Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Thursday, November 20, 2025. We start our day with some significant developments at our city’s school district. Fort Worth ISD trustees are pushing back against the recent state takeover. In a seven-to-one vote, the board decided to appeal Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath’s move to appoint a conservator to oversee the district. Board President Roxanne Martinez says our priority remains our students and working toward better outcomes. We’ll be watching closely as the district’s challenge goes to the State Office of Administrative Hearings with a fast-tracked decision expected within 30 days. Meanwhile, Christopher Ruszkowski, who’s been named as our school system’s conservator, joined his first board meeting this week.
Turning to local government, Fort Worth’s Board of Adjustments held a major session yesterday at the new City Hall on Fort Worth Trail. Residents and business owners discussed property zoning cases and city code enforcement, something that could affect developments coming up in the cultural district and along Hulen Street. These meetings shape everything from building new restaurants to how historic homes are renovated.
On the weather front, a low-pressure system is moving through North Texas today, and the National Weather Service has part of our area under a flood watch. We’ll see heavy rainfall this morning, making roads like I-30 and Bryant Irvin tricky to navigate. Expect the rain to clear by late afternoon with highs just under 60. Cooler, drier air settles in tonight and looks to stick around as we head toward the weekend.
In business news, the West 7th area welcomes a new bakery this week, Sweet Sage opening doors just in time for the holiday rush. Meanwhile, there are whispers of a major retail chain closing the Eastchase Parkway location, though the company hasn’t confirmed details. We’ll update listeners as more comes in.
For our job market, the city’s official website is promoting over 300 new job openings, with the fastest growth in logistics and healthcare. The surge is helping offset recent layoffs from national retailers with distribution centers along Highway 287.
Arts and culture continue to thrive downtown. The Modern Art Museum is preparing its winter exhibit, and Bass Performance Hall hosts a special concert series this weekend featuring local jazz bands. Saturday night, Sundance Square plays host to a family-friendly tree lighting festival.
In school sports, Arlington Heights High School’s football team clinched a playoff berth this weekend with a gritty 21-17 win over Paschal, sending the Yellow Jackets to regionals. Nice job, Jackets.
Turning to public safety, Fort Worth police responded to a string of vehicle break-ins last night near South Hulen and Bellaire Drive. Patrols have increased, but neighbors should remain alert and lock vehicles.
Before we wrap, a quick feel-good shout-out. Volunteers from Trinity Habitat for Humanity completed two homes near Polytechnic High this week, giving working parents the keys right before Thanksgiving. That’s the spirit of Fort Worth.
Thank you for tuning in this morning. Don’t forget to subscribe for more 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.aiGet the best deals
https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI