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ANOTHER REASON WE CAN'T SUPPORT CORTEZ FOR SBOE

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(Ruben Cortez, a former trustee of the Brownsville Independent School District, is running against City of Brownsville IT Specialist Tad Hasse in the November general election for District 2 of the Texas State Board of Education. Cortez is the son of JP 2-1 Justice of the Peace Linda Salazar. In this snippet from the lawsuit filed against BISD by former Special Needs Department Director Art Rendon, he recounts how Cortez used his position to force the district to hire his sister.) 

58. On or about June, 2008, Ruben Cortez, a sitting School Board member of BISD, contacted Plaintiff (Art Rendon) directly via telephone. He instructed Plaintiff to hire his sister, Linda Aguilar, for summer school employment as a Special Education teacher.

Image result for linda salazar and ruben cortez59. Plaintiff informed Mr. Cortez that BISD had hiring policies in place and instructed him that the hiring applications for the summer of 2008 had already been accepted and processed.

60. Cortez sent Plaintiff his sister’s application and insisted Plaintiff call her in immediately and give her a job. Plaintiff set up a meeting between Cortez’ sister, Linda, Ana Lerma, who was a Special Education supervisor, and Dr. Lee Garcia, Assistant Director for Special Services.

At this meeting, Ruben Cortez’ orders were followed, and Linda Aguilar was given a job for the summer of 2008.


REQUIRED TO SUCCEED IN B'TOWN: DA MAYOR'S BLESSING

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Image result for mayor tony martinez
Nov. 7, 2017 City Commission Agenda Item 10. Consideration and ACTION to authorize Change Order to Task Order No. 5 to CH2M to increase scope of work to design services related to New Airport Terminal Project at the Brownsville South Padre Island International Airport. (Bryant Walker – Airport) 

Feb. 6, 2018  City Commission Agenda Item 15. Consideration and ACTION to execute a License Agreement between the City of Brownsville and Origo Works Properties, LLC. (Engineering).

By Juan Montoya

Well, it has become quite clear now that in the Da Mayor Tony Martinez administration, the only thing required to snag real estate deals, to bend the rules, and to cash in on the city treasury is your personal relationship with Hizzoner.

Whether it's Abraham Galonsky snagging a $2.3 million price tag on the Casa del Nylon property most other appraisers tag at $750,000, or browbeating and ridiculing other city commission members to see things his way or hit the highway, and even selling tax-delinquent property to himself to turn a handsome profit, Tony has had the least word.

In every case, the public has had to dish out the cash to pay for Da Mayor's largess. He has developed a knack for self-dealing and profiteering at the expense of the poorest community in the nation draped with the mantle of sanctity. He even has a private chapel to worship Da Lawd in his back yard.

How do you succeed in Tony Martinez's Brownsville?

If you're a beginning engineering firm and attended St. Joseph Academy with his son, why he's there to give you a helping hand using the public's funds. Take, for example, the construction of the Brownsville-South Padre Island International Airport Terminal. Originally pegged at $38 million, that price has rapidly escalated to close to $58 million thanks to his intervention.

 CH2MHILL of Englewood, Co. requested the change order from Airport Director Bryant Walker in a letter dated Sept. 21 saying that original terminal was originally planned to be approximately 65,000 square feet with another 9,000 square feet designated by Custom and Border Protection for Federal Inspection Service (FIS) areas.

That, however, has changed and now the terminal is now planned for 85,000 square feet and the FIS areas to 23,000 square feet. The additional design and architectural work will increase the fees by CH2MHILL by $850,925.00, bringing ti from the original $1,650,000 to $2,500,925.00, which represents approximately 6.6 percent of the estimated construction value.

"The other item that has caused additional design and management effort is the coordination with our local architect, Origo Works," wrote James Kirshbaum, the engineer for CH2MHILL.

"As requested by the mayor, we engaged Origo Works to help incorporate "local" architectural features and elements into the original design. This effort extended the conceptual design phase of the project by approximately five months, resulting in significant additional efforts by CH2M, Corgan and Origo Works."
(See graphic at right. Click to enlarge.)

It's worth noting that the offending paragraph in Kirshbaum's letter (circled in yellow in the graphic) was removed when it was presented to the city commission. It is also worth noting that non one filed a complaint against the mayor for tampering with a government document as they did when commissioner Jessica Tetreau tried to correct the vote on the appointment of a new member of the GBIC.

And less than three month later (Feb. 6, 2018), Da Mayor was at it again. Origo Works was refurbishing a building to set up shop along the frontage road but there was a snag. It did not have enough parking space as required by the city. Without it, as many other would-be business people know, the permits would be denied and no business could take place.

But not to worry, there's where knowing Tony pays off. The firm lists work done on the mayor's businesses, including Spanky's Burgers and Rincon de la Paz off Palm Boulevard on their website. Both businesses list their principal as Martinez, and list his law firm's address at 1206 E. Van Buren Street as their mailing address.

The Feb. 6 agenda item placed by Engineering (not Tony?) reads: Consideration and ACTION to execute a License Agreement between the City of Brownsville and Origo Works Properties, LLC. (Engineering).

Under the licensing agreement, the city agreed to let the company use a part of city property...which lies adjacent to or is anticipated to be part of a continuum of the foregoing‐described major commercial development...which permission it seeks to build and maintain concrete/asphalt parking and landscaped areas which would run along, aside or across City property."

In exchange, Origo Works will build a parking lot, fence, and maintain it for the next five years with one-year options for renewals.

Commented one of our readers:

"The free give-away of city land to Origo Works for parking spaces with no consideration for the existing six business entities affected by this license agreement shows no mercy. These six businesses will no longer be able to access the rear of their buildings including the garbage collections via the alleyway which will be replaced by the relocated hike & bike trail. 

No notice to the owners no due diligence by the planning & zoning or building permits department including the engineering department. WHAT IS GOING ON?"

Yes, what is going on, indeed?

From this jaundiced viewpoint, it seems pretty simple. Martinez is doing as he wants, handing out benefits he doesn't own, and favoring his cronies at the expense of the city and its residents like priest handing out the host on Sundays.

CANDIDATE CORTEZ: LEADERSHIP THAT INSPIRES LAWSUITS

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By Juan Montoya

It's a good thing we don't have a debtor's prison in civilized nations anymore.
Otherwise Brownsville Independent School District Position 1 candidate Mark Anthony Cortez would be wearing an orange jumpsuit.

In a Sunday newspaper ad, he goes on about how he is committed to bring fairness to the district and for voters to allow him to manage the districts' $550 million budget that includes their property on their behalf.

Yet, a if voters took a cursory glance at examples of his fiscal responsibility, it would make them question his facile claims.

Just two of them – not including his delinquent property taxes to the BISD (more of that in future posts) – include a $12,023 debt judgment against him and his ongoing negotiating to pay off an additional bad debt of $2,335.61 with another lender who took him to small claims court. Lucky for him that somehow ended in his mother's 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 7,000 employees. The BISD is the city's largest employer and operates budgets of more than $540 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?

NO $1.4 MILLION SCOREBOARD, BSN, OR PARAGON SPORTS?

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By Juan Montoya

In reading the Brownsville Herald today, we ares struck by the frugal nature of the ads purchased by Brownsville Independent School District Place 4 incumbent Joe "Coach" Rodriguez.

While other candidates realize that early voting starts Monday and want to impress their credentials to the electorate, Rodriguez seems to favor the staid, quiet approach to his advertising budget. In other words, to go cheap.

His claim to fame are the so-called America’s Best Urban Schools Awards which are handed out in San Diego, the place, coincidentally, where BISD's Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas once ruled the roost.

In his minuscule ads, Rodriguez goes back to 2016 and says six school garnered recognition as either "gold" or "silver" winners. The last we heard, Rodriguez hasn't stepped into a classroom to give instruction to any BISD students in decades, yet readily claims the credit for the recognition.

Image result for coach joe rodriguezIn the others, he crows up his own performance as "a trustee that has questioned insurance and personal (personnel?) procedures that have saved BISD over $6 million." Yet, he doesn't give any specifics on how he has saved the district that much moolah. We should just take him at his word as the Herald obviously did.

Them in the Sports section (of course, he was after all, a "coach" many lifetimes ago), he chides three other trustees for trying to terminate the superintendent's contract.

This is the same Rodriguez who promised the district's residents when he moved to place Zendejas in an interim role until there had been a nationwide search led by a nationally-known consultant, that community input would be assured by the appointment of a committee of local residents, and that extensive interviews would take place.

All that was forgotten and tossed to the side and Zendejas, who handed in a two-page resume, was made permanent super now at almost $300,00 a year, and has given Rodriguez all he wants. Maybe "Coach" learned Latin along the way. How do you say "quid pro quo"?

But we're dying to know why he – who championed the hiring of Paragon Sports without competitive bidding – isn't claiming credit for that company getting more than $7 million in business from the BISD installing artificial turf? He said they were the "best in the world" at what they do without really telling anybody how he came to that conclusion.

When a purchasing agent demanded that Paragon be vetted by the district as they did all other BuyBoard vendors, she was ignominiously exiled to the Food and Nutrition Service, the Siberia of the BISD.

He also hasn't told anyone why he chose the company that installed the $1.4 million smoke and mirrors scoreboard at crumbling Sams Stadium, also without going out for bids. Were they also the "best in the world?" Or were they just more generous than most?

Oh, yeah, the BuyBoard.

Once you're a member you can pick from any of the vendors listed there without going out for bids. In fact, BSN Sports, the company he works for, is listed as a vendor, too. Over the time he has been on the board, that company has sold BISD millions in sports equipment.

"Coach" has been very successful in selling BSN and Herrf Jones products under the Varsity Brands to the BISD. The graphic below indicates just how successful he has been.Image result for joe rodriguez, coach, rrunrrun


In fact, during a recent controversy involving the ordering of 30 $895 championship rings for the Porter soccer team, Rodriguez was outspoken in defending the purchase, even though as a vendor of BSN, a sister company under Varsity Brands, it constituted a clear conflict of interest and he should have abstained from both the discussion and the vote.

He ignored that and he did.
Image result for joe rodriguez, coach, rrunrrun

Rodriguez is now seeking reelection to the Position 4 spot on the board against challengers Randy Gonzlaez, Dr. Prisci Roca Tipton and Jorge Valdez.

Will the voters of the district allow him to continue going to the well and to "keep the momentum going" as a vendor posing as a defender of children's education and the well-being of the district?

HOJA SUELTA SHOWS ROUGH-AND-TUMBLE BISD ELECTION

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(Ed.'s Note: We wondered how long it would take for the gloves to come out in the elections for the board of trustees of the Brownsville Independent School District. Well, we didn't have to wait long. The race for Position 2 is between incumbent Carlos Elizondo, Erasmo Castro and Herman Otic Powers, a former BISD trustee.

We have been told that hundreds of hojas sueltas pointing out the two candidates criminal records have been appearing in windshields of cars parked in shopping malls and the parking lots of BISD facilities. We checked, and, except for the fact that there is no political disclaimer, the information in the hoja suelta appears to be true.

(Hojas sueltas, by the way, appear to be a campaign tradition peculiar to South Texas. Supporters of candidates will often take it on their own while they campaign on educational issues in their literature and media ads.)

With early voting starting Monday, we expect more hojas sueltas in other races will start to sprout on the political landscape.)

ISN'T HE SUPPOSED TO AVOID PLACES THAT SELL ALCOHOL?

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(Ed.'s Note: It's often been said that Brownsville is a small town with a lot of people. Wherever you go, someone will probably know you. And if you speak ill of someone in mixed company, you might be talking with their cousin.

Well, that's probably what happened here. That's District 27 State Rep. Rene Oliveria at Cobbleheads sipping on something that looks like a mixed drink (or is it a soft drink?). The glass of water (or is it white wine?) is in front of him on the table. We thought Rene was under court order not to enter places where alcohol is served, or to imbibe alcoholic beverages until his trial for DWI.

We don't want to pick on the guy, but many other people under court order have to heed the restrictions as conditions of their bond arrangements before their court date. This is not the first time we have received photos of him at local drinking establishments. In fact, we received more than a half dozen pictures of this particular outing to Cobbleheads. Beware, Mr. Rep. People are watching. Is Luis Saenz?)

CORTEZ: LET ME SPEND YOUR TAXES, BUT I WON'T PAY MINE

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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

COLD AND RAIN AREN'T STOPPING EARLY VOTING CRUNCH

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(Ed.'s Note: Turnout was heavy this morning at the Brownsville Central Library and the voters- as well as the supporters of the various candidates for the many races at the state, county and local levels  -were out braving the elements as were voters at the Central Library in Brownsville. This elections will determine everything from a state senator, a county judge and the members of the Brownsville Independent School District, among others, including judicial races.

And if you hurry to the Central Library you might actually see Cameron County Elections Administrator Remi Garza actually working. We're not kidding!

Wanna know where to vote on Nov. 6 in the Cameron County General Election?
Find your precinct (left)



STORY BEHIND EARLY VOTING PICTURE OF PRISCI SUPPORTER

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(Ed.'s Note: When Marisol, a Hanna High School Early College student took this photo of the campaign worker at the Brownsville Independent School District Main Office, she thought it was just one of the campaign workers paid by candidates to push for them.

Only today, she found out that it wasn't just any paid campaign worker pushing her candidate, but that ti was Prisci Roca-Tipton's mother under the striped umbrella. Later we also found out that her father was working the other entrance of the main building.

We've heard about a mother's love, and this is a clear example of that lofty sentiment. Besides Roca-Tipton, other candidates running include Randy Gonzales, incumbent Joe "Coach" Rodriguez, and Jorge Valdez.

The excitement created by Beto O'Rourke in his run for the U.S. Senate seat held by Ted Cruz is apparently fueling the interest in this election cycle. And that is spilling out into the rest of the races. Below are the early voting results for Monday in the general election, and the early vote in the  BISD races by voting sites. (Click to enlarge.)
It's interesting to note that Monday's turnout of 6,875 is about six times as many as the 1,286 votes cast in the March primaries in the county. 


By comparison, there were 2,471 votes cast in the first day of the November 2016 early voting period in the BISD to the 2,509 cast Monday, indicating that there is a core number of voters in the district and that the 11 candidates are vying for the same voters.

FROM OUR MAN IN HAVANA: LOVE AND SALUDOS FROM FIDEL

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(Ed.'s Note: Remember when your friends went on vacation and brought you back a T-shirt that said something like "My friend went to ---- and all I got was this lousy T-shirt?"


Well, a friend of ours just returned from Havana, Cuba after traveling to Houston, Miami, and then to Havana, all on Southwest Airlines. Besides a few trinkets like a bongo drum key chain, he left the best for last: a Cohiba Esplendido hand-rolled Cuban cigar.
Image result for castro with a cohiba cigar

The Cohiba was well known to be Fidel Castro's (Peace be with him) favorite stogie and he enjoyed The Cohiba was well know to be Fidel Castro's (Peace be with him) favorite stogie and he enjoyed one every chance he could get.

We're not communists sympathizers, but the man knew his cigars. We don't know whether to smoke this on a special occasion (if Beto O'Rourke beats Ted Cruz for a the Texas U.S. Senate seat, for example), or if we will just keep it as a memento. It is unique, in that sense.

Our friend regaled us with stories about traveling in Havana in a vintage 1959 Ford Fairlane and visiting some of colonial Havana where vintiga buildings dating back to the Spanish colony sist side by side with modern hotels being constructed by Canadians. And then there are the Cuban ladies which range from fair-complected tones to mulattas and blacks.

Our buddy was traveling with his better half so he couldn't ogle as much as he would have liked, of course. But some of the video he took with his phone gave us a idea of the multi-cultural society which is today's Cuba.

Short of going to Havana, the Cohiba is the next-best thing to being there.

"COACH" JOE RODRIGUEZ: A LIFETIME OF BENDING THE RULES

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(Ed.'s Note: No less than two people who wen to vote at the City of Brownsville Public Library sent us photos showing Brownsville Independent School District incumbent Joe Rodriguez greeting people as they entered the rear of the library and into the hallway where early voting was being conducted.

One of us told us that "Coach" Joe (rather feeble now and swinging his walker) said he had already voted and said he "would appreciate "anything you could do." 

Now, Rodriguez was not wearing any campaign signs or T-shirts, but that would seem to us to be campaigning within the restricted area. We understand that the voting poll judge was advised that Rodriguez was greeting voters as they entered the area and was told in no uncertain terms he could not do that. As it is, he owns the property adjoining the library and has the fence plastered with his signs.

Is Rodriguez – facing challenges from Prisci Roca-Tipton, Randy Gonzales, and Jorge Valdez – hearing the footsteps of defeat and has decided to pull out all the stops, including illegal campaigning at the polls?

CHEO MUNOZ NOW A THORN ON STISD, BOBBY LERMA'S SIDE

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By Juan Montoya

Did you ever wonder what ever happened to Cheo "Burn the Midnight Oil" Muñoz, the former trustee of the Brownsville Independent School District?

You remember Muñoz. He used to drive all the other BISD board members crazy nitpicking numbers of roofing contracts, architectural designs, and even electrical schematics. It got to the point where he was questioning the numbers so much that board members would often leave the meetings in the we hours of the morning because Muñoz was not satisfied with the answers from the administration.

You see, Cheo was a retired Brownsville Public Utility Board engineering employee. He, along with his trusty sidekick Meme Hernandez (QEPD), used to send shivers up the spines of elected officials and administrators as they set off on crusades against real (and often imagined) conspiracies on the public treasury.

Often, some entities (like Cameron County Pct. 1) would blame them for delaying this project or another with their continual nitpicking and questioning of their cost projections, use of specific materials, etc., etc., 

The construction of the outfall to the river to prevent flooding to the Valle Escondido area was held up for months as the duo questioned engineer's soil samples, water flows, etc. No answer, it seemed, would satisfy them because they always suspected some conspiracy afoot. 

Well, Cheo was an appointed member of the South Texas Independent School District board of directors until someone whispered in County Judge Treviño's ear that the other board members were gong nuts over Muñoz's micromanaging of that board's finances and administrative activities. Quitanolos, Willy, they said.

So not long ago, before the the candidates had filed for the ballot for the STISD, Treviño told Muñoz thank you for your service, but that he wasn't going to reappoint him to the board.  The STISD board of directors is comprised of 24 members from Cameron, Hidalgo and Willacy Counties, making it – they claim – the largest school board in the nation.

Each county has four elected positions representing each County Commissioner’s precinct. In addition, each county judge appoints a member for every 100,000 people. Cheo was that appointment for Pct. 1. The other, the elected member, is Brownsville attorney Bobby Lerma. Lerma is also the City of Brownsville Municipal Judge.
Board Member Eliceo Munoz
When told his services were no longer required, Muñoz threw a snit and filed for Lerma's elected position in defiance. Now, Lerma and Muñoz are vying for the position held for the last 24 years by Lerma.

This is a more important position than it would appear.

The STISD serves junior high and high school students who live along the southernmost tip of Texas, the region known as the Rio Grande Valley. The district stretches over three counties, Cameron, Hidalgo and Willacy, and overlaps 28 other school districts, an area of 3,643 miles.

Any student living in the three counties can attend. Its administration boasts that 95 percent of STISD graduates continue their education at major universities or technical colleges.

According to the Cameron County Elections Office, so far, 1,955 votes have been cast in the STISD race, meaning that votes are crucial to who remains – or leaves – the board. Those who stay will manage a nearly $66 million budget, with an average $48 coming from the average residence in the district.

This is the first time that the elected position on the STISD board is being contested. And the only reason is because Muñoz is mad that he was not reappointed to the board because of his peculiar style of managing. What will the voters say?

COUNTY'S EARLY VOTING RATE AT PRESIDENTIAL-YEAR PACE

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The first two days of early voting in Cameron County has outpaced the rates of November 2016, the presidential-election year when Donald Trump was elected to the White house.

And although there are numerous races being contested – including the Cameron County Judge's race between incumbent Eddie Treviño and challenger Carlos Cascos – it seems that the U.S. Senate race between incumbent Ted Cruz and "Beto" O'Rourke has caught the electorate's fancy.

Total for the first two days 11-day early voting period from Oct. 22 to Nov. 2 is 13,467 votes across the 20 open voting sites. Five other early voting sites will open on a limited basis later in the early voting period.

Those 13,467 votes for this year slightly outpace the 13,119 votes cast in the first two days of the Nov. 2016 elections, a surprising total since they have been cast in a presidential midterm election.

The rule of thumb for predicting the turnout in local elections holds that 60 percent of the votes are cast during this period.

"This is wonderful news for us," said a voting site worker at the Brownsville Central Public Library, the most popular early voting site in the county. "It's good to see so much interest in the electorate."

There are, of course, other races being run here. Judicial, state, and school district races are also at stake. The heightened interest could impact these races as well.

"We are hoping people in Cameron County take the time to vote," said the worker. "It's a privilege  people in this country enjoy that sometimes we don't appreciate."

PREDICTION: BETO BLUE WAVE DOOMS CASCOS' CANDIDACY

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By Juan Montoya

We have always liked Carlos Cascos.

His frankness, his open-door demeanor, and his down-to-earth personality has made him an attractive alternative to the behind-the-scenes, smoke-filled-room attitudes of machine-politician Democrats of Cameron County.

In any other election cycle, the crossover vote – between 20 to 22 percent – would propel him to victory over any Democrat. But this is not your usual election-year cycle. This is the year of Betomania.

So far, 23,260 voters have trekked to the early-voting polling places in the first four days of the 11-day voting period. That is just under the 25,750 presidential election-year turnout of November 2016.

If the trend continues through the rest of the early voting, it will be very difficult for Cascos' crossover votes to overcome the very last year of the palanca vote.

In a sense, the last year of palanca votes plus the Betomania enthusiasm may doom this very Cameron County-unique crossover phenomenon that has propelled Carlos to the top county seat at the Dancy Building.

We're not in love with Eddie Treviño, by any means. His tenure as BPUB legal counsel is still affecting the ratepayers of the city with excessive utility bills to pay for the yet-unseen Memorandum of Understanding between the city and Tenaska for the Electric Plant to Nowhere. But Cascos has stated he would not make that a campaign issue. So be it.

 We had not seen this type of mania exhibited across South Texas since the Tony Garza days when three Democratic Party commissioners crossed party lines to defeat Ray Ramon.

Now the boogie man isn't Ray. It's Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, and the knee-jerk right-wing reactionaries like John Cornyn, Mitch McConnell and the like. It's the dog-whistle racism of the nation's Republican Party which may have thrown the wet towel on the Cascos candidacy.

We could be wrong. But let me tell you a little story.

Not long ago, an elderly couple mistakenly threw their mail-in ballots in the trash. In any other time they would have just blown it off and forgotten about voting. But this year, because they wanted to vote for Beto, they called their son to take them to fill out the affidavits that they had thrown away their ballots and wanted to vote in person at an early-voting site.

The Beto phenomenon is very real, especially here in South Texas. He may not win the statewide race north of Sarita, but the local races along the Rio Grande will be affected by the mid-term turnout. Like I said, before, we hope we are wrong. But the indices are all there.

In fact, Cascos supporters have gone as far as publicizing lawn signs for Beto and Carlos as if to show the dichotomy in Brownsville.

The massive voter registration effort by the Democrats combining with Betomania are the makings of a Perfect Storm that might just wipe out the crossover vote that has made Cascos county judge time and time again.

We know we are going out on a limb with this, Cameron County being Cameron County. Let's see what the voters finally say.

ANATOMICALLY CORRECT BUFFALO BY PLAINS CAPITAL BANK

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(Ed.'s Note: One of our seven readers sent us this photo of the sculpture of the red buffalo located on Price road just west of the Barnard Street intersection. If you have ever seen a live buffalo other than the one the Garza brothers had out on Military Highway, you know that size wise, it's not a true rendition of the real animal.

In real life, buffaloes are huge beasts that tower over a small pickup truck. The females bear the scars of the hooks of the forelegs of the  males that latch on when they mate. And we'll stop short of commenting on the obvious anatomically correct version of the sculpture. We thank out perceptive reader for the photo submitted above.)

UP GO COMMISSIONER NEECE'S $450,000 OF EYES-IN-THE SKY

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Crews of Xtreme Security & Fire of Brownsville are seen installing some of  the more than $498,000 worth of 40 camera systems in the Main Street district, which is roughly encompassed by Adams, 14th, Levee and 8th streets. A committee of city and police officials started researching the project in August 2017, and installation is scheduled to be completed in November.

Commissioner Ben Neece, who represents downtown Brownsville, said the cameras not only will help catch criminals but also deter them as word gets around. During the commission meeting, he said there’s still a perception that the area is dangerous despite “vibrant and robust momentum” that has drawn new businesses and entertainment venues downtown.

DALLAS MORNING NEWS, HOUSTON CHRONIC ENDORSE BETO

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In explaining its endorsement of Beto O'Rourke for Senate in Texas, The Dallas Morning News editorial board said he had run &
By Marina Fang
HuffPost
Texas Democratic Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke landed another major endorsement, this one from the Dallas Morning News, whose editorial board hailed the El Paso congressman’s “inclusive and hopeful tone” over that of opponent Sen. Ted Cruz, (R), calling the incumbent “a cutting figure in today’s politics.”

In explaining its endorsement, the paper’s editorial board said O’Rourke had run “a campaign that’s based on unifying communities,” arguing that “the pivotal issue before our country is public leadership, and here we believe O’Rourke’s tone aligns with what is required now.”

“In the divisive times in which we live, we believe that tone and leadership are the top issues with which to judge these candidates’ tenures in office. So we’re placing a bet on Beto,” the paper wrote.

The board made it clear that it does not agree with some of his more progressive policy positions but celebrated O’Rourke’s “demeanor that offers respect for each person and a humbleness that will allow him to open the door to working with those who hold political views different from his” ― noting, for example, his bipartisan friendship with Rep. Will Hurd (R-Texas).

In explaining its endorsement of Beto O’Rourke for Senate in Texas, The Dallas Morning News editorial board said he had run “a campaign that’s based on unifying communities.”

But the paper also called out what it sees as “blemishes on his campaign,” citing O’Rourke’s support for impeaching President Donald Trump and his adoption of Trump’s name-calling against Cruz as departures from the unifying tone of his campaign.

Last week, O’Rourke also earned the endorsement of the of the Houston Chronicle. The paper endorsed Cruz in 2012.

“A ‘Beto’ victory would be good for Texas, not only because of his skills, both personal and political, but also because of the manifest inadequacies of the man he would replace,” the Chronicle’s editorial board wrote.

The Senate race between O’Rourke and Cruz is one of the most highly watched matchups in this year’s midterm elections, with the result expected to be closer than usual for the traditionally Republican state. O’Rourke’s candidacy has sparked grassroots enthusiasm among Democrats and drawn heavy fundraising.

REMEMBER THIS BEFORE THERE WAS A RINGGOLD PARK?

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                                                                                                                                        Courtesy Photo

By Gene Fernandez
Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The process of incorporating 'Ringgold Park" into the Brownsville public park system formally began June 16, 1927.

The purchase of the parcel that was to become a park was transacted on that date. However, the prevailing thought at the time throughout this country was to favor the creation of parks and recreational areas and their integration into our social order.

Basically, eight city squares (double-sided city blocks) of land out of the Original Townsite Acre Block 5 were purchased by Mayor A.B. Cole's administration from developer Lon C, Hill by way of Pauline J. Wells, widow of the early Brownsville power broker James B. Wells. A covenant in the deed transfer stipulated that "all the property herein conveyed for park and other municipal purposes."

The specific zone which encompasses the park area is dominated by the presence of what is known as Town Resaca, which wraps around the subject peninsula of the property. In its original form the terrain was somewhat erratic in topography, due to the effect of eons of water flow into this delta range.

Little is known about the early land use in this sector other than periodic mentioning of its having had brick making and sand pit operations on it, which actually created more radical land features to the landscape. By the time of its purchase the city elements, those early vestiges of use had long been abandoned, and by 1929, when actual construction began to transform the topography, mention was made of the useful incorporation of certain sand pits in the building of sunken garden pools.

A word-of-mouth account that was still circulating in the 1950s revealed that the adjacent tract (where Cummings Middle School has long been located) was utilized as a landfill at some point after the cessation of mining operations taking advantage of the pits that had been created.

The very earliest accounts of the condition of the landscape over this park are prior to its usage as such revealed a lush, dense cover of native chaparral that skirted the entire peninsula. In the evolution of the park's development the native brush was incorporated into the overall design as an attractive feature, capitalizing on the natural aspect.

Great efforts were made throughout the end of the 1920s and into the 1930s to supplement this natural growth with large-scale plantings of ornamental shrubs such as poinsettias and bougainvilleas, but the retention level was low, due to the ravages of periodic droughts and freezes over the decades. As a result of those trying forces of nature, none of these beautification efforts have survived into modern times. In particular, the droughts of the 1940s and the decade-long drought of the 1960s reduced all these efforts to naught.

During the period of the Great Depression an abundance eff labor efforts by the Works Progress Administration and the National Youth Administration were directed toward land clearing, landscaping and other missions at the park, showing the community's concern for its development. Ringgold Park actually enjoyed a favorite status by the local citizenry over the other parks that had been developed from the time of the turn-of-the-century up until WWII such as Filmore (Lincoln) Park, Resaca Park, Washington Park, and the Depot and Chamber of Commerce Park.

Throughout the Depression, newspapers bore frequent mention of picnics, Easter egg hunts, social receptions, and sporting events centering on Ringgold.

The year 1933 witnessed some strange visitors entering the park. Being that "Snakeville" operated by William Abraham "Snake King" Lieberman, was situated on the rial siding where the modern-day Palm Village shopping center was located, the terrible hurricane that year broke open the majority of the animal compounds of that facility and wild creatures of all kinds gravitated to much more natural conditions as existed on Ringgold Park.

Up until the early 1960s, Yucatan Black Iguanas were frequently seen running through the park along the roof gutters of Cummings Junior High.

At a point in 1939, Hubert Hudson, Sr., extended an offer through the Camber of Commerce in a philanthropic gesture, to pay for the construction of a "Community Center" on these grounds. This was a substantial building with all the latest amenities. This proposal was shot down by Mayor Robert Runyon on the basis that it would attract dancing and music events to a park that he wanted to feature more of an approach to nature.

The park did not change much at all in its appearance and infrastructure from the 1930s up to the 1950s. In 1954 the Brownsville School System built Cummings Junior High School on the adjacent tract and there was a slight increase in facilities offerings at that time. The major addition to be added in 1955 was the Sams Memorial Pool, spurring the building of picnicking accommodations and an area for shuffleboard courts.

This was followed by another contribution from the Sams Foundation in the form of the Camile Community Theater in 1965.

It was at some point in the 1970s that the name change took place to shift from the previously-known Ringgold park to the new Dean porter Park.

The mid-1970s witnessed a major revamping of the public BarB-Q facilities and open-door pavilions, but there was no significant improvement to the overall grounds beyond that for the following years until the efforts of an all-volunteer committee began organizing the Dean porter Renovation movement, which culminated (from the mid-1990s through about 2005) in what we now possess as an $19 million asset for the City of Brownsville, its residents and visitors.

2018 GENERAL VOTER TURNOUT DWARFS 2014 MIDTERMS

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Image result for early voting turnout heavy in brownsville texas


By Diana Eva Maldonado 
Brownsville Herald

The turnout for early voting in Cameron County has been historic with triple the number of ballots cast in comparison to the 2014 midterm election results.

County commissioners on Friday voted to extend the number of locations available for voting this weekend at four of the busiest polling places in the county.

The Brownsville Public Library on Central Boulevard, the Harlingen County Annex on Wilson Road, the San Benito Community Building and the Port Isabel City Hall locations will hold early voting today and Sunday.

The polls will be open today from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and on Sunday voters can cast ballots between 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. In all residents can vote at 15 locations today and six on Sunday.

Commissioners also agreed to extend voting an additional hour next week to handle the record turnout. With the exception of polling place already scheduled to close late, all others will stay open until 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. The courthouse location will be open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. next week and the polling places in Port Isabel, Los Fresnos and La Feria will operate from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. next Thursday and Friday, Nov. 1 and Nov. 2.

“The Commissioner Court responded to the historic turnout and took action to make sure everyone had a chance to vote who wanted to take advantage of early voting,” said Cameron County Elections Administrator Remi Garza. “We are excited that at the level of participation so far and want to make sure that anyone who wants to voter early can. Voting early gives the voters choice and the time to vote at their convenience.”

During the first four days 23,260 people cast early ballots with more than 20 percent of the voting taking place at the Brownsville library.

B'VILLE-BASED K OF C LEADER ACCUSED OF CHILD SEX ABUSE

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NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (Reuters) - The Knights of Columbus was sued on Tuesday by two men who said they were sexually abused as children by a leader of a youth group run by the Roman Catholic fraternal organization.

The federal lawsuits allege that Knights of Columbus officials knew a leader of the Columbian Squires youth group in Texas was molesting children but did not make any effort to stop him or remove him from the position. (The group also alerted local authorities in Brownsville, Texas, where the leader identified in the lawsuits as Juan “Julian” Rivera was based.)
Image result for juan julian river, K of C, Brownsville

The suits are believed to be the first child sex abuse claims filed against the Catholic group, said Jeffrey Herman, the attorney representing the two alleged victims.

“Like so many victims, these two men have suffered in silence for literally decades, and finally they are getting help,” said Herman.

The Roman Catholic Church has been rocked by sex abuse scandals worldwide. Some priests have been convicted of pedophilia, other cases have been settled in civil courts and the church has paid millions of dollars in damages.

In the largest compensation deal to date, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles agreed in 2007 to pay $660 million to 500 victims of sexual abuse dating as far back as the 1940s.

“We emphatically deny the allegations that have been made,” said Patrick Korten, a spokesman for the Knights of Columbus.

With 1.8 million members worldwide, the Knight of Columbus is the world’s largest Catholic mens’ organization and is focused on charity work.

Its Squires youth division is made up of some 28,000 boys ages 10 to 18.

(The Valley Morning Star reported that "Julian Rivera terminated his membership in the Knights of Columbus in January 2010, according to the website. There was no one home at the address listed under his name.

But outside the Knights of Columbus branch in Brownsville on Wednesday, Herman, the attorney for both of the men who filed lawsuits, said the cases reflected “a pattern of abuse by the people who families trust the most.”

Stone, who stood beside Herman, said the old Knights’ building on Old Port Isabel Road gave him chills. He said it was the place where he first began to serve in the Columbian Squires, the Knights’ youth organization for 10- to 18-year-old boys, which helps host fundraisers and events.

Stone, who said he is undergoing rehabilitation treatment in Kansas, said Rivera plied him with whisky, marijuana, pornography and a white pill that he said would help him relax, according to court filings. He said that when he hesitated to give Rivera a massage, Rivera brandished a small handgun and placed it on the ground, according to allegations in the lawsuit.

Stone’s lawsuit alleges Rivera sexually abused him for six years on overnight trips for local and national events of the Squires.

“I thought I was in the hands of someone who was going to take care of me,” he said.)

In one of the lawsuits, an unnamed Kansas resident claims the Squires leader abused him from 1978, when he was 10 years old, until 1986.

He claims the leader shared him with other youth counselors in the group and threatened to kill him if he told anyone, the lawsuit said.

The second lawsuit came from Texas resident Jim Dennany, who said he alerted Knights of Columbus officials in 1986 to assaults he said he suffered in the 1970s when he was a young teenager.

He claimed the group took no action, concealed the allegations and told him to keep quiet, according to the lawsuit.

The accused former youth group leader remained a youth leader with the Knights of Columbus until last year, said Herman, a Miami-based attorney who specializes in sex abuse cases.

“We allege that Rivera fit the profile where they should have known he was a potential predator,” the attorney said. “He openly paraded himself around with boys and did not even try to cover it up.”

The Knights of Columbus spokesman said the group first became aware of allegations of sexual abuse against Rivera in December 2009.

“We acted immediately, removing him from any responsibility involving youth programs,” Korten said. The group also alerted local authorities in Brownsville, Texas, where Rivera was based, he said.

To read antire article, click on link: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-abuse-catholics/lawsuits-accuse-knights-of-columbus-of-child-abuse-idUSTRE6BD5LW20101214
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