After days of walkouts on public school campuses across Texas, two state Republican leaders set their sights on a familiar target to rein in the student-led fight against immigration enforcement.
Austin, TX
ICE protests spread across Texas — so why single out Austin ISD?
McCallum High School students walk out of class in protest of ICE in Austin Friday, Jan. 30, 2026.
They took aim at the Austin Independent School District.
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In back-to-back announcements, Gov. Greg Abbott ordered the Texas Education Agency to investigate Austin ISD’s role in student protests at more than a dozen campuses. He demanded no such inquiry of any other district where students protested.
Three days later, Attorney General Ken Paxton demanded Austin ISD provide information on attendance, absences, security policies and communications between district staff about the walkouts, accusing the district of facilitating the walkouts. Just like Abbott, Paxton only selected the Austin district for his inquiry.
Neither official answered any questions from the American-Statesman about why they singled out Austin ISD for investigation, nor have they provided any specific insight on what wrongdoing they suspected occurred. The officials also did not address whether they believe the district’s practices concerning protests are out of step with others.
The outsized attention on Austin ISD’s handling of the protests is the latest example in recent months of Abbott, Paxton and other state conservatives singling out the urban district in a progressive city.
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In May, Paxton sued the district over its alleged use of critical race theory in classrooms, but he later dropped the case after officials confirmed they are following state law. A state board of education member in March condemned Austin ISD’s annual celebration of Pride Week, which the district had already scaled back as lawmakers sought to ban pride-related clubs on campuses. In their crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, conservative lawmakers routinely lambasted the district for its stated values.

Crockett High School students participate in a school walkout in Austin on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026, as part of a nationwide protest against the actions of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Hundreds of students participated in the walkout, which was one of many similar student demonstrations held at other Austin-area schools.
While Austin ISD isn’t the only district that state leaders have scrutinized over alleged violations of conservative policies, the latest probes underscore the belief among many advocates and parents that Republicans frequently use the district “as a punching bag,” said Cuitlahuac Guerra-Mojarro, a district parent.
“Austin ISD seems to be a target of the governor and attorney general for political exploitation,” said Guerra-Mojarro, who is also co-host of the Education X podcast, which examines issues confronting the district. “The headline isn’t as sexy if they investigate Pflugerville ISD. Austin, being the capital of the state, makes it a really easy target.”
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Texas education attorney Martin Cirkiel, who has represented students and families on both sides of the political aisle, said: “Why is Austin being singled out? It is obvious. It is political.”
Some district parents and advocates also fear it is the latest effort to build a case toward a state takeover of the district.
Austin ISD Trustee Kevin Foster said repeated inquiries, lawsuits and investigations have ramifications that ripple throughout the system.
“Each time an outside agency or an outside organization tells us to respond, they compel us to spend resources,” he said.
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Austin ISD faces a $65 million deficit, and any unexpected cost adds to that tally, which has happened several times in the past few years. Foster acknowledged state efforts to hold the district accountable have at times been justified, including in 2023 when TEA investigated chronic failings in the district’s special education department.
But he said there is a difference between the state’s reasonable scope of powers and when the district appears to be “singled out.”
Protests from San Antonio to Houston

Crockett High School students walk out of school in Austin on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026, as part of a nationwide protest against the actions of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Hundreds of students participated in the walkout, which was one of many student demonstrations held at other Austin-area schools.
In the past 10 days, protests like the ones at Austin schools erupted across the state — from San Antonio to Houston.
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Thousands of students carried signs, waved flags and — in Austin — marched to the Texas Capitol to voice outrage over the presence and tactics of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Protests began after the killings of Alex Pretti, Renee Good, Silverio Villegas González and Keith Porter Jr., all civilians who died during encounters with federal agents.
Students also protested at campuses in Manor, Pflugerville, Leander and Hays school districts. Most demonstrations occurred without incident. Two protests outside of Austin ISD gained attention online — a fight at a protest in Buda resulted in police on Tuesday charging a 45-year-old Kyle man with two counts of assault against student protesters from Johnson High School. Police deemed him the “primary aggressor.”
Abbott also took notice of Kyle police’s arrest of two minors during student walkouts. Police later clarified the arrests were not related to the protests. One minor was charged with possession of alcohol by a minor, among other things, and the other was charged with resisting arrest and interfering with public duties.
Online, Abbott insisted that “it’s about time students like this were arrested.”
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“We are also looking into stripping the funding of schools that abandon their duty to teach our kids the curriculum required by law,” he said in a social media post about the incident.
Largely, recent student protests against ICE have been peaceful.
Over the past half-century, federal law gave special consideration to students’ ability to demonstrate.
A 1969 U.S. Supreme Court case solidified grade-school students’ right to protest during the school day — unless demonstrators disrupt learning.
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“Basically, the thing is, as long as they’re not disrupting school, the school board can’t thwart the First Amendment rights to protest,” Cirkiel said.
However, under state law, teachers aren’t allowed to encourage students to protest on a particular issue or share their political views in class. They can be punished for doing so. This week, Hays CISD placed a teacher on administrative leave after photos circulated online of him holding profane protest signs while on campus
“These dedicated staff members are not politicians,” Hays Superintendent Eric Wright wrote in a Feb. 2 letter to families. “They have no need for and don’t seek votes or campaign contributions; nor are they ever up for election.”
Consistent with state law, Austin ISD prohibits employees from encouraging walkouts or protests, spokesman JJ Maldonado said. Campus leadership provides guidance to staff on maintaining professional boundaries, he said, and staff’s role is to inform students of consequences for leaving class.
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An educator’s role in a walkout

McCallum High School students walk out of class in protest of ICE in Austin Friday, Jan. 30, 2026.
Guerra-Mojarro said Austin teachers are particularly cautious about their political behavior in the current climate.
“Over the last decade, teachers’ personal opinion has been chilled,” he said.
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However, Brian Phillips, spokesman for conservative think tank Texas Public Policy Foundation, believes both investigations will unearth wrongdoing on the part of Austin ISD and educators.
Austin ISD’s actions specifically “appalled” him because he felt punishments for students leaving class — an unexcused absence — weren’t harsh enough, he said.
“Did their parents even know they were walking up Congress?” Phillips said. “Where were the teachers? Did the teachers let them out of class?”
He pointed to a post-walkout announcement from Hays CISD that warned students they’d face Saturday school detention and lose final exam exemption privileges if they become truant as a more appropriate response to the demonstrations. According to state law, students become truant when they miss 10 days in six months.
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Abbott’s original call to investigate Austin ISD referred to a social media post by Phillips with photos of AISD police vehicles near student protestors on Congress Avenue.
Austin ISD Superintendent Matias Segura has said the district didn’t promote the recent protests, but campuses directed district police to be present to ensure students remained safe.
According to district policy, administrators may prohibit student expression if it interferes with school activities or the rights of other students or teachers. The district communicates with parents about walkouts if officials learn of them in advance and always wants students in the classroom during school hours, Segura said.
“During the school day, our students are our responsibility and we’re committed to the safety of our students in our community, regardless if they are on our campus,” Segura said in a letter to parents.
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While walkouts aren’t a perpetual event on campuses, it’s not uncommon for students in Austin ISD or other districts to protest local or national issues.
In 2018, students across the nation walked out of class in response to the Parkland High School shooting earlier that year that resulted in the death of 17 students and teachers. Following those walkouts, Abbott directed the TEA to ensure districts took steps to protect students from shootings.
But the tradition runs deeper: In 1968, students walked out to protest the Vietnam War, poverty and racial discrimination within the schooling system, including in San Antonio. Some of these protests played a role in policy changes, including the walkouts in San Antonio’s Edgewood ISD, which helped spark changes in the state’s public school funding system.
Students also walk out of class in Austin ISD to voice their unique concerns. In past practice, district officials say staff have supervised walkouts, even those that are relatively small, which students have staged on issues like abortion rights or potential school closings.
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For these past protests, district officials say they marked students leaving class with an unexcused absence. AISD maintains rules about truancy that apply to protest-related absences: multiple absences can put a students’ final grade in jeopardy or even prevent a student from getting credit, according to district policy. Unless given special accommodations, students must attend 90% of a class to receive credit, according to district policy.
Investigations lead to new rules
Although the investigations appear focused on Austin ISD, debate over a school’s proper response to protests has triggered significant statewide response. The TEA confirmed it launched investigations of other districts, but did not say which ones. Meanwhile, some districts ratcheted up consequences for students leaving school to attend demonstrations.
On Tuesday, the TEA told districts that the state could sanction educators who help students leave class for political activism and impose harsh consequences against school districts that don’t follow state attendance requirements. TEA even threatened districts with the most severe repercussion the agency has available — a state takeover.
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But Texas doesn’t have jurisdiction over how local school districts punish students who skip class as long as each district is consistent in its punishment, no matter the reason for a student’s absence, said Kevin O’Hanlon, an Austin attorney who specializes in education law.
The state could investigate whether a district had given harsher or more lenient punishment to protesting students compared to other unexcused absences unrelated to protests, he said. “It’s based on their conduct, not on their speech,” O’Hanlon said.
As a parent of high schoolers, Laurie Solis is disappointed but not surprised by Abbott and Paxton’s focus on Austin ISD.
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“I really hate that Gov. Abbott is using the federal tactics at play, which is threatening our people on whatever they feel like is an opening or an exposure,” Solis said. “Austin ISD is not the only district where students were using their First Amendment rights to protest.”
Austin, TX
Austin lands top-5 spot on new list of best park systems in Texas
Austin and its stellar park system were just ranked the fifth-best in Texas, according to the newly released ParkScore Index.
Every year, land conservation nonprofit Trust for Public Land rates the park systems in the 100 largest American cities with regard to their accessibility, equity, acreage, investment, and amenities.
On a national level, the best park systems are located in Washington, D.C. (No. 1); Irvine, California (No. 2); Minneapolis (No. 3) and St. Paul (No. 4), Minnesota; and Cinncinati, Ohio (No. 5).
Austin’s No. 47 ParkScore ranking in 2026 is a solid improvement over last year’s No. 54 rank.
The organization attributes much of the city’s progress to numerous recent new parks in South Austin and downtown, which have dramatically increased the percentage of residents that live within close proximity of a park — a crucial metric in the report’s methodology. Currently, 76 percent of Austinites live within a 10-minute walk of a park, compared to 68 percent last year.
“Ten years ago, only 48 percent of Austin residents lived within a 10-minute walk of a park,” a release said. “The city’s dedication to opening new parks in park-deficient neighborhoods is paying off.”
Austin also spends far more to maintain its park system — a three-year average of about $236 per resident — than the national average $154 per resident. The Austin City Council is currently considering a $260 million bond investment that would benefit the local park system and Austin’s Parks and Recreation Department.
Elsewhere in Texas, Plano and Frisco in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex boast the best park systems in the state.
Molly Morgan, the Texas State Director and Associate Vice President of Trust for Public Land, said in the release that Texas’ high-scoring performance in the annual index has proved that it is making park accessibility a statewide priority.
“Cities across the Lone Star State are making serious investments, opening new parks, partnering with school districts, and closing gaps that have existed for decades,” Morgan said. “They’re showing what’s possible when Texas gets serious about parks.”
Morgan added that there’s still more work to be done to increase park accessibility to the 9 million Texans that don’t have a park within a 10-minute walk of their homes.
Here’s how the rest of Texas stacks up in the national ranking:
- No. 13 – Plano
- No. 30 – Frisco
- No. 38 – Dallas
- No. 45 – Arlington
- No. 58 – Fort Worth
- No. 61 – San Antonio and El Paso (tied)
- No. 64 – Garland
- No. 69 – Houston
- No. 71 – Irving
- No. 72 – Corpus Christi
- No. 77 – Laredo
- No. 96 – Lubbock
Austin, TX
Live updates: Scattered storms make their way through Central Texas
AUSTIN (KXAN) – Severe thunderstorms are moving through Central Texas Thursday evening. Here is the latest forecast from the First Warning Weather team.
Here are the main headlines:
Thursday
9:04 p.m.: KXAN viewer Tiffany Morgan sent in this photo from Pflugerville.
8:29 p.m.: KXAN’s Andy Way is in Georgetown and sent in this photo of the orange sky.

8:14 p.m.: KXAN’s Madison Myers is in Marble Falls tracking the storms and sent in this video.
8:00 p.m.: See Austin area rainfall totals here.
7:30 p.m.: Low Water Crossing #6 7748 Spicewood Springs Rd in Austin is closed.
7:22 p.m.: Oncor is reporting a power outage in Taylor affecting almost 1,500 customers. The full Oncor outage map can be found here.
7:11 p.m.: Austin Energy is reporting one power outage affecting 1,500+ customers in west Austin, north of Emma Long Metro Park, in the Glenlake neighborhood.
7:06 p.m.: Multiple road closures are being reported in Marble Falls.
- 800 Blk Ave L Between Broadway St. & Ninth St.
- 1300 Blk Broadway St (Childress Park) Between Ave L & Ave N
- 800 Blk Main St. Between Broadway St. & Ninth St.
6:49 p.m.: A Flash Flood Warning is in effect for northwestern Blanco, southwestern Burnet and southeastern Llano until 9:45 p.m. Life threatening flash flooding is possible with this storm.
Austin, TX
Arizona State softball heads to super regionals at Texas with momentum
ASU softball to compete in NCAA Austin Super Regional
The Arizona State Sun Devils softball program will face the Texas Longhorns in the NCAA Austin Super Regional beginning Friday, May 22, 2026.
Momentum is not tangible. It is not something that can be picked up and felt. It cannot literally be seen, but while hard to grasp and seize, momentum is certainly building in Tempe.
No. 19 Arizona State softball (44-16) is preparing to head to the Austin Super Regional in the 2026 NCAA Softball Tournament to take on No. 3 Texas (42-10), with a spot in the Women’s College World Series on the line. It’s a homecoming for coach Megan Bartlett, who coached at Texas before moving to ASU.
Ahead of last week’s Bryan-College Station Regional, after shocking everybody by winning the Big 12 tournament, Bartlett said to The Arizona Republic, “When you have momentum at your back in the postseason, you become real dangerous, real quick.”
Those words proved to be prescient.
ASU opened up the Bryan-College Station Regional with a run-rule win over McNeese. In the next game, ASU beat No. 15 Texas A&M, coached by former ASU coach Trisha Ford, 4-3, setting up a potentially decisive game in a rematch.
ASU softball shocked the field and won the Big 12 tournament
After an 11-13 regular season, Arizona State softball shocked the field and won the Big 12 tournament. Next up is the Bryan-College Station Regional.
Then came redshirt senior Brooklyn Ulrich.
In the bottom of the fifth inning, Ulrich uncorked a titanic grand slam – ending the game right there, 9-1, and sending ASU to the next round.
Just like that, the Sun Devils have become real dangerous, real quick.
Sun Devils underdogs again — and that’s OK
“They just keep doing their thing,” Bartlett said May 20. “People keep asking, ‘What’d you do with these kids?’
“Nothing. It was the same message over and over again. We got healthy, they put the pieces together. At that point, it’s been a lot of confidence and belief. They’re certainly playing with some incredible momentum at their back right now.”
Since losing three straight to Texas Tech in the second-to-last series of the regular season late last month, ASU has won nine games in a row, including the takedown of Texas Tech to win the Big 12 tournament.
The temperature is quickly rising in Arizona, with the end of spring and the start of summer looming. But that’s not the only thing getting hot.
Arizona State softball thrives with Red Mountain alum Brooklyn Ulrich
Arizona native Brooklyn Ulrich talks about her time growing up at Red Mountain and her journey to playing at Arizona State.
“We feel really confident going into the weekend,” said junior infielder Katie Chester, who hit a two-run home run in the first game against Texas A&M. “We’ve been saying, ‘The Devils are getting hot.’ And we got hot at the right time in the season.”
Despite the confidence built over the past few weeks, ASU is still an underdog. Texas is the defending NCAA champion, coming off ending Oklahoma’s dynastic run of four consecutive NCAA titles.
ASU is trying to use the outsider tag to its advantage.
Brooklyn Ulrich exemplifies ASU’s personality
“We know we’re the underdog going in,” Chester said. “We have nothing to lose. We just go in and play how we play. That’s why we’ve been winning all the games we have.”
For Ulrich, a Mesa native who attended Mesa Westwood and then Red Mountain, this is a moment that she was told wasn’t possible.
As a kid, she hoped to attend ASU. There’s even a photo of a young Ulrich, sporting a Mesa Mountain View shirt, along the fence at an ASU game. But Ulrich was told by Ford’s Sun Devils coaching staff at the time that she wasn’t good enough to play at ASU.
Ulrich shifted her plans and decided to attend Marshall, where she played for the next four years. When she went into the transfer portal for her final season of eligibility, she was the first player Bartlett targeted.
A homegrown talent shining for the hometown team could have a far-reaching impact for Bartlett to retain in-state athletes.
“We would love all those Brooklyns to just stay home from the get-go,” Bartlett said. “BK is such a proud Sun Devil. This was the dream from when she was little. We were so thrilled to get her. She’s a super resilient kid. She’s been a tremendous asset. We want those superstar, Arizonian kids to stay home. Be the next BK.”
Ulrich, typically soft-spoken, is trying to soak it all in. She’s been thinking of this for years — helping lead ASU.
“When I entered the portal, I said I’m not playing anywhere but Arizona State. I’m going to go play there,” Ulrich said. “It has met every expectation, every dream. I used to come here as a little girl, watch softball. We had season tickets right in front of the press box. I just loved it. It’s everything that I could have ever dreamed of.”
This season isn’t over yet — there’s still a national championship in the balance.
But Bartlett was blunt when asked how people should remember this season.
“Arizona State’s back,” Bartlett said. “We’re going to continue to do nothing but get better.”
Logan Stanley is a sports reporter with The Arizona Republic who primarily focuses on high school, college and Olympic sports. To suggest ideas for human-interest stories and other news, reach out to Stanley at logan.stanley@usatodayco.com or 707-293-7650. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter: @LSscribe.
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