San Miguel Electric Cooperative’s plan to turn into a solar and battery plant will leave only 14 coal-fired power plants in the state.
Stories by Texas Tribune fellows
The Texas Tribune welcomes a group of student fellows into our newsroom each spring, summer and fall. Here is a sampling of their work. Learn more about the fellowship program here.
Hereโs what to know about transition-related health care, which Texas has banned for children
Senate Bill 14 prohibits trans kids from receiving puberty blockers and hormone treatments. Hereโs what medical experts and trans Texans say about such care.
Trump nominates former Texas lawmaker Scott Turner to lead Housing and Urban Development
Turner served in the Texas House for four years and was also executive director of the White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council in the first Trump administration.
Rural Texas officials and civic leaders discuss economic development, health care and water supply in smaller communities
The Tribuneโs rural symposium highlighted the challenges the stateโs far-flung regions face โ and the opportunities they offer.
Federal appeals court affirms ruling that Caldwell County must hold public bail hearings
The Texas Tribune, the Caldwell/Hays Examiner and Mano Amiga challenged the countyโs policy of barring the press and public from bail hearings, saying it violated the First Amendment.
Texasโ 90,000 DACA recipients can sign up for Affordable Care Act coverage โ for now
Those enrolled in the federal program shielding them from deportation can enroll through Jan. 15, but a lawsuit and Trumpโs anti-immigration stance threaten to eliminate eligibility.
How to stay politically engaged in between election cycles
From engaging with representatives to joining advocacy groups, there are numerous ways to continue participating in democracy and shaping policy after the polls close.
Republicans win Tarrant County, moving local government further to the right
Former state Rep. Matt Krauseโs win may push the commissioners court even further away from the bipartisanship on which it once prided itself.
9 million Texans voted early in 2024. Hereโs how that compares to previous years.
The turnout rate dropped more than 8 percentage points compared to four years ago โ a high-water mark for the Lone Star State.
Dan Patrick debunks claims about Texas voting machines switching votes
Republican National Committee Co-Chair Lara Trump said Texas had fixed an error with voting machines, but Patrick quickly said there was no problem to fix.



