Fort Worth Local Pulse

Fort Worth Wakes to Wet Skies: Floods, New Hotels, and Your Sunday Plans

3 min · 7. kesä 2026
jakson Fort Worth Wakes to Wet Skies: Floods, New Hotels, and Your Sunday Plans kansikuva

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Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Sunday, June 7, 2026. We wake up today watching the sky. CBS Texas meteorologists say North Texas faces more heavy rain and isolated storms, with a flood watch in effect because our ground is already saturated. That means we want to take it slow on I 35W, I 30, and along the Trinity River, especially in low lying spots near Panther Island and Riverside. Showers come and go through the day, with muggy highs in the 80s and more rain possible tonight. We start with a regional development that affects many of us who work or play just down the road in Arlington. FOX 4 reports the historic Sheraton Hotel in the Arlington Entertainment District was brought down in a controlled implosion Saturday morning to clear the way for The Americana, a 500 million dollar Loews luxury resort. That project is expected to create hundreds of construction and hospitality jobs and add another big draw right by AT and T Stadium and Globe Life Field, boosting tourism that often spills back into downtown Fort Worth hotels and restaurants. Here at home, Fort Worth City Hall is focused on drainage and street flooding after this weeks storms, with staff reviewing problem intersections along East Lancaster, Berry Street, and around the TCU area. We can expect updated stormwater projects and possible temporary lane closures as crews clear debris from inlets. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price inside Fort Worth is now in the mid 300 thousand dollar range, with hot pockets around Alliance, Near Southside, and along Camp Bowie. Rent for a typical two bedroom apartment sits around 1,500 dollars a month, and builders around Walsh Ranch and north of Loop 820 continue to add new homes. On the job front, employers along West Seventh, in the Medical District by Harris Methodist, and in Alliance are posting openings in health care, logistics, retail, and hospitality, many in the 18 to 25 dollars an hour range. For culture and events, indoor plans are our friend today. The Kimbell and the Modern on Camp Bowie are open and dry, and Sundance Square restaurants are leaning into brunch crowds between showers. Local venues along West Seventh and Near Southside have live music tonight, weather permitting, including small country and indie sets at neighborhood bars. In sports, local high school baseball and softball teams are wrapping up playoff runs, with several Fort Worth ISD programs earning regional honors, giving our students some well deserved spotlight. On the crime front, Fort Worth police over the past day report several weather related crashes on I 20 and Loop 820, along with a handful of overnight property crimes on the east and south sides. Officers continue to stress locking vehicles, removing valuables from view, and slowing down on wet roads. A quick feel good note to end on. Volunteers along the Trinity Trail spent part of the weekend picking up trash washed in by recent rains, helping keep the riverfront cleaner for joggers, cyclists, and families. Thanks for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local 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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jakson Fort Worth Local Pulse: Child Rescue, Summer Heat, and Juneteenth Celebration kansikuva

Fort Worth Local Pulse: Child Rescue, Summer Heat, and Juneteenth Celebration

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Saturday, June thirteenth. We start with breaking news from the Fort Worth Police Department. Yesterday around lunchtime, officers respond to a report of a missing child near Dream Park by the Trinity River. According to Fort Worth Police, what begins as a routine call turns into a lifesaving rescue as officers quickly locate the child safe and reunite them with family. It is a tense reminder for all of us to stay alert in crowded parks and trails, but also a feel good moment about how fast our first responders move when it matters. On the broader safety front, police report no major overnight incidents citywide, but we do have extra patrols along West Seventh and the Stockyards after a few recent late night disturbances. We should expect to see more cruisers along West Seventh Street and North Main, especially around closing time. Authorities ask that we plan rides ahead and report reckless driving or fights right away. Weather wise, we are in classic Fort Worth summer mode. The National Weather Service in Fort Worth says we are heading for the mid to upper nineties today, with heat index values pushing into the triple digits and a heat advisory lingering into the evening. Skies stay mostly sunny and dry, so we should drink plenty of water and take breaks if we are outside, especially at midday. Looking ahead a couple of days, storm chances tick up again late Sunday into Monday, with highs easing back into the upper eighties. City Hall is focused on how we speak up at council meetings. The city recently rolls out a new speaker registration system for council sessions. According to the city’s public information office, we will now need to sign up online after the agenda posts and at least a couple of hours before meetings start. It is a small procedural change, but it affects how we weigh in on zoning, budgets, and neighborhood issues. On the community and culture front, there is a big Juneteenth Block Party this morning at the Ryan Family YMCA on McCart Avenue in south Fort Worth. The YMCA and Fort Worth Police are teaming up for free family fun, with local vendors, live music, food, and kids activities from nine to noon. No tickets are required, so we can just show up, enjoy the music, and support our neighbors. For live music tonight, Ticketmaster listings show Straight Tequila Night, the original nineties country tribute, playing Tannahill’s Music Hall in the Stockyards at nine. It is a solid option if we want to make a night of it after dinner on Exchange Avenue. In sports, our local high school summer leagues are in full swing. Several Fort Worth ISD baseball and softball squads are playing showcase games this weekend, and local coaches say college scouts are keeping an eye on standouts from schools along I-30 and East Lancaster. On the jobs front, the Fort Worth Chamber continues to post new openings across logistics, healthcare, and construction, with many listings in the $20 to $30 an hour range. The Chamber also notes that large employers near downtown and Alliance are still hiring for warehouse and driver roles as World Cup tourism boosts traffic through DFW. Real estate agents around Camp Bowie and along the Chisholm Trail Parkway say inventory is tight, with typical single family homes listing in the high three hundreds and moving in just a few weeks. Renters are seeing modest increases, especially near West Seventh and Magnolia, where new mixed use projects continue to fill up quickly. To close on one more positive note, that quick rescue near Dream Park is drawing praise from parents across social media, with many thanking the officers who sprint the trails and search the riverbank in the summer heat. It is one more example of our community looking out for our kids. Thank you for tuning in and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local updates. 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

13. kesä 20263 min
jakson Fort Worth Local Pulse: World Cup Fever, Summer Storms, and Budget Talks kansikuva

Fort Worth Local Pulse: World Cup Fever, Summer Storms, and Budget Talks

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Friday, June twelfth. We wake up under mostly cloudy skies across Fort Worth, with warm, muggy air already building. The National Weather Service says we have a good chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms this afternoon, with highs in the mid 80s and light south winds. That means we keep an eye on the radar if we are heading out to the park, to the pool, or to any outdoor events later today. Downtown, our city is buzzing as World Cup fever settles into Sundance Square. NBC DFW reports that fans from all over the world are gathering there to watch matches on big screens, bringing more foot traffic to the restaurants and bars along Main Street and around the plaza. That is good news for service jobs and tips heading into the weekend. At City Hall, council staff continue working through summer budget workshops, with a focus on public safety staffing, street repairs, and park maintenance. While we do not have new votes today, those conversations are setting the stage for how our tax dollars will show up in our daily lives next year, from smoother commutes on West Seventh to more lighting and patrols along East Lancaster. On the job and business front, the Fort Worth Chamber is highlighting steady demand in logistics, healthcare, and construction. Recruiters are talking about hourly warehouse roles in the Alliance corridor starting in the high teens per hour, and entry level medical support jobs near the Medical District around Magnolia and Eighth Avenue in a similar range. That steady hiring supports a still tight local housing market, with agents saying median home prices around Fort Worth holding near the mid three hundreds, especially in fast growing areas north of Loop 820. Culturally, we have plenty to do. The Fort Worth Chamber’s events calendar features the R and B Lovers Tour, with Keith Sweat, Joe, Dru Hill, and Ginuwine headed to Dickies Arena tonight, bringing traffic and energy along Montgomery Street and the Cultural District. Across town, the city’s Parks and Recreation calendar invites our seniors to the Super Senior Swim at Marine Park Pool on Northwest 20th Street, a dedicated, low key session to stay active and cool. Juneteenth celebrations are already underway. Organizers of Freedom Vibes 2026 are in the middle of a week long festival that runs through June twentieth, with events across the city celebrating freedom, culture, and community. In local sports, our high school football and volleyball players are into summer conditioning, while club soccer and baseball teams are using fields from Gateway Park to Benbrook to prepare for regional tournaments. World Cup excitement is spilling into pickup games at neighborhood parks every evening. On the public safety front, Fort Worth police report no citywide emergencies overnight, but we still see the usual mix of vehicle break ins and a few assaults, mainly clustered along our busier nightlife corridors. Officers continue to ask us to lock cars, remove visible valuables, and slow down along I 35W, I 30, and East Lancaster, where serious crashes remain a concern. We share this to help all of us move through the day with a bit more awareness. For families, the Fort Worth Public Library system continues its summer programming with story times and craft activities at branches from Golden Triangle to Diamond Hill, a great option if afternoon storms chase us indoors. Our feel good note today comes from community nonprofits like Community Storehouse up on Katy Road, which is ramping up summer food and school readiness support for kids in need. Volunteers there say every packed backpack and meal helps a local child walk into the next school year more confident. Thank you for tuning in and make sure to subscribe. 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

Eilen3 min
jakson Fort Worth Gears Up for 2026 World Cup While Job Market Booms kansikuva

Fort Worth Gears Up for 2026 World Cup While Job Market Booms

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Thursday, June eleventh. We wake up today with our eyes on the sky. Storms overnight leave streets damp along West Seventh and around TCU, and we carry a small chance of scattered showers through the afternoon, with highs in the upper eighties. We stay humid, but we get pockets of sunshine for lunch breaks and school pickups. Tonight, skies clear a bit and we dip into the low seventies, and tomorrow looks a touch hotter and drier, so we plan those outdoor errands then. Around City Hall, we continue to feel the push to get ready for the 2026 World Cup. Local coverage in the Fort Worth Star Telegram notes city leaders are fine tuning transportation and security plans tied to the FIFA Fan Festival at Sundance Square and along Houston Street, including extended bus and TEXRail service to downtown during match days. That means more late night trains and small detours for drivers near the Intermodal Transportation Center. On the jobs front, Fort Worth Chamber and local hiring boards list roughly ten thousand open positions across the Metroplex, with several hundred in and around downtown, Alliance, and along Bryant Irvin. Health care, logistics near Alliance Airport, and construction along the Chisholm Trail Parkway are leading the way. Starting wages for warehouse roles are hovering in the mid to upper teens per hour. In real estate, local brokers report that median home prices inside the loop are sitting in the mid three hundreds, with newer builds around Walsh Ranch and down near Crowley closer to the mid fours. Inventory is still tight, with only about two months of supply, so buyers need pre approvals ready, while sellers continue to see multiple offers, especially near good schools. For culture and music, Ticketmaster lists country star Luke Bryan headlining Dickies Arena tonight at seven, bringing more traffic to Montgomery Street, so we plan extra time getting around the Cultural District. At the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History on Gendy Street, today’s schedule includes IMAX showings of Serengeti and Cities of the Future, which make a solid option for families dodging any leftover showers. Arts Fort Worth and the Art Club of Fort Worth are promoting an upcoming Silk Ice Dye workshop this Saturday for listeners who want a creative afternoon downtown. School wise, local ISDs are celebrating end of year wins. Coaches in Fort Worth ISD highlight several student athletes earning all state honors in track and baseball, and a handful of seniors from Paschal and Arlington Heights committing to play at small colleges across Texas. On the crime front, Fort Worth police logs from the last day show no citywide emergencies, but we do note a couple of serious incidents: a reported armed robbery near East Lancaster Avenue late last night and a domestic disturbance call on the South Side that led to one arrest. Officers remind us to lock cars, avoid leaving valuables visible at gas stations along I thirty five, and call in suspicious activity rather than confronting anyone ourselves. We end on a feel good note. Community groups downtown are ramping up volunteer shifts to welcome World Cup visitors, organizing bilingual welcome booths near Sundance Square and the Stockyards. It is a reminder that our city’s hospitality is one of our strongest assets. Thank you for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so we can stay connected every morning. 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

11. kesä 20263 min
jakson Fort Worth Wakes to Wet Skies: Floods, New Hotels, and Your Sunday Plans kansikuva

Fort Worth Wakes to Wet Skies: Floods, New Hotels, and Your Sunday Plans

Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Sunday, June 7, 2026. We wake up today watching the sky. CBS Texas meteorologists say North Texas faces more heavy rain and isolated storms, with a flood watch in effect because our ground is already saturated. That means we want to take it slow on I 35W, I 30, and along the Trinity River, especially in low lying spots near Panther Island and Riverside. Showers come and go through the day, with muggy highs in the 80s and more rain possible tonight. We start with a regional development that affects many of us who work or play just down the road in Arlington. FOX 4 reports the historic Sheraton Hotel in the Arlington Entertainment District was brought down in a controlled implosion Saturday morning to clear the way for The Americana, a 500 million dollar Loews luxury resort. That project is expected to create hundreds of construction and hospitality jobs and add another big draw right by AT and T Stadium and Globe Life Field, boosting tourism that often spills back into downtown Fort Worth hotels and restaurants. Here at home, Fort Worth City Hall is focused on drainage and street flooding after this weeks storms, with staff reviewing problem intersections along East Lancaster, Berry Street, and around the TCU area. We can expect updated stormwater projects and possible temporary lane closures as crews clear debris from inlets. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price inside Fort Worth is now in the mid 300 thousand dollar range, with hot pockets around Alliance, Near Southside, and along Camp Bowie. Rent for a typical two bedroom apartment sits around 1,500 dollars a month, and builders around Walsh Ranch and north of Loop 820 continue to add new homes. On the job front, employers along West Seventh, in the Medical District by Harris Methodist, and in Alliance are posting openings in health care, logistics, retail, and hospitality, many in the 18 to 25 dollars an hour range. For culture and events, indoor plans are our friend today. The Kimbell and the Modern on Camp Bowie are open and dry, and Sundance Square restaurants are leaning into brunch crowds between showers. Local venues along West Seventh and Near Southside have live music tonight, weather permitting, including small country and indie sets at neighborhood bars. In sports, local high school baseball and softball teams are wrapping up playoff runs, with several Fort Worth ISD programs earning regional honors, giving our students some well deserved spotlight. On the crime front, Fort Worth police over the past day report several weather related crashes on I 20 and Loop 820, along with a handful of overnight property crimes on the east and south sides. Officers continue to stress locking vehicles, removing valuables from view, and slowing down on wet roads. A quick feel good note to end on. Volunteers along the Trinity Trail spent part of the weekend picking up trash washed in by recent rains, helping keep the riverfront cleaner for joggers, cyclists, and families. Thanks for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local 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

7. kesä 20263 min
jakson Fort Worth Local Pulse: Storms Brewing, New Rentals Debated, Summer Events Heat Up kansikuva

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. kesä 20263 min