News from the South - Texas News Feed
Teen killed in crash when other juvenile lost control of car, slammed into tree, police say
SUMMARY: A tragic crash occurred in southwest Houston when a teenager lost control of an SUV and slammed into a tree, killing a 14-year-old passenger. The crash happened just before 11 p.m. on West Fukquay Street. The two surviving teens, including the driver, initially fled but later returned to the scene. The deceased teen was in the back seat. The Harris County DA’s office is reviewing potential charges for failure to stop and render aid. Investigators are still determining whether speed or intoxication contributed to the crash. The SUV was heavily damaged in the collision.

According to the Houston Police Department, there were a total of three juveniles in the car when the driver lost control and crashed into a tree.
News from the South - Texas News Feed
Summertime heat means paying attention to your body’s warning signals
SUMMARY: A high-pressure ridge will bring extreme heat to Texas this week, with temperatures reaching triple digits on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Wednesday is expected to be the hottest day. Newcomers to Central Texas should be aware of heat risks, with two key warnings: Heat Advisory (103°F air temp, 108°F heat index) and Excessive Heat Warning (105°F air temp, 113°F heat index). Tips for staying safe include drinking water, wearing light clothing, applying sunscreen, and checking on the elderly. It’s also important to recognize the signs of Heat Exhaustion versus Heat Stroke. The hottest months are approaching, with June through August averaging highs over 90°F.
The post Summertime heat means paying attention to your body's warning signals appeared first on www.kxan.com
News from the South - Texas News Feed
Texas House OKs excluding trans people from state records
“Texas House votes to strictly define man and woman, excluding trans people from state records” 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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Dozens of trans people and their allies gathered in the outdoor Capitol rotunda Friday, chanting at the top of their lungs.
They will not erase us.
The next day, the Texas House of Representatives preliminarily passed a bill that aims to do just that.
House Bill 229 strictly defines men and women based on the reproductive organs they were born with, and orders state records to reflect this binary. The bill, titled the “Women’s Bill of Rights,” lays out the “biological truth for anybody who is confused,” said author Rep. Ellen Troxclair, an Austin Republican.
The bill passed on second reading 86-36 after an at times tense debate, and is expected to be finally approved next week before going to the Senate, which has already passed several bills with a similar focus.
Surrounded by a cadre of Republican women, Troxclair said the goal of the bill was to ensure women’s rights aren’t “eroded by activists” as more people come out as trans and nonbinary. Democrats argued against the bill for almost three hours with Rep. Jessica González, D-Dallas, saying “it is harmful, it is dangerous, and it is really freaking insulting.”
If this bill becomes law, more than 120,000 trans Texans would be forced to be defined in state records by the sex they were assigned at birth, rather than the gender they identify as, even if they’ve already legally changed their birth certificates and driver’s licenses.
Saturday’s debate rehashed a deep fracture over sex and gender that has animated the Texas Legislature, and much of the country, for the last five sessions. In previous years, legislators focused on tangible questions of bathroom access, youth sports and gender-affirming care for minors.
This year, the proposals that have gained the most traction reflect a more fundamental question: what is a woman?
For conservative lawmakers, the answer is simple, and best defined by reproductive organs. For trans people and their allies, the answer is simple, and best left to an individual’s assertion of their gender identity.
Only one of those groups controls the Texas Capitol.
“We’re a state that believes in truth, and we’re a state that honors the hard-won achievements of women, the women who fought for the right to vote, to compete in sports and to be safe in public spaces, to be treated equally under the law,” Troxclair said on the floor. “But if we can no longer define what a woman is, we cannot defend what women have won. We cannot protect what we cannot define.”
In the bill, a woman is defined as “an individual whose biological reproductive system is developed to produce ova,” and a man is “an individual whose biological reproductive system is developed to fertilize the ova of a female.” Democrats criticized this as overly simplistic, excluding trans people, but also intersex people and those who can’t conceive children.
“Any biologist knows there are variations in sex chromosomes, hormone levels and other traits … where an individual’s biological characteristics don’t align with typical male or female categorization,” said Rep. Jon Rosenthal, a Democrat from Houston. “The real question is, do you believe that all people have the basic rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of their own personal happiness?”
This bill aligns with an executive order from Gov. Greg Abbott, who declared in January that Texas only recognizes two sexes, male and female, and a non-binding legal opinion from Attorney General Ken Paxton, who said state agencies should not honor court opinions to change someone’s sex listed on official documents.
At the Capitol rally on Friday, Lambda Legal senior attorney Shelly Skeen said revoking these changed documents, and preventing people from changing them in the future, “affects every aspect of our daily lives.” Having a birth certificate or drivers’ license that reflects a different sex than their physical presentation, or that doesn’t align with their passport or other documents, could leave trans people in a legal limbo and potentially open them up to violence, she said.
It could impact the state facilities, like prisons, they are sorted into, the bathrooms and locker rooms they are supposed to use and the discrimination protections they are entitled to, Skeen said. Unlike other bills, like the so-called “bathroom bill,” this legislation does not have civil or criminal penalties for using a facility that doesn’t align with one’s sex.
Troxclair did accept one amendment, by El Paso Democrat Rep. Mary González, to clarify how intersex people, who are born with both sets of reproductive organs, fit into these definitions.
The chamber also preliminarily approved Senate Bill 1257, which would require health insurers that cover gender-affirming care also cover any adverse consequences and costs of detransitioning. The bill, authored by Sen. Bryan Hughes and sponsored by Rep. Jeff Leach, passed 82-37.
Leach said he brought this bill on behalf of people who were left with tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars of medical bills because their health insurance wouldn’t cover the costs of detransitioning.
“The illustration that I think best describes this is, if you take somebody to the dance and they want to go home, then you have to take them home,” Leach said during the debate on Saturday.
The bill says that any insurance company that covers gender-affirming care must cover all detransition-related costs for its members, even if that person wasn’t on the health insurance plan at the time they transitioned. Democrats filed more than half a dozen amendments to narrow the scope of the bill, critiquing the bill as a health insurance mandate. None of the amendments passed.
Last session, Texas lawmakers outlawed gender-affirming care for minors. Trans advocates worry that raising the cost of covering gender-affirming care will result in health insurers not covering the treatments for adults, either.
“If you can make it painful enough for providers and insurers, health care is gone,” said Emmett Schelling, the executive director of the Transgender Education Network of Texas. “It doesn’t just feed into gender-affirming care. It bleeds into health care that we all need, that we all deserve.”
Speaking on the floor Saturday, Rep. Ann Johnson, a Houston Democrat, said the Legislature was telling insurance companies not to cover gender-affirming care.
“The reality is this bill, however you couch it, is about eliminating the existence of trans individuals in Texas,” Johnson said. “Stop pretending that you’re for freedom. Stop pretending that this is about the kids.”
First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!
This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/05/10/texas-house-trans-bills-advance/.
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 Texas House OKs excluding trans people from state records 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-Left
The article presents a clear stance on the controversy surrounding the Texas House’s passage of House Bill 229, which defines gender based on reproductive organs and challenges transgender identity recognition. The tone is sympathetic to the transgender community, emphasizing the harm the bill could cause and quoting opponents who argue it could erase transgender individuals’ rights and protections. At the same time, the article provides a fair representation of the bill’s supporters, though it leans towards highlighting the negative impact on trans people and allies. This framing, along with its focus on the personal stories of those affected, suggests a Center-Left political bias, favoring inclusivity and transgender rights.
News from the South - Texas News Feed
Protesters oppose land ownership bill
SUMMARY: The Texas House approved Senate Bill 17, which restricts land ownership in Texas for residents or entities from countries labeled as national security threats, including China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia. Advocates say the bill protects Texas land and resources from hostile foreign nations. However, protesters, including members of the Texas Asian American Association, argue it targets the Chinese and other minority communities, potentially enabling racial discrimination. They fear it could harm the Texas economy by discouraging contributions from affected groups. Protesters continue to fight the bill as it awaits final Senate approval and the governor’s decision.

Protestors took to the streets in Austin on Saturday to oppose a bill that would restrict who can own land in the state.
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