Bill Zeeble
Bill Zeeble has been a full-time reporter at KERA since 1992, covering everything from medicine to the Mavericks and education to environmental issues. Heâââ
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A police SWAT team is conducting operations at a synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, near Dallas.
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At the beginning of next month, more than 650 new state laws take effect. Leading up to Sept. 1, public radio reporters from across Texas are explaining some of the most high profile and consequential of those laws. Today: HB 3979, which targets teaching critical race theory in schools.
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Many Texans may be eligible for grants through the Federal Emergency Management Agency or loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration.
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The North Texas Food Bank has served many millions more than it expected to over the last year, and it had to think about how to distribute and acquire that food for its constituents.
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The North Texas Food Bank has served many millions more than it expected to over the last year, and it had to think about how to distribute and acquire that food for its constituents.
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Summer Smith says her son was physically assaulted, forced to drink urine and called racial slurs by white classmates during a sleepover. Plano police and the school district are investigating.
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Texas has allowed curbside voting for decades, for anyone physically unable to enter a polling place. Voters ask for help when they get to a polling location, and an election officer will bring a ballot to the car.
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Now that the Irving-based Boy Scouts of America has declared bankruptcy following sexual abuse lawsuits, victims are waiting for what happens next.
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Texas is all too familiar with grief after a church shooting. Sunday's gunfire in suburban Fort Worth came two years after the deadliest church shooting...
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Early Saturday morning, a white officer in Fort Worth, Texas, shot and killed Atatiana Jefferson inside her home. A worried neighbor had called to report that the door to Jefferson's home was open.