The Gas Peddle

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Editor’s Note: This is part two of a two-part series supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Ida B. Wells Society Investigative Reporting Fellowship. See part one here. (Leer en español aquí.)

On a balmy, overcast afternoon in late March 2025, a crowd gathered outside Texas Southmost College’s auditorium in downtown Brownsville. With them came signs, many of them directed at the city’s mayor, John Cowen, who was giving the annual “State of the City” address inside. 

“Brownsville is at the edge of its future,” Cowen told attendees. The mayor, who also serves as president of his family’s international logistics company, headquartered in the border city he now leads, described various industries operating, or soon to be operating, in the area. Some prominent corporations sponsored the event, including Houston-based NextDecade, the company behind the gargantuan gas export project Rio Grande LNG.

The phrase “edge of the future” echoed the “New Space City” sentiment first promoted by the previous mayoral administration and inspired by Elon Musk’s nearby SpaceX launch site. The boosterish idea is codified in Brownsville’s newly expanded slogan: “On the border, by the sea, and beyond.” Outside among the protesters, however, local industry expansion, especially in liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, was not seen as an economic driver but an existential threat.

“Brownsville cannot keep selling us out to these toxic polluters,” said Josette Cruz Hinojosa, an organizer with the South Texas Environmental Justice Network and onetime candidate for the Port of Brownsville’s board of commissioners. “The city has continued to fail us, and the city is endangering us directly—endangering our children and their future.”

Protestors outside Texas Southmost College on March 26, 2025 (Gaige Davila/Texas Observer)

Elected officials with the city and surrounding Cameron County have incorporated Rio Grande LNG, under construction 12 miles east of Brownsville and expected to be one of the country’s two largest such facilities by export volume, as a core part of an area-wide effort to remake the Rio Grande Valley—the region of about 1.4 million mostly Latino residents at Texas’ southern tip—into an international corporate hub. Officials rooted in Brownsville, population 192,000 with a 25 percent poverty rate, have promoted the export plant as a major source of jobs and related economic activity. NextDecade promises to provide at least 5,000 construction jobs and 437 permanent positions. For this, Cameron County handed the company a 10-year, $373 million tax break (about 1.5 times the county’s annual budget). 

Meanwhile, officials nearer the project site in the environmentally sensitive Laguna Madre area—home to the much smaller communities of Port Isabel, Laguna Heights, Laguna Vista, Long Island Village, and South Padre Island—have opposed the facility over the past decade. Local governments, Port Isabel’s economic development corporation, and even the local water utility signed resolutions opposing LNG projects as companies started signing leases along the Brownsville Ship Channel. The area’s lone school district rejected tax abatement requests for gas facilities. 

As the Texas Observer reported in part one of this series, the Laguna Madre area, which currently depends on tourism and fishing, has cause for concern. Political and business leaders elsewhere along the Texas Gulf Coast and into Louisiana have bent over backward to bring in LNG; in the years since, they’ve seen explosions, air pollution, gutted shrimping income, and transformed neighborhoods and natural spaces. As one lifelong resident of the Louisiana coast put it: Her hometown’s “never going to be the same,” and for the people of the Laguna Madre area, she said, “Your hometown’s not going to be the same neither.”

Yet Brownsville-area officials have ignored these risks along with the hyperlocal opposition. Now emails and documents obtained by the Observer reveal how this posture may have been influenced by an extensive and yearslong lobbying effort by NextDecade, with Cameron County and the city being in regular contact with the company as the firm worked through various legal setbacks. The records also show that NextDecade and these governments already have several public-private partnerships in the areas of emergency services and community relations, going beyond the tax abatement that the county granted the company in 2017.

“If you want to put it succinctly, they’re a bunch of mamones,” said Jared Hockema, Port Isabel’s city manager and a local Democratic politico, after reviewing the Observer’s findings showing the contacts between Brownsville and Cameron County officials and NextDecade. “That’s exactly what they are, doing something like this—selling out your neighbors.” 

In 2022, NextDecade’s then-chief lobbyist, David Keane, approached Brownsville City Manager Helen Ramirez via email to join the company’s Community Advisory Board (CAB). This advisory board would engage in “two-way communications between the community or communities and the Rio Grande LNG project,” he wrote

Ramirez joined as a permanent member of the group, which is almost entirely made up of people who publicly support Rio Grande LNG, including the highest elected officials and administrators from the county, the City of Los Fresnos, the Port of Brownsville, and the City of Brownsville, along with several NextDecade executives. Email invitations for the board meetings show additional members, including staff from the Brownsville Chamber of Commerce, SpaceX, and more. 

NextDecade claimed it created the CAB for the company to “become aware of any community concerns and address them.” But the group was also instrumental in NextDecade’s strategy to use elected officials for leverage when Rio Grande LNG faced opposition. 

In 2023, as part of a long-running legal battle over the plant, all but one permanent member of the board—Port Isabel’s police chief, Robert Lopez—sent a letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) saying the regulator was taking too long to reapprove Rio Grande LNG after it had faced a setback. FERC was analyzing the plant’s potential environmental justice impacts for a second time, prompted by a lawsuit from Port Isabel. These letters were ghostwritten by NextDecade, as previously reported by DeSmog

Prior to sending those letters, as shown in emails and calendar invites, Keane met repeatedly with Cameron County officials, who were among the senders. A few months later, NextDecade got enough financial backing to start construction of the Rio Grande LNG facility, celebrating the milestone at a “stakeholder reception” in Brownsville in August 2023. 

“He’s written letters on our behalf. He’s been a supporter when we needed him,” Keane said of County Judge Eddie Treviño before introducing him to speak at the event. “He’s probably sorry that he gave me his cell phone number.” NextDecade broke ground on the LNG site later that year.

In May 2024, Keane asked the CAB to turn out at a commissioners court meeting to support amendments to NextDecade’s tax abatement. That August, the company called on some CAB members to “stand with RGLNG” after the project lost its FERC authorization—because of a lawsuit from Port Isabel residents, the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas, the City of Port Isabel, and the Sierra Club. NextDecade wrote or edited testimonials, op-eds, and video scripts for these elected officials that were published on the company’s website and in local news publications. 

That same month, and into September, NextDecade’s legal team guided City of Brownsville attorney Guillermo Treviño in filing an amicus brief as part of the company’s appeal, emails show. NextDecade’s legal counsel suggested arguments, a template for the brief, and how to properly file it. “It will be interesting to see what response the petitioners come up with,” Treviño wrote to Keane. 

“Thank you for your continued support,” Matt Schatzman, NextDecade’s CEO, wrote in a note to Cowen after the city filed its amicus brief. “We will get through this, and persevere!” 

In an email to the Observer this April, Treviño said that “NextDecade’s legal consultants did not participate in the drafting” of the brief and that “The majority of it was written by me” with input from others unaffiliated with NextDecade.

Brownsville and Cameron County officials continued to frequently confer with NextDecade representatives, emails show, with the latter repeatedly thanking the former for letters and public support. This included NextDecade helping Cameron County edit a press release announcing that the Rio Grande LNG project had won a state economic development award. In November 2024, calendar entries show that NextDecade hosted lunch and dinner meetings with Brownsville and Cameron County officials and representatives of the Japanese financier Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, which is a financial adviser for Rio Grande LNG. 

The Brownsville Ship Channel is still used recreationally by locals. (Gaige Davila/Texas Observer)

In February 2025, the Cameron County Commissioners Court invited a council member, Joe Ricco, and the mayor, Patrick McNulty, both of South Padre Island—one of the Laguna Madre-area towns that has opposed LNG—to speak about expanding their city’s convention center. The agenda for the commissioners meeting specifically included an executive-session item to “confer with commissioners’ court legal counsel regarding possible legal issues with the South Padre convention center.”

During the executive session, Ricco told the Observer, Cameron County Commissioner David Garza asked the Padre Island officials if they were going to sign a “letter of support” for Rio Grande LNG if the county backed the convention center expansion. The Island elected officials said they wouldn’t.

When asked about this, Garza did not confirm or deny whether he asked the officials to support the LNG project, but he said that a support letter from South Padre Island during the time frame Ricco said this exchange occurred “would not have altered the outcome, as LNG was already established in the county.” When asked again whether he asked the officials if they were going to support the LNG project, Garza did not respond. Ricco reiterated that the exchange occurred when the Observer showed Ricco the commissioner’s response. 

The agenda and minutes for the February 11, 2025, meeting made no reference to discussion of the LNG project with the city officials. “On its face, assuming the council member’s account is correct, it does raise serious questions about whether the discussion in executive session went beyond what’s allowed under the Open Meetings Act,” said Jim Hemphill, an Austin attorney on the executive committee of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas who separately advises the Observer on libel matters.

In November 2025, Ramirez, Cowen, and several city and Brownsville Chamber of Commerce staff took a lobbying trip to Washington, D.C. The group, which included senior employees of NextDecade and Bechtel, the company constructing the LNG plant, met with Senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn, as well as Valley Congressman Vicente Gonzalez, all of whom support Rio Grande LNG. The trip and a private dinner were partly sponsored by NextDecade. The chamber, which designated NextDecade its 2025 “Member of the Year,” declined to disclose how much NextDecade paid for the trip when asked by the Observer.

Like other LNG companies up along the coast, NextDecade is building an omnipresence locally, sponsoring events throughout the Laguna Madre and Brownsville areas, including fishing tournaments, beach cleanups, and Port Isabel’s annual shrimp cook-off. NextDecade also now regularly hosts “LNG demonstrations” at area schools, including in Point Isabel ISD, the same district that rejected the company’s tax abatement request. 

As the LNG plants in other Gulf communities expanded, so did their political and cultural power among elected officials, local chambers of commerce, and emergency responders. NextDecade is no different: The company agreed to fund the salary of a Cameron County deputy fire marshal for four years. It also gave the City of Brownsville nearly $1.2 million to cover the cost of a fire truck the city bought in 2024. According to a cost-sharing plan acquired through a records request, NextDecade will also pay for training some of Brownsville’s firefighters to respond to emergencies at the Rio Grande LNG facility. The company will additionally pay, the plan says, for any city fire and emergency services that the plant receives once it starts operating. 

Cowen and Ramirez, the latter of whom resigned from the city in December 2025, declined to comment for this story. 

When meeting with local officials, NextDecade representatives downplayed the negative effects that Rio Grande LNG would have on the surrounding area, saying the company would mitigate whatever issues came up, according to officials familiar with those conversations. This included so-called carbon capture, removing carbon during the liquefaction process and injecting it into a well so that it would not go into the atmosphere. NextDecade claimed this would remove up to 90 percent of the yearly carbon emissions from Rio Grande LNG’s operations. 

This technology would help make the plant the “greenest LNG project in the world,” as the company has touted. But, in 2024, a year into constructing the plant, NextDecade pulled its FERC application to incorporate carbon capture, saying the technology wasn’t “sufficiently developed.” The corporation still says Rio Grande LNG will provide “low-carbon” energy but has yet to specify how or apply for a related state permit.

In its latest environmental assessment of the Rio Grande LNG project, FERC said that NextDecade was considering a carbon storage site in Kleberg County, about two and a half hours away from Port Isabel. The company’s most recent investor presentation said that it’s “exploring a potential [carbon capture storage] project” but makes no other mention of its development. 

With plans to expand beyond its initial projected size and no carbon capture system in place, Rio Grande LNG’s greenhouse gas output would be even larger than what FERC first analyzed in 2019. And even if Rio Grande LNG removes some carbon, it would remove only the emissions from one part of the liquefaction process: It would not remove other pollutants or reduce how much carbon is leaked during transport and released by the fuel’s burning

Emails show that NextDecade representatives told Cameron County and Brownsville officials in August 2024 that the company had pulled the carbon capture system from Rio Grande LNG, but no officials directly responded. County Judge Treviño told the Observer last June that he had been looking forward to the system being a part of the project and he hoped it would return. 


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The first construction phase of the facility remains underway. If Rio Grande LNG builds out to 10 “trains”—the term for the machines that chill and liquefy the gas—as NextDecade has now indicated, the plant will export 60 million tons of gas per year, potentially sending more than a dozen ships per week through the Brazos Santiago Pass, where the channel meets the Gulf, creating hours of delays for other vessels. 

Rio Grande LNG’s expansion beyond its initial plans was mentioned specifically by the City of Port Isabel when it again sued FERC in December in the D.C. Circuit Court, the same federal court that had canceled Rio Grande LNG’s authorization by the regulator earlier last year. The lawsuit came after FERC had approved the project for the third time, in September, shortly after the company completed a court-ordered supplemental environmental impact statement. 

The city, the South Texas Environmental Justice Network, the Sierra Club, and Earthjustice said in the December lawsuit that FERC had again failed to accurately measure the air pollution impacts of Rio Grande LNG, nor had the regulator incorporated the project’s expansion plans into its analysis. Nathan Matthews, senior attorney for Earthjustice and the lead attorney on the suit, said it could take up to a year for the court to rule. 

FERC noted in its 2019 analysis that ship traffic, as then projected, would have “permanent and moderate” impacts on local fishing industries that use the Brazos Santiago Pass, including shrimpers, who are already struggling to remain in business.
“We’re in a sensitive state as it is, and any little thing to agitate that just makes it worse,” E.J. Cuevas, who runs the shrimping company Cuevas Trawlers in Port Isabel, told the Observer. Shrimpers and other vessels already must coordinate with the dredge ships that are deepening the channel to fit LNG tankers, a precursor for what’s to come if the hulking ships regularly start making their way through. 

Regardless of whether Rio Grande LNG reaches 10 trains, it will be a massive operation, requiring an equally large emergency response if an accident occurs. Some Laguna Madre-area cities aren’t satisfied with how the company will respond to a disaster, if one happens. Speaking on background to discuss confidential material, three local officials told the Observer that the plans are inadequate and that, even with industrial fire training, local fire departments are unequipped to handle a disaster akin to a 2022 LNG explosion that occurred up the coast in Freeport or worse. 

“Even if Brownsville Fire responds out there, they’re going to need multiple agencies to respond,” one local emergency services official in a nonelected position told the Observer. “They can send every damn truck that they have. It’s not going to be enough.” 

A glimpse of what could happen was seen after SpaceX’s Starship, which launches 6 miles as the crow flies from the LNG project site, exploded in the middle of the night last July. The Brownsville Fire Department held back from responding to the blaze as 911 calls flooded the dispatch line. Nobody was hurt, yet the explosion overwhelmed the city’s emergency services for hours.

There have already been generator fires at the Rio Grande LNG site, along with car accidents outside of it, which TxDOT data obtained by the Observer shows have doubled in the area since 2023, the year construction started. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) reports also show that at least two serious workplace accidents have happened at the location. 

FERC’s most recent analyses of the Rio Grande LNG plant say the risk of explosions or other disasters is “extremely low” because of the mitigation precautions it requires, including spill containment and emergency shutdown plans. 

Meanwhile, Laguna Madre-area residents have gotten a relatively paltry portion of the jobs created so far by the plant. The company has said in emails to elected officials that 70 percent of the project’s construction employees are “local”—which it defines as people from zip codes within 100 miles of the facility, a radius wide enough to encompass the more-populous McAllen metro area in neighboring Hidalgo County. From mid-2023 to mid-2025, internal reports and emails indicate that NextDecade maintained an average of around 1,400 full-time-equivalent jobs at Rio Grande LNG, with about 50 of these coming from Port Isabel. Brownsville, along with Mission and Edinburg—two cities in the McAllen metro—had around 790 combined. There was no current count of employees or breakdown of their origins in the documents reviewed by the Observer

NextDecade did not respond to repeated inquiries about current local employment numbers at the site. The Texas Workforce Commission denied requests related to the company’s employment records.

At least six of every 10 people who live in the Laguna Madre area work on the fishing boats or in the stores, restaurants, hotels, and bait stands that both locals and tourists frequent year-round, according to Census data. These industries, in some form or another, rely on the beaches and bays that surround them, along with interconnected wetlands and the brush beyond. Though FERC says there won’t be “significant” impacts to these industries, many residents aren’t believing it. Nor are they believing that Brownsville-area officials would be as supportive of LNG if the plant was closer to them. 

Mary Angela Branch, a Port Isabel resident and member of SaveRGV, an organization that opposes SpaceX and LNG in South Texas, is one of the doubters.

“They’re not seeing it. They’re not smelling it. They’re not driving home to it,” Branch told the Observer. “Maybe if they came out to [South Padre] Island and they had to wait a little bit because the tanker was coming in, or sitting in traffic on [Highway] 48. But that didn’t matter. They didn’t even think about that. And that’s so minuscule compared to how we are impacted by it.” 

Bechtel has already cleared nearly a thousand acres of ecologically critical clay dunes called lomas—along with whatever archaeological artifacts may lie beneath them—plus thornscrub and other native flora, replacing them with cranes, storage tanks, and the trains that will liquefy the gas. NextDecade has established a conservation area in Brownsville to ostensibly compensate, but similar to destroying old-growth forest, the erasure of wetlands is often practically irreversible. It would take decades for the area to return to a state similar to that from before the construction, if the plant were to ever cease operating.

Across the road from the Rio Grande LNG site is the Bahia Grande Unit of the Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, a tangible reminder of what the land looked like before the plant and even before Highway 48. In 2005, a multi-agency project that included Cameron County rerouted water from the Brownsville Ship Channel to begin filling the empty tidal basins of the refuge, marking one of the largest estuary-restoration projects in the United States. A year later, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service presented a National Conservation Award to the Cameron County Commissioners Court for its role.

But an environment-forward county commissioners court belongs to a bygone era. Hockema, the Port Isabel city manager, said past county leadership rejected projects that were environmentally damaging, such as a landfill in Los Fresnos and oil drilling in Boca Chica Beach (where SpaceX now looms). 

“Cameron County is the one that led the project to restore the Bahia Grande [wetlands]. That’s the irony of all this,” Hockema told the Observer. “And then now they’re destroying it. It’s crazy.” 

Hockema called the county’s focus on new industry myopic, and he said economic development shouldn’t take precedence over public safety, quality of life, or the environment.

The Rio Grande LNG site as seen from the Brownsville Ship Channel (Gaige Davila/Texas Observer)

County Judge Treviño, meanwhile, sees his responsibility as the county’s highest elected official differently. “We view our goal as a county, as the largest local government, to work with entities, small and large, to help them accomplish and reach their goals,” Treviño told the Observer

When asked about Port Isabel’s opposition to the project, he said the city stood to benefit the most from Rio Grande LNG because employees would stay, eat, and spend money in town. Hockema partly disagreed, noting that while Port Isabel does get some business from workers shopping and eating in town, most employees working at Rio Grande LNG don’t live in the area.

Treviño said the project amounted to the county taking a chance on bringing more jobs to the area and alleviating its poverty rate—and that NextDecade needed to be a “good neighbor” in doing so. He said he didn’t believe that Rio Grande LNG would be as environmentally destructive as the “naysayers” predict. “We got to be worried about tomorrow,” Treviño said. “If you don’t get up and take a swing, you’re never going to get a hit.” 

He continued, “but the concerns are valid, and they should always be on top of mind, making sure that these industries, small and large, don’t have a negative, permanent impact on our local environment.”

An October 2025 analysis of public emissions data by the Environmental Integrity Project found that every operating LNG facility nationwide has violated its pollution limits. Five facilities have violated the Clean Water Act, including Corpus Christi LNG, which is about three hours from the Laguna Madre area and, as of now, the closest operating gas export facility. 

Even with only six trains, four fewer than NextDecade is planning to develop, Rio Grande LNG, FERC says, would emit about 6.5 millions tons of greenhouse gasses and tens of thousands of pounds of air pollution a year. That’s the same greenhouse gas emissions that would come out of about two coal plants, according to the Environmental Protection Agency’s greenhouse gas calculator. 

Treviño said he trusted that NextDecade has the most current technologies and safeguards to prevent accidents like Freeport LNG’s 2022 explosion, though he added that the county would watch the company closely.

“Things can always change, but I think, both short and long term, this is going to be a net-positive thing. That’s what I’m praying for.”

NextDecade expects to start producing LNG at the plant in 2027. 

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Editor’s Letter: Introducing Our May/June 2026 Issue

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Texas Observer reader, 

Thus, it ends as it began as it begins as it ended. Or something like that.

The state, and to some extent the nation, waits to see who prevails between John Cornyn and Ken Paxton in the May 26 runoffs. Trump could still endorse (and may indeed do so in the gap between press time for this magazine and when you read it), but he let pass the deadline for either candidate to formally drop out. The third GOP hopeful, Wesley Hunt, turned out to be nothing more than a marginal spoiler ensuring said runoff. 

On the blue side, the front-runner from last fall, James Talarico, indeed secured the Senate nomination after all—leaving his truncated tiff with Jasmine Crockett as one of those feverish episodes short-lived enough to feel more like a vexatious dream than history. 

We, meanwhile, soldier on through the inexplicably long gap between our early-March primary and late-May secondary primary (a new name to suit the absurdity). Only two other states are unwell enough to hold their midterm primaries as early as we do, and neither waits so long as Texas to then finish the job. For that matter, most states don’t have primary runoffs at all; instead, they presumably just enjoy the springtime like normal humans.

Yet, here we are, with just a few long weeks and the consciences of a tiny group of hardcore Republicans between us and a likely railroad commissioner who believes that every single Muslim in America should be deported. Godspeed to us all.

And here we are as well (flawless transition), with the Observer’s third issue of the year. 

I’ve been thinking, in the two years now that I’ve been editor, about what our covers should be for. It’s a tricky call. I want them to genuinely catch your interest, so I don’t want you to feel like you’ve basically already read the stories they advertise. At the same time, they can’t be so obscure that you’re perplexed. Sometimes, I think they should be a reprieve from an ambient heaviness; other times, they should be a call to skip brunch and take to the streets. And sometimes, perhaps just one time, they should be a rattlesnake.

May/June 2026 cover (Adrià Voltà/Texas Observer)

This issue’s cover, I hope, will serve as a planted flag. A statement of principle in the face of political headwinds blowing from both sides of the aisle. Something small to hold onto as some Democrats—in this election season without end—subject civil rights to political expediency.

Solidarity,

Note: To be the first to get all the stories in our bimonthly issues, become a Texas Observer member here.

The post Editor’s Letter: Introducing Our May/June 2026 Issue appeared first on The Texas Observer.

As License Plate Readers Expand in Texas, Privacy Advocates Are Fighting Back 

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Last week the City of Kyle, a fast-growing Austin suburb, interrupted a string of recent victories won by local activists to thwart the further expansion of police surveillance technology across Central Texas. 

On April 21, council members overwhelmingly voted 6-1 to authorize the Kyle Police Department to apply for another state grant—worth up to $381,200—to continue funding at least 38 preexisting Flock Safety automated license plate readers (ALPRs).

Most of the local residents in attendance who spoke on the issue opposed the city’s move to obtain further funding for the artificial intelligence-powered network of surveillance cameras. “There’s one cell-phone tower within a mile of my house, and there’s four Flock cameras. You need a warrant to check my cell site records, but you have more granular data from the cameras than you do from [the cell tower],” David Moss, a Kyle resident, told the city council at the meeting.  

Flock has sold nearly 92,000 such cameras to local police departments across the nation—including more than 10,000 in Texas, according to an open source map of the cameras compiled by DeFlock. The City of Kyle has had them since 2024. The cameras record the license plate numbers of trafficking motorists going about their daily routines and store immense logs of surveillance data that can be queried by participating law enforcement agencies across the nation. The records are stored for at least 30 days before being deleted, except in cases in which the data is pulled from the system for investigative purposes.

Downtown Kyle in 2020 (Shutterstock)

Flock has come under fire from privacy advocates as well as local activists concerned about surveillance technology for allowing law enforcement agencies to conduct unrestricted searches of its data—including for the purposes of immigration enforcement and, in at least one instance, an abortion investigation. 

Flock Media Relations Manager Evan White told the Texas Observer that while the company doesn’t work directly with U.S. Customs and Border Protection or Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), “Agencies choose with whom to share data and can change or revoke their sharing settings at any point.”

Kyle City Council member Claudia Zapata was the lone vote against the grant application. “The fact that we have definitive proof that not only Texas DPS, but agencies across the nation, have tracked our system and used it in order to enforce immigration is, to me, disgusting,” she told the Observer, referring to the Department of Public Safety by its initials. “Some of [my colleagues], not all of them, vocally say that they care about immigrants, yet here is a tool that is being used to create a faster pipeline for their deportation, and they’re still for it.”

Council member Melisa Medina, who voted in favor of applying for a new Flock grant, said at a prior meeting that, “If something were to happen to [my daughter] I would definitely want that technology available, to be able to find that person.”

According to Zapata, Kyle’s internal ALPR policy does not mandate that an officer have reasonable suspicion or probable cause to conduct a search of the city’s Flock data.

Kyle Police Chief Jeff Barnett told council members that officers need only a “valid investigative reason” to conduct searches of the department’s ALPR data. The searches are “logged indefinitely, which allows for regular audits and to ensure our staff are using it in a proper manner,” he said. 

According to audit logs of the city’s Flock system reviewed by the Observer, the Kyle Police Department searched its own ALPR data at least 2,891 times from January through March of this year. The audit logs also show police from 18 other agencies across 10 states conducted at least 117 searches of Kyle’s Flock data that were related to immigration enforcement this year, with well over half of the searches flagged as “ICE.”

The Kyle audit logs also show that DPS conducted at least 10 immigration-related searches flagged as “civil and/or administrative,” which may involve warrants that aren’t signed by a judge. As reported by 404 Media, Texas law enforcement agencies conducted at least 180 searches of ALPR data in connection with immigration enforcement activity from January to May 2025. DPS did not respond to the Observer’s request for comment. 

At least 17 other searches of Kyle ALPR data flagged as civil and/or administrative were conducted by out-of-state police departments, mostly from Florida. The logs show hundreds of police agencies have access to the city’s Flock data. 

Another query, from January 5, by the local police department in Lebanon, Tennessee, listed “Obstructing Justice – Suspicious female filming traffic stop and making comments about ICE” as the reason for the department’s search of Kyle’s Flock data. Both filming police and speaking out against ICE are protected activities under the First Amendment.

Searches like these are why local municipalities have begun pushing back against the rapid adoption and expansion of such technologies, said Kabbas Azhar, a fellow with the Electronic Privacy Information Center. “In general, the use of Flock currently is completely unregulated,” he told the Observer. Even when cities and states do impose regulations, the Flock system is essentially run on the honor system, Azhar says.

Council member Zapata said she’s concerned about the possibility of the Hays County sheriff, who is a Republican, entering into a task force agreement with ICE (which wouldn’t require approval from the Democratic-controlled commissioners court) and using the city’s Flock data to carry out immigration enforcement.  

Under a state law passed during the last legislative session, all county sheriffs must request or enter into a 287(g) agreement with ICE, which deputizes state and local authorities to carry out certain immigration enforcement duties, by December 1. Last year, DPS entered into a task force agreement—the most expansive type of 287(g) arrangement—that effectively deputizes state troopers to act as federal immigration agents. DPS has been particularly aggressive in expanding its arsenal of AI-powered surveillance technology in recent years.  

Last year, DPS entered into a $26-million contract with Flock. (The state then also fined Flock earlier this year for operating without a license in violation of state law.) 

Additionally, anti-surveillance activists remain concerned about how the data is being used in abortion investigations in a state that has largely outlawed the procedure. Last May, for instance, 404 Media reported that the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office in North Texas had entered “had an abortion, search for female” as the reason for conducting a nationwide search of Flock cameras. Despite the local officers’ attempt to frame the search as a welfare check, an affidavit obtained by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) confirmed deputies initiated the search as part of a “death investigation” of a “non-viable fetus.”   

While Kyle has moved to maintain its surveillance infrastructure, other jurisdictions in the region have cut off Flock Safety and other similar tech—thanks in part to organizing led by a “No ALPRs” community coalition featuring over 30 state and local organizations. 

In June, San Marcos and Austin voted against the rapid uptake of ALPRs. While San Marcos voted to block a further expansion of its Flock camera network, Austin completely did away with more than 540 Axon and Flock ALPR cameras after the coalition pressured the city to hit the brakes. In October, Lockhart voted against a proposal to enter into a contract with Flock for seven new ALPRs after similar community pushback. Hays County, where Kyle is located, quickly followed suit, becoming the first county in the state to end its contract, which was for at least six Flock cameras.

In February, however, DPS began essentially overriding the local decisions of Austin and others by installing several Flock cameras within state rights-of-way along the highway after receiving authorization from the Texas Department of Transportation. An investigation by KUT also found that the Austin Police Department has continued to search Flock ALPR data stored by neighboring police departments in Round Rock and Sunset Valley.

Nationally, at least 61 cities have rejected the use of ALPRs, by either terminating contracts or halting further expansions of the technology, according to DeFlock

Mackenzie Rhine, a digital rights attorney and EFF board member, told the Observer that the Austin anti-ALPRs coalition is targeting other types of surveillance in the city and elsewhere—like AI-powered security cameras in parks—while also looking at taking the anti-surveillance fight to the state legislature next session.

The coalition is working to develop model state policy based off of Austin’s Transparent and Responsible Use of Surveillance Technology (TRUST) Act, which establishes a framework for how city departments adopt surveillance technologies and guides internal transparency and accountability measures, including restrictions on data retention and sharing and requirements to audit and report how such technologies are being used. 

Last session, state lawmakers took steps toward regulation of AI-powered surveillance technology in passing the Texas Responsible Artificial Intelligence Governance Act, which established the AI Advisory Council to review state agencies’ use of such tech. There were also bills filed to reign in police’s use of ALPRs, but none gained any traction. 

The coalition is now trying to expand its reach by partnering with new members who might be better positioned to communicate privacy concerns to the Republican-dominated legislature. That includes Travis County Libertarian Party Chair Austin Whaley, who, with the coalition, is considering pushing a state constitutional amendment with TRUST Act-like provisions that would require companies like Flock to consider privacy protections in their contracts, including addressing data-sharing agreements with third parties.

Despite the Kyle City Council’s vote to fund Flock cameras last week, Zapata said she’ll continue to work with like-minded representatives in other cities to combat the expansion of surveillance tech. But she also thinks that there ultimately needs to be a statewide legislative response.

“There is so much information that is collected off of these [ALPRs] that is just being funneled into big, expanding surveillance networks,” Zapata said. “It’s something that definitely has to be fought at the state level.”

The post As License Plate Readers Expand in Texas, Privacy Advocates Are Fighting Back  appeared first on The Texas Observer.

What Does the Allred-Johnson Runoff Tell Us About Texas Dems? 

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Eight years before their heated congressional runoff, Colin Allred and Julie Johnson both rode into political office on the blue wave of the 2018 midterms. 

Allred, an NFL linebacker-turned-lawyer, ousted the powerful Dallas Republican Congressman Pete Sessions. Johnson, an attorney from Farmers Branch, toppled the divisive firebrand Matt Rinaldi en route to the Texas House. They both served as rather middle-of-the-road Democrats in Washington and Austin, respectively, rather than flashy ideologues. When Allred decided to run for the U.S. Senate against Ted Cruz in 2024, Johnson ran for—and won—his open congressional seat. 

Now, Allred and Johnson are locked in a contentious runoff against each other for the newly redrawn deep-blue 33rd Congressional District, which was moved out of the longheld domain of Fort Worth Democratic Congressman Marc Veasey and will now be centered in Dallas County. In the four-way primary for the majority-minority seat, Allred fell 6 points short of the requisite 50 point victory mark, while Johnson pulled in 33 percent of the vote. Veasey decided not to run for reelection after GOP state legislators redrew the congressional map at the behest of President Donald Trump. Allred was initially running again for the Senate, but backed out in favor of a run for U.S. House after fellow Dallas Democrat Jasmine Crockett entered the Senate primary. His and Johnson’s old district, the 32nd, was gerrymandered into a deep-red district that stretches into East Texas.

At times, their campaigns have seemed like a proxy battle for the future of Democrats in Texas and elsewhere. Both candidates have attacked each other on topics like corporate influence and immigration, seeking to capitalize on wedge issues within their party ahead of the May 26 runoff. However, many observers of the race have argued that the overall lack of disparity between Allred and Johnson has made this race less about progressive politics and more about personality and political grudges. 

“This is not a classic progressive versus moderate war the way that it used to be in the Democratic Party, but there are definitely shades of a more centrist coalition-focused Democrat like Allred, who is challenging a more progressive activist-oriented Johnson,” said Brandon Rottinghaus, a University of Houston political science professor who is writing a book about Texas Democrats. “There are relatively small policy differences between them. There are small ideological differences between them, and that’s what makes the campaign so intense and personal.”

For instance, Allred has repeatedly decried Johnson’s stock trading, particularly her trading shares in Palantir, the data analytics company that boasts lucrative contracts with the Department of Homeland Security and the Israel Defense Forces. The Allred campaign has also incorporated these criticisms into his platform, publishing an “anti-corruption” plan that proposes banning individual stock trading by members of Congress. 

Johnson said her Palantir stocks were managed by a third party and told reporters “I made $90 on the whole thing,” referring to the trades. In an interview with the Texas Observer, she added, “It’s always unfortunate when somebody tries to misrepresent a circumstance and falsely portray something that’s not accurate for their own political gain. And my opponent did that because he doesn’t have a positive record to run on.”

Allred has, in turn, taken flak for moderate postures he’s taken on border policy, including breaking with many Democrats in 2024 to vote for a GOP-led House resolution condemning the Biden administration’s handling of the southern border. During his Senate campaign, he was one of a small group of Democrats to support the measure, which passed with unanimous Republican backing.

Those moves have drawn Johnson’s ire, as did Allred’s vote for the controversial Laken Riley Act, which mandates detention without bail for immigrants accused of a crime—even some low-level offenses—throughout their court proceedings. “He voted to basically deny due process and to deny the concept in this country that you’re innocent before proven guilty,” Johnson said. “I have robustly stood against that.”

Eva Arreguin, a Dallas-based organizer, is concerned that both candidates are trying to out-posture each other as progressives by latching on to trendy policy issues but don’t have clear political convictions. Arreguin voted for Zeeshan Hafeez, who ran as a staunch progressive and finished fourth in the primary before then endorsing Allred. Arreguin called the endorsement “disappointing,” and now she says many of her friends in the organizing community don’t know who to vote for in the runoff. 

“The folks I know are leaning a little more Julie, but it does feel uneasy, because why did you have stocks [invested] in our demise?” Arreguin said. “The Dallas way is to be quiet and be a good Democrat, but we definitely want to see way more fight for the people from our elected officials.”

In response to criticism that he is insufficiently progressive, a spokesperson noted to the Observer that Allred has consistently advocated for immigrant and Dreamer families, including voting for the Dream and Promise Act. He has also championed LGBTQ+ equality, the campaign said, serving as a co-sponsor of the Equality Act. For her part, Johnson has pointed to her legislative efforts to expand Medicaid eligibility, change Texas abortion law, and increase funding for childcare. 

Johnson and Allred have also both faced scrutiny over the financial support they’ve received from certain PACs—including those connected to Israel. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) was one of Johnson’s top contributors during the 2024 election cycle, according to OpenSecrets. Campaign finance data show the campaign has continued collecting AIPAC funds this year. Allred has also received donations from individuals affiliated with JStreetPAC, a liberal pro-Israel group. 

The candidates’ support from the Israel lobby particularly rankles Karla Palomares, a local community organizer. “I believe Allred and Johnson are examples of where the ‘corporate’ and ‘establishment’ Texas Democrats could be headed, specifically in terms of co-opting the progressive movement,” she told the Observer.

The Allred and Johnson race has also divided Democratic lawmakers in Texas and across the country. State Representatives Rhetta Bowers of Rowlett and Aicha Davis of DeSoto both endorsed Allred, as did Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price. Johnson, meanwhile, has the backing of groups such as Stonewall Democrats of Dallas, as well as a notable endorsement from New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who gave her support a little over a month before the March primary. 

Tensions within the Texas Democratic Party came to the fore during the home stretch of the U.S. Senate primary between Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico, when Allred made a video addressing a political content creator’s claims that Talarico called Allred a “mediocre Black man.” 

Talarico denied making that remark, saying that he referred to Allred’s 2024 Senate campaign as “mediocre” but not Allred personally. The Allred campaign did not directly answer a question about whether Allred has talked to Talarico or if he will endorse him, only saying that Allred is committed to his race and supporting Democrats up and down the ballot. He echoed those comments in a recent interview with Politico, adding that Talarico “needs to show comfort in Black spaces and Black communities” to do well with Black voters in November. Johnson, meanwhile, endorsed Talarico in late 2025.

Texas Democratic Party Chairman Kendall Scudder said he thinks contested primaries like this one can be beneficial. 

“Where they can become an issue is if we don’t act like adults here and don’t come to terms with the fact that, sure, we may have preferences within the Democratic Party coalition of what we want and would like to see, but that preference is very different than what we see in November, where it is just a full-fledged assault on working class people from the other side,” Scudder said. (The state party remains neutral in all primaries.) 

Scudder pushed back against the notion that the Allred versus Johnson race is a proxy fight between moderate Democrats and the party’s more progressive wing. Rather, the chairman thinks the contest is a unique situation created by redistricting. 

Rottinghaus says there are several examples of Democrats’ clashes leading to lasting fissures. Top of mind right now are runoffs like the 33rd, and the lingering tensions from the Talarico-Crockett primary, but going back to the 1970s, there were Democratic gubernatorial primaries between progressive Frances “Sissy” Farenthold and conservative Dolph Briscoe. Then, in the 1978 gubernatorial race, Democratic infighting helped pave the way for the first Republican victory in a governors’ race in over a century. 

If Allred wins, Rottinghaus noted, Democratic unity becomes even more important for Talarico’s prospects in November. “Healing is the watch word here,” Rottinghaus said. “They need to find a way to come together. And if they don’t, it’s going to be a problem when it’s an all-hands-on-deck turnout situation for Democrats.”

The post What Does the Allred-Johnson Runoff Tell Us About Texas Dems?  appeared first on The Texas Observer.