Austin, TX
Are public universities doing enough to comply with Texas’ DEI ban? Lawmakers will decide | Houston Public Media
Michael Minasi/KUT
Texas lawmakers got an update Tuesday on the steps higher education leaders are taking to implement a state law that bans diversity, equity and inclusion offices at public universities and colleges. The Republican-backed Senate Bill 17 took effect in January.
The Texas Senate Subcommittee on Higher Education also heard testimony on free speech and concerns about antisemitism on college campuses.
“The topics we’re covering today are timely and get to the fundamentals of what we expect from our higher education institutions,” Committee Chair Brandon Creighton said.
The panel’s meeting comes less than two months after Creighton (R-Conroe) asked chancellors of seven public university systems, including the University of Texas System, to provide information about their efforts to dismantle DEI programs to comply with the law he authored.
“While I am encouraged with the progress I have seen from many institutions of higher education in implementing SB 17, I am deeply concerned with the possibility that many institutions may choose to merely rename their offices or employees titles,” he wrote in his March 26 letter. “This letter should serve as notice that this practice is unacceptable.”
A week after the letter went out, UT Austin President Jay Hartzell announced additional changes at the flagship institution, which had already taken steps to comply with SB 17. The changes included closing the Division of Campus and Community Engagement and laying off about 50 people who had previously worked on DEI initiatives. Groups such as the American Association of University Professors at UT Austin called the latter move unnecessary.
Hartzell told the UT Faculty Council in April that he believed UT Austin was in compliance with the law when it took effect but that others disagreed.
“There are those who are spending their days looking for cases where they think we’re not complying, and we’ve addressed those as they’ve come about,” he said.
Ahead of Tuesday’s hearing, a group of UT Austin students, faculty and staff who oppose SB 17 marched from the UT Tower to the Capitol to speak out against the law and how it has affected campus.
UT Austin student Maggie DiSanza said she marched in solidarity with faculty at Texas’ public universities who have been “unjustly fired because of overcompliance with SB 17.”
“One of the biggest reasons that we’re here today is because SB 17 was written in such a vague way that compliance looks very different from campus to campus,” said DiSanza, a member of the progressive youth civic group Texas Rising. “At UT, we’ve seen an all-out purge of DEI programs.”
Laysha Gonzalez, a third-year UT student, said the march felt like the right place to be.
“I’m first generation Mexican American. I’m the first in my family — and I mean I have a 94-year-old grandmother — and I’m the first in my family to attend a university in the U.S.,” she said. “I get emotional just thinking about it.”
Gonzalez said the law feels like an attack on students like herself.
She added DEI programs benefit all students, and she is concerned about future classes who will not have access to the same resources and opportunities she did.
“We all really need to wake up and really think about the future. You really have to realize and remember what being a Texan means and that means Texans that look all different ways,” she said. “If we want to change the world, it has to be with people that are representative of each person in the world.”
In addition to university compliance with SB 17, the higher education subcommittee also heard testimony on free speech and antisemitism on college campuses.
Gov. Greg Abbott and other Republican lawmakers have repeatedly criticized pro-Palestinian protests as antisemitic and praised UT Austin’s hardline response to demonstrations, which included calling in state troopers. Police arrested nearly 140 people during protests on campus. Law enforcement has also arrested pro-Palestinian demonstrators at UT Dallas and the University of Houston.
In contrast, some UT Austin students have said the university has not responded adequately to concerns about Islamophobia and discrimination against Palestinian and Arab students. Last month, for example, a Muslim UT Austin student was attacked by three men yelling Islamophobic phrases.
In response to that incident, the university said in a statement it was “committed to the safety and well-being of every member of our University community and has no tolerance for violence or other hateful actions against any of our community members, including those in our Muslim, Palestinian, and Arab communities.”
Compliance with DEI ban
Creighton said before SB 17 took effect in Texas, DEI programs on college campuses had grown “out of control, replacing merit with equity for some.”
“In the past, these groups got what they wanted by shouting loud enough, leading universities to allocate tens of millions of dollars, reshaping hiring and promotions, and establishing hundreds of committees and DEI offices to please them,” he said.
Creighton said Texas can come up with other ways to increase the number of students from underrepresented groups who attend college.
“No amount of DEI trainings that are mandatory, workshops or political oaths that have to be signed in order to apply for a job will open up opportunities for underserved students in Texas,” he said.
State Sen. Royce West (D-Dallas) pushed back, saying he thinks DEI opponents have taken too narrow a view of who it benefits.
“To frame DEI just based on race alone, I think is wrong,” he said. “It not only deals with issues of race and gender but geographic location, veteran status, disability status, etc.”
West said it is going to be vital to understand how SB 17 impacts student success on college campuses, and he hopes it’s not “disastrous.”
The law does require public universities and colleges to work with the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to produce a biennial study on the impact of implementing the measure. The institutions will be tracking application, acceptance, retention and graduation rates, for example, and the data must be broken down by race, ethnicity and sex.
University of Texas System Chancellor J.B. Milliken told senators about the changes the institution has made to comply with the law so far.
“I believe our board, our system administrative leadership and our presidents and their administrative teams have undertaken the significant work of executing many changes in a very large operation in good faith and successfully,” he said.
Milliken said the UT System has closed 21 DEI offices at its institutions, eliminated 311 full-time and part-time positions that previously focused on DEI and cancelled 681 contracts, programs and trainings. As a result of these changes, he said, the UT System estimates more than $25 million will be saved or reallocated to “other university mission-related purposes.”
Milliken said although DEI programs have been dismantled, UT System institutions are still committed to serving all students.
“Our priorities continue to be focused on expanding access, on increasing affordability and in putting in place the resources that all of our students need, not only to graduate, but to launch strong careers aligned with in-demand jobs and good earning opportunities,” he said.
West asked Milliken whether DEI programs had helped increase graduation rates for underrepresented student groups.
“I think you would be the first to tell me that the programs we had in place had not been adequately doing what we hoped they would do in terms of increasing enrollments and increasing graduation rates,” Milliken said.
But when West pressed him on whether there was at least some increase in graduation rates because of DEI programs, Milliken said he wasn’t sure any increases were a result of the programs.
Other university leaders, including the heads of the Texas A&M University System and University of Houston System, also testified.
During public testimony, opponents of SB 17 told senators about the negative impact of the law and its unintended consequences.
Patricia Lim/KUT
Andrea Gore, a professor in the UT College of Pharmacy, said the DEI ban is going to impact the university’s ability to get research dollars.
“Here’s why SB 17 needs to be amended: First, research proposals to biomedical funding agencies require a diversity statement,” said Gore, who has brought $17 million in grants to UT Austin. “There is simply no way of getting around these federal requirements.”
Dallas City Council member Adam Bazaldua testified that SB 17 is going to hurt efforts to develop a diverse, well-rounded workforce.
“Legislation like SB 17 and banning of DEI policies at higher education [institutions] will create a climate that is hostile and unwelcoming,” he said. “It is detrimental to our economic growth.”
Alicia Moreno, who lost her job at UT Austin because of efforts to comply with SB 17, echoed that concern. She said shuttering programs and pulling funding from student organizations has had major consequences.
“This bill has caused our students to feel unwanted and unsupported,” she said, “and it has taken away…programs and necessary critical services.”
Moreno also said UT Austin has discontinued initiatives that did not run afoul of SB 17, such as the Monarch program, which supported undocumented students.
“It was claimed by UT Legal that we did race-based programming, which is completely false,” she said. “UT Legal told me they made their decision by only looking at our Instagram page.”
Moreno said that raises concerns about how the university determined which programs did not comply with SB 17.
“I ask that you all provide further clarification on what it really is that you need to be compliant with SB 17 and to hold institutions accountable from this overreach of this bill,” she said.
Free speech, antisemitism and pro-Palestinian protests
While the bulk of invited testimony focused on compliance with SB 17, the first hour of the hearing was devoted to a discussion about free speech and antisemitism on college campuses.
Creighton characterized pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses across the U.S. as antisemitic. He praised UT System and UT Austin leaders for their response to the demonstrations.
“I respect everyone’s right to protest on campus when they follow the rules,” he said. “When they incite and encourage danger and/or harm to others, Texas students and all Texans and faculty must be kept safe.”
Senators heard invited testimony from several people, including Levi Fox, a member of Longhorn Students for Israel.
He said he and some other Jewish students felt threatened by the protests at UT Austin, adding that a student and professor made antisemitic comments to him.
“Universities everywhere are places for learning, growth and experiences,” he said. “Recently we’ve seen our nation’s most prestigious universities become breeding grounds for hate, misinformation and isolation.”
Fox said he has seen Jewish students remove symbols of their faith because they’re concerned about being targeted.
“I’ve seen firsthand, Jewish students taking off yarmulkes, or hiding their Stars of David that they hang around their neck,” he said.
Courtney Toretto, a policy director with the Anti-Defamation League, was also invited to testify. She said the group has seen an unprecedented spike in antisemitic incidents on college campuses since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel, which killed about 1,200 people. In the months since, Israel’s military has killed more than 35,000 people in Gaza.
“Over the past few weeks, we’ve watched in dismay as campus life at universities, including UT Austin and Dallas, has been upended by protests that have too often devolved into hateful, antisemitic rhetoric,” she said.
But other people who spoke during public testimony pushed back on the idea that pro-Palestinian protests are antisemitic.
Julia Heilrayne said the April 24 protest at UT Austin was meant to be peaceful.
“It was never planned to be, nor did it become the antisemitic event that it has been made out to be,” she said.
Heilrayne, who said she has Jewish ancestry, criticized university leaders’ decision to call in state troopers.
“What happened on campus was a clear violation of their rights as students attending a public university,” she said.
She added state troopers arrested her sister, knocking her to the ground and “aggressively” twisting her arms.
Dr. Aman Odeh, a pediatrician who recently volunteered in Gaza, said lawmakers should not lose sight of why students are protesting.
“When I heard the testimonies this morning there was not a mention of why these students are speaking up,” she said. “I was talking to a nurse [in Gaza] about how she lost her 1-year-old to a blast explosion. She did not get to say goodbye.”
Odeh added protecting the right to free speech is vital.
“By ensuring our institutions of higher learning remain spaces of open dialogue, critical thinking and intellectual diversity, we uphold the very essence of democracy,” she said. “Let us stand together in defense of free speech and ensure that future generations inherit a society where their voices are heard.”
Creighton said in a statement following the hearing that it “will lay the groundwork for important legislation that I will work to advance in the 89th legislative session.”
Austin, TX
Athena the owl: 2nd owlet discovered to be alive
AUSTIN, Texas – It was initially believed that both of Athena the owl’s owlets at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center had died, but officials reported some hopeful news.
What we know:
On April 19, the wildflower center had posted that both of Athena’s owlets had not survived after they had been born on April 9 and April 11.
The first owlet died on April 17 and the second owlet was reported to have died overnight on April 18.
Athena was not seen at the nest and was not spotted in nearby trees.
The wildflower center continued to monitor the nest and on April 20, the second owlet was found to be alive and showing signs of movement.
In coordination with Austin Wildlife Rescue, the owlet was retrieved and is being rehabilitated.
What we don’t know:
Officials say early signs are encouraging and that the owlet is showing strength and appetite.
The exact cause of the death of the first owlet is now known, but the wildflower center says a variety of natural factors can affect survival, including food availability.
The backstory:
Since 2012, a pair of great horned owls have made a specific corner of the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center their home. Like clockwork, the pair return each year to nest above the archway of the courtyard entrance, greeting visitors who pass beneath them.
The female owl, affectionately named Athena, has become a staple of the center.
Athena’s reach extends far beyond the local Austin community. Through a partnership with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the center hosts a 24/7 livestream of the nest, allowing bird-watchers from around the globe to monitor her progress in real-time.
The City of Austin also recently designated Athena the official Owl Ambassador of Austin.
The Source: Information from Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center and previous reporting by FOX 7 Austin.
Austin, TX
America 250 celebration: Texans who fought for independence honored in Austin – Texas – The Black Chronicle
(The Center Square) – As part of Texas’ celebration of the founding of the United States, a new monument was unveiled in Austin commemorating 69 patriots who fought for U.S. independence who later came to Texas.
Texas is also celebrating its first U.S. Navy fleet week in state history in the Houston area, where roughly 1,000 sailors and Marines are participating in nearly 200 events as part of the America 250 celebration. This also includes commemorating the Texas Navy, which helped win Texas’ independence from Mexico 190 years ago this April, The Center Square reported.
Gov. Greg Abbott and the leaders of the Texas Society Sons of the American Revolution unveiled a new monument honoring Texas revolutionary war patriots at the Texas State Cemetery in Austin.
Abbott, a direct descendent of a patriot who supported the cause of American independence, was also inducted into the Sons of the American Revolution and received the Silver Good Citizenship Medal.
“It is appropriate to remember that today, April 18th, 251 years ago, the Battles of Lexington and Concord occurred with the shot heard around the world,” Mel Oller, president of the Texas Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, said.
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On the evening of April 18, Paul Revere rode from Boston to Charlestown warning colonists that British troops were coming. Several hundred Minute Men and colonial militia fought British soldiers the next morning in Concord and Lexington, the first battles of the American Revolutionary War.
The commemoration in Austin was important “to reflect on the courage, sacrifice and enduring principles that gave birth to the United States of America,” Oller said. “This monument stands as a tribute to those patriots and reminder to future generations of the ideas that continue to shape our Republic.”
“Texans played a role in the war too, and it’s important to recognize them, and the sacrifices they made for our freedom,” he said.
“The history that is etched the United States into the annals of the greatest country in the history of the world,” Abbott said. As others try to rewrite American history or “try to condemn the glory of what America has been able to achieve,” Abbott said Texas was focusing on teaching children about U.S. and Texas history. “We must educate every generation about why it is that America grew from just a tenuous 13 colonies into the most powerful country in the history of the world.”
“There could hardly be a better time to dedicate this monument than during our 250th celebration of freedom, of independence,” he said. It’s “an enduring testament to the heroes who fought for that freedom that is unique to America.”
One of the greatest gifts Revolutionary War heroes gave Americans was freedom, Abbott said, “but freedom is not a one-time event. The fight didn’t end with the Treaty of Paris. It’s an everyday process, perpetually. Just as the patriots took to the hillsides to battle the Red Coats, modern day Patriots” continue to fight for freedom, including the failed policies of Marxism, he said. Many Texans’ ancestors “died for a country they would never get to see. Stories of these heroes must be told. Generations of Americans must be reminded of who they are and what they fought for.”
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There are 69 American Revolutionary War heroes listed alphabetically on the monument who later settled in Texas, including native Tejanos who fought for American independence, according to TSSAR.
Listed first is John Abston, who enlisted in the militia in Virginia when he was 18. He fought alongside and under men like John Crockett, father of Davy Crockett, in one of the most pivotal battles of the war: the Battle of Kings Mountain, in South Carolina. He later moved to Collin County, Texas.
Another is José Santiago Seguín, the grandfather of Texas Revolutionary hero Juan Seguín, the first and only Tejano to be elected to the Republic of Texas Senate. He also fought with Sam Houston in the Battle of San Jacinto.
Another is Peter Sides, who fought with a North Carolina regiment against the British. He later joined the Gutierrez-Magee expedition in 1812 and was killed in 1813 at the Battle of Medina in what is now Bexar County. The battle is “known as the bloodiest battle on Texas soil. The rebels’ bodies were desecrated and their body parts were removed and scattered,” the TSSAR explains.
Another is William Sparks, who joined a North Carolina militia when he was 17. He and his family later moved to Nacagdoches, Texas; his sons and grandsons fought for Texas independence.
Listed at the bottom of the monument is Ira Hobart Evans, a Congressional Medal of Honor recipient and the youngest Speaker of the Texas House who founded the Texas Society of the Sons of American Revolution.
Austin, TX
How Texas’ road, bridge conditions compare to other states
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Texas’ highway system dropped two spots since 2025, and now ranks at No. 27 in the country for its cost-effectiveness and overall conditions, according to the Reason Foundation’s 2026 Highway Report.
The report assessed pavement conditions, fatalities, deficient bridges, infrastructure costs and congestion levels across the United States. Texas earned the following rankings:
- 33rd in urban interstate pavement conditions
- 21st in rural interstate pavement conditions
- 39th in urban arterial pavement conditions
- 12th in rural arterial pavement conditions
- 3rd in structurally deficient bridges
- 26th in urban fatality rate
- 42nd in rural fatality rate
- 41st in traffic congestion
“More than 42,000 of the nation’s 618,923 highway bridges, nearly 7%, are still structurally deficient. Arizona, Nevada, and Texas reported the lowest percentages of deficient bridges,” the report said.
The full report can be found online.
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