The San Antonio Express-News obtained a Police Department presentation that shows violent and property crime across the city fell in 2024.
Dense fog advisory issued for Central and South Texas tonight through Wednesday. Visibility will drop to a quarter mile or less.
After a bitterly cold week, a major weather pattern change will bring warmer temperatures and some rain to South Texas next week.
The Alamo City officially recorded 0.10 of an inch of snow at the San Antonio International Airport, which makes Tuesday morning’s event the first measurable snowfall found since February 2021. Thankfully, this event was nothing compared to the multi-day deep freeze that we all remember nearly four years ago.
Salena Sanchez, a fourth-grade teacher with South San Antonio ISD, died last Tuesday after a battle with ovarian cancer at the age of 30.
We may still be in January, but parts of Texas will see an early start to the severe weather season as a strong storm system makes its way into the Lone Star State over the next 24 to 36 hours. Low pressure,
Michael Karlis is a Staff Writer at the San Antonio Current. He is a graduate of American University in Washington, D.C., whose work has been featured in Salon, Alternet, Creative Loafing Tampa Bay, Orlando Weekly, NewsBreak, 420 Magazine and Mexico Travel Today. He reports primarily on breaking news, politics...
SAN ANTONIO - Winter Storm is now developing along the South Texas coast and starting to pump moisture into our region. Reports of light freezing rain, freezing mist and sleet are coming in. These reports will become more numerous through the evening and especially overnight.
Just days away from the coldest air of the season paying us a visit in San Antonio and South Texas! Bitter cold arctic air mass will surge south
South San Antonio ISD teacher Salena Rose Sanchez died Jan. 14 after battling cancer. She worked at Armstrong Elementary School for five years.
An upper-level storm system coming from the west into Texas in the coming days brings a chance for rain and thunderstorms every day this week.
Developers, city contractors, lawyers, lobbyists and corporate executives are the usual suspects when it comes to campaign giving in San Antonio municipal elections. But they can be gun shy, especially in a race for mayor where the incumbent can’t seek reelection because of term limits and numerous candidates are running — like the May 3 election.