
Travis Bubenik
News DirectorTravis has waltzed across Texas throughout his career in journalism, covering everything from pipeline protests in the Big Bend and oilfield flaring in the Permian Basin to Gulf Coast hurricanes and courtroom battles all over the state.
A Houston native and University of Texas alum, he got his start in public radio as an intern at Marfa Public Radio, where he has at various times been a reporter and host of both Morning Edition and All Things Considered.
Travis’ reporting has frequently appeared on NPR and public radio’s Marketplace. His dog Valentine is indeed named after the town.
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The Judd Foundation says it’s on track to finish renovating the historic Marfa building that contains the late artist’s work.
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The property owners association for the sprawling desert subdivision says it will begin implementing a conservation plan for non-potable water sales in September amid concerns about growing demand and drought.
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The West Texas park, known for its scenic spring-fed pool, has reopened historic cabins that were built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s.
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City council members say the move could help the city crack down on rental owners not paying hotel occupancy taxes. Brewster County officials tried the same approach last year, but abandoned it after deciding it wasn’t worth the money.
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The Interior Department on Wednesday established the historic schoolhouse in Marfa, Texas as the nation’s newest national park unit. The site will explore the often undertold history of Mexican American school segregation across the Southwest.
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El Departamento de Interior designó el miércoles la histórica escuela de Marfa, Texas, como nuevo parque nacional. El sitio explorará la historia, a menudo poco contada, de la segregación en las escuelas mexicano-estadounidenses del suroeste.
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The settlement comes after environmental groups sued the agency to force action on a plan to clean up haze pollution in Texas and multiple other states.
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County officials on Wednesday appointed a handful of community representatives to a recently formed utility board that will explore solutions for water systems in some of the Big Bend region’s smallest towns.
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Sergio Mencha Pizarro, who has gone by the name “El Menchaca,” pleaded guilty on June 28 to a federal drug trafficking charge that carries a mandatory life sentence.