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One of the major challenges of addressing Dallas’ housing shortage is developing new supply and adding density while protecting the single-family neighborhoods residents have worked so hard to be a part of.
Last month, the City Plan Commission approved a rezoning request for West Oak Cliff’s little Jimtown neighborhood that strikes a nice balance of both. How? It prevents multifamily development while offering a unique option: “granny flats.”
Roughly five years in the making, all that’s left is for Dallas City Council members to approve the rezoning. We urge them to do so.
The area up for rezoning is actually only a portion of the broader Jimtown area. It’s situated just southwest of Clarendon Drive and Hampton Road and includes 50 properties. The areas surrounding it are mostly zoned for single-family residential, but this one section is currently zoned for multifamily uses.
Residents started the formal rezoning process in 2019. Before that, they had attended a meeting in which they found out their homes were zoned for multifamily use, said neighborhood association president Mary Lou Paras. Most had assumed they were zoned for single-family use.
Once they found out, fear of redevelopment drove the community to come together and ask the city to act, Paras said.
Paras described the neighborhood’s many community meetings and said the desire to change the zoning was pretty much unanimous.
While barring multifamily uses in most of the neighborhood, the rezoning allows, by right, what are called accessory dwelling units, known commonly as granny flats.
These units are located on the same property as a house, either as a smaller detached unit or are an attached portion, according to the American Planning Association. Residents who jump through the municipal hurdles such as permitting can rent these spaces out.
That creates an opportunity for adding density and affordable housing. Plus, it offers residents an avenue for supplementing their income.
Victor Romo, 69, a Jimtown resident who spoke before the Plan Commission last month, told officials that he and his wife, Linda, have lived in their home since 1988 and are lifelong residents of Oak Cliff.
The residents of his area want security in knowing that a developer isn’t going to come in and “build three two-story condos on one lot,” Romo said.
Often, when an area is redeveloped, existing residents are priced out.
Romo told planners that he continues to work in landscaping because his Social Security benefits aren’t enough. “It’s ridiculous that we’re living in the times that we are,” he said. “I don’t even know where we can afford to live if we can’t pay the taxes.”
Zoning is about more than documents, meetings and motions, it’s about real people who have made their lives in our city.
This process took entirely too long. A lot can change in five years. But in the end, Dallas got it right with Jimtown, tailoring the area’s zoning to the community’s needs. That’s how it should work.
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
A 12-year-old Dallas middle-schooler ended up on the streets, where a pimp discovered her. For as little as $50, he sold her for sex. He withheld food unless she worked. She later disappeared into the state’s foster care system after suffering from depression. She attempted suicide.
A 13-year-old seventh- grader was forced to have sex with men in Houston by a pimp who hooked her on drugs. She died shortly after turning 18 from a fentanyl overdose — a few months before her abuser was sentenced to prison.
A 17-year-old Lubbock runaway was required to have sex with men in hotels and truck stops until she earned her pimp $1,000 daily. That quota meant seeing up to 20 “clients” per day. She spiraled into drug addiction.
These children have more in common than the abuse they endured — and the lifelong trauma that comes with it. Each was mandated by federal law to receive financial compensation from the pimps and pedophiles who abused them.
You can read more in-depth reporting from our media partner, The Dallas Morning News.
The Dallas Mavericks entered the 2026 NBA Draft with the #9 pick, the #30 pick and a fair amount of trade rumors swirling around them. After selecting Morez Johnson, Jr. at #9, things went dreadfully quiet on the trade front. As subsequent picks were made and the minutes ticked by, it seemed apparent that Dallas would be making a selection at #30 instead of packaging that pick with a veteran in an effort to move up the draft board. Any hope at picking up a young guard to help in the rebuild looked bleak.
With the #30 pick, Dallas selected Koa Peat, Adam Silver said goodnight and that was that. Except it wasn’t. As the first round of the Draft was concluding, rumors started buzzing that the Mavericks were in fact making a move. Details are still being confirmed, but as it stands, Dallas will be trading the #30 pick Koa Peat and two future second-round draft picks to the New York Knicks in exchange for Sergio DeLarrea’s services. The exact second-rounders were still being determined late Tuesday night.
Here are the details we have at this time:
Los Angeles Lakers Received: 24th Overall Pick (Cameron Carr, Baylor)
Dallas Mavericks Received: 25th Overall (Sergio de Larrea, Spain)
Phoenix Suns Received: 30th Overall (Koa Peat, Arizona)
New York Knicks Received: Cash (Lakers), two second-round picks (Mavericks), and three more second-round picks (Suns)
DeLarrea was on the radar of a number of Mavs Moneyball staffers, perhaps none more than Tyler Edsel who wrote an excellent crash course on him and what he can bring to the Mavs. To be clear, it is unlikely he is going to have a massive day-one impact on the team, but the Mavericks really needed to do something to acquire more young talent that fit a position of need. While he may not be as flashy a name as Brayden Burries (whom the Mavs skipped over in favor of Morez) or Labaron Philon, Jr. (who somewhat surprisingly slipped to #22), Dallas really needed to do bolster the guard position and they came through.
If DeLarrea’s shooting transfers to the NBA level, it would be a big boon for a team that struggled from downtown much of last season. While not an immediate impact player, Dallas did well to move up a bit in a low-cost move that keeps all of their other assets intact for what will surely be a summer of retooling via trades and free agency.
Stay tuned for updates, as it is unclear which second-round picks the Mavericks will let go of in this deal.
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Falcons WR Drake London is now the NFL’s third-highest paid wide receiver in AAV, signing a four-year, $141 million extension with $100 million guaranteed and $35.26 million per year.
London, who is 25, is the same age as Cowboys wide receiver George Pickens, and both are heading into their fifth seasons in the NFL. Pickens too was seeking a long-term contract, but the Cowboys told him and his representation that would not happen this offseason, and he instead signed his $27.3 million franchise tag that keep shim under contract for the 2026 season.
Pickens’ one-year deal on the tag makes him the 17th highest-paid wide receiver in the league in AAV. Should Pickens go out and post a year similar to his 2025 campaign where he had more than 1,400 receiving yards and nine touchdowns, a deal similar to London’s may be in the ballpark of what Pickens could seek. For reference, CeeDee Lamb is the league’s fifth-highest paid WR at $34 million annually. If Pickens surpasses him and is closer to London’s $35 million per year mark, he and Lamb would become the highest-paid WR duo in NFL history, surpassing the Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, who currently combine for $69 million per year. – Tommy Yarrish
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