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Nearly 250 homes sold in Plano this May

The median price of a home in Plano in May 2026 was $541,275, down from $548,750 in May 2025.

The specifics: The number homes sold in Plano in May was 249, while 363 homes were listed—down from 503 last May.

Check out recent real estate data for Plano from MetroTex Association of Realtors comparing data from May 2025 to May 2026.

 
On The Transportation Beat
Dallas Fort Worth International Airport opens 9 new gates in Terminal C

Dallas Fort Worth International Airport officials held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on June 8 to open nine new gates in Terminal C.

The project included five rebuilt gates and four new gates, which will be utilized by American Airlines, according to a news release from DFW Airport.

The work is part of the DFW Forward projects, a $12 billion capital improvement program that is renovating and expanding the airport that opened in 1974.

The details: The new Terminal C pier features nine electronic boarding gates equipped with industry-leading technology, and elevates the customer experience with new concessions, seating, and restrooms, according to a news release from American Airlines.

Going forward: Work on Terminals A and F is still ongoing, according to an airport news release.

Terminal F, which will be the sixth terminal at DFW Airport, will add 31 gates for American Airlines.

A pier-style expansion is coming to Terminal A and will add 10 more gates.

 

Your Weekend To-Do List

Check out these weekend events across the metro area.

The Boho Market

Dive-In Movie

June 12, 6-10 p.m.
Richardson

June 12, 7:30-11 p.m.
Denton

More info

More info

 

Rosé & Wine Pairing

Country Music Kick-Off

June 13, 1-3 p.m.
Grapevine

June 13, 6-9 p.m.
Frisco

More info

More info

 
To submit your own event, click here.

CI Texas
Gov. Abbott tells PUC, ERCOT to ensure Texas consumers do not foot the bill for data center growth

Texas must protect residential consumers from paying for the infrastructure needed to power new data centers, Gov. Greg Abbott said in a June 10 order aimed at balancing the rapid growth of data centers with the needs of residents and communities.

The big picture: The governor directed state regulators to ensure data center companies do not pass infrastructure costs on to ratepayers, urging lawmakers to tighten regulations on data centers’ water use and repeal certain tax exemptions that benefit the industry.

Abbott’s order comes as Texas grapples with how to manage the data center boom amid climbing electric demand and looming water shortages. It is the first time the Republican governor has publicly called to restrict data center growth.

The context: As communities across Texas consider new data center projects, reporting shows that some residents are pushing back, raising concerns about the large facilities’ water usage, potential strain on the electric grid and impacts on local neighborhoods.

What they're saying: In response, state agencies called protecting consumers from rising electric costs "our top priority."

 

Your local team

Michael Crouchley
Editor

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

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