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SHADES OF OBAMA, BETO GIVES CRUZ RUN FOR HIS PAC $$$

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By Michelle Goldberg
New York Times
Opinion Columnist

On Saturday night, at the end of a hideous week in American politics, there was an unfamiliar feeling in Austin, Tex.: hope.

More than 50,000 people streamed into a city park to hear music legend Willie Nelson perform at a rally with Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic congressman from El Paso who is running a strikingly competitive race against oleaginous ghoul Ted Cruz.

Many were young – Nelson’s set started after 10 p.m. – wearing Beto T-shirts and waving Beto flags. Nearby, a packed restaurant advertised “Beto beer.” In the air was that slightly delirious energy you feel when a political campaign becomes a movement.

Shortly before the rally, I watched Evan Smith, chief executive and co-founder of The Texas Tribune, interview O'Rourke onstage at a nearby auditorium. It was uncanny how much the candidate recalled Barack Obama circa 2008, and not just because of his gawky magnetism.

Like Obama, O’Rourke is unapologetically progressive but offers a vision of post-partisan national unity. He treats his audience as too savvy for political clichés. When Smith asked him if he planned to go negative against Cruz, he mocked attack ads with distorted pictures and ominous music.

“We’re sick of that stuff,” he said, except he used a saltier term than “stuff.”

Like Obama, O’Rourke is running on hope over fear; he exudes compassion and speaks about “power and joy.” Christine Allison, a Republican-turned-independent, is president of the company that publishes D Magazine, a city magazine for Dallas, and one of O’Rourke’s ardent supporters. “He listens,” she told me, saying that he has what Christians sometimes call a “servant-leader approach to politics.”

If O’Rourke wins – if power and joy are enough to oust a sneering right-wing demagogue like Cruz in a deep-red state – it will ratify a new theory of politics that’s taken hold in Democratic circles since 2016. Like the gubernatorial candidates Andrew Gillum in Florida and Stacey Abrams in Georgia, O’Rourke is running a campaign based more on inspiration than persuasion.

Rather than making narrowly targeted appeals to swing segments of the existing electorate, he seeks to turn out new voters, including young people and people of color.

“Our contention is that if no one’s ever shown up, and listened to you, and incorporated your story into why they’re campaigning, and the expectations that we’re setting for one another, then I wouldn’t expect you to vote either,” O’Rourke told Smith on Saturday.

So instead of centrist triangulation, O’Rourke – like Abrams and Gillum – is speaking to the aspirations of his base, and betting that other voters will be won over by his honesty. 

He defended the right of N.F.L. players to take a knee during the national anthem to protest police killings of unarmed African-Americans, supports “Medicare for All,” and slams Cruz for being in the pocket of the National Rifle Association. He’s campaigning in a conservative state, but refusing to let the right set the terms of debate.

It’s been working better than anyone could have expected. Though O’Rourke is still an underdog — Texas hasn’t had a Democratic senator in 25 years — pollsters describe the race as a tossup. He has raised record-breaking sums without taking any money from political action committees. Soon his campaign will announce its third-quarter fund-raising results, and the rumor is that the total will be staggering, though all O’Rourke would say on stage is that it’s “a lot,” and more than the $10.4 million he raised last quarter.



TODAVIA MIRAN LA TEMPESTAD...Y NO SE HINCAN

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By Juan Montoya

Either the handlers of incumbent Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño can't read the groundswell of unpopularity and public umbrage directed at I.E.S. founder Dr. Ruben Gallegos and his son Ruben Jr., or they have a loyalty that's too deeply entrenched and choose to ignore it.

There is no way, of course, that the Treviño campaign could have predicted that the disclosures of the gouging of federal dollars by the Gallegos gained from the provision of shelter and a modicum of educational instruction to unaccompanied migrant minors would come a week before the planned Meet-and-Greet for Treviño hosted by Cameron County Pct. 1 Commissioner Sofie Benavides and her former campaign treasurer Gallegos Sr.


But it did.

And now, with public opinion swinging wildly against the Gallegos and the fate of their well-paid executives on the I.E.S. payroll and their "contractors" pending a final resolution that will probably result in massive restitution of up to $22 million and potential federal prosecution, it seems like it would be the unlikeliest time to have the elder Gallegos co-host this event.

People are outraged as glimpses of the inner workings of the I.E.S. – making millions off the misery of unaccompanied migrant minors – have become known. And no, it wasn't GOP rival Carlos Cascos who snitched on the I.E.S. scandal, it was local watchdogs who merely asked that Cascos use the power of his office to punt their grievances up the federal ladder, which he did.

Neither Cascos – nor Treviño for that matter – had a hand in Gallegos Sr. and Jr. paying themselves $677,242 and $663,240 a year respectively. Or to have State Rep. Eddie Lucio III getting a total of $139,312 in total compensation to make sure that taking was done legally. What else did the III do for his lucrative compensation? Will he have to answer to the feds for his role as consigliere in this ongoing enterprise as well?

In other words, this has been a long time in the offing.

Now, with the feds closing in – if they haven't already probed into the Gallegos' massive real-estate investments – it will just be a matter of time before the other shoes fall. We will learn whether Gallegos Sr. and Jr. took advantage of being appointed to the Cameron County Regional Mobility Authority to speculate on real estate investments that would be enhanced by his inside knowledge of the CCRMA's upcoming projects.

That is but one thread that would seem a logical sequence for any investigation into the Gallegos' dealings.

And we haven't even touched on the potential Hatch Act violations which  prohibits individuals being paid with federal funds from running for office in a partisan race. We would think that would include serving as campaign treasurers or actively campaigning for candidates of either party. Does that apply to a campaign for county judge?

Either way, with the election just a little over a month away, the last thing a candidate needs right now is an association with any or part of the developing I.E.S. scandal.

"Todavia miran la tempestad..."

CITY MANAGER, ATTORNEY, LIKE ASTROS, IN PLAYOFFS

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By Juan Montoya

After weeks of stiff competition, the choice for city manager and city attorney will be left in the hands of four members of the City of Brownsville commission.

The pre-game formalities aside, it will be up to the commission majority to decide – tonight – which two individuals will manage the city and advice the commissioners on municipal law.
Yesterday, the three remaining candidates for the city manager's spot were presented to the public. We say public, of course, but those attending say that the bulk of those there were city administrators and employees who came to meet the new boss, whichever may be chosen.

The finalists introduced to the gathered bureaucrats were Noel Bernal, Juan Guerra and Jesus A. Garza.

Garza, from Pharr, has been city manager since his appointment in 2015.

Guerra, a Brownsville native, was appointed city manager of Kingsville, also in 2015.

Bernal, was named as assistant city manager for the city of Coppell in 2017.

As you can readily tell, all three have one thing in common: they are all very young. That probably started the Brownsville swamp denizens' salivary glands flowing at the prospect of dealing with these chillun'. Whoever is chosen better get ready for a learning experience, to put it mildly.

We wish them well, although they will discover that city administrators are pretty much set in their ways and don't take to advice (or directives) particularly well.

The city attorney candidates were Gary Linan, Lysia Bowling and Rene De Coss.

Let the playoffs begin! Let's go 'Stros!


CITY MANAGER CANDIDATES: WOULD YOU LET THIS HAPPEN?

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(Ed.'s Note: No one asked this question from the three prospective city manager candidates, but it would have been enlightening to have learned what their response would have been.

If they had been city manager at the time that Mayor Tony Martinez pushed for the issuance of Certificates Of Obligation [which don't require voter approval] to purchase, among other buildings, the Case del Nylon above for $2.3 million dollars on the word of Martinez alone that the city could then flip it to the U of Texas System, would they have gone along with it?

When the city commission authorized the issuance $13.06 million Certificates of Obligation, $2.3 million was tabbed for the purchase of the Casa del Nylon on 1304 E. Madison and the adjoining building and property next door at 655 E. 14th Street. 

The $3.2 million price tag for the 52,586 square feet listed on the CO issue amounts to about $44 a foot, an extravagant amount given real estate prices in the surrounding neighborhood.
When commissioner Ricardo Longoria found out about the fact that Martinez's law partner Horacio Barrera represented the seller in the transaction, he wrote a local blog:
"For the record: I did not know that Abraham Galonsky was represented by Horacio Barrera. The only reason I voted for the acquisition of the property was because of the location and its proximity to the Multimodal BUS Facility and the fact that in the future Galonsky would probably ask for more than what he is right now. 

"There are many things going on in this city that had not happened in a very long time," Longoria complained. "Many dealings are going on behind closed doors, contracts are being signed by an elected official without the consent of the City Commission or City Manager," he wrote."

Ok Guys. If you had been asked about the COs and the Casa purchase, what would you have said?"

UNANIMOUS COMMISSION PICKS DE COSS FOR CITY ATTORNEY

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Image result for rene de coss

(Ed.'s Note: After four hours in executive session, a unanimous City of Brownsville City Commission voted to hire Municipal City Judge Rene De Coss to be the next city attorney Tuesday.

The position had been vacant since August 2017.

The choice had been narrowed to three candidates with De Coss vying for the post with local attorney Gerry Linan and Penscola, Fla., city attorney Kysia H. Bowling.

The Brownsville Herald reported that At-Large “A” City Commissioner Cesar de Leon motioned to approve the hiring of De Coss. The commission, he said,  is confident the new city attorney will hit the ground running.

“Rene has been our judge for many, many years,” de Leon said. “He’s also been a district judge, so he’s seen everything. We are very happy that he’ll be able (to contribute to the city more), because he already has working knowledge being a judge for so many years.”)

"DEADBEAT" CORTEZ EYES BISD'S $550 MILLION BUDGET

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By Juan Montoya

One of the five candidates who wants you to vote for him to manage the Brownsville Independent School District's $550 million budget has had a court issue a $12,023 debt judgment against him and is negotiating to pay off an additional bad debt of $2,335.61 with another lender who took him to his mother's JP small claims court.

Mark Anthony Cortez, the son of JP 2-1 Linda Salazar, had a summary judgment issued against him in County Court-at-Law #2 on March 28, 2018 for a debt he owed Citibank. The records do not reflect whether Citibank recovered any of the money. (See graphic at right. Click to enlarge.)

Although Cortez's slogan is "leadership that inspires," about the only thing it has inspired so far is lawsuits by his lenders.

And a law firm representing another lender (originally Walmart credit card) has given notice to the JP 2-1 Linda Salazar that they have "recently reached a settlement in the form of a lump sum" for the $2,335.61 he owed on the card.

That case was pending in Salazar's court earlier this year and charges that Cortez (2018-FDC-00525), had failed to pay $2,335.61 since February 7, 2017 on a Walmart credit card. That account was sold to Midland Funding who then sued for collection.

That lawsuit ended at Linda's court since April 2018 and remains pending until the lender is paid at which time they say they will enter a Notice of Nonsuit.

The agreement was entered into the record Sept. 14, 2018. After failing to respond to the suit to collect, Cortez contacted them following the posting of the story on this blog August 24.

And, after a complaint was filed with the Texas Commission on Judicial Conduct for not recusing herself from her son's case, Salazar had her colleague – and best buddy – JP 5-1 Sally Gonzalez, of Harlingen, approve the negotiations between Cortez and the lender's attorneys.

Cortez is facing four other opponents in the Position 1 race for the seat left vacant when incumbent Cesar Lopez decided not to seek reelection. They are (in order of the ballot)  1. Caty Presas-Garcia, 2. Jose Valdez, 3. Drue Brown,  4. Cortez, and 5. Timmy Ramirez.

As a member of the board, the office holders hold a huge sway on the education of some 43,000 students, and 7,500 employees. The BISD is the city's largest employer and operates budgets of more than $500 million annually. The economic spin off from spending those funds will reverberate across the city and region's economy.

The BISD – through a Tax Restructuring Election and a 11.5 percent increase in property taxes – is now in the midst of a construction binge that could top $100 million in the next five years. It's enough to make any contractor's mouth water. Who will get the contracts, get a job with the district, or be promoted to a higher - and better paying - position, is influenced by who sits on the board, although many will try to deny it.

It is, in a sense, the most important election in the city and affects thousands of families and their livelihoods, and, oh yeah, their children's education. 

Do we need someone overseeing its operation on the board when they apparently can't (or won't)  manage his own finances?

CITY SOURCES: IT'LL BE NOEL BERNAL FOR CITY MANAGER

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By Juan Montoya

No on in the city administration or commission will state it publicly, but heretofore reliable sources assert that city representatives are now in negotiations with Coppell, Deputy City Manager Noel Bernal who was picked by the commission to replace former city manager Charlie Cabler.

Image result for noel bernal bioThey say that headhunter Ralph Andersen and Associates had requested that the commission not make the announcement immediately to give the principals time to negotiate and tell the other candidates of the commission's selection.

These sources say that commissioners and legal counsel were impressed with Bernal's forceful presentation and his knowledge of the issues that have been facing Brownsville. The two other candidates were Pharr city manager Juan Guerra and Kingsville city manager Jesus A. Garza.


Bernal was Assistant City Manager, of Taylor, City Administrator, City of Falfurrias, City Administrator, La Villa, and Intern - Asst. to Pharr Economic Development Corporation Manager, Pharr.

He has a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Public Administration, degrees from the University of Texas Pan American in Edinburg. He is a Certified Public Manager, and is currently pursuing Lean Six Sigma (LSS) Black Belt Process Improvement Training Certification.

In his cover letter to his application obtained by the Brownsville Herald, Bernal wrote that: "Brownsville is a historically significant community that is on the cusp of tremendous transformation...With bi-cultural traditions and its recent economic development success, there is momentum and a strong desire for further economic prosperity. This is a special time and I am excited about the opportunity to serve the community as its next City Manager.”

"There is a unified commitment to build on the community’s history while harnessing the potential for being the preeminent community of choice in the Rio Grande Valley,” Bernal wrote. “It is this, and similar efforts, that provide the stability necessary to propel Brownsville forward in a cohesive manner.”

The city manager position comes with an annual salary of up to $275,000 plus benefits, depending on candidate qualifications, according to a brochure by Ralph Andersen and Associates.

OOPS! CORTEZ SUED FOR TAXES BY B.I.S.D., COB AND COUNTY

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(Ed.'s Note: After we posted that Brownsville Independent School District Position 1 candidate Mark Anthony Cortez had a bad-debt judgment issued against him and is negotiating paying another in small claims court, it was brought to our attention that even the school district, the City of Brownsville and Cameron County have a suit against him for delinquent taxes. Details follow below.)

By Juan Montoya

Image result for linda salazar, mark cortezWe admit it.


In our search for criminal and civil court records dealing with Brownsville Independent School District Position 1 candidate Mark Anthony Cortez, we missed a crucial one.

That would be lawsuit 2016-DCL-08312 filed by Cameron County, the City of Brownsville, and the Brownsville Independent School District against candidate Cortez that is still pending in the 445th District Court.

Cortez is facing four other opponents in the Position 1 race for the seat left vacant when incumbent Cesar Lopez decided not to seek reelection. They are (in order of the ballot)  1. Caty Presas-Garcia, 2. Jose Valdez, 3. Drue Brown,  4. Cortez, and 5. Timmy Ramirez.

The total bill including delinquent taxes, penalties, interest, and costs justly due on March 2017 were $11,090.08, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit two tracts of property and inventory at another location.

The delinquent taxes listed by the delinquent tax firm Linebarger Goggan Blair and Sampson LLP include amounts owed to all three entities. The tax amounts plus penalties and costs for 2014, 2015 and 2016 by entity are:

City of Brownsville: 
Tract 1: $2,129 
Tract 2: $1,048
Tract 3 (inventory): $16.58

Cameron County:
Tract 1: $2,129
Tract 2: $1,022
Tract 3 (inventory)$21.38

BISD
Tract 1: $2,786
Tract 2: $1,721
Tract 3 (inventory): $27.30

Grand Total for Property 1: $7,101
Grand Total for Property 2: $3,792
Grand Total for Property 3: $65.26
Total: $10,959.08

ZENDEJAS STAGES HER ONE-WOMAN (PLUS MONTERO) SHOW

POWERS SENDS MESSAGE OF HOPE FOR CANCER AWARENESS

LOADING THE DICE BEFORE ELECTIONS AN OLD, TIRED GAME

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By Juan Montoya

In 1990, the year that Carlos Cascos was elected to be Cameron County Pct. 2 Commissioner, he took office the following January...and found that his predecessor, in a fit of pique, had transferred every last one of his road and Bridge dollars to the Pct. 3 budget under the control of Commissioner Dolph Thomae.

Both Thomae and Cortinas have passed since, but ever since then the idea of allowing the incoming commissioner to have a say so in his department's budget has been thrown about.


The thinking goes like this: The next commissioner will have to deal with the needs of his precinct and the outgoing commission should not be able to throw logs on the tracks to derail his tenure.

In 1990, before the consolidation of the Road and Bridge fund, those dollars were supposed to last the entire year. This was the years before most precinct roads were paved and caliche politics was a fact of life. If you could send a crew and a truck to rain-gutted roads or place a concrete pipe in a driveway for your constituents, they would remember you next time there was an election.

Thomae knew this better than most, with his tenure extending several decades in his Democratic precinct. The other commissioners – especially those from Brownsville – complained that he had 60 percent of the paved roads (and funds to service them) while the other three struggled with lean budgets to merely spread a thin layer of caliche on them.

Therefore, when Cortina transferred his road and Bridge funds to Thomae, he was purposely denying Pct. 2 residents the little they had, and tying the hand sof the man who beat him for office.

This may be past history, but it comes to mind when just this week we saw the results of boards taking actions before the November elections that will have to be dealt with by their successors. It happened when an old board of the Texas Southmost College extended the contract of President Lily Tercero, and it happened when the current board of the Brownsville Independent School District extended the contract of Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas for three more years before next month's election.

In the case of Tercero, a new board terminated the contract after listing numerous grievances against her administration. Predictably, she sued in federal court and now she wants the remaining two years of her salary paid by the college, almost a half million plus her attorneys' fees.

Image result for cameron county texas commissioner mike cortinas, obituaryAnd – even if her majority wins these elections – Zendejas can sue the BISD for her $300,000-plus yearly salary if push comes to shove. It was almost laughable to hear BISD general counsel Baltazar Salazar call the contract extension "improper" since he is currently making $280,000 himself to attend 12 monthly meetings.

Trustees Joe Rodriguez, Carlos Elizondo and Cesar Lopez were joined by Laura Perez-Reyes to extend Zendejas' contract. Rodriguez and Elizondo are running for reelection and Lopez did not seek reelection.

And trustee Phil Cowen chimed in that the public should have been consulted on whether the contract should have been extended was also suspect because he raised no such outcry when the board – without consulting the electorate – raised taxes by 11.25 cents on every $100 in property valuations.

But since some of the funds were earmarked for facilities, his bread and butter, that was ok with him.

The idea that such extensions of contracts should be left up to the incoming board members – or the incumbents if they prevail after an election – is one that should be explored and implemented as policy.

Otherwise, just as Cortinas did back in 1990, that will hand around the incoming elected officisals' necks like an albatross. 

CAN YOU GUESS WHO THE BOYS IN BLUE ARE TALKING ABOUT?

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(We are usually loath to publish anonymous narratives such as the one below because there is no way we could possibly verify that these allegations are true. But, without naming names, this rings very much like an insider's view of the department whose named should be changed from BPD to Peyton Place. It's an intriguing inside view which we publish with the protection of anonymity. The writer (s?) say they will send the explicit version to the city commissioners. Oh-Oh!)

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
The police department is a total disappointment and it’s only going to get worse.

The girls and boys in blue will never forget (some officers)  have always been allowed to do as they please and nobody says anything. 

Past Chiefs and their protector (former city manager Charlie) Cabler made them untouchable. 

(One) has started spreading shit about people who get caught in friendships like a little girl. He is so worried about other people’s business but says nothing about himself. This city should ask the officers how many have been punished for talking to his girlfriend.

(Another) sits at his computer all day and waits for his girlfriend to walk the hallway and if any officer talks to her he calls them in and punishes them for dumb shit. If you ever talked to his girlfriend or was ever a friend of hers you won’t be allowed on some assignments.

Remember some of us don’t have to be quiet anymore about (this) stupid ways. Let’s talk some more about the past. 

Everyone remembers when (one) got a jailer pregnant and only paid child support when she threatened to report him. He would give her $100 dollars a month. The poor girl finally gave up and moved on and found a good man to take care of her and raise her child. 

And there are many stories about the gloried SWAT closet. This was a place where this one (and others) would take females and have sex with them, even laughing about it when the girls would cough because of the tear gas that was always in there. 

 The Chief (Orlando Rodriguez) had to make the SWAT team move the closet because of the complaints. And can we forget about their use of the job and power to get girls, even arresting men to put them in jail for the night so he can have a good night with their girlfriends? 

Everyone remembers when (they) and a Municipal Court girl would charge $50 dollars to fix the citations. Maybe the city should go back ten years and ask the female employees why they quit their jobs. All the pretty young girls in the police department have been promised any position they want to keep quiet about the past. 

(They have even) promised the most recent baby momma who works at P.D. that she will be promoted and given an easy job.  And they are the jealous types. 

One time when a female officer one of them liked was interested in younger male officer, he was brought in  and warned him to stay away from the girl or he was going to be "fucked up."

And we even remember when (one) beat up a fellow officer so bad at work that he couldn’t go to work for a week but, again, Daddy Cabler covered it up for him. This is just a little bit of information, there is more to come. Commissioners will be receiving an email with more (of these)  secrets. 

 More to Come.

EDUCATOR QUESTIONS TETREAU'S VOTES ON ARRCO

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Dear City of Brownsville Commissioner Ben Neece,

I am a public school teacher who was born and raised in Brownsville. I moved away to attend the University of Texas in Austin to become a teacher. I have otherwise lived in this town my entire life. I live in your district and care very much about the downtown area.

Image result for jessica tetreauI don’t think we have ever met personally. I am writing to you because you are both my Commissioner and because I understand that you are on the Audit and Oversight Committee for the City of Brownsville. I

 do not know if I should be speaking to you or to someone else but I thought I might communicate what I know and you can decide how best to proceed.

I have evidence that Commissioner Jessica Tetreau has been using her position as a City Commissioner for her own personal benefit. The records of the Brownsville City Commission show that in September 2014, Commissioner Tetreau voted to award ARRCO Construction a contract for $768,770.20. The minutes of the agenda for that meeting state the following:

15. Consideration and ACTION to award a contract for the Southmost Hike and Bike Trail.
Commissioner Rose Gowen moved that a contract for the Southmost Hike and Bike Trail be awarded to ARRCO, of Brownsville, Texas, for a bid amount of $768,770.20. The motion was seconded by
Commissioner Jessica Tetreau and carried unanimously.

Back in 2014, Car Wash Plus was working for ARRCO as a Subcontractor, hoping to get City Work. 

On July 15th, 2015, Tetreau filed a conflict of interest form with the City acknowledging this pre-
existing conflict of interest with ARRCO . In her conflict of interest statement she admitted that ARRCO had previously hired Car Wash Plus to do work on the Belden Trail.

This is a big problem either way you look at it. If ARRCO had hired Car Wash Plus before the vote on the nearly million dollar contract, Tetreau’s vote was illegal. If Car Wash Plus hired Tetreau’s company after the fact to do work for the City ( or BCIC), it was a payoff for her vote to award the contract. 

If you had just awarded a contract to someone, why would you accept a job from them as a subcontractor? It looks illegal either way. There is more. Tetreau actually went out of her way to help this contractor who defrauded the City. 

After AARCO was caught with a forged bond, and reported to the District Attorney’s Office, Tetreau and DeLeon demanded that the City pay AARCO’s subcontractors with City money. This was even reported in the Brownsville Herald.

The subcontractors were mad because the City had already paid AARC0 and AARCO had’nt paid their subcontractors. In another words, Tetreau went on the record demanding that the City pay AARCO’s debt when she had a conflict of interest with this company.

Tetreau plays fast and loose with the rules y estoy encabronada !! Car Wash Plus has a huge contract with Allied Waste. Tetreau makes sure she recuses herself from votes on Allied Waste , but she makes sure she has other commissioners support them (De Leon).

I’m sick of all this corruption in our City and I hope you will do something about it. I hope you agree that a grandes males, grandes remedies !

I hope you understand that under the circumstances, I would rather remain anonymous. The facts in this letter are a matter of public record and are on file with the City.

Buena suerte persiguiendo a las ratas!

MEET AND GREET THE POWERS THAT BE

HARD SCRABBLE SUNDAY MORNINGS AT THE CARTA

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Image result for la carta brava, brownsville, ,rrun rrun


By Juan Montoya

They start queuing up as early as 9 a.m. Sunday when the normal people are heading for church.

The bells at Immaculate Conception Cathedral are pealing and the evangelical crowd at the fountain in the city square is just coming together as the hermanos are laying out their tables for the free lunch at noon. But first, the small group of believers must take a dose of religion.

But that is the second helping after the madatory pozole at La Carta.
Image result for pozole in a styrofoam cup
In fact, if you do not accept the Styrofoam bowl of pozole and one of tortilla chips they can't serve you beer. The doors open at 10 a.m. and as Ceci and the girls get the place ready, a small stream of people come in to imbibe the hair of the dog that bit them the previous night.

The crack queens are next, stretching out their limbs in the morning heat and venturing out from their holes or abandoned houses or vacant buildings where they spent the night. For them, life is a constant hustle, a constant measuring up of likely marks who will feel sorry for their gaunt cheeks, haunted eyes and second-hand outfits they gleaned from the dumpsters behind the segundas all over downtown.

"You should have seen her and her sister when they were younger," says one of the early birds as he pops open a can of cold beer. "Estaban bien guenas hasta que le hicieraon a la piedra. Nunca se bajaron del avion. Pobrecitas."

Image result for beto quintanilla albumsThe juke box is an open scream as Beto Quintanilla belts out a song that sounds suspiciously just like all his other songs, with fake gunfire accentuating the offbeat like a counter melody. "Uno sabe donde nace, pero nunca donde acaba Estado pegado al norte, Tamaulipas tierra brava, (bang, bang, bang)..."

A few conjuntos sometimes wander in, but that is usually later at night. Fro now, it's just what's available on la chillona.

The pool players are next, like perpetual doormen standing around the table leaning on their cue sticks. Here all the shots are called and accidental ones don't count.

"Cantaditas, no guevas,"they call out before the game. "Y es last pocket."

Some of the ladies are still wearing last night's outfit, usually gold lame shoes with leopard print blouses a bit too tight for the sagging flesh. If it looks like they have been slept in, it's because they probably were. But hey, in the semi darkness of the Carta, no one notices or even care.


In their corner, retired veterans and ex cops pass judgment on the crowd and keep to themselves.

The panhandlers start hustling beers from some of the patrons they know from many days of hanging out at the joint.

"Prestame dos dolars, bro," despues te pago."

Of course, everyone knows that they will never remember to pay their marks, but in a way, the loan is like an investment. One of these days it might be you wanting a beer and feeling your empty pockets. One good turn...

After everyone who wanted to eat a bowl of pozole has taken his, some pass their filled ones to appreciative homeless as noon approaches. Noon means that a football game will be on at the Sportsman Lounge and small groups of customers drift over to Elizabeth Street behind the HEB parking lot to see one, or to see the soccer game of La Ligua MX and shoot the breeze with Boni, Bonifacio to his friends.

For those with more refined tastes, a small number of trendy joints are available where loud rock and canned music is the fare. But after a while, the $3 dollar beers lose their appeal and they drift back to the $1.50 brews at La Carta or Boni's.

By 3 p.m. if they are playing, the Dallas Cowboys will be on the air. From there on, it'll be suds and football until dusk turns into night and people start drifting toward home and the work week begins again. And so, another day goes by in the underworld of the border city.

And if you get a hangover, well, the high-rise elderly dwellers know that the Sportsman opens at 7 a.m. and La Carta at 10 to start all over again.

VOTING OFFICE EXTENDS HOURS UNTIL NOVEMBER 6

IT'S LATIN JAZZ FESTIVAL TIME IN BROWNTOWN AGAIN

THE WIDE OPEN FACES OF NEED IN DOWNTOWN BROWNSVILLE

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By Juan Montoya

The sight of vacant buildings in the downtown area is as common as the "for rent" signs on many of them. In this unusual shot of the old Anyer Second-Hand store at 952 Washington, one can see through the empty building and the pedestrian walking on 12th Street. 

At the end of the window in the far middle, one can make out the old federal building, now City Hall. (Anyer, but the way, is actually Reyna, in reverse, the name of the man who put up the second-hand clothing store many years ago.) The business has since moved to another location on Washington Street.

City leaders are hoping that the infusion of new money in upper-scale clubs by entrepreneurs will fuel a resurrection of the inner city, but the going has been painfully slow. 

Image result for plasma donors, rrunrrun
Not only do second-hand stores and discount outlets predominate the inner city core, but so has a profusion of plasma centers who see in our neighbors across the river an untapped source of donors.

On any given day, hundreds of donors line up at the centers to make a few dollars for their blood donations. You can tell them apart from other folks because they wear a wrap around their left elbow where the blood is drawn.




Image result for plasma donors, rrunrrunEach morning, before the sun rises in the east, there is a long line forming on the CSL Plasma centers in downtown Brownsville.

The lines are composed of local people in need of cash, and with Mexican nationals who are enticed by the opportunity of making $200 a month once they are considered established donors at the center.

At the current exchange rate, that's $3,600 pesos, a nice figure that rivals the amount they would make in a job on the Mexican side of the border.

But that's just a trickle of cash compared to what these companies – and hospitals who sell plasma and blood products charge for it.

In 2013, Ben Bowman, CEO of General Blood, a national for-profit blood brokerage firm, said:
"It depends on where you live. In Miami-Dade/Broward (Florida) you're probably looking at about $200 for a pint whereas one of our associates just got back from Seattle and said parts of Seattle are paying $600 for the same pint," he explained.

The major plasma company in Brownsville is CSL Ltd., a biopharmaceutical company.
According to a financila website, it researches, develops, manufactures and markets vaccines and plasma protein biotherapies to treat and prevent human medical conditions. The company operates its business through two segments: CSL Behring and bioCSL.

The CSL Behring segment provides plasma-derived and recombinant products, and operates plasma collection networks through CSL Plasma. The bioCSL segment manufactures, sells and distributes vaccines, antivenoms and other pharmaceutical products in Australia and New Zealand; and also manufactures and markets in vitro diagnostic products through Immunohaematology.

It has manufacturing operations in Germany, Switzerland and the United States. The company was founded on November 2, 1961 and is headquartered in Parkville, Australia.
Last year, as of December, it reported $5.78 billions in profits and made several Forbes lists, including:

#818 of the most successful Global 2000
#1,448 in sales
#447 in profit

#272 in market value
#44 Innovative Companies (2013)
Asia's Fab 50 Companies (2013)

Brownsville's CSL Plasma is a subsidiary of CSL Behring (which itself is part of CSL Limited), collects donations of blood plasma across the US through about 60 donation centers in 25 states; it also has about 10 collection locations in Germany.
Image result for plasma donors, rrunrrun
The company collects approximately 3 million liters of plasma each year. The plasma is used by the company's parent to manufacture therapies for bleeding disorders such as hemophilia, as well as blood clots, immune deficiencies, burns, shock, and other conditions. It also operates laboratory testing facilities and logistics centers.

To the donors from the Brownsville and Mexican sides of the Rio Grande selling their blood being in a few welcome dollars. But little do people realize that their arms are on the grassroots side of a multi-billion dollar empire that thrives on a poverty-stricken population.

The revitalization of the downtown area is going to be a slow process, but a start has been made by the arrival of a smattering of upper-scale eateries and clubs. 

The trick now is to attract tenants to the empty buildings and the construction of affordable housing in the empty second-story spaces so that students and local residents can establish a permanent presence and give downtown a lived-in look that will attract more businesses.

CAN YOU GUESS FROM WHERE THIS PICTURE WAS TAKEN?

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(Ed.'s Note: Off to the north and under the silvery billowing clouds, one can see the Cameron County Oscar Dancy Building. Right in front of it (it seems like below) is the Catholic school next to the Immaculate Conception Cathedral whose spires can be seen to the left (and west) of the photo. The white block building immediately behind the Dancy Building is the county courthouse on Harrison St.

Hint: The light-colored bus ports in front are the parking spaces to the Brownsville Multi-Modal Bus Terminal. If you guessed the roof of the new four-story parking structure on Adams Street you've got it right. We thank one of our intrepid (and stair-climbing) readers for this submission.)

WALL TO WALL AT THE TEXAS COUNTY DINER FOR POWERS

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(Ed.'s Note: We can't say we attended Monday's Meet-and-Greet for Position 1 BISD candidate Otis Powers, but a few of our readers did and said the place was packed. Former and current elected officials, BISD staff and just plain people joined the candidate to show their support. Powers is running against incumbent Carlos Elizondo and fellow challenger Erasmo Castro. As we approach the October 22 start for early voting, every candidate is seeking to gather traction for the momentum to carry them to victory. This good showing is bound to encourage his supporters and fire up the opposition.)
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