HomeMy WebLinkAbout2026-2-24 Euless Articles
New wellness retreat with salt cave and float
rooms to open in Euless
By Stephanie Allmon Merry Feb 18, 2026 | 3:32 pm
A new wellness studio will bring some much-needed calm to one of the busiest areas of
Dallas-Fort Worth: Altered States Wellness will open at 1300 Red River Dr., Suite 200,
Euless, in the Glade Parks development in March.
The Glade Parks studio is the fourth DFW location and first in Tarrant County for Altered
States, which is based in Coppell. There are also outposts in Richardson, The Colony,
and Houston.
However, Euless will be the location to include a fully immersive salt cave. "Designed to
evoke the feeling of being inside a Himalayan salt cave," a release says, "the space
combines natural textures, calming lighting, and salt-rich surroundings to create a
deeply relaxing environment intended to support respiratory wellness, stress relief, and
overall relaxation."
Salt therapy, or halotherapy, is where you inhale fine salt particles to improve lung
function, drawing water into the airway and thinning mucus so that it's much easier to
breathe. Studies have shown that salt therapy can be beneficial for respiratory
conditions, skin problems, and allergies.
In addition to the salt cave, the Euless retreat will also offer Altered States' co re
services, the release says, including float therapy in two uniquely designed themed
rooms:
A cabin-themed float room, inspired by warmth and grounding.
An oasis jungle-themed float room, offering a lush, nature-inspired escape.
Additional wellness services include:
A full-body red light therapy bed
Cold plunge and sauna for contrast therapy
Compression boots
PEMF therapy
BrainTap guided meditation
A beverage bar serving kava, kombucha, and hydrogen water
According to the website, prices run about $39 for a 45-minute infrared sauna session,
$39-$59 for a 30- or 60-minute salt cave session, and $89-$139 for float therapy.
Services can be booked a la carte or in packages, and memberships are available.
“Glade Parks represents an exciting next chapter for our brand,” says JoJo Struebing,
founder of Altered States Wellness, in the release. “This location brings together our
most popular services while introducing a new immersive salt cave experience designed
to transport guests out of their day-to-day environment and into true restoration.”
To mark its grand opening, Altered States at Glade Parks will offer free wellness
sessions all day Saturday, March 7, beginning at 11 am, to allow guests to explore the
space and experience select services firsthand.
For more information, visit the website.
Euless Trinity becomes latest North Texas
school to walk out in ICE protest
By Samuel O’Neal Updated February 20, 2026 2:35 PM
Students at Trinity High School in Euless walked out of class at around 11:20 a.m.
Friday morning to hold an anti-ICE protest, joining a rapidly growing list of high schools
in DFW to protest ICE activity in the area.
Friday’s protest started at Trinity High School, 500 N. Industrial Blvd., before students
quickly made their way about a half mile to Euless City Hall, 203 N. Ector Dr. They
gathered on the lawn in front of the City Hall building for a few minutes, chanting anti-
ICE slogans and passing out cookies to fellow student protestors. They then made their
way down a sidewalk along Airport Freeway, returning to City Hall and Trinity High.
The protest included well over 100 students and lasted for about an hour.
“What do we want to chant, what do we want to say?” A student leading the protest
asked his fellow protesters over a megaphone on the lawn of Euless City Hall.
About a dozen students suggested using an expletive to the leader holding the
megaphone.
The students chanted the expletive for a few minutes as more made their way to Euless
City Hall from Trinity High. The group then headed down a sidewalk along Airport
Freeway while Euless Police Officers watched from their patrol cars. No officers exited
their vehicles or interacted with the students, but followed them along the frontage road.
A number of students held up flags from Spanish-speaking countries, including
Guatamala, Mexico, and Honduras. Other students held up homemade signs that read
“I Like My ICE Crushed!” and “Jesus Was An Immigrant Too.”
Another student held a sign reading “If your undocumented neighbor does not have due
process, then neither do you
As students marched along Airport Freeway, one rolled a speaker down the sidewalk as
California-based rapper YG’s anti-Donald Trump song “FDT” blared on maximum
volume. Students sang along as they marched.
A parent of a protester who monitored the students said the walkout was first planned
about a week and a half ago. It was entirely student organized and faculty did not play a
role in assisting, the parent said.
Trinity High is the latest of dozens of North Texas high schools to hold a walkout in
recent weeks and months to protest ICE activity in Tarrant County and the killing of two
people in Minneapolis earlier this year.
Students gathered in a circle to discuss what to chant during their anti-ICE walkout at
Euless City Hall.
Earlier this month the Texas Education Agency issued new guidance on student -led
walkouts as hundreds occurred across the state.
TEA said students must be marked absent if they participate in walkouts and schools
risk losing daily attendance funding if they allow or encourage students to walk out of
class. The agency said teachers who facilitate walkouts will be subject to investigation
and possible sanctions could include revoking their licenses.
If there is evidence of a school system facilitating a walkout, the district will be subject to
investigation, which could lead to the district being taken over and a new boa rd of
managers being named to replace the existing school board, state officials previously
said.
The guidance has caused some student leaders across DFW, like those at Saginaw
High School, to only hold protests after school hours to ensure they are in co mpliance
will all rules, a Saginaw student protest leader previously told the Star-Telegram.
But at Trinity High on Friday, students still chose to walk out during school hours. A
parent of a protesting student said Friday that the school has threatened d isciplinary
action for doing so.
Students started at Euless City Hall before marching down Highway 183 on Friday
during the anti-ICE walk out protest
School walkouts in Texas have gotten so much buzz in recent weeks and months that
Gov. Greg Abbott took to X to respond to a Star-Telegram story about walkouts in
Haltom City. Despite that story not being about Fort Worth ISD, Abbott said in his post
that he would “course correct” the Fort Worth school district.
“THIS is a school district that Texas is taking over because FWISD has failed students
for 5 years in a row,” Abbott wrote on X. “Parents are fleeing FWISD & choosing school
choice because they want their kids educated and not indoctrinated. The State will
course correct FWSID.”
Other schools in the region that have had student walkouts include Fort Worth Trimble
Tech, Richland, Birdville, Hurst L.D. Bell, Fort Worth Young Women’s Leadership
Academy, Saginaw and Saginaw Boswell.
This story was originally published February 20, 2026 at 1:51 PM.