Your Dallas Weekly Newsletter for Wednesday, August 13, 2025!

Halfway through the week! Here’s your news.

LMA announces newsrooms in the 2025 national cohort of the Lab for Journalism Funding

By editorial

August 12, 2025

The 2025 national cohort of the LMA Lab for Journalism Funding has selected 20 news organizations to participate in a six-month program to develop strategies to fund essential local journalism via philanthropy.

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From Forest Avenue to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard

By Jerry L. Hawkins

August 12, 2025

Originally published with our media partner, Dallas Free Press The election of Elsie Faye Heggins to the Dallas City Council in 1980 signaled a massive change to Dallasโ€™ political environment, and she and her community knew it. Heggins and her fellow South Dallas residents commenced giant-sized plans to terraform South Dallas. In his document, [โ€ฆ]

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In redistricting clash, Texas GOP flexes power to shut down Democratsโ€™ last tool of resistance

By Eleanor Klibanoff, The Texas Tribune

August 12, 2025

Texas Republicans have used their control of the state government to push a partisan agenda, culminating in a long-shot legal bid to expel House Democrats and a push to deliver five additional congressional seats to President Trump.

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Five years after shedding Confederate moniker, a West Texas high school may be Lee High again

By Carlos Nogueras Ramos, The Texas Tribune

August 11, 2025

The Midland Independent School District board of trustees is set to consider reverting the name of Legacy High School to Midland Lee, sparking a debate over honoring Confederate leaders and the legacy of the schoolโ€™s football team.

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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. : A clear and present danger to American health

By Congressman Kweisi Mfume, D, MD, The Afro

August 8, 2025

Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has been criticized for slashing programs, undermining trust in vaccines, and mishandling health crises, leading to a measles outbreak and rising drowning deaths.

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How Ancient Practices at UMBC Heal Old Wounds

By Mekhi Abbott, Word In Black

August 10, 2025

Studiesย haveย madeย it clear: Black college students are more likely to observe and experience overt racism and experience microaggressions that communicate that they are intellectually inferior or donโ€™t belong.ย  While those problems are complex, the University of Maryland-Baltimore County has adopted a basic but deceptively challenging way to address them with an ancient practice: people sitting in a circle, having a conversation. LEARN MORE:ย In Adopting Racial Healing, Shriver Center Embraces its Legacy โ€œThe problems and conflicts weโ€™ve created in the modern world are complex, but the solution is actually pretty simple: we need to turn towards one another and talk,โ€ said Jeff [โ€ฆ]

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40 LOVE Legacy Builder Ceremony Serves Culture, Community, and Celebration in Dallas

By editorial

August 9, 2025

The inaugural 40 LOVE Legacy Builder Ceremony celebrated Black excellence and honored the contributions of individuals committed to preserving Black stories and legacy for future generations, while also showcasing the next generation of leaders.

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Howโ€™s Your Brain? It Might Be Paying the โ€˜Black Taxโ€™

By Jennifer Porter Gore

August 12, 2025

Black Americans are 20% more likely to face serious mental health challenges than the overall population, and the combination of mental illness and chronic stress from racism puts them at increased risk of accelerated brain aging and cognitive decline.

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Why Young Americans Dread Turning 26: Health Insurance Chaos

By KFF Health News

August 11, 2025

The Affordable Care Act has created an โ€œinsurance cliffโ€ for young adults turning 26, leaving many without insurance due to the complexity of choosing a plan and the rising costs of coverage.

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Dads to Doulas: Empowering Fathers to Advocate Amid Maternal Health Crisis

By Megan Sayles, The Afro, Word In Black

August 11, 2025

Dads to Doulas is a new program launched by Dear Fathers, a St. Louis-based platform, to provide education and training to Black men and expectant fathers to advocate for their families from pregnancy to infancy, in an effort to reduce disparities in Black maternal and infant health outcomes.

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