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Office market full of optimism as Fort Worth starts new year strong

Office market full of optimism as Fort Worth starts new year strong

by Bob Francis, Fort Worth Report
January 11, 2026

The new year is only a few days old, but the Fort Worth office market already feels different to Todd Burnette, executive managing director at JLL. 

“We are definitely coming out of the downturn in the office market,” he said. “It feels different than in 2025, so we’re encouraged. I feel good about what we’ll see in 2026.” 

That optimism is despite a new report on the Fort Worth office market for the fourth quarter of last year, which saw more space vacated than leased. 

The office market had been beset with a variety of issues creating economic uncertainty —– from COVID-related shifts in office attendance to global conflicts to higher interest rates to tariffs —– that led many companies to delay decisions on office space and needs, Burnette said. 

“But that seems behind us to a large extent,” he said. 

The report finds the city’s downtown showing strength even as trophy class offerings attract tenants to new projects along West 7th and southwest Fort Worth, Burnette said. 

The JLL report notes that Fort Worth downtown has the second-lowest Class-B vacancy rate of any central business district in the nation.

Burnette said he expects to see more activity return to Sundance Square soon. 

“That’s been a question mark for a few years, but we’re seeing indications that is changing,” he said, noting that the area recently hosted a New Year’s Eve event that attracted a reported 100,000 attendees. 

“That shows how strong of a draw downtown Fort Worth is,” he said. “And it’s not just the north part of downtown. With the convention center upgrades, Texas A&M’s first building coming on line and I think the Omni Hotel expansion will happen soon, we’re going to see more growth on the south end of downtown.” 

If downtown has one question mark, it is the lack of space for a big project, said Burnette.

“If we had a big project that wanted space downtown, we don’t really have it,” he said. 

Some projects are attracting some tenants away from downtown, however. 

Overall, office leasing activity will continue to be concentrated in Class A and trophy class properties in the downtown, south Fort Worth and Westlake/Southlake submarkets, he said. 

The trophy class projects underway include: 

  • Goldenrod Companies’ mixed-use  Van Zandt project along West 7th that will include 100,000 square feet of office space. 
  • The first phase of Keystone Group and Larkspur Capital’s 37-acre mixed-use Westside Village project that will include about 880,000 square feet of office space. 
  • The Crescent Offices second building that will add 171,500 square feet of office space. JPMorganChase  will move many of its downtown Fort Worth operations to the building. 
  • The Office at Clearfork will have 75,800 square feet of space with Wells Fargo taking two floors of the building, shifting operations from downtown. 

All that means the market could see 1.2 million square feet of trophy class space by 2035, up from nearly none a decade ago, he said. 

“That flight-to-quality transition will continue to occur,” Burnette said. 

Last year also saw the largest office lease of the decade in the city, Burnette added, with  Lockheed Martin renewing a 455,000-square-foot office lease at 5555 N. Beach St. in the Fossil Creek Business Park. The nNorth Fort Worth lease secured space for 1,800 employees involved in supply chain and engineering. 

Burnette said his optimism is bolstered by the fact that rents continue to increase. Class A space was leasing for $31.45 per square foot at the end of 2025, up from $30.68 at the end of the second quarter last year. 

“I think those rates are going to go up,” he said. “We’ve got a very strong market.” 

Bob Francis is business editor for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at bob.francis@fortworthreport.org. At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy here.

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Desmond Scott Breaks Silence As Fans Show Support For Kristy Sarah After Infidelity Divorce (UPDATE)

Desmond Scott Breaks Silence As Fans Show Support For Kristy Sarah After Infidelity Divorce (UPDATE)

Desmond Scott is finally breaking his silence after Kristy Sarah made infidelity claims in a divorce petition. He released a statement, apologizing to Sarah and explaining the allegation and the state of their marriage in recent times.

RELATED: Broken Vows? Social Media Star Kristy Scott Files For Divorce From Husband & The Alleged Reason Has Fans Heartbroken

Desmond Scott Says He’s Committed To Being A Dad

On Saturday (Jan. 10), Desmond Scott issued a social media statement referring to Kristy Sarah’s divorce filing. Posting on Instagram Stories, Scott admitted to engaging in “choices” he’s not proud of during a separation period in his marriage. He apologized to Kristy and spoke of remaining an active dad to their sons, Vance and Westin.

“I want to begin by apologizing to Kristy, our family, and everyone who has been impacted by the public attention surrounding this situation. I know this news has been disappointing for many, and I’m truly sorry for the hurt it has caused,” Desmond Scott wrote. “Kristy is the mother of my children, and that will always come first. I remain fully committed to being an active, present, and loving parent to our boys, as I have always been.”

Scott said he and Kristy had “faced challenges” and sincerely tried to work through them. However, near the end of last year, Desmond said he wanted to separate, told his wife that, and during that time made those choices. He said they decided to divorce after discussing what happened. He thanked their supporters for their love over the years and shared his hopes that they’ll continue to stick by him.

“I ask for privacy and compassion as we navigate this difficult chapter of our lives. Thank you to everyone who has supported us over the years. I’m grateful for that support and will continue sharing my love for cooking and the things that inspire me. I hope you’ll continue that journey with me.”

No More Couple Goals? Kristy Sarah Files For Divorce

During the last month of 2025, fans peeped that Kristy hadn’t been including Desmond Scott in her social media posts. They built a brand he’s expanded into social media chefin’ and after weeks of nothing came the divorce petition. They wed in 2014 and had been dating since their teen years together. She filed to end the Scotts on December 30, citing infidelity.

The Fans Have Questions!

Fans have been spamming Kristy’s comment section with questions that she’s yet to respond to. The couple had not previously revealed marital issues. No word yet on what will happen to the newly built family home the family debuted on social media—another big question in the comment sections. Kristy’s last Instagram post, as of Saturday night, dropped on Jan. 6. Disbelief was the common feeling under that post.

Also, under Desmond Scott’s latest IG post from two days ago, fans have questions, prayers and a lil’ spicy word or two. In the clip, he’s making his sons a coke float.

“All of a sudden he look different to me,” @llloverocksss commented.

“I just wanna know with who… cause Kristy the whole package I’m just curious. It happens tho so no hate,” @j.michellepaz wrote.

“We all pray you didn’t fumble the bag,” @producertonyawilder added.

@brown_ranger even peeped an alleged bio change on Desmond’s profile, writing, “His bio used to be “My wife’s chef” or something like that and now it’s Father & Chef .” 

@toxicology2024 added, “We understand this can happen to anyone you guys are human. Been friends since 14 that’s a long time prayers up to you both ”

Meanwhile, @anarcotics got a lil’ aggressive, commenting: “I got everything BUT compassion for you! don’t let me catch you.”

But @karlaturner.of took a softer approach, writing, “I hope you can recover from each of what you are going through.”

And @emeraldwarrior had the same energy, commenting: “Mr and Mrs Scott. Please fight to restore your marriage and family. DON’T LET THE DEVIL WIN”

RELATED: From “I Do” To “I Don’t” Celebrity Divorces And Breakups That Had Us Questioning If Love Still Exists

What Do You Think Roomies?

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1 in 3 college grads admit their degrees weren’t financially worth it—now they can’t save for retirement because they’re drowning in debt | Fortune

1 in 3 college grads admit their degrees weren’t financially worth it—now they can’t save for retirement because they’re drowning in debt | Fortune

Most people go into their degrees, hoping it’ll be the golden ticket to well-paid office jobs after graduation day—especially given the sheer amount of hours and thousands of dollars (or pounds, in my case) they’ve committed to getting the qualification. But past college grads have a brutal reality check for bright-eyed Gen Z: It wasn’t worth it. At least, from a financial standpoint. 

A staggering 30% of graduates across all generations have admitted that they’re not better off financially thanks to their degrees. In fact, the Nexford University report highlights that many are actually worse off. 

The majority of graduates say they took out $25,000 to $49,999 in student loans, but a quarter owe more than $50,000—and they’re still paying for it years and years after tossing their graduation caps into the air. 

A third of grads are drowning so much in debt that they’re having to delay saving for their first home, and even retirement for a decade on average. 

Instead of their degree being the launch pad for a successful life and career, some 14% admit they had to delay moving out of their parents’ house and starting a family because of hefty student loads. 

Graduates thought their paychecks would make the debt worth it

The majority of graduates enter university knowing they’ll take on some level of debt. But it’s usually shrugged off with the promise of higher-paying, stable careers that only a degree can unlock.

While at the time, the grads surveyed expected they’d land an entry-level role paying around the $52,000 mark after graduating, the reality was stark: Most started out on around $35,000. 

Those who studied law saw a $30,000 drop between their desired salaries and what they actually got offered after graduation. Those who studied education landed roles paying around $25,000 less than they’d imagined. And arts and humanities students thought they’d land $50,000 roles straight out of college, but actually got entry-level job offers at $30,000.

For many, the disappointment didn’t end there. Nearly half of grads had to fork out more money after graduating for further training and other more specialised qualifications to stand out in their desired field. 

To add more salt to the wound, just 8% said that college diplomas matter most in today’s job market. In hindsight, the majority think that networking and having demonstrable skills for the role hold more weight in the current economy.

Degrees just aren’t paying off the way graduates were promised

With college costing students an average of $36,436 per year, the next generation of workers is already questioning the return on investment they’ll get from the qualification. The number of Gen Zers signing up for vocational programs and trade schools instead of higher education is at a record high. 

But for those already embarking on a degree, or recently graduated, the bad news just keeps coming. In 2023, LinkedIn data showed that job ads that didn’t require one were up 90%. At the time, it was because employers were turning their attentions to skills-first hiring. But the situation has since become even more dire. 

Now, not only are employers calling degrees “irrelevant” and even hiring for personality above credentials, but the number of entry-level roles available for fresh-faced grads is significantly shrinking. 

In the U.K. alone, more than 1.2 million applications were submitted for fewer than 17,000 graduate roles last year. Meanwhile, Americans report that the probability of finding a job right now has hit a record low

Thanks to AI, many early-career jobs are being automated. One of the scientists who helped create the technology, Professor Yoshua Bengio, has even warned that the days of all office jobs are numbered.  

The experts’ advice now, for the swath of young unemployed grads, is to turn their backs on the subjects they studied, and instead apply for non-degree retail and hospitality jobs that they could have just nabbed straight out of school without the debt.

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Caleb Williams rallies Bears from 18 points down for 31-27 playoff win over rival Packers

Caleb Williams rallies Bears from 18 points down for 31-27 playoff win over rival Packers

CHICAGO – Caleb Williams dropped back, pump-faked and found DJ Moore wide open down the sideline for the go-ahead touchdown.

His latest clutch throw propelled the Chicago Bears to yet another improbable comeback win and kept their breakout season going for at least another round of the postseason.

Williams came through in his playoff debut, throwing a 25-yard touchdown pass to Moore with 1:43 remaining, and the Chicago Bears rallied from an 18-point deficit to beat the rival Green Bay Packers 31-27 in a wild-card game on Saturday night.

The NFC North champion Bears (12-6) extended their resurgent first season under coach Ben Johnson with their seventh fourth-quarter comeback victory. They split two down-to-the-wire games with Green Bay in the regular season, and this one turned out to be a thriller when it looked like it would be a breeze for the Packers (9-8-1).

Chicago trailed 21-3 at halftime and 21-6 through three quarters, only to outscore Green Bay 25-6 in the fourth on the way to its first playoff win in 15 years.

“True belief,” Williams said. “Belief. That’s all you need. You got belief in the coaches that they’re gonna call the right play at the right time. You got belief in the players on the field that you’re gonna make the right play at the right time.”

After Williams connected with Moore to give the Bears their first lead since it was 3-0, Jordan Love led Green Bay into Chicago territory. But on third down at the 28, he dropped the snap, scrambled and heaved a pass to the end zone with no time left. Jaquan Brisker deflected the ball, setting off a wild celebration — and a curt handshake between Johnson and Packers coach Matt LaFleur.

The Bears will host a divisional-round game next weekend.

“We just keep plugging along,” Johnson said. “We keep fighting. We’ve been proving that this year. That’s who we are, that’s what we do.”

Chicago pulled within 21-16 on D’Andre Swift’s 5-yard run early in the fourth quarter. The Packers responded, with rookie Matthew Golden breaking three tackles and leapfrogging a fourth defender on a 23-yard catch-and-run for his first career touchdown, making it 27-16. Brandon McManus missed the extra point wide left.

The Bears went 76 yards, with Williams throwing an 8-yard touchdown pass to Olamide Zaccheaus and hitting rookie Colston Loveland for the 2-point conversion to make it 27-24 with 4:18 remaining.

The Packers then drove to the Chicago 21, only to come away with nothing when McManus missed wide right on a 44-yard field goal attempt. The Bears responded with the go-ahead touchdown drive and hung on for their first playoff win since the 2010 team beat Seattle in the divisional round at Soldier Field. They had lost three straight in the postseason, starting with a loss to Aaron Rodgers and the Packers in the NFC championship game that season.

Green Bay dominated Chicago for years. But the momentum in the NFL’s longest-running rivalry seems to be turning, with the Bears beating the Packers for the third time in the past five games.

“We’re here and I’m going to be here for a while, is my plan,” Williams said. “Be in a bunch of games, be in these moments and come out victorious. That’s the mindset for right now this year. That’s also the mindset for the future.”

The Bears envisioned nights like this when they drafted Williams No. 1 overall last year, and when they hired Johnson in the offseason. Williams delivered after a shaky start, throwing for 361 yards and the two late touchdowns. He completed 24 of 48 passes and was intercepted twice.

Loveland caught eight passes for a career-high 137 yards for the Bears, who had closed the regular season with tight losses to San Francisco and Detroit.

The Packers dropped their final five games. That certainly was not what they envisioned when they acquired star pass rusher Micah Parsons from Dallas in late August and sent expectations soaring. The two-time All-Pro suffered a season-ending knee injury in a Week 15 loss at Denver, and the defense struggled without him.

“I know we fought through a lot of adversity this year,” coach Matt LaFleur said. “Unfortunately we didn’t do enough to overcome that adversity. That’s all of us collectively. We’ve got to do more.”

Love threw for 323 yards and four touchdowns after missing the final two regular-season games. He hadn’t played since a helmet-to-helmet hit from Chicago’s Austin Booker in the second quarter of a Week 16 loss at Soldier Field.

Romeo Doubs, Christian Watson and Jayden Reed each had TD catches in the first half. Ty’Ron Hopper stopped a threat in the third quarter when he intercepted a backpedaling Williams near the goal line.

“I don’t think it’s we don’t have the composure, I think it’s just the situation we put ourselves in,” Love said. “Jumping out to a lead and doing what we wanted in the first half and then the second half kind of a completely different story. I think for any team that’s going to be frustrating, and you’ve got to find ways to be able to overcome that and get back to it. I think we did, but it was just a little too late.”

Injuries

Packers: RT Zach Tom (knee) was inactive after missing the Packers’ final three regular-season games. … Backup OL Jacob Monk (biceps) left the game in the first half.

Bears: Johnson said LB T.J. Edwards (broken left fibula) is out for the remainder of the season, and LT Ozzy Trapilo (knee) likely is, too. Edwards was carted off the field in the second quarter after his left foot got caught up with the leg of Watson and bent awkwardly. He was fitted with an air cast before he was taken away. Trapilo was hurt blocking on a pass play on the go-ahead drive. … CB Kyler Gordon (groin) was activated from injured reserve after being sidelined since Week 13.

Up next

Packers: Start the offseason.

Bears: Host a divisional-round game against either the Los Angeles Rams or Philadelphia. The Eagles play San Francisco on Sunday, and the Rams knocked out Carolina on Saturday.

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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The Case for Impeaching Donald Trump

The Case for Impeaching Donald Trump

Bombs over Latin America: It’s giving Wag the Dog, if you ask me. The administration, seemingly hot to bring back neoconservative military conquest, soft-launched its latest regime change war in Venezuela by making indiscriminate attacks on boats in the Caribbean and Pacific waters off of Central America. These attacks, all undertaken without a jot of congressional oversight and on the dubious premise that the boats were packed with fentanyl bound for the United States, were murderous on their own. But the news that the military was ordered to strike an already stricken boat in a “double tap” attack to kill any survivors has raised the specter of war crimes—and in a way that even many Republicans don’t seem ready to countenance.

Trump’s Binance buddy gets a pardon: Changpeng Zhao began this year the disgraced former CEO of Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, having done prison time for, as the Biden DOJ put it, “failing to maintain an effective anti-money laundering (AML) program,” violating the Bank Security Act, and allowing money to flow freely to a host of bad actors, including “terrorists, cybercriminals, and child abusers.” But Zhao, having forfeited the right to run Binance, wanted back in. So he used his connections to Trump’s family and inner circle to secure a pardon that would let him run the show again. In return, Zhao showered his attention on World Liberty Financial—using Binance’s leverage to enrich Trump’s private crypto fund. TNR’s Tim Noah was positively apoplectic about the shady arrangement.

Chips to China: Speaking of Tim Noah and apoplexy: It’s probably not great that one firm, Nvidia, has come to possess such godlike, market-moving power. Its outsize importance to the global economy had Noah fingering it as one of the major pillars to crumble, when he gamed out a potential Trump stock market crash back in October. Trump’s been doing what he can to boost Nvidia’s fortunes, however: This year, the president broke with long-standing national security tradition and announced that he was permitting the firm to sell its H200 chips to China. As The New York Times’ David Sanger noted, the deal—the fruits of “intense lobbying” from Nvidia CEO and White House gadfly Jensen Huang—raised a basic question: “If the chips that power the most advanced technology can be sold to the United States’ chief technological, military and financial competitor, where is the new line drawn?” That’s probably the least of Trump’s concerns, however: The deal also guaranteed that “25 percent of all the revenues from the sales would go to the United States,” in yet another case of this administration’s affection for fascist corporatism.

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Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir Dead at 78 – Our Culture

Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir Dead at 78 – Our Culture

Grateful Dead, co-founding singer-guitarist for the Grateful Dead, has died at the age of 78. “It is with profound sadness that we share the passing of Bobby Weir,” his family said in a statement. “He transitioned peacefully, surrounded by loved ones, after courageously beating cancer as only Bobby could. Unfortunately, he succumbed to underlying lung issues.”

“Bobby’s final months reflected the same spirit that defined his life,” they continued. “Diagnosed in July, he began treatment only weeks before returning to his hometown stage for a three-night celebration of 60 years of music at Golden Gate Park. Those performances, emotional, soulful, and full of light, were not farewells, but gifts. Another act of resilience. An artist choosing, even then, to keep going by his own design. As we remember Bobby, it’s hard not to feel the echo of the way he lived. A man driftin’ and dreamin’ never worrying if the road would lead him home. A child of countless trees. A child of boundless seas.” Read the full statement below.

Born Robert Hall Parber in San Francisco on October 16, 1947, Weir started playing piano and trumpet before picking up the guitar at age 13. He crossed paths with Jerry Garcia on New Year’s Eve, 1962, at Dana Morgan’s Music Store in Palo Alto. They formed a jug band called Mother McCree’s Uptown Jug Champions, which turned into the Warlocks and finally the Grateful Dead.

In addition to playing rhythm guitar, Weird shared lead vocal duties with Garcia throughout Grateful Dead’s 30-year tenure. After Garcia’s death in 1995, Bob Weir took part in offshoots such as the Other Ones, the Dead, Further, and Dead & Company, the version of the group featuring John Mayer. Just weeks after his diagnosis, Weir reunited with Dead & Company for what would turn out to be his final performances: a three-night run celebrating Grateful Dead’s 60th anniversary in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park.

Weir issued his first solo album, Ace, in 1972. His last full-length, 2016’s Blue Mountain, featured contributions from members of the National Along with the rest of the Dead, Weir was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994 and presented with Kennedy Center Honors in 2024.

Weird Family Statement:

It is with profound sadness that we share the passing of Bobby Weir. He transitioned peacefully, surrounded by loved ones, after courageously beating cancer as only Bobby could. Unfortunately, he succumbed to underlying lung issues.

For over sixty years, Bobby took to the road. A guitarist, vocalist, storyteller, and founding member of the Grateful Dead. Bobby will forever be a guiding force whose unique artistry reshaped American music. His work did more than fill rooms with music; it was warm sunlight that filled the soul, building a community, a language, and a feeling of family that generations of fans carry with them. Every chord he played, every word he sang was an integral part of the stories he wove. There was an invitation: to feel, to question, to wander, and to belong.

Bobby’s final months reflected the same spirit that defined his life. Diagnosed in July, he began treatment only weeks before returning to his hometown stage for a three-night celebration of 60 years of music at Golden Gate Park. Those performances, emotional, soulful, and full of light, were not farewells, but gifts. Another act of resilience. An artist choosing, even then, to keep going by his own design. As we remember Bobby, it’s hard not to feel the echo of the way he lived. A man driftin’ and dreamin’, never worrying if the road would lead him home. A child of countless trees. A child of boundless seas.

There is no final curtain here, not really. Only the sense of someone setting off again. He often spoke of a three-hundred-year legacy, determined to ensure the songbook would endure long after him. May that dream live on through future generations of Dead Heads. And so we send him off the way he sent so many of us on our way: with a farewell that isn’t an ending, but a blessing. A reward for a life worth livin’.

His loving family, Natascha, Monet, and Chloe, request privacy during this difficult time and offer their gratitude for the outpouring of love, support, and remembrance. May we honor him not only in sorrow, but in how bravely we continue with open hearts, steady steps, and the music leading us home. Hang it up and see what tomorrow brings.

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Environmental experts say Texas data centers come with uncertainty

Environmental experts say Texas data centers come with uncertainty

The main switchyard at a Midlothian power plant. The federal government is sending Texas more than $60 million to strengthen the state’s power grid. Credit: Shelby Tauber for The Texas Tribune

Texas is home to approximately 400 data centers — some currently operational, others still under construction and a number that are still in the planning stages. Experts say the boom comes with a lot of uncertainty.

Texas data center power demand

What they’re saying:

“Data centers are a relatively large power demand in a small area, something like, you know, 100 or 200 megawatts of power. That’s more than a small city or a small town would be consuming itself,” said Carey King, a research scientist with the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin.

Over the past year, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas has received more than 200 gigawatts worth of large load interconnection requests, approximately 73% of which are from data centers. That has led to questions about whether the state’s grid is up to the task of supplying power to the facilities.

“Many of us who suffered through winter storm Uri still have PTSD over, you know, fears that the grid won’t be able to meet demand,” said Luke Metzger, the executive director of Environment Texas, a local nonprofit working to safeguard the state’s natural environment.

Question of infrastructure

That’s not the only question. King points out that there is also a question of whether all the proposed data centers will actually be built. He says if they don’t end up materializing, it could spell trouble for anyone making investment decisions based on the projections. And if infrastructure is built to accommodate the needs of projects that never come to fruition, those costs could be passed off to consumers in the form of higher rates.

Experts say these speculative data center projects have led to uncertainty around how much power will actually be needed to meet the demands of the state’s data centers.

Senate Bill 6, which was signed into law last June, outlined new requirements for data center projects, including stipulating that data centers put up more capital up front for things like transmission studies and interconnection fees. The bill is, in part, intended to reduce some of that uncertainty around speculative power loads.

Potential environmental impact

But concerns still remain around the potential environmental impact of the state’s data centers.

“There are an estimated 130 new gas-powered power plants that have been proposed for Texas, in part to meet this demand for data centers, and if they’re all built, that’s going to have as much climate pollution as 27 million cars,” said Metzger.

Above all, Metzger says the biggest uncertainty is water, as there is no central entity in the state that collects and compiles information on those needs.

On average, a single data center consumes millions of gallons of water annually, according to researchers with the University of Michigan. Metzger says that’s of particular concern here in Texas, where water supply is already being pushed to its limits.

“Texas is a very drought-prone state, and already, you know, you know, according to the Water Development Board, you know, we don’t have enough supply to meet demand,” said Metzger. “There is no way to make more water. And so, I think ultimately, you know that that could be the greatest concern for the state.”

Over the past year, residents across Central Texas have spoken out about data centers in places like Round Rock and Taylor, citing additional concerns including falling property values, noise, and health impacts.

What’s next:

Moving forward, experts recommend that local leaders undergo long-range planning to determine whether they’re able to allocate limited resources to data centers in the long run prior to approving these projects.

The Source: Information in this article comes from FOX 7 interviews with experts. 

TexasTechnologyEnvironment

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Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Jan. 11 #475

Today&apos;s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Jan. 11 #475

Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.


To solve today’s Connections: Sports Edition, it helps if you know the roster of a certain Florida team. If you’re struggling with today’s puzzle but still want to solve it, read on for hints and the answers.

Connections: Sports Edition is published by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by The Times. It doesn’t appear in the NYT Games app, but it does in The Athletic’s own app. Or you can play it for free online.

Read more: NYT Connections: Sports Edition Puzzle Comes Out of Beta

Hints for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.

Yellow group hint: Ouch!

Green group hint: Behind the mic.

Blue group hint: Florida athletes.

Purple group hint: Not tall.

Answers for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Yellow group: Sports injuries.

Green group: NFL broadcasters.

Blue group: Jacksonville Jaguars players.

Purple group: Short ____.

Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words

What are today’s Connections: Sports Edition answers?

completed NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Jan. 11, 2026

The completed NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Jan. 11, 2026.

NYT/Screenshot by CNET

The yellow words in today’s Connections

The theme is sports injuries. The four answers are break, pull, sprain and tear.

The green words in today’s Connections

The theme is NFL broadcasters. The four answers are Buck, Eagle, Michaels and Nantz.

The blue words in today’s Connections

The theme is Jacksonville Jaguars players. The four answers are Etienne, Lawrence, Little and Strange.

The purple words in today’s Connections

The theme is short ____. The four answers are corner, handed, hop and stop.


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North Texans join nationwide protests against ICE following Minneapolis shooting

North Texans join nationwide protests against ICE following Minneapolis shooting

Demonstrators gathered across the country over the weekend to protest the Trump administration’s immigration policies, following the fatal shooting of a woman in Minneapolis.

In Fort Worth, police estimated that about 700 people joined a peaceful rally and march through downtown on Saturday. A smaller protest took place in Southlake’s Town Square.

Protesters held signs calling to abolish ICE and to honor the life of Renee Good, the woman killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.

“We have to raise our voices, we can’t be silent,” said Dr. Michael Bell, senior pastor at Greater St. Stephen First Church, who stood alongside other members of the Fort Worth clergy.
“This is what this is about. Bringing us together and pushing back against the divisiveness,” Bell said.

Attendees carried signs with Good’s photo and called for an end to increased deportations under the Trump administration.

Fort Worth resident Kathy Johnson reflected on her father’s service in World War II.
“Those people didn’t fight for what is going on here. They fought against this kind of stuff, and I don’t want it. It doesn’t feel like where I want to live,” Johnson said.

Trump administration officials have said the ICE officer involved, Jonathan Ross, acted in self-defense when he shot Good as she fled during a confrontation on Wednesday. The case remains under investigation, and Minnesota officials and eyewitnesses have disputed the federal account.

“I think it’s very important to get people to vote because that’s the only way we are going to make change — and showing up like this, and showing people in power that we are not okay with this,” said Emily Carlos, a resident of Arlington.

In a statement Saturday, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin defended ICE officers and their use of force.

“ICE officers are facing a nearly 1300% increase in assaults against them as they put their lives on the line to arrest murderers, rapists and gang members,” McLaughlin said.

“The First Amendment protects speech and peaceful assembly — not rioting, assault and destruction,” she added. “DHS is taking measures to uphold the rule of law and protect public safety and our officers.”

Fort Worth police said there were no disturbances or arrests made during Saturday’s demonstration.

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Judson ISD superintendent on paid leave, per district statement released hours after board meeting

Judson ISD superintendent on paid leave, per district statement released hours after board meeting

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This story has been updated following a statement issued by the district at 9:41 p.m.

An acrimonious board meeting of the Judson Independent School District ended abruptly Saturday with the withdrawal of a motion to relieve Superintendent Milton Fields of his duties.

Trustees then voted 6-1 to “proceed as discussed in closed session,” leading journalists and the public to believe Fields remained at the helm.

However, a statement sent to news outlets four hours after the end of the meeting clarified that the superintendent had been placed on leave after all.

“The District’s Superintendent, Dr. Milton ‘Rob’ Fields, III, has been placed on administrative leave with pay in accordance with the Board’s motion at today’s meeting,” said the statement sent from the email account of Judson’s chief communications officer.

“Further, Dr. Lacey Gosch will serve as Acting Superintendent until further notice. Since this involves confidential personnel matters, we will not be commenting any further. The District remains focused on the core functions of serving students, supporting staff, and maintaining a stable learning environment for the community,” the statement, which said it was from Board President Monica Ryan, went on to say.

TPR texted Ryan for confirmation of the statement’s accuracy. Ryan said their lawyer had recommended the vague language at the end of the meeting, but the 6-1 vote at the end of the meeting was to place Fields on leave and appoint an acting superintendent.

Trustee Lesley Lee, one of three new board members elected in May, made the original motion to relieve Fields and place him on paid administrative leave “pending an investigation” into unnamed “reported concerns.”

However, members of the public and some trustees made it clear they believed Ryan was the one truly instigating the push to remove the superintendent.

Before making the motion, Lee said she was heartbroken and believed Fields was a good man.

“This is my agenda, so there’s no finger pointing anymore,” Lee said.

After nearly three hours of discussion in closed session, Lee withdrew the motion to place Fields on leave and made the new motion to “proceed as discussed in closed session.”

Members of the Judson community, including multiple former board members and a man who taught Fields when he was a Judson student, packed the board room on Saturday to support the superintendent after the agenda of the specially called meeting was posted mid-week.
During public comments they called the superintendent a man of character and integrity, and the move to remove him from leadership a witch hunt.

Milton Fields is a product of Judson ISD and a longtime employee of the district. When he was appointed superintendent in the spring of 2023, the board was packed with community members celebrating his selection.

“Dr. Fields is doing great work. He needs to not be removed,” said Amber Gonzales, the principal of Copperfield Elementary and one of the nearly 30 people who spoke in support of the superintendent. “He needs our support. He needs a board that works with him in unison and not against him. He needs a board that does not tie his hands and instead allows him to do his job that he was hired to do for this district.”

Local optometrist and community member Charlinda Nance said the move against Fields was personal for her because she had block walked for Ryan.

“When people came to me and said, ‘We voted for her because you vouched for her.’ I did. In the beginning, I said, ‘Let’s not confuse her passion for aggression.’ This is aggression. This is planned,” Nance said.

“And if we’re going to put him on administrative leave or terminate his employment, show me a write up. Show me an improvement plan,” Nance added. “Show me where we tried to work together to make this district better as a whole.”

P.J. Cabrera, a local professor and former Judson journalism teacher pointed out that Fields is one of only a few Black superintendents in Texas.

“If you remove the superintendent in this way you are going to cause chaos, a mass exodus of faculty and staff and family and students, and you guys will be known for removing one of the few superintendents of color in the state of Texas,” Cabrera said.

Saturday was the eighth time the Judson school board agenda has included a discussion of the superintendent’s duties or responsibilities since the May election changed the makeup of the board, and the third time the agenda included possible action on his employment.

However, it was the first time the discussion was moved from closed to open session. Discussion in closed session was not even on the agenda, but the board moved discussion behind closed doors after longtime trustees Laura Stanford, Suzanne Kenoyer, and José Macias Jr. pushed for it.

A screenshot of the full Judson ISD school board at the dias with Superintendent Milton Fields on Saturday, January, 10, 2026 during a specially called meeting to discuss and act on the superintendent's employment.

A screenshot of the full Judson ISD school board at the dias with Superintendent Milton Fields on Saturday, January, 10, 2026 during a specially called meeting to discuss and act on the superintendent’s employment.

Stanford, Kenoyer, and Macias said they had no idea what the basis of the investigation was, and the board needed to go into closed session to discuss legal concerns and personnel matters.

“I don’t know what he did wrong. I’ve not heard any allegations,” Stanford said. “The last written document we have about Dr. Fields is a good evaluation.”

“This is a railroad job. This needs to be postponed until all of us know what these alleged allegations are. Because, frankly, I don’t believe it,” added Kenoyer.

Board President Monica Ryan accused them of lying when they said they didn’t know what it was about.

“To hear fellow board members just lie to the public at this point, when we know via the emails that they have been in receipt of the same emails as seven board members have, that’s just super disappointing that they can’t just be truthful with the public and are pretending they don’t know what this is about,” Ryan said.

“That’s not true. Quit calling us liars, please,” Stanford replied.

The superintendent also seemed unaware of what the allegations were about. At one point, he offered to clarify matters in public, mistaking the motion to put him on leave with pay for an allegation about pay.

“We have the people around the dais who can answer any pay questions. We can go ahead and ask the question, and we could talk about it now,” Fields said.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t think I heard anything about pay,” Ryan responded.

“I’m still free to talk about whatever it is,” Fields replied.

Fields also broke up the tense back and forth between trustees accusing each other of lying and asked them to please go into closed session.

“Investigate what you need to, but please, let’s stop this. This is only a further embarrassment to the district, and it only affects the classrooms even more,” Fields said.

Trustees eventually voted 4-3 to go into closed session to speak with an attorney, with Stephanie Jones voting with Stanford, Kenoyer, and Macias.

They briefly returned to open session to vote to add a discussion of personnel matters to the closed session and went back behind closed doors for more than two hours.

Macias was the only trustee to vote against Lee’s motion to “proceed as discussed in closed session.”

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