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    View From the Capitol

    How Sen. Wendy Davis and rowdy protestors killed the strictest abortion bill in America

    Alexa Garcia-Ditta
    Jun 26, 2013 | 12:54 pm

    UPDATE: Gov. Rick Perry has called another special session to take up abortion legislation.

    --

    After a 10-hour filibuster, a Texas bill that would have imposed some of the strictest abortion regulations in the country was killed. Sen. Wendy Davis (D-Fort Worth) may have been the one carrying the torch in the Capitol on Tuesday night, but that torch wouldn’t have been lit without the thousands of Texas women and their supporters who rose up, mobilized and made their voices heard. Ultimately, they were the ones who sealed the fate of Senate Bill 5.

    By 8 pm on June 25, the line to watch the filibuster in the gallery was three levels high and continued down the east hall of the first floor. Overflow rooms easily hosted more than 300 people glued to the monitors and Twitter.

    At that point, Davis had been talking for almost eight hours with no food or water, and she hadn’t so much as leaned on her desk. (Per the rules of the filibuster, that stuff was all strictly forbidden.) Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst had given her two strikes — one for supposedly veering off topic, and another for getting help from a fellow senator with her back brace. One more, and it’d be over.

    Minutes before the deadline, crowds in the gallery and in the rotunda erupted until past midnight, deafening any vote that could’ve taken place in the Senate.

    The next several hours are a bit of a blur. The heated debates happening in the chamber were about rules, technicalities, points of order, points of inquiry and points of whatever-these-guys-could-think-of. It was nearly impossible to know what was going on. Things changed rapidly as we approached the midnight deadline, which would signal the end of the special session and death of Senate Bill 5.

    At about 10 pm, Sen. Donna Campbell, a Republican from Central Texas, got a third strike against Davis and her filibuster. Commence the uproar in the Senate gallery. While the crowd’s instinct was to storm the Senate chamber, Democratic senators used every legislative tool in their arsenal to stall a vote and question the third strike.

    Minutes before the deadline, crowds in the gallery and in the rotunda erupted until past midnight, deafening any vote that could’ve taken place in the Senate. At 12:01 am, the bill was as good as dead.

    But we all know Texas, and we all know that it ain’t over ’til it’s over. At about 12:05 am, reporters began tweeting from the chamber that a vote had taken place and that it counted. Lt. Gov. Dewhurst and Republican senators said that because of the noise from the crowd, no one could hear the senators starting to vote before the midnight deadline. Reporters captured screenshots from the Texas Legislature Online website, which posted that the vote had taken place on June 26, not on June 25 — the official last day of the special session.

    To add to the confusion, the website was then mysteriously edited moments later to show that the vote had in fact taken place on June 25.

    Deliberation over the fate of Senate Bill 5 went on for another hour, and most people stayed for the long haul. Cecile Richards and company were still huddled around a podium, anxiously awaiting word themselves.

    I stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas, Ken Lambrecht, who at around 2 am received a text message from Davis from inside a closed-door meeting with Dewhurst and the senators. Cecile Richards took the mic and declared victory.

    “This is straight from Sen. Wendy Davis. ... ‘First, I love you guys,’” Richards read from the iPhone. “‘The lieutenant governor has agreed that SB 5 is dead.’”

    Word spread quickly that Dewhurst finally acknowledged that the vote had in fact taken place after midnight. Dewhurst made the official announcement around 3 am. It was a moment veteran lawmakers, veteran Capitol reporters, and longtime advocates and activists said they hadn’t seen in more than a decade, if ever.

    The power of citizen mobilization, viral social media and technology brought the live show to spectators around the country, including President Barack Obama. The people’s voices prevailed. Regardless of what comes next, the death of Senate Bill 5 was a victory for civic engagement and the future of Texas.

    Sen. Wendy Davis' filibuster at the Capitol against SB5.

    Sen. Wendy Davis filibusters an abortion bill at the Texas Capitol
    Photo by Tom Reel
    Sen. Wendy Davis' filibuster at the Capitol against SB5.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    Park news

    New I-35 deck park in southern Dallas moves closer to spring 2026 debut

    Luciana Gomez
    Feb 20, 2026 | 1:14 pm
    Halperin Park
    Courtesy rendering
    Renderings for Halperin Park.

    A massive deck park spanning Interstate 35E in southern Dallas is set to open in late spring 2026. Called Halperin Park, the five-acre community space has been under construction since 2017 and will be completed in two phases:

    Phase One (finishing in late spring) will include the section from Ewing Avenue to Lancaster Avenue and will feature a pavilion, amphitheater, playground area, interactive fountains, a second level overlooking the Dallas Zoo and the highway, and a large event room for every dining and special events.

    Phase Two (to be completed over the next five years) will add the park section toward Marsalis Avenue, with an additional pavilion and extra gathering space.

    The project is being developed by the Southern Gateway Public Green Foundation and built by the Texas Department of Transportation. Funding comes from the North Central Texas Council of Governments, as well as the private Halperin Foundation, which donated $23 million in 2024 and secured naming rights.

    In January, the Dallas City Council approved spending up to $8 million to complete Phase One for spring completion.

    The public-private initiative will create $1 billion in economy impact over the next five years, according to a study by UNT Dallas.

    Halperin Park Rendering of Halperin ParkCourtesy rendering

    A park with purpose
    Developers say the park aims to integrate the west side of Oak Cliff, which was somewhat segregated with the construction of I-35 in Oak Cliff in the 1960s, leading to low-income communities and generational poverty.

    The project started nine years ago, when the Texas Department of transportation planned a reconstruction of I-35 and began gathering neighbors’ feedback. The result was a plan to widen bicycle and pedestrian lanes in the service roads alongside the highway, and to build a deck over the highway between Ewing and Marsalis avenues, adjacent to the Dallas Zoo. (Similar Klyde Warren Park's "deck park" concept.)

    While the project faced some skepticism at first, it later gained momentum as private supporters continued to join.

    “Forty percent of the Dallas population lives in South Dallas, yet this segment only accounts for 15 percent of the tax base,” says April Allen, President and CEO of the Southern Gateway Public Green Foundation, citing the opportunity to address the economic equality in the area through the development of the park and all the business it can bring.

    Halperin Park Rendering of Halperin Park.Courtesy rendering

    Neighborhood pride
    For Allen, this project is personal. The Toronto-born executive first moved to Dallas 22 years ago to work at Neiman Marcus, after getting her engineering degree in Canada and her MBA at Harvard. Oak Cliff felt like the right place for her as an intown neighborhood, with a confluency of cultures, local pride and an entrepreneurial spirit, as she describes it. Her first Realtor told her Oak Cliff was “not the right place for her." Instead of choosing a different neighborhood, Allen chose a new Realtor.

    She has lived on the same street in North Cliff since, now raising her two kids with her husband, an Oak Cliff native, whom she credits for her further understanding of the neighborhood, its roots and civic dynamics.

    Under Allen’s leadership, Halperin Park is focused on a community-first approach that provides support to the neighbors through programs around health and wellness, after-school activities, local food trucks and markets, and educational workshops to help expand homeownership and financial acumen.

    To highlight the history and culture of Oak Cliff, they will feature an annual Walk of Fame, lifting up the stories of those who contributed to Oak Cliff history, with the first one happening as part of the inauguration of the park, organizers say.

    They will provide their own 24-hour security team to ensure a safe place for families and kids, with clean and well-lit crosswalks.

    Given their proximity with the zoo, parking will be available on the East side of the park at the zoo site, with a walkway to the park. They are working on parking options for the West side.

    “We want to create a space for community growth and more business in the area," says Allen. "We are already seeing this come to life with projects such as East Dock, and we are excited for future investment that the park will bring."

    parks
    news/city-life

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