DTX-PCL: Impact 9/5/2025

Good Morning, Prosper & Celina!

Top Story
Celina officials break ground on new 100-acre Wilson Creek Park

Celina officials broke ground on the new Wilson Creek Park park Sept. 3. Construction of the park is expected to cost $50 million.

The details: Wilson Creek Park will be about 100 acres located at the corner of the future Sunset Boulevard and Roseland Parkway. It will include ball fields and pickleball courts, soft surface and concrete trails, playgrounds, a pavilion, nine-hole disc golf course, and more.

 
ci business
First State Bank will relocate in Celina

First State Bank is relocating in Celina.

It currently operates on Ash Street and the new location will open on Preston Road. The Preston Road location will replace the one on Ash Street.

What they offer: The bank will offer personal and business banking services. Patrons will be able to open personal and business accounts, receive a variety of loans including mortgages, and utilize online banking at the new branch.

  • 433 S. Preston Road, Celina

 

FOODIE FRIDAY
Check out these new restaurants and bars opening across the Dallas - Fort Worth area.

A new Texas-based seafood and Cajun restaurant is now serving customers after announcing its soft opening in August.

Te’jun Texas Cajun offers seafood combos and plates with shrimp, crab, crawfish, corn and potatoes, according to its website.

The Keller location also has the Snapper Classic, a new fish plate that serves a red snapper filet over rice with the restaurant’s Cajun cream sauce, according to a restaurant newsletter. Te’jun’s owners are also planning to add salads to the menu in the coming weeks, starting at $6.99.


Learn more.

 

🍣 Spicy Matka now open in Frisco
(Read more)

🍜 Show Mini Hot Pot to serve Asian cuisine in Richardson
(Read more)

🍦 Maya Creamery and Lounge offers ice cream, tea in Northlake
(Read more)

🍓 Bondi Bowls to offer açai bowls, locally sourced coffee in Plano’s Legacy Hall
(Read more)

 

Co-owners of Aromas on Oak, Ryan Buck and Kirsten Trudo-Buck wanted to create a cozy space where the community could sip coffee and relax, Buck said.

Signature drinks include the teddy bear latte, which has honey and cinnamon, and the tiramisu latte, which is topped with mascarpone cheese whipped cream and cocoa powder, he said.

The coffee comes from a renowned coffee roaster, Jodi Weiser, who also owns a coffee consulting business, Buck said.

Aromas’ baked goods, which includes croissants, bagels, muffins and pound cakes, are sourced from three different bakeries around Dallas-Fort Worth, he said.


Read now.

On The Transportation Beat
Royal Jordanian Airlines to bring flights to Dallas Fort Worth International Airport in 2026

Dallas Fort Worth International Airport will add a new destination in 2026: Jordan.

The details: Royal Jordanian Airlines announced it will launch nonstop service to Queen Aila International Airport in Amman, Jordan, in May 2026, according to a Sept. 3 news release. Royal Jordanian will offer weekly flights four times a week aboard a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner with 270 seats, according to the news release.

Quote of note: “Welcoming Royal Jordanian to DFW is another exciting step in growing our global network," DFW Airport CEO Chris McLaughlin said in the release. "This new nonstop connection to Amman is a first for North Texas and will expand our reach into the Middle East and further grow DFW’s role as a key international gateway."

 
CI Texas
Second special session ends without new laws on THC, property taxes

Around 1 a.m. Sept. 4, the Texas Legislature gaveled out of its second special session of the year. On the heels of a two-week Democratic walkout that stymied bills during a previous legislative overtime, lawmakers moved quickly to pass 16 of Gov. Greg Abbott’s 24 priorities in under three weeks.

The details: A long-debated plan to ban or restrict sales of hemp-derived THC and a measure aimed at reining in local property tax growth were among the proposals that did not make the cut. Those proposals fell apart in the final days of the special session, after House and Senate lawmakers were unable to reach agreements. 

Also of note: Lawmakers also did not pass bills intended to improve emergency preparedness and communications in the wake of the deadly July 4-5 floods; shield certain law enforcement files from public disclosure; and bar local governments from hiring outside lobbyists. 

The governor can call a special session at any time; however, legislative leaders indicated they did not expect to return to Austin to tackle the remaining agenda items.

 

Your local team

Samantha Douty
Senior Editor

George Rodriguez
General Manager

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