Corrections and Clarifications

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Our reporting on all platforms will be truthful, transparent and respectful; our facts will be accurate, complete and fairly presented. When we make a mistake — and from time to time, we will — we will work quickly to fully address the error, correcting it within the story, detailing the error on the story page and adding it to this running list of Tribune corrections. If you find an error, email corrections@texastribune.org.

Posted in Energy

American Idle

Each year in the United States, idling trucks and cars burn several billion gallons of fuel, emitting various pollutants without driving a single mile. The Texas Legislature passed legislation in 2005 limiting big trucks to five minutes of idling time, but local governments aren’t obligated to enforce the law, and the debate over exemptions continues to roil.

Posted in Energy

The Pelican Grief

At Goose Island, near Rockport, some of the nearly 200 pelicans rescued from the Gulf oil spill and sent to Texas seem to be thriving. But officials are holding their breath to see whether the rescued birds stick around or fly back to habitats that may still be contaminated. “Wildlife do crazy things,” says the manager of the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge. “That’s why they’re called ‘wild.'” But the ones that stay could face survival struggles, too, from coastal litter and competition with other species for food.

Posted in Public Education

TribBlog: In Reversal, SBOE Passes Charter Financing [Updated]

After getting shot down in committee, SBOE member David Bradley, R-Beaumont, and other members succeeded Friday in pushing through a plan to purchase school buildings and lease them back to charter schools in a split vote, with two Democrats absent. The decision, however, is contingent upon a favorable attorney general’s opinion on the legality of the controversial move — which would pull money from the Permanent School Fund.

Posted in Public Education

TribBlog: Merit Pay and the “Black Box”

In the latest clash between the Houston Independent School District and those who question its use of “value-added data” to grade and sometimes fire teachers, state Sen. Mario Gallegos Jr., D-Houston, grilled an HSID representative at Tuesday’s Senate Education Committee hearing over what he decried as a transparency issue for the district.

Posted in Demographics

The University of Someplace Else

Fewer students from Mexico have enrolled at border schools like the University of Texas at El Paso, UT-Pan American, and Texas A&M International since 2006, while their ranks have grown at schools farther from the Rio Grande, like UT-Austin and Texas A&M. Can the drop be attributed to the drug war, or is the growing violence simply compounding the decades-old problem of border “brain drain”?

Posted in Higher Education

TribBlog: Goodbye, Simkins

The University of Texas System Board of Regents voted unanimously this morning to rename an all-male dorm Creekside Residence Hall after weeks of debate about the man the building was originally named for: William Stewart Simkins, a dead UT law professor and Ku Klux Klan organizer.

Posted in Higher Education

Naming Rights

The University of Texas once admired Ku Klux Klan organizer and law professor William Stewart Simkins. Today the UT System’s regents meet to consider whether the tree-shaded all-male residence on San Jacinto Boulevard that bears his name still should.

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