Fort Worth Local Pulse
Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Friday, June nineteenth. We wake up to calm skies over downtown and the Trinity. The National Weather Service says we sit in the low seventies this morning, heading toward upper eighties this afternoon with a light south breeze. A stray pop up storm is possible east of I 35, but for most of us it stays hot, dry, and a bit humid. That means outdoor plans around Trinity Park or the Stockyards are a go, but we remember water, shade, and sunscreen. Tonight, we cool back into the seventies with similar weather through the weekend. From City Hall, Fort Worth officials continue to push growth on the west and north sides. We see more attention on traffic along Camp Bowie and around Alliance as new warehouses and housing go in. Council members are talking about timing lights and adding turn lanes on busy stretches like Bryant Irvin and Heritage Trace to ease our commutes. We will keep watching those decisions because they shape how long we sit in the car every day. On development, local real estate agents report that the median home price in Fort Worth is hovering around three hundred fifty thousand dollars, with homes near TCU, along Hulen, and in the Cultural District still moving quickly, many seeing offers within about two weeks. Rents stay high but steady, with many one bedroom apartments inside Loop 820 around fifteen hundred dollars a month. Job wise, the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce says we have dozens of openings in logistics and manufacturing around Alliance, and steady hiring in health care near the Medical District on Magnolia and Eighth Avenue. If we are looking, this is a good week to refresh resumes and check postings from the big employers along I 35 and 121. In culture and events, Fort Worth Culture Map highlights a busy weekend. Texas country favorites Randy Rogers and Pat Green share the stage at Billy Bobs Texas in the Stockyards tonight. At the Fort Worth Convention Center on Houston Street, the Freedom Vibes 80s concert brings nostalgic R and B as part of the Juneteenth Freedom Vibes Festival. The National Juneteenth Museum reminds us celebrations continue through tomorrow with food, music, and history on the Southside. Local schools are easing into summer, but several Fort Worth ISD teams are still in offseason workouts, and coaches are already talking about fall football under the lights at Farrington Field and Herman Clark. On public safety, Fort Worth Police say they are still investigating a shooting last week in the Sycamore Landing area in the South Division, near Crowley Road, and they are asking anyone with information to contact detectives or Crime Stoppers. Patrols are stepped up in that neighborhood, and officers emphasize they believe this is a targeted incident, not random, but we all stay aware and check on our neighbors. A feel good note to end on. Volunteers along the Trinity Trails spent part of this week picking up trash from Panther Island down to Rogers Road, making our riverfront cleaner for morning walkers, cyclists, and families out with strollers and dogs. It is a small thing that makes our shared spaces a little better. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you do not miss our daily check in. 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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