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Citing safety concerns, Starbase restricts access to public streets

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www.kxan.com – Dave Hendricks – 2025-06-25 12:34:00

SUMMARY: The city of Starbase, Texas, approved SpaceX’s request to install gates at four intersections, citing safety concerns and aiming to limit visitor access to enhance security and community control. Despite a process requiring permits and notifications, SpaceX had already begun construction before full review. Residents and property owners raised legal concerns, questioning whether blocking public streets violates Texas law. Cameron County DA Luis V. Saenz indicated obstructing public roads without authority is a misdemeanor under Texas Penal Code. City officials emphasized controlled access for emergency services and necessary visitors, aiming to address incidents involving unwanted individuals, though critics argue this may create a gated community.

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The post Citing safety concerns, Starbase restricts access to public streets appeared first on www.kxan.com

News from the South - Texas News Feed

Police release footage after officer hit by car, suspect shot during incident near the Galleria

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www.youtube.com – KHOU 11 – 2025-06-24 22:10:39

SUMMARY: Houston police released body cam footage of an incident near the Galleria mall where officers attempted to arrest Max C. Whitaker, 43, on May 25. Whitaker, suspected in a jugging case, drove his car into oncoming traffic and pinned an off-duty HPD sergeant inside the driver’s door. The sergeant fired multiple shots as Whitaker tried to flee, justifying the use of deadly force due to fear of serious injury. Whitaker was critically injured and charged with aggravated assault on a public servant, but prosecutors unexpectedly dropped all charges. The district attorney’s office reserved the right to refile charges later.

A police sergeant and a suspect were injured. Video shows a car nearly crushing the sergeant.

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Eight Circuit judges reject Abbott’s rational for vetoing THC ban | Texas

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-06-24 17:21:00


The Texas Legislature passed SB 3 to ban THC statewide, but Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed it, citing likely constitutional challenges and court delays similar to Arkansas’ stalled THC ban. Abbott proposed regulating THC like alcohol instead. However, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton challenged Abbott’s claims, citing federal law permitting states to ban THC, with court precedents from the Fourth and Seventh Circuits and states like California and Colorado supporting such bans. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court’s injunction blocking Arkansas’ THC ban, affirming states’ rights under the 2018 Farm Bill to regulate or ban hemp. Paxton confirmed SB 3 would be reintroduced. Abbott scheduled a special session to consider regulations, though many Texas Republicans oppose legalizing marijuana.

(The Center Square) – Several of the reasons Gov. Greg Abbott made for vetoing a statewide THC ban, SB 3, were rejected Tuesday by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Texas legislature overwhelmingly passed SB 3 with bipartisan support during the regular legislative session. Late Sunday night, Abbott vetoed it.

In his proclamation explaining the veto, he said SB 3 was “well-intentioned. But it would never go into effect because of valid constitutional challenges.” If it were enacted, “its enforcement would be enjoined for years, leaving existing abuses unaddressed,” he said, adding that “Texas cannot afford to wait.”

He pointed to Arkansas enacting a THC ban in 2023, Act 629, which was challenged in court. A lower court halted it from going into effect, arguing it would “likely [be] preempted by federal statutes and that its criminal provisions were likely unconstitutionally vague,” Abbott said. “The result in Arkansas? Their law has sat dormant, meaningless, having no effect for nearly two years while further legal proceedings play out. That result must be avoided in Texas,” Abbott said. Instead, he proposed regulating THC similar to how alcohol is regulated.

On Monday, Patrick challenged each of Abbott’s arguments, saying they were flawed and factually inaccurate. Federal law expressly permits states to impose their own restrictions, including banning THC, Patrick said. He also said the Fourth and Seventh circuits have ruled as much and California and Colorado banned THC with no problems, The Center Square reported.

He said he believed the 8th Circuit would rule in favor of Arkansas.

One day later, it did.

On Tuesday, a panel of judges on the Eighth Circuit, including the chief judge, reversed the lower court’s injunction.

The judges also confirmed Patrick’s argument, stating in their 16-page ruling that nothing in the 2018 Farm Bill “preempts or limits any law of a State or Indian tribe that … regulates production of hemp and is more stringent than this subchapter.”

They also said the Arkansas Supreme Court would reach the same conclusion they did.

“We predict that the Arkansas Supreme Court would hold that” a provision, the saving’s clause, was upheld in the law, agreeing with the state.

The judges rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the state’s ban prohibited interstate commerce of hemp products, also saying, “We predict the Arkansas Supreme Court would adopt our understanding of the phrase ‘continuous transportation.’ Any more of a restrictive understanding would mean that Act 629 would violate the 2018 Farm Bill’s Express Preemption Clause.”

The judges also point out that the “text of the 2018 Farm Bill shows only that Congress wanted to facilitate state legalization of hemp, if a state wants to. Congress allows states to legalize hemp by removing the biggest hurdle – federal criminalization.”

The text of the 2018 Farm Bill “does not support” the plaintiff’s claim “that Congress intended to ‘federally protect[] hemp’ and coercively mandate nationwide legality,” the judges said. “States may obtain primary regulatory authority over hemp production,” including banning it.

“Instead, just because states may legalize hemp under the 2018 Farm Bill does not mean they must,” the judges note.

The judges also rejected the argument Abbott cited, saying the Arkansas bill “is not unconstitutionally vague and the district court abused its discretion when it issued a preliminary injunction based on the statute being void for vagueness.”

In response to the ruling, Patrick said the court ruled the way he believed it would and the Texas Senate would reintroduce SB 3 and the state legislature would pass it again.

Abbott called a special session for next month, adding SB 3 to the agenda, suggesting that the legislature implement a series of regulations to legalize THC.

The Republican Party of Texas opposes legalizing marijuana; the majority of Republicans in the legislature voted to ban it, not regulate it.

When the legislature convenes next month, Patrick said, “All we have to do is pass SB 3, just like we passed during the regular session.”

The post Eight Circuit judges reject Abbott’s rational for vetoing THC ban | Texas appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article presents a factual account of the political and legal developments surrounding Texas Governor Greg Abbott’s veto of SB 3, a bill to ban THC statewide, and the subsequent court rulings that challenged the reasons given for the veto. The language is neutral and descriptive, simply reporting statements made by Governor Abbott and Representative Patrick, as well as the court’s findings, without endorsing either side’s position. It balances perspectives from both the executive branch and the legislature, noting bipartisan support for the bill while highlighting the Republican Party’s opposition to legalization. The article refrains from emotive or opinionated language, focusing on facts and legal interpretations rather than advocating for or against the THC ban or legalization. Thus, it functions primarily as neutral reporting on ideological positions rather than promoting an ideological stance itself.

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Robert Nichols to retire from Texas Senate

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Kayla Guo – 2025-06-24 16:27:00


Sen. Robert Nichols, a six-term Republican from East Texas and the Senate’s most senior GOP member, announced he will not seek reelection, planning to serve until January 2027. Known for occasionally breaking with party leadership, Nichols opposed several GOP priorities, including private school vouchers and a bill limiting local authority, and voted to convict Attorney General Ken Paxton in 2023. Rep. Trent Ashby of Lufkin immediately launched his campaign to succeed Nichols, emphasizing conservative values, rural investments, public education funding, and protecting children from “harmful ideologies.” Ashby is a banker and former dairy farmer active in state education and natural resource committees.

Robert Nichols, the most senior Texas Senate Republican, won’t run for reelection” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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Sen. Robert Nichols, R-Jacksonville, announced Tuesday he would not seek reelection to his East Texas seat — news that was followed minutes later by Rep. Trent Ashby, R-Lufkin, launching his campaign to succeed him in the upper chamber.

“It had always been my goal to make things better, to stop bad things, to do it in a way I thought was right, never forgetting who I represented and to work at it long enough, but not too long,” said Nichols, who intends to serve out his term through Jan. 12, 2027, in a statement. “It has been one of the greatest honors of my life to have represented the people of East Texas in the Texas Senate.”

Nichols, the most senior Republican in the Senate, bucked his party on several key issues over his six terms, establishing himself in recent years as a rare Republican willing to occasionally break with Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who tightly controls the Senate.

This legislative session, he drew the ire of the state Republican Party for watering down a GOP priority bill to bar political subdivisions, like local governments, from using public funds for lobbying. In 2023, Nichols was the only Senate Republican to reject private school vouchers and a bill preempting local authority. That same year, he was one of just two Senate Republicans who voted to convict Attorney General Ken Paxton on over a dozen articles of impeachment accusing him of corruption and bribery. And in 2022, Nichols was among the first few anti-abortion lawmakers to support an exception for rape to the state’s near-total abortion ban.

Nichols was first elected to the Senate in 2006, representing a district that covers a large piece of East Texas from the Houston suburbs to south of Tyler. He previously served in the 1980s and 1990s as a state transportation commissioner and as mayor and city council member for Jacksonville, a city of 14,000 about a half-hour south of Tyler. He was last reelected in 2022 without any primary opposition and nearly 80% of the vote.

“You are a true statesman and have represented East Texas with honor and steadfast resolve to do what is in the best interest of your district,” Rep. Cody Harris, R-Palestine, posted on social media in response to Nichols’ news. “Texas is better because of you. You will be greatly missed, my friend.”

Ashby, who was elected to the Texas House in 2012 and later named the GOP’s Freshman of the Year, announced his campaign for Nichols’ seat soon after.

In his campaign announcement, Ashby emphasized his commitment to “defend the conservative values that define East and Southeast Texas,” highlighting his work on private property rights, law enforcement, rural infrastructure investments, public schools and teachers and protecting children from “harmful ideologies.”

“This is a time of great change and opportunity for our region, and we need a strong, experienced voice in the Senate — someone who will defend our conservative values, fight for rural communities, and ensure the region remains a priority in Austin,” he said.

Ashby was a key player this legislative session in negotiations over an $8.5 billion public school funding package and an effort to scrap the STAAR test. He sits on the House Natural Resources and Public Education committees.

He was born and raised on a dairy and diversified livestock operation in Rusk County, and he serves as a senior vice president at VeraBank, according to his campaign website.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/06/24/robert-nichols-texas-senate-trent-ashby/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

The post Robert Nichols to retire from Texas Senate appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This article provides a factual and balanced overview of the political developments involving Texas State Senator Robert Nichols and Representative Trent Ashby, both Republicans. The coverage highlights Nichols’ occasional departures from party lines on specific moderate issues and presents Ashby’s conservative platform without overt editorializing. The absence of loaded language or partisan framing, along with the focus on local Republican figures and their policy positions, suggests a center-right lean typical of regional reporting on Republican leadership in Texas.

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