Officials at Dallas City Hall spent another week navigating the budget process as key deadlines get closer. We’re not going to get into all that today, though.

If you’re itching for budget highlights, it looks like Skillman Library might get a new lease on life — albeit operating only three days a week. And a pitch to redirect $400,000 from Phase One of the Dallas Bike Plan to animal services was dropped. Meanwhile, public safety advocates are bemoaning proposed levels of police funding.

Forget all that for now and catch up on some other developments inside and outside of City Hall.

Officials Lose Another Legal Battle

The Texas Supreme Court has ended a three-year battle between city officials and Texas Card House, a poker club operating off LBJ Freeway in northern Dallas. On Friday, the state’s highest court refused to hear an appeal from the city, siding with the poker club. 

City officials have been arguing that the club was mistakenly granted a certificate of occupancy by the permitting department. That claim failed to hold up in multiple venues, including the city’s Board of Adjustment and the Fifth Court of Appeals.

Pokernews, which appears to be the first publication to report on the city’s latest legal loss, noted that Texas Card House (which owns several poker clubs around Texas) got help from its biggest competitor. The Lodge Card Club in Round Rock filed an amicus brief defending the right to play poker in the state.

Texas Card House opened its Dallas location in 2020 under a social club model, which purportedly skirts state gambling laws by charging membership and seat fees instead of taking a cut of hand winnings like at Winstar in Oklahoma.

City officials moved to revoke the establishment’s permit in 2022, sparking a legal fight that has cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars. Texas Card House has claimed that the pulled permit was a political act and that its business model complies with state law.

While it looks like Texas Card House will be able to continue dealing in Dallas for now, the larger question of whether the social club model will hold legally remains unsettled. Barring legislation calling it one way or the other, local jurisdictions seem to be playing it by ear. Officials in Tarrant County, for instance, have been keeping a tight lid on potential operations, shutting them down when they pop up.

Y’all Street Boasts New Addition

Dallas is taking another step toward becoming a national financial center with the announcement that the Bank of Nova Scotia’s American arm will be opening a regional headquarters in Victory Park.

The firm’s move is coming at the expense of North Carolina and promises to bring more than 1,000 jobs that average $135,000 in wages. In exchange, Scotiabank gets a 10-year property tax break from the city and millions of dollars in supporting grant funds and state tax refunds.

Scotiabank will be moving into 100,000 square feet of office space in Victory Commons One at 2601 Victory Ave. It marks the latest relocation in the city’s growing financial services sector, better known these days as Y’all Street.

Council Member Jesse Moreno (District 2), who represents the area along with roughly half of the nearby Central Business District, celebrated the news and said a new neighborhood empowerment zone would ensure the company prioritizes hiring city residents and pays above the living wage.

“Dallas is a city that thrives when our business community prospers, and District 2 is booming with a vibrant and growing economy,” he said, according to a news release.

While the Scotiabank move is a welcome economic development for the area, an op-ed by The Dallas Morning News editorial board pointed out that AT&T is still scouting for new digs outside downtown.

“The company has declined to comment on its intentions, but whispers that AT&T might decamp to the suburbs have been swirling in business circles for a while,” the editorial board wrote. “While the company has reportedly faced pressure from employees resistant to a full return to the office, Dallas officials had been told that AT&T would consider relocating if public safety issues downtown were not addressed.”

Respondents in the city’s latest annual community survey said improving public safety should be a top priority for officials, and of course voters passed Proposition U to significantly bolster police resources and staffing.

City Initiative Aims To Safeguard Nightlife Economy, Prep for World Cup

The city is launching a Nighttime Economy & Responsible Hospitality Division (NTE) to help balance “community needs, business success, and public safety,” according to a news release.

No doubt the timing is appropriate. The World Cup is less than a year away, and Deep Ellum has been making headlines for all the wrong reasons this summer.

Officials have been working on the division and its plans to bring “businesses, venues, and communities together to safeguard this sector, prepare for major global events, and ensure Dallas sets the standard for a world-class nightlife economy,” said Edward Grant, NTE’s new manager.

More details about the initiative will be shared at a “Glow Up Summit” scheduled for October 14. The event will be heavily focused on preparing for the World Cup, which is expected to draw millions of visitors and potentially billions of dollars in spending to D-FW.

In normal times, the Big D’s nighttime economy clocks over $24 billion a year and sustains around 256,000 jobs. Out of the city’s six entertainment districts, Uptown/Harwood/Victory Park and Downtown are the top producers in terms of economic impact.