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Check out 5 business updates from Grapevine, Colleyville, Southlake

Check out five recent business updates from Grapevine, Colleyville and Southlake.

Now open
Boogie's Pups
Boogie's Pups, a Dallas-Fort Worth area pet store, now has a second location in Grapevine.

Grapevine location manager Hugo Hernandez said Boogie's Pups is the one-stop shop for all puppy needs, or to find a “forever puppy” for the home.

The store offers retail, resale and grooming services. Boogie's Pups partners with USDA Licensed Breeders and hobby breeders to ensure the health of the puppies up for adoption, according to its website. The business also has a “no puppy mill promise” policy.

  • 2805 E. Grapevine Mills Circle, Ste. 124, Grapevine

Thrift Giant
Thrift Giant is now open in Colleyville, selling designer clothes, accessories and housewares, according to a Facebook post from the business.

The resale store partners with Donate 2 Impact, who takes donations at the store and offers free at-home pickups, per its website.
  • 3901 Colleyville Blvd., Colleyville

 
Now Open
Baseball Lifestyle 101 selling baseball apparel in Grapevine

Baseball Lifestyle 101 opened inside Grapevine Mills to long lines on April 3.

The opening day of the store featured free t-shirts for the first 100 shoppers, while stickers and snacks were available. Shoppers who spent more than $100 were given an additional gift with shoe laces and charms.

The details: The company sells clothing for adults and children, featuring a variety of collections, including swim trunks, ice cream, the World Baseball Classic, various holidays, and collaborations with Realtree, Monopoly, Backyard Baseball and the Savannah Bananas.

The Grapevine store has its newest gear, The Stadium Collection, as well as Mother’s Day-themed Cherry Blossom clothing.

The background: According to its website, Baseball Lifestyle 101 was founded by Josh Shapiro in 2013 to grow the game of baseball. What started as an Instagram page is now the country’s top-selling off-field baseball apparel company.

  • 3000 Grapevine Mills Parkway, Ste. 128, Grapevine

 
Permit Preview Wednesday
Raising Cane’s support office relocation, Custer Frontier Marketplace: See 5 of the latest permits filed in the DFW area

A Raising Cane’s support office relocation and new landscaping at Firefly Park in Frisco are two of many new projects filed recently with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.

Here are five of the most expensive permits filed with TDLR in the past week.

1. Raising Cane’s Dallas Restaurant Support Office relocation
Three floors of an existing building in Plano will be renovated to become the new Dallas-area support office for Raising Cane’s, according to a TDLR filing. Plano City Council first approved the relocation in August 2024, per previous reporting. Construction is estimated to take less than a year and a half to complete.

  • Location: 5320 Legacy Drive, Plano
  • Estimated timeline: June 1, 2026-Nov. 29, 2027
  • Estimated cost: $112 million

2. Firefly Park retail site
Firefly Park’s retail site will have civil construction and landscaping along Fireglass Way, according to a TDLR filing. Construction is estimated to take about a year and a half.
  • Location: Fireglass Way, Frisco
  • Estimated timeline: April 1, 2026-Sept. 1, 2027
  • Estimated cost: $25 million

 
Statewide News
Over 270K Texans applied for education savings accounts. Here’s who state officials say are expected to receive them.

Funding for Texas’ education savings account program is expected to dry up before it reaches all low-income applicants, the state comptroller’s office announced April 2.

The overview: More than a quarter of a million students applied for the first year of Texas Education Freedom Accounts, which will give participating families access to state funds to send their children to private school or homeschool them.

The details: Most eligible students will be placed on a waitlist for the 2026-27 school year, as the $1 billion program is expected to serve between 90,000 and 100,000 students. State officials said all funds are expected to go to students with disabilities, their siblings and children from low-income families.

The state will use a four-tier, randomized lottery system to determine who is accepted. Once funding runs out, the remaining students will be placed on a waitlist.

How it works: Students with disabilities can receive up to $30,000 each in ESA funding, depending on their individual needs. Other accepted students will receive $10,474 for private education or $2,000 for homeschooling.

 

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