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One subdivision, called Kings Colony, was created in the 1980s, but Colony Ridge began buying and selling land there in 2005 and soon accumulated nearly 250 lots, court records showed in 2024.
Colony Ridge spans 33,000 acres and is home to tens of thousands of residents, many of whom, according to county officials, ...
A map showing the location of Colony Ridge, which lies about 35 miles north of Houston, Texas. The joint DOJ-CFPB suit, filed in federal court in Houston, accuses Colony Ridge Development LLC and ...
Colony Ridge’s leadership agreed to pay a $23,280 penalty that could rise to $29,100 if the company failed to improve its stormwater runoff monitoring, according to a TCEQ commissioners order ...
Inside Colony Ridge, the reality is far more complicated than the either extreme in the illegal immigration debate would acknowledge. These are human beings, not pieces on a game board.
Colony Ridge, a sprawl of homes, trailers and even tents, is home to as many as 75,000 people in an area at least 50 percent bigger than Manhattan.
Colony Ridge entities developed a collection of subdivisions that cover about 33,000 acres of land 30 miles north of Houston. Those neighborhoods drew the attention of Gov. Greg Abbott and the ...
Colony Ridge contends with crime and undocumented immigrants, she acknowledged, but no more than in other Texas communities and certainly not the threat portrayed by some top Republican politicians.
Colony Ridge, a booming subdivision just outside the Grand Parkway in Liberty County, was an “absolute nightmare.” He called it an “unbelievable cartel-run community. . . .
NEW CANEY, Texas — For months we've been reporting on the controversy surrounding Colony Ridge, the Liberty County community that Republicans labeled a hotspot for undocumented immigrants and crime.
Texas developer disputes political claims Colony Ridge is haven for unlawful immigrants Developer John Harris says his fast-growing subdivision in Liberty does not market itself to immigrants ...
Colony Ridge’s leadership agreed to pay a $23,280 penalty that could rise to $29,100 if the company failed to improve its stormwater runoff monitoring, according to a TCEQ commissioners order ...