Every major project — reservoirs, ISD bonds, MUDs, large subdivisions, road expansions —
tracked with facts, sources, and what you can do. Updated as filings move. No advocacy here;
that lives in Ask the Desk.
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stadium📍 AT&T Stadium and surrounding Cowboys Complex Development Project area, City of Arlington.
The Arlington City Council voted to commit up to $273 million in city funds toward AT&T Stadium upgrades, in exchange for an extension of the Dallas Cowboys' lease through 2055 (current lease ends 2038). The Cowboys are contributing at least $750 million. Upgrades include security enhancements, road improvements, pedestrian bridges, a dedicated ride-share parking lot, additional digital signage, and plaza shade cover.
On May 2, 2026 Fort Worth voters approved all six bond propositions in an $845M package. Prop A: $511.48M for streets and mobility. Prop B: $185.14M for parks, recreation, and open-space. Other props covered additional infrastructure plus the city's first-ever affordable-housing bond proposition. Voters also approved nine charter amendments including a raise for mayor and council.
Last updated 2026-05-02
schools📍 Keller ISD service area (Keller + portions of Colleyville, Fort Worth, Haltom City, Hurst, North Richland Hills, Southlake, Watauga, Westlake).
At its May 14, 2026 board meeting, Keller ISD trustees voted to close three intermediate schools — Bear Creek, Parkwood Hill, and Trinity Meadows — ahead of the 2027-28 school year. The campuses remain open for the 2026-27 year. The district cites declining enrollment, projecting savings of $3M-$3.75M annually in operating costs and $39M in avoided capital improvement costs.
Last updated 2026-05-15
schools📍 Mansfield ISD service area (City of Mansfield + portions of surrounding southern Tarrant).
Mansfield ISD voters approved Proposition A (Equip and Renovate School Facilities) by a 54.37%-45.62% margin (5,828 to 4,891) and Proposition B (Instructional Technology) by 52.91%-47.08% (5,654 to 5,032). The ballot also included two Board of Trustees seats — Place 6 and Place 7.
Last updated 2026-05-03
residential📍 447-acre site within Flower Mound (Tarrant + Denton).
Toll Brothers' 447-acre Havenwood development cleared its first subdivision site plan and tree-removal permits at Flower Mound's March 2, 2026 council meeting. The project was initially approved in May 2024 and will build out in four phases. The first phase covers 87 homes.
Last updated 2026-03
retail📍 820 N. Beach St. at NE Loop 820, Haltom City.
A 42,500-sq-ft H Mart at 820 N. Beach St. (at NE Loop 820) will anchor a 50-acre mixed-use development with 50+ restaurant/retail spaces including Korean BBQ, sushi, Vietnamese, Thai, and Mexican. 100% leased; substantial completion is targeted for mid-to-late September 2026. Anchors a major Asian-foods retail and dining hub for the Mid-Cities corridor.
Last updated 2026-05
How items get on the watch. An item lands here when it crosses a public-filing
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