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Ken Paxton sues Austin homeless center | FOX 7 Austin

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www.youtube.com – FOX 7 Austin – 2024-11-26 21:52:09

SUMMARY: Residents in South Austin are voicing concerns regarding the Sunrise Community Church’s homeless center, which is facing a lawsuit from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Community members report increasing crime and public disturbances, including drug activity, syringes, and other hazardous waste near a local elementary school. Parents express fear for their children’s safety, highlighting specific incidents occurring close to the school. The Sunrise Center, which served 11,000 people last year, issued a statement regretting the lawsuit’s timing. The center’s executive director noted that they were unaware of the legal action until it was publicly announced.

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A lawsuit filed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is asking the court to shut down a homeless center he says is a public nuisance.

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Routine traffic stop ends in officer-involved shooting | FOX 7 Austin

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www.youtube.com – FOX 7 Austin – 2025-05-07 07:51:09

SUMMARY: A routine traffic stop in North Austin near Breaker Lane and I-35 ended with an officer-involved shooting. Three people were in the car: a woman driving, a male passenger, and a child. The male passenger was asked to exit, but when officers attempted a pat down, he tried to run and then reached for a weapon. Two officers fired, and the suspect is now in surgery. No officers were injured, and the woman and child are safe. The involved officers are on administrative leave, and bodycam footage will be released later. Traffic delays persist as the investigation continues.

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The Austin Police Department is investigating an officer-involved shooting in North Austin that began as a routine traffic stop.

FOX7Austin brings you breaking news, weather, and local stories out of Central #Texas as well as fun segments from Good Day Austin, the best from our video vault archives, and exclusive shows like the Good Day Austin Round-Up and CrimeWatch.

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How many 100° days will Austin get this year? Here’s what the First Warning Weather team predicts

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www.kxan.com – Christopher Adams – 2025-05-07 06:56:00

SUMMARY: The KXAN First Warning Weather team has predicted an above-average number of triple-digit days for Austin in 2025. While the average number of 100° days is 29, forecasts range from 38 to 58 days. Meteorologists cite factors like drought and soil moisture, with predictions influenced by the amount of rainfall in the early summer months. The record for the most triple-digit days was set in 2011 with 90 days, and the hottest temperatures ever recorded were 112° in 2000 and 2011. Historically, the earliest 100° day occurred on May 4, 1984, and the latest on October 2.

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The post How many 100° days will Austin get this year? Here's what the First Warning Weather team predicts appeared first on www.kxan.com

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Texas lawmaker counters teacher’s union on education funding levels | Texas

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-05-06 17:59:00

(The Center Square) – State Sen. Brandon Creighton, R-Conroe, who authored the Texas Senate’s education package, including Texas’ first school choice bill, is countering a claim made by Texas AFT that public schools remain underfunded.

Texas AFT called on the Texas Senate, including Creighton, to pass a House public school funding bill claiming, “educators and staff across the state have been laid off, campuses have been closed and consolidated, and deep budget cuts threatened extracurriculars, academic programs, and the support staff who helped the whole student thrive.”

“State leadership has spent the last two sessions picking winners and losers in education policy, and somehow neighborhood schools never come out on top. I can’t stress this enough: Texas public schools are facing an existential crisis, and we need lawmakers to move with a real sense of urgency,” Texas AFT president Zeph Capo said.

Texas AFT is affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers and the AFL-CIO and represents all non-administrative certified and classified public school employees in Texas.

Creighton replied, saying, “after saying they’d be OK forgoing teacher raises in order to kill school choice last session, the Texas AFT is at it again,” offering to correct Capo’s claims with “some actual facts.”

Creighton’s SB 26 includes the “largest investment in teacher pay raises in Texas history – and likely the nation,” he said. He filed the bill earlier this year, which unanimously passed the Senate in February, The Center Square reported.

It allocates nearly $5 billion to implement pay raises for public school teachers and includes incentives for additional pay, liability protection, and other provisions. The $5 billion is “a permanent allotment in the state budget dedicated to teacher salaries,” he said.

An education package filed by state Rep. Brad Buckley, R-Killeen, which includes teacher pay raises, doesn’t include a permanent allotment like the Senate version, Creighton said. “For this reason, we are in negotiations to protect it,” he said. “With these raises and other incentives, teachers will have opportunities to earn more than $100,000 a year.”

Buckley’s HB 2, which would allocate nearly $8 billion for additional classroom funding and teacher pay increases, passed the House in April by a vote of 142-5.

The House’s Teacher Bill of Rights also passed in April, which includes enhanced penalties for public school students who commit violence or make threats of violence, The Center Square reported.

The Texas Teacher Bill of Rights is “a national model for ensuring our educators get the compensation and respect they deserve,” Creighton said.

Among other measures, SB 26 allows public school teachers to enroll their children in their school’s pre-K program, if offered, for free; includes liability protections for educators so they “no longer need to pay an organization for liability insurance;” provides a “teacher preparation program that supports uncertified educators already in the classroom on their path to certification;” expands access and options for those seeking to become teachers, Creighton said. It also expands mechanisms to strengthen the state’s education “workforce, recognizing talent, and ensuring every student has a qualified teacher,” he said.

Ahead of the Texas House passing Creighton’s school choice bill, which Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law on Saturday, Abbott said the legislature was “providing more funding than ever before” for public schools “and a higher teacher pay raise than ever before in the history of our state.”

The roughly $330 billion two-year budgets proposed by the Texas House and Senate allocate roughly $96 billion for public school funding for Texas’ 5.5 million public school K-12 students. The majority, $80 billion, comes from state and local funds, the remainder comes from the federal government.

Average funding per public school student is more than $15,000, nearly double the basic allotment of $6,160, the governor’s office says.

Some claim, pointing to Texas Education Agency data, that when adjusting for inflation, per-student funding is closer to funding levels from roughly a decade ago.

According to a Texas Association of School Business Officials survey, 65% of 190 school districts listed deficit budget/lack of resources as their top problem followed by low or declining enrollment. Roughly 42% of districts surveyed said they are reporting ending fiscal 2024 in a deficit and didn’t anticipate giving raises without help from the legislature. Nearly 63% said they expect to end fiscal 2025 in a deficit; 55.3% said they will need to make budget cuts for fiscal 2026, according to the survey.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has said that school districts are cutting their budgets because they kept spending based on temporary federal COVID-era relief money.

“Many school districts went out and hired people with that money,” Patrick said. “So a lot of the cutbacks that they’re talking about is because they spent the money on ongoing things. Our funding for education is higher than it’s ever been.”

He also points out that from 2019 to 2025, public school enrollment only increased by 100,000 students statewide while state funding “has dwarfed that. We’re spending much, much more money for roughly the same number of students” who were enrolled in public schools five years ago.

The post Texas lawmaker counters teacher’s union on education funding levels | 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: Center-Right

The article predominantly presents the perspectives of Texas state leadership, particularly focusing on the claims of Sen. Brandon Creighton and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who defend the state’s education policies and funding. The language used is in favor of the state’s approach, emphasizing increased funding, teacher pay raises, and the introduction of school choice bills. The article contrasts the views of Texas AFT, a teacher’s union, but does not delve deeply into its criticisms. The tone reflects a pro-government and pro-reform stance, especially with the emphasis on the state’s increased funding and changes to education policies, suggesting a Center-Right bias toward the reforms and political figures mentioned.

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