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Brownsville Veterans takes care of Brownsville Lopez; Brownsville St. Joseph drops a game in TAPPS

Brownsville Veterans at the Upper Valley Media Day at McAllen High School. (Andrew Cordero/Special to The Monitor)

BROWNSVILLE — There are not many games left that could potentially trip up Brownsville Veterans from winning a fifth straight District 32-5A title. A meeting with Brownsville Lopez was one of those games on paper.

Brownsville Lopez hung around with Brownsville Veterans, but after the half the Chargers pulled away to win 51-33 Wednesday night in a District 32-5A meeting at Lopez High School.

The Chargers and head coach Arnold Torres understood the importance of this game.

“I am proud of the girls and how they came in, everybody contributed and everyone played well,” Torres said. “Definitely was a team victory today.”

Chargers guard Brianna Brackhahn finished with a game-high 18 points, grabbed rebounds and played strong defensively with key player Daniela Sauceda playing sparingly Wednesday night due to illness.

“I really stepped up. I had more points than usual,” said Brackhahn, who averages seven points a night. “Most of us were feeling sick, so I knew it was an important game to fill that void left from Daniela.”

Brownsville Veterans pulled away in the third quarter, outscoring Brownsville Lopez 18-5 after only being up 20-16 at halftime. Eight different Chargers scored Wednesday night. Junior guard Brianna Barnes was the closest to Brackhahn with nine points.

Sophia Carrizales led Lopez with a team-high 17 points.

The Chargers (27-5, 11-1) host Donna High at 6 p.m. Friday. The Lobos (15-11, 8-4) travel to Mercedes at 6 p.m. Friday.

ST. MARY’S HALL 38, ST. JOSEPH 28

Brownsville St. Joseph faced off with San Antonio St. Mary’s Hall with a chance to move into first place in TAPPS 5A District 4 earlier in the afternoon.

The Bloodhounds lost to the Barons 38-28 but put up a tough fight against a St Mary’s Hall team that had a distinct size advantage with 6-foot-0 post Sedelia Wilson-Larkin.

Brownsville St. Joseph guard Regina Tovar (10) attempts a layup Wednesday afternoon against St. Mary’s Hall in a TAPPS 5A District 4 meeting at St. Joseph Academy. Photo Courtesy of Victor Dominguez

Brownsville St. Joseph senior standout Regina Tovar finished with a game-high 14 points. The Bloodhounds struggled at times during the second half to generate offense with the Barons playing a tight zone defense.

Brownsville St. Joseph only scored nine points during the second half after only being down 21-19 at halftime.

Bloodhounds freshman Seanah Mireles tied the game at 19 in the second quarter with back-to-back 3-pointers. Mireles scored 10 and did a solid job helping defend Wilson-Larkin, who — along with guard Maddie Florence — led the Barons in scoring with 13 points.

Brownsville St. Joseph forward Seanah Mireles (32) looks for space Wednesday afternoon against St. Mary’s Hall in a TAPPS 5A District 4 meeting at St. Joseph Academy. Photo Courtesy of Victor Dominguez

The Bloodhounds (17-8, 4-2) return to action against Laredo Augustine at 4 p.m. Friday in Laredo.

Rattlers steamroll Javelinas, improve to 2-0 in district

Sharyland High forward Iker Urueta, left, celebrates with teammate Carlos Lopez (12) after scoring one of his three goals during a 9-0 victory over PSJA Southwest on Wednesday at PSJA Southwest High School. (Delcia Lopez | The Monitor)

PHARR — Sharyland High junior Iker Urueta recorded a first-half hat trick and the Rattlers steamrolled the PSJA Southwest Javelinas 9-0 during a District 31-5A contest Wednesday at PSJA Southwest in Pharr.

The victory moves the Rattlers to 2-0-0 in district play, an improvement from last year’s 0-1-1 start to the year.

“I mean it is the perfect start,” Sharyland High head coach Jorge Guerra said. “Sometimes I tell the kids that right now it doesn’t matter how we get them, but we just need to pick up points. We’ve picked up six our first two games, so we’re happy.”

Sharyland High came out red hot during the first half, taking a commanding 3-0 lead just 14 minutes into the game behind goals from Furkan Coban, Carlos Lopez and Urueta.

Just 11 minutes later the Rattlers found paydirt again, with Urueta blowing past the defense for his second goal of the half.

Urueta wasn’t done yet, stopping on a dime and demonstrating his crafty footwork to lose a defender before drilling the ball into the back of the net to secure the first-half hat trick.

The junior forward’s three goals bring his season total to five through just two district games.

Sharyland High junior forward Iker Urueta (7) blows past a defender on his way to a goal during a District 31-5A contest against PSJA Southwest on Wednesday at PSJA Southwest High School in Pharr. Urueta scored three goals during the win. (Delcia Lopez | The Monitor)

“The key to my hot start is just the motivation from my dad,” Urueta said. “I’m just super happy with my team too because they give me the support and everything. I just hope I can keep going with this start. I thank God for giving me the speed and ability to be able to play like this. I just got to keep practicing and practicing because practice brings progress.”

The Rattlers followed their first-half scoring barrage with an almost as explosive second half, with four more players netting goals to take home a dominating 9-0 victory over their district rival.

Seven different players scored goals during the win, with Juan Castillo, Juan Pablo Trevino, Eliab Alvarez and Gonzalo Gandaria each adding a score during the second half.

The Rattlers have now outscored their first two district opponents 13-2, with eight different players scoring at least once this year.

Sharyland High defender Inaki Cruz, left, defends PSJA Southwest’s Pedro Galvan (10) during a District 31-5A contest Wednesday at PSJA Southwest High School. The Rattlers’ defense pitched a shutout during the win. (Delcia Lopez | The Monitor)

“I think we’re exceeding expectations early on,” Guerra said. “I knew coming in it was a totally different team from last year with only three starters coming back. I also knew that we were going to be a solid team defensively, but I wasn’t expecting us to score 13 goals in our first two games. We’ll take them though.”

The Rattlers (2-0-0) continue district play at 6 p.m. Friday, hosting Edinburg Vela at Richard Thompson Stadium in Mission. The Javelinas (1-1-0) will look to get back in the win column against Valley View (0-2-0), taking on the Tigers at 6 p.m. Friday at Tiger Stadium in Hidalgo.

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Sharyland High blasts PSJA Southwest 9-0

Sharyland High's Iker Urueta , left, duels for the ball against PSJA Southwest defender Andy Calderon, right, during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Iker Urueta , right, gets past PSJA Southwest defender on his way to score at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Iker Urueta, left, duels for the ball against PSJA Southwest Andy Calderon, right, during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Furkan Coban (6) slices past PSJA Southwest’s Adrian Zumaya, back, during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Francisco Gomez (22) is tripped by PSJA Southwest’s Andy Calderon (4) during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Iker Urueta , left, gets past PSJA Southwest defender Diego De Leon, right, on his way to a score at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
PSJA Southwest’s Pedro Galvan, right, with a header defended by Sharyland High’s Inaki Cruz, left, during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Gonzalo Gandaria, left, duels for the ball against PSJA Southwest Adrian Zumaya, right, during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Iker Urueta ,left, celebrates after scoring with teammate Carlos Lopez after scoring his third goal against PSJA Southwest during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. Sharyland defeated PSJA Southwest 9-0. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])
Sharyland High’s Iker Urueta , left, duels for the ball against PSJA Southwest Andy Calderon, right, during a game at PSJA Southwest High school soccer field Wednesday, Jan. 17 2024 in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez| [email protected])

Mike McCarthy will return as coach of the Dallas Cowboys after stunning wild-card loss

Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy speaks to reporters following an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers, Sunday, Jan. 14, 2024, in Arlington, Texas. The Packers won 48-32. (Sam Hodde/AP Photo)

By SCHUYLER DIXON | AP Pro Football Writer

Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy speaks to reporters following an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers, Sunday, Jan. 14, 2024, in Arlington, Texas. The Packers won 48-32. (Sam Hodde/AP Photo)

Mike McCarthy will get another chance to end a nearly three-decade stretch without a deep playoff run for the Dallas Cowboys, a decision that ends three days of intense speculation over the coach’s future.

Owner and general manager Jerry Jones said Wednesday night that McCarthy will be back for a fifth season after a stunning 48-32 wild-card loss to Green Bay.

The Cowboys were the first No. 2 seed to lose to the last team to get in since the 14-team format was adopted in 2020. Dallas surged to the NFC East title in the final two weeks and had a chance to host at least two playoff games.

Instead, McCarthy’s team is the first not to reach a conference title game after three consecutive 12-win playoff seasons.

“There is great benefit to continuing the team’s progress under Mike’s leadership as our head coach,” Jones said in a statement with several references to the disappointment of the playoff loss. “Mike has the highest regular-season winning percentage of any head coach in Cowboys history, and we will dedicate ourselves, in partnership with him, to translating that into reaching our postseason goals.”

McCarthy was hired to get Dallas past the divisional round for the first time since the 1995 season, the last of the storied franchise’s five Super Bowl titles.

The 60-year-old coach won a Super Bowl with Green Bay 13 years ago and reached the NFC championship game three other times in 12-plus seasons leading the Packers.

McCarthy was fired midway through a second consecutive losing season in Green Bay in 2018. He was out of football in 2019 before Jones hired him. He is 167-102-2 overall and 42-25 with Dallas.

McCarthy has one year remaining on his contract. Jones’ statement made no mention of an extension.

Quarterback Dak Prescott, who also has one year left on his $160 million, four-year deal, played poorly in the first half as Dallas fell behind 27-0. A top-five defensive unit never did slow the Packers in quarterback Jordan Love’s playoff debut.

Dallas allowed the most points in the franchise’s postseason history while dropping to 1-3 in the playoffs under McCarthy. Prescott is 2-5 in the playoffs.

“We will start our process of review and decision-making regarding everything that impacts our team and roster,” Jones said. “While we’re not going to address specific players and extensions or free agents at this point, it deserves our deepest review and consideration, and it will get it.”

Two of the Cowboys’ three playoff losses under McCarthy have been playoff openers at home, where Dallas won 16 consecutive regular-season games before the loss to Green Bay.

Both times, Dallas was the only team to lose at home on wild-card weekend. San Francisco won at AT&T Stadium to end the Cowboys’ 2021 season.

One factor working in McCarthy’s favor was he had just finished his first season as the play-caller for Prescott, who led the NFL with 36 touchdown passes and completed a career-best 69.5% of his passes.

Jones had high praise for his coach and quarterback during the season, and might want to see how the new dynamic of that relationship might grow.

“Our loss on Sunday is shared by everyone here, not just coach McCarthy. Our players. Our coaches. Our front office. Myself,” Jones said. “The lens we use to view and evaluate coach McCarthy is holistic. While we’re all disappointed with the result on Sunday and with our playoff record, I am 100 percent supportive of him as our head coach and ability to reach our goals.”

The Cowboys might lose defensive coordinator Dan Quinn to a head coaching job. The former Atlanta coach has been in charge of the Dallas defense for three seasons, but the performance against the Packers was perhaps the unit’s worst since Quinn took over.


AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

San Sebastián Rooftop Festival set for Friday atop McAllen parking garage

Ritmo de Candela (Courtesy photo)
Ritmo de Candela (Courtesy photo)

Local Afro-Cuban and Latin Jazz orchestra Ritmo de Candela is collaborating with Thrive Markets to present the San Sebastián Rooftop Festival, an event filled with live music, art, dancing, and local artisans.

Attendees will be immerse in the beauty of Afro-Cuban rhythms and vibrant culture from 7 to 11 p.m. Friday, Jan. 19, on the rooftop of the McAllen Parking Garage, 221 S. 15th St. in McAllen.

Admission is $5.

Rhythm Room will be opening the event with a free Salsa dance class at 7:30 PM, perfect for all skill levels.

Ritmo de Candela is an ensemble in the Rio Grande Valley, specializing in Salsa and tropical rhythms.

Xander Ortega, lead male vocalist, said this group “was born out of a genuine desire to diversify the arts in the RGV and a commitment with great music: the people’s music.”

The beauty of Latin Jazz and Afro-Cuban rhythms is found in its spirited music, capable of bringing anyone to their feet.

Sonáli, lead female vocalist, hopes to “bring happiness and excitement to the community through their music.”

Find more information about the event on Instagram or Facebook by following Ritmo de Candela, @RitmoDeCandela.

Election season heating up in San Benito

A car drives past a banner marking the polling location at the San Benito Fire Department Station 1 Saturday, May 6, 2023, on election day for the municipal and SBCISD Board of Trustees election in San Benito. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

SAN BENITO — Election season’s cranking up in this politically charged town.

Earlier this week, city commissioners called a May 4 election in which voters will decide two of five seats on the commission.

During Tuesday’s meeting, commissioners also contracted with Cameron County to run the election.

On Wednesday, Remi Garza, the county’s elections administrator, said the department’s charging the city $23,480.

At City Hall, Wednesday marked the first day in which residents can file to run as candidates in the election, David Favila, the city’s spokesman, said.

Feb. 16 marks filing deadline.

The election comes a year after voters swept in a new commission, ousting the board’s previous majority.

After more than three years on the board, Commissioner Pete Galvan said he’s running for a second full term in Place 3.

In November 2020, Galvan, a pharmacist who serves as the commission’s mayor pro tem, won an unexpired term which former Commissioner Rick Guerra had left open after he resigned to run for the mayor’s seat.

Then in May 2021, Galvan won his first three-year term.

In Place 4, Carol Lynn Sanchez, an attorney who first won election in 2017, is vacating her seat to run for the state District 37 House seat held by first-term Republican Janie Lopez.

”I will finish the term I committed to finishing to my constituents,” Sanchez stated. “I owe it to the voters who believed in me. I am not leaving my community. I’m just using the knowledge I gained as a commissioner to now help it at a higher and more effective level.”

Brownsville’s Art Hurtado finishes 20th in HURT 100 in Hawaii

Brownsville ultra marathon runner Art Hurtado wears his race jersey prior to the HURT 100 ultra marathon Jan. 13-14 in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Courtesy photo)
Brownsville ultra marathon runner Art Hurtado wears his race jersey prior to the HURT 100 ultra marathon Jan. 13-14 in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Courtesy photo)

Brownsville endurance runner Art Hurtado finished the HURT 100 in Hawaii in 29:56.39, meeting the threshold to submit credentials for this summer’s Badwater 135 in Death Valley, California, and achieving a personal performance goal.

Before the trail run through the sub-tropical rain forest in the mountains above Honolulu, Hurtado, 38, said finishing the five 20-mile laps in anything under 30 hours would be spectacular.

As it turned out, Hurtado’s time was the 20th best among the 75 runners who finished under the 36-hour time limit, according to results posted on the official race website.

Being able to finish healthy in under 30 hours was his biggest accomplishment, Hurtado said Tuesday afternoon by phone from Daniel K. Inouye International Airport as he waited for his flight back to the Rio Grande Valley.

“The last aid station was 2 1/2 miles before the finish line. The aid workers said you have 40 minutes to get to the finish line, so I ran like a bat outta hell to get there,” he said.

Hurtado had a support team of one. Greg Suhrman, a friend from Dallas, met him after each lap with supplies and gear, ‘kind of like a pit stop,” he said. Then on the final lap Suhrman ran with Hurtado as a pacer, encouraging him over the final miles.

“On the laps they have aid stations with a lot of volunteers with everything you would need, food and water, it’s your chance to get your nutrition and hydration,” Hurtado said, adding that it was one of the most-organized races he’s ever done.

”I wanted a challenge and that’s what they delivered. The last two laps were pretty difficult. By that point your muscles are really hurting from the steep descents and all your body systems are fighting you but you have to just keep going,” he said.

HURT 100 stands for the Hawaiian Ultra Running Team Trail 100-Mile Endurance Run. This year’s race was re-routed slightly due to a landslide in the mountains north of Honolulu. The cumulative elevation gain and loss was 26,750 feet.

Brownsville ultra marathon runner Art Hurtado stands with Candice Burt, the world record holder for consecutive ultra marathons, at the pre-race briefing for the 2024 HURT 100 in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Courtesy photo)

Hurtado said he will take a few weeks off before getting back into training.

“Generally my recovery is getting better and better with each race. Despite how difficult this race is, I think I feel the best I’ve come out of any 100 I’ve come out of so far, so that’s a sign I’m progressing as an athlete and as a runner. But it’s still gonna be a few weeks of taking a break and easing back into exercising again just to play it safe because I want to play it safe and not risk an injury over the long term,” he said.

Hurtado, a surfer who also runs the beach patrols on South Padre Island, said the surf in Texas doesn’t compare to Hawaii. He checked out Waikiki beach and the north shore where the big surf is legendary.

“I did get to go swim a little bit. As a surfer I wanted to check it out,” he said. “The surf was really good, especially compared to Texas. We have small surf. It was gorgeous to see the blue waters and the clean waves that go on for a long time.”

Hurtado said he will submit an application for the Badwater 135, “but that’s very up to chance because there’s a lot of people submitting.” He has some other races in mind near term, such as the Bryce Canyon Ultra in Utah, a 100-mile race in May.

“I also have a 50-mile race for fun in April, the Brazos Bend 50 that’s at Brazos State Park south of Houston,” he said.

Long term he plans to eventually run in the 240-mile Mohab 240 in Mohab, Utah.

In the HURT 100, Hurtado ran about 15 minutes behind Candice Burt, one of the Mohab 240 founders and the world record holder for consecutive ultra marathons with 200 in a row.

“She passed me on the last lap,” he said.

Harlingen’s Early Childhood Academy recognized by H-E-B Excellence in Education

Students from Harlingen CISD's Early Childhood Academy play outdoors Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2024, in Harlingen. (Courtesy: HCISD Early Childhood Academy/Facebook)

HARLINGEN — They knew they were excellent.

And now everybody else does.

The Harlingen Consolidated Independent School District’s Early Childhood Academy has just been named one of five finalists in its category for the H-E-B Excellence in Education Award.

“We are excited and just kind of processing everything,” said Principal Bertha Perea.

The H-E-B Excellence in Education Awards are designed to honor outstanding public school professionals and to thank them for their dedication and commitment, says its website.

This designation is especially significant for the academy because it is a specialty school which opened only in August 2022. The Academy teaches students from several high school campuses about the early childhood teaching profession.

“I think our application just really spoke to and highlighted the things that really make us special,” Perea said. “The top of the list is really our distinctive culture here at our school. We have a very unique way of doing things. Everyone that walks through our door, we welcome them with our saying, ‘Welcome to our happy place.’ Even the children know that saying and they are greeted in that way.”

The next step, she said, will be a banquet later this year in which the sole finalists will be announced in each category. Those finalists will receive a monetary award.

Edinburg utility bills to increase twice this year after water rate hike approved

Edinburg City Hall is seen in this undated photo. (Courtesy: City of Edinburg/Facebook)

EDINBURG — The city council here has approved a series of rate increases that will see the average resident paying 67% more on their water and sewer bills within five years.

The increases will come in stages, with the first rate hike expected to go into effect on March 1, followed by a second increase at the start of the new fiscal year this October. Three additional rate increases will be implemented every Oct. 1 through 2027.

However, the vote wasn’t unanimous. Edinburg Mayor Ramiro Garza Jr. and Place 1 Councilman Dan Diaz voted against the measure during Tuesday night’s city council meeting.

Afterward, Garza explained he’s not opposed to increasing rates, but he wished the council had considered his recommendation to hold public hearings before passing the measure.

“We just adopted a budget in October where we told the public we were not going to adjust rates,” Garza said during a lengthy discussion.

The mayor proposed holding a series of public hearings to gather public input about the rate adjustments.

“Over three months ago, we told everybody, ‘Your rates are going to stay the same for the whole year,’ right?” Garza said, referring to discussions the council held last fall when deciding on the 2024 fiscal budget.

“We should have told everybody, ‘Well, there’s a study we’re doing, we may adjust rates.’ But we didn’t do that,” Garza added.

However, just before discussing the rate increases amongst themselves Tuesday, the council shot down the mayor’s idea.

RISING RATES

The new rates will be implemented over the next five years in increases of about 11% per adjustment.

Willdan Financial Services, the consultants the city hired last summer to carry out the rate study, illustrated what those sequential increases will look like for the average ratepayer.

In Edinburg, an average residential consumer uses between 5,000 and 7,000 gallons of water and wastewater per month, according to Dan V. Jackson, a vice president with Willdan.

Jackson showed the council a rubric for what that customer will pay over the next five years for 5,000 gallons of usage per month.

Beginning March 1, that consumer will see their bill go up about $2.97 per month. On Oct. 1, it will go up another 9%, or an additional $3.28 per month.

The rate won’t go up again until the start of the next fiscal year, on Oct. 1, 2025.

At that point, residents will see their bills go up an additional 11% every October through 2027. That equates to about $3.64 per month in 2025, $4.04 per month in 2026 and $4.49 per month in 2027.

All told, the average 5,000-gallon-per-month residential customer will pay about $18.13 more per month on their water and sewer bills by late 2027.

That’s an increase of just over 67% from today’s rate of $26.87 to $45.28 per month.

Those figures are for water and sewer service charges only and do not include additional charges for trash service, taxes and other fees that make up the city’s unified utility bills.

Commercial customers will see similar increases.

The average commercial consumer pays about $223.73 for 50,000 gallons of water per month.

On March 1, that rate will go up to $248.34, and then go up again to $275.66 on Oct. 1 of this year.

By 2027, the average commercial customer will be paying $377 for water and wastewater service, for a total increase of 68.5% compared to today.

NECESSARY DECISION

None of the councilmembers seemed particularly enthusiastic about the prospect of charging residents — and themselves — more for water and sewer service. However, all of them conceded that the rate changes were necessary to meet current and future needs.

“No one on the council wants to raise rates, but if we’re being responsible, we have to look at our growth,” Diaz said. “What we’re charging, we’re barely meeting the requirements.”

As Jackson, the consultant, explained to the council during a Dec. 19 workshop, the revenues generated by the rate increases will go toward financing dozens of utility infrastructure projects over the coming decade, including new water and wastewater treatment plants.

Combined, the 87 projects come with an estimated $260 million price tag.

The rate adjustments are necessary for another reason, too — to bring the utility department back into a state of self-sufficiency.

Currently, one large-scale utility infrastructure project that is on the books is being subsidized via the city’s general fund, which is typically used to pay for day-to-day operating expenses, such as payroll.

The project involves moving utility lines north of the city as TxDOT works to expand Interstate Highway 69-C. Edinburg is paying for it by loaning itself the money via a capital improvement plan loan.

“Unfortunately, right now, because of some of the transactions that have occurred, we’ve had to work with other resources and it’s not self-sustaining at this point,” Edinburg Finance Director Ascencion Alonzo said of the city’s utility fund.

“It’s an enterprise fund. At minimum, it should break even,” he added, referring to how the money that consumers pay for water and sewer service should ideally generate enough revenue to pay the utility department’s operations and expenditures.

Place 4 Councilman David White placed part of the blame for the insolvent fund, as well as some long-delayed infrastructure projects, at the feet of the previous city council.

“There was a lot of stuff that I discussed and all this stuff that I found out later, and thank God for all you guys coming in that we’re starting to clean up some freakin’ messes that were done, and this is one of them,” White said.

He further lamented the blowback he expects the council will receive in the wake of the rate hikes.

“We’re gonna take a bath with our public because we’re gonna have to raise this rate,” he said.

Brownsville hosts its first Winter Texan Expo

A Winter Texan Expo attendee stops by one of dozens of booths at the 2023 event in McAllen. The expo is being held in Brownsville for the first time on Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024. (Courtesy: Welcome Home RGV)
A Winter Texan Expo attendee stops by one of dozens of booths at the 2023 event in McAllen. The expo is being held in Brownsville for the first time on Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024. (Courtesy: Welcome Home RGV)

The annual Winter Texan Expo just celebrated its 31st year in McAllen. On Thursday, the event celebrates its first year in Brownsville, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Brownsville Events Center, 1 Event Center Blvd.

Kristi Collier, president of Welcome Home RGV, which has put on the free expo each winter since 2014, said some of the vendors at last year’s event in McAllen expressed a wish for the same type of opportunity in the Lower Valley, and so organizers went to work.

“The city of Brownsville has been so great in supporting this event, and we’re making it happen,” she said.

In addition to 50-or-so vendors, the event will feature door prizes, games, food samples from local restaurants and live music by Rick McEwen, Jason Whorlow and Kai. It’s being sponsored by the city, Visit Brownsville, Breakaway Cruises, the Infinitus Group, Visit South Padre Island, Equity Lifestyle Properties and Senior Medicare Patrol.

Visit Harlingen & Port Isabel will be on hand, as well as restaurant and attractions and other businesses.

Welcome Home RGV says it aims to be the “ultimate resource” for Winter Texans and year-round retirees, providing top recommendations for activities, events, products and services. The company also publishes an e-newsletters, an annual directory and the weekly Welcome Home Winter Texan newspaper in addition to maintaining a social media presence and putting on events such as the annual expo.

Collier said taking over the event just made sense.

“It just fits right in line with all of our programming and our mission of elevating the experience of all Winter Texans,” she said. “We work with RV parks all up and down the Valley and know that not all people from Brownsville want to take the drive to McAllen for our show. We picked up some Brownsville vendors that weren’t able to make it to the McAllen show, so it’ll be the same yet very different.”

Collier said the Tuesday expo in McAllen attracted approximately 3,000 people, fewer than usual, though she attributed it to the abnormally cold weather and was hoping for a good turnout in Brownsville.

“If we had 1,000 people in Brownsville tomorrow I would be over the top,” she said. “I will be so happy.”

Welcome Home RGV plans to make the Brownsville expo an annual thing alongside the McAllen event, Collier said.

“We’re incredibly optimistic and looking forward to a long partnership with the city of Brownsville and supporting our Winter Texans,” she said. “It’s a way for all of us to say thank you to our Winter Texans for being here, and spending money here, and to welcome them to the area.”