Today on The Lone Star Dispatch: the DHS shutdown hits record length as Trump bypasses Congress to pay TSA agents, the Iran war widens with Houthi strikes and intelligence contradictions on missile destruction, landmark crypto legislation nears passage, and Texas faces a regulatory shake-up on hemp that takes effect Monday.
President Trump signed an executive order directing DHS to use available funds to pay TSA employees starting March 30, bypassing Congress as the partial shutdown hit a historic 42 days. Nearly 500 TSA officers have quit, call-out rates exceed 11% nationally and hit 40% at some airports, and spring break travel is severely disrupted. The Senate unanimously passed a bipartisan bill funding all DHS agencies except ICE and Border Patrol, but House Republicans rejected it within hours, passing their own 8-week bill that includes full ICE funding and voter ID requirements.
Why it matters
This is a constitutional boundary-push: a president unilaterally directing payment of federal employees without an appropriation sets a precedent that will be tested in court and future shutdowns. For Millsap and Parker County, the practical fallout is real — DFW Airport is operating with degraded security, federal contractor payments are frozen, and FEMA and Coast Guard personnel remain unpaid, weakening emergency response capabilities heading into Texas severe weather season. The House Freedom Caucus linking voter ID to DHS funding signals that immigration and election policy will remain entangled through 2026.
Yemen's Houthi forces launched their first missile strike on Israel on March 27-28, formally entering the broader Iran-backed coalition war. The Houthis warned they could escalate attacks if the conflict widens or Red Sea shipping lanes are used against Iran, threatening a second critical chokepoint alongside the Strait of Hormuz.
Why it matters
The Houthi entry transforms this from a bilateral US-Iran conflict into a multi-front regional war. Red Sea shipping handles roughly 12% of global trade; combined with Iran's Strait of Hormuz toll scheme (already charging $2 million per vessel), two of the world's most critical energy and commerce arteries are now contested simultaneously. For Texas, this directly threatens oil and gas export revenues and could push energy prices higher, compounding inflation pressures on construction materials and local development costs.
Five US intelligence sources told Reuters that roughly one-third of Iran's missile stockpile is confirmed destroyed, with another third likely damaged or buried — leaving significant remaining capability. This sharply contrasts with public US claims of 90% degradation and Secretary Rubio's assertion the war will end 'in weeks not months,' even as the Pentagon deploys 82nd Airborne and Marine units for possible operations against targets including Iran's Kharg Island oil hub.
Why it matters
The gap between classified assessments and public messaging raises serious questions about war sustainability and escalation risk. If Iran retains substantial missile capability, the conflict timeline extends well beyond Rubio's 'weeks' claim — and the US has already burned through 850+ Tomahawk missiles in one month while only producing a few hundred annually. The munitions math doesn't work for a prolonged campaign, which is why troop deployments are signaling potential ground operations that would represent a major escalation.
New Texas regulations effective March 31 ban smokable hemp products and impose massive licensing fee increases: manufacturing licenses jump from $258 to $10,000 and retail registrations from $155 to $5,000. Hemp products represent 30-50% of revenue for many smoke shops, and at least one retailer has filed suit to block the rules. The $4.3 billion Texas hemp industry employs tens of thousands.
Why it matters
This is the most immediately actionable story for your role. The 38x manufacturer and 32x retail fee increases will generate a wave of licensing questions, business closures, and potential new applications for alternative uses of existing commercial spaces. Monday's effective date means local permit offices across Texas will see impacts within days. Watch for the lawsuit outcome — an injunction could freeze implementation and create even more uncertainty for applicants.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps is already charging vessels $2 million for safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, with Iran's parliament drafting formal shipping toll legislation. The G7 called for 'toll-free freedom of navigation,' but NATO allies refused Trump's request to provide naval escorts for commercial shipping.
Why it matters
This is economic warfare targeting the 21 million barrels of oil that transit the Strait daily. NATO's refusal to escort ships signals a fracturing of the Western alliance over the Iran campaign, leaving the US increasingly isolated in enforcing maritime security. For Texas energy producers and refiners, Hormuz disruption directly affects crude oil pricing, export competitiveness, and downstream costs that ripple through construction materials and consumer prices in communities like Millsap.
Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott announced bipartisan agreement on the CLARITY Act, which would assign CFTC oversight of digital commodities like Bitcoin and Ethereum while the SEC handles digital securities. A compromise on stablecoin yield provisions broke months of deadlock. Scott predicts passage by Easter, with the next Senate markup scheduled April 13.
Why it matters
This would be the first comprehensive US crypto regulatory framework, ending years of enforcement-by-lawsuit that has driven companies offshore. Clear jurisdictional lines between CFTC and SEC give investors and businesses certainty about compliance requirements. Separately, the Digital Asset PARITY Act proposes tax breaks for stablecoins but notably excludes Bitcoin from de minimis exemptions — a split that could shape which digital assets gain mainstream adoption. Both bills signal Washington is finally moving from hostility to structure on crypto.
President Trump signed an executive order on March 27 requiring all federal contractors and subcontractors to eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion programs within 30 days. Companies must provide records access for compliance verification; penalties include contract termination and debarment from future federal work.
Why it matters
Any local government or business in Parker County that holds or pursues federal contracts — including infrastructure, transportation, or emergency management work — must now audit and potentially restructure recruitment, training, and workforce programs by late April. The order's ambiguity on what constitutes DEI (does recruiting at HBCUs count? mentorship programs?) creates immediate compliance risk. Expect federal contracting attorneys to be in high demand over the next month.
Fort Worth city officials are reviewing zoning and land-use ordinances after Texas Original applied to open a second dispensary on Horne Street. State law permits up to 15 dispensaries statewide with one required satellite per public health district, and cities are exploring whether they can regulate these uses through zoning despite state prohibition on outright bans.
Why it matters
This is a test case for how Texas municipalities navigate state preemption on emerging industries. Fort Worth's approach to zoning medical cannabis — without banning it outright — will likely become a template for smaller communities. For Millsap, understanding this state-local regulatory dynamic is essential as new business categories emerge that don't fit neatly into existing land-use codes. The precedent here will inform how permit coordinators across North Texas handle similar applications.
Bitcoin dropped to $66,350 on March 28 as the Fear & Greed Index hit 12 — its lowest since October 2023. The selloff was amplified by $15 billion in quarterly options expiry, rising Treasury yields, and Iran war escalation. Ethereum broke below the $2,000 psychological level to $1,981, with whale selling accelerating the decline.
Why it matters
The extreme fear reading of 12/100 has historically preceded major market bottoms, but the combination of geopolitical risk, macro headwinds, and derivatives pressure makes this cycle different. Bitcoin is now down over 20% year-to-date, and the quarterly options expiry created forced selling that could cascade if $66K support fails. The silver lining: institutional buying has continued through the selloff, and the CLARITY Act's progress (above) could provide a catalyst if it passes.
A Dubai-based company's plan to build a 'sustainable city' near Kaufman, Texas — intended to house up to 20,000 foreign nationals — has been canceled following an investigation by Attorney General Ken Paxton. State lawmakers and residents had raised national security and infrastructure concerns about the project.
Why it matters
This case illustrates how large-scale development proposals face multi-layered scrutiny in Texas — from local zoning to state AG intervention. For permit coordinators, it's a reminder that projects with unusual ownership structures or foreign backing may trigger state-level review that supersedes local approval processes. The Kaufman site is roughly 90 miles from Millsap, and the precedent applies directly to how rural Texas communities vet ambitious development proposals.
A hacking group claiming the name 'Internet Yiff Machine' stole 93GB from P3 Global Intel's anonymous crime tips platform, exposing names, addresses, Social Security numbers, phone numbers, and criminal histories of tipsters — along with investigators' replies. The breach compromises the anonymity that is the foundation of Crime Stoppers-type programs.
Why it matters
This breach undermines the trust that makes anonymous crime reporting work. If tipsters fear exposure, the pipeline of community intelligence that local law enforcement depends on dries up. For communities like Millsap that rely on regional Crime Stoppers programs (including the Texoma and Wichita Falls systems), this could have a chilling effect on public cooperation with police. Law enforcement agencies should be communicating with residents about whether their local tip systems use the compromised platform.
House Speaker Dustin Burrows assigned interim charges directing committees to study property tax reform, rural law enforcement staffing, healthcare affordability, aviation infrastructure, data center expansion, and the possible annexation of New Mexico counties before the 2027 legislative session.
Why it matters
These interim charges are the roadmap for what the Texas Legislature will prioritize next session. Property tax reform directly affects municipal budgets and permit fee structures, rural law enforcement funding shapes public safety in communities like Millsap, and the data center study follows Parker County's neighbor Polk County's recent 'impact permit' requirement for data centers. Understanding where the Legislature is heading gives local officials a 12-month head start on adapting policies and planning.
Executive Power Expanding as Congress Stalls From Trump's emergency order paying TSA agents to the DEI contractor mandate and currency signature, the White House is increasingly using executive authority to sidestep congressional gridlock — setting precedents that reshape the federal-local relationship.
Iran War Entering Dangerous Expansion Phase Houthi missile strikes on Israel, Iran's Strait of Hormuz toll scheme, intelligence gaps on missile destruction, and US munitions depletion all point to a conflict widening beyond initial parameters with no diplomatic offramp in sight.
Texas Regulatory Landscape Shifting Rapidly From hemp bans with massive fee hikes to medical marijuana zoning questions and voter purge lawsuits, state-level regulatory changes are cascading down to local governments, creating compliance complexity for permit coordinators and small businesses alike.
Crypto Regulation Crystallizing in Washington The CLARITY Act's bipartisan progress, the PARITY Act's tax proposals, and ongoing market stress from geopolitical tensions are converging to reshape the regulatory and investment landscape for digital assets simultaneously.
Federal Workforce Strain Hitting Local Communities TSA food bank lines at DFW, 500+ officer resignations, and airport chaos illustrate how federal dysfunction directly impacts Texas communities — from travel disruption to consumer spending and emergency service gaps.
What to Expect
2026-03-31—Texas smokable hemp ban and new licensing fees take effect — manufacturers face $10,000 fees, retailers $5,000
2026-04-06—Trump's extended deadline for potential strikes on Iran's energy facilities expires
2026-04-13—Senate Banking Committee markup on CLARITY Act crypto legislation
2026-04-27—Federal contractor DEI elimination deadline (30 days from March 27 executive order)
2026-05-02—Grand Prairie $327M bond election — early voting begins April 20
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