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Dallas, TX
Fair Park gets green light for community park in South Dallas in Dallas City Council vote
Dallas City Council greenlit Fair Park’s long-awaited community park on Wednesday, delighting South Dallas community leaders and giving an embattled nonprofit permission to build the multimillion-dollar project.
“I just can’t thank you all enough for unifying, for fighting, for advocating, for not accepting ‘No,’” said council member Adam Bazaldua, who represents Fair Park’s district, to neighborhood leaders.
The nonprofit Fair Park First has been awaiting a development agreement from the city as millions in grant funding neared a March deadline. The group has already raised more than $30 million for the park. Over the past several months, city and community leaders have been evaluating whether the nonprofit was ready to deliver the 10-acre park at the city-owned fairgrounds.
Dallas City Council member Adam Bazaldua applauds after a council decision to give Fair Park First permission to build a park during a hearing on Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Dallas. Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer
On Wednesday, council members voted unanimously in favor of a contract, even though some have expressed concerns. The nonprofit has faced scrutiny since 2024, after nearly $6 million in misspent donor funds were disclosed. Last year, the city cut ties with the nonprofit and Oak View Group, Fair Park’s venue manager. The community project’s future was left undecided.
Fair Park project faces urgency
The city’s Park Board president assembled a task force in December to review Fair Park First’s readiness. In January, the City Council took oversight of the contract consideration from the Park Board as tensions grew over delays in the process. South Dallas leaders urged progress.
“Our community does not need another committee or more delays,” said Diane Ragsdale, a former council member and South Dallas advocate. “We need action. We deserve equitable public investment, strong health protections and a high quality of life for each resident. To abandon this project now would represent yet another clear breach of public trust.”
Ragsdale said the park was thoughtfully planned by people in South Dallas, noting numerous meetings. The park is part of a decadeslong effort to repair damage after the city razed homes to build parking lots at Fair Park, and would replace parking spaces at the fairgrounds, serving nearby neighborhoods.
Bazaldua said Black residents experienced displacement “at the hands of the very institution meant to protect them.”
“There were homes there. There were front porches. There were neighbors who knew each other’s names,” Bazaldua said at a news conference after the vote.

Alyssa Siffermann, interim executive director of Fair Park First, looks at a presentation printout with Jason Brown, the board chair, before a meeting at City Hall on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in Dallas.
Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer
The park will offer restoration, Bazaldua said, a vibrant space for people who “have waited far too long for equitable investment.” The park, planned near Exposition and South Fitzhugh avenues, is expected to include a host of amenities, with an estimated projected cost of just over $40 million.
The new contract is expected to come with a number of guardrails and the city would own improvements made at the fairgrounds. With the agreement, Fair Park first would:
- Be held to a set of deadlines
- Be responsible for all permits
- Give briefings to City Council
- Allow a city audit
- Allow for a city-appointed, nonvoting board member for financial oversight
City oversight
At Wednesday’s City Council meeting, council member Cara Mendelsohn asked deputy park director Ryan O’Connor about an audit of the funding. He said the city had received a preliminary audit, as a draft, which the department planned to share with the council in the coming months.
Mendelsohn said she was hesitant to support the project without the audit findings, but she would be in favor because of the park’s importance.
“I don’t think there’s anybody on this council that doesn’t want the park to happen, including me,” Mendelsohn said. “I’m concerned about the timing and that we really should be waiting for this forensic audit.”
Bazaldua said Fair Park First has undergone several audits. City leaders have also questioned Fair Park First’s ability to meet its goals.
“I don’t think you’re gonna hit your timeline,” Mendelsohn said. “I think it’s overly aggressive, probably unnecessarily overly aggressive.”
Jason Brown, Fair Park First’s board chair, said more context is needed around the project and its progress, which has completed its design and development phase.
“We didn’t just start working on this six months ago,” he said.
‘Stronger sense of connection’
City Manager Kimberly Bizor Tolbert thanked the council and community leaders in a statement, adding that the park will transform underused space into a vibrant, welcoming destination for South Dallas.
“The investment will honor the historic Fair Park neighborhoods while delivering new green space to play and gather, and a stronger sense of connection for the residents who have advocated for this project for so many years,” she said.
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South Dallas community leaders rejoiced after the vote. Some had questioned the city’s attention to the park, pointing to other projects across the city, including Halperin Park, a deck park in southern Dallas that is nearing completion.
The new agreement represents trust and the city honoring commitments to people who live near Fair Park, welcoming visitors and hosting major events, said Norma Shaw with theFair Park Estates Neighborhood Association.
Too often, she said, Fair Park’s benefits have not flowed back into nearby neighborhoods. “For decades, our community has supported Fair Park as a regional and national destination,” Shaw said. “A community park is not a luxury. It is a basic infrastructure. It is a safe place for children to play, for seniors to walk, for families to gather and for neighbors to build relationships.”
What’s next
Fair Park First leaders are taking aim at a groundbreaking as early as August, with a goal of completion in late 2027. The nonprofit has about a $7.5 million funding gap to close within six months of the agreement to reach its goal of about $40.7 million.
Brown said the agreement gives the nonprofit more authority to fundraise for the project and he was grateful city leaders were able to work toward a common goal and come up with a solution to the delay.
“It gives us confidence to know that we can start making these expenses, start paying things to move the project further along,” Brown said.
This reporting is part of the Future of North Texas, a community-funded journalism initiative supported by the Commit Partnership, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, the Dallas Mavericks, the Dallas Regional Chamber, Deedie Rose, Lisa and Charles Siegel, the McCune-Losinger Family Fund, The Meadows Foundation, the Perot Foundation, the United Way of Metropolitan Dallas and the University of Texas at Dallas. The News retains full editorial control of this coverage.
Dallas, TX
Former Dallas ISD Superintendent Michael Hinojosa runs for Dallas Mayor
DALLAS – Former Dallas ISD Superintendent Michael Hinojosa announced that he is running for Mayor of Dallas on Monday.
Hinojosa says the city needs experienced leadership to address the budget challenges and pro sports teams leaving Downtown Dallas.
Addressing Dallas’ budget and pro sports team
Local perspective:
Michael Hinojosa served two stints as superintendent of Dallas ISD, totaling 13 years. He told FOX 4 that he officially filed paperwork to enter the race and plans to formally launch his campaign at a Tuesday morning news conference at Dallas City Hall.
Hinojosa points to financial track record at Dallas ISD
What they’re saying:
Hinojosa cited his tenure leading Dallas ISD as evidence of his financial management experience, saying the district’s reserves grew from about $32 million when he took over in 2005 to nearly $1 billion in obligated and unobligated fund balances by the time he left.
“I think that it’s really important for this community to know that we’re at an inflection point and that the city and the community need a strong, proven leader,” Hinojosa said.
He pointed to the city’s budget shortfall, employee furloughs and concerns over major sports franchises potentially leaving downtown as examples of challenges facing Dallas.
He said solving the city’s challenges would require coalition-building and pledged to focus on issues important to residents, taxpayers and businesses.
“I believe that a vision is a dream with a deadline,” Hinojosa said, adding that if elected he would aim to address the city’s biggest challenges within two terms.
Campaign announcement at Dallas City Hall
What’s next:
Hinojosa said he will outline his priorities during a 10 a.m. campaign announcement on Tuesday, July 14, at Dallas City Hall.
The Source: Information in this article was provided by an interview conducted by FOX 4’s Shaun Rabb.
Dallas, TX
Viral East Dallas coffee shop fears major sales drop amid six-week road closure
Construction plans disrupt business in East Dallas. Just a few days ago, the owners of Juju’s Coffee off La Vista Drive in Dallas were informed by Oncor that the street on which their shop is located will be closed.
One of the owners, Nick Rocha, said the closure will last six weeks, but if there are any delays, it could be extended until October.
The coffee shop, which opened in 2023, has recently gained a lot of popularity. One of their drinks, called the “do-si-dos,” has gone viral, and now they have lines out the door on a regular basis.
“It’s a peanut butter milk latte… We probably doubled our sales or more if I had to be honest,” said Rocha.
Since the drink’s release in April, the flow of customers has been nonstop.
“We were like, ‘We’ll go viral and then we’ll die out.’ Then we’re like, ‘Well, when is it going to be over, because we’re just getting slammed?’ We were both doing like 60- to 70-hour weeks… And it just kept going, and it turned from like, ‘Okay, we’re scared of it,’ to, ‘Okay, we can do this,’” said Rojas.
Rojas says that just as they were adjusting to the new normal, the notice from Oncor came.
“They were just like, ‘Yeah, so we’re going to close the street, sorry.’ That was tough… because we’re in the middle of dreaming and vision casting for what’s coming and what’s next,” said Rojas.
Starting July 20, La Vista Drive will be closed, sidewalk accessibility will be difficult, and street visibility will be too. Rojas believes the impact could drop their sales by about 50%. He says they’ve had meetings with the city and Oncor, but says there’s nothing they can do, and now their only plea is to their customers.
“Anybody that comes in and supports, it’s a genuine gratitude from us,” said Rojas.
Dallas, TX
3 unanswered questions before training camp: Dallas Cowboys edition
For the Dallas Cowboys and their owner, Jerry Jones, the hope is always that the changes made will improve the product on the field. Every team heading into training camp will have questions to answer, and the Dallas Cowboys are first on our list with 3 of the biggest ones. This will be an ongoing series for the next couple of weeks until camp starts, and answers start to reveal themselves in real time.
Another season of change for the Dallas Cowboys. Will it make a difference this time around to end the drought? Jerry Jones sure hopes so. Dallas hasn’t had a title in 30 years, and Jerry Jones promised to look in the mirror and make much-needed dramatic changes. The 34-year-old Christian Parker, who has no defensive coordinator experience, must embody the change upfront. Veterans were added, and Dak Prescott is back and healthy, running a new scheme. We shall see.
I wouldn’t worry about whether CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens can coexist long-term. I’m more concerned about whether you can keep them happy with the culture and get them to commit long-term. They declined to negotiate with Pickens and instead slapped him with the franchise tag. If Dak Prescott continues to spread the ball around, he should be able to keep them happy, but it comes at a cost: winning in the playoffs or a Super Bowl title.
Tight end Jake Ferguson’s role could diminish during the upcoming season. Even after signing a four-year, $52 million extension, former undrafted free agent Brevyn Spann-Ford is a better blocker and could have a major impact on the Cowboys’ offense in 2026.
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