Corrections and Clarifications
Our reporting on all platforms will be truthful, transparent and respectful; our facts will be accurate, complete and fairly presented. When we make a mistake — and from time to time, we will — we will work quickly to fully address the error, correcting it within the story, detailing the error on the story page and adding it to this running list of Tribune corrections. If you find an error, email corrections@texastribune.org.
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Correction, : A previous version of this story incorrectly characterized the nature of an accident at the Arkema facility during Hurricane Harvey. The facility experienced a chemical fire during the storm, not a gasoline leak. Texas legislators eye tougher rules on chemical tanks to prevent explosions, spills during storms
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Correction, : Due to errors in the state's COVID-19 vaccine dashboard, this story incorrectly stated the percentage of vaccine doses that had been given out in Texas as of Monday. Roughly 44% of doses had been given out, not roughly one-third. The story also incorrectly stated that the state had received more than 793,000 vaccine doses; the state corrected its dashboard late Monday to show that more than 944,000 doses had been shipped to Texas. More vaccines on the way to Texas this week as the state's COVID-19 situation worsens
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Correction, : The original version of this story stated that Texas’ standardized test contracts totaled $338 million. The correct total for the four-year agreements for the STAAR exams is $388 million. Texas hires two companies to run STAAR, moving toward statewide online testing
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Correction, : A map with this story originally misspelled the name of a reservoir on the Rio Grande. It’s Amistad Reservoir, not Armistad Reservoir. The Trump administration awarded border wall contracts to build on land it doesn't own in Texas
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Correction, : This story originally misspelled the name of Texas Department of State Health Services Commissioner John Hellerstedt in one instance. Texas officials expect it to take months for coronavirus vaccine to be available to anyone who wants it
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Correction, : Due to incorrect information provided by Texas Health Resources, a previous version of this story stated that Texas Health Frisco converted baby delivery and postpartum recovery beds to medical overflow. The hospital converted only postpartum beds. Ahead of the holiday season, Texas' ICU capacity is the lowest since the start of the pandemic
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Correction, : An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Texas had 21,000 open ICU beds available at the end of April. The state had 2,100 open ICU beds at that time, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. Ahead of the holiday season, Texas' ICU capacity is the lowest since the start of the pandemic
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Correction, : A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the number of people who could be vaccinated when Texas receives an initial supply of coronavirus vaccine. It will be enough to give 1.4 million people an initial dose, not two doses for 700,000 people. Texas may receive initial coronavirus vaccine doses for 1.4 million people this month, Gov. Greg Abbott says
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Correction, : A previous version of this story misstated where Big Bend Regional Medical Center is located. The hospital is in Brewster County, not Presidio County. The story also got the population of Jeff Davis County incorrect. The county has about 2,300 people, not 15,000. Coronavirus is ablaze in West Texas as tourists flock to Big Bend and Marfa. Hospitals are running out of overflow options.
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Correction, : An earlier version of this story incorrectly described the host of a panel featuring Texas lawmakers. The panel was hosted by the LBJ Library Future Forum, not the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. Republicans kept their grip on Texas government in 2020. In 2021, they'll be able to tighten it.
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Correction, : This story originally misstated that all statewide elected offices are on the ballot in 2022. The top statewide offices — governor, lieutenant governor, land commissioner, agriculture commissioner, attorney general and comptroller — are on the ballot. But some seats on the Texas Supreme Court, Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and Railroad Commission of Texas will not be up for election. Texas Republicans eye 2022 — and beyond — after romping in November election
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Correction, : Due to an editing error, the Nov. 21 version of this tracker included incorrect death counts for 19 counties: El Paso has 949 deaths, not 106; Ellis has 106 deaths, not 949; Deaf Smith has 36 deaths, not 44; Delta has one death, not 36; Denton has 200 deaths, not one; DeWitt has 44 deaths, not 200; La Salle has 14 deaths, not 10; Lamar has 66 deaths, not 14; Lamb has 35 deaths, not 66; Lampasas has 10 deaths, not 35; Madison has 12 deaths, not two; Marion has 15 deaths, not 59; Martin has 176 deaths, not 169; Mason has two deaths, not six; Matagorda has 59 deaths, not 175; Maverick has 169 deaths, not one; McCullouch has six deaths, not 12; McLennan has 175 deaths, not 15 and McMullen has one death, not 7. How coronavirus impacted Texas: Hospitalizations, vaccinations, cases and deaths
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Correction, : This story stated the wrong percentage of students learning from home in majority low-income districts because the analysis did not include 264 out of the 828 districts. It is 67%, not an average of 64%. Many Texas families say remote learning isn’t working and they want it fixed
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Correction, : A earlier version of this story provided the incorrect final salary for former UT-Austin President Greg Fenves because of wrong information provided by both a UT-Austin spokesman and by the UT System. Fenves earned $995,000 before he left, not $900,000. UT-Austin President Jay Hartzell poised to make $1.25 million annually
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Correction, : This story incorrectly stated the metric used to determine when new health restrictions can be imposed in regions of Texas. On Oct. 14, Gov. Greg Abbott changed the trigger to when more than 15% of the region's hospital capacity is used for COVID-19 patients. Previously, the trigger was when more than 15% of hospitalized patients had COVID-19. Coronavirus hospitalizations are up in Texas as some fear the state is headed toward another surge
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Correction, : This story incorrectly stated the metric used to determine when new health restrictions can be imposed in regions of Texas. On Oct. 14, Gov. Greg Abbott changed the trigger to when more than 15% of the region's hospital capacity is used for COVID-19 patients. Previously, the trigger was when more than 15% of hospitalized patients had COVID-19. Texas is on the cusp of another COVID-19 surge. Is the state better prepared to handle it?
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Correction, : This story incorrectly stated the metric used to determine when new health restrictions can be imposed in regions of Texas. On Oct. 14, Gov. Greg Abbott changed the trigger to when more than 15% of the region's hospital capacity is used for COVID-19 patients. Previously, the trigger was when more than 15% of hospitalized patients had COVID-19. In Lubbock, pandemic fatigue sets in as hospitalizations rise
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Correction, : This story incorrectly stated the metric used to determine when new health restrictions can be imposed in regions of Texas. On Oct. 14, Gov. Greg Abbott changed the trigger to when more than 15% of the region's hospital capacity is used for COVID-19 patients. Previously, the trigger was when more than 15% of hospitalized patients had COVID-19. Funeral homes and hospitals in parts of Texas brace for new wave of coronavirus infections and deaths
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Correction, : A previous version of this article said the most recent midterm elections were in 2016. The elections were held in 2018. Democrats didn’t get a blue wave, but some of the fastest-growing suburbs in Texas are still moving to the left
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Correction, : An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Kamala Harris will be the first person of color to become vice president of the United States. Harris will be the first woman and the first Black and South Asian American person to become vice president, but Charles Curtis, who was Native American and served under President Herbert Hoover from 1929-33, was the first person of color to have that position. Joe Biden defeats Donald Trump for the presidency
Corrections and clarifications prior to Oct. 21, 2020 are available here.