FORT BEND COUNTY – The Houston Chronicle reports that Fort Bend County officials on Sunday confirmed that a woman has contracted measles, the first confirmed case in the county following outbreaks in West Texas and the Panhandle. The woman, who officials did not identify, likely contracted the disease during recent international travel, county officials said. The case is being investigated by Fort Bend health officials who were conducting contact tracing to identify possible exposures and limit further spread of the disease, according to a county news release. âI want to reassure our community that we are working closely with Health and Human Services to keep everyone informed,â Fort Bend County Judge KP George said in a statement. âYour safety and well-being remain my top priority. I urge all residents to check their immunization records, get vaccinated if necessary and stay vigilant for symptoms. Together, we can protect our families, neighbors and the greater Fort Bend community.â
Senate vote near for bill requiring sheriffs to partner with ICE
AUSTIN – KXAN reports that legislation to mandate Texas sheriffs participate in immigration law enforcement is moving closer to a vote at the Texas Capitol. Senate Bill 8 is on the chamberâs intent calendar for Monday. The bill filed by State Sen. Charles Schwertner, R-Georgetown, would require all Texas counties with 100,000 or more people to join Immigration and Customs Enforcementâs (ICE) 287(g) program. Schwertner described the program as a partnership between local law enforcement and federal ICE in the identification and detainment of criminal aliens. âPeople overwhelmingly saw the policies of an open border and how it affects communities, and they overwhelmingly warrant stronger enforcement of criminal aliens to make sure they are identified, detained, prosecuted and deported,â Schwertner said.
Senator Schwertner has discussed the ideas in Senate Bill 8 in previous sessions. He said this year, the ideas are getting more traction at the Capitol. The current genesis of the bill is the people overwhelmingly voicing their opinion last November, on November 5, that we need stronger border enforcement and enforcement of our immigration laws,â Schwertner said. Some opponents of the legislation have raised concern that it could create discourage some people from reporting crimes, potentially putting public safety at risk. âAs SB 8 is discussed, it is my sincere hope that public safety is carefully considered. When people are afraid, they hide in the shadows. Victims donât report crime and witnesses donât come forward with information. Criminals win as they take advantage of the vulnerable among us,â Travis County Sheriff Sally Hernandez wrote in a statement on SB 8. âThe impact of that reaches beyond immigration to our humanity. I want victims of crime to run to law enforcement, not away from us,â Hernandez added.
Woman arrested after allegedly punching an elderly woman
LINDALE – According to reports from our news partner, KETK, a woman was arrested after allegedly striking an elderly woman in the face.
According to the arrest affidavit, around 2:45 p.m. deputies responded to a reported assault in progress on Stewart Street in Lindale. There, they found 64-year-old Tina Davis with bruising and redness on her face.
The document said that 30-year-old Avery Martinez showed deputies a video of the incident that occurred prior to their arrival. The video showed Martinez step onto Davisâ property and threaten to harm Davis. The deputies observed Martinez putting her hands on Davis, and then the fight falls out of view in the video. Continue reading Woman arrested after allegedly punching an elderly woman
Water is the new oil in Texas
AUSTIN – Inside Climate News reports that in Central Texas, a bitter fight over a $1 billion water project offers a preview of the future for much of the state as decades of rapid growth push past the local limits of its most vital natural resource. On one side: Georgetown, the fastest growing city in America for three years straight, which in 2023 signed a contract with an investor-funded enterprise to quickly begin importing vast volumes of water from the Simsboro Formation of the Carrizo Wilcox Aquifer, 80 miles to the east. On the other side: the cities atop the Simsboro that rely on its water. Bryan, College Station and the Texas A&M University System, a metro area with almost 300,000 people, have sued the developer to stop the project. A trial is set for the first week of May.
âWeâre going to fight this thing until the end,â said Bobby Gutierrez, the mayor of Bryan. âIt effectively drains the water source of the cities.â The pump and pipeline project to Georgetown, developed by California-based Upwell Water, is the largest of at least a half dozen similar projects recently completed, under construction or proposed to bring rural Carrizo Wilcox aquifer water into the booming urban corridor that follows Interstate 35 through Central Texas. It would eventually pump up to 89 million gallons per day, three times the usage of the city of Bryan, to Georgetown and its neighboring cities. âThat basically stops all the economic development we have,â Gutierrez said. âWeâre talking about our survival.â The fight over the Upwell project could well be a prelude for the broader battles to come as cities across Texas outgrow their water supplies. Lawmakers in the state Capitol are pushing to avert a broad scarcity crisis with funding to desalinate seawater, purify salty groundwater and treat oilfield wastewater to add to the supply. But all of these solutions remain years from realization. In the near term, only import projects from freshwater aquifers will continue to meet the growing water demands of thirsty Texas cities. Regulation of such projects falls to a patchwork of small, rural agencies called groundwater conservation districts, which might not be fully equipped or empowered to manage plans for competing regional water needs that can affect entire cities for generations to come.
TWU hosts public meeting for District 6 on Thursday
TYLER – Do you have questions about your water bill? If you live in District 6, there is a place to get your answers. Tyler Water Utilitie will hold a come-and-go community meeting in District 6 at the Pollard United Methodist Church, Gym, 3030 New Copeland Rd. This event will feature information stations staffed by Department Directors and offers you a chance to speak directly with Councilmember Brad Curtis. Water Customer Service Representatives will also be available to help with individual account questions. So, if you are a district 6 customer, come to the event and speak one-on-one with experts to learn more about TWU, utility billing, and improvement projects, ask questions and provide feedback on these topics. Remember to bring a copy of your water bill for specific billing questions.
East Texas woman arrested for the murder of her daughter
CASS COUNTY – Our news partner, KETK, reports that a woman has been arrested by the Cass County Sheriff’s office for capitol murder after an incident left a 9-year-old dead.
At around 6:31 a.m., the Atlanta Police Department received an emergency call from a residence in Bloomburg off of FM 74, a post from the sheriffâs office said.
A neighbor made the 911 call on behalf of an injured woman identified as Jacki Kubin, who ran to the neighbor asking for help. Officials reported that the neighbor was able to give law enforcement a description of a fleeing vehicle.
When officers arrived, an Atlanta Texas Police Department officer found a female child that had suffered severe trauma. The child was transported to a nearby hospital. Continue reading East Texas woman arrested for the murder of her daughter
David Ranckenâs App of the Day 03/31/25 â OldRoll!
Dallas Fed: Texas employment expected to increase in 2025
DALLAS â The Texas Employment Forecast released by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas indicates jobs will increase 1.9 percent in 2025, with an 80 percent confidence band of 1.2 to 2.6 percent.
Texas employment grew an annualized 2.1 percent in February, while January employment was revised down to 1.7 percent growth.
The forecast is based on an average of four models that include projected national GDP, oil futures prices,?and the Texas and U.S. leading indexes.
“February job growth was broad based, led by increases in the energy, leisure and hospitality, and construction sectors,” said Jesus Cañas, Dallas Fed senior business economist. “Only employment in professional and business services dropped. Employment rose in most major metropolitan areas of the state but fell in Houston and Austin.”
Additional key takeaways from the latest Dallas Fed report:???????
The forecast suggests 276,000 jobs will be added in the state this year, and employment in December 2025 will be 14.5 million. ????
Texas employment increased by an annualized 2.1 percent month over month in February, an increase from January’s growth of 1.7 percent.??
The unemployment rate, which takes into account changes in the total labor force along with other factors, increased in AustinâRound Rock, BrownsvilleâHarlingen, Fort WorthâArlington, HoustonâThe WoodlandsâSugar Land, and San AntonioâNew Braunfels, according to?seasonally adjusted numbers?from the Dallas Fed.???? ????
The rate was unchanged in DallasâPlanoâIrving and El Paso.
It decreased in Laredo.
The Texas statewide unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.1 percent in February.???
Texas cities square off over aquifer pipeline plans
LEE COUNTY – In Central Texas, a bitter fight over a $1 billion water project offers a preview of the future for much of the state as decades of rapid growth pushes past the local limits of its most vital natural resource.
On one side: Georgetown, the fastest-growing city in America for three years straight, which in 2023 signed a contract with an investor-funded enterprise to quickly begin importing vast volumes of water from the Simsboro Formation of the Carrizo Wilcox Aquifer, 80 miles to the east.
On the other side: the cities atop the Simsboro that rely on its water. Bryan, College Station and the Texas A&M University System, a metro area with almost 300,000 people, have sued the developer to stop the project. A trial is set for the first week of May.
âWeâre going to fight this thing until the end,â said Bobby Gutierrez, the mayor of Bryan. âIt effectively drains the water source of the cities.â
The pump and pipeline project to Georgetown, developed by California-based Upwell Water, is the largest of at least a half dozen similar projects recently completed, under construction or proposed to bring rural Carrizo Wilcox aquifer water into the booming urban corridor that follows Interstate 35 through Central Texas.
It would eventually pump up to 89 million gallons per day, three times the usage of the city of Bryan.
âThat basically stops all the economic development we have,â Gutierrez said. âWeâre talking about our survival.â
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The fight over the Upwell project could well be a prelude for the broader battles to come as cities across Texas outgrow their water supplies. Lawmakers in the state Capitol are pushing to avert a broad scarcity crisis with funding to desalinate seawater, purify salty groundwater and treat oilfield wastewater to add to the supply. But all of these solutions remain years from realization. In the near term, only import projects from freshwater aquifers will continue to meet the growing water demands of thirsty Texas cities.
Regulation of such projects falls to a patchwork of small, rural agencies called groundwater conservation districts, which might not be fully equipped or empowered to manage plans for competing regional water needs that can affect entire cities for generations to come.
Texas law offers limited clarity, generally preferring a landownerâs right to pump their own groundwater over regulations on private property. Despite fierce denunciations of the Upwell project from nearby city leaders, no one has alleged that its developers have broken any laws.
âWeâre following the rules. Why are we being vilified?â said David Lynch, a managing partner at Core Capital investment firm in Houston and a partner in the Upwell project. âI think they feel uncomfortable about whatâs coming and their reaction is to make us go away.â
After all, heâs not the only one doing this. Five years ago, San Antonio started pumping up to 49 million gallons per day through a 140-mile pipeline from the Carrizo Wilcox Aquifer. Another pipeline was completed last year and will soon begin pumping to the city of Taylor and the new Samsung microchip manufacturing complex there. Another, scheduled for completion this year, will take water into the cities of Buda and Kyle.
After the lawsuit delayed the Upwell projectâs tight timeline, Georgetown commissioned two other pipeline projects from the same aquifer.
âPeople are starting to pay enough for water to make these sorts of projects work,â Lynch said, driving his black Ford Super Duty Platinum truck down the dirt roads of Upwellâs 9,000-acre farm property and well field in Robertson County. âThereâs no cheap water left in Texas.â
In the middle of all this is the little Brazos Valley Groundwater Conservation District, based in the small town of Hearne and also a defendant, alongside Upwell, in the lawsuit.
District manager Alan Day feels for the cities of Bryan and College Station. To an extent, he said, they are right. The more pumping from the aquifer, the sooner everyone will reach conditions of scarcity, though he doesnât think it will happen as quickly as city leaders say.
At the same time, he said, âBryan canât claim the water.â Groundwater is a private property right in Texas as sacred as any other. Everyone is allowed to pump whatever their land produces.
âWater is the new oil,â said Day, a former ranch manager of 27 years. âThey have a commodity that can be sold and they have every right to sell it.â
At this time, he said, he has no authority to stop landowners from pumping as long as they fulfill the requirements of the permitting process, which Upwell did. Even if he could do it, Day chuckled at the notion that state leaders would let his tiny office put the brakes on development along the I-35 corridor, home to manufacturing campuses of Tesla, Samsung and Apple, and offices of Amazon, Meta and Google, as well as one of the nationâs largest clusters of data centers and its fastest growing cities.
However, Day said, there will come a day when that changes. The laws for his district, like all others in Texas, specify a threshold at which new rules kick in. Itâs called the âdesired future condition,â or DFC, a level below which the district is not willing to go. When they get there, everyone will face restrictions on pumping and the days of groundwater abundance will be over for the Simsboro portion of the aquifer. To date, no district in Texas has hit its DFC.
Day said heâs only following the rules. Heâll honor the property rights of landowners who want to pump, and when they hit the DFC, heâll implement restrictions district-wide.
âWhat does that do to the growth of Bryan and College Station and Texas A&M and anyone else who is depending on Simsboro?â Day asked. âIt stops it.â
This situation follows a generation of steep growth and development that state leaders have dubbed the âTexas Miracle.â The population of Williamson County, seated in Georgetown, 28 miles north of Austin, doubled in 17 years to 700,000 people while its median household income increased by more than 90%. Neighboring counties share similar stories, where sprawling subdivisions and shimmering tech campuses now cover former ranchlands.
Georgetown needs to add millions of gallons per day to its water supply within the next several years. When it signed the pipeline contract in 2023 that stipulated deliveries beginning in 2030, it was acting on a much tighter timeline than decades that are typically considered for large scale water planning.
âBased on hyper growth that weâve seen in our water territory, weâve seen the need for higher levels of contracted water sooner than we originally anticipated,â said city manager David Morgan.
Most of the new water will serve new residential areas, he said, and will be used primarily to irrigate lawns and other neighborhood landscaping. Williamson County is also courting a cluster of five large data centers that it expects would bring another 100,000 people to the county.
But what if Bryan, and the cities of the Brazos Valley, want data centers, too? The region is currently pursuing ambitious opportunities in semiconductors, nuclear energy, aerospace, defense and life sciences, said Susan Davenport, president of the Greater Brazos Partnership, an economic development group.
âThese sectors, along with the growing workforce and families who support them, are directly dependent on access to our local water resources,â she said.
Although many major projects importing groundwater into Central Texas are just now being realized, the plans have been in the works for decades, according to Michelle Gangnes, a retired finance lawyer and co-founder of the Simsboro Aquifer Water Defense Fund.
In 1998 Gangnes moved from Austin to rural Lee County. That same year, San Antonio, 140 miles away, announced plans to import 49 million gallons per day from wells in Lee County on the site of an old Alcoa aluminum smelter. A prolonged fight ensued and the project was never realized, but many others would follow.
âThatâs what started the whole gold rush on water,â Gangnes said. âIt resulted in all these groundwater districts being formed, trying to resist the water rush on the Simsboro.â
The groundwater districts were formed by an act of the Texas legislature in 2001. But, when the time came to make groundwater rules, powerful interests kept them loose, according to Ken Kramer, who previously directed the Texas office of the Sierra Club for 24 years. Chief among them was T. Boone Pickens, the iconic Texas oilman who also wanted to export groundwater from his land holdings in the Panhandle.
âThere was heavy lobbying by groundwater exporters to make sure that groundwater districts could not stop exports,â Kramer said. âGroundwater then became more of the target for moving water to growing areas and populations.â
Under a principle in Texas called the âright of capture,â landowners are allowed to pump from their land whatever they are able to. Changes made to the Texas Water Code in 2001 stipulated that withdrawals are allowed so long as they donât affect other permit holders âunreasonably,â which lacks a firm legal definition. That leaves lots up to interpretation for the groundwater districts of Texas.
âThey live in a difficult world where itâs unclear exactly what their power is to tell somebody no,â said Robert Mace, executive director of the Meadows Center for Water and the Environment at Texas State University. âIf you tell somebody no youâre almost guaranteed to get sued.â
In recent years, several major pipeline projects into Central Texas came online. San Antonio eventually got its Carrizo Wilcox Aquifer water through a 6-foot-wide, 140-mile long Vista Ridge pipeline which began drawing water from Burleson County in 2020, causing levels in neighboring landownersâ wells to plummet.
The old Alcoa wells in Burleson County were also put to use. A developer called Xebec Holdings bought the 50-square-mile property in 2022 and signed deals to pipe almost 18 million gallons per day to the City of Tyler.
âThereâs constantly people out there trying to lease water rights to see if they could do a project to sell water,â said Gary Westbrook, general manager of the Post Oak Savannah Groundwater Conservation District. âWeâre going to have to find a way to regulate. You canât just say no.â
A Gatehouse Pipeline is currently under construction to Georgetown, with another one called Recharge in development. Morgan, the Georgetown city manager, said those two projects were identified and accelerated after the lawsuit challenged the Upwell project.
âWe believe the lawsuit is going to likely delay getting that fully resolved,â he said.
Upwell Water, a San Francisco-based financing firm, announced in 2020 that it had raised $1 billion from investors âto monetize water assets.â
Upwell partnered with CoreCapital investors in Houston, which bought its 9,000-acre Robertson County farm property in 2021. Lynch, the managing partner at CoreCapital, said he expected to sit on the property for 10 years until the economics of water made it attractive to develop a major export project.
But as soon as he entered the market, he found eager buyers willing to pay well.
âWe bought it and all of a sudden we had everybody calling saying we need water,â Lynch said. âThen we said, we have more demand than we can supply, letâs talk to the neighbors.â
Upwell recruited seven neighboring landowners to put company wells on their property and contribute to the export project.
These arenât regular irrigation wells, which in this area can tap water 40 feet down. These are 1,400 feet deep, cased in 2-foot-wide steel pipe, able to produce large volumes.
âItâs a million-dollar hole,â said Mark Hoelscher, one of the neighboring landowners involved in the project, as he looked up at one of the diesel-powered well installations. âItâs big time.â
In October 2022, Upwell received permits for 16 wells to pump nearly 45 million gallons per day without any challenges in the hearing process. Four months later it received its permit to export the water out-of-district. Then in September 2023, the district issued permits for another 32 wells belonging to the seven adjoining landowners to produce an additional 45 million gallons per day.
Until that point, authorities in the Bryan-College Station metro area, some 30 miles south, apparently remained unaware of the project transpiring in Robertson County. Not until September 2024, when the district considered applications for updated permits to export the combined 89 million-gallon-per-day production of all 48 wells, did Texas A&M University enter into the proceedings, filing a request for review by the State Office of Administrative Hearings.
Texas A&M University declined to comment for this story.
âNo one has questioned the fact that we own the land and we have rights to the water underneath it,â said Hoelscher, a third generation landowner in the Brazos River Valley. âThe fact of the matter is the water is ours.â
One week later, A&M filed a lawsuit in state district court seeking a temporary injunction stopping the groundwater district from recognizing any of the permits associated with the Upwell project until a hearing is held.
A&M argued that the previously issued permits should be open for re-examination because some board members of the groundwater district were ineligible for service at the time the permits were originally approved.
In November, Bryan and College Station filed papers to join the lawsuit. It said their âability to produce groundwater from their Simsboro wells and the economic vitality of the region will be adversely affected if the Contested Applications are granted.â
College Station Mayor John Nichols, a former professor of agricultural sciences at Texas A&M, said in a statement: âThe transfer of groundwater from our district to users in other areas is one of the most significant issues facing the College Station/Bryan area. Iâm a staunch proponent of private property rights, but we are deeply concerned about the long-term impact of excessive extraction on our community.â
He called on lawmakers to adopt statewide groundwater regulations ensuring the rights of current permit holders over new water users.
None of that, however, matters to the trial that will take place in early May. All the judge will decide is whether or not A&M and the cities have rights to challenge the previously issued permits.
In court filings, Upwell argued A&Mâs petition âdemands that the Court turn back time and recognize a non-existent ârightâ to administratively contest final groundwater permits that the Brazos Valley Groundwater Conservation District properly noticed and issued to Intervenors months and years prior â all without any complaint or contest by any party, including Plaintiff.â
If the judge denies A&Mâs request, the permits will be issued and work will begin on the Upwell project pipeline.
If the judge grants A&Mâs request, the permits will head into a potentially yearslong process of state administrative hearings that could threaten the viability of the project and its promised returns to investors.
Whether or not the pipeline gets built, other similar projects are likely to follow. The situation is headed in one direction: toward the DFC, the threshold at which restrictions begin.
In the Brazos Valley and surrounding districts, that threshold is a 262-foot drop in water wells from levels measured in 2000. In the 25 years since then, pumping has led the wells’ water to drop by one quarter of that allotted reduction, according to district manager Day, suggesting ample water supplies remain.
But, that remains to be seen. In total, Day said his district has issued permits for up to 291 million gallons per day of pumping from the Simsboro Formation, averaged yearly, of which 89 million gallons per day are associated with the Upwell project. However, only a fraction of that permitted volume is actually pumped.
If all permitted pumping were to suddenly come online, Day said, computer models showed they would hit the DFC in six years.
In reality it wonât happen quite that fast. The Upwell project plans to scale up its pumping gradually over years. And many farmers hold irrigation permits to pump much more water than they ever actually will, unless they also encounter the opportunity to join an export project.
When the aquifer hits the DFC, the rules say it mustn’t fall further. That means all users would face mandatory curtailment. Itâs unclear how such unprecedented measures would be enforced in Texas.
For Gutierrez, the mayor of Bryan, this management method creates a contest for investors to tap the water-wealthy Simsboro Formation and sell off its bounty before time runs out.
âThey want to exploit everything we have for their personal benefit,â he said. âItâs a race of who can take the most amount of water in the least amount of time to deplete a resource for their pocketbooks.â
Article originally published by The Texas Tribune. To read the originally published article, click here.
Health officials say federal cuts will hurt Texasâ measles response
GAINES COUNTY – The Trump administration this week announced plans to clawback $11 billion in pandemic-era grants that could harm local Texas public health departments as they battle a historic measles outbreak.
In Lubbock, where many of the 40 Texans infected with measles have been hospitalized, grant funding affected by the announcement has paid for an epidemiologist who has directly responded to the measles outbreak in West Texas that has killed a 6-year-old girl. In Dallas, the grant funding was helping to equip a biolaboratory that will support more testing for pathogens, including measles.
âItâs kind of crazy to have this funding cut,â said Lubbockâs public health director Katherine Wells. âI donât have a savings account in public health.â
The Trump administration confirmed Tuesday that it was going to eliminate funding that had been created to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, prioritizing instead on projects that address chronic diseases and the presidentâs Make America Healthy Again initiative. Much of that funding, however, has been used to pay for infrastructure to respond to infectious diseases other than COVID, including measles, local health officials have said.
The Texas Department of State Health Services notified public health departments late Tuesday of the federal governmentâs plans. State officials have not provided specifics on how much money is cut or how many health departments are impacted.
âDSHS was notified that the federal grant funding for Immunization/COVID, Epidemiology Laboratory Capacity (ELC/COVID), and Health Disparities/COVID, is terminated as of March 24, 2025,â according to the the notice from the agencyâs associate commissioner Imelda Garcia. âThe Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS or System Agency) is issuing this notice to pause all activities immediately. Please do not accrue any additional costs as of the date of this notice.â
Wells said the funding cut will impact her officeâs work combating the spread of measles. Lubbock has been using three grants to help pay for extra temporary staff, a part-time nurse and a full-time epidemiologist to help with vaccinations, answering phones and working with testing of patients. Two of the cityâs three grants were not set to expire until 2026.
Ten of the stateâs 327 measles cases have been confirmed in Lubbock and 226 cases have been in Gaines County, about 90 minutes southwest of Lubbock.
This measles outbreak has further exposed Texasâ threadbare public health system.
The grants, she said, allowed her to hire eight people to help shoulder the workload the outbreak has brought. Since January, Lubbock hospitals have treated many of the more than 300 patients infected with measles, including a 6-year-old who died on Feb. 26.
âWeâre trying to figure it out,â Wells said. But with state and federal funds cut, city and county health department that counted on those COVID-19 era grants for new programs and outreach will now have to go to local taxpayers to help shore up the abrupt shortfall.
Dallas County has already broken ground on a $52 million biolab to help combat future health threats. Their health director, Dr. Philip Huang, said the grant money Dallas County had received was going to be used to help equip that new lab.
âIt was a lot of equipment,â Huang said. âThese machines can help with COVID but these machines also help with our preparedness and ability to test a lot of other pathogens … including measles.â
Like Wells, he and other public health officials are now going to have to determine how to still move forward without this funding.
âThe things that we’re doing and using the funds for COVID have great implications for our future preparedness for everything else so weâre not in the same situation at the start of COVID,â he said. âWe had seen how little investment there had been in public health, so itâs very short sighted to say, âOK, well these were COVID funds itâs over.â Itâs not.â
Article originally published by The Texas Tribune. To read the originally published article, click here.
Mortgage company Rocket buying Mr. Cooper
COPPELL (AP) -The mortgage company Rocket is buying competitor Mr. Cooper in an all-stock deal valued at $9.4 billion, just weeks after acquiring real estate listing company Redfin.
Texas Democrats select Kendall Scudder as state party chair
AUSTIN – The Texas Democratic Partyâs governing board on Saturday elected Kendall Scudder to lead the party forward as its new chair after a devastating performance in November and years of electoral defeats.
âThe challenge that weâre facing right now is terrifying for this country and for this state, and a lot of people are counting on us to come together and do the right thing and make sure that we are building a Texas Democratic Party that is worthy of the grassroots in this state,â Scudder said upon taking the gavel. âLetâs build a party that the working men and women of this state can be proud of.â
Scudder took 65 out of 121 votes, an outright majority in the seven-way race.
Scudder will take over as chair of the state party at a moment when Democrats are grasping for a way forward after blowout losses up and down the ballot last year, including President Donald Trumpâs victory and a surge to the right by traditionally Democratic groups, such as Hispanic voters in South Texas.
After proclaiming Texas a competitive state where Democratic candidates had a fighting chance of winning statewide for the first time in three decades, party leaders instead watched as Trump and U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz trounced their Democratic challengers by roughly 14 and 9 percentage points, respectively. Democrats also ceded ground in the state Legislature and lost nearly every contested state appellate court race, in addition to 10 judicial races in Harris County â eating away at years of Democratic dominance in Texasâ largest county.
That left many Democrats concerned that, after appearing to come within striking distance of winning statewide in 2018, the party was back at a sobering low.
Longtime Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa announced his resignation shortly after the election, acknowledging the partyâs poor performance and a need for a new direction.
That push for a fresh vision defined the race for party chair. Scudder will be the incumbent come 2026, when a broader group of delegates will elect the next full-term chair at the party convention in Corpus Christi. The 121-member State Democratic Executive Committee chose Hinojosaâs successor at the Saturday meeting, its first quarterly meeting of the year, because he resigned in the middle of his four-year term.
During his campaign, Scudder, an East Texas native, emphasized the importance of listening to the âgrassroots.â Even before he launched his candidacy, he had accused party leadership under Hinojosa of ignoring those voters and activists. He wants to ârecalibrateâ the party toward a focus on working people.
âThe reality is simply that Democrats on the ground donât have a lot of confidence in party leadership anymore,â Scudder told The Texas Tribune in an interview on Thursday.
He wants the party to pay attention to areas he says it has previously written off, like rural communities, and put a priority on Spanish-language communications.
Scudder has worked in affordable housing and real estate. He came onto the state party stage through the SDEC, although he began his political activism with the Texas Young Democrats and the Texas College Democrats.
Scudderâs leading opponents, former Harris County Democratic Party Chair Lillie Schechter and former Annieâs List Executive Director Patsy Woods Martin, had offered similar but competing visions to re-establish Democratic credibility on kitchen table issues and reconnect with voters in their communities. During the campaign, Schechter and Woods Martin emphasized their experience getting Democratic candidates elected.
The SDEC hosted a candidate forum in Austin on Friday evening before toasting Hinojosa, the outgoing chair.
There, and at the panelâs meeting on Saturday, party insiders discussed how to rebuild credibility with working class voters, engage young people, fundraise and build a party infrastructure that better facilitates elected officialsâ involvement in races around the state.
âThe problem is that every Democrat thinks that if they had 10 more minutes, they could explain it to you,â Scudder said on party messaging during the forum. âWeâve got to get to a point where weâre speaking to people at their gut, because people vote with their guts and not their brains.â
While most party chair contests are shaped by region and race and decided at the partyâs convention during midterm election years, this race was a more insular affair whose outcome was determined by a small group of the partyâs activists, many of whom are progressives dissatisfied with the partyâs strategies and operations.
Although the SDEC was prepared to go multiple rounds with their ranked choice ballot, Scudderâs 65 allowed him to win in the first round. Woods Martin took 27 votes, and Schechter took 26. Denton County Democratic Party Chair Delia Parker-Mims took two votes, and Meri Gomez rounded out the count with one vote. Eight candidates appeared on the ballot, but one dropped out before the election.
As the votes were tabulated, members passed out to-go shots of blue liquor â and non-alcoholic options â in an effort to liven spirits after a difficult 2024 election and an unprecedented chair race.
The candidates were largely aligned ideologically. And they especially all agreed on the need for change in the partyâs direction.
âWe are at an inflection point right now,â Schechter said, âand if we donât learn lessons from the last election, and continue doing things status quo, weâre never going to win in Texas.â
Article originally published by The Texas Tribune. To read the originally published article, click here.
Trial will determine who will pay $600 million settlement in disastrous Norfolk Southern derailment
(AP) – Norfolk Southern wants two other companies to help pay for the $600 million class-action settlement it agreed to over its disastrous 2023 train derailment near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border and the toxic chemicals that were released and burned.
The railroad filed the motion that is set to go to trial starting Monday to force the railcar owner GATX and the chemical manufacturer OxyVinyls to share the cost of the settlement because Norfolk Southern believes those companies are partly responsible for what happened in East Palestine, Ohio, on Feb. 3, 2023.
This lawsuit won’t change anything about how much money residents will receive from the settlement or any payments the village or anyone else is set to receive because those are all established in various settlement agreements. This case will only affect which company has to write the checks to pay for the class-action settlement.
Residents are still waiting to receive most of the money from the settlement because of pending appeals, although some payments have started to go out.
An assortment of chemicals spilled and caught fire after the train derailed in East Palestine. Three days later, officials blew open five tank cars filled with vinyl chloride because they feared those cars might explode, generating a massive black plume of smoke that spread over the town and forced evacuations.
Many residents still worry today about potential health consequences from those chemicals.
The derailment was the worst rail disaster since a crude oil train devastated the small Canadian town of Lac-Megantic and killed 47 people in 2013. It prompted the U.S. to focus on rail safety and reforms, which were proposed in Congress before stalling without passing.
Norfolk Southern says companies share the responsibility
Norfolk Southern already lost a similar lawsuit last year when it tried to force GATX and OxyVinyls to help pay for the environmental cleanup after the derailment that has cost the Atlanta-based railroad more than $1 billion. It is making similar arguments again to try to get help paying for the class-action settlement.
âNorfolk Southern alone has paid the costs relating to the derailment despite ample evidence that other parties share in the responsibility. This trial is about reinforcing the role shippers and railcar owners play in transportation safety and ensuring everyone responsible pays their fair share,” the railroad said in a statement.
Norfolk Southern, like most railroads, doesnât own most of the cars it hauls, and the railroad says everyone involved in shipping hazardous chemicals bears some responsibility for ensuring their safety under federal regulations.
Norfolk Southern argues GATX bears some responsibility for the derailment because it owned the railcar filled with plastic pellets that caused the derailment when its bearing overheated, caught fire and failed that night, sending 38 cars off the rails.
Norfolk Southern also said it believes OxyVinyls should pay because the railroad says chemical manufacturer provided inconsistent and inaccurate information about its vinyl chloride before officials decided to release and burn it.
Companies say Norfolk Southern was responsible for safety
Both GATX and OxyVinyls say it would be ridiculous to hold them responsible for the derailment when Norfolk Southern operated and inspected the train and all the cars and was responsible for delivering the cargo safely.
âNorfolk Southernâs claims against GATX are baseless,” the railcar owner said in a statement.
GATX said it complied with all the relevant regulations for taking care of its railcars. The company said that even if the car was damaged six years earlier by standing parked in the middle of floodwaters from Hurricane Harvey, the railroad should have spotted the problem and repaired it, sending GATX the bill for the repairs.
The National Transportation Safety Board said the crash was caused by the failure of an overheating bearing on GATX’s railcar. The railroadâs sensors spotted the bearing starting to heat up in the miles before the derailment, but it didnât reach a critical temperature and trigger an alarm until just before the derailment. That left the crew scant time to stop the train.
Norfolk Southern recommended the vent-and-burn operation to release the vinyl chloride based partly on information about the chemical that OxyVinyls had published beforehand suggesting a chemical reaction could happen and cause the tank cars to explode.
But the NTSB confirmed in its investigation that was unnecessary because the tank cars were starting to cool off and the railroad failed to listen to the advice from OxyVinyls’ experts or share their opinions with the officials who made the decision.
âThis trial is nothing more than Norfolk Southernâs continued attempt to shift the blame, attention, and financial responsibility for its train derailment, response, and vent and burn decision to anyone other than itself,â the Texas-based company said. âOxyVinyls did not cause the derailment, its tank cars did not breach, and it did not make the decision to vent and burn the VCM (vinyl chloride monomer) cars.â
The trial is expected to last two to three weeks.
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Drugs, gun, stolen vehicle recovered after chase ends in Henderson
HENDERSON — The Panola County Sheriffâs Office said that drugs, a firearm and a stolen vehicle were recovered after a chase ended in Henderson on Saturday. According to our news partner KETK, the sheriffâs office said that one of their deputies found a vehicle in Carthage that was reported stolen by the Bossier City Police Department in Louisiana. The deputy conducted a traffic stop but the vehicleâs driver allegedly refused to leave the vehicle and then fled on Highway 59 North, according to the sheriffâs office.
The driver took Highway 59 into Harrison County before heading westbound on Interstate 20 with deputies from Panola County and the Harrison County Sheriffâs Office pursuing the vehicle along with a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper. Continue reading Drugs, gun, stolen vehicle recovered after chase ends in Henderson