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Texas values collide in fight over Houston-Dallas high speed rail

A proposed high-speed rail line between the state's two largest urban areas represents the collision of two things Texans hold dear: private property rights and an unrestrained free market

5-year-old Cainen Calhoun runs to catch up to his father Charlie on his family's land in Bedias, Texas, on Sept. 15, 2018. A proposed high-speed rail would be built along existing power lines.
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Living off the land

Randa and Charlie Calhoun with their twin sons, Cainen and Cash, 5, fish on their land in Bedias, Texas, on Sept. 15, 2018. The proposed high speed rail would be built along existing power lines.
Central Texas Partners released this map showing the likely route of a high-speed rail line between Dallas and Houston.

In Grimes County, neighbors face a choice

Charlie Calhoun with twin sons Cainen and Cash, 5, raise cattle on their land in Bedias, Texas, on Sept. 15, 2018. A proposed high speed rail would be built along existing power lines.

In the cities, promises of renewal

A DART train station near an undeveloped area in the Cedars neighborhood in the south side of Dallas, a proposed location for a high-speed rail station, on Monday, Sept. 24, 2018.

Lives on hold

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State government Transportation High-speed rail