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Wells Dunbar | The Texas Standard

As  online editor for KUT News, Wells Dunbar covers news in Austin, Central Texas and beyond. Before joining the KUT family, Wells served as staff writer and news blog editor at The Austin Chronicle, and covered the Texas Legislature for Gallery Watch. Hailing from El Paso, Wells is a longtime Austin resident whose interests include technology and social media, film and music, and spending quality time with his wife and cat.

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  • Update: The Texas House Committee on Transparency in State Agency Operations met Monday to discuss an investigation that could lead to impeachment
  • If you're heading to 7-Eleven today for a free Slurpee, raise your glass to the city of Austin and her Texas Longhorns: After all, it was here in Austin
  • Update: The Texas AM Board of Regents approved the university’s $450 million plan to redevelop Kyle Field into the biggest stadium in Texas (by seating
  • Simmering tensions between University of Texas at Austin President Bill Powers and the UT Board of Regents keep rising: An article in the Houston Chronicle
  • A Texas Department of Transportation conference wouldn’t normally attract much attention. But invite a robot car to your meeting, and everything changes...
  • Can you put a price tag on man’s best friend? The heard oral arguments Thursday morning in a case that could answer that question. An animal shelter employee is appealing a lower court’s ruling that found her accidental euthanasia of a family dog gave the pet’s owners grounds to recover damages related to the dog’s “sentimental or intrinsic value.” The appeal from Fort Worth shelter employee Carla Strickland describes what happened: In 2009, Kathryn and Jeremy Medlen’s dog Avery escaped from their backyard and was picked up by animal services. The Medlens found the dog at the shelter, but didn’t have the money to take Avery out, so an agreement was made that they would come back for the dog in a week. A few days later, Strickland made a list of animals to be euthanized – and added Avery to that list by accident. “When the Medlens returned for their dog a few days later,” the appeal reads, “they learned of his unfortunate fate.” The Medlens sued Strickland, and the case was appealed; the Austin American-Statesman has an overview of the court activity. At appeals court, the Medlens argued that while personal property – in this case, their dog – may have little market value, they were due damages due to the “intrinsic or sentimental value.” The court sided with the Medlens, before Strickland appealed the case to the state’s high court. “The issue before the Texas Supreme Court is how much in damages a person in Texas can recover when someone loses, kills or injures their pet,” says Ryan Clinton, an Austin animal rights advocate and attorney who filed a brief in support of the Medlens. “The other side,” Clinton says, “they’re all arguing that the most someone should ever be able to recover, if someone kills their pet, is the actual market value replacement costs. So if you got you pet for free from a shelter, they’re saying hat your pet is worth absolutely nothing." Strickland’s appeal says the lower court’s ruling puts the state on a slippery slope: “This sweeping change in animal law gives pet owners the potential for a greater damages recovery for the loss of their pets than is available for the loss of a relative or close human friend,” it says. “Although dogs are beloved companions, they should not be placed into this intimate familial category as a matter of public policy. To do so would allow damage claims with no sensible or just stopping point, ultimately affecting the quality and costs of pet services to the detriment of pets and their owners, as well as other business interests in the state.” The Associated Press cites an even more pointed argument from Strickland’s attorneys: "there is an endless supply of dogs that can serve the same purpose." But Clinton doesn’t buy that argument, saying that plenty of other states have found ways for pet owners to recover damages – “whether its sentimental value damages, whether its punitive damages, whether its emotional distress damages.” Oral arguments concluded Thursday; there’s no word yet on when the court may issue an opinion.