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Montgomery County officials give latest update on Pauline Road Fire

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www.youtube.com – KPRC 2 Click2Houston – 2025-03-19 22:13:09

SUMMARY: Montgomery County officials have issued evacuation orders due to a 1,300-acre fire spreading from San Jacinto County. Mandatory evacuations are in place for areas like Lee Turner Road and Big Peach Creek Estates, while voluntary evacuations affect parts of Montgomery County, including Duro and Chisum. The fire is being fueled by high winds and low humidity, and it is expected to grow overnight. Shelters are open for evacuees, and livestock can be taken to designated locations. Emergency crews are working to contain the fire, but residents are urged to evacuate immediately if unsafe, as the situation remains critical.

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The Montgomery County Judge Mark Keough and other county officials give the latest update on a wildfire burning.

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News from the South - Texas News Feed

Texas squanders second-half lead in 86-80 loss to Xavier in First Four

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www.kxan.com – Billy Gates – 2025-03-19 23:58:00

SUMMARY: In a thrilling First Four matchup of the NCAA Tournament, Xavier defeated Texas 86-80, thanks in part to Zach Freemantle’s late-game heroics, scoring six critical points in the final 1:48. Freemantle tallied 15 points, with 13 coming in the second half. Texas had initially led by 13 points, but Xavier’s strong second-half performance, including Marcus Foster’s standout shooting, turned the tide. The Musketeers, who shot 55% overall, overcame multiple deficits to secure their victory, while Texas’s season ended with a 19-16 record. Xavier (22-11) will face 6-seed Illinois next.

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How to eat healthy during National Nutrition Month

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www.kxan.com – Anthony Torres – 2025-03-19 21:40:00

SUMMARY: Texas has a higher obesity rate than the national average, prompting the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics to declare March as National Nutrition Month. KXAN anchors discussed dietary choices with dietitian Lily Beasley, emphasizing the nutritional differences between grocery store and restaurant foods, which often contain unhealthy fats, sugars, and sodium. Beasley encouraged people to enhance their diets by adding healthier foods rather than restricting them. She warned against fad diets like ketogenic, which can cause nutrient deficiencies. Additionally, she noted the link between diet, gut health, and mental well-being, suggesting that balanced nutrition positively impacts mood and energy levels.

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Texas Senate OKs bill to allow smaller homes on smaller lots

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Joshua Fechter and Zach Despart – 2025-03-19 20:21:00

Texas Senate advances bill to allow smaller homes on smaller lots

Texas Senate advances bill to allow smaller homes on smaller lots” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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The Texas Senate on Wednesday advanced the chamber’s signature bill aimed at reining in the state’s high housing costs: allowing smaller homes on smaller lots.

Senate Bill 15 — a top priority for Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who leads the Senate — would reduce the amount of land cities require single-family homes in new subdivisions to sit on. The idea is to reduce the final cost of new homes by allowing homebuilders to construct smaller homes on smaller lots. The bill cleared the Senate by a 28-3 vote.

“The crisis can be summarized in one stat: the average age of a homebuyer in Texas is 54,” said state Sen. Paul Bettencourt, a Houston Republican who authored the bill. “That’s a classification … that’s not going to be able to be sustained to help first-time homebuyers.”

The bill is part of a slate of proposals aimed at addressing the state’s high home prices and rents by allowing more homes to be built. Texas needs about 320,000 more homes than it has, according to one estimate. That shortage helped drive up home prices and rents, housing advocates and experts argue, because the state hasn’t built enough homes to meet demand amid the state’s economic boom.

State lawmakers are eyeing ways to relax local rules that say what kinds of homes can be built and where — which critics say get in the way of allowing more homes to be built. Legislators are considering proposals intended to make it easier to build accessory dwelling units — otherwise known as ADUs, casitas or mother-in-law suites — in the backyards of single-family homes. Other proposals would allow developers to put homes in places that now only allow offices, shopping malls, warehouses and houses of worship.

SB 15 would prevent cities from requiring homes in new subdivisions to sit on more than 1,400 square feet. The most common lot-size requirements in major cities sit between 5,000 and 7,500 square feet, a Texas Tribune analysis found. The idea behind reducing those requirements would be to give homebuilders the flexibility to build smaller homes and thus reduce the overall cost of the home. The bill would only apply in new subdivisions, not in existing neighborhoods, that sit on at least five acres of land.

For some city officials as well as neighborhood activists who oppose new housing, the idea of state lawmakers weighing in on what kinds of homes cities allow and where is an undue incursion on local authority. Other states like California, Oregon, Montana and Florida have passed laws aimed at curtailing local rules in order to add more homes and reduce housing costs. Few parts of Texas have gone untouched by higher housing costs in recent years, proponents note — providing ample pretext for state lawmakers to intervene.

In Texas, the GOP-led Legislature has pushed for more than a decade to sap authority to make laws from local officials in the state’s urban areas, often Democrats. Democratic House lawmakers led the charge in 2023 to kill legislation that would’ve addressed some local zoning rules when it comes to housing.

Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, expressed concern that Bettencourt’s bill would take zoning powers away from cities that have an interest in regulating land uses like military facilities and industrial parks. But Bettencourt said the legislation relates solely to density, leaving local leaders free to reserve land for residential and commercial use.

Georgetown Republican Sen. Charles Schwertner said he worried that the density rules would unfairly limit city officials’ ability to shape growth.

“I still feel this might be a step too far, although I am willing to vote for it today,” he said.

Some Democrats in the Legislature have shown openness to relaxing city zoning rules at the state level. Two Democratic senators, Roland Gutierrez and Royce West, signed on to Senate Bill 15 as co-authors. (The bill also has nine Republican co-authors.)

The bill now moves to the Texas House of Representatives, where similar legislation died last session. Lawmakers in that chamber, too, have shown an appetite for changes to allow more homes to be built. Making it easier for builders to obtain permits and more difficult for neighboring property owners to oppose new housing are among House Speaker Dustin Burrows’ top priorities.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/03/19/texas-senate-smaller-homes-vote/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

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