86.6 F
McAllen
Home Blog Page 73

Summer heat exacerbates garden issues for Texans

Birds hunt for food in the stalks as the sun beats down on a field of sorghum Thursday, June 15, 2023, on Russell Lane in San Benito. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

By Laura Muntean

Texas gardeners usually sing the same tune this time of year — the heat is oppressive, and moisture is in short supply. Some East Texas and Gulf Coast gardens received rain from tropical storms, but many Texans are humming through the second verse with continued high temperatures and a lack of moisture.

“When it comes to moisture, Texas continues to be the place for the haves and have nots,” said Larry Stein, Ph.D., Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service horticulture specialist at Uvalde and professor in the Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Department of Horticultural Sciences. “Some places have received way too much rain and others not near enough.”

Since either extreme can kill plants, Texas gardeners need to keep their moisture conditions in mind during the hot summer months.

How to help your plants endure heat

Proper moisture helps plants deal with extreme heat.

Weeds compete with your garden plants for moisture, so stay on top of removing them. You may also need to pull plants that just aren’t doing well. In other words, you “gotta know when to hoe them and know when to throw them.”

“It is the number of leaves on a plant that dictate how much water the plant uses,” Stein said. “Plants can take intense heat and light if they have sufficient water. But it would be best not to try to establish plants at this time, regardless of your water situation.”

Watch for garden pests

Pest populations also usually flare up during summertime when conditions are hot and dusty.

“Be on the lookout for spider mites, aphids, white flies; these are best discouraged as opposed to treating once you have them,” he said. “Populations can become so great that the plants must be eliminated so that you can prepare for a fall planting.”

Stein said using a spray with seaweed extract alternating with a soapy solution seems to discourage such pests. Spraying should commence when the plants begin setting fruit and continue on a 10-day to two-week schedule.

A ladybug perches on a flowering plant Thursday, March 16, 2023, on Tucker Road in Harlingen. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

Watch moisture levels as temperatures rise

Stein said vegetation and trees have prospered in many locations with moisture, but many may be entering “a world of hurt” due to drying conditions. And while he is hopeful Texas won’t experience a heatwave as intense as last year, we know Mother Nature has her own plans.

“Remember, if you do have newly planted plants they will need at least an inch of water a week, but never apply water daily or plants will not be deep rooted,” he said. “Water should be applied either once a week or perhaps every three or four days. Established plants can go three weeks or so before a watering.”

Mulch can help protect soil moisture

Don’t forget the importance of mulch. A thick layer of mulch will help maintain soil moisture and reduce weed competition.

Stein said the heat is taking a toll on fruit set, so it may be time for some gardeners to pull the plants — such as tomatoes — and wait for more favorable conditions if they just don’t have the moisture needed.

“You can’t allow plants with green fruit or berries to suffer from lack of moisture,” Stein said. “Summer watering and care for fruit and fall nut production is especially critical to ensure quality.”

A sprinkler system waters a lawn along Central Boulevard in the late afternoon on July 14, 2022, in Brownsville. (Miguel Roberts/The Brownsville Herald)

Provide enough moisture for lawns

Evaluate the volume of water delivered from lawn sprinklers to ensure healthy, stress-free grass during the heat of the summer. Stein said one thorough watering, which delivers 1 inch of water at a time, is better than several shallower sessions.

The amount of water available through flower bed sprinklers can be checked by placing several shallow pans among shrubs or flowers the next time your sprinklers are on to measure the amount of water received.

Firebush can handle the heat, attracts hummingbirds

Texas gardeners looking to add color to their garden might want to consider incorporating firebush into their garden or landscape.

Firebush, sometimes called hummingbird bush, thrives in the heat and is a designated Texas Superstar.

“The original one was found, as they love to say, blooming its brains out, in Laredo, Texas, one of the hottest and driest places in the state,” Stein said. “It will have to be grown as an annual in the colder areas of the state, but it will be a perennial in many areas like the Rio Grande Valley.”

Firebush is a tropical plant with tremendous heat tolerance with showy tubular flowers. It also has good pest resistance, which makes it an easy plant to grow organically. It can bloom from June to November and is attractive to hummingbirds and pollinators. An occasional light shearing will encourage blooms as well as result in a denser plant with closely spaced flower clusters. The blooms fade and don’t require removal.

It will grow in almost any soil, including those highly alkaline and heavy clays, as long as well drained. It can grow in partial shade, but really loves full-sun locations. It can also be grown in containers with good drainage.

Too much water however will kill a firebush. Once the plant is established, only water when the top inch of the soil is dry, typically a week to 10 days.


Laura Muntean is media relations coordinator for Texas A&M AgriLife.

Jump start: Nursing apprenticeship program begins with ceremony

Members of the first cohort of the RGV College/DHR Registered Nurse Apprenticeship Program pose for a group photo following a ceremony at Edinburg Conference Center at Renaissance on July 10. Officials of DHR, RGV College, and Lone Star National Bank look on from behind. (Benjamin Treviño | The Monitor)
Members of the first cohort of the RGV College/DHR Registered Nurse Apprenticeship Program pose for a group photo following a ceremony at Edinburg Conference Center at Renaissance on July 10. Officials of DHR, RGV College, and Lone Star National Bank look on from behind. (Benjamin Treviño | The Monitor)

EDINBURG — Twelve Rio Grande Valley College nursing students signed letters of intent and donned white coats at a ceremony July 10, marking the beginning of the Registered Nurse Apprenticeship Program. The initiative, which is aimed addressing the ongoing nursing shortage, is a joint project of Rio Grande Valley College and DHR Health.

The program approved by the Texas Board of Nursing in April will be integrated into the college’s existing Associate Degree Nursing program. The student apprentices will work 24 hours a week under the supervision of nurse preceptors at DHR Health. A $1 million grant by the Texas Workforce Commission will financially support the apprentices as they complete their college education.

“Our students struggle financially as they attend school,” said Dr. Annabelle Palomo, President and CEO of RGV College. “All of us who have attended nursing school ask, ‘How do you make ends meet and yet meet your clinical hours?’ That’s where this initiative comes in with DHR.”

“I’m very thankful to the DHR administration who decided along with Dr. Palomo to bring this program here,” said DHR Health Rehabilitation Hospital Medical Director Dr. Saroja Vishwamitra. “With programs like this we don’t have to recruit nurses from all over Texas. We have them right here in our own back yard.”

Brenda Cantu of Peñitas is among the 12 nursing students making up the first cohort of the program, which is one of only two in the state of Texas. The other is at Vernon College in Wichita Falls.

“I graduated as an LVN from RGV College in December,” Cantu said. “As soon as I finished I applied for the ADN program, which I’m doing now. It’s going to help me because when I graduate I will already have a year of experience with hands-on training.”

Palomo says a similar partnership with UTRGV is currently in the works. For more information on the nursing apprenticeship program at DHR, visit www.dhrhealth.com/careers.

Former medic raises safety concerns at Edinburg Motorsports Park

The marquee for the Edinburg Motorsports Park is seen from Highway 281 on Tuesday, July 16, 2024, in Edinburg. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

EDINBURG — A once active participant of events at Edinburg Motorsports Park is raising alarming concerns over driver and spectator safety at the popular drag strip.

Luis Arévalo, whose family has often participated in races at the high octane track since the 1990s, said he’s concerned that officials who operate the track — and with the city of Edinburg — aren’t doing enough to address potentially deadly hazards at the track.

A retired first responder, Arévalo said he felt compelled to pull his sponsorships from the track after bringing his concerns to its operator’s attention to no avail.

“My concern is, basically, personal, and I’m gonna say it’s just safety. They’re not safe,” Arévalo told The Monitor this week.

Arévalo said his concerns center around allegedly subpar preparations for emergency response at the track.

He pointed to a recent incident where a young driver’s souped up car flew down the drag so fast that air got caught underneath the vehicle, sending it flying. When the car came back down to earth, the high octane fuel it carried erupted into flames which quickly engulfed the entire vehicle.

In a video of the crash posted to social media, spectators can be seen running toward the vehicle while yelling for help. It ultimately fell to those same bystanders to check on the driver and put out the conflagration with a handful of fire extinguishers.

The driver escaped with no injuries thanks to how well retrofitted the vehicle had been with a roll cage and other race gear, Arévalo, who was one of the bystanders who helped put the flames out that night, said.

However, it took half an hour for firefighters to respond to the track, which lies on the same property as the South Texas International Airport, the city-owned airport located nine miles north of town.

During the same event, Arévalo alleges that another man went into cardiac arrest and, again, was forced to wait at least 30 minutes before receiving emergency transportation to a hospital.

Buildings are seen in a distance at the Edinburg Motorsports Park Tuesday, July 16, 2024, in Edinburg. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

The man survived.

But that incident illustrates another of Arévalo’s concerns. The race track’s operators allegedly do not maintain sufficient equipment or staffing to respond to emergency medical situations, he said.

“That guy collapsed, hit his head on the guardrail,” Arévalo said.

But the one medic on scene had no “backboard, no C-collar” to use during his ministrations on the patient, Arévalo said.

Arévalo also expressed concern over how the facility stores and sells the specialized fuel that racers use to blast down the straightaway at speeds in excess of 200 mph.

While most car owners are accustomed to seeing unleaded fuel come in three octane options — ranging between 87 and 93 — at the average roadside gas station, racers at the Edinburg track often opt for the specialized racing fuel sold there.

Arévalo said it can be as high as 120 octane, making it much more flammable and explosive, and requiring specialized handling.

The retired first responder claims the track may be improperly storing and selling the fuel.

It was the cumulative weight of these concerns that prompted Arévalo to pull a financial sponsorship from the race track and its operators.

Since then, his relationship with the operators, who go by the same name as the track, Edinburg Motorsports Park, has become decidedly frosty.

The race track at the Edinburg Motorsports Park Tuesday, July 16, 2024, in Edinburg. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

“We had a little mishap at the track and I got my attorney involved,” Arévalo said, referring to a verbal altercation that occurred between himself, his wife and one of the track operators.

Edinburg Motorsports Park did not return a message seeking comment for this story.

But the city has responded to Arévalo’s allegations.

In a statement issued Friday, the city clarified that though it owns the race track property, it does not operate the facility. The city also acknowledged that some concerns have been brought to its attention.

“Recently, a private citizen who is in a legal dispute with the operator alleged certain safety concerns regarding the facility,” the statement reads.

“Although the operator and the citizen are in a private legal dispute, the City takes safety allegations seriously and is actively reviewing them. We are committed to proactively ensuring that all valid safety concerns on City-owned property are addressed promptly and effectively,” it further reads.

Speaking after a city council meeting Tuesday night, Edinburg Mayor Ramiro Garza Jr. at first downplayed questions from The Monitor about a potential investigation into safety concerns at the track.

“I don’t know if I’d call it an investigation, I mean, ‘cause it’s not. It’s really us looking into some of the things that were brought up to city staff and I know they’re looking into it,” Garza said then.

But on Friday, the mayor echoed the city’s official statement regarding a potential legal conflict between Arévalo and the track’s operator.

If a legal dispute exists between Arévalo and the track operators it has not yet risen to the level of a lawsuit being filed. A search of Hidalgo County court records show no litigation between the two sides currently exists.

The marquee for the Edinburg Motorsports Park is seen from Highway 281 on Tuesday, July 16, 2024, in Edinburg. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

Regardless of who or why someone is sharing a concern, Garza assured that the city takes safety seriously.

“We’re working with the operator to make sure that if there are any safety issues that they are addressed,” Garza said.

For his part, Arévalo said he only got an attorney involved after what he claims is retaliation for bringing up his concerns in the first place.

Arévalo says one of the track operators, Rey Chavez, banned him from the facility once Arévalo pulled his sponsorship — worth north of $12,000 — unless the operator did something to “fix the track.”

Arévalo said his attorney reached out to “their attorney,” as well as Garza and City Manager Myra Ayala, but only to inform them that he is representing Arévalo, not because Arévalo has any intentions for a lawsuit.

“I’m not coming here to get the track shut down … I’m coming here so you guys know what’s going on. I have merit. I have proof it’s being done,” Arévalo said.

He’s also had several sit down sessions with city leaders over the past several months to explain the nature of his concerns and press Edinburg to address them before someone gets hurt.

“I’ve been in this medical industry for … 25 years, and I’ve seen how fast someone can bleed to death, I’ve seen how someone can burn to death, I’ve seen where burning cars where we can’t extricate the victim and they burn alive,” Arévalo said.

“That’s the attitude of ‘no pasa nada,’ and that’s the attitude that he has,” Arévalo said, referring to the race track operators.

“Haz que no pasa algo, that’s when the city is going to act,” he said, meaning that until something happens, that’s when the city will act.


Editor’s note: This story has been republished from a former post due to technical issues.

Alton woman convicted of fatal McAllen drunk driving crash, gets 10 years

Sorely Lizeth Niño
Sorely Lizeth Niño

A 21-year-old Alton woman on Friday afternoon was sentenced to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to intoxication manslaughter for a fatal McAllen crash that killed a 43-year-old woman.

Sorely Lizeth Niño, who was 19 at the time of the crash, killed Brenda Belmontes on May 29, 2022.

Hidalgo County District Attorney Toribio “Terry” Palacios said the decade in prison is warranted.

“A 10-year prison sentence is warranted when an innocent life is lost because somebody made a selfish decision of driving while intoxicated,” Palacios said in a news release announcing the sentence. “I urge citizens of the Rio Grande Valley to prevent these situations by making a plan ahead of time to avoid driving drunk.

The crash happened at approximately 2:35 a.m. that day at 500 S. 15th Street in downtown McAllen.

Niño was driving black Ford Taurus that hit a GMC Envoy, which Belmontes was trying to enter, according to the news release and a probable cause affidavit.

Niño’s blood alcohol content was 0.19 — more than twice the legal limit.

Responding officers found Belmontes lying face up in the middle of the road and the GMC Envoy’s driver told authorities Niño’s Taurus was traveling at a high rate of speed, according to the affidavit.

Niño and two other women were all trapped in the Taurus.

After being removed, police identified signs of intoxication from Niño.

“Okay sir, I didn’t want to drive. I’m sorry,” Niño told an officer before she began to cry, according to the affidavit.

One of the other women in the Taurus told an officer she had been at a club in downtown McAllen before she began falling asleep, according to the affidavit.

The two other women were arrested for public intoxication.

Niño was booked into the Hidalgo County Adult Detention Center on July 10 to await her plea, court records show.

She had been free on a $40,000 bond.

Proposal to pay Harlingen mayor, commissioners shot down

Mayor of Harlingen Norma Sepulveda gives a speech Wednesday, June 28, 2023, at a check presentation by AT&T and the AT&T Foundation for $22,500 to the Stars Scholarship Fund at the UTRGV Clinical Education Building in Harlingen. (Denise Cathey | The Brownsville Herald)

HARLINGEN — After nearly 100 years, Harlingen’s mayor might be getting a vote on the city commission.

In November, voters will decide the fate of the proposed City Charter amendment heading for the city election’s ballot.

But amid some residents’ opposition, commissioners shot down a committee’s proposal to pay the mayor and commissioners as compensation, also voting down a measure that would have allowed them to opt into the city’s health insurance plan.

During a four-hour special meeting, commissioners also voted against the Charter Review Committee’s recommendation to boost the mayor’s and city commissioners’ terms from three to four years as part of a plan to draw more voters to the polls.

Like Commissioner Rene Perez, Commissioner Daniel Lopez proposed aligning city elections with presidential elections, arguing state and national elections help boost local voter turnout.

“Overall, I’m satisfied with the way everything went,” Perez said Friday. “I think it was a good effort by the commission to fix and update the charter.”

On Friday, Mayor Norma Sepulveda said she had favored giving voters the chance to the determine of the fate of the committee’s recommendations for revisions to the City Charter, which dates back to 1927.

”My position was clear last night: Respecting the process and upholding the integrity of our democratic system is paramount,” she said in a statement. “By putting all of the committee’s recommendations on the ballot, we ensure that the ultimate decision lies in the hands of our voters. This approach not only honors the hard work and dedication of the Charter Review Committee but also reinforces our commitment to a participatory democracy where every citizen’s voice can be heard.

”I’m proud of our commission for recognizing the value of these recommendations and for supporting the vast majority of what was presented. Letting the voters decide will help shape a future that truly reflects the will of our community.”

Among its recommendations, the Charter Review Committee proposed paying the mayor $25,000 and commissioners $15,000 as compensation for their time of service.

“We recognize that to serve as a commissioner or mayor is a public service,” Delia Avila, a committee member, told commissioners during Thursday’s meeting.

“We want to provide something to open the door for more people to participate in city government … who might not otherwise be able to afford to run for office,” she said.

Across the country, many cities pay their elected officials as compensation for their time of service.

“The committee was looking at figures in other cities in the Rio Grande Valley,” Avila told commissioners.

In Brownsville, the city pays the mayor $40,000 while paying commissioners $25,000, she said.

“We also had a very healthy debate on our committee that we are not interested in providing a full salary or a significantly large stipend to the commission,” Avila said. “We also are interested in providing a small stipend … in the interest that the commission be more accessible during daytime hours.

“We recognize that it can be difficult to juggle a full-time career in addition to elected office and by providing a stipend we hope the commission would be able to be more accessible during business hours to the public.”

Among the committee’s recommendation was a measure that would have allowed the mayor and commissioners to opt into the city’s health insurance plan.

When the two measures came to a vote, commissioners unanimously shot them down.

But most commissioners supported the committee’s recommendation to give the mayor a vote on the commission.

Now, Harlingen stands as the only Valley city which doesn’t give the mayor a vote, officials said.

“The mayor, particularly here in the city of Harlingen, is the only elected representative who represents the city at-large, so without having a member on the commission to vote on behalf of the city as a whole, we’re doing a disservice to our community,” Avila told commissioners.

“Also, the mayor’s vote can become part of the voting record and therefore be held more accountable for their voting record and thereby giving more transparency and power to the people to be able to make sure their elected representatives are representing them,” she said.

This year, the six-member Charter Review Committee held eight, two-hour meetings, City Manager Gabriel Gonzalez told commissioners during Thursday’s meeting.

“There were 12 articles in the charter — 99 sections,” he told commissioners. “We went over each and every one of these in nauseam and by the time we were finished we ended up with 101 sections.”

The charter’s review marked the city’s first since 2006, Sepulveda said Friday.

“I was truly impressed with their dedication and commitment,” she said, referring to committee members whose work she described as “a crucial part of our democratic process.”

“These volunteers delved deeply into their tasks, demonstrating meticulous deliberation, spirited debate and thorough research,” Sepulveda said. “The last committee of this nature convened in 2006, and it’s clear that our current committee took their responsibility seriously, representing our community with great integrity and insight. It is essential to honor their efforts and recommendations because they encapsulate the community’s voice.”

Cameron County leaders are thrilled with SpaceX HQ announcement

Starbase General Manager discusses Starship launches and other SpaceX matters during an invitation-only presentation Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023, at the Brownsville Events Center. (Steve Clark | The Brownsville Herald)

Billionaire founder and CEO of SpaceX Elon Musk is so mad at the governor of California that he’s moving the company’s headquarters from Hawthorne, a suburb of Los Angeles, to SpaceX’s Starbase compound at Boca Chica.

At least that’s what Musk posted on X on Tuesday in reaction to a law signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom barring school policies that require teachers to inform parents if their child changes gender identification while in school.

“This is the final straw,” Musk posted on the social media platform, which he owns. “Because of this law and the many others that preceded it, attacking both families and companies, SpaceX will now move its HQ from Hawthorne, California, to Starbase, Texas.”

Hawthorne’s million-square-foot campus houses the company’s Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rocket engineering and production facilities as well as corporate offices. SpaceX reported in a court filing last year that it has 13,000 employees across the country. Presumably a large percentage of those are in Hawthorne.

Elon Musk appears at an event, Nov. 2, 2023, in London. (Kirsty Wigglesworth/Pool/AP Photo)

But what portion of that percentage Musk wants to move to Starbase, he hasn’t said. It’s also unknown how many Hawthorne employees would be willing to relocate to deep South Texas.

Nonetheless, Brownsville Mayor John Cowen was thrilled with the announcement.

“I think it’s fantastic news,” he said. “That’s always been a goal for us, to have companies have their headquarters in Brownsville — major companies.”

Starbase is outside Brownsville city limits, though the city has felt a significant economic impact from SpaceX’s presence nearby and the 2,000-plus people who work at Starbase (Cowen estimates it’s close to 3,000 now, with SpaceX’s expansion of Starship and Super Heavy production). At the same time, it has further tightened an already-tight housing market — especially affordable housing.

The mayor predicted the relocation of headquarters would mean more high-paying jobs for the area, many more people traveling to and from the city, and more business for the Brownsville South Padre Island International Airport.

“I think that it creates a lot more visibility for Brownsville,” Cowen said. “SpaceX is the most valuable aerospace company in the world. It’s an amazing thing to be able to say that you have SpaceX in your backyard, and their headquarters are coming to Brownsville.”

He said Brownsville would benefit from the extra SpaceX employees and predicted the company would expand the residential component of Starbase to accommodate the influx. Cowen said more housing would be built in and around the city as well.

Hundreds of spectators view SpaceX Starship, the world’s largest and most powerful rocket launch from Starbase, Texas near Boca Chica Beach Thursday morning, March 14, 2024, along Texas State Highway 48. (Miguel Roberts | The Brownsville Herald)

“It just means more investment in our area,” he said. “That’ll bring more investment in our infrastructure as well.”

Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño Jr. called Musk’s announcement “very welcome and positive news.”

“We’re still cautiously awaiting the exact details of what that could mean and the specifics associated with such a potential relocation,” he said. “So far when he’s said he’s going to do something he does follow through on it. We’re banking on that, but we are still awaiting the details from him or SpaceX executive decision makers. We hope that it brings a lot more positive attention, growth, jobs and even more potential in the space industry.”

Treviño conceded housing is something county communities have been grappling with in recent years, and that it’s not likely to be solved in the short term. But if the county does see a new influx of SpaceX people, the housing issue will be solved one way or another, he said.

“I think that just means that we’re going to have to be building a lot more housing: homes, apartments, duplexes — everything associated with it,” he said. “And instead of looking at it only as a potential problem, I think we should be looking at it as a potential positive asset and development.”

Treviño said SpaceX owns a lot of land around Starbase and that more residential space likely would be built to house additional employees if needed.

Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño, Jr. stands in the Cameron County Courthouse Oscar C. Dancy Building in downtown Brownsville in February 2023. (Miguel Roberts | The Brownsville Herald)

“I think what we’ll probably be seeing is … whatever development they can do (and) continued development countywide,” he said. “Not just in Brownsville but countywide: Los Fresnos, San Benito, Harlingen, Combes, Primera, La Feria — even Hidalgo (County). I know a lot of people that live in Hidalgo that are working (at SpaceX). It should be a plus for everyone.”

Harlingen Mayor Norma Sepulveda extended an invitation not only to SpaceX employees needing a place to live but also to SpaceX corporate.

“While the move of headquarters to Starbase is still under consideration, it presents an exciting opportunity for our region,” she said in a statement. “Harlingen is already home to many SpaceX employees, thanks to our central location and outstanding quality of life. … The relocation would create numerous jobs and opportunities for our residents.”

Sepulveda said Harlingen is ready to house additional SpaceX employees and is “well suited for headquarters operations.”

“Harlingen offers a supportive business environment, robust infrastructure and a strong sense of community that make it location for both residential and corporation expansion,” she said.

Nick Mitchell-Bennett, executive director of the nonprofit Come Dream Come Build, which is committed to increasing the availability of quality, affordable housing for low-income residents, said Brownsville and Cameron County better get ready.

“It’s exciting and could be a huge game changer for our community,” he said. “But if our population grows too big too fast, it will put a massive strain on the housing market.”

In those situations, it’s typically low-income residents who feel it the soonest and suffer the longest lasting impact, Mitchell-Bennett said.

“We just need to be prepared as soon as possible,” he said.

Editorial: Attorney general should stop harassing migrant aid services with no evidence of wrongdoing

Sister Norma Pimentel at the Catholic Charities Humanitarian Respite Center on Monday, June 20, 2022, in McAllen. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

Texas once sought to be a leader in the fight against lawsuit abuse and nuisance legal attacks. Today, state officials are perhaps the worst at misusing our legal system — and taxpayers’ money — to score political points.

State Attorney General Ken Paxton, who presumes to champion Christian principles, is pestering church-based organizations across Texas that provide services to legal immigrants and refugees.

Paxton is demanding that Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley and other organizations prove they aren’t “illegally transporting … migrants across the border,” according to a spokesman for the attorney general’s office. Paxton has taken similar action against Angeles Sin Fronteras in Mission and Team Brownsville — defying a court order from state District Judge Francisco X. Dominguez, who demanded that Paxton stop his “outrageous and intolerable” efforts to shut down another target, Association House in El Paso.

Such abuse is unsettling — even hypocritical — from a man who himself has faced indictment on securities fraud charges, impeachment in the legislature and revolt from his own workers who have accused him of various abuses and misdeeds.

Catholic Charities responded to Paxton’s demands for its records by submitting more than 100 pages of documents, but its officials very appropriately are challenging a subpoena to face state prosecutors.

Judge J.R. Flores of the 139th state District Court in Edinburg has said he could rule on the matter within the next week.

We trust Flores will recognize that criminal procedure requires that prosecutors provide evidence supporting their allegations. Paxton hasn’t done so; he’s merely cited letters from Gov. Greg Abbott and Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Dallas, who both accuse the aid organizations of promoting illegal migrant trafficking. They offered no evidence of actual crimes, and Paxton’s office hasn’t filed charges against any of the centers.

The groups are providing services to people who primarily are brought by federal officials who have processed the immigrants’ visa applications — which gives them legal status while their cases are under review.

All this means little to Paxton, Abbott and other state officials who already have spent billions of taxpayers’ dollars on their anti-immigration efforts — money that could have improved state infrastructure or provided myriad services to Texas residents where we already rank last or near last in many key service categories. The officials’ blatant disregard for those who might have valid reasons to seek refuge in our country, for Dominguez’s order and for the principles of jurisprudence is disappointing, especially in a state where more than 5 million of their constituents — more than 17% of our total population — are foreign-born.

Abbott loves to tout the “Texas economic miracle,” but he seems naïve to think it could have occurred without the hard work, dedication and exuberance of these foreign-born fellow Texans.

If Paxton, Abbott or any other official has evidence of actual misdeeds by any of these groups, they need to show it, or stop playing politics, stop the divisive warfare, and be leaders for all Texans — or get out of the way of those who will.

Global tech disruption affects RGV air travel

Passengers check-in at Avelo Airlines in Brownsville South Padre Island International Airport Wednesday, May 17, 2023, during an official ribbon cutting ceremony celebrating the inaugural nonstop flights, which also include flights to Los Angeles, California. (Miguel Roberts | The Brownsville Herald)

A global technology outage directly affected Rio Grande Valley air travel Friday morning, delaying flights at all three airports.

The disruption of Microsoft 365 caused similar issues for air travel across the world. A defective content update by U.S. firm Crowdstrike impacted Microsoft’s Windows Operating System, the company reported.

McAllen and Brownsville/South Padre Island airports advised of travel complications via social media.

“Due to a global technology issue affecting multiple airlines this morning, please verify your flight status directly with your carrier,” Brownsville/South Padre Island International Airport posted Friday morning on Facebook. “Expect longer lines and wait times, and allow extra time for your travel.”

An airport worker handles a cart at the McAllen Miller International Airport on Monday, Feb. 7, 2022, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

McAllen International Airport encouraged travelers to check their airline apps for updates.

“Airlines are experiencing minimal delays and cancellations due to the global IT outage,” a Facebook post advised. “As this is an ongoing situation, please remember to contact your Airline for the latest updates.”

Valley International Airport’s arrivals/departures board at flytheValley.com showed a 7:55 a.m. Southwest flight from Houston arriving 186 minutes late to Harlingen, but many afternoon flights were listed as “on time.”

Via X on Friday morning, @RudyForTexas wrote, “A Delta flight made it out of McAllen but I think it is going to land at the wrong airport.”

After Crowdstrike stated that it was a defect in an update, it also added that the incident was “not a security incident or cyberattack.”

“The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed,” said a statement from Crowdstrike. Microsoft, meanwhile, said “the underlying cause has been fixed,” but that residual impacts continue to affect some of its Microsoft 365 apps and services.

Edinburg taps Josie Ramirez as new city attorney

Edinburg City Hall on Monday, Jan. 13, 2020, in Edinburg. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

EDINBURG — Three months after City Attorney Omar Ochoa announced his intention to leave the city, officials here have at last chosen his replacement.

After a lengthy meeting Tuesday evening, the Edinburg City Council unanimously approved hiring Josephine L. “Josie” Ramirez to become Edinburg’s first in-house city attorney.

Ramirez, who currently serves as an assistant city attorney in McAllen, has an extensive history in municipal and local government law, a fact alluded to by Edinburg Mayor Ramiro Garza Jr. after Tuesday’s council meeting.

“She’s worked here in the county. She started the transition there with the county from when they used to contract out (for legal services) kind of like we did (with) a third party law firm,” Garza said.

Ramirez served as the chief of the civil litigation division for the Hidalgo County District Attorney’s Office. She began working for the DA’s office in 2010, according to a publication by the State Bar of Texas.

Ramirez has also previously worked for the McAllen firm Thornton, Biechlin, Reynolds & Guerra.

Earlier this year, Ramirez began serving as an assistant attorney under McAllen City Attorney Isaac Tawil.

Tawil spoke highly of Ramirez and her bonafides.

“Ms. Ramirez is an experienced, talented and practical lawyer who has dedicated much of her professional career to public service,” Tawil said Friday.

“I am sure that she will do well in her new role,” he said.

Over in Edinburg, officials are excited about starting a new chapter in the city’s legal department.

Currently, the county’s second largest city relies on contracting out for legal services.

For the last five years, that responsibility has fallen to prominent Edinburg civil and personal injury attorney, Omar Ochoa.

But as the city continues to experience a development and population boom, Ochoa realized that Edinburg would benefit from an attorney who could devote their full and complete attention to the city’s legal needs.

In early-March, Ochoa announced his intention to resign from the city once his successor could be found. In the meantime, elected officials appeared to concur with Ochoa’s assessment of the city’s need to evolve its legal department.

To that end, the council began exploring the idea of making the office of city attorney a staff position.

A five-member ad hoc charter review committee has also proposed a charter amendment that would codify within the city charter that the city attorney be a full-time city staffer.

Garza, the mayor, said Ramirez’s experience guiding the county through a similar transition will serve her well as Edinburg begins a new chapter of its own.

“(She) has a lot of experience that I think could help us as we do our transition,” Garza said.

Ramirez was one of at least eight people who applied to be the Edinburg city attorney.

The council interviewed her and two other candidates with local government experience two weeks ago.

They included Isaac Sulemana, who currently serves as the La Joya city attorney and as chief of staff for Hidalgo County Judge Richard F. Cortez, and Carlos Y. Benavides IV, who operates his own law firm out of Austin.

All three candidates served stints within the Hidalgo County DA’s office.

And in May, the council interviewed its first round of candidates, former federal prosecutors Robert “Bobby” Wells Jr. and Patricia Rigney.

Rigney — once the Pharr city attorney — was largely thought to be the frontrunner for the position. But shortly after sitting for back-to-back interviews in both Edinburg and Mission, Rigney accepted a $230,000 offer from the west county city dubbed, “The Place to Be.”

It’s unclear when Ramirez’s first day in Edinburg will be, but the mayor said the transition will likely happen in the next month.


Editor’s note: This story was updated with new information and to correct when Ramirez began serving as assistant attorney in McAllen.

San Benito school board goes with Fred Perez as superintendent finalist

Fred Perez
Fred Perez

SAN BENITO — After a two-month statewide search, the school board Friday unanimously selected acting Superintendent Alfredo “Fred” Perez as the finalist for the district’s superintendent job.

After a three-hour closed session meeting, board members picked Perez from a short list after narrowing a field of 27 candidates.

Now, board members are waiting through a state-mandated 30-day period before Perez would take office.

Perez has served as acting superintendent since last September, when the past school board appointed him to the job after former Superintendent Theresa Servellon resigned three weeks following her suspension.

“Fred’s greatest attributes were shown in the past 10 months,” board President Orlando Lopez said after the meeting, noting much of the district’s staff supports Perez. “He pretty much stabilized the district and created a positive culture and working and learning environment.”

After working 20 years in education, Perez was serving as the district’s Migrant and Federal Programs director when he took over as acting superintendent.

During his 16-year district tenure, Perez served as San Benito High School’s assistant principal, Miller Jordan Middle School’s principal and Gateway to Graduation Academy’s principal after working as a special education teacher and special education program coordinator.

“I look forward to the challenge,” Perez said after the board’s vote, noting his wife and son work as teachers here. “I am grateful to have the opportunity to continue to lead this district. I’ve made very good connections with the board members. We have a goal and we’re working toward that. It starts at the top and it flows down to the administration, straight down to the teachers and right to the students.”

In May, board members hired the Texas Association of School Boards for $10,500 to help conduct the search drawing 27 candidates for the job.

By Friday, board members had narrowed the field to a short list including Perez and another candidate, Lopez said.

“It was a great pool of candidates,” he said. “The board dissected them and we came up with the candidate we felt was the best fit for our district at this time.”

As part of the search process, officials conducted a survey, posting a link on the district’s social media channels while emailing parents and staff.

The school board “wanted to include the San Benito community in the search for the next superintendent,” board Vice President Ariel Cruz-Vela said earlier, adding the survey posed questions such as “what are the professional and personal characteristics that the board should look for in the next superintendent.”

The school board received 455 responses, 47% from parents and members of the community, 52% from staff and 1% from students, she said.