Dallas, TX
Who is running for Dallas ISD school board?
School safety, teacher retention and student success are the key focuses of candidates as two seats on the Dallas school board are up for grabs.
The new trustees will join veteran representatives in working with Superintendent Stephanie Elizalde to steer the second-largest district in Texas as it works to boost academic performance and manage a roughly $1.9 billion budget.
Trustees set DISD priorities for serving the district’s roughly 140,000 students, pass legislative agendas and evaluate the superintendent’s effectiveness. Election day is May 4; early voting runs now through April 30.
District 1 trustee Edwin Flores is stepping down to pursue a seat on the Dallas College board. District 9 trustee Justin Henry – who is currently board president – also is not seeking reelection. Both have endorsed candidates who they want to succeed them.
Dan Micciche, who represents the District 3 area that includes Northeast Dallas, is running unopposed for reelection.
District 1
Three people are seeking the Northwest Dallas District 1 seat.
Flores is endorsing Lance Currie, a law firm partner with two kids in DISD. Currie has worked with multiple organizations supporting public education, including Reading Partners and EducateDallas. Currie said it’s vital to have a parent’s perspective on the board.
Currie has worked alongside Flores for years to understand the district’s direction and priorities, including as the trustee’s appointee on a racial equity advisory council.
“He has the right experience, the right demeanor, the right understanding,” Flores said of Currie.
Currie said he wants the district doing additional work to figure out what happens to students after they graduate and set goals based on their success. He’s supportive of one of the district’s key reforms: the Teacher Excellence Initiative, a pay-for-performance compensation model.
“If you’re gonna have to live with some turnover, I’d rather keep the really effective [teachers] and have the other ones find the places that they need to be so that our kids can continue to learn,” Currie said.
He’s running against nonprofit field director Maureen Milligan and Chris Roberts, who works in information technology.
Milligan wants school leaders to pause and determine what is succeeding – and what isn’t – as the district grapples with budget challenges and declining enrollment.
“We really need this comprehensive assessment of what programs have been working – how our facilities and our investments, staff and the rest of the system can really be strategically designed,” she said.
Milligan acknowledged that could mean fewer schools in the future. DISD’s enrollment has decreased by more than 15,000 students since 2018-19.
She is involved in many civic organizations, including the City of Dallas 2024 bond taskforce. As trustee, she said she would increase the number of parents and community members who participate in campus-level decision making.
Prior to Roberts’ career in technology, he was a middle and high school band director. He’s an advocate for additional music education, more restrictive technology policies and stronger discipline.
“If we have strong discipline, it would actually be a recruiting tool,” Roberts said. He added that he wants DISD known as a place where “we’re good with discipline. We have a tight ship.”
He said his ideas would likely be met with a lot of “noise” initially but would be in the best interest of the district.
DISD overhauled its discipline practices in recent years, aiming to keep more kids on campus and solve underlying behavior issues. The district wanted to tackle the negative impact of exclusionary discipline, which removes students from class and disproportionately affects students of color.
District 9
Four candidates are seeking to represent District 9, which includes South Dallas along with parts of downtown, Pleasant Grove, Deep Ellum, Uptown and East Dallas.
Henry supports Ed Turner, an insurance broker and longtime DISD volunteer who previously sought the same seat.
Henry said Turner will keep his focus on what’s best for kids and can build relationships even with those he disagrees with. Turner is the only candidate with a significant campaign finance balance. The latest reports online showed he had roughly $16,000 cash on hand.
Student safety is top of mind for candidates. A DISD student wounded a classmate in a shooting at Wilmer-Hutchins High School earlier this month, raising concerns about how a teenager brought a gun onto campus despite the use of metal detectors and clear backpacks.
Turner – whose daughter attends a DISD school – said he wants to see more focus on keeping students safe from fentanyl.
“Every teacher, everyone in the building, should be trained on identifying overdoses,” he said, adding that there should be easy access to medication that rapidly reverses opioid overdoses.
One of his opponents, Oralia Alonso, a parent instructor/liaison at Ann Richards STEAM Academy, said she’s in favor of more mental health resources.
“The district has programs available,” she said. “But are they reachable to every school? Do the parents have that information?”
The candidates have various ideas on tackling teacher retention.
Da’On Boulanger-Chatman, a fine arts teacher in Garland ISD, said that while he supports the overall idea of the Teacher Excellence Initiative, he wants to make changes to the system so educators don’t feel in competition with each other.
“This is not to say that the TEI program is not effective in many ways. It is,” he said. “However, the verbiage and the selection criteria that is presented to the teachers is not a morale booster.”
He also wants educators who win “Teacher of the Year” awards to get a seat at the boardroom table for trustee meetings.
Community organizer LaKashia Wallace suggested moving to a four-day school week to attract successful teachers. Fridays could be used for academic remediation for students who need it, she said. A few smaller area districts have moved to shortened weeks, including Anna, but large urban districts have stayed away from this model.
“Since we’re in a budget crisis, what can we do to look and see incentives for teachers and staff?” she said. “Get what we need done and give teachers an opportunity to rest.”
The DMN Education Lab deepens the coverage and conversation about urgent education issues critical to the future of North Texas.
The DMN Education Lab is a community-funded journalism initiative, with support from Bobby and Lottye Lyle, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, Dallas Regional Chamber, Deedie Rose, Garrett and Cecilia Boone, The Meadows Foundation, The Murrell Foundation, Solutions Journalism Network, Southern Methodist University, Sydney Smith Hicks and the University of Texas at Dallas. The Dallas Morning News retains full editorial control of the Education Lab’s journalism.
Dallas, TX
Dallas City Hall is in bad shape; how bad we just don’t know
From the get-go, the conversation about Dallas City Hall’s future has been polluted by finger pointing, foregone conclusions and unreasonable expectations. Council members are set today to discuss the building again. They should bring the patience, honesty and open-mindedness this debate deserves.
The hulking structure designed by architecture legend I.M. Pei has deteriorated to the point where the city can’t continue to do nothing. Options include moving into a different, existing space, constructing a new city hall or staying put and repairing 1500 Marilla.
City staffers earlier this month presented a wide-ranging estimate that it would cost between $152 million and $345 million to handle the building’s deferred maintenance.
Council members must now decide whether to invest in getting better numbers — probably at great cost — or to cut bait and move on with a different option.
At the briefing earlier this month, some council members sharply questioned the cost figures’ reliability. And we’ll grant that any estimate with a $200 million range is plainly imprecise. But there should be room for a little grace here. Assistant City Manager Donzell Gipson told us staffers had little time to offer an estimate of the total cost of City Hall’s deferred maintenance.
In an Aug. 29 memo, Mayor Eric Johnson named council committee members and outlined priorities for each committee. The finance committee was instructed to “determine whether Dallas City Hall and other municipal facilities effectively support City operations and best serve the citizens of Dallas.”
After the mayor issued the committee charges, staff received a committee assignment asking for a dollar figure on the cost to fix City Hall, Gipson said. The finance committee met to discuss this topic on Oct. 21. By our math, that gave city staff less than two months to come up with a wildly complex number — hardly a reasonable timeframe.
So city staff used what information they had and cobbled together an estimate from bits and pieces of knowledge about various systems and needs in the 1978 building.
The $17 million quote for new emergency generators is a recent one, Gipson explained, so that one should be reliable. Two of the larger items, water infiltration and garage repair, are estimated to cost at $72 million to $100 million and $25 million to $145 million, respectively. Gipson said those estimates are partly based on old quotes adjusted into today’s dollars and partly on other potential unknowns.
There are concerns about leaks in the reflecting pool, for example, and fixing that problem could carry many unknown costs, Gipson said.
What lends credibility to staff’s low-range estimate is a facilities condition assessment dated October 2018. It identified some $92 million in needed repairs and replacements at City Hall, a city spokesperson said. Many of the items in the report were never addressed.
It’s been years since Dallas learned City Hall needed nearly $100 million in maintenance, and deferred maintenance costs grow the longer they’re deferred. So staff’s $152 million low-end estimate may not be a hard quote, but it reads as reasonable to us based on the costs that were assessed in the recent past.
Staff said some of the high-range estimates are based on unknowns. That sounds like a guess to us. But City Hall is an unusually difficult building to work with, in part because it isn’t constructed like most buildings. Its exterior and interior concrete structure makes it hard and expensive to assess costs. So staff threw out a number they hope is the worst-case scenario to fulfill the mandate in the committee charge.
Now, there’s a caveat to all this. Dallas City Hall — both council and staff — have done an abysmal job of managing the city’s real estate assets. Keeping track of the maintenance needs at City Hall and other city-owned properties is grinding work. It’s also work that just doesn’t get done in a systemized way.
The most recent and memorable example of Dallas’ real estate bungles is the building at 7800 N. Stemmons Freeway. The city bought it to use as a permitting center and then couldn’t get permits for it.
The failures ran so deep that City Manager Kimberly Bizor Tolbert instructed staff to “suspend all real estate purchasing unless previously approved by Dallas voters or the City Council.”
The last inventory of city-owned property was in 2017, our newsroom colleague reported in May, and Dallas assessed only 220 of its more than 500 properties at that time.
The most recent city budget did include plans for an updated facility condition assessment, and a February memo does discuss the development of a new “Strategic Real Estate Master Plan.” Hopefully, those steps will help.
As for City Hall, residents will have an opportunity to voice their opinions at a listening session hosted tonight by council members Cara Mendelsohn and Paul Ridley. Both council members oppose tearing the building down, an option we think needs to be on the table.
Some of the talk there will likely focus on staff’s estimates for repairs. The numbers aren’t perfect, but make no mistake, City Hall does have serious and costly problems that must be addressed.
Whether the time is right to move on is a tough call. But pretending that staff inflated the figures just to prime the city for a teardown doesn’t match the facts we reviewed.
A real conversation about what to do next should begin with the reality that this building is in trouble, and there is no cheap way out.
Dallas, TX
Cowboys should consider NFL trade deadline reunion with former leading rusher
Most of the attention surrounding the Dallas Cowboys ahead of the NFL trade deadline has been on the defensive side of the ball, and rightfully so.
The Cowboys have an elite offense this season, but their defense has been one of the worst in the NFL. That’s why they’re expected to explore options to shore up their defense to make a second-half run at the playoffs.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t concerns on offense that should be addressed. This includes running back, which might be easy to overlook considering the way Javonte Williams has played.
MORE: Potential Cowboys target posts cryptic message amid trade deadline rumors
Williams has been a pleasant surprise, with 633 yards and eight touchdowns through the first eight games of the season. The problem is that no one behind him has proven capable of producing at a consistent level.
Entering Week 9, Miles Sanders is still second on the team with 117 yards, but he’s been on the IR since being injured in Week 4. Rookie Jaydon Blue is the current option at RB2 and he has just 65 yards on 22 attempts.
If Dallas wants to improve behind Williams, they should consider a reunion with their former leading rusher, Tony Pollard, who could be traded by the Tennessee Titans, according to Dianna Russini of The Athletic.
“The players the Titans are fielding the most calls on: DE Arden Key, LB Dre’Mont Jones, RB Tony Pollard and DT T’Vondre Sweat.” – Russini, The Athletic
MORE: Cowboys’ best NFL draft fits include ‘shudtown corner’ starring at LSU
Pollard had back-to-back 1,000-yard campaigns for the Cowboys in 2022 and 2023 before leaving in free agency ahead of the 2024 campaign. He signed a three-year deal worth $21.75 million with the Titans and then ran for 1,079 yards and five touchdowns in his first season with the franchise.
This year, he has 424 yards and two touchdowns, while averaging a career-low 3.9 yards per attempt. It’s hard to blame that solely on Pollard, considering the issues the Titans have had.
Pollard’s trade value isn’t likely to be high, which means the main question for Dallas would be his contract. Would Jerry Jones be willing to take on Pollard’s deal after allowing him to walk in 2024?
One thing that could make him more interested is a potential out in the contract after this season. Jones could see this as a potential one-year rental, giving them a back capable of taking over should something happen to Williams.
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Dallas, TX
How did Dallas restaurant Mamani win a Michelin star after less than 2 months open?
The Michelin story stealing the spotlight in Dallas-Fort Worth is how brand-new French restaurant Mamani won 1 Michelin star.
The conversation is largely not around whether Mamani deserves the big win. No, it’s around why this monumental win happened in the first place.
Mamani opened Sept. 2, 2025, and was one of the most interesting new restaurants of the year in Dallas-Fort Worth. Its executive chef-partner, 37-year-old Christophe De Lellis, is toiling in the restaurant daily, fine-tuning his newborn alongside a fleet of servers, chefs, managers, a sommelier and even a full-time baking director. De Lellis has told The Dallas Morning News he’s proud of his French restaurant — and it’s the first that’s really his — but that Mamani is a work in progress. It’s a great painting and he’s still holding the brush.
Yet, sometime in the restaurant’s first 48 dinners, anonymous Michelin critics ate at Mamani several times and were impressed enough with its food to hand it Dallas’ only new Michelin star of 2025.
Mamani executive chef Christophe De Lellis pumps his fist as the Dallas restaurant name was called as a new 1-star Michelin recipient at the Michelin Guide Texas ceremony. He said after the event he was both surprised and grateful for the honor.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
It was a move so shocking, The News asked tight-lipped company Michelin to explain.
In a statement, Michelin’s anonymous chief inspector — a person rarely heard from in the media — said De Lellis’ impressive resume helped his chances. Much of De Lellis’ professional career was working for revered French chef Joël Robuchon. Even after his death, Robuchon is one of the most decorated Michelin-starred chefs in the world.
De Lellis’ roots are in France, the home of Michelin.
Here’s Michelin: “Chef Christophe De Lellis has had a consistent background before opening Mamani,” the anonymous, unnamed chief inspector wrote to The News, “and multiple meals there proved the level of the cuisine at this new Dallas restaurant to be indicative of cuisine at the 1 star level.”
Dallas diners, this is huge.
Unpack this statement, and it says that De Lellis’ work elsewhere, likely referring to his executive chef job at Joël Robuchon Restaurant in Las Vegas some 1,200 miles away, spoke volumes about the work he has done at Mamani for fewer than two months. (De Lellis also helped at sibling restaurant Bar Colette in Dallas while Mamani was under construction.)
In one of the most heartwarming moments on stage at the Michelin Guide Texas ceremony in October 2025, Mamani owners Brandon Cohanim (left), and Henry Cohanim (right) hug executive chef and partner Christophe De Lellis, who helped their new Dallas restaurant win 1 Michelin star.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
We should compare Michelin’s statement against its criteria when awarding stars. Though the company keeps much of its methodology a mystery, it has long said its critics use a five-point test while looking for the world’s best restaurants:
- Quality of ingredients
- Harmony of flavors
- Mastery of techniques
- Personality of the chef as expressed through their cuisine
- Consistency, both across the entire menu and over time
It’s possible four of these five items are achievable in under two months. But No. 5, consistency “over time”: How short is too short? Dallas Morning News readers and rule-followers have flooded us with comments, wondering why Michelin took such liberties with the time element.
Michelin confirmed it does not have a cutoff date for when restaurants are too new to be eligible for inclusion in the Guide. Mamani is just that great, we could assume.
One example of a beautiful dish at Mamani is the scallop and caviar appetizer. Others (not pictured) that were enjoyed by Michelin critics were the veal cordon bleu entree and the Paris-Brest, a dessert.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
We return, however, to criteria No. 4, the personality of the chef. De Lellis’ pedigree spoke volumes in just a few weeks. But, we should remind ourselves a Michelin star goes to the restaurant, not to the chef. Is that the case with Mamani? The Michelin inspector’s explanation makes it sound like De Lellis was a big part of the win.
“Of course the star belongs to our entire amazing team,” De Lellis said in a company statement two days after the award.
Some News readers have expressed empathy for a small number of other excellent Dallas restaurants that had nearly 365 days since last year’s ceremony to adjust and correct their menus, vying for Michelin attention, while Mamani got it so quickly.
But while Mamani amazed judges, other Dallas-Fort Worth restaurants could have, too. Mamani winning a star does not diminish another restaurant’s chances.
Tatsu Dallas, a Japanese restaurant in Deep Ellum, was the only other Michelin star recipient in Dallas-Fort Worth in 2025.
The News asked Michelin how many other restaurants across the globe were awarded Michelin stars within 2 months or less of being open. A spokeswoman said Michelin doesn’t keep that kind of data on the countless restaurants it has visited since the Guide started in 1900.
We are left with two takeaways. First, Mamani has an army of culinary talent at its new Uptown Dallas restaurant led by superstar chef De Lellis. Second, Michelin makes its own rules, and we are left to understand what we can. You decide whether you can accept what we can’t understand.
This story is part of The Dallas Morning News’ coverage of the Michelin Guide Texas. Read more about the restaurant picks in Dallas-Fort Worth and across Texas.
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