Keep pets cool in Texas heatwave
Veteran reporter provides pet owners with expert advice on canine heatstroke prevention and management.
Veteran reporter provides pet owners with expert advice on canine heatstroke prevention and management.
Cops Want Snitches After Shooting Kills One, Injures Seven.
Atlanta's tech scene has boomed over the last decade, earning it the nickname "Silicon Valley of the South."
Before Austin Answered, there was Austin Untold Stories -- uncovering history hidden in plain sight.
Two years post-Roe, former abortion clinics fight to stay open.
Casar takes on corporate heat: demands immediate OSHA water-breaks rule action.
Bipartisan border security policies are possible, but Congress must act and reject executive overreach. Security and compassion are not mutually exclusive.
The Holly Power Plant no longer divides Butler Trail. Reclaimed parkland now unites East Austin.
The NHTSA has ordered the recall of over one million vehicles from Chrysler, Toyota, and PACCAR trucks.
New England tornado warnings. No padding.
Foolio, a Florida-based rapper, was killed on Sunday during a shooting that also hospitalized three others. He was 26.
Heat dome poised to broil the region this week, 90s forecast with no rain in sight, according to the National Weather Service.
Cops rolled into the Short North around 2:28 a.m. Saturday, responding to a shooting.
The Texas Lottery urges you to check your tickets. Don't let the house win and avoid the government's money grub.
News from the Lone Star State: Texas: Your daily lottery draw results at a glance.
Granite slab at Texas Capitol: A forgotten symbol of morality?
Brands often equate Pride with rainbow logos and superficial gestures, but true allyship means advocating for LGBTQIA+ rights and actively supporting the community year-round. It's time for companies to back up their rainbow rhetoric with real action and help the queer community fight for the basic rights they deserve.
McCaul carries Texas gravitas to Taiwan and India in bid to assert US influence.
Texas Constitution doesn't decide presidential eligibility—that's decided by the US Constitution.