HOUSTON – The family of as man shot and killed while working at the Houston Farmers Market is opening up about the loss of their loved one.
Damon Price, 36, was shot after confronting two teens who were allegedly trying to steal a golf cart from the Houston Heights business early Thursday morning.
According to the Houston Police Department, a fight ensued after Price confronted them. That’s when a 14-year-old pulled out a gun and shot Price, killing him.
On Saturday, just two days after he was killed, Price’s fiancé is opening up only to KPRC 2′s Gage Goulding.
“To know Damon is to love Damon, and he was truly loved,” Ashley Thomas said. “A great father, a great friend, provider, everything. He was everything to me.”
Price, at just 36 years old, was murdered while working the early morning shift as a gatekeeper at the Houston Farmers Market.
He leaves behind his fiance and the six kids they share between them.
Damon Price and his fiancé Ashley Thomas. Price, 36, was killed when two teens shot and killed him while trying to steal a golf cart from the Houston Farmers Market. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)
Ashley Thomas: “I’m gonna say my kids because he love my kids like they were his own. And that was my babies, too. I know they hurt.”
Gage Goulding: “They have to grow up without a father now, your kids. That was a father figure for them to grow up without that.”
Ashley Thomas: “For four years. They [were] so used to him coming in the door. And now to see that he can’t come in and not to hear him say. His words ‘Off your ass, on your feet’ is, this is crazy, to not hear those words.”
Gage Goulding: “What are you going to miss most about Damon?”
Ashley Thomas: “The way he loved me and he loved on me.”
She didn’t realize something happened until she called down to the Houston Farmers Market on Thursday morning. She sensed that something was wrong when she woke up.
“We have a routine, she said. “And the routine was if I don’t text him before he text me, we better text each other and I did not get it text, a ‘Good morning, baby.’”
When she reached the security guard at the Houston Farmers Market, she learned the love of her life was gone.
“That’s when she told me to sit down. And I’m like, ‘Why, I gotta sit down?’ And she tells me. I still feel like I’m in a dream and I pinch me. But it’s my reality. Yeah, he’s not here.”
Damon was shot and killed by a 14-year-old who was trying to steal a golf cart. When he confronted them, a fight started and one of the teens pulled out a gun, shooting and killing Damon.
Gage Goulding: “These are teenagers that did this and took this man not only out of your life, but out of your children’s life, out of his children’s life.”
Ashley Thomas: “I can’t—I can’t even process it. What are y’all doing? I can’t even be angry because these are children. I don’t know how to be angry at kids when I have kids myself.”
Gage Goulding: “Do you think that there’s a violence problem here in Houston?”
Ashley Thomas: “Of course, and it needs to come to an end.”
Damon’s family is planning on a balloon release to celebrate his life next week.
HOUSTON – It’s almost like an evil game of monkey in the middle. The residents of the Durham Heights Apartments in Houston Heights being the monkey caught in the middle of CenterPoint Energy on one side, and their apartment managers on the other side.
For more than a week, they’ve been without power and running water after a severe weather outbreak in the Houston area.
The apartment complex has a water system that relies on an electric pump to move water to each of the apartments on the corner of Durham Drive and West 26th Street.
Relief was in sight when CenterPoint Energy came to replace a big green transformer outside of the apartment building.
However, when they turned the transformer on, they found yet another problem.
“Last night, CenterPoint Energy’s team replaced the transformer that serves the Durham Heights Apartments,” a CenterPoint Energy spokesperson said. “Upon attempting to re-energize the complex, the team determined that the customer has a cable fault within their conductors. Unfortunately, until the customer fixes their equipment, this complex cannot be energized.”
Residents woke up on Friday to yet another day of blistering warm temperatures in their rented homes with a forecast that only has the mercury moving upwards into dangerous territory.
The heat is on!🥵It’s the “unofficial” start to summer this Memorial Day weekend & it will certainly feel like it. Heat indices in the triple digits are expected. Even though there are no heat advisories in effect yet, make sure to practice heat safety! Stay hydrated & cool! pic.twitter.com/EnVqSX1SOP
“It’s hot as heck in my apartment,” Kathryn Guthrie said.
“I stayed here up until last night. Last night was kind of my breaking point,” Tannis Rhodes added.
They’re looking for some kind of answer, some sort of light at the end of the tunnel.
According to residents, they’ve been getting emails from the apartment manager, but they’ve been full of false promises and no real updates.
When KPRC 2′s Gage Goulding went to get answers, he was met with the classic response of: “No comment.”
Gage: “Hi. How are you?”
Apartment Manager: “Good.”
Gage: “My name is Gage. I’m with KPRC 2 News.”
Apartment Manager: “Yes. I saw you yesterday.”
Gage: “Yeah. So, what’s going on?”
Apartment Manager: “I will have to just, you know, no comment right now. I was not able to or at liberty to discuss anything, but everything’s kind of like being worked on. But we’re not at liberty. No comment right now.”
Gage: “Okay, so CenterPoint has you energized. So, the is internal, right?”
Apartment Manager: “Like I said, no comment right now. And if you can just step over here for me.”
The apartment manager isn’t lying; work is being done. But there’s no inkling as to where the problem is or when the solution will be delivered with power being resorted to the residents who are expected to pay rent on the first of the month.
“For her to just, like, not say anything and not give us like an update or real actual answers is very frustrating for me at least,” Guthrie said.
While the apartment complex’s electrical contractors were working, we asked for our own third-party professional electrician to take a look at the situation and give their best judgement without actually touching the problem itself.
“I don’t know why they would have a fault in one of the wires from just this [transformer] going out,” John Longorio from Panther Electric said.
Finding the answer and the problem amid the mess of wires might be a lot harder than it sounds.
Gage: “So, they have to go through each individual wire until they find. “
John: “Yeah, that’s what I would be doing for.”
Gage: “A long day ahead of them.”
John: “If one of them or if they find that if they find the short, then it is probably going to be a matter of them pulling the wire out and pulling it back in.”
Until the issue is found, a solution is drawn up and the problem fixed—all the residents here can do is wait.
“I’m going out of town for Memorial Day weekend and really if it’s not on by the time I get back from that. Yeah, I’m getting out of here,” Matt Murray said.
KPRC2 asked IR Living, the owner of the apartment complex, for more information. Our messages were not returned.
Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.
A New, Hip, High tech Retirement Environment Debuts in Houston
The Watermark at Houston Heights, Houston
The Watermark at Houston Heights
Today’s Baby Boomers are a larger, healthier, and more active demographic than their folks were, out-sizing them by 62%. The 75+ population in the U.S. is projected to grow 50% in the next ten years, doubling in the next 20. Do we want to live forever? Maybe: this generation works hard at longevity. In fact, this month’s National Geographic asks, on the cover: Can aging be cured?
While scientists produce longevity diets and breakthroughs in Alzheimer meds, today’s seniors are retiring later, traveling more, and embarking on non-traditional work/live/play paths, which includes the urban lifestyle as well as proximity to their children.
But getting old remains a challenge —- the body falters, the mind deteriorates, diets and movement are restricted.
A new Houston adult community is integrating those challenges into a first of its kind luxury senior lifestyle real estate offering. The Watermark at Houston Heights, the firstÉlan Collection in Texas, presents an independent and assisted living senior community aimed at residents seeking a vibrant and active lifestyle up to, well, as long as they can. Highly tech-enabled , the concept focuses on aging in place, rewarding healthy living, access to senior and longevity resources, and top healthcare providers under one roof.
The Watermark at Houston Heights common space
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark is like living in a Four Seasons with some structure and a personal aging concierge.
The Watermark is located in the smack of Houston’s vibrant Houston Heights, known for hip retail concepts, restaurants and culture. It joins eight other thriving Élan properties in upscale communities such as Palm Beach, Coral Gables, Napa, Los Angeles, Brooklyn, Tucson and now, Georgetown (TX).
The Élan concept is resort-like senior environments with curated technology assist woven into everyday life, all to soften the blows and deficits of aging.
The Watermark at Houston Heights signature restaurant
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights Indulge Spa
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights Indulge Spa
The Watermark at Houston Heights
Elan was conceived by a Boomer FOR Boomers.
“Several years ago, retirement living CEOs were talking,” says David Freshwater, CEO of Watermark Retirement Communities and an industry veteran.
“I asked, ‘would any of you live in your communities when you get to that age?’ There was a pause… and then everyone said, ‘no we wouldn’t”
“That hit me,” says Freshwater. “It hit me hard.”
David Freshwater is a 35-year veteran of the retirement industry. And he is officially tossing out the word, ‘retirement’. Freshwater, inching toward 69, was talking to me from Wyoming. He lives in Tucson. Constantly on the go, he is the prototype for the senior community he created at Elan. Freshwater conceived the Elan concept to cater to affluent seniors but to offer more —- a lifestyle shunning ageism, promoting vibrant, spirited living at various care levels, all wrapped into a five-star wellness resort.
And he had no shame about pulling in technology to assist.
Throw out the obvious alert buttons that scream OLD PERSON. Enter PalCare alert: discreet wearables coupled with a community-wide modular emergency call system for real-time location alerts to falls and accurate location tracking.
Then there’s the building’s private cable TV station, a Radiant Channel Insertion, with a wide array of well-being (and exclusive) programming from yoga, meditation, scholarly courses, to movies, theater, even musical performances to be enjoyed at home.
A trip to Tuscany? Skiing when your knees aren’t up to it? There is EngageVR-Virtual Reality, Oculus technology to offer virtual experiences replicating what residents may have enjoyed in the past, but can no longer do. We’ve seen this technology used abundantly in open houses in Dallas.
Let’s face it, we do get more forgetful as we age. But there are ways to stave that off. Thus cognitive health and memory training classes through UCLA’s renown Longevity Center are offered to help residents stay ahead of, or deal with, aging deficits.
Since technology solutions are incorporated into the fabric of Watermark’s communities, a Technology Concierge is available to assist residents and their families with the frustrations of processes and adoption rates.
Coming of age in the Covid era, Watermark integrated the latest technology to screen and track communicable diseases for a high risk community. GoHealthID is a web-based software app custom built for WatermarkRetirement Communities that tracks and reports associate and resident COVID-19 testing and vaccinations. Super high tech, the platform leverages blockchain technology, linked to cryptography, with timestamp and transaction data that is HIPPA secure.
An Accushield system replaces sign-in books for visitors and third-party caregivers with a kiosk-based, sign-in system that also records temperatures and asks health-related screening questions.
The Watermark at Houston Heights virtual reality fun
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights art studio
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights heated pool
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights gardening center
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights golf simulation
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights movie night
The Watermark at Houston Heights
Freshwater wrapped it all into beautiful real estate: The Watermark at Houston Heights is a stunning seven-story residential tower of 222 residences (201 senior living up to almost 1500 square feet, 21 memory care) designed by Architect of Record Kirskey, with Munoz + Albin Architecture and Planning, with sweeping skyline views of Houston. Residences are studio and two-bedroom with open floor plans, designer kitchens or kitchenettes, quartz countertops and tile backsplashes, and modern bathrooms with walk-in disability accessible showers. Most residences include in-suite washing machine and dryers as well as ranges. Expansive floor-to-ceiling windows allow abundant natural light.
Common areas incorporate niche social spaces accented with curated art, as well as terraces, lounges, a state-of-the-art fitness center, art gallery and studio creation space, movie theater, library, heated outdoor swimming pool, activity lawn, luxury salon and spa, virtual-reality lounge and golf simulator.
The Watermark at Houston Heights residential living unit
The Watermark at Houston Heights
The Watermark at Houston Heights residential living/living room
The Watermark at Houston Heights
“This is a re-start, not a retirement,” says Freshwater. “We are trying to shed the word “retirement” in our corporate brand because it doesn’t reflect nor encapsulate what is actually going on within our communities.” Elan charges a one-time membership fee with monthly rentals that vary in each community.
Years ago, at age 55, Freshwater sensed his company was not building products he himself would likely consume.
“If we are NOT building a product I want to live in, we are doing something very wrong,” he told colleagues.
From the beautiful real estate to the daily activities and food, life is carefully planned and crafted to stimulate the mind, body and souls of its residents.
The Watermark at Houston Heights, The W Lounge
The Watermark at Houston Heights
About the food: Seasons, a signature restaurant is on site, along with other casual options and at-home dining that can adjust recipes and favored signature dishes. There are healthcare integrations through the Alzheimer’s Association®, and a collaboration with Baylor College of Medicine. The entire Élan Collection is also currently in collaboration negotiations with representatives from the Cleveland Clinic.
“More seniors prefer city life because of proximity to arts, top medical care, and services, not to mention their families” says Freshwater. “And in their later years, people tend to want to experience rich learning possibilities, and grow.”
Like going back to college: Watermark University offers residents learning and whole-person well-being through interactive live lectures, courses, and activities exclusive to the property.
Wall Street is paying attention. The compulsively comprehensive concept has attracted blue chip investors, such as Prudential, Goldman Sachs, and Kayne Anderson — Kayne Anderson has invested in five of the Elan communities. Expansion is in the air: another Elan prototype is almost complete in Georgetown, Texas, just north of Austin. Investors believe the next generation of seniors will be a ripe market in terms of sheer numbers and disposable income: a fixed-income clientele who will not be so affected by inflationary trends or income dips. They will age, of course, but demand their dignity, every bit as much as they demanded the right to vote when they were just babes at 18.