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City to discuss speed hump placements

SAN BENITO — Tonight is expected to be a busy night for city commissioners.

They will meet this evening at 5:30 p.m. at city hall located at 401 North Sam Houston to discuss several agenda items.

In addition to the usual items, the skate pad and street repairs, commissioners also will be presented with a list of requested speed hump placements.

Commissioners will consider taking action on the recommendations from the traffic safety board for several speed humps and other traffic recommendations.

The requests come from residents in the city and then are sent to the traffic and safety board for approval.

Commissioners are charged with making the final approval.

Viola Reyes requested a speed hump on Yoakum and Rogers, but the traffic and safety Board deemed it more appropriate to recommend a speed limit sign at two locations at Yoakum and Rogers.

Yuditt Ann Espinosa requested a speed hump on 8th Street, but the traffic and safety board recommended a speed limit sign of 15 miles per hour.

Pedro Garcia requested a speed hump on Winchell ending at Francisco Madero. The traffic and safety board recommended a speed hump on Winchell ending at Francisco Madero on the 500 block.

The traffic and safety board approved Sylvia Cruz’s request to place a speed hump on Juanita Street between La Palma and Ruben Vela Street.

Interim Police Chief Michael Galvan requested a speed hump on Biddle Street between Rockefeller and Hull Street.

The traffic and safety board recommended one speed hump on the 400 block, but also recommended making the street a one way, reducing the speed limit and no through trucks.

This decision was made after conducting a survey by the public works department with 60 percent participation of the citizens residing on that street.

In addition, commissioners will consider a resolution approving the Parks and Recreation Master Plan.

They also will consider accepting the letter of resignation from Federico Garza of the Economic Development Corporation Board and then consider appointing a replacement

Commissioners will also discuss having a memorial tribute for former City Manager Manuel Lara, who died unexpectedly last year.

Inmate escapes jail, leads high-speed chase

PORT ISABEL — A violent jail escape turned into a high-speed chase through five counties on Sunday, officials said.

Adam Joseph Elliott, 36, took officers for a ride before being apprehended in Nueces County, officials said.

“The prisoner got combatant during the booking process,” Port Isabel Police Chief Wally Gonzalez said. “He punched both officers and got away.”

Elliott is facing charges of aggravated assault against a police officer and evading and resisting arrest with a vehicle.

“We apprehended him in Bishop and he was transported to Kleberg County jail,” said Lt. Johnny Hernandez, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Elliott was originally arrested by Laguna Vista police at 4 a.m. Sunday and charge with aggravated assault against an officer.

Laguna Vista police transported Elliott to the Port Isabel jail.

At 9 a.m., Laguna Vista police returned to finish the booking process at the jail.

But they didn’t make it past fingerprinting.

Elliott punched out the two police officers and rushed past another, officials said.

Police said he proceeded down the hall and fell down and punched his way past another officer.

Before making it out the back door, Elliott attacked another officer with a fire extinguisher during his getaway, police said.

According to Gonzalez, the Laguna Vista police tried to Taser Elliott but missed.

“This is the first time that somebody escaped from our custody from the booking area,” Gonzalez said.

Gonzalez said he is concerned about the escape. In his 10 years on the force with Port Isabel he has never seen this happen.

After Elliott made it out of the jail he carjacked a Chrysler 300 vehicle with an elderly woman in the passenger side at a nearby restaurant, police said.

Police said Elliott left the woman unharmed at a Pizza Hut and continued north toward Houston, where police suspect he was heading.

Gonzalez said Port Isabel police sent out an alert on the stolen car.

Hernandez said DPS observed the stolen vehicle in Willacy County and engaged in a high-speed chase before arresting Elliott north of Kingsville.

Commission eyes beefing up Baxter Building resolution

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HARLINGEN — The proposed $4.5 million renovation of the city’s tallest building is key to the revitalization of the downtown area.

At least that’s what a proposed amendment to a resolution supporting the project states.

In a meeting tomorrow, city commissioners are expected to approve the amendment to the resolution originally approved Feb. 3 supporting developer MRE Capital’s proposed project to renovate the Baxter Building into a largely low-income apartment development.

City officials inadvertently omitted the clause from the resolution, City Manager Dan Serna said yesterday.

Serna said officials want to amend the resolution to include the clause appearing in his Feb. 24 letter to the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs.

“We just want the documents to coincide with each other,” Serna said.

The amendment states, “the city of Harlingen, Texas, acting through its governing body, explicitly identifies Baxter Lofts as contributing most significantly to the concerted revitalization efforts of the city.”

Mayor Chris Boswell has called the Baxter Building’s renovation critical to the revitalization of the downtown area.

Since the late 1960s, the nine-story building has decayed to become a towering eyesore hindering the 25-year effort to revive the area, including the Jackson Street District, Boswell said.

In February, commissioners approved the resolution to support MRE Capital in its application for federal tax credits to the Department of Housing and Community Affairs.

MRE Capital has applied for tax credits to help fund the renovation of the Baxter Building into a 24-unit apartment development that would include 19 low-income units.

The Kansas City, Mo.-based developer plans to offer two low-income units to residents with household incomes of $15,720 for families of four; four units to residents with household incomes of $26,200; and 13 units to residents with household incomes of $31,440.

The remaining apartments would either be rented at market rate or offered to residents with household incomes of $31,440 for families of four.

The developer would offer six one-bedroom apartments and seven two-bedroom apartments to residents with household incomes of $31,440.

An architectural sketch shows the development of 13 one-bedroom apartments and 11 two-bedroom apartments that would offer 26 parking spaces along South A Street and West Jackson Avenue.

But Boswell said the city owns a large parking lot between Harrison and Van Buren avenues, about a block away from the building.

Historically, tax credits have funded about 70 percent of applicants’ construction costs, Gordon Anderson, a spokesman with the Department of Housing and Community Affairs, said in an earlier interview.

MRE Capital is applying for what are known as “competitive 9-percent housing tax credits,” according to the resolution.

The renovation of the vintage 1927 building appears to hinge on the developers’ success in obtaining the tax credits.

On the condition the company qualifies for the credits, MRE Capital would pay the Harlingen Community Improvement Board $250,000 for the Baxter Building while investing $4.5 million to renovate it to its original condition.

In Texas, the application process for federal tax credits “is very competitive,” Anderson said.

As of its March 1 deadline, the state agency received 142 applications from developers requesting a total of $144.3 million in tax credits, Anderson said, adding the state has $63.3 million worth of tax credits available.

Last year in Texas, Anderson said, 54 of 155 applicants who filed for tax credits were awarded funding totaling $63.5 million.

The agency’s board of directors is expected to decide whether to award MRE Capital the tax credits July 28.

Commission eyes beefing up Baxter Building resolution

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HARLINGEN — The proposed $4.5 million renovation of the city’s tallest building is key to the revitalization of the downtown area.

At least that’s what a proposed amendment to a resolution supporting the project states.

In a meeting tomorrow, city commissioners are expected to approve the amendment to the resolution originally approved Feb. 3 supporting developer MRE Capital’s proposed project to renovate the Baxter Building into a largely low-income apartment development.

City officials inadvertently omitted the clause from the resolution, City Manager Dan Serna said yesterday.

Serna said officials want to amend the resolution to include the clause appearing in his Feb. 24 letter to the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs.

“We just want the documents to coincide with each other,” Serna said.

The amendment states, “the city of Harlingen, Texas, acting through its governing body, explicitly identifies Baxter Lofts as contributing most significantly to the concerted revitalization efforts of the city.”

Mayor Chris Boswell has called the Baxter Building’s renovation critical to the revitalization of the downtown area.

Since the late 1960s, the nine-story building has decayed to become a towering eyesore hindering the 25-year effort to revive the area, including the Jackson Street District, Boswell said.

In February, commissioners approved the resolution to support MRE Capital in its application for federal tax credits to the Department of Housing and Community Affairs.

MRE Capital has applied for tax credits to help fund the renovation of the Baxter Building into a 24-unit apartment development that would include 19 low-income units.

The Kansas City, Mo.-based developer plans to offer two low-income units to residents with household incomes of $15,720 for families of four; four units to residents with household incomes of $26,200; and 13 units to residents with household incomes of $31,440.

The remaining apartments would either be rented at market rate or offered to residents with household incomes of $31,440 for families of four.

The developer would offer six one-bedroom apartments and seven two-bedroom apartments to residents with household incomes of $31,440.

An architectural sketch shows the development of 13 one-bedroom apartments and 11 two-bedroom apartments that would offer 26 parking spaces along South A Street and West Jackson Avenue.

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Largest mock evacuation in Texas begins Wednesday

HARLINGEN – The largest mock disaster drill in Texas history is a go for Wednesday.

The hub of the activity is Valley International Airport. But the major airlift and transport of hurricane evacuees – including civilian hospital patients – will engage hospitals, personnel and airports from San Antonio to Dallas to Austin and Houston.

Yesterday, about two hundred military personnel wearing their operational camo milled inside a commandeered hangar at Valley International, setting up tan hospital tents and seeing to it everything is prepared.

“The interesting point is this is the largest disaster exercise Texas has ever done,” said Maj. Wayne Hill with the Texas Air National Guard. “Another significant piece of this is we’ve never contracted for commercial aircraft to fly our general population, non-medical people, out of the Valley.”

In addition to twin military C-130 transport planes, the drill will utilize two Boeing 737s and an MD-80 to transport civilians, Hill said.

Those flights will carry 400 volunteers to simulate an evacuation of the Valley as a Category 5 hurricane looms off the coast in the Gulf of Mexico. Another 64 volunteers will act the roles of medical transports, people who may be in wheelchairs or bed-bound or on IVs.

The two military cargo planes, the C-130s, will land in Harlingen on Wednesday morning. Then a hectic flight schedule begins at noon, with planes arriving and departing on the half-hour mark until the last plane departs Harlingen for Austin at 4 p.m.

The final flight is scheduled to land in Austin at 5:15 p.m.

For more on the story read Wednesday’s Valley Morning Star.

Port Isabel jail escapee captured 150 miles away

PORT ISABEL — Police say Adam Joseph Elliott’s violent weekend escape from the Port Isabel jail ended in a high speed chase five counties away.

“The prisoner got combatant during the booking process,” said Port Isabel Police Chief Wally Gonzalez. “He punched both officers and got away.”

Elliott, 36, of Houston, was apprehended in Nueces County.

Elliott is facing charges of aggravated assault against a police officer, evading and resisting arrest detention with a vehicle.

For more on his escape and capture read Tuesday’s Valley Morning Star.

Health Dept: Get rid of tall grass, standing water to eliminate mosquitos

HARLINGEN – Due to the recent rains, city officials are askign home owners to cut their laws and eliminate standing water.

“We want to give a friendly reminder to property owners,” Harlingen Code Enforcement Manager Juan Leal said. “The rainy months have caused many properties to have overgrown grass. Standing water also poses a problem for mosquito growth.”

Everyone is asked to do what they can to prevent mosquito problems.

Leal warns the mosquitoes transmit serious diseases, including encephalitis, dengue, Zika and Chikungunya virus and heartworms in pets.

Homeowners are asked to remove any potential mosquito breeding grounds.

U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela: ‘Mr. Trump, you’re a racist’

Congressman Filemon Vela, D-Brownsville, confirmed he penned the letter in frustration over Donald Trump’s rhetoric.

U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela, D-Brownsville, has penned a letter to Donald Trump calling the Republican presidential candidate a racist.

Vela also told Trump “you can take your border wall and shove it up your ass.”

The congressman said he is tired of Trump’s rhetoric which he says has been bad all along but, he said Trump took it to another level on the latest racist attack on U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel.

“I had to do it in language that only Donald Trump could understand,” Vela said about the tone of his letter.

The congressman was referring to remarks that Trump referred to Curiel as a Mexican although the judge is a U.S. citizen born in Indiana.

“I think it is very disgraceful. I couldn’t think any other way to respond than to fight fire with fire,” Vela said.

Vela said he is also standing up for the 55 million Hispanics living in the U.S.

“This last week when I was home I run into constituents on the streets and Trump’s rhetoric is making them really upset that they are looking for someone to speak out for them,” Vela said.

Here is the full text of the letter:

June 6, 2016

Donald Trump

725 Fifth Avenue

New York, NY 10022

Dear Mr. Trump,

As the United States Representative for the 34th Congressional District of Texas, I do not disagree with everything you say. I agree that the United States Government has largely failed our veterans, and those of us who represent the people in Congress have the obligation to rectify the Veterans Administration’s deficiencies. I also believe that the Mexican government and our own State Department must be much more aggressive in addressing cartel violence and corruption in Mexico, especially in the Mexican border state of Tamaulipas. And clearly, criminal felons who are here illegally should be immediately deported. There might even be a few other things on which we can agree.

However, your ignorant anti-immigrant opinions, your border wall rhetoric, and your recent bigoted attack on an American jurist are just plain despicable.

Your position with respect to the millions of undocumented Mexican workers who now live in this country is hateful, dehumanizing, and frankly shameful. The vast number of these individuals work in hotels, restaurants, construction sites, and agricultural fields across the United States. If I had to guess, your own business enterprises either directly or indirectly employ more of these workers than most other businesses in our country. Thousands of our businesses would come to a grinding halt if we invoked a policy that would require “mass deportation” as you and many of your supporters would suggest. That is precisely why the Republican-leaning U.S. Chamber of Commerce agrees that these workers deserve a national immigration policy that would give them a pathway to citizenship.

While you would build more and bigger walls on the U.S.-Mexico border, I would tear the existing wall to pieces. No doubt Mexico has its problems, but it is also our third-largest trading partner. U.S. Chamber of Commerce has documented that this trade relationship is responsible for six million jobs in the United States. In 2015, the U.S. imported $296 billion in goods from Mexico while exporting $235 billion in products manufactured in this country to Mexico. The Great Wall of China is historically obsolete, and President Ronald Reagan famously declared, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall … ” while urging the Soviet Union to destroy the barrier that divided West and East Berlin. Why any modern-thinking person would ever believe that building a wall along the border of a neighboring country, which is both our ally and one of our largest trading partners, is frankly astounding and asinine.

I should also point out that thousands of Americans of Mexican descent that you mistakenly refer to as “Mexicans” have valiantly served the United States in every conflict since the Civil War. While too numerous to list, let me educate you about a few of these brave Medal of Honor recipients:

Master Sergeant Jose Lopez, from my own hometown of Brownsville, Texas, fought in World War II. Lopez was awarded the United States’ highest military decoration for valor in combat – the Medal of Honor – for his heroic actions during the Battle of the Bulge, in which he single handedly repulsed a German infantry attack, killing at least 100 enemy troops. If you ever run into Kris Kristofferson, ask him about Jose Lopez because as a young man Mr. Kristofferson recalls the 1945 parade honoring Sergeant Lopez as an event he will never forget.

In 1981, President Reagan presented Master Sergeant Roy Benavides with the Medal of Honor for fighting in what has been described as “6 hours in hell.” In Vietnam, Sergeant Benavides suffered 37 separate bullet, bayonet and shrapnel wounds to his face, leg, head and stomach while saving the lives of eight men. In fact, when awarding the honor to Benavides, President Reagan, turned to the media and said, “if the story of his heroism were a movie script, you would not believe it.”

You have now descended to a new low in your racist attack of an American jurist, U.S. District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel, by calling him a “Mexican” simply because he ruled against you in a case in which you are being accused of fraud, among other accusations. Judge Curiel is one of 124 Americans of Hispanic descent who have served this country with honor and distinction as federal district judges. In fact, the first Hispanic American ever named to the federal bench in the United States, Judge Reynaldo G. Garza, was also from Brownsville, Texas, and was appointed by President John F. Kennedy in 1961.

Before you dismiss me as just another “Mexican,” let me point out that my great-great grandfather came to this country in 1857, well before your own grandfather. His grandchildren (my grandfather and his brothers) all served our country in World War I and World War II. His great-grandson, my father, served in the U.S. Army and, coincidentally, was one of the first “Mexican” federal judges ever appointed to the federal bench.

I would like to end this letter in a more diplomatic fashion, but I think that you, of all people, understand why I cannot. I will not presume to speak on behalf of every American of Mexican descent, for every undocumented worker born in Mexico who is contributing to our country every day or, for that matter, every decent citizen in Mexico. But, I am sure that many of these individuals would agree with me when I say: ‘Mr. Trump, you’re a racist and you can take your border wall and shove it up your ass.’

Sincerely,

Filemon Vela

Member of Congress

Worst Polluters are in most vulnerable neighborhoods, study finds

According to a news story published in the journal Environmental Research Letters, just 5 percent of industrial polluters account for 90 percent of the toxic emissions in the United States.

What is worse, these super polluters tend to cluster in low income and minority communities, putting poor people and people of color at an exponentially elevated risk from industrial contaminants.

The findings show that a few polluters much more toxic than others, plus racial and socioeconomic inequalities can determine where these “toxic outliers” set up shop.

It is no secret that poor and minority communities shoulder a disproportionate burden of environmental harm. These communities often lack the economic and political power to block dirty factories from locating in their neighborhoods or to enforce existing environmental regulations.

These comm unities become toxic dumping grounds because they are the avenues of least resistance.

They call it “contamination without representation.”

Guardians of the Laguna Madre are fighting this battle currently to save the valuable green field jobs of ecotourism and vacation destination which are being endangered by the proposed LNG plants on the Brownsville ship channel.

The health of the nearby residents living and working in the South Padre Island, Port Isabel, Long Island Village and Laguna Vista areas are about to be exposed to the toxic rain which will fall on them from less than 3 miles away.

This toxic rain would be equal to all of the greenhouse gas pollution caused by all of the cars, trucks, and tractors in Cameron county. If only one LNG plant is constructed, it would immediately become the worst polluter by far in Cameron county.

For our future generations, we must stop the proposed construction of these LNG monstrosities.

Diane & Rick Teter Laguna Vista

Where are the good candidates?

In the letter from Santiago Perez published June 1st, there are some legitimate concerns about voting for Trump.

However, are the worries more or less when considering voting for Hillary?

My opinions is the same as one expressed by a friend, “With all of the eligible people in the U.S., couldn’t we come up with better candidates than these two?”

Anyone who knows Hillary’s history and who won’t vote for Trump is better served to stay home on election day.

That, too, is a no-win solution because not voting is another form of voting.

Mr. Perez is right. We will get what we deserve, and we have proved that we don’t deserve much.

We have already discarded our better candidates, but they probably could not get elected anyway.

Looks like it could be four more years of down hill skiing. Looks like a long, cold winter.

Sincerely, Norma Christian Raymondville