Austin, TX
Free KidsFish Lubbock Event This Weekend Moves to a New Location
This 12 months, the annual KidsFish Lubbock occasion can be held at Mackenzie Park as a substitute of Maxey Park.
You’ll be able to take the kiddos out to fish this Saturday, April twenty third, 2022, from 7 a.m. till 1 p.m. There are not any fishing licenses required for the occasion, and poles, bait and lunch with be offered for free of charge.
Mackenzie Lake was stocked with channel catfish, weighing between 2 and 5 kilos, so that you’re certain to snag your self a great one. The perfect half? You do not even should mess with these previous fishing poles in your storage which can be all twisted up collectively. The poles can be there for you, arrange and able to go.
You may get tickets right here, and it is fully free. The registration is simply in order that they’ll understand how many individuals to anticipate this Saturday in order that they’ll put together all the freebies accordingly.
Seize the youngsters and take them out for a beautiful day of fishing in Lubbock. If you happen to occur to go along with your loved ones and catch your self a whopper, we might like to see it. Touch upon our Fb web page or ship us an app message with a photograph of your baby and their catch. If we get sufficient submissions, we’ll throw collectively a little bit gallery of all the enjoyable.
Mackenzie Park is positioned at 301 Interstate 27. We hope you have got a implausible time fishing with your loved ones this weekend, and we want you luck and the most important catch of all of them.
20 Putting Photographs From Throughout Texas Throughout Winter Storm Uri
Texas was hit laborious by Winter Storm Uri, a polar vortex which led to tens of millions being with out energy for days in fixed freezing temperatures. These photographs present the nice, the dangerous and ugly of the disaster.
Remnants of the 1970 Lubbock Twister
Austin, TX
State Representative Pat Curry files first bill in Austin, & it relates to abortion
AUSTIN, Texas (KXXV) — Texas lawmakers have filed a record-breaking 1,500 bills for the 2025 legislative session.
25 News’ Lauren Adams spoke to Representative Pat Curry about one bill he’s already filed that has to do with abortion.
Newly elected State Representative Pat Curry has already filed a proposed law that has to do with prohibiting mifepristone from being used to end pregnancies.
Mifepristone is used in combination with another drug to terminate pregnancies less than 70 days in duration by blocking the effects of progesterone, a hormone needed for a pregnancy to continue.
“We don’t want it used as birth control, so I have a bill for that,” Curry said.
He introduced House Bill 1339 which would designate mifepristone a schedule IV controlled substance with penalties for possession without a prescription.
“Now a child can get it. We don’t want children to get it. Number two we want to make sure the people who do get it get it through a doctor for the right usage,” Curry said.
Some physicians oppose limiting Mifepristone and it’s partner drug Misoprostol, fearing it could slow down administering it to women hemorrhaging during miscarriage, child birth or postpartum.
25 News was there Monday as Pat Curry was sworn as the newest state representative.
He vowed to represent McLennan County’s “conservative values” in Austin, and he says this abortion-related bill is reflective of that promise.
“I will carry the conservative values to this town and make sure we vote conservatively,” Curry said.
The state of Louisiana classified the drug Mifepristone as a controlled substance last legislative session.
More stories from Lauren Adams
Austin, TX
These 15 Houston K-8 schools rank among Texas' best for 2025
Several Houston elementary and middle schools are at the top of the class when it comes to educating and preparing the next generation for a successful life and career, according to U.S. News & World Report’s just-released list of 2025 Elementary and Middle Schools Rankings.
One such school – T.H. Rogers School in Houston ISD – is the No. 8 best middle school in Texas for 2025.
U.S. News ranked over 79,000 public schools on the state and district level using data from the U.S. Department of Education. Schools were analyzed based on their students’ proficiencies in mathematics and reading/language arts on state assessments, and tie-breakers were decided based on student-teacher ratios.
Texas’ best middle schools for 2025
Three Houston middle schools achieved spots among the top 10 best Texas middle schools for 2025, according to U.S. News.
T.H. Rogers School has a total enrollment of 1,063 students, with 87 percent of the student population scoring “at or above the proficient level” in mathematics, and 90 percent proficiency in reading. The school has a student-teacher ratio of 17:1, with 62 full-time teachers.
T.H. Rogers School also topped the district-wide list as the No. 1 best middle school in HISD.
Houston Gateway Academy – Coral Campus also ranked among the statewide top 10, coming in at No. 9 with a total enrollment of 914 students. U.S. News says 82 percent of HGA students are proficient in math, and 80 percent are proficient in reading.
“Houston Gateway Academy – Coral Campus did better in math and better in reading in this metric compared with students across the state,” U.S. News said in the school’s profile. “In Texas, 51 percent of students tested at or above the proficient level for reading, and 41 percent tested at or above that level for math.”
Right behind HGA to round out the top 10 best Texas middle schools is Houston ISD’s Briarmeadow Charter School. This middle school has 600 students, 69 percent of which are proficient in math and 74 percent are proficient reading.
Briarmeadow’s student-teacher ratio is 16:1, which is better than the district-wide student-teacher ratio, and it employs 38 full-time teachers.
U.S. News also ranked Briarmeadow as the second best middle school in Houston ISD.
Six additional Houston-area schools ranked among the top 25 best middle schools in Texas, including:
- No. 18 – Cornerstone Academy, Spring Branch ISD
- No. 19 – Mandarin Immersion Magnet School, Houston ISD
- No. 21 – Smith Middle School, Cypress-Fairbanks ISD
- No. 22 – Seven Lakes Junior High, Katy ISD
- No. 23 – Houston Gateway Academy
- No. 25 – Beckendorff Junior High, Katy ISD
The best elementary schools in Texas
Jesus A. Kawas Elementary school in Laredo was crowned the No. 1 elementary school in Texas for 2025, while two Houston-area schools made it into the top 10.
Tomball ISD’s Creekside Forest Elementary in The Woodlands is the No. 7 best elementary school statewide, boasting 656 students, 42 full-time teachers, and one full-time counselor. Students at this school, which U.S. News designates is situated in a “fringe rural setting,” scored 90 percent efficiency in math and 94 percent efficiency in reading.
Following one spot behind Creekside Forest in the statewide ranking is Sugar Land’s Commonwealth Elementary School in Fort Bend ISD, coming in at No. 8. Commonwealth has a student population of 954 with 55 full-time teachers, and two full-time counselors. The school’s student-teacher ratio is 17:1, and 90 percent of students are proficient in math, and 94 percent in reading.
U.S. News says student success at Commonwealth is significantly higher than the rest of Fort Bend ISD.
Other Houston-area schools that were ranked among the 25 best in Texas are:
- No. 13 – Bess Campbell Elementary, Sugar Land, Lamar CISD
- No. 20 – West University Elementary, Houston ISD
- No. 23 – T.H. Rogers School, Houston ISD
- No. 25 – Griffin Elementary, Katy ISD
“The 2025 Best Elementary and Middle Schools rankings offer parents a way to evaluate how schools are providing a high-quality education and preparing students for future success,” said LaMont Jones, Ed.D., the managing editor for Education at U.S. News. “The data empowers families and communities to advocate for their children’s education. Research continues to indicate that how students perform academically at these early grade levels is a big factor in their success in high school and beyond.”
Austin, TX
Nuclear energy plan aims to improve Texas grid
AUSTIN, Texas — Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) on Monday released a nuclear energy plan aimed at strengthening the state’s power grid.
The plan is laid out in the Texas Advanced Nuclear Reactor Working Group Report, which Abbott directed PUCT to create last year. The report outlines the use and benefits of advanced nuclear reactors (ANRs) in Texas.
The report lists five main benefits of nuclear power in the state:
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Enhancing energy security by providing power for urban centers, ports, oil and gas regions, industrial facilities, data centers and military bases
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Improving grid reliability through nuclear power, as opposed to coal, wind and solar power
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Economic development and industry opportunities by adding jobs in the state
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First-in-nation advantages by being “the first state with an efficient ANR strategy”
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Global market potential by establishing the state as the preferred supplier for U.S.-based ANR technology
Abbott said that the nuclear energy plan would also provide more affordable power to Texans.
“Texas is the energy capital of the world, and we are ready to be No. 1 in advanced nuclear power,” Abbott said. “…I thank Public Utility Commissioner Jimmy Glotfelty and the members of the Texas Advanced Nuclear Reactor Working Group for working tirelessly to put Texas on the path to be the global leader in advanced nuclear power. As we build an advanced nuclear industry in our great state, we will ensure Texas remains a leader in energy and strengthen the Texas grid to meet the demands of our growing state.”
According to the report, these Texas regions would be likely candidates for ANR development:
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Coastal: Galveston, Port of Corpus Christi Authority, Beaumont, Houston Ship Channel
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Rio Grande Valley: Port of Brownsville
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Inland: Victoria, government/university lands, industrial complexes, the Houston area, the Permian Basin, non-ERCOT areas, Central Texas, the Metroplex
It also recommends creating a Texas Advanced Nuclear Energy Authority at an existing state agency to “to identify and study obstacles and opportunities and provide recommendations to future Legislatures to ensure Texas is the global leader in advance nuclear energy and technologies.”
Population growth in Texas continues to put immense strain on the state power grid, which has lead to historic blackouts during severe weather. Most notably, the major power crisis in February 2021 caused by the grid’s failure left over 4.5 million homes and businesses without power. Approximately 246 people died, most of them from hypothermia.
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