Texas

Lifestyle
Weather

Navigate Texas for living, moving, working, and road trips with region fit, state rules, weather risk, and daily logistics.

Install

openclaw skills install @ivangdavila/texas

When to Use

User needs Texas-specific guidance that generic U.S. advice usually gets wrong: choosing a metro, moving, driving, taxes, weather prep, family logistics, small business setup, or road trip execution.

This skill should activate for four modes: visiting, moving to Texas, living in Texas, and operating a Texas-based business.

Architecture

This skill works statelessly for one-off Texas questions. If the user wants continuity across sessions, memory lives in ~/texas/. If ~/texas/ does not exist, read setup.md, explain planned local storage in plain language, and ask for confirmation before creating files. See memory-template.md for structure.

~/texas/
└── memory.md     # User context, region, timelines, constraints, and open loops

Quick Reference

TopicFile
Setup guidesetup.md
Memory templatememory-template.md
Region fit and metro tradeoffsregions.md
Move-in sequence and admin checklistmoving-and-settling.md
License, registration, tolls, and vehiclestexas-dmv-and-vehicles.md
Renting, buying, property tax, and flood riskhousing-and-property.md
Power, water, internet, and recurring billsutilities-and-bills.md
Taxes, insurance pressure, and cost realitycosts-and-taxes.md
Heat, storms, freezes, outages, and prepweather-and-emergencies.md
Laws, scams, and practical safetylaws-and-safety.md
Schools, childcare, and family planningfamily-and-schools.md
Health insurance, urgent care, and care accesshealthcare-and-insurance.md
Jobs, LLC setup, sales tax, and compliancework-and-business.md
Road trips, visiting, and city-hoppingroad-trips-and-visiting.md
Official sources mapsources.md

Core Rules

1. Classify the User Before Giving Advice

  • Decide which Texas mode applies first: visitor, future resident, current resident, or business operator.
  • Then anchor the answer to the user's region, metro, county, ZIP, and school district when those variables change the recommendation.
  • If that context is missing, ask for it before pretending Texas is uniform.

2. Separate State Rules from Local Reality

  • Texas-level rules are only the first layer. City, county, appraisal district, utility territory, school district, and flood zone often change the real answer.
  • Always label which parts are statewide and which parts must be verified locally.
  • For address-specific questions, prefer official portals over memory or generic summaries.

3. Distances and Drive Time Beat Map Intuition

  • Texas plans fail when users underestimate distance, tolls, fatigue, weather, and event traffic.
  • For both relocation and travel, convert geography into realistic drive-time, airport, and corridor tradeoffs.
  • Never recommend same-day overstuffed plans just because destinations look close on a map.

4. Texas Cost Reality Is Broader Than "No State Income Tax"

  • Include housing, property tax pressure, insurance, toll roads, summer power bills, car dependence, and weather-driven costs.
  • For homeowners and businesses, mention appraisal, deductible, flood, hail, and outage exposure when relevant.
  • Use costs-and-taxes.md before saying a place is "cheap."

5. Weather and Grid Risk Change Good Advice

  • Heat, flood, hail, hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfire smoke, and winter freezes are not edge cases.
  • Adjust moving plans, road trips, home choice, and seasonal recommendations around actual hazard exposure.
  • When weather is part of the problem, lead with readiness and fallback plans, not brochure copy.

6. Deliver Checklists, Not Tourism Copy

  • Texas users usually need deadlines, documents, portals, sequence, and tradeoffs.
  • For administrative questions, answer in the form "do this today / this week / later" whenever possible.
  • For destination questions, show why one base city or region fits better than another.
  • Before creating or changing local files in ~/texas/, explain the planned write and ask for confirmation.

7. Use Official Sources for Unstable Rules

  • License rules, registration steps, sales tax, homestead details, district lookups, and emergency guidance can change.
  • Verify current information from the official state or local source before giving precise compliance steps.
  • If current verification is blocked, say so plainly and avoid false precision.

Common Traps

  • Treating Texas like one market instead of multiple different metros and risk zones.
  • Recommending a neighborhood or suburb without checking commute shape, flood exposure, and school district.
  • Saying "no state income tax" while ignoring property tax, insurance, tolls, and electricity spikes.
  • Mixing up Texas DPS, TxDMV, county tax offices, appraisal districts, and city utilities.
  • Planning a road trip by miles instead of daylight, heat, event traffic, and fuel gaps.
  • Giving housing advice without mentioning HOA, wind or hail exposure, and renter or owner insurance gaps.
  • Using U.S.-generic legal guidance for cannabis, DWI, landlord-tenant, or permit questions.

External Endpoints

EndpointData SentPurpose
https://www.texas.govPage requests only unless user explicitly wants form guidanceState service portal and resident tasks
https://www.dps.texas.govPage requests only unless user explicitly provides personal case detailsDriver license and ID rules
https://www.txdmv.govPage requests only unless user explicitly wants vehicle workflow helpVehicle title, registration, and county office guidance
https://comptroller.texas.govPage requests only unless user explicitly wants tax-specific guidanceSales tax, franchise tax, property tax resources
https://tea.texas.govZIP, city, district, or school references if the user asks for school matchingSchool district and education framework
https://www.texasready.govPage requests onlyEmergency preparedness and hazard planning
https://powertochoose.orgZIP if the user asks to compare electric plans in deregulated areasElectricity market lookup

No other data is sent externally.

Security & Privacy

Data that may leave your machine:

  • Public page requests to official Texas or utility-choice sites
  • ZIP, city, county, or district data only when the user asks for location-specific guidance

Data that stays local:

  • Region preference, move timeline, family constraints, vehicle notes, and open tasks in ~/texas/

This skill does NOT:

  • Submit government forms on the user's behalf without explicit instruction
  • Store credentials, SSNs, or payment information in local memory
  • Assume local rules when the answer depends on a city, county, or district

Trust

By using this skill, location details such as ZIP, county, or district may be checked against official Texas or local-government websites when the user asks for precise guidance.

Only install if you trust those public services with that lookup context.

Related Skills

Install with clawhub install <slug> if user confirms:

  • travel — General itinerary design and travel planning structure
  • car-rental — Rental car, pickup, and handoff decisions for Texas trips
  • booking — Reservation workflows for flights, hotels, and schedule holds
  • business — Broader business operations guidance beyond Texas-specific rules
  • health-insurance — Deeper insurance-plan comparison and terminology support

Feedback

  • If useful: clawhub star texas
  • Stay updated: clawhub sync