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Bullet train sparks fight as old as Texas: Progress vs. tradition
William Shelton will not let go of the past, even if it is in the way of someone else’s future. He has spent more than five years rebuilding his family’s ancestral home, board by board, and has no intention of leaving it or the 250-acre farm that has been in his family since 1851. Two Continue reading
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Houston population growth fueling expansion of commuter bus options
When Brian Moeller, 37, moved to Houston in 2013 from Denver, following his wife by about six months, the first thing he did was find a job. “We had an apartment in Katy close to her work, my job was in Westchase,” Moeller said. “Easy enough, I’ll take the bus.” Except it wasn’t easy enough. Continue reading
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U.S. 290 construction finally to end (mostly) later this year
Frequent travelers of U.S. 290 know two different eras of the freeway: Before Construction and During Construction. Before miles of construction started in 2011, U.S. 290 was a tied-up mess slowing to a crawl by increased demand. During is six years of freeway closings, lane changes and narrow stretches shared by heavy trucks – along Continue reading
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City poised to open streets to ‘dockless’ bike sharing
A rainbow of bicycles likely is coming to Houston sidewalks soon, so long as the yellow, green, orange and gray bikes do not get blacklisted by a skeptical City Council. Houston officials are poised to open the city to at least six dockless bike-sharing companies that will distribute the readily-available cycles throughout the 11 council Continue reading
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Harvey’s lasting legacy – disaster prep
Sporting goods and hardware stores are reporting increased sales and interest in on solar power generation, batteries and water filtration, as many people try to prepare for what they recognize is an eventuality in Houston: Living without aid for a few days. Even some items at grocery stores are doing brisk sales after the waters Continue reading
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Post-season seats can be obstacle for disabled Astros fans
Gerald Sanchez and his father, Sam, are true Houston sports fans. Not even a stroke that confined Sam to a wheelchair six years ago could sideline their attendance at Astros, Rockets and Texans games. Sam’s wheelchair, however, did keep them out of Minute Maid Park for the past two playoff series, a casualty of the Continue reading
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Agreement first step in bringing a high-speed rail connection between Houston and Dallas
Calling a planned high-speed rail connection to Dallas “an idea whose time has come,” Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner signed an agreement Thursday with the bullet train’s backers that both sides said is the first of many steps to making the trip a reality. “This is the starting point to begin the process of definitive agreements,” Continue reading
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Texas ban on texting while driving takes effect Sept. 1
Citing a need to protect Texans, Gov. Greg Abbott on Tuesday signed a bill banning texting while driving, shortly before calling on lawmakers to set clear statewide standards for all phone use behind the wheel. “It took 10 years, but we got here,” said State Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, who championed the bill with State Continue reading
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Hyperloop envisions Texans traveling in tubes at 700 mph
Anyone who’s sat long enough in Texas traffic knows it feels like going in circles. So maybe it’s fitting that one day it could be replaced with a loop that could make traveling from Houston to San Antonio, Austin or Dallas take about as long as a drive to Galveston. No, seriously. Four cities in Continue reading
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State accelerates start time for major I-45 improvement project
So the project some only dreamed about is, at least on paper, a reality, pending the allocation of more than $900 million for the reconstruction of two major interstate intersections in the downtown area. Though these first steps are incremental compared to the overall plan, officials say they are important and send the clear message: Continue reading

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