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The council's quiet vote approving a $55 million pay out to an oil and gas company, could be the end of a decade-long legal fight over drilling on city-owned land.
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A decade after a legal fight began over a deal to drill for natural gas on city-owned land, Dallas council members are considering a $55 million payout to settle.
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Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings says a $30 million lawsuit filed Thursday by Trinity East Energy is the latest in a 鈥済ame of poker.鈥 The gas drilling company鈥
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The Dallas City Council has killed plans to drill for natural gas on three tracts of land in the northwest part of the city. Concerns about the drilling鈥
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It appears the Dallas Plan Commission is taking a tougher stand on gas drilling than the city鈥檚 drilling task force recommended. Plan Commissioners are鈥
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Gas drilling on park land in northwest Dallas has been turned down for a second time. The City Plan Commission heard three hours of debate over drilling鈥
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Dallas City Manager Mary Suhm takes the hot seat Wednesday at City Hall. The mayor has requested an explanation of the Trinity East Energy gas drilling鈥
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Dallas City Manager Mary Suhm admits her staff added a piece of city park land to a gas drilling lease without City Council approval.Councilman Scott鈥
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Debate over the first permits to drill for natural gas in Dallas heated up at the City Plan Commission meeting as drilling opponents alleged a backroom鈥
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Next month, the Dallas City Plan Commission will reconsider its denial of gas drilling permits for Trinity East Energy. But, some at the commission鈥
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UPDATE 10:45am: The re-vote on gas drilling permits for Trinity East Energy may not happen today. Three city council members have sent a letter to the鈥
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The Dallas City Plan Commission voted against natural gas drilling permits on three sites in northwest Dallas on Thursday. That move becomes an鈥