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Pu Ying Huang
Pu Ying Huang is a photojournalist based in Houston, Texas & Bogotá, Colombia.
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Hurricane after hurricane wreaked havoc in Orange, Texas. Finally, residents say they got a break.
Thread by @puyinghuang on Thread Reader App
A fracked well in West Texas can produce five times as much wastewater as oil
Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers
Texas Tribune photojournalists on the front line: photography in a year of pandemic and unrest
The Brief: Essential Texas News by The Texas Tribune
The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter - The Brief
The Texas Tribune’s photographers captured a state in motion in 2023
Texas 2023: Year in Photos
Texas will have an $18.6 billion surplus and avoid a recession, comptroller projects
The Texas Tribune Festival wraps up with big ideas and lively discussions
Scenes from the 2023 Texas Tribune Festival
A weekend of protest and mourning: George Floyd’s death spurs demonstrations in Texas cities
Texas tax break helps big companies and hurts public schools, critics say
Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers
Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers
Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers
Venezuelans desperate for work have resorted to crossing the Andes — on foot.
Hundreds of desperate migrants are living in makeshift settlements near the Venezuelan border.
In Mexico’s Matamoros, thousands of asylum seekers wait in an encampment for their asylum cases to be heard in the US.
On the outskirts of the Colombian border city of Cúcuta, nearly 1,000 Venezuelan families have struggled to rebuild their lives in the Alfonso Gómez settlement since they arrived roughly two years ago. Now, borders are shut because of coronavirus.
A weekend of protest and mourning: George Floyd’s death spurs demonstrations in Texas cities
Type Investigations
Texans Join 'March for Our Lives' Rallies Across the State