Find a Business Near: Texas

Below is a list of all cities within the State of Texas in which we have business listings. If you do not see your city within the list below, You can add a business for just $49.95 per year. To add a business submit your info here.

Find a Business Near: Texas

Population for Texas: 29,145,505

Total Males: 14,221,720
Total Females: 14,413,722
Median Household Income: $63,826
Total Households: 9,906,070
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Choose A City Beginning With Letter "X" In Texas


    Number of Firms, Establishments, Employment, and Payroll by Employee Size for Texas (2020)
    STATE ENTERPRISE SIZE FIRMS ESTABLISHMENTS EMPLOYMENT ANNUAL PAYROLL (1,000)
    Texas 01: Total 458,588 609,476 11,104,054 $611,142,429
    Texas 02: <5 employees 268,586 269,016 438,812 $22,741,432
    Texas 03: 5-9 employees 77,203 78,223 508,491 $20,816,314
    Texas 04:10-14 employees 32,123 33,325 374,493 $15,607,536
    Texas 05: 15-19 employees 17,647 18,746 293,776 $12,234,391
    Texas 06: <20 employees 395,559 399,310 1,615,572 $71,399,673
    Texas 07: 20-24 employees 11,010 12,079 237,411 $9,777,697
    Texas 08: 25-29 employees 7,613 8,616 200,852 $8,333,622
    Texas 09: 30-34 employees 5,458 6,534 170,032 $7,290,646
    Texas 10: 35-39 employees 4,270 5,209 153,571 $6,420,764
    Texas 11: 40-49 employees 5,757 7,466 245,188 $10,871,014
    Texas 12: 50-74 employees 7,719 11,075 437,542 $20,344,671
    Texas 13: 75-99 employees 4,038 6,836 314,385 $15,137,925
    Texas 14: 100-149 employees 4,187 8,745 431,389 $21,861,536
    Texas 15: 150-199 employees 2,135 5,711 283,191 $14,448,369
    Texas 16: 200-299 employees 2,373 7,344 398,685 $21,703,914
    Texas 17: 300-399 employees 1,260 4,418 254,052 $13,887,203
    Texas 18: 400-499 employees 860 3,322 195,042 $11,852,221
    Texas 19: <500 employees 452,239 486,665 4,936,912 $233,329,255
    Texas 20: 500-749 employees 1,332 6,932 374,943 $21,423,463
    Texas 21: 750-999 employees 780 4,882 270,963 $15,377,179
    Texas 22: 1,000-1,499 employees 918 6,307 317,027 $19,227,544
    Texas 23: 1,500-1,999 employees 559 4,982 231,364 $13,674,469
    Texas 24: 2,000-2,499 employees 369 3,566 174,473 $10,827,655
    Texas 25: 2,500-4,999 employees 940 16,084 643,415 $44,009,151
    Texas 26: 5,000+ employees 1,451 80,058 4,154,957 $253,273,713
    Green Initiatives & Environmental History for: Texas

    Basic History

    Spanish explorers were the first to visit the region in the 16th and 17th centuries. A short-lived French colony was established in 1685. Americans began to settle along the Brazos River in 1821 when Texas was controlled by Mexico. In 1836, following a brief war between the American settlers in Texas and the Mexican government, the Independent Republic of Texas was proclaimed. After Texas became a state in 1845, border disputes led to the Mexican War of 1846-1848.

    Environmental History

    Texas has more than 20 native trees, of which the catclaw, flowering mimosa, black persimmon, weeping juniper, cottonwood, cypress, the American white elm, magnolia, white oak, orchids are abundant across the state. Texas wild rice and several cactus species are classified as endangered throughout the state. The red wolf, white-tailed deer, the nine-banded armadillo, coyote, bobcat, and mountain lion inhabit different areas of the state. Owing to human encroachment, most of them are steadily disappearing despite efforts by naturalists throughout the United States to save them. The state has its own wildlife protection programs, but 63 animal species are now listed as threatened or endangered, including the Mexican long-nosed bat, Louisiana black bear, bald eagle, Mexican spotted owl, Texas blind salamander, Houston toad, two species of whale, and five species of turtle.

    Green Initiatives

    Texas is continuing to make great strides with innovative environmental initiatives. Some of them include: encouraging state dwellers to purchase water conservation kit; encouraging rainwater harvesting, drip irrigation, and landscaping with native plants; ensuring clean air, clean water, and safe management of wastes with several projects initiated by The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality; plans entail adding several energy efficient features including small-scale wind energy conversion system, solar panel array, solar water heating systems, electric vehicle charging stations, and interactive display modules for environmental education; supporting community gardens; recycling all plastics, aluminum, tin, steel, newspapers, paper grocery bags, magazines, corrugated cardboard, chipboard, phone books, junk mail, and glass containers; encouraging green building and LEED Certification; and having high-efficiency energy systems in place.

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