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Texas Judge Forces State Agency to Honor Deal for Planned 1,000-Home “Muslim City”

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Kristian Thorne
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A major housing project in Texas is moving forward after a judge ruled that a state agency must stick to its agreement with developers behind a controversial community once known as the East Plano Islamic Community (EPIC).

The project, now rebranded as The Meadow, is planned to include 1,000 homes, a mosque, schools, and additional community infrastructure. Supporters say it is a large-scale residential development designed to serve a growing population in the region.

But the project has also sparked political tension across Texas.

Some state leaders have raised concerns about the development, with critics arguing it could eventually be used to enforce religious legal frameworks. Those claims have not been backed by court findings but have fueled public debate around the project.

On April 2026, a Travis County judge ordered the Texas Workforce Commission to comply with existing agreements tied to the development. The ruling came after the agency attempted to pause or block parts of the project, citing an ongoing investigation involving federal partners, including the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

The commission argued that the project should remain on hold due to regulatory concerns and claimed the matter was still under active review.

However, the court sided with developers, effectively requiring the state agency to continue honoring previously agreed terms while the legal process continues.

In a statement, the Texas Workforce Commission confirmed it disagrees with the ruling and is preparing to appeal, saying:

“This development remains under active investigation with our federal partners at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). We are taking immediate steps to appeal this decision.”

The ruling marks a significant procedural win for the developers, who have faced mounting political scrutiny as the project gained attention online and in state-level discussions.

For now, construction plans remain on track, though the broader legal and political fight is far from over. The case is expected to continue moving through appeals while federal and state reviews proceed in parallel.

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