The Dallas Morning News podcast

Dallas Hero threatens lawsuit if city does not remove homeless encampments in 60 days ... and more news

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The City of Dallas may be in for another lawsuit if it doesn’t enforce a state law that bans unauthorized camping in public spaces and removes homeless encampments from its sidewalks. Dallas Hero, the nonprofit that led the ballot measure to waive municipal immunity and expose the city to lawsuits if it violates the charter and state law, sent a 60-day notice to the Dallas City Council on Wednesday. In other news, the proposed merger between Kroger and Albertsons is officially dead — and that just might be good news for Dallas-Fort Worth shoppers; Dallas could spend up to $15 million to get the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center ready to be the media hub for the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup despite ongoing plans to tear it down for a new one. The City Council will vote Wednesday on whether to approve the terms of an eight-month deal with FIFA to use the downtown convention center as the tournament’s international broadcast center, which would host the main feed used to broadcast all World Cup matches and be the home base for thousands of journalists and broadcasters covering the event; And the Texas Rangers have moved into the Bullpen Eras of their offseason tour. The club on Wednesday agreed to a one-year deal with changeup artist right-hander Jacob Webb, who spent last season with Baltimore, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Dallas Morning News. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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