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Argyle ISD approves 8 new high school courses

The Argyle ISD board of trustees unanimously approved eight new courses for high school students at a Nov. 17 meeting.

The gist: The new courses will be available by student request for the 2026-27 school year.

The specifics: Each year, district staff review current courses in alignment with graduation requirements, career and technical education offerings, and student interest, according to district documents.

The new courses are:

  • Robotics 1
  • Digital Art and Design
  • Advanced Placement Business with Personal Finance
  • Advertising
  • Personal Financial Literacy
  • AP Seminar
  • AP Research
  • Dance Wellness 2

 
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Liquor King opens new location in Highland Village

North Texas-based Liquor King has opened a new location in Highland Village, according to company staff.

What they offer: The liquor store sells a selection of whiskey, gin, wine and beer, according to its website. Customers can also find mixers and bar accessories.

One more thing: The Highland Village location, which opened Nov. 21, is the eighth in North Texas, company staff said.

  • 2300 Highland Village Road, Ste. 100, Highland Village

 
metro news monday
6 Dallas-Fort Worth neighborhood, business developments in progress

Developers have broken ground on a master-planned community in Denton that will feature homes from nine builders, trails, park space, on-site schools and retail space, including the city's first H-E-B. Meanwhile, TeraHop, a Singapore-based tech company, is expanding its operations to a new Richardson facility.

Here are six development stories you may have missed from Community Impact's Dallas-Fort Worth coverage areas.

Landmark breaks ground in Denton, model homes coming soon

VanTrust Real Estate announces 121 Commerce Park project in McKinney

Flower Mound council approves zoning for 335-acre conservation development Eden Ranch

Tech company TeraHop to open Richardson manufacturing facility

Grocery store development in North Texas continues to surge

Fort Worth launches Alliance Logistics District to streamline regional freight traffic

 
In Your Area
Grapevine's Carol of Lights starts holiday festivities in the Christmas Capital of Texas

The Christmas Capital of Texas started its holiday event schedule with the 37th Carol of Lights on Nov. 24 on Main Street.

A 60-foot Christmas tree was lit at 7:30 p.m., while Santa made appearances at three different locations during the four-hour event.

According to the Grapevine Convention & Visitors Bureau website, more than 1,400 festive Christmas events take place over 40 days, transforming Grapevine into a storybook destination.

What happened: There were some new events at this year's Carol of Lights, including Santa’s Racetrack and the Frozen Fun zone, which had bounce houses and a snow hill.

What to expect: The Merry & Bright Christmas Drone Show is scheduled for 7 p.m. Dec. 1 and Dec. 8. There will be 400 drones in 12 custom formations near Main Street and Northwest Highway and near Main Street and Dallas Road, according to previous reporting.

 
CI Texas
‘Kind of maxed out’: Texas lawmakers question whether state can afford to fund larger property tax breaks

On the heels of what proponents have called “historic” property tax relief, some Texas lawmakers are questioning whether the state can afford to continue increasing the tax exemptions passed in 2023 and 2025.

The big picture: Texas homeowners pay property taxes to various local entities, although lawmakers can limit how much entities increase taxes each year and provide state funding to expand tax exemptions.

Texas is spending $51 billion on property tax relief in fiscal years 2026 and 2027 alone and may be required to spend more to maintain existing tax exemptions in future bienniums, lawmakers said.

What they're saying: "We're kind of maxed out at what we can do for property tax reform, from a budget perspective," said Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, during a Nov. 20 event.

"$51 billion ongoing, it's a huge amount to continue to support. To think about doing anything more seems very fiscally irresponsible," Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, said.

The other side: Rep. Ellen Troxclair, R-Lakeway, said creating limits on local government spending would be critical to keeping Texas affordable.

 

Your local team

Connor Pittman
Editor

Lexi Canivel
General Manager

Email [email protected] for story ideas, tips or questions.

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