Airdate:01/05/25
Guests: Celia Cole – CEO of Feeding Texas
TYLER â Organizers are already hard at work for this yearâs 92nd annual Texas Rose Festival Parade according to our news partner KETK. On Friday, they unveiled this yearâs theme and introduced the world to the newest Rose Queen, Avery Armstrong of Tyler. This yearâs princess of the Rose Festival is Mary Dial of Tyler. This year is a special for Mary as her sister was last yearâs Rose Festival princess.
At their annual Winter Gala at the Willow Brook County Club, the Texas Rose Festival Association said that âA Tapestry of Talesâ is the theme for this yearâs festivities. At the black tie optional gala on Friday, they also revealed this yearâs queenâs court which includes the princess, ladies-in-waiting and attendants.
KETK is the official home of the Texas Rose Festival Parade so be sure to follow us for everything you need to know leading up to this yearâs festivities in October.
HOUSTON (AP) â Winter weather brings various hazards that people have to contend with to keep warm and safe.
These dangers can include carbon monoxide poisoning, hypothermia and frozen pipes that can burst and make homes unlivable.
Public safety officials and experts say there are multiple ways people can prepare themselves to avoid these winter weather hazards and keep themselves safe.
The hazards are on the radar this week because millions of people in the United States are set to be hit with moderate to heavy snow from Kansas City to Washington. Cold conditions are also gripping the East Coast.
Staying safe inside your home
Officials say that during a winter storm, people should stay indoors. But home heating systems running for hours can increase the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning as the deadly fumes can be produced by furnaces, stoves and heaters, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Carbon monoxide can also be created when people use portable generators or run cars in their garages to stay warm or charge their phones.
Dr. Alex Harding, assistant professor of emergency medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said that because carbon monoxide is odorless and colorless, people wonât necessarily be aware of it.
âThe symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning can be really insidious. They can sneak up on patients and can range from just developing a headache or maybe a little bit of nausea to all the way to losing consciousness and seizures,â he said.
Dealing with hypothermia
The cold weather hitting much of the East Coast has the ability to be dangerous or deadly because of unsafe exposure to elements. This week’s winter storms are tracking to the south, and cold air will likely be present as far south as Georgia, said Jon Palmer, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Gray, Maine.
The cold temperatures could sneak up on people in parts of the country that have largely experienced a mild winter so far.
âReally cold temperatures and winds can make temperatures feel a lot colder, and the result of that could be cold air that could eventually lead to frostbite at a much faster rate or hypothermia at a much faster rate than normal,â Palmer said.
Prolonged exposure to frigid temperatures can put people at risk to hypothermia, a condition that happens when oneâs body loses heat faster than it can produce it.
âHypothermia is definitely one of the bigger concerns, especially if we do have any kind of certainty in like power grids or electricity failing,â Harding said.
The danger of hypothermia is greater for someone who is outside, exposed to wind gusts and isnât wearing appropriate clothing or has clothing that gets wet.
âIf they have a safe place thatâs warm, where they can hunker down, where they have water and food and all those kind of necessities ⌠then thatâs going to limit their exposure to those risks,â Harding said.
But vulnerable populations like people with disabilities or homeless individuals can have problems finding a warm and safe place to stay.
Protecting your home’s pipes
Frozen pipes in a home during severe winter weather is a particular problem in parts of the South because such equipment is often located outside structures. But other parts of the country also have to deal with this problem.
Jose Parra, a master plumber with Abacus Plumbing, Air Conditioning & Electrical in Houston, advises people to insulate any pipes that are exposed to the outside, turn off and drain sprinkler systems and let faucets inside a home drip during freezing temperatures so water can run through the pipes and protect them.
âA lot of what weâre fixing, I would say 80% to 90%, could have been prevented with just a little bit of work ahead of time,â Parra said.
Electric vehicle troubles
Experts acknowledge that cold weather can be hard for electric vehicles, but they say with some planning and a little adjustment, owners should be able to travel pretty much as normal.
Inside EV batteries, lithium ions flow through a liquid electrolyte, producing electricity. But they travel more slowly through the electrolyte when it gets cold and donât release as much energy. That cuts into the range and can deplete a battery faster.
In the short run, automakers are likely to come up with better ways to protect battery life and warm them for charging, Neil Dasgupta, associate professor of mechanical and materials science engineering at the University of Michigan, told The Associated Press earlier this year. And there are new battery chemistries in development that are more resilient in cold weather.
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Tom Krisher contributed to this story.
TYLER â As East Texas prepares for the first cold weather of 2025 coming in on Monday, several East Texas locations are opening their doors as warming centers and shelters.
Our news partner KETK has compiled the following list of locations opening to the public – please visit this link for a regularly updated list of warming shelters.
BULLARD, Texas – The Bullard Independent School District is in mourning after a high school student died in a motor vehicle crash on Wednesday. According to our news partner KETK, Madison Nelson, a 9th grader, passed away in the crash, according to a statement released by the district. She represented the 2024 freshman class as a homecoming duchess in this past fall semester.
Continue reading Bullard ISD mourns loss of high schooler killed in crash
DALLAS (AP) â A fire that broke out at a shopping center in Dallas on Friday morning killed more than 500 animals, most of which were small birds, authorities said.
The 579 animals in the pet shop at Plaza Latina in Northwest Dallas died from smoke inhalation, Dallas Fire-Rescue spokesperson Jason Evans said in a statement. The flames from the fire never reached the animals. Chickens, hamsters, two dogs and two cats also died, Evans said. The two-alarm fire took about two hours and as many as 45 firefighters to extinguish around 11 a.m., Evans said.
âWhile DFR personnel did search and attempt rescue, all animals in the shop unfortunately perished due to smoke inhalation,â Evans said.
No people were injured in the fire. The structure of the large, one-story shopping center was severely damaged, including a partially collapsed roof, Evans said.
The shopping center includes multiple small businesses and was described on its Facebook page as “a place where people can go to eat, and buy all sorts of Latin goods and services.â A post on the page in Spanish asked for prayers for the families who work there.
The cause of the fire was not immediately determined and is under investigation, Evans said.
DALLAS – The Dallas Morning News reports that a small regional electric cooperative in far West Texas is seeking to connect portions of New Mexico to Texasâ self-contained power grid. The Rio Grande Electric Cooperative, a rural electric retail company that owns thousands of miles of power lines across 18 Texas counties, is not wholly part of ERCOT, but it wants to be. Last month, the power provider petitioned the federal regulatory body overseeing the nationâs electric grid and asked regulators to determine whether connecting their customers to ERCOT, including homes and businesses in two New Mexico counties, would trigger federal regulation. Texas has maintained an energy grid largely disconnected from the rest of the country. This isolation has allowed the state to avoid federal regulation, which many lawmakers, including Gov. Greg Abbott, have touted as an economic advantage contributing to the stateâs sustained economic growth.
The electric cooperative argues allowing ERCOT power to cross state lines would not trigger federal regulation because all the large electric transmission lines they own are in Texas. The electricity that crosses state lines is transmitted on smaller distribution lines like those connected to homes and small businesses across Texas. They argue that the Federal Electric Regulatory Commission does not have jurisdiction over those lines. The Rio Grande Electric Cooperativeâs CEO Theresa Quiroz said in an interview that allowing the co-op to connect its remaining customers to ERCOT was âcriticalâ to the organizationâs ability to meet future power needs in its coverage area. âWe have a lot of entities inquiring of us whether we have the capacity and ability to serve them,â Quiroz said. âWe have an obligation to serve them. However, we canât do it with what we have in place. At this point, we are having to turn away customers, and we donât want to do that.â No hearings have been scheduled in the case, but the Rio Grande Electric Cooperative asked federal regulators to issue a ruling by Feb. 24.
HOUSTON – The Houston Chronicle reports that thegrowth of the Houston region continues to seem nearly inexorable, with two exurbs in the region appearing on a new list of the fastest-growing places in the United States. Atascocita, in northeast Harris County, was the fifth fastest-growing place in the country from 2022 to 2023, according to a new analysis from SmartAsset, the personal finance website. The community â technically a “census-designated place” rather than a city â added about 12,000 people during the span, the study found, for a year-over-year growth rate of 11%. Over the past five years, Atascocita’s population has ballooned by nearly 40%, second only to Buckeye, Ariz. Conroe, in Montgomery County, also made the top 10: It saw population growth of 6.73% from 2022 to 2023, the ninth-highest growth rate in the nation. Over the past five years, Conroe’s population has grown by almost 25%.
TYLER- Attorney General Ken Paxton’s visit to the Rose City will be part of a state-wide tour on January 6th and 7th.
His tour is in conjunction with Republican Party of Texas Chairman Abraham George, which will include stops in key districts across the state. Paxton said in a press release that the tour aims to draw attention to representatives he believes have “fallen short of upholding conservative principles in the past and are reportedly working for a speaker not elected by a Republican majority.” Continue reading Attorney General Ken Paxton to stop in Tyler
WASHINGTON â U.S. Rep. Keith Self, R-McKinney, voted against House Speaker Mike Johnsonâs reelection to lead the lower chamber on Friday, before switching his vote for Johnson at the last minute.
Self was one of three Republicans to initially vote against Johnson during Friday’s vote â which appeared as though it would block his leadership bid. U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie, a libertarian leaning Republican from Kentucky, cast a vote instead for U.S. Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota. Massie communicated his opposition to Johnson days ahead of Fridayâs vote, but the other opposing votes had kept their plans secret. U.S. Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina voted for House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan of Ohio. Self voted for Florida’s Byron Donalds.
The defections denied Johnson the 218 votes needed to secure the gavel. But Self and Norman switched votes to Johnson before the vote was declared over, allowing Johnson to retain the speakership. Continue reading After first opposing Mike Johnson, Texas Congressman Keith Self changes vote
BULLARDâ The Bullard Independent School District is in mourning after a high school student died in a motor vehicle crash on Wednesday.
Madison Nelson, a 9th grader, passed away in the crash, according to a statement released by the district. She represented the 2024 freshman class as a homecoming duchess in this past fall semester.
Dr. Jack Lee, Bullard ISD Superintendent released a statement, saying, âI am deeply saddened to inform you that Madison Nelson, a 9th-grade student at Bullard High School, passed away on Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025, in a motor vehicle accident. Madi was a shining star who consistently excelled in the classroom. She was regularly looked up to by other students and represented the Freshman Class as one of our homecoming duchesses earlier this fall semester. Please keep Madiâs family, friends, and teachers in your thoughts and prayers.â
Continue reading Bullard ISD mourning 9th grader who died in crash
WASHINGTON (AP) â The 119th Congress is convening for the first time on Friday and House Speaker Mike Johnson was fighting for his political life. However, Johnson has rebounded and garnered the required 218 votes to be reelected as house speaker. The Associated Press has live updates from congress.
PAYNE SPRINGS â Payne Springs Fire Rescue firefighters saved a dog that was found lifeless at a fire in the Cherokee Shores area last night.
According to Payne Springs Fire Rescue (PSFR), they were alerted to the fire at around 7:53 p.m. on Thursday. when firefighters arrived at the scene they found a double wide mobile home with a heavy fire spreading into the home from the porch.
PSFR Engine 1 was reportedly able to make a quick knock down before they did a primary search of the home. PSFR said one dog was found lifeless under a bed. The dog was removed and they started to treat it with oxygen. According to a report from KETK, the dog was able to recover after a couple of minutes on oxygen. The home sustained significant damage during the fire and the American Red Cross has been called to help the resisdents.
PSFR said that Gun Barrel City Fire Department, Eustace Fire Department, Payne Springs Police Department, Eustace Police Department, the Henderson County Sheriffâs Office and UT Health EMS all responded to the scene.
WASHINGTON (AP) â A majority of Republicans say they are confident in the 2024 vote count after Donald Trumpâs win, according to a new poll that finds a sharp turnaround from GOP votersâ skepticism about U.S. elections after the president-elect spent four years lying about his loss to President Joe Biden.
About 6 in 10 Republicans said they have âa great dealâ or âquite a bitâ of confidence that the votes in last year’s presidential election were counted correctly nationwide, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. That’s a sharp rise from about 2 in 10 Republicans who were confident in an AP-NORC poll in October. And about two-thirds of Republicans in the new survey said they were confident in their stateâs vote count, up from about 4 in 10 before the election.
That helped drive up the share of Americans saying they have âa great dealâ or âquite a bitâ of confidence in the accuracy of the election to about 6 in 10. That’s higher than in October, when roughly half of Americans said they were highly confident the votes would be counted accurately.
The mood is substantially different than it was four years ago, when Trumpâs supporters, fueled by his false claims of a stolen election, assaulted police and smashed their way into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to interrupt the certification of Bidenâs victory. Weeks later, an AP-NORC poll found that about two-thirds of Republicans said Biden was not legitimately elected president.
That belief persisted throughout Biden’s presidency and until last year’s election, as Trump continued to sow doubt about the accuracy of U.S. elections. He even did so on Election Day in the hours before it was clear he would win.
But since Trump’s victory in November, Republicansâ suspicions about election security at all levels â including confidence in their own local election officials â have ebbed substantially.
There were no indications of trouble before the election despite Trumpâs attempts to lay the groundwork to challenge the accuracy of the count if he lost the vote. Nor were there any real questions over the integrity of the 2020 count, which was confirmed by a wide range of state audits,recounts and reviews, some of which were led by Republicans, including Trumpâs own Department of Justice.
Threats toward local election officials soared after 2020, leading to a wave of veteran administrators leaving office. In a potential sign that those hostilities might ease, the poll found that about 7 in 10 Americans have âa great dealâ or âquite a bitâ of confidence that votes in the 2024 presidential election were counted accurately by their local election officials, up from about 6 in 10 in October.
That movement was almost entirely driven by Republicans: About 7 in 10 were highly confident in local officialsâ counts in December, compared with about half in October.
One group’s confidence in the integrity of the election ticked down â Democrats. Their confidence in the national vote count declined from about 7 in 10 to about 6 in 10, although their certainty in the accuracy of state vote counts remained stable.
Still, the dip in Democratic confidence is nowhere near the scale of skepticism among Republicans after Trump’s defeat in 2020. The Democratic candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris, conceded her loss to Trump the day after Election Day and there has been no organized Democratic effort to prevent the handover of the presidency to Trump, as there was among some conservatives in 2020 to try to block Biden from ascending to the presidency.