The three Treviño children have suffered from panic attacks and nightmares since a mass shooting a year ago this week left 19 of their schoolmates and two teachers dead. Their parents are striving to help their kids feel normal again.
Evan L’Roy
Evan L’Roy was a Poynter-Koch 2022-2023 fellow and a photographer at The Texas Tribune. He was a spring photography fellow in 2021 and a contract photo editor after graduating from the University of Texas with a radio-television-film degree. Raised in Dallas, Evan has worked as a cinematographer and photographer for Austin TV station KXAN, The Daily Texan and various commercial/film productions. With a focus on enterprise stories, Evan produced visual projects about the environment and homelessness in collaboration with Tribune reporters.
Photos: In the wake of tragedy, Uvalde residents look to murals for healing
Murals of the victims give the community a positive outlet to process their grief and celebrate their loved ones’ lives.
They saved to buy their own mobile homes. Then the land beneath them was sold to an investor.
Mobile homes are a vital source of affordable housing for around 2 million Texans. But as Texas cities grow, many mobile home parks are being closed and redeveloped, pushing out longtime residents.
Photos from Uvalde: How a grief-stricken community prepared to send its children back to school
Today, students in Uvalde return to classrooms for the first day of school, just 15 weeks after the deadliest school shooting in Texas history.
The eviction crisis in photos: How three Texans faced losing their homes during a pandemic
With the final CDC eviction moratorium now set to expire at the end of July, three Texas families recount their experiences facing their own housing struggles over the past year.

