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Five news organizations join Texas Tribune and ProPublica investigative initiative

Five news organizations join Texas Tribune and ProPublica investigative initiative

Yahoo11-04-2025

The Texas Tribune and ProPublica have selected five partner organizations in Texas to participate in a new investigative initiative that will support accountability journalism in local newsrooms across the state.
Over the next year, the five newsrooms — El Paso Matters, Fort Worth Report, Houston Chronicle, The Texas Newsroom and WFAA — will report on how power is wielded in Texas in collaboration with our investigative team.
In 2020, the Tribune and ProPublica launched a first-of-its-kind collaboration to publish investigative reporting for and about Texas. Both organizations publish the team's stories, which are distributed for free to other news organizations in Texas and beyond.
'Local newsrooms are primed to deliver accountability reporting because they intimately know the communities they cover,' said Vianna Davila, deputy editor of the Tribune-ProPublica investigative unit. 'We hope to facilitate even more of that reporting at a critical time in Texas and are so excited to work with these five newsrooms from across the state.'
El Paso Matters
El Paso Matters has been El Paso's primary source of in-depth and investigative reporting since it began publishing in 2020. Founded and led by veteran El Paso journalist Robert Moore, El Paso Matters is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that focuses on accountability reporting on government, education, health and the environment and also reports on the culture that makes El Paso a unique community.
El Paso Matters has won national awards from the Online News Association, the Society of Professional Journalists and the Institute for Nonprofit News, as well as numerous state awards from Texas Managing Editors. In 2022, the organization's investigation into the failures of District Attorney Yvonne Rosales led to a petition to remove her from office and eventually her resignation. In 2024, a collaborative project by El Paso Matters, La Verdad of Ciudad Juárez and Lighthouse Reports in Europe called into question the official explanation of a detention center fire in Juárez that killed 40 migrants.
Fort Worth Report
Fort Worth Report is a nonprofit, digital-only news platform launched in 2021 by a group of Fort Worth residents who were alarmed about the decline of meaningful local news coverage. The daily publication provides original reporting on city and county government, schools, business and development, health care, plus arts and cultural institutions — concentrating on Fort Worth and Tarrant County, one of the fastest growing regions in the U.S.
The Report's investigative work has looked at high-speed police chases in Fort Worth, leading to the release of long-withheld pursuit policies. A series of investigations into Tarrant County-based Gateway Church revealed past abuse allegations, ethical concerns in leadership and financial fallout. Its live journalism Candid Conversations event series includes annual community listening sessions and local candidate forums, in addition to convening experts and community leaders to facilitate thoughtful dialogue about issues readers care about. In 2024, the newsroom expanded its reach by launching the Arlington Report. It was named the Small Business of the Year by the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce.
Houston Chronicle
The Houston Chronicle boasts the state's largest newsroom covering Texas' most populous city and the fourth-largest in the U.S. With the biggest subscriber base in Texas, the Chronicle reaches over 1.8 million print and digital readers weekly and garners more than 30 million monthly visits to its digital sites.
Chronicle journalists focus on local and statewide issues, exploring their far-reaching implications on national political and social landscapes. Its Austin-based bureau — the state's largest — delivers in-depth coverage attuned to Texas' legislative and cultural developments. As a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and recipient of numerous national and state-level journalism awards, the Houston Chronicle is a champion of investigative reporting and impactful journalism. Recently, its investigations have driven legislative actions, including reforming practices at the state's largest utility company and addressing environmental hazards such as 'zombie wells.' This spring, exclusive reporting on irregularities in a $95 million Texas Lottery win led to significant changes in gaming oversight and inspired proposed legislative amendments.
The Texas Newsroom
The Texas Newsroom is the collaboration among NPR and the public radio stations in Texas, including KUT in Austin, KERA in North Texas, Texas Public Radio in San Antonio and Houston Public Media, leveraging the talents of more than 120 public radio journalists in Texas. Its statewide newscasters deliver news live six times each weekday and its show Texas Standard delivers timely, thoughtful coverage of politics, lifestyle, the environment, technology and business from a uniquely Texas perspective.
Last year, Public Media Journalists Association named the Texas Newsroom's senior editor Rachel Osier Lindley its editor of the year. Its Sugar Land podcast won a national Gracie Award for investigative journalism. NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists named the Texas Newsroom's investigative editor and reporter Lauren McGaughy winner of the 2024 Randy Shilts Award for LGBTQ+ Coverage. She has done extensive reporting on extreme heat in Texas; recently, a federal judge ruled the heat in the state's prisons is unconstitutional.
WFAA
WFAA, headquartered in Dallas, is one of the largest and most respected local television news operations in the United States. From the groundbreaking continuous live broadcast following the John F. Kennedy assassination to being an emerging leader in 24-hour local news streaming, WFAA has throughout its history led the charge in innovation and leadership through all forms of media.
WFAA has earned 11 silver duPont-Columbia University batons for excellence in journalism and is the only local television station in the nation to receive a duPont-Columbia Gold Baton, the highest recognition in broadcast journalism. Recently, WFAA's investigative team has focused on exposing lax regulation of caregivers of vulnerable and intellectually disabled people; highlighted abuses in the state's foster care system; chronicled 'forever chemical' contamination of agricultural lands; and in a yearslong effort, uncovered a ploy to hide foreign ownership of American aircraft that resulted in a federal criminal case ending in convictions and a lengthy prison sentence for the ringleader.
Disclosure: Houston Public Media has been a financial supporter 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.
Tickets are on sale now for the 15th annual Texas Tribune Festival, Texas' breakout ideas and politics event happening Nov. 13–15 in downtown Austin. Get tickets before May 1 and save big! TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase.

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Columbia protester Mahmoud Khalil freed from immigration detention
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Columbia protester Mahmoud Khalil freed from immigration detention

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Diplomatic breakthrough elusive as Israel-Iran war stretches into second week
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Diplomatic breakthrough elusive as Israel-Iran war stretches into second week

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Diplomatic breakthrough elusive as Israel-Iran war stretches into second week
Diplomatic breakthrough elusive as Israel-Iran war stretches into second week

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TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Hours of talks aimed at de-escalating fighting between Israel and Iran failed to produce a diplomatic breakthrough as the war entered its second week with a fresh round of strikes between the two adversaries. European ministers and Iran's top diplomat met for four hours Friday in Geneva, as President Donald Trump continued to weigh U.S. military involvement and worries rose over potential strikes on nuclear reactors. European officials expressed hope for future negotiations, and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said he was open to further dialogue while emphasizing that Tehran had no interest in negotiating with the U.S. while Israel continued attacking. 'Iran is ready to consider diplomacy if aggression ceases and the aggressor is held accountable for its committed crimes,' he told reporters. No date was set for the next round of talks. 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Iran has retaliated by firing 450 missiles and 1,000 drones at Israel, according to Israeli army estimates. Most have been shot down by Israel's multitiered air defenses, but at least 24 people in Israel have been killed and hundreds wounded. Addressing an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency warned against attacks on Iran's nuclear reactors, particularly its only commercial nuclear power plant in the southern city of Bushehr. 'I want to make it absolutely and completely clear: In case of an attack on the Bushehr nuclear power plant, a direct hit would result in a very high release of radioactivity to the environment,' said Rafael Grossi, chief of the U.N. nuclear watchdog. 'This is the nuclear site in Iran where the consequences could be most serious.' Israel has not targeted Iran's nuclear reactors, instead focusing its strikes on the main uranium enrichment facility at Natanz, centrifuge workshops near Tehran, laboratories in Isfahan and the country's Arak heavy water reactor southwest of the capital. Grossi has warned repeatedly that such sites should not be military targets. After initially reporting no visible damage from Israel's Thursday strikes on the Arak heavy water reactor, the IAEA on Friday said it had assessed 'key buildings at the facility were damaged,' including the distillation unit. The reactor was not operational and contained no nuclear material, so the damage posed no risk of contamination, the watchdog said. Iran previously agreed to limit its uranium enrichment and allow international inspectors access to its nuclear sites under a 2015 deal with the U.S., France, China, Russia, Britain and Germany in exchange for sanctions relief. But after Trump pulled the U.S. unilaterally out of the deal during his first term, Iran began enriching uranium up to 60% — a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90% — and restricting access to its nuclear facilities. Iran has long maintained its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but it is the only non-nuclear-weapon state to enrich uranium up to 60%. Israel is widely believed to be the only Middle Eastern country with a nuclear weapons program but has never acknowledged it. Israel said its warplanes hit dozens of military targets across Iran on Friday, including missile-manufacturing facilities, while an Iranian missile hit Israel's northern city of Haifa, sending plumes of smoke billowing over the Mediterranean port and wounding at least 31 people. Iranian state media reported explosions from Israeli strikes in an industrial area of Rasht, along the coast of the Caspian Sea. Israel's military had warned Iranians to evacuate the area around Rasht's Industrial City, southwest of the city's downtown. But with Iran's internet shut off — now for more than 48 hours — it's unclear how many people could see the message. The Israeli military believes it has destroyed most of Iran's ballistic missile launchers, contributing to the steady decline in Iranian attacks. But several of the roughly three dozen missiles that Israel said Iran fired on Friday slipped through the country's aerial defense system, setting off air-raid sirens across the country and sending shrapnel flying into a residential area in the southern city of Beersheba, a frequent target of Iranian missiles where a hospital was hit Thursday.

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