by the Center for Public Integrity, not ProPublica.
Becca Aaronson's May 1, 2014 story, "Company That OK'd Unnecessary Braces Kept its Contract," initially stated that the state’s legal settlements with dental and orthodontic providers cleared those providers of criminal wrongdoing. Under the terms of those settlements, the state could still prosecute the providers for criminal wrongdoing if it finds additional evidence that fraud occurred.
Ross Ramsey's May 2, 2014 column, "Analysis: Texans in Some Districts Just Don't Vote," incorrectly identified Ann Johnson as a Republican. She ran as a Democrat in 2012.
Cathaleen Qiao Chen's April 30, 2014 story, "Candidates Talk Urban-Rural Divide in Runoff," incorrectly referred to Ben Streusand as a former mortgage broker. He was a mortgage banker.
Cathaleen Qiao Chen's April 30, 2014 story, "Lawmakers Urged to Reform Parole With Technology," has been updated to clarify that 62 percent of all discharged state jail inmates are arrested again — not necessarily returned to prison — within three years of their release.
Neena Satija's April 29, 2014 story, "Supreme Court's Air Pollution Ruling Goes Against Texas," incorrectly referred to the United Mine Workers of America as an industry group.
Jim Malewitz's April 28, 2014 story, "Blurred Lines: Texas-BLM Spat Has Complicated History," incorrectly said that the U.S. gained all lands south of what the Spanish called the Rio Rojo in the 1819 Adams-Onís Treaty. The U.S. gained lands north of the river, which the Spanish called Rio Roxo. Additionally, the story originally stated that an Oklahoma judge ruled that all 140 disputed acres of Tommy Henderson’s land was public land. But the ruling actually awarded about 45 acres to the Oklahomans and the rest to the federal government.
Morgan Smith's April 26, 2014 story, "Senator Van De Putte Releases Tax Returns," previously gave incorrect totals on the Van de Puttes' gambling losses. Those figures have been corrected and it has been specified that the losses ocurred in 2011 and 2012.
Ross Ramsey's April 25, 2014 column, "Analysis: A History Lesson on Stifling a Senate Minority," previously said that Dan Patrick had promised not to name any Democrats committee chairs if elected lieutenant governor. Patrick has only said that it is possible he won't name any.
Aman Batheja's April 24, 2014 story, "Voters Could Approve Billions in Debt in May," misstated the impact of the state's property tax cap on debt service on fast-growing school districts.
Jim Malewitz's April 22, 2014 story, "AG Seeks Details on Federal Plans for Land by Red River," misspelled the name of a spokesman for the Bureau of Land Management. He is Paul McGuire, not McGwire.
Becca Aaronson's April 17, 2014 story, "Abortion Doctors Sue Hospital Over Revoked Privileges," misstated the name of the judge who approved the temporary reinstatement of admitting privileges. Her correct name is Sheryl Day McFarlin.
Jim Malewitz's April 16, 2014 story, " Court Thwarts Sierra Club's Hazardous Waste Challenge," has been updated to clarify the differences between two Sierra Club challenges to permits issued to Waste Control Specialists.
Alexa Ura's April 10, 2014 story, "Abortion Providers Petition 5th Circuit to Review Decision," originally stated that the new requirement that abortions be performed in ambulatory surgical centers remained unchallenged in court. Abortion providers filed a second lawsuit challenging the additional requirement last week.
Victor Hugo Michel and Cathaleen Qiao Chen's April 10, 2014 story, "China's Embrace of Tequila Affects Texas, Mexican Markets," originally said tequila consumption in China was projected to grow to 84.4 billion liters a year. That is the projection for total alcohol consumption in China. Also, a previous version of the story called Mexico the largest U.S. trading partner; it is the third-largest.
Cathaleen Qiao Chen's April 10, 2014 story, "Despite Changes, Driver Surcharge Program Faces Opposition," placed the number of drivers that took advantage of the 2011 amnesty program at 713,444. That was the number of eligible drivers; the actual number was 14 percent, or slightly less than 100,ooo drivers. An updated version of the story also did not accurately report the position of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. The organization continues to support the program but wants it to be reformed.
Aamena Ahmed's April 9, 2014 story, "Property Tax Lending Industry Under Review Again," did not originally include a reference to the passage of House Bill 1597, which allows for installment payments of certain homestead taxes.
Alexa Ura's April 8, 2014 story, "Prolific Donors are Behind Perry's Marketing Tool," incorrectly reported that HoltCat, a Caterpillar dealer, had received a Texas Enterprise Fund grant. The grant went to Caterpillar Inc., a manufacturer.
Alana Rocha's Jan. 13, 2014 article, "Unemployment Drug-Testing Law Delayed" incorrectly reported that proposed federal rules for drug screening for unemployment insurance applicants would be published March 1. It should have been reported that a notice of proposed rulemaking would be published in March.
Joshua Blank and Bethany Albertson's April 3, 2014 article, "Polling Center: Texan First, American Second" mistakenly reported a percentage of 18- to 44-year-olds considering themselves to be Texans first as a group mean. It should have been reported as the mean of those who identify as Texans.
John Reynolds' March 28, 2014 article, "The Brief: Watts Nowhere to Be Seen in Guv Race," originally said the unveiling ceremony for the Vietnam Veterans Monument at the Texas Capitol would take place on Friday instead of the correct date of Saturday. The story has been updated to change the date and to include the participation of Gov. Rick Perry.
Becca Aaronson's March 27, 2014 article, "5th Circuit Upholds Texas Abortion Regulations," incorrectly stated that Justice Edith Jones is the current chief justice on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. She was the chief justice until 2012.
Aamena Ahmed's March 23, 2014 article, "GMO Labeling Movement Stagnant in Texas," initially said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration supports labeling but has said it is voluntary because foods with GMOs are safe to eat. It has been updated to clarify that the FDA supports voluntary labeling of GMO products, which are required to meet the same safety standards as other foods.
Becca Aaronson's March 19, 2014 interactive, "The Impact of HB 2 on Texas Abortion Facilities," has been updated to indicate that the Planned Parenthood clinic in Waco has a state license to perform abortions, but no longer performs the procedure.
A table in a Polling Center blog post from March 6, 2014 incorrectly listed Ken Paxton's percentage of the actual vote as 45 percent; it should've said 44 percent.
Reeve Hamilton, Aamena Ahemd, Alex Ura, Edgar Walters, Jim Malewitz and Neena Satija's March 4, 2014 article, Statewide Races Offer Some Surprises, Runoffs initially reported that Bert Richardson was a prosecutor. He is an administrative judge and an adjunct law professor. An early version of this story also reported that SBOE member Pat Hardy and candidate Erika Beltran had won their primary elections. Both will proceed to runoff races.
Becca Aaronson's March 4, 2014 article, "Tough Competition in Senate Primaries," originally misspelled the name of a candidate in Senate District 31. He is Mike Canon, not Cannon.
Aman Batheja's March 4, 2014 article, "Cornyn, Sessions Trounce Opponents; Hall in Runoff," misidentified the former Woodville mayor who was headed to a runoff in the race to replace U.S. Rep. Steve Stockman. He is Brian Babin, not Ben Bagin.
John Reynolds' Feb. 27, 2014 Texas Weekly story "And Down the Stretch They Come" and Becca Aaronson's Feb. 21, 2014 Texas Weekly post "Cruz Lends a Hand to Campbell in SD-25 Race" incorrectly stated that U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz had endorsed state Sen. Donna Campbell, who is running for reelection. He has not formally endorsed her.
Jim Henson and Joshua Blank's Feb. 27, 2014 Polling Center post, "Strong Undercurrents Still Define Abbott-Davis Race," incorrectly said that in an October poll, 28 percent were unable to express an opinion about Attorney General Greg Abbott. In that poll, 41 percent were unable to express an opinion about Abbott.
Neena Satija's Feb. 24, 2014 article, "Latest Texas vs. EPA Battle Goes Before U.S. Supreme Court," incorrectly reported that the state was already issuing permits. It was corrected to reflect the fact that Texas is developing rules to begin issuing greenhouse gas permits, but has not yet started doing so.
Edgar Walters' Feb. 24, 2014 article, "Houston Church Opts Not to Defect From Denomination," incorrectly stated that Grace Presbyterian Church in Houston is in the process of joining the ECO. It is in the process of deciding whether to join.
Shelby Sementelli's Feb. 21, 2014 article, "Carona, Huffines Face Off in Contentious SD-16 Primary," incorrectly listed Education among Sen. Carona's current Senate Committee assignments. He is a past, but not current, member of that committee.
Aman Batheja's Feb. 20, 2014 article, "Standing Out a Challenge in Race for Stockman Seat," originally quoted Congressional District 36 candidate Chuck Meyer as saying Harris County has "plenty of representatives there to represent that part of the district.” Meyer actually said Harris County has "plenty of congressmen down there to represent the interests of that district.”
Becca Aaronson's Feb. 12, 2014 article, "Obamacare Enrollment Continues Steady Climb," incorrectly spelled the name of the deputy director of Progress Texas. He is Phillip, not Philip, Martin. The story was also clarified to indicate that enrollment in the federal insurance marketplace climbed. It is not clear from the data whether those who enrolled were previously among the uninsured.
Shelby Cole's Feb. 7, 2014 article, "Craft Brewers Celebrate New Beer Laws," incorrectly stated that the new brewing laws took effect on Jan. 1, 2014. They took effect in June 2013.
Edgar Walter's Feb. 11, 2014 article, "7 Candidates Vie for Chance to Reshape Texas Criminal Court," incorrectly identified state district judge Barbara Walther's campaign manager as Gus Johnson. His name is Gus Clemens.
Aman Batheja's Feb. 10, 2014 article, "Stockman's Claims About Record Draw Questions," incorrectly referred to House Speaker John Boehner as House majority leader.
Brandi Grissom's Feb. 9, 2014 article, "Town's Stance on Famed Convict Changes Over 15 Years," incorrectly referred to Richard Pesikoff as a clinical professor of psychology at the Baylor College of Medicine. His correct title is clinical professor of psychiatry.
Alexa Ura and Morgan Smith's Feb. 7, 2014 article, "Invasion" Talk Fuels Concern for GOP Hispanic Outreach," includes an updated statement attributed to Texas Politics Project director Jim Henson to clarify his comments that the electoral impact of the increasing Hispanic population would not be felt during this election cycle.
Elena Schneider's Jan. 27, 2014 article, "Stockman Resurfaces, Claims He Was Never Hiding," incorrectly reported that Chad Henderson was a student at Chattanooga State University. He was actually a student at Chattanooga State Technical Community College.
Jim Malewitz's Jan. 24, 2014 article, "Demand Response Could Factor in Grid Debate," incorrectly referred to electric generators who are pushing regulators to overhaul the wholesale energy market as "electric utilities." Utilities are a separate and distinct type of company.
Becca Aaronson's Jan. 21, 2014 article, "Texas Finalizes Rules for Health Care Navigators," reported that navigators must complete the state's additional training requirements by March 1. Although the rules initially proposed by the department required navigators to meet that deadline, the state's new rules extended the deadline to May 1.
Alexa Ura's Jan. 9, 2014 article, "Court Hears Arguments in Online Defamation Case," incorrectly reported that a Travis County jury had ruled that Andrew Harrison Barnes' online remarks about a former employee were defamatory. The remarks were not found to be defamatory, and the case was dismissed.
Julián Aguilar's Dec. 19, 2013 article, "Immigration Reform Advocates Open to Piecemeal Approach," originally said that the group Bibles, Badges and Business was spearheaded by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. It was spearheaded by the National Immigration Forum.
Neena Satija's Dec. 18, 2013 article, "Phil Wilson Named New LCRA General Manager," incorrectly said that Ross Phillips would not assume the post of interim general manager. He was slated to hold that position for the month of January.
Neena Satija's Dec. 17, 2013 article, "Much at Stake as LCRA Chooses New Leader," incorrectly said that Becky Motal had been at the LCRA for two and a half years. She has been general manager for two and a half years.
Becca Aaronson's Dec. 11, 2013 article, "More Texans Purchase Health Plans in Online Marketplace," originally said that Texas had the highest number of people who had purchased a health plan in the federal marketplace. More people have purchased a plan in Florida.
Ross Ramsey's Dec. 7, 2013 article, "Former Midland Mayor Challenging Seliger in SD-31," misidentified Bob Barnes as a former Midland mayor.
Jim Malewitz's Dec. 6, 2013 article, "Texas Supreme Court to Mull Underground Trespassing," originally said it was the first time the state's high court had considered an underground trespassing claim. The Texas Supreme Court had considered underground trespassing in a different context.
Jay Root's Nov. 23, 2013 article, "Injured Worker's Ex-Employer Denies Retaliation," originally listed an injured worker's surnames in the wrong order. His name is Wilmer Lopez Sanchez.
Julián Aguilar's Nov. 9, 2013 article, "Asylum Seeker Completes 'Pedaling for Justice' Ride," incorrectly referred to Velo Paso as Velo El Paso.
Edgar Walters' Nov. 7, 2013 article, "Texas Libraries Face Federal Funding Cuts," misstated the year that federal cuts would reduce grant funding for Texas libraries to $3 million annually. It is 2014, not 2015.
David Maly's Nov. 4, 2013 article, "Liberal Groups Fault Cruz, Cornyn on Judicial Vacancies," misattributed a quote from David Hinojosa, southwest regional counsel for MALDEF.