Fort Worth Local Pulse

Fort Worth Local Pulse: Summer Heat, City Growth, and Community Events

3 min · 4. juni 2026
episode Fort Worth Local Pulse: Summer Heat, City Growth, and Community Events cover

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Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Thursday, June fourth, and we’re catching everyone up on what’s happening around our city right now. We start at City Hall, where the Fort Worth City Council is holding a session today focused on the upcoming special election, working through voting dates and ballot notices for later this year. According to the city’s public agenda, council members are weighing timing and locations that affect where we cast our ballots and how accessible early voting will be, so we’ll keep an eye on how that shapes our fall plans. Weatherwise, we step out into a warm and muggy North Texas morning. Local forecasters say temperatures across the Dallas Fort Worth area will climb into the low 90s this afternoon, a few degrees warmer than yesterday, with a heat index that makes it feel closer to the mid 90s. Storm chances stay low for Fort Worth during the day, but we watch for a few pop up showers late, especially west of downtown. Winds stay breezy, so it’s a good day for outdoor plans if we stay hydrated and keep the sunscreen handy. In breaking local development, downtown and the Near Southside continue to see new projects. Commercial brokers report that office vacancies are stabilizing just north of Sundance Square, while apartment rents across greater Fort Worth are up roughly three percent from this time last year. For home shoppers, median single family prices in Tarrant County are hovering in the low to mid three hundreds, and well priced homes near Camp Bowie and along Bryant Irvin are still drawing multiple offers. On the job front, regional employers around Alliance, the Medical District, and along Interstate 35 are listing thousands of openings, especially in logistics, nursing, and skilled trades. Workforce groups say starting hourly pay for warehouse work is now commonly in the mid to upper teens, with many postings near twenty dollars an hour. For culture and fun, downtown comes alive tonight with Unmuted Karaoke at Big Laugh Comedy Club, running from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. along Houston Street, blending stand up energy with a late night sing along. Out in southwest Fort Worth, the Southwest Community Center on Welch Avenue is gearing up for its summer Father’s Day barbecue later this month, a low cost way for families to gather and meet neighbors. In schools, coaches around the city are celebrating strong spring showings from local baseball and softball teams, with several Fort Worth ISD squads making deep playoff runs and building momentum heading into summer leagues. Public safety officials report a relatively routine past 24 hours, with Fort Worth police responding mainly to traffic collisions along Interstate 30 and U.S. 287, plus a handful of property crimes on the city’s east side. Detectives continue to ask for tips on recent burglary cases, encouraging all of us to lock vehicles, secure porch deliveries, and check home cameras if we see anything suspicious. For a feel good note, volunteers on the Near Southside have been sprucing up pocket parks and planting new flowers along Magnolia Avenue, making those evening strolls and patio dinners a little brighter as summer kicks in. Thanks for tuning in to Fort Worth Local Pulse, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in with your city. This has been Fort Worth Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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episode Fort Worth Local Pulse: Storms Brewing, New Rentals Debated, Summer Events Heat Up artwork

Fort Worth Local Pulse: Storms Brewing, New Rentals Debated, Summer Events Heat Up

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Saturday, June 6, 2026. We wake up today to a warm, muggy start across Tarrant County. Fox 4 News says we have a good chance of scattered thunderstorms this afternoon, with highs in the upper 80s and some pockets of heavy rain. That means we plan outdoor plans with a backup, watch for slick spots on I 35, I 30, and around the Mixmaster, and keep an eye on low water crossings if storms pop up. From City Hall, the City of Fort Worth reports it is moving ahead with a late June town hall on new short term rental regulations. City staff say they want our feedback before final rules are set, which could affect how many Airbnbs we see in neighborhoods like Fairmount, Near Southside, and along Camp Bowie. There is also ongoing work on road projects near West Seventh and along Lancaster that may slow our commutes but aim to ease congestion long term. In breaking local development news, the Star Telegram highlights steady construction downtown and in the Stockyards, with new mixed use projects bringing several hundred new apartments and retail spaces. Real estate agents say median home prices in Fort Worth are now in the mid three hundreds, with multiple offers still common inside Loop 820 but a bit more breathing room farther out toward Benbrook and Saginaw. On the job front, regional employers around Alliance and near DFW Airport are listing hundreds of openings, especially in logistics, warehouse work, and aviation support. Local staffing firms report hourly warehouse wages often starting around the high teens, with some skilled positions in the low twenties per hour. For culture and entertainment, FoodieLand, the large food festival, continues today and tomorrow at Texas Motor Speedway, bringing dozens of vendors, live music, and family activities. The track also hosts the NASCAR Racing Experience today, so we can expect extra traffic along Highway 114 and I 35W. Closer in, live music is scheduled tonight in the Near Southside and along West Seventh, with several local bands playing outdoor patios if the rain cooperates. In schools and sports, Fort Worth ISD celebrates students from several high schools advancing to state level academic competitions, and local baseball and softball all star teams are gearing up for summer tournaments across the city. Turning to public safety, local stations report officers responding overnight to a couple of significant crashes along Loop 820 and a shooting investigation on the east side. Police say there is no ongoing threat to the general public but ask anyone with information to contact Fort Worth PD. We stay mindful, check on neighbors, and use extra caution on the roads, especially with wet pavement. For a feel good story, community volunteers on the Northside spent the morning yesterday cleaning up around Main Street and handing out fresh produce near the Stockyards, showing once again how our city rallies around one another. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you do not miss our next update. This has been Fort Worth Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

6. juni 20263 min
episode Fort Worth Local Pulse: Drones, Heat, and Community Care - June 5, 2026 artwork

Fort Worth Local Pulse: Drones, Heat, and Community Care - June 5, 2026

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Friday, June 5, 2026. We start today with a safety update close to home. Fort Worth police are rolling out a new drone response program, aiming to get eyes on emergency scenes faster and free up officers for in-person calls. NBC 5 reports the department is testing launches from several patrol divisions, with drones dispatched right after 911 calls to help assess danger and traffic around incidents. Leaders say this could cut response times and improve officer and public safety, and we should expect to see more of these drones in the skies over major corridors like East Lancaster and West 7th as the program grows. From city and state transportation, TxDOT’s Fort Worth District is moving ahead on I 20 improvements west of town, from Santa Fe and Clear Lake Road over toward East Bankhead Highway in Parker County. The agency is preparing a public meeting later this month, with plans for new frontage roads and better access. That matters for all of us who commute from the west side or out toward Weatherford, since construction and future closures could add time to our daily drive along I 20 and Loop 820. Weather wise, we are waking up to warm and muggy conditions across Fort Worth, with highs headed toward the low to mid 90s this afternoon. We could see a pop up thunderstorm, mainly late in the day, especially north of I 30. Any storm that develops could briefly impact the drive along I 35W and around downtown. Tonight stays warm and humid, and heading into the weekend, we hold on to the heat with only small storm chances, so it is a good idea to plan shade and water if we are out at Trinity Park or around the Stockyards. In local business news, several hiring boards are showing roughly seven thousand open jobs across the Fort Worth area this week, with strong demand in logistics around Alliance, healthcare near the Medical District along Eighth Avenue, and service jobs in downtown and Clearfork. For housing, local real estate agents report the median home price in Fort Worth sitting in the mid 300 thousands, with slightly more listings on the market than this time last year, giving buyers a bit more room to negotiate in neighborhoods like Wedgwood, Ryan Place, and out toward Keller. On the culture and fun side, Fort Worth is gearing up for live music and community all weekend. Billy Bob’s in the Stockyards has multiple acts on stage tonight and tomorrow, while Sundance Square is hosting free outdoor performances and family friendly activities in the plaza. The Modern Art Museum on Camp Bowie is running extended hours this weekend, giving us more time to catch new exhibits before the summer rush. Sports fans have plenty to watch. The Texas Rangers are back at Globe Life Field in nearby Arlington, opening a three game home set against the Cleveland Guardians tonight. First pitch is scheduled for this evening, and many Fort Worth fans will be heading east on I 30 after work. Locally, several Fort Worth ISD high school teams have wrapped strong spring seasons, with track and baseball squads earning regional honors, and coaches are already talking about summer workouts and camps. Turning to public safety, Fort Worth police and local outlets report a relatively calm last 24 hours, with no citywide major incidents overnight. Officers did respond to a handful of serious crashes along I 35W and near East Berry, and there were a few arrests tied to ongoing investigations on the south side. Police continue to remind us to lock cars, remove valuables, and keep porch lights and cameras active, especially in neighborhoods along Camp Bowie and around TCU, as summer tends to bring an uptick in opportunistic thefts. For a feel good note to close, neighbors along Magnolia Avenue and near South Main are organizing small community cleanups and food drives this weekend, teaming up with local restaurants and churches to support families hit hardest by rising costs. Volunteers are setting up near neighborhood parks and along the Trinity Trails, turning a hot weekend into a chance to take care of each other. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in on life here in Fort Worth. This has been Fort Worth Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Yesterday4 min
episode Fort Worth Local Pulse: Summer Heat, City Growth, and Community Events artwork

Fort Worth Local Pulse: Summer Heat, City Growth, and Community Events

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Thursday, June fourth, and we’re catching everyone up on what’s happening around our city right now. We start at City Hall, where the Fort Worth City Council is holding a session today focused on the upcoming special election, working through voting dates and ballot notices for later this year. According to the city’s public agenda, council members are weighing timing and locations that affect where we cast our ballots and how accessible early voting will be, so we’ll keep an eye on how that shapes our fall plans. Weatherwise, we step out into a warm and muggy North Texas morning. Local forecasters say temperatures across the Dallas Fort Worth area will climb into the low 90s this afternoon, a few degrees warmer than yesterday, with a heat index that makes it feel closer to the mid 90s. Storm chances stay low for Fort Worth during the day, but we watch for a few pop up showers late, especially west of downtown. Winds stay breezy, so it’s a good day for outdoor plans if we stay hydrated and keep the sunscreen handy. In breaking local development, downtown and the Near Southside continue to see new projects. Commercial brokers report that office vacancies are stabilizing just north of Sundance Square, while apartment rents across greater Fort Worth are up roughly three percent from this time last year. For home shoppers, median single family prices in Tarrant County are hovering in the low to mid three hundreds, and well priced homes near Camp Bowie and along Bryant Irvin are still drawing multiple offers. On the job front, regional employers around Alliance, the Medical District, and along Interstate 35 are listing thousands of openings, especially in logistics, nursing, and skilled trades. Workforce groups say starting hourly pay for warehouse work is now commonly in the mid to upper teens, with many postings near twenty dollars an hour. For culture and fun, downtown comes alive tonight with Unmuted Karaoke at Big Laugh Comedy Club, running from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. along Houston Street, blending stand up energy with a late night sing along. Out in southwest Fort Worth, the Southwest Community Center on Welch Avenue is gearing up for its summer Father’s Day barbecue later this month, a low cost way for families to gather and meet neighbors. In schools, coaches around the city are celebrating strong spring showings from local baseball and softball teams, with several Fort Worth ISD squads making deep playoff runs and building momentum heading into summer leagues. Public safety officials report a relatively routine past 24 hours, with Fort Worth police responding mainly to traffic collisions along Interstate 30 and U.S. 287, plus a handful of property crimes on the city’s east side. Detectives continue to ask for tips on recent burglary cases, encouraging all of us to lock vehicles, secure porch deliveries, and check home cameras if we see anything suspicious. For a feel good note, volunteers on the Near Southside have been sprucing up pocket parks and planting new flowers along Magnolia Avenue, making those evening strolls and patio dinners a little brighter as summer kicks in. Thanks for tuning in to Fort Worth Local Pulse, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in with your city. This has been Fort Worth Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

4. juni 20263 min
episode Fort Worth Ranks Among Nation's Most Polluted Cities as Air Quality Concerns Rise artwork

Fort Worth Ranks Among Nation's Most Polluted Cities as Air Quality Concerns Rise

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Thursday, May twenty-first, twenty twenty-six. We start with breaking news on our air quality. Fort Worth is now ranked among the ten most polluted cities in the country for fine particle pollution. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports we sit around ninth nationwide for those tiny PM 2.5 particles that get deep into our lungs and bloodstream. Traffic along I-35W and I-30, operations at DFW Airport, factories, and even home heating are big contributors. Doctors warn this can worsen asthma and heart conditions, so we should take it easy outdoors if we have breathing issues, especially during the afternoon commute. Weather-wise, we are waking up mild, with temperatures in the mid-60s climbing into the mid to upper 80s by late afternoon. Skies stay mostly clear, and winds are light, so that haze may hang around. A cold front is on the horizon in the next couple of days, bringing a slight cool down but not much rain. For outdoor plans around Sundance Square or along the Trinity Trails today, it is a warm go, just with that air quality caution in mind. From City Hall, the job board for the City of Fort Worth shows new openings across departments. One example is a senior equipment operator position in the water department closing soon. The city reminds us they can close postings without notice, so if we are job hunting, now is the time to jump on those applications. On transportation, Fort Worth police and Trinity Metro crews are dealing with a TEXRail crash involving a vehicle near Sylvania Avenue between the North Side and Mercantile stations. According to the Star-Telegram, service in that stretch is delayed for hours as repairs continue, so riders should build in extra time and watch for bus shuttles. In sports, we are just days away from the twenty twenty-six Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club, running May twenty-fifth through thirty-first. Golf fans across Fort Worth are already seeing preparations ramp up along University Drive. Expect heavier traffic near Colonial and increased business for restaurants and hotels along West Seventh and in the Near Southside. In our schools, Fort Worth ISD continues leadership changes after years of performance concerns, with new administrators working to boost achievement and stabilize campuses. We will be watching how that affects classrooms as we move toward the end of the school year. For crime and safety, aside from the TEXRail crash investigation, there are no major citywide incidents reported overnight, but police do remind us to slow down in construction zones and around train crossings, especially on Sylvania and other busy corridors. We close with a feel-good note. Neighborhood groups along Magnolia Avenue and in the Stockyards are organizing weekend cleanups, tying into concerns about air and street pollution. It is a small but meaningful way we can all pitch in. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been Fort Worth Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

21. maj 20263 min