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Tag: local news

  • University of St. Thomas offers a degree for students with learning differences

    University of St. Thomas offers a degree for students with learning differences

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    The University of St. Thomas offers a two-year program designed specifically for students who have learning differences that may interfere with academic success in a traditional collegiate setting.

    Dr. Tera Torres, founder of the Associate of Applied Science in Pragmatic Studies program, joined KPRC 2 News Today at 10 alongside a current student, Nick Nilson, to talk about the program. You can watch the entire interview above.

    You can learn more about the program on their website.

    What’s the degree plan?

    According to their website, using Universal Design for Learning (UDL) as an instructional modality, students in this program will spend 12-15 hours per week in the classroom with a cohort of 12-15 students, which allows for more personalized instruction.

    The Associate of Applied Science in Pragmatic Studies prepares and influences socially responsible citizens who will transform and sustain communities. Graduates will possess the knowledge, skills, and dispositions needed to meet postsecondary goals and increase employment outcomes. Graduates will also demonstrate that learning differences will no longer be an obstacle for success.

    Requirements:

    According to their website, admission to the program requires high school completion and a current full and individual psychoeducational evaluation (FIE) that indicates an IQ within 2 standard deviations of the mean of standard scores.

    Applicants must show reading, writing, and math levels at a fourth-grade level or better (using standardized assessment tools). They also need one recommendation letter from a non-family member who has direct knowledge of the applicant’s academic skills and community citizenship.

    An interview between the program faculty/staff and the student applicant is also required for admission.

    Information from all data sources (FIE, recommendation letter, interview, and high school transcript verifying completion) are used for admissions decisions and for educational planning purposes.

    How much does it cost?

    Tuition for this program is $393 per credit hour.*

    While scholarships are not offered for this program, federal and state financial aid may be available for those who qualify. Learn more about FAFSA and TASFA.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Kendyl Turner

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  • Terry Bryan Rivera arrest: How Border Patrol caught Houston child murder suspect walking over bridge from Mexico

    Terry Bryan Rivera arrest: How Border Patrol caught Houston child murder suspect walking over bridge from Mexico

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    Brownsville – Border patrol agents found child murder suspect Terry Bryan Rivera a few steps away from the Mexico border on Monday.

    Sheriff Ed Gonzales posted on X that Rivera was arrested as he attempted to cross back from Mexico into the U.S.

    Rivera was on the run, a fugitive accused of killing Carlos Fernandez, his ex-girlfriend’s 12-year-old son. As he was walking across the Gateway International Bridge in Brownsville, Rivera was flagged for his capital murder warrant when he showed his entry documents to U.S. border agents. They matched his picture and fingerprints with the National Crime Information Systems, a database used by law enforcement across the country.

    “As Spring Break traffic begins to pick up, our frontline CBP officers continue to maintain strict vigilance,” said Acting Port Director Michael Reyes. “These types of apprehensions reinforce and perfectly illustrate the importance of CBP’s commitment to its border security mission.”

    The 27-year-old Houston man fled the area after the March 4 murder, with the help of his mother, now-jailed in Houston for hindering his apprehension.

    Rivera’s accused of shooting into his ex-girlfriend’s home that night.

    Carlos was trying to protect his two younger sisters, who are also Rivera’s daughters when he was hit and killed.

    Rivera was caught just hours after Carlos’s funeral.


    MORE ON THIS

    2 Lamar CISD elementary school teachers die in murder-suicide

    Beloved pediatrician’s family suing Conroe apartment complex over her murder

    Source: Texans acquiring running back Joe Mixon in trade from Bengals

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Karen Araiza

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  • ‘I’m sorry dad. I love you:’ Family pleads for clues after man shot, killed in SE Houston

    ‘I’m sorry dad. I love you:’ Family pleads for clues after man shot, killed in SE Houston

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    HOUSTON – A family is asking for help trying to find the person who shot and killed a man in Houston’s South Park neighborhood.

    The victim, Willie Earl Johnson, 56, was shot outside of his home at the corner of Glenhurst Drive and South Wayside Drive in South Park on Friday.

    The Houston Police Department said they got a call around 8 p.m. from a neighbor after hearing a gunshot.

    It’s only when firefighters arrived on the scene that they found Johnson’s body laying out near the driveway and sidewalk.

    “The only thing we know right now is that a neighbor heard a gunshot called, and other folks were out there, HFD actually found the body,” said Lt. Willkens of the Houston Police Department.

    On Sunday, his family spoke Only with KPRC 2 News, pleading for any clues that might help police capture whoever killed Willy.

    “He was, a homebody, a father, a husband, a brother, a cousin, an uncle,” said Meka, his sister. “He’s always cheerful, like helping.”

    “I’m sorry, dad. I love you. I always love you. I wish I was there with you when that happened. And I’m. You know, you’ll always be in my heart,” his daughter Myra added while fighting back tears.

    Willy is the latest victim of a senseless shooting. His family said Willy lost one of his kids several years ago to gun violence.

    This time, Willy was left to die alone outside his home.

    “Nobody was there when we got there. They just left him there by himself. He was there on the ground, nobody seeing nothing,” Meka said.

    That’s why they need any clues out there that might lead detectives to answers and closure for this family.

    “Just call just. You ain’t gotta tell them who you is,” Meka said. “We ain’t saying you got a snitch or nothing like that, just say whodunit.”

    You can submit an anonymous tip to Crime Stoppers of Houston by calling 713-222-TIPS (8477) or through their website.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Southwest Airlines delays, cancels dozens of Florida flights as Texas Spring Break begins

    Southwest Airlines delays, cancels dozens of Florida flights as Texas Spring Break begins

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    HOUSTON – Southwest Airlines has delayed and canceled dozens of flights from Houston to Florida and vice versa due to thunderstorms and severe weather in the area.

    Across the country, more than 1,400 flights have been either canceled or delayed, according to FlightAware.

    “Thunderstorms in the Southeast are impacting our operation. Our Teams are focused on our Operation and providing Hospitality to our Customers. We apologize for any inconvenience and appreciate our Customers’ patience while we work to get them safely to their destinations,” Southwest Airlines wrote in a statement.

    Travelers headed to Florida from other states are also seeing issues.

    “Our flight was actually canceled and rebooked till Monday the 11th,” said Jacky Valles from El Paso. “They said the weather, they blamed it was a weather.”

    The Valles family is trying to get to Miami to catch their first ever family cruise.

    After sitting at Hobby Airport in Houston for hours trying to get rescheduled, her brother came running over just before 6 p.m. with the good news.

    “We have the tickets to Orlando,” Erik Valles said. “We’re getting there. I’m getting on that cruise. Even though I’m afraid of water, I can’t swim. I’m going.”

    United Airlines also reported some canceled and delayed flights to cities in Florida.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Cynthia Miranda, Gage Goulding

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  • United Airlines has turbulent week of airplane incidents, including Houston, all with Boeing aircraft

    United Airlines has turbulent week of airplane incidents, including Houston, all with Boeing aircraft

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    HOUSTON, TexasUnited Airlines closed out the week with three incidents and a federal agency launching a probe into an issue with one of their aircraft last month.

    Two of the incidents involve airplanes landing or taking off at airports in Houston.

    Starting with an engine fire, to a wheel falling off a plane and even a jet skidding off the runway.

    All of the incidents involve one of United’s fleets of Boeing aircraft, putting even further scrutiny on the plane manufacturer that was already under a microscope.

    The week started with sparks on Monday.

    A United Airlines flight from Houston to Fort Myers, Florida had an engine catch fire midflight while over the Gulf of Mexico. The Boeing 737-900ER airplane returned to Houston’s Bush Intercontinental Airport without any further issues.

    “United flight 1118 returned to Houston shortly after takeoff after flames were seen in the engine,” the company said in a statement. “The flight landed safely and passengers deplaned normally. Our investigation revealed that the engine had ingested litter (bubble wrap) that was on the airfield. A new aircraft took our customers to Fort Myers later that evening and the aircraft involved is back in service.”

    Fast forward to Thursday in San Francisco. A United jet headed to Japan was forced to land at Los Angeles International Airport after losing a tire during takeoff.

    “The last departure lost the wheel on departure. So we’re going to have to shut the runway down,” said air traffic controllers on the radio.

    The tire from the Boeing 777-200 landed on parked cars below. No one was injured in this incident either.

    “United flight 35 lost one tire after takeoff from San Francisco and landed safely at LAX,” a United spokesperson said. “Our team quickly arranged for a new aircraft to take customers to Osaka later that evening. We will work with customers as well as with the owners of the damaged vehicles in SFO to ensure their needs are addressed.”

    Also on Thursday, the National Transportation Safety Board announcing another probe into Boeing.

    This time, they’re looking at “stuck rudder pedals” following an issue on a United jet landing at Newark Airport in New Jersey. The plan was traveling from the Bahamas and was landing when the issue occurred.

    “We appreciate the NTSB’s work on this preliminary report and will continue to fully support their investigation,” a Boeing spokesperson told KPRC 2′s Gage Goulding on Friday. “We worked closely with United Airlines to diagnose the rudder response issue observed during two 737-8 flights in early February. With coordination with United, the issue was successfully resolved with the replacement of three parts and the airplane returned to service last month.”

    The week ended with another incident involving one of United’s Boeing jets.

    A plane landing at Bush Intercontinental on Friday morning skidded off the runway. The plane came to a rest, tilting to the left side with the nose gear sticking up in the air.

    “After landing in rainy conditions, United 2477 exited the taxiway into a grassy area. All passengers were bused to the terminal and assisted by our team with their onward connections and other needs,” a United spokesperson said.

    The string of incidents involving Boeing aircraft now puts an even bigger microscope on the plane builder.

    “The bottom line is, they’ve been having some serious issues,” said aviation expert Pete Trabucco.

    While the talk of the town has been a younger group of pilots trying to fill a shortage of airplane captains, Trabucco says the cockpit isn’t the only place scaping by to find staff.

    “There’s also a widening gap between retiring aviation mechanics and those that are in the field,” he said. “In fact, the Bureau of Labor Statistics says that we need to actually put 1,200 jobs together.”

    Meanwhile, some travelers are looking to book a flight on any plane but a Boeing.

    “When I go on a plane, I expect to get here safe,” said Reese Bryant, who flew on an Airbus to Houston. “I’m [going to] pay the extra $50 bucks more because I refuse to go on a plane that’s tearing apart in the air.”

    While that might be a preference at this point, air travel is still by far the safest method of travel.

    “It’s still the safest mode of transportation. That will never change,” Trabucco said.

    KPRC2 asked for comment from the Federal Department of Transportation, but we did not receive a reply.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • ‘The worst feeling I’ve ever had on a fire:’ Texas Panhandle firefighter loses home while saving others

    ‘The worst feeling I’ve ever had on a fire:’ Texas Panhandle firefighter loses home while saving others

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    STINNETT, Texas – A firefighter in the Texas Panhandle came home to find his house engulfed in flames by the same fire he’s fighting.

    Charles Clark left work Tuesday afternoon after hearing that the fire was headed towards his home.

    By the time he got home, it was already too late.

    “The back of my house was already on fire,” Clark said.

    He could’ve done what a lot of people would do: sit and watch his life burn in front of his own eyes.

    Instead, he did what he’s trained to do. Not put out fires, but keep the fire from spreading to his neighbors.

    Thanks to his work and the work of his fellow volunteer firefighters in Stinnett, they saved several homes—including his next-door neighbor.

    “It’s a decision that wasn’t an easy one to make, but it was the right decision,” Clark said. “My house was not savable. Everything in this house can be replaced.”

    Gage: “That says a heck of a lot about somebody.”

    Charles: “I’ve heard that a lot here recently as well. I’ve been told, you know, by several people, that what [I] did was heroic. I don’t see it that way. It was extremely difficult to walk away from my house, but also knew that if we tried to do something to save my house, that my neighbor’s house might burn.”

    Roughly a half dozen homes burned in his community, including the home of Joyce Blankenship, who died in the fire.

    The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Why today is critical in the fight against largest wildfire in Texas history

    Why today is critical in the fight against largest wildfire in Texas history

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    FRITCH, Texas – The largest wildfire ever to burn in the State of Texas continues its path of destruction across the Texas Panhandle.

    The Smokehouse Creek Fire is one of four wildfires that have consumed a collective 1,249,500 acres of land.

    Rain, snow and frigid temperatures on Thursday helped firefighters play catch up against the fire that’s been nearly unstoppable up until this point.

    “The precipitation is helping us out. It’s keeping that fire at bay,” said Houston Fire Department Captain Beau Moreno. “A lot of the time, the heat is so intense that you can’t get close enough to even put some water on it. The snow is actually helping us. I didn’t expect to come from Houston, Texas and fight fire in the snow.”

    As of Friday morning, the Smokehouse Creek Fire remains just 5% contained.

    Now, all eyes are on the weather – which could make or break firefighter’s efforts to contain the fire.

    Forecasts call for highs in the 70s, which will only dry up the land that just received much-needed precipitation.

    On top of that, wind will increase and relative humidity values will drop. Both are bad news for firefighters, who traveled from across the state, to try and help save these communities.

    “Right now, we need to make sure that the fire is completely out,” Cpt. Moreno told KPRC2 on Thursday. “It’s a bad situation, and we don’t want to make the situation worse by not hitting these spots right here that you see still burning.”

    The Texas A&M Forest Service is predicting a high wildfire danger on Friday. That risk increases to very high for the entire Texas Panhandle on Saturday and Sunday.

    The National Weather Service in Amarillo predicts critical fire weather to return this weekend, creating a prime condition for wildfires to flourish.

    A Fire Weather Watch has been issued beginning 12 p.m. on Saturday and running through midnight on Monday. The National Weather Service says a Red Flag Threat will be present throughout the weekend as well.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • ‘North Carolina has a problem’: Task force discusses rise in child fentanyl deaths

    ‘North Carolina has a problem’: Task force discusses rise in child fentanyl deaths

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    RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) – More children in North Carolina are dying from fentanyl in recent years. The North Carolina Child Fatality Task Force took a closer look at those deaths and what could be done to prevent them during its meeting Thursday.

    The N.C. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner Chief Toxicologist Sandra C. Bishop-Freeman shared the harrowing data with the task force.

    “It has become clear that fentanyl is the first and foremost opioid that is currently causing illicit deaths in the pediatric population,” said Bishop-Freeman.

    Bishop-Freeman said 108 North Carolina children died from fentanyl in the past decade, most of them are teenagers or are babies and toddlers.

    “We have older individuals that are using the drug recreationally, either knowingly or unknowingly, and toddlers and infants that are finding the drug through exploration,” Bishop-Freeman said.

    She said there’s been a huge increase in the past few years, with 35 fentanyl deaths in 2022 for teenagers and children below 5.

    Marty McCaffrey sits on the state committee that reviews child deaths.

    “It’s always been the worst meeting and the most horrific meeting I go to every month, but over the last couple of years I will say, if it’s possible, it’s gotten even more horrible,” McCaffrey said.

    McCaffrey and others in the meeting said when it comes to solutions, safe storage is critical.

    He suggests giving mothers who have known substance abuse issues secure boxes. He also suggests that after a mother gives birth hospitals should send her home with Narcan if doctors know the children in that home may be at risk for coming in contact with drugs.

    “I mean, we’re going to have to accept, and really change our culture, about how we deal with some of these moms, all of these moms, with substance use, and recognize there’s good harm reduction strategies we have to start employing,” McCaffrey said.

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    Gilat Melamed

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  • ‘You can’t see anything:’ Laser strikes blinding pilots over Houston

    ‘You can’t see anything:’ Laser strikes blinding pilots over Houston

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    HOUSTON, Texas – More and more people are shining lasers at pilots flying above Houston.

    In 2023 alone, it happened well over 400 times. Each of those occasions temporarily blinding a pilot flying at several hundred miles per hour, putting lives in the air and on the ground in danger.

    A laser strike is when someone on the ground points a laser at an aircraft. The laser hits the cockpit of the airplane or helicopter, often obstructing the pilot’s vision temporarily. In some serious cases, a laser strike can lead to injury.

    According to data from the FAA, pilots flying above the Houston area reported 473 laser strikes.

    One of those pilots is Lt. Ryan Chapman with the Texas Department of Public Safety.

    Texas Department of Public Safety Pilot Lt. Ryan Chapman flying above Houston, Texas in a law enforcement helicopter. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    “Your eyes constrict and you can’t see anything,” Chapman said. “Not only is my life at stake, but my partner’s life is too.”

    He flies the Texas DPS helicopter around 1,000 feet above the ground, travelling often at speeds topping 150+ miles per hour. Just the slightest of movements on the controls could be the difference between staying airborne or crashing to the ground.

    “It’s like jumping on one leg, patting your head and rubbing your belly,” Chapman said. “Because every limb you have is doing something different. There’s a lot going on. And then you add a distraction like a laser you can’t see that’s that’s a big factor.”

    Any distraction is bad, but a blinding laser could be catastrophic. When the laser beam enters the cockpit, it often reflects off the glass, expanding and blinding the pilots to the point they can’t see.

    A laser strike as seen in the cockpit by the pilot of an aircraft. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    To make matters worse, law enforcement, like the Texas Department of Public Safety, uses night vision goggles. This just makes the laser strike that much more powerful.

    Gage: “When you think about a laser coming out of a little device just like that, whenever it travels up to the aircraft, is it coming in tiny like that? Or what does it look like?”

    Ryan: “No. As the beam travels, it gets wider from the source. It gets wider. And so when it hits, it hits a wider surface area of the actual helicopter or airplane.”

    According to Chapman, the tiny little laser that’s smaller than the tip of a pencil grows into a ginormous glow.

    Gage: We’re right over one of Houston’s busiest highways. If something, God forbid, were to happen. I mean this not only for us in the aircraft, but it could be for countless people on the ground.”

    Ryan: “That’s correct. Yep. Residential areas. Because most people are at home when they’re doing this, they don’t realize the people that their friends and neighbors they’re putting at risk.”

    Chapman is one of the thousands of pilots that have been blinded by lasers. This wasn’t a one-time occurrence for him.

    Ryan: At least 25.”

    Gage: 25 time?”

    Ryan: 25 times.”

    Gage: “How long you been doing this?”

    Ryan: Two years.”

    Gage:You’ve been hit 25 times in two years?”

    Ryan: “Yes, sir.”

    His most recent run in with a laser was on February 1, 2024.

    Two men are accused of pointing a laser at his law enforcement helicopter in Northwest Houston. His tactical officer, or right hand man, used the helicopters state-of-the-art cameras system to hone in the home that the light beam was coming from.

    Texas Department of Public Safety Pilot Lt. Ryan Chapman flying above Houston, Texas in a law enforcement helicopter. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    “You can see the beam all the way to the ground. So, if you’re within range of the camera, then we can see you,” Chapman said.

    The chopper calling down to Precinct 4 Constable deputies who arrested Artemio Gonzales and Leonel Vasquez.

    “If an individual decides to make that unfortunate choice, state wise, it’s a Class A misdemeanor, but federally, it’s a felony charge,” said Sgt. Stephen Woodward of the Texas Department of Public Safety. “And it’s not a matter of if, it’s when you get caught, you could face some serious penalties and fines.”

    Across the county, laser strikes are up 40%, according to data from the FAA. A total of 13,304 reports were filed in 2023 alone.

    In the Lonestar State, a total of more than 1,400 laser strikes were recorded. Of those, 473 are in the Houston area.

    Many of those strikes hitting commercial airline jets, which are carrying hundreds of passengers.

    Gage: “What does that tell you?”

    Ryan: It tells me they’re not getting caught enough.”

    That’s exactly what the FAA is looking to change. The enforcer of the sky is cracking down on anyone who has the not so bright idea to blind a pilot.

    Texas Department of Public Safety Pilot Lt. Ryan Chapman flying above Houston, Texas in a law enforcement helicopter. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    “Including fines of up to $11,000 per violation. Bottom line lasers and aircraft don’t mix,” said FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker.

    Gage: “What would you say to anybody that thinks it’s funny? It’s a joke to just go ahead and shine. A laser up in the sky thinking it’s harmless fun.”

    Ryan: “I would tell them to think about their actions before they do that, because it’s not fun and it’s not safe.”

    To report a laser incident to the FAA, click here.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Dallas Observer Announces Partnership with News Revenue Hub

    Dallas Observer Announces Partnership with News Revenue Hub

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    The support of Dallas Observer members matters now more than ever as we enter a presidential election year. Our members not only help support our journalists as they prepare to dig deeply into political campaigns, candidates and issues that affect our community, but they help us plan for a stronger newsroom that serves our community.

    Since our founding, the Dallas Observer has been free to our readers. With both advertiser and reader support, our print papers remain free, and we’ve never put up an online paywall. We remain dedicated to providing our reporting to everyone at no charge.

    Empowering local journalism, one member at a time

    To help continue that goal in today’s media environment, we’re proud to announce we’ve joined forces with News Revenue Hub, a nonprofit founded in 2016 and dedicated to helping newsrooms like ours win community support and avoid paywalls and mandatory subscriptions.

    “We’re excited to add Voice Media Group’s publications in Denver, Phoenix, Dallas and Miami to our growing cohort of for-profit publishers this year,” said Abbey Gingras, News Revenue Hub’s director of consulting services. “Our strategic fundraising and scaled technology is a great complement to Voice’s diverse revenue mix. We look forward to helping them develop a strong membership program that galvanizes the deep relationships they already have with their communities.”

    We look forward to News Revenue Hub’s help.

    “This partnership presents a unique opportunity for us to enhance our program’s offerings and elevate our commitment to serving our loyal readers and members with even greater dedication,” said Lily Black, Voice Media Group’s membership manager. “Together, we can build a stronger, more vibrant network that enriches our local journalism landscape.”

    But the most important member of this partnership is you, our readers. The long-term challenges organizations like ours face aren’t going away. We want to keep covering Dallas the way it deserves to be covered, so we are calling on our readers who value independent, open-minded and fearless news reporting to support the Dallas Observer by contributing any amount to assist our newsroom.

    “We don’t believe the answer to more revenue is piling on more website ads,” says Chelsey Dequaine-Jerabek, Voice Media Group’s editorial director. “We believe that journalism thrives from diversified revenue streams. We believe in the power of community. And we believe that our readers’ support has the power to make a prominent impact.”

    Join our community of members, and we’ll put whatever money you contribute toward producing high-quality local journalism. We know you work hard for your money, and you can rest assured we’ll work hard for you, covering Dallas as only we can.

    Membership benefits and upcoming members-only events

    In addition to knowing that you’re supporting public service journalism in your Dallas, your membership brings you several  benefits, among them discounted or complimentary tickets to our own signature events, such as our Morning After brunch celebration on March 2 and Tacolandia (2024 date to be announced soon).

    Supporters also get a chance to attend special newsroom events, including a solo performance from Leah Lane of Rosegarden Funeral Party on May 16 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. If you’re already a member, keep an eye on your inbox for the free event invite.

    As a supporter of the Dallas Observer, you’ll enjoy what you’re reading even more knowing you helped make it happen. Have feedback about our program? Email Lily at [email protected].

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    Patrick Williams

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  • Man arrested for vandalizing campaign signs in Fort Bend County

    Man arrested for vandalizing campaign signs in Fort Bend County

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    SUGAR LAND, Texas – The Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office arrested man who allegedly vandalized political campaign signs in the Sugar Land area.

    Axel Banegas, 22, is charged with criminal mischief for allegedly destroying campaign signs outside of a shopping plaza on State Highway 6.

    Damaged political campaign signs lay along the side of State Highway 6 in Sugar Land, Texas. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    Deputies say they obtained a warrant for his arrest and took Banegas to jail on February 24.

    Investigators were able to narrow down Banegas as a suspect thanks to security cameras in the parking lot, which they said showed him damaging signs on February 13, as well as his yellow Camaro.

    “You kick over a sign, you’re being a ******* dumb***,” said Aaron, from Sugar Land.

    That’s one way to put it. Fort Bend County Sheriff Eric Fagan releasing a much more PG statement.

    “We condemn the unlawful act of damaging political campaign signs,” says Sheriff Eric Fagan. “Every candidate has the right to campaign, and it is against the law for individuals to vandalize these signs. We take this matter seriously, and the investigation will continue, following up on other leads and suspects to ensure accountability for these actions.”

    All up and down State Highway 6, you’ll find broken and destroyed campaign signs.

    Within a few blocks, there are dozens of the signs.

    “Week in and week out, it seems like someone’s purposely doing that,” said Omar Hussain, who manages a corner store where political signs are in pieces. “I hope it’s not a rivalry between the Democrats and Republicans locally.”

    As we’re just two weeks away from the primary election in Texas, the sheriff’s office says they’re still looking for other suspects who allegedly vandalized signs.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Grandfather killed in NW Houston fire sparked by smoking while on oxygen

    Grandfather killed in NW Houston fire sparked by smoking while on oxygen

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    HOUSTON, Texas – A grandfather died in an apartment fire in NW Houston early Saturday morning.

    At least one other person was taken to the hospital after escaping the burning building. Two children were also home at the time of the fire, but weren’t hurt.

    Family members tell KPRC 2′s Gage Goulding that the victim is David Brown.

    David Brown, the victim of a fatal apartment fire in NW Houston on February 24, 2024. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    According to the Houston Fire Department, they received a 911 call around 12:24 a.m. on Saturday at the Pine Forest Park Apartments on Deep Forest Drive.

    The fire starting after Brown, who was wearing his medical oxygen, lit a cigarette. His wife told KPRC 2 that Brown’s head was engulfed in flames.

    “He was standing there and he had them little small. He’s not supposed to be smoking with that oxygen,” Margaret Booker-Brown said. “He lit a cigarette like this here and it was flame all the same flame. It was flames all up on over his head, all the way to his ears.”

    The charred remains of an apartment at the Pine Forest Park Apartments in NW Houston after a fire killed a grandfather on February 24, 2024. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    Margaret grabbed her two grandchildren and ran.

    Her husband never made it out.

    Houston Firefighters rescued David, but he later died at the hospital.

    The charred remains of an apartment at the Pine Forest Park Apartments in NW Houston after a fire killed a grandfather on February 24, 2024. (Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    “He had health problems and things, but he didn’t have to go out like this,” said David’s step-daughter Aletha Booker. “My poor father. I don’t even know what to say, how to feel about this right now.”

    A total of eight apartment homes were damaged by the fire, smoke and water. Several families are now faced with finding a new place to live in the meantime.

    The Houston Fire Department says the official cause of the fire remains under investigation.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • International chefs bring culinary flare to World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff

    International chefs bring culinary flare to World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff

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    HOUSTON, Texas – When you think of Texas BBQ, you often think of those local, western cowboys cooking up some of the best, mouthwatering meat.

    At the RODEOHOUSTON World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff, there’s a lot of that. Roughly 250 different cooking teams to be exact. But there are also a select set of chefs that travelled across the globe to be in Houston this weekend for their chance to be crowned best BBQ.

    About 10 international teams from as far as Australia are injecting their country’s culinary cuisine into the BBQ. It’s like a clash of Texas BBQ and a world of flavor.

    The teams are from countries like Brazil, Canada, United Kingdom, Mexico, Australia, Sweden and more.

    “The brisket is the queen, is the king, Is everything in Texas barbecue,” said Bruce Salomon, who’s representing Brazil with his company Braza-B-Que. “And look at this brisket in. Beautiful. It’s amazing.”

    His teams spent hours trimming and cutting their brisket, valued at roughly $400, for Saturday’s main competition.

    “In Brazil, we like beef flavor. So we only cook with salt. We don’t use rubs,” Salomon said.

    Across the walkway is Morgan Lundin, who’s representing Sweden and his company Lingon & Dill BBQ.

    “The town I’m from, there so proud that we’re here,” he said. “The whole village that I’m from there cheering now and they follow us on Facebook like ‘Yeah, go and get him.’”

    His team is getting their chicken ready for competition on Saturday. Sweden is competing in all three categories: ribs, brisket and chicken.

    Also in the international section is a group from the land down under: Australia.

    “If I’m being honest, I would probably tear up a little bit. It would mean been a lot, man. Like, you know. It’s a lot of coming over here and traveling so far,” Daniel Barrett of Big Smoke BBQ said.

    It’s a big deal for all of the teams here, but it means that much more for those that are traversing the globe. Barrett didn’t just pack a suitcase, but actually shipped his brisket from Australia to smoke and present to the judges.

    “When we first come over we’re really nervous. You know, are our flavor is going to carry over? But we try not to change too much. You know what we do back home that worked for us. We can. I really do our thing. And everyone who does the their own thing has their own little twist on their own little flavors.”

    Each of the teams say they have drawn inspiration for their BBQ from the American BBQ, including crews from the Texas area.

    The main competition for the World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff will take place on Saturday. Gates will be open from 9 a.m. until 11 p.m.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Vermonter accused of sexually assaulting minor

    Vermonter accused of sexually assaulting minor

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    WEST RUTLAND, Vt. (NEWS10) — A Castleton, Vermont, man was arrested on Thursday and is accused of sexually assaulting a minor under 13. Sean Seguin, 37, turned himself in and faces multiple charges.

    According to Vermont State Police, an investigation with the Department for Children and Families (DCF) looked into a report of possible child sexual abuse first reported on February 12. The suspect, Seguin, turned himself in on Thursday.

    Charges:

    • Aggravated sexual assault
    • Lewd/lascivious conduct with a child

    Seguin was processed by Vermont State Police at the Rutland Barracks and was brought to Rutland Criminal Court for arraignment. he is held without bail at the Marble Valley Correctional Facility.

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    Michael Mahar

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  • RodeoHouston kicks off with World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff

    RodeoHouston kicks off with World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff

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    HOUSTON, Texas – It’s time to rodeo in Houston!

    The official kickoff to the nearly month of Houston Rodeo events is underway. More than 250 chefs are competing in the 2024 World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff at NRG Park.

    Annually, more than 200,000 people flock to the finger-licking good tents scattered across the parking lot feasting both their eyes and stomach’s on some of the best BBQ in the world.

    “This is 20 days of rodeo, three days of some of the best barbecue and excitement and people watching you’ve ever seen in your life,” said Steven Brown of Lonesome Dove Cookers. “It’s pure excitement. It’s nothing like I have people coming in from all over the United States. They’ve never seen anything like this. This is amazing.”

    From ribs to brisket and everything else you can fit on your plate, chefs are serving up plates while fine turning their work for the judge’s pallets.

    They have three days, starting Thursday, to cook up their best work.

    At Lonesome Dove Cookers, the judges last year rewarding the group with first place in the open category.

    It’s awesome because you work all year long to get to this point and that’s what you want. Yeah, this this is the cook off of the cook off,” said Lonesome Dove Cookers head chef Robert Vasquez.

    Their tent is just of the more than 250 serving up their signature meats for empty bellies.

    “We got brisket, we got turkey breast, we got pork belly, we got ribs, loaded potatoes, creamed corn,” he said.

    “Everyone’s trying to show just what they can cook. Digging up something from the back and saying, oh watch this,” Brown added.

    The World’s Championship BBQ Cookoff continues through Saturday.

    Then, cookers will tear down their tents and move out to make way for the Houston Rodeo, which starts February 27.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Florida’s Experiment With Measles

    Florida’s Experiment With Measles

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    The state of Florida is trying out a new approach to measles control: No one will be forced to not get sick.

    Joseph Ladapo, the state’s top health official, announced this week that the six cases of the disease reported among students at an elementary school in Weston, near Fort Lauderdale, do not merit emergency action to prevent unvaccinated students from attending class. Temporary exclusions of that kind while an outbreak is ongoing are part of the normal public-health response to measles clusters, as a means of both protecting susceptible children and preventing further viral spread. But Ladapo is going his own way. “Due to the high immunity rate in the community, as well as the burden on families and educational cost of healthy children missing school,” he said in a letter released on Tuesday, the state’s health department “is deferring to parents or guardians to make decisions about school attendance.”

    That decision came off as brazen, even for an administration that has made systematic efforts to lower vaccination rates among its constituents over the past two years. Ladapo’s letter acknowledges the benefits of vaccination, as well as the fact that vulnerable children are “normally recommended” to stay home. Still, it doesn’t bother giving local parents the bare-minimum advice that all kids who are able should get their MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) shots, Dorit Reiss, a professor and vaccine-policy expert at UC Law San Francisco, told me. “I wouldn’t have expected him, in the middle of a measles outbreak, to be willing to sacrifice children in this way.”

    The Florida Department of Health has not responded to a request for comment on Ladapo’s future plans, should this situation worsen. For the moment, though, he has chosen to lower the guardrails from their standard height. It’s an escalation of his, and Florida’s, broader push against established norms in public health, especially as they relate to vaccination. So what happens now?

    At least in any immediate sense, Ladapo’s decision may not do much harm. In fact, there’s good reason to believe that its effects will end up being minimal. Parents who have children at the school, Manatee Bay Elementary, have until today to decide whether to pull out those kids for the next three weeks. Many seem to have already done so: About 200 students, and six teachers, have been absent, according to local news reports. In the meantime, Broward County Public Schools’ superintendent said yesterday that just 33 students out of the school’s nearly 1,100 were still unvaccinated. Given those two facts—some degree of self-imposed isolation, and 97 percent of the community now having some level of immune protection—the virus will have a hard time spreading no matter what the rules for attendance might be.

    Disease modeling, too, suggests that the risk of a larger outbreak is low. For a study released in 2019, a team of researchers based at Newcastle University and the University of Pittsburgh simulated thousands of measles outbreaks at schools in Texas, the most populous state to allow nonmedical exemptions from routine vaccine requirements. The researchers looked at the extent to which a policy of sequestering unvaccinated kids would help to reduce the outbreaks’ size. In the median outcome, even without any school-wide interventions, they found that an initial case of measles spreads only to a small handful of people. Adding in the rule that unvaccinated kids must stay at home has no effect on transmission. When the school’s vaccination rates are assumed to be unusually low, the rule reduces the outbreak’s size by one case.

    Not all the modeling outcomes are so rosy. For the very worst-case scenarios, in which a case of measles emerges in a school where unvaccinated kids happen to be clustered, the study found that forced suspensions have dramatic benefits. A major outbreak in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, for example, might end up infecting 477 people in the absence of any interventions, according to the model. When unvaccinated kids are kept from going to school, that number drops by 95 percent.

    Hypothetical models can’t tell us what will happen in a real-life school with real-life kids, like the one in Weston, Florida. But given Manatee Bay Elementary’s reported vaccination rate, it’s fair to assume that Ladapo’s policy won’t be catastrophic. Indeed, it may well end up sparing a few dozen families from the fairly serious inconvenience of being out of school without having much effect at all on the outbreak’s final size.

    But is the sparing of that inconvenience worth the risks that still remain? (And how should one value the time of a parent who could have vaccinated their child but chose not to?) As Reiss points out, if this policy leads to even one more case in the current outbreak, it will have put one more kid at risk of hospitalization, long-term complications, or even death. Worst-case outbreak scenarios do occur from time to time, as we all know well by now; and the Weston outbreak getting much worse is certainly within the realm of possibility. Any public-health authority would have to weigh these odds in the face of a six-case cluster; and surely almost every statewide health authority would choose to err on the side of caution. In Florida, though, the scale appears to tip the other way. Ladapo has rolled the dice on doing less.

    That’s been his way since the very day he was appointed by Governor Ron DeSantis, in September 2021. Just hours after he was introduced, the state ended mandatory quarantines for low-risk students who had been exposed to COVID. The following March, just a few weeks after being confirmed into the job, Ladapo announced that Florida would be “the first state to officially recommend against the COVID-19 vaccines for healthy children.” He continued to scale up from there: That fall, he recommended against the use of mRNA vaccines by any men under the age of 40. A year later, in October 2023, his office warned everyone under the age of 65 about the risks of getting an mRNA-based COVID booster. And then, finally, just last month, Ladapo came out with a warning that mRNA-based COVID vaccines “are not appropriate for use in human beings.”

    The man’s commitment to undermining vaccination is truly unparalleled among leading public-health officials. “As a surgeon general he stands alone,” Reiss told me. Yet Ladapo’s policy activism, however grotesque it might seem, has been bizarrely ineffective in practice. Take his March 2022 move to lead the way on not vaccinating young people against COVID. Media coverage of that announcement dwelled on reasonable concerns that this policy would dampen immunization rates; vaccine experts said it was a dangerous and irresponsible move that would “cause more people to die.” In practice, though, it seems to have done almost nothing. At the time of Ladapo’s announcement, 24.2 percent of Florida’s kids and 66.3 percent of its teenagers had received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine. (The corresponding national numbers at the time were somewhat higher.) By the end of the year, and in spite of Ladapo’s contrarian guidance, Florida’s vaccination numbers for these age groups were up by about four and three points respectively—which is almost exactly the same amount, percentage-wise, as the increases in those numbers seen across the country.

    Or compare Florida’s experience to that of Nevada, a state which had very similar child and teen vaccination rates in March 2022: 23.1 percent and 64.0 percent. Through the end of 2022, while Ladapo was discouraging his constituents from getting shots, that state’s Democratic governor was engaged in a large-scale effort to do just the opposite. And yet the results were essentially the same: Nevada’s rates increased by pretty much the same amount as Florida’s.

    For all of Ladapo’s efforts to dampen his state’s enthusiasm for life-saving interventions, Florida’s age-adjusted rates of death from COVID do not appear to have increased relative to the rest of the country, at least according to reported numbers. In this way, one of the nation’s loudest and most powerful voices of vaccine skepticism seems to be shouting into the wind. His proclamations and decisions to this point have been exquisitely effective at producing outrage, but embarrassingly feeble when it comes to changing outcomes. Even taken on its own terms, as a means of changing public-health behavior, Ladapo’s anti-vaccine activism has been a demonstrable failure.

    Perhaps this week’s decision to relax the rules on fighting measles will mark just one more step along that path: Once again, Florida’s surgeon general will have taken an appalling stance that ends up having no effect. But then again, now could be different. By the time Ladapo got around to undermining COVID shots, more than two-thirds of the state’s population, and 91 percent of its seniors, were already fully vaccinated. The damage he could have done was limited, by definition. But the measles outbreak in Weston is unfolding in real time. More such outbreaks are nearly guaranteed to occur in the U.S. in the months ahead. Reiss worries that Ladapo’s new idea, of choosing not to separate out unvaccinated kids during a school outbreak, could end up spreading into other jurisdictions. “If this becomes a precedent, that becomes a bigger problem,” she told me.

    For the first time since taking office, Ladapo may finally have a real opportunity to make a difference through his vaccination policy. That’s a problem.

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    Daniel Engber

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  • Celebrating excellence: St. Mary’s Jordan Lee’s named to McDonald’s All-American team

    Celebrating excellence: St. Mary’s Jordan Lee’s named to McDonald’s All-American team

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    STOCKTON, Calif. (KTXL) – Jordan Lee of St. Mary’s High School in Stockton, was selected from more than 400,000 high school basketball players spanning across the country for the chance to show off their skills at the 2024 McDonald’s All-American game.

    Lee has been a stand-out player this season, averaging 24.5 points per game and is set to attend the University of Texas next season. Lee was recognized with a special jersey presentation ahead of the Rams playoff game against Oak Ridge.

    “I could talk on and on about my experience with Jordan,” Rams head coach Alle Moreno said. “It’s a special thing to coach a player like her and be around a person like her. She’s really special on and off the court.”

    “She’s just such a focused kid,” Lee’s father Roderick said. “I’m so happy to be a part of her journey.”

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    Kirsten Kellar

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  • GlobalFoundries to construct second plant in Malta

    GlobalFoundries to construct second plant in Malta

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    MALTA, N.Y. (NEWS10) — GlobalFoundries will be building a second chip FAB plant in Malta, following a $1.5B grant awarded from the federal government. According to Senator Chuck Schumer’s Office, the company in the Captial Region will make an estimated $12B investment over the next 10+ years.

    The new plant is expected to bring in 1,500 new jobs in the area. According to the Office of Chuck Schumer, the new state-of-the-art computer chip factory will grow GlobalFoundries’ current chip manufacturing fab for the automotive industry in Malta, strengthen GlobalFoundries’ Vermont operations, and add secure capacity for essential chip manufacturing for big markets. 

    “New York State is becoming the best place on earth to build a business,” Governor Hochul said. “Thanks to our pro-business policies, commitment to innovation, and best-in-the-nation workforce, green jobs and high-tech manufacturers are flocking to the Empire State. This $11 billion investment from GlobalFoundries is a game changer, and with the partnership of the Biden administration, New York’s congressional delegation, and all of our local stakeholders, the best is yet to come.”

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    Michael Mahar

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  • Prayer service being held Sunday for missing 11-year-old Audrii Cunningham

    Prayer service being held Sunday for missing 11-year-old Audrii Cunningham

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    POLK COUNTY, Texas – A prayer service is being held Sunday for Audrii Cunningham, an 11-year-old girl from Livingston who’s been missing since Thursday.

    Audrii disappeared Thursday morning, never making it on the school bus that morning. Her disappearance prompted an AMBER Alert and hundreds of volunteers poured into Livingston to help find her.

    On Sunday morning, the VFW Post #8568 in Polk County is holding a prayer service for Audrii.

    In a post on Facebook, the VFW said the service will happen at 12 p.m. at their facility in Livingston.

    “Audrii loves the VFW and has spent many days making us laugh and learning to dance. Our hearts are breaking. We love you sweet girl,” the VFW posted on social media.

    Audrii hasn’t been seen since Thursday morning.

    In a press conference on Saturday, the Texas Department of Public Safety officially named Don Steven McDougal as the sole person of interest in the child’s disappearance.

    The 42-year-old man has a lengthy criminal history, including felony convictions for crimes against children.

    Investigators also say they found a backpack that they believe to belong to a child. However, Texas DPS has not said if the backpack belongs to Cunningham.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Gage Goulding

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  • Proposed legislation on short-term rentals in Saratoga Springs

    Proposed legislation on short-term rentals in Saratoga Springs

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    SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (NEWS10) — A public hearing will be held on Tuesday, February 20 at 6 p.m. at Saratoga Springs City Hall regarding short-term residential rentals in the City. The proposed legislation looks to regulate short-term rental uses in the city.

    Under the new legislation, for short-term residential rental properties, only owner-occupied properties will be eligible for short-term rentals and require valid inspection and permit records from the city fire department and accounts office. It would also require compliance with occupancy limits and property maintenance codes and mandate registration of all short-term rentals with the City.

    The new legislation would require all short-term rental owners to have a revocable permit before renting out their property. Applicants must provide proof of ownership, comply with safety standards, pay applicable fees, and submit a detailed application including information, property details, insurance, and inspection reports.

    The proposed legislation can be viewed in full below.

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    Michael Mahar

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