In late-night testimonies, relatives of Uvalde victims call on Texas lawmakers to advance gun bill

With emotional testimony about their own experiences, parents of children who were killed in the Uvalde school shooting urged a Texas House committee late Tuesday to pass on to the full chamber a bill that would raise the minimum age to purchase certain semi-automatic rifles. Families waited more than 12 hours after the House Select Committee on Community Safety first convened about 9 a.m. to testify about their final memories with some of the 19 children and two teachers who were killed in the May 24 mass shooting at Robb Elementary and how their lives have changed since.
Recent Posts

Texas anti-war veteran among those aboard Gaza aid flotilla intercepted by Israeli Navy

Bexar County encourages residents to get pets vaccinated after confirmed rabies case in fox

First Look: San Antonio’s much-anticipated Elsewhere Too will debut this Saturday

Judge orders the immediate release of Texas DACA recipient

San Antonio’s largest homeless shelter, Haven for Hope, welcomes new president and CEO

Calling for televised public executions (in Christ’s mercy) with Texas pastor Joel Webbon

State-of-the-art adaptation of Mozart’s The Magic Flute hits San Antonio’s Tobin Center

Study: Texas among states with most prosecutions for pregnancy-related crimes, post-Roe

Texas Rep. James Talarico outraises Democratic rivals as he chases John Cornyn’s Senate seat

San Antonio grocer H-E-B names first female president in its history

"My job is to find and attract mastery-based agents to the office, protect the culture, and make sure everyone is happy! "