Texas
North Texas band to participate in Presidential Inaugural Parade
A North Texas band is among the nearly 40 participants selected to march in the Presidential Inaugural Parade on Monday.
The parade followed the swearing-in ceremony.
The Shivam Dohl Tasha Pathak is a Plano-based group blending a traditional Indian drum and symbol ensemble with modern music.
The band was started a decade ago by Harish Nehate and Nikhil Potbhare.
“Our effort has been to take it out and let everyone enjoy it. It is music, I mean, no one is bereft of music,” said Potbhare.
The band, which now includes dozens of members, has performed at several sporting events like a Mavs game last year.
But Monday night practice in a parking lot in Plano was for a much broader audience.
“We have to practice, practice, practice until we don’t get it wrong,” said Nehate.
On Monday, the group will perform in the Presidential Inaugural Parade after accepting an invitation last month from the Trump Vance Inaugural Committee.
“I see this email and I just start shouting and they’re like, ‘What happened?’ and I’m like, we’re going to DC!” said Nehate.
The President, Vice President, their spouses, and special guests will watch the parade as it passes in front of the Presidential Reviewing Stand, according to the schedule of events.
The 1.8-mile route begins at the Capitol and ends at the White House.
“Getting accepted is such an amazing thing to experience, I mean, think about it,” said Potbhare.
Selected out of numerous applicants, they are one of two bands invited from Texas.
Drummer Pranav Bhosale says this will be the first time an Indian group has ever performed at an inaugural parade.
“So it is an honor for our group to do it for the first time,” said Bhosale.
Texas
Hands-on telehealth helps reach rural Texas communities
Subscribe to The Y’all — a weekly dispatch about the people, places and policies defining Texas, produced by Texas Tribune journalists living in communities across the state.
A shipping container in Fort Davis is at the center of a new experiment in bringing telehealth to an aging rural population.
Perched in the Davis Mountains of West Texas, Jeff Davis County faces steep barriers to care. Nearly one in five residents lacks reliable broadband. The only doctor in Fort Davis, the county seat, is semi-retired, and most people make the 30-minute drive to Alpine for care. With a median age of 58, among the highest in the country, the need for consistent medical care is growing, even as access, both in-person and virtually, remains a challenge.
The retrofitted 40-foot container houses the new Davis Mountain Clinic in Fort Davis, a telehealth hub created through a partnership between Texas A&M and Texas Tech universities to connect residents with remote medical and mental health professionals.
But for rural Texas, expanding telehealth for aging populations depends on more than video calls. It requires reliable broadband, digital literacy for older residents, trusted community health workers, and practical ways for clinicians to weave virtual visits into everyday care.
Since opening in October 2025, the Davis Mountain Clinic has added something many rural telehealth programs lack: a physical place with reliable connectivity and a local registered nurse, Carol Brewer, who can take vital signs, perform physical exams, and guide patients through virtual visits with providers who may be hundreds of miles away.
Brewer, who is also the director of the clinic, said this approach creates a whole new world of access for the community, especially for older patients who may feel less comfortable navigating virtual appointments.
“The majority of the patients I see are part of an older population,” Brewer said. “The advantage is, when they come here to see the doctor, I manage the technology on my end, they don’t have to deal with that at all…I’m the hands of the physician via telehealth. I have a stethoscope and an otoscope. So they can hear their lung sounds, heart sounds, bowel sounds, or look in their eyes, ears, nose. I facilitate that.”
Brewer’s hands-on approach highlights how telehealth can be tailored to the realities of an older, rural population, where technology alone isn’t enough, and personal guidance can make the difference between care received and care missed.
“People who live in rural areas are older, sicker, and poorer than people who live in urban areas. Because of that, there are absolutely practical applications for telehealth and its clinical applications,” said Billy U. Philips, PhD, the former executive vice president of the The F. Marie Hall Institute for Rural and Community Health and current Grover E. Murray Professor at Texas Tech University. “But when you overlay with age dimension, then the delivery of care is really going to depend on local and personal circumstances.”
Brewer sees the importance of local connection and community in her work every day.
“I had a patient that came and saw the doctor [virtually] yesterday. His wife had dropped him off, and I gave him a ride home afterwards, because his wife had to go down to Alpine,” Brewer said. “There are just things that we can do for the patients that they’re not going to get anywhere else.”
Brewer said that even though the county has just 1,200 residents, she often sees several patients each day. Some come for virtual appointments, while others need help managing aging-related care, navigating insurance, or even obtaining copies of their medical records.
“I had a patient whose daughter came by and said she didn’t think her mom looked well, and her vehicle was out of commission, so she couldn’t get her to the doctor. I went to their home and checked on her mom, and sure enough, her oxygen levels were low and she wasn’t wearing her oxygen,” Brewer said. “We got her back on [the oxygen] and stabilized her, and while I was there, I called to set up a doctor’s appointment. The daughter was arranging another way to get her mom to the doctor. It’s a small community, so if they can’t come to me, I go to them.”
This hybrid delivery of care offers hands-on support while also connecting a rural community to specialists and providers in different corners of the state.

Technology challenges
A 2025 report from the Texas Broadband Development Office found that Jeff Davis County faces significant broadband challenges due to its small, aging population, mountainous terrain, and high proportion of residents with disabilities or limited English proficiency. These factors make deploying reliable, affordable internet costly and complex, often requiring public subsidies to make broadband expansion feasible.
But these hurdles aren’t unique to Jeff Davis County.
In rural parts of Texas’s Coastal Bend, along the Texas Gulf Coast, available broadband is not equivalent to reliable broadband.
“Even if you pay for the platinum packages, you may at best receive only so-so service,” said Amy Kiddy Villarreal, director of the Coastal Bend Aging and Disability Resource Center. “Internet availability and quality are among the biggest hurdles [to accessing telehealth].”
Philips said that across rural Texas, broadband is often limited, unreliable, and costly, creating obstacles for telehealth and other digital services. While commercial expansion may improve access over the next decade, for now some residents rely on shared community spaces, like clinics, senior centers, and libraries, to get online.
These hubs not only provide connectivity but can also offer guidance for older or less tech-savvy residents, helping them navigate the digital tools they need for health care and daily life.
Highlighting the practical challenges of expanding connectivity, Philips emphasized the need for flexible solutions that give rural residents real choice: “The question now is: how do we get things done in such a way that rural populations have choice and have competitive pricing, and have places where they can have access, even if it isn’t in their home?” he said.
This effort is underway in the Coast Bend region.
“Coastal Bend Council of Governments’ new broadband planning effort is working to bring better, faster internet to the parts of the Coastal Bend that need it most and will make telehealth visits more available and dependable for older adults,” Villarreal said. “By identifying where service is lacking and collaborating with local health care providers and community leaders, this plan lays out the groundwork for more reliable telehealth at home and in trusted community spaces. Together, these improvements help ensure that people in rural areas can access the care they need, when they need it.
Digital literacy promotes health
Across rural Texas, distance is more than a matter of miles, it can be the difference between receiving timely care or going without it. In the Permian Basin, a region in southwestern Texas, older adults can travel hours for a routine doctor’s visit. Limited broadband access, few primary care providers, and scarce public transportation create steep barriers.
Alma Montes, director of Area Agency on Aging of the Permian Basin, is tackling these issues head-on with a commitment to helping older people in rural Texas age in place.
“In these rural towns, they really are the best places to age. In all my years doing this work, smaller communities are where you want to be when you’re older. You can drive longer, there’s no traffic, and everything, from your house to the senior center, is just a few blocks away,” Montes said. “You feel empowered longer. You’re connected to a community where people check in on you, know your routine, and notice if something’s off. It’s just a shame primary care isn’t there for them, because it truly is a great place to grow old.”
In these Permian Basin communities, social cohesion is strong, but health infrastructure is thin. Residents lean on neighbors and family, yet often have to leave town for basic services. Montes found that older adults’ struggles with telehealth weren’t just about access to broadband or devices.
Through a partnership with Aetna, her team distributed tablets and trained about 50 seniors to use email and access virtual care. The bigger barrier wasn’t connectivity, she said; it was unfamiliarity. Many older residents were wary of technology they haven’t used before, making ongoing support essential for the successful implementation of telehealth.
Montes said that investing in these skills, tools, and community partnerships paid dividends beyond just telehealth access.
“We want to improve their overall well-being. Even if we didn’t fully get them to telehealth, there were gains along the way. They can now email family, send and receive photos, connect on social media, even Skype with loved ones. And we know, especially after COVID, that social connection has a real impact on health,” Montes said. “So even if they’re not all doing telehealth visits, they’re using technology in ways that positively affect their health.”
Community health workers
In many rural communities, and particularly among immigrant families, concerns about privacy, scams, and surveillance shape how residents engage with new systems. That’s where trusted local resources, like community health workers, become essential.
Community health workers are trained, certified locals who help residents navigate care, connect to services and access basic health support.
“Out in these rural communities, part of the [telehealth implementation] has to do with trust and whether you know the person,” Philips said. “Some patients have heritages that make them potential targets for law enforcement operations or other authorities. So you need a trusted figure–a navigator or community health worker–that’s known to that community and trusted. We equip those individuals to serve as a bridge, helping people understand and use the technology available to them.”
Training programs across rural Texas aim to expand the pool of community health workers and equip them both to be a local resource and a facilitator to accessing more expansive care virtually.
Practicing telemedicine
For Dr. Ariel Santos, a trauma and acute care surgeon and director of the Texas Tech Telemedicine Program, telemedicine allows him to triage patients across rural West Texas, determining when situations demand air ambulances or when a patient can be treated locally.
“As a trauma surgeon, I’d rather be consulted earlier when there’s a trauma patient,” Dr. Santos said. “Telemedicine can be used to triage patients…It can either expedite treatment, or it can help determine that a patient doesn’t need to be transferred.”
Dr. Santos said these calls can save tens of thousands of dollars in unnecessary medical transfers and also reduce the number of visits a patient has to make as they receive continuity of care.
“I could use [telemedicine] to pre-op the patient, meaning to prepare them before seeing them in person,” Dr. Santos said. “And postoperatively, I could see the patient and check on the wound easily, without them needing to spend time and money traveling.”
Dr. Santos also sees telemedicine’s potential beyond trauma. One key example is Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes), a virtual collaboration model designed to support rural providers in caring for complex patients.
In rural Texas, caring for older adults with dementia often means working without nearby specialists. The Dementia Care ECHO program uses a hub-and-spoke structure, connecting geriatric experts at a central “hub” with local primary care teams, long-term care staff, and community providers, the “spokes,” through virtual sessions. Multidisciplinary teams, including doctors, dietitians, pharmacists, and social workers, guide providers through real patient cases, helping them deliver specialized care that might otherwise be out of reach.
“Through the ECHO program, we can leverage geriatricians’ speciality using technology,” Dr. Santos said.
For patients and caregivers, it brings expert support closer to home, though limited broadband continues to challenge access in many communities.
The future of rural telehealth
Telehealth offers an alternative pathway for delivering care for both patients and providers. However, experts warned that telehealth should not be seen as a replacement for in-person care, but rather a supplemental service that expands access, especially for rural populations.
“Telehealth is not a substitute for good, high quality primary care,” said Brock Slabach, chief operations officer at the National Rural Health Association (NRHA). “So in my opinion, it should be delivered as a tool for primary care and for specialists to be able to enhance the care continuum and hopefully, in many cases, reduce the need for in-person visits.”
The Davis Mountain Clinic offers one example of balancing telehealth with in-person care delivery.
“I think it’s a great model for other rural communities,” Brewer said. “The physicians we work with are very supportive. They’re very helpful, and they are also invested beyond just the services that they’re providing. They’re wanting to help in the community, they’re asking for ways that they can serve the community.”
As rural communities continue to innovate in health care, discovering new ways to better serve their patient populations, they also face threats from cuts to broadband, health care, and education funding.
Philips said that without sustained investment, rural communities may struggle to maintain the trajectory of growing telehealth programs and broadband access, putting patients’ health and the progress made in digital care at risk.
“A lot of these opportunities to adopt and adapt technology were funded by federal resources that are now heavily constrained,” Philips. “As a country, we have to decide whether we value rural people enough to supply them with the health care and other kinds of essentials, including digital literacy, that will allow us to keep them healthy.”
Disclosure: Texas A&M University and Texas Tech University have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.
This article was written with the support of a journalism fellowship from The Gerontological Society of America, The Journalists Network on Generations, and The Commonwealth Fund.
This article first appeared on The Daily Yonder and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Texas
Texas Rangers to host Cincinnati Reds in home opener at Globe Life Field on Friday, April 3 at 3:05 p.m.
– Saturday, April 4: Dot Race Results bobblehead giveaway and Leon Bridges Theme Night
– Four of the club’s first six home games to feature promotional item giveaways
Texas
Our new Texas Public Schools Explorer will better serve parents
The Texas Tribune redesigned its Public Schools Explorer to add more timely data and features to help families and teachers navigate the state’s sprawling public school system.
In all, Texas has 1,202 school districts and 9,113 public schools, including hundreds of charter schools and alternative campuses. About 5.5 million students attend public schools in Texas, and our explorer includes information on all of them.
It’s an overwhelming amount of data, which is why our journalists focused on organizing the site in a more intuitive way. We included more context to explain what the numbers mean and why they matter. In addition, each school’s performance is compared against statewide and regional trends, which will help families better understand how their child’s school is performing.
We feel this is the perfect time to launch a new site. Parents and families need to be able to see the options available for their children’s education, especially as school choice expands in Texas. We’re showing readers their local campus and nearby campuses, including traditional school districts and charter schools. We show how their school demographics, funding and other characteristics have changed over time to help illustrate broader trends.
We also hope this tool will be useful to teachers, school staff, policymakers and anyone curious about Texas education — including those who need accurate and reliable data to understand how policy impacts students.
Each school district and campus has its own page on the site. Within those pages, data is now organized into a handful categories, including student demographics, classroom experience, opportunities and outcomes, and more. Each category has its own URL, making it easier to share information that matters the most.
We’ve added new data from the Texas Education Agency, including funding information for school districts to help readers better understand where and how schools get money. We also redesigned the districts page to make it easier to find districts using different filters.
In addition to these new features, our site will be more up to date than ever before. Previously, the explorer was updated once a year. Now we can integrate new data as soon as the state releases it, with finance numbers expected in the spring and state accountability ratings in August.
This new explorer builds on the Data Visuals team’s ongoing work covering public education issues affecting students and teachers across the state. In a recent story, we showed how low-income students are being left behind in higher education outcomes and included a lookup tool to help readers explore the data in their own communities.
If you have feedback, email us at schools-feedback@texastribune.org. Also, stay tuned for more updates — we plan to release new features soon. After exploring the new tool, be sure to check out the Tribune’s extensive public education coverage for more on how these issues are playing out across the state.
This project is supported in part by Greater Texas Foundation and Houston Endowment.
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