Airdate: 12/22/24
Guests: Devon Smith, Development Director, United Way of Smith County
Airdate: 12/22/24
Guests: Devon Smith, Development Director, United Way of Smith County
MINEOLA â Two East Texas women are working to make sure everyone has a meal and a place to be during the holiday season, according to our news partners at KETK. The ladies who make it all happen are co-founders, Wendi Warren and Brandi OâShea. âIf you took Tyler, Longview, Kilgore, Lindale, Mineola and Alba and combine them into one place, thatâs how many people are facing food insecurity in East Texas,â Warren said. They said the holiday season is about trying their best to help all the people. To do that, Windy and Brandy put in action an idea theyâve wanted to try for years, a free event where anyone can find food entertainment and community. Continue reading Two women create a place everyone can feel at home for the holidays
TYLER – The Run Tyler 5K is back with a color run edition on Saturday, Jan. 11! The entry fee is $20 per runner, and the registration closes on Tuesday, Jan. 7. Check-in will be from 7:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. at the Tyler Rose Garden, 420 Rose Park Dr. Afterward, a post-race party will be held, where participants can receive their medals, enjoy refreshments and take photos. The 5K benefits the Tyler Parks and Recreation Department in its efforts to provide events and programming for the community. For more information, visit https://bit.ly/RunTyler5k, the Tyler Parks and Rec Facebook page, or call Parks Administration at (903) 531-1370.
DALLAS â The Texas Employment Forecast released by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas indicates jobs will increase 1.6 percent in 2024, with an 80 percent confidence band of 1.5 to 1.7 percent.
This is smaller than the previous month’s forecast of 2.2 percent for 2024.????????
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. Three of the four forecasts declined this month as a result of weaker leading indexes and lower oil futures prices. Downward benchmark revisions to second quarter job growth also played a role.
Texas employment growth has disappointed in recent months, increasing only an annualized 0.9 percent in November and 0.1 percent in October.
“Texas employment expansion was weak, with only 10,000 jobs added in November,” said Jesus Cañas, Dallas Fed senior business economist. “Gains were concentrated in smaller private sector services, such as information and financial activities, although some larger sectors also expanded including the education and health sector and government.”
The forecast suggests 230,000 jobs will be added in the state this year, and employment in December 2024 will be 14.2 million.????
The unemployment rate, which takes into account changes in the total labor force along with other factors, increased in almost all of Texas’ major metros in November. This includes BrownsvilleâHarlingen, DallasâPlanoâIrving, El Paso, Fort WorthâArlington, HoustonâThe WoodlandsâSugar Land, Laredo and San AntonioâNew Braunfels, according to?seasonally adjusted numbers?from the Dallas Fed.???? ????
The rate was unchanged in AustinâRound Rock.
The Texas statewide unemployment rate increased to 4.2 percent in November.?????
TYLER â Our news partners at KETK report that a lifelong resident of Northwest Tyler has placed her bid for the Tyler City Council District 3 seat. Shonda Marsh, with 30 years of experience in healthcare and a deep commitment to community advocacy, claims to bring transformative leadership to the district. Marshâs career included leadership roles during the COVID-19 pandemic.
âThis campaign is not about me; itâs about amplifying the voices of Northwest Tyler,â Marsh said. âWe will honor our districtâs rich history while building a future that ensures every family has the opportunity to thrive.â Continue reading New Democratic candidate for Tyler City Council District 3 seat
TYLER â Across the street from the Village at Cumberland in Tyler, the Genecov Group has purchased a 60-acre development site expected to bring a new form of entertainment for East Texans, according to our news partners at KETK. The company said they will bring sports, leisure and nightlife to Tyler in the ultimate recreation and cultural playground known as Parkside Development. It will include major retailer stores, restaurants, boutique hotel and pad sites. Continue reading Developers plan 60 acres for entertainment, retail stores
WASHINGTON (AP) â Facing a government shutdown deadline, the Senate rushed through final passage early Saturday of a bipartisan plan that would temporarily fund federal operations and disaster aid, dropping President-elect Donald Trump’s demands for a debt limit increase into the new year.
House Speaker Mike Johnson had insisted Congress would âmeet our obligationsâ and not allow federal operations to shutter ahead of the Christmas holiday season. But the day’s outcome was uncertain after Trump doubled down on his insistence that a debt ceiling increase be included in any deal â if not, he said in an early morning post, let the closures âstart now.â
The House approved Johnson’s new bill overwhelmingly, 366-34. The Senate worked into the night to pass it, 85-11, just after the deadline. At midnight, the White House said it had ceased shutdown preparations.
âThis is a good outcome for the country, â Johnson said after the House vote, adding he had spoken with Trump and the president-elect âwas certainly happy about this outcome, as well.â
President Joe Biden, who has played a less public role in the process throughout a turbulent week, was expected to sign the measure into law Saturday.
âThere will be no government shutdown,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.
The final product was the third attempt from Johnson, the beleaguered House speaker, to achieve one of the basic requirements of the federal government â keeping it open. And it raised stark questions about whether Johnson will be able to keep his job, in the face of angry GOP colleagues, and work alongside Trump and billionaire ally Elon Musk, who called the legislative plays from afar.
Trump’s last-minute demand was almost an impossible ask, and Johnson had almost no choice but to work around his pressure for a debt ceiling increase. The speaker knew there wouldnât be enough support within the GOP majority to pass any funding package, since many Republican deficit hawks prefer to slash federal government and certainly wouldnât allow more debt.
Instead, the Republicans, who will have full control of the White House, House and Senate next year, with big plans for tax cuts and other priorities, are showing they must routinely rely on Democrats for the votes needed to keep up with the routine operations of governing.
âSo is this a Republican bill or a Democrat bill?â scoffed Musk on social media ahead of the vote.
The drastically slimmed-down 118-page package would fund the government at current levels through March 14 and add $100 billion in disaster aid and $10 billion in agricultural assistance to farmers.
Gone is Trumpâs demand to lift the debt ceiling, which GOP leaders told lawmakers would be debated as part of their tax and border packages in the new year. Republicans made a so-called handshake agreement to raise the debt limit at that time while also cutting $2.5 trillion in spending over 10 years.
Itâs essentially the same deal that flopped the night before in a spectacular setback â opposed by most Democrats and some of the most conservative Republicans â minus Trumpâs debt ceiling demand.
But it’s far smaller than the original bipartisan accord Johnson struck with Democratic and Republican leaders â a 1,500-page bill that Trump and Musk rejected, forcing him to start over. It was stuffed with a long list of other bills â including much-derided pay raises for lawmakers â but also other measures with broad bipartisan support that now have a tougher path to becoming law.
House Democrats were cool to the latest effort after Johnson reneged on the hard-fought bipartisan compromise.
Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, said it looked like Musk, the wealthiest man in the world, was calling the shots for Trump and Republicans.
âWho is in charge?â she asked during the debate.
Still, the House Democrats put up more votes than Republicans for the bill’s passage. Almost three dozen conservative House Republicans voted against it.
âThe House Democrats have successfully stopped extreme MAGA Republicans from shutting down the government, crashing the economy and hurting working-class Americans all across the nation,â House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said, referring to Trump’s âMake America Great Againâ slogan.
In the Senate, almost all the opposition came from the Republicans â except independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, who said Musk’s interference was ânot democracy, that’s oligarchy.â
Trump, who has not yet been sworn into office, is showing the power but also the limits of his sway with Congress, as he intervenes and orchestrates affairs from Mar-a-Lago alongside Musk, who is heading up the new Department of Government Efficiency.
The incoming Trump administration vows to slash the federal budget and fire thousands of employees and is counting on Republicans for a big tax package. And Trump’s not fearful of shutdowns the way lawmakers are, having sparked the longest government shutdown in history in his first term at the White House.
âIf there is going to be a shutdown of government, let it begin now,â Trump posted early in the morning on social media.
More important for the president-elect was his demand for pushing the thorny debt ceiling debate off the table before he returns to the White House. The federal debt limit expires Jan. 1, and Trump doesn’t want the first months of his new administration saddled with tough negotiations in Congress to lift the nation’s borrowing capacity. Now Johnson will be on the hook to deliver.
âCongress must get rid of, or extend out to, perhaps, 2029, the ridiculous Debt Ceiling,â Trump posted â increasing his demand for a new five-year debt limit increase. “Without this, we should never make a deal.”
Government workers had already been told to prepare for a federal shutdown that would send millions of employees â and members of the military â into the holiday season without paychecks.
Biden has been in discussions with Jeffries and Schumer, but White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said: âRepublicans blew up this deal. They did, and they need to fix this.â
As the day dragged on, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell stepped in to remind colleagues âhow harmful it is to shut the government down, and how foolish it is to bet your own side wonât take the blame for it.â
At one point, Johnson asked House Republicans at a lunchtime meeting for a show of hands as they tried to choose the path forward.
It wasnât just the shutdown, but the speakerâs job on the line. The speakerâs election is the first vote of the new Congress, which convenes Jan. 3, and some Trump allies have floated Musk for speaker.
Johnson said he spoke to Musk ahead of the vote Friday and they talked about the âextraordinary challenges of this job.â
MARSHALL – The Marshall Police Department (MPD) is investigating an officer-involved shooting that occurred on Thursday, December 19, 2024, in the 100 block of Interstate 20. The incident began around 1:20 p.m. when MPD officers responded to a 911 call reporting a disturbance.
Upon arrival, MPD officers encountered an individual armed with a handgun. Marshall Police officers, along with the MPD Special Response Team (SRT) and Crisis Negotiation Team, were assisted by the
Harrison County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) SRT and deputies. They attempted to de-escalate the situation through negotiations. Despite these efforts, the individual shot at officers with a handgun and an MPD officer returned fire, striking the individual. Continue reading Officer-involved shooting in Marshall
KILGOREâ The road to becoming a champion is long and winding, and some of the hardest moments of that journey, happen when no one is watching.
The Kilgore Bulldogs have made those sacrifices, and find themselves just one win away from hoisting championship gold.âThe reason weâre in this fight is because of the work that they put in there, their dedication and discipline to prepare the right way week in and week, week out as allowed our team one to be ready to go on Friday night, and also to improve every week,â said head coach Clint Fuller. âThatâs the reason that weâre weâre playing for a state championship.â Continue reading Kilgore will play in first state championship since 2013
SOUTH TEXAS – The Texas Tribune says in December 2021, Gov. Greg Abbott traveled to South Texas to inaugurate the first 880-foot stretch of the stateâs newly constructed wall on its border with Mexico. At the press conference, with cameras zoomed tightly on him against a backdrop of the three-story high, slatted wall in Starr County, the Republican governor declared the barrier to be impenetrable. He banged a mallet on a metal beam to drive home his point. âItâs heavy and itâs wide,â he said assuredly. âPeople arenât making it through those steel bars.â Three years and $3.1 billion later, Abbott may be right. Migrants and smugglers arenât breaching the bars. They donât have to, because they can walk around them. Today, that completed segment, now 2 miles wide, is an island of metal and concrete surrounded by farmland â hardly an obstacle for migrants who have traveled sometimes thousands of miles to reach the United States. An investigation by The Texas Tribune has identified for the first time where Texas has built its border wall, information the state keeps secret as it pours billions into the highly touted infrastructure project. It has revealed that the unprecedented foray into what has historically been a federal responsibility â Texas is the first state to build its own border wall â has so far yielded little return on billions of dollars invested.
The 50 miles constructed through November, totaling 6% of the 805 miles the state has designated for building, are far from the endless barrier Abbott often presents the wall to be in video clips he shares on social media. The wall is not a singular structure, but dozens of fragmented sections scattered across six counties, some no wider than a city block and others more than 70 miles apart. Each mile of construction costs between $17 million and $41 million per mile, depending on terrain, according to state engineers. The Tribune also found the wall building program has been hampered by landowners on the border, who are resistant to letting the state build on their property. Since 2021, the state has asked hundreds of property owners to sign easement contracts, under which the state pays a one-time fee for the permanent rights to a strip of land to host the wall. Officials cannot seize private land for the wall like they can for other public infrastructure projects because the Legislature prohibited the use of eminent domain for the wall program. Landowners in a third of the 165 miles the state is currently trying to secure said they were not interested in participating, the firm overseeing land acquisition wrote in a wall progress report last month. This has resulted in gaps limiting the barrierâs effectiveness in the few areas the state has built. Mike Novak, executive director of the Texas Facilities Commission, the agency in charge of the project, has said in public meetings that land acquisition is the most daunting hurdle in completing the program. As a result, construction appears to be driven by where the state can most easily acquire land, instead of where wall would be most effective at deterring illegal crossings, said several border security experts who reviewed the Tribuneâs findings. Texas has mostly built on sprawling ranches in rural areas, the Tribune found, while the experts said the priority should be urban centers where people sneaking across can easily disappear into safe houses or waiting vehicles.
PALESTINE â A Texas House Committee was left without its key witness on Friday after Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a motion late Thursday barring death row inmate Robert Roberson from testifying at the Capitol.The bipartisan House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence had planned to hear directly from Roberson on Friday at noon about his failed efforts to overturn his capital murder conviction using the stateâs junk science law, which grants new trials in cases that relied on scientific evidence that is later discredited.
But Paxtonâs motion, which argued that the panelâs subpoena to Roberson was âprocedurally deficient and overly burdensome,â excused the state prison system from complying with the committeeâs subpoena and allowing Roberson to testify in person. That left the future of Robersonâs testimony unclear.
Lawmakers have tried for weeks to bring him to Austin after the Texas Supreme Court noted in November that state officials should be able to produce Roberson for testimony in compliance with a subpoena that does not interfere with a scheduled execution. After the committeeâs first subpoena expired, it served him with another one this week.
Roberson was convicted of capital murder in 2003 for the death of his 2-year-old daughter Nikki, who was diagnosed with shaken baby syndrome. He has argued that new scientific evidence discredits Nikkiâs diagnosis and shows she died of natural and accidental causes. Continue reading Texas House panel may never hear Robert Robersonâs testimony
TYLERâ The Tyler Police Department arrested a 27-year-old man for online solicitation of a minor on Tuesday after a call from a YouTuber.
According to court documents, Tyler PD officers responded to a call about a suspicious person near the Residence Inn on Heritage Drive in Tyler at around 5:45 p.m. on Tuesday.
Our news partner, KETK, reports that the caller was later identified as the owner of a YouTube channel used to catch sexual predators called âPredator Poacher.â The owner told Tyler PD officers about a man that the channel had reportedly been in contact with since June 11, 2023.
Officers were shown messages that were reportedly between someone posing as 11 and 13-year-old girls and 27-year-old Jordan Lee Burk. According to the arrest affidavit, Burk had sexual conversations with someone posing as an 11-year-old named âEmilyâ and a 13-year-old named âMaddiâ about dating and pregnancy.
On Tuesday, Tyler PD officers contacted Burk at his workplace, BioLife Plasma, to discuss the alleged messages. After Burk was read his Miranda right and questioned, he allegedly admitted to contacting the 11-year-old. According to Smith County records, Burk was arrested on two charges of online solicitation of a minor and sexual conduct, and booked into the Smith County Jail before being released on Wednesday.
TYLERâ The Diocese of Tyler has announced that Pope Francis appointed Bishop Gregory Kelly, the current Auxiliary Bishop of Dallas, as the new Bishop of Tyler on Friday. According to our news partner KETK, Kelly will be the fifth Bishop to ever be appointed to lead the Tyler Diocese since it was founded in 1986 by Pope St. John Paul II. Kellyâs appointment comes after Bishop Joseph Strickland was removed as Bishop of Tyler in November of 2023, following a months-long investigation by the Vatican.
Kelly was born in Le Mars, Iowa on Feb. 15 1956. He received his Bachelorâs of Arts in philosophy from the University of Dallas in 1978 while he was in the Holy Trinity Seminary in Irving, according to the Diocese of Dallas.Later in 1982, he received his masterâs degree in divinity from the University of Dallas and he was ordained as a priest in that same year. He was made Auxiliary Bishop for Dallas in 2016 and has served as a Vicar General and moderator for the Curia.
The Diocese of Tyler will have an announcement press conference at 10 a.m. on Friday in the St. Paul meeting room at the Diocesan Chancery, located at 1015 E. Southeast Loop 323.
AUSTIN (AP) â Texasâ attorney general sought again on Thursday to stop a man on death row from testifying to lawmakers who have raised doubts about his guilt and successfully paused his execution at the last minute in October. Robert Roberson was convicted in 2003 of killing his 2-year-old daughter. His execution had been set to be the first in the U.S. over a conviction tied to shaken baby syndrome, a diagnosis some medical experts have questioned. A Texas House panel had again subpoenaed Roberson to appear before lawmakers Friday, which would require a transport from his prison outside Houston.
Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said his office asked a court for an order blocking the subpoena, which he said automatically prevents Roberson from appearing while the legal challenge is pending. A spokesperson for Democratic Rep. Joe Moody, chair of the Texas House committee that subpoenaed Roberson, did not immediately respond to a text message seeking comment Thursday. Continue reading Death row inmate’s testimony challenged again