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ST. JOE-MATA PREPPIES TURN CITY INTO ANIMAL HOUSE; GRINGO DE MAYO LATEST WRINKLE OF THE PARTY SCAM

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By Juan Montoya

It started innocently enough, as a new wrinkle to the Mr. Amigo Association when the invitee - usually a novela hero or heroine with Televisa - was invited to preside over a week-long party by an inside cadre of friends out to have good time and make a little pocket change on the side.

The group would solicit participation from the local business community in the form of sponsor ships, donations, and - from local restaurants - free samples of their wares for a slight fee from the public, of course. That was the famous Taste of La  Frontera" fundraiser. The board would then all take off to Mexico City, wine and dine the MAA selection, and come back home to nurse their hangovers and hand over the baton to the next luminary of the self-appointed MAA board.

Image result for mr. amigo association sculpture on linear parkThe  Charro Days crowds would get a chance to ogle at their television hero and would go home to await the next year's show. The city extended all its services to the guest and the group ranging from security by the Brownsville Police Dept., public facilities for their events, some of them restricted to the inside group. Accountability to the public? Are you kidding? We'll use public funds as we see fit and no one has the right to ask what happened to the money.

The MAA's initial mission to invite someone who has done something to unite both nations were left far behind. Instead, the focus subtly shifted to personages of mass appeal which would turn out the crowds. No more Mexican presidents, ambassadors, or artists of international stature. If not substance, then a circus would do. In other words, the bar was perceptibly lowered.

The MAA, infiltrated by Televisa and Brownsville and Matamoros "elites," this year chose unknown business tycoon Elias Ayub, whose main claim to fame was that he was the son-in-law of Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim.

The show was a flop. In fact, Ayub stood up the city when he flew off on his jet to the Mexican Tennis Open in Acapulco while the crowds in the Charro Days International Parade sat patiently waiting for his appearance. Nothing doing, of course.

The president of the MAA, Arturo Trevino, a businessman whose family  has extensive commercial interests in Matamoros and now in Brownsville, is a St. Joe grad who saw his opportunities and took them. He has had some experience politicking. His brother Armando was a candidate for political office in Matamoros. If anyone knows all the tricks, they would.

His example of "giving back to the community" is MAA's purchase of 400 bicycles for students from Matamoros attending Brownsville schools with funds raised from Brownsville businesses and individuals.

Trevino, besides his St. Joe's connections to the twin cities' elite, is now a member of the Brownsville Community Improvement Corporation (BCIC) and knows where the bucks can be tapped for his "building new traditions" schemes.

Just as Trevino saw the MAA formula as the blueprint for a quick, easy buck, so have a a number of local "boosters" and "organizers" of various events who grabbed on quickly to the city's brass ring. Promote and get approval for an event that would "promote" the city, use public facilities, security, and assets for nothing, and pocket the proceeds. "Beerfest," Una Noche en Garibaldi, "Tacos y Tragos," etc., are the brainchildren of this bunch.

At each event, there is some slight mention of the event being a "fundraiser" for some good cause as a justification for free use of the public's assets and facilities while the books are kept under wraps and accountability is nil.

Even the use of the $450,000 electronic billboard at the old Visitors and Convention Bureau, a cost that usually soars past $3,000 to $4,000 was provided by the city for free for use by the private school alumni.

The latest wrinkle is the so-called "Gringo de Mayo," a for-pay event to be held at Market Square which has been refurbished at enormous cost by the public and celebrates the "memory" of the late Alan Jeffrey "Jeff" Lewis whose claim to fame seems to have been that he attended St. Joseph's Academy with his pals from Brownsville and Matamoros.

When he died in 2017, his honorary pallbearers included Rick Cardenas, Rene Cardenas, Les Gloor, Dr. Karen Brooks, along with his "Brothers" from the Charro Days Beard Posse- Wesley Reed, Joe Kenney, Leo Trevino, Raul de la Llata, Mike Pashos,
Rusty Harwood, Doroteo Garcia, Pancho Parker, Narciso Cortez, Johnny Champion, Joe Lee Rubio, Tiny Barrientes, Bean Ayala, Craig Grove, Lloyd Young, Will Putegnat, Danny Loff, Bobby Walker, Javier Garcia, and Mike Garcia.

The organizers of the event make no bones about it.

They say the idea for the event was born during a group drunk that included "everything that Jeff loved during a good party; avocado, good drinks, and a great time with new and old friends."

This, according to the St. Joe FB page will "bring culture and fun" to Brownsville. Trevino, who owns a produce company, has already posted that he has "secured" 500-plus pounds of avocados for the event. Don't hurt to make a little pocket change while we're at it, no?

The entry fee is between $30 for pre-sale, $40 at the door and $50 per couple. That should keep the rabble out.

Almost as an afterthought, the organizers say that the Brownsville Historical Association will get a cut (they don't say how much) as will something called the Jeff Lewis Endowment. Let us take a wild guess. We would wager that any grant or scholarship might include a St. Joe student. What do you think?

We don't mean to speak ill of the dead, but Mr. Lewis had his demons and that included behavior that resulted in his being removed from his coaching job at Rivera High School for activities better left unsaid. Let's just say he was hardly a role model for the students there.

It's high time that the city fathers (and mothers and nannies on the city commission) take control of the activities by groups like the MAA and others who piggyback their money raising activities to line their coffers. Why should public funds and facilities be used to host a good drunk and a few bucks for a select few?

PORT CONNECTOR ROAD OK'D, EAST LOOP STILL WAITING

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BROWNSVILLE, Texas — The South Port Connector Road Project received environmental clearance on April 24, 2019 from the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) Pharr District Office, advancing the project to the construction phase.

The project is part of the Cameron County Regional Mobility Authority’s (CCRMA) East Loop Corridor plan. When complete, the South Port Connector Road will span two miles and will connect Ostos Road at the Port of Brownsville with State Highway 4.

(Ed.'s Note: But while the East Loop - which will remove hazardous cargoes from International Blvd. in the heart of the city, along schools, churches, and barrios, has been waiting for more than 30 years to be built, the connector, which will serve billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX, has become a reality overnight.)

The project will enhance the port’s intermodal connectivity, further facilitating domestic and international trade throughout the Rio Grande Valley.

“The Port of Brownsville is a valuable asset to the Texas economy and a major economic force in the region,” said John Reed, Brownsville Navigation District Chairman.

“Infrastructure improvements such as the South Port Connector facilitate our efforts in strengthening the port’s position as the main hub for domestic and international trade in South Texas. Working collaboratively with Cameron County and CCRMA contribute greatly to the success of joint projects like this.”

The South Port Connector project is the result of a strategic collaboration between the port, the CCRMA, Cameron County and TxDOT – all working in unison – to create positive investment opportunities in the region.

“Cameron County and this administration are committed to working with our partners at the Port of Brownsville to ensure that we continue to build the proper infrastructure to attract industry that will provide jobs and a better quality of life for all,” said Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño Jr.

“I thank the Texas Department of Transportation, the Port of Brownsville and the CCRMA for working on getting the environmental document cleared. The engineering plans are 100 percent complete and funding is in place, paving the way for the construction of the project to proceed. This important project when completed will provide additional access for future development at the port.”

The project will improve traffic accessibility to the Port of Brownsville by providing another entry and exit to and from the port. It will eventually offer direct access to commercial lanes at the Veterans International Bridge.

CCRMA Chairman Frank Parker Jr. stated, “the CCRMA is glad to be a partner with Cameron County and the Port of Brownsville on this very important infrastructure project. The CCRMA prepared the environmental document and coordinated the environmental clearance with TxDOT. This is the first phase of the overweight corridor and we are very excited to have received environmental clearance. We look forward to getting this project under construction in the very near future.”

SUCKING BLOOD ONE DROP AT A TIME: LOCATION! LOCATION!

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By Juan Montoya
Business in booming in downtown Brownsville.

Or shall we say pulsating?

Every day, hundreds of people  cross the Gateway Bridge and line up at huge warehouse-looking buildings - one of them the refurbished historical Three Sisters store at the corner of 10th Street and Elizabeth - to do business. A few are Brownsville residents, but the majority, after talking to the in line, are from Mexico.

They're not lining up at discount or second-hand stores. And there are no Walmarts or Target stores for their shopping convenience.

But business is business and the economy around these structures is booming. In fact, these centers - except for a few upscale bars and lounges around the Market Square - have been the scant few that have opened for business in the downtown area.

These businesses hire hundreds of workers clad in blue scrubs who herd the clients inside and make them comfortable in soft, padded easy chairs. Plasma-screen color televisions provide them with entertainment as they sit.

But they are not there to buy anything. In fact, they are there to "donate" their blood to the busy plasma centers. There are two GSL Plasma centers downtown and the new one - GCAM Plasma - is now open for business. GSL has another center off Price Road and the US 77-83 expressway.

When they emerge from the centers downtown near the bridge, many head straight for the HEB grocery store on Elizabeth past shuttered and boarded up stores and the homeless sleeping in doorways, make a few purchases totaling at least $5 of groceries, and pay with their newly-issued  debit cards.

And since many of them are from Matamoros, HEB pays them the balance of their cards (between $30 to $45) in cash and saves them the trouble of cashing in their cards at local banks that require U.S. identification.

The planners of the new GCAM Plasma center got it right. They remodeled the Three Sisters store located directly across the street from the HEB saving their clients - some still a bit dizzy from their donation - the four-block walk to the store from the GSL center.

You can tell who has donated plasma because the workers at the centers wrap their arm with brown cotton bands to stanch the bleeding after the needles have been removed. You see them at the cash registers at the HEB making their token purchases to cash their cards.

And so, carrying their 10-pound bag of chicken quarters or other small purchases, they head back across the river. For people whose only access to income could consist of a job at the maquiladoras averaging $10 a day, the $40 per weekly donation are a welcome addition to the household finances.

"No hay mas, carnal," they shrug.

Local managers of the plasma centers will not talk on the record, but instead refer you to an 800 number answered by a recording giving a vague message of the social and lifesaving benefits of donating blood.

It's in a sense, location! Location! Location!

GSL for example, has seven centers along the Rio Grande all the way to McAllen to make it convenient for Mexico residents to walk across the bridges and plug right in.

After a good day of harvesting the lifeblood from the needy, the companies load up their daily take in trucks to haul off to their distribution centers. Another day, another pint of plasma.

Business is booming downtown!
Image result for plasma donors, brownsville texas, rrunrrun

WIND AND SHADOWS: A SURREAL SHOW ON CITY SIDEWALKS

AND CITY ASSETS ARE USED TO FACILITATE THIS "MEMORY"?

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MEXICAN DE MAYO VS.
GINGO DE MAYO

(The Gringo de Mayo celebration organizers are using public facilities and assets (city staff to set up the venue,traffic control personnel, security, etc.) for free in hopes of raising money to create a St. Joseph Academy scholarship in the name of the late Jeff Lewis. They piggybacked on the Brownsville Historical  Association, a non=profit, by promising them a cut of the profits. The BHA better watch its wallet with these guys.

The "memorial" is being held at the city's refurbished Market Square tonight. Entry fees range from $30 pre-sale, $40 per person at the door, and $50 per couple. It is no secret that the affable vigilante from the Beard Posse was an alcoholic, coke head and in his inebriated state would dance naked in front of the television while his daughters observed. The following lament to his legacy is from someone who knew him intimately.)

You came into my life with broad shoulders and an even broader smile. You weren't a stranger to me as I had seen you in the company of other relatives on many occasions. You were the toast of the party and you greeted everyone with a hug. You filled the room with warmth.

I'm not sure when you started calling me your pal, but in the first years of high school you were a favorite uncle to me. For 50 years we have been family. Most of my knowledge from life experiences has been gained with you at my side.

You have been my escort to the seamier side of life, which has been a roller coaster ride of cheap thrills. Besides my attachment to you, I have become a kissin' cousin with the rest of your clan--drugs, nicotine and sex.

I have lost control. I don't blame you for my excesses, but you have never advised me to step on the breaks. Broken families are part of the steep toll I've paid for the good times.

If I were happy in spite of the sadness I've caused others because the pleasure was worth the pain, I would accept myself as an individual who marched to a different drum. But I am wracked with guilt, remorse and unhappiness. I see a dark horizon, a bleak future and an early death.

I purposely walk into ambushes. Physically, I can't resist. The temptations are too great. I throw caution to the wind and roll the dice time and time again. The intensity of the moment is more blinding than the sun.

You and your band of bullies--drugs, nicotine and sex--taunt me. You've heard me talk this same shit in the past. I'm going to change, but nothing changes and I slip deeper and deeper into despair

I know I am weak. I know I'm capable of continuing my reckless behavior at the expense of everything. I don't like making excuses for my excesses. It's too easy, but a force possesses me beyond my control.

I use the excuse that it is too late and I return to the oblivion of my vices. The calm impression I give hides the turbulence roiling beneath the surface. I am swimming for my life. If I have any hope of saving myself from drowning, I must liberate myself from you.

With a clearer mind, I might have the strength to combat the wild beast that stalks me every day. I must escape your clutches before you and your friends destroy me.

"MR. TRUMP EATS YOUR SOUL IN SMALL BITES..."

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By James Comey
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 08:  Former FBI Director James Comey takes his seat after being sworn in before the Senate Intelligence Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill June 8, 2017 in Washington, DC. Comey said that President Donald Trump pressured him to drop the FBI's investigation into former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn and demanded Comey's loyalty during the one-on-one meetings he had with president.  (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)New York Times Opinion Page

People have been asking me hard questions. 

What happened to the leaders in the Trump administration, especially the attorney general, Bill Barr, who I have said was due the benefit of the doubt?

How could Mr. Barr, a bright and accomplished lawyer, start channeling the president in using words like “no collusion” and F.B.I. “spying”? And downplaying acts of obstruction of justice as products of the president’s being “frustrated and angry,” something he would never say to justify the thousands of crimes prosecuted every day that are the product of frustration and anger?

How could he write and say things about the report by Robert Mueller, the special counsel, that were apparently so misleading that they prompted written protest from the special counsel himself?

How could Mr. Barr go before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday and downplay President Trump’s attempt to fire Mr. Mueller before he completed his work?

And how could Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, after the release of Mr. Mueller’s report that detailed Mr. Trump’s determined efforts to obstruct justice, give a speech quoting the president on the importance of the rule of law? 

Or on resigning, thank a president who relentlessly attacked both him and the Department of Justice he led for “the courtesy and humor you often display in our personal conversations”?

What happened to these people?

I don’t know for sure. People are complicated, so the answer is most likely complicated. But I have some idea from four months of working close to Mr. Trump and many more months of watching him shape others.

Amoral leaders have a way of revealing the character of those around them. Sometimes what they reveal is inspiring. For example, James Mattis, the former secretary of defense, resigned over principle, a concept so alien to Mr. Trump that it took days for the president to realize what had happened, before he could start lying about the man.

But more often, proximity to an amoral leader reveals something depressing. I think that’s at least part of what we’ve seen with Bill Barr and Rod Rosenstein. Accomplished people lacking inner strength can’t resist the compromises necessary to survive Mr. Trump and that adds up to something they will never recover from. It takes character like Mr. Mattis’s to avoid the damage, because Mr. Trump eats your soul in small bites.Image result for trump eating your soul

It starts with your sitting silent while he lies, both in public and private, making you complicit by your silence. In meetings with him, his assertions about what “everyone thinks” and what is “obviously true” wash over you, unchallenged, as they did at our private dinner on Jan. 27, 2017, because he’s the president and he rarely stops talking. As a result, Mr. Trump pulls all of those present into a silent circle of assent.

Speaking rapid-fire with no spot for others to jump into the conversation, Mr. Trump makes everyone a co-conspirator to his preferred set of facts, or delusions. I have felt it — this president building with his words a web of alternative reality and busily wrapping it around all of us in the room.

I must have agreed that he had the largest inauguration crowd in history because I didn’t challenge that. Everyone must agree that he has been treated very unfairly. The web building never stops.

From the private circle of assent, it moves to public displays of personal fealty at places like cabinet meetings. While the entire world is watching, you do what everyone else around the table does — you talk about how amazing the leader is and what an honor it is to be associated with him.

Sure, you notice that Mr. Mattis never actually praises the president, always speaking instead of the honor of representing the men and women of our military. But he’s a special case, right? Former Marine general and all. No way the rest of us could get away with that. So you praise, while the world watches, and the web gets tighter.

Next comes Mr. Trump attacking institutions and values you hold dear — things you have always said must be protected and which you criticized past leaders for not supporting strongly enough. Yet you are silent. Because, after all, what are you supposed to say? He’s the president of the United States.

You feel this happening. It bothers you, at least to some extent. But his outrageous conduct convinces you that you simply must stay, to preserve and protect the people and institutions and values you hold dear. Along with Republican members of Congress, you tell yourself you are too important for this nation to lose, especially now.

You can’t say this out loud — maybe not even to your family — but in a time of emergency, with the nation led by a deeply unethical person, this will be your contribution, your personal sacrifice for America. You are smarter than Donald Trump, and you are playing a long game for your country, so you can pull it off where lesser leaders have failed and gotten fired by tweet.

Of course, to stay, you must be seen as on his team, so you make further compromises. You use his language, praise his leadership, tout his commitment to values.

And then you are lost. He has eaten your soul.

James Comey is the former F.B.I. director and author of “A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership.

GABBY GARCIA ANNOUNCES FOR 138TH DISTRICT COURT

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(Ed.'s Note: Everyone thought attorney Gabriela "Gabby" Garcia was set to challenge Cameron County District Attorney Luis V. Saenz in 2020, but instead she has announced today she will run for the 138th District Court to be left vacant when Judge Arturo Nelson Cisneros retires next year. She might be facing attorney Helen Delgadillo who has been telling friends she might run for the 138th. Let's see who else might join the two women.)

WHAT IS THE SBISD ADMINISTRATION HIDING FROM US?

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By Joe F. Rodriguez

I will preface my essay by stating that it is directed at the fiscal and not the academics of Board of Trustees responsibility.

Per the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB), School boards are elected locally to ensure that the schools in that community are governed and operated properly—both fiscally and academically.

Since school districts rely on public funding, school boards are accountable to the public for how they
spend district funds. All action conducted by the board is public record.

“Transparency and Openness” in all forms of government is what strengthens our democracy. They
both promote accountability and provide the taxpayers a vehicle to see where and why our tax dollars
are being spent.

I viewed the “Finance Committee Meeting – April 3, 2019” online to review Agenda Item #6 “Consideration/Discussion of Renewal of Agreement between San Benito CISD and Absolute
Business Consulting Group for the 2019-2020 School Year”  Videoof Finance Committee Meeting – April 3, 2019  https://tinyurl.com/y6y64ys3


Below is a verbatim question and answer between Trustee Mendez and Superintendent Dr. Carman
re Agenda Item #6.

Trustee Mendez question:
“Do we have a letter of Agreement or Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that depicts what they
are doing for us? What is the tangible product and benefit to the district?”


Superintendent Dr. Carman response:
“Yes, we do have an MOU I don’t see it attached to this measure if they did sent one for next year, We have one for the current year. “

Later on Trustee Mendez requested to Superintendent Dr. Carman:
“Please bring in the “Engagement Letter” or the “MOU” so that we can really look at it and see what ind of services are being provided and that way we can be transparent on that part.”

Superintendent Dr. Carman response to Trustee Mendez request:
“Yes I will make sure by the time the board book goes out for Tuesday’s (April 9, 2019) meeting that
the MOU and “Engagement Letter” are in there. It will be in there.”


Having heard that verbal exchange between Superintendent Dr. Carman and Trustee Mendez, on
Thursday April 4, 2019 I submitted via email a Texas PIA request as follows: “Current Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU) in relation to the current contract between San Benito CISD and Absolute
Business Consulting Group expiring on April 10, 2019.

On Monday April 8, 2019 I received the following response from the Interim PR Director: “There is no documentation responsive to your request.”
Needless to say, “Where is the openness and transparency? and What are they hiding?
As the SB News has reported, the San Benito CISD Board of Trustees approved a new contract between the San Benito CISD and Absolute Business Consulting Group (ABC Group) at their Regular Board Meeting on Tuesday April 9, 2019.

On April 16, 2019, I submitted via email a Texas PIA request for the following: “Current Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), Letter of Engagement, and signed Contract between San Benito CISD and Absolute business Consulting Group (ABC Group) approved by The Board on April 9, 2019.”

On April 29, 2019 I received the following response in regards to my request for the “Current
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)” and “Current Letter of Engagement” stating “There is no
documentation responsive to your request”.

This shocked me because as documented above that at the April 3, 2019 Finance Committee
Meeting Superintendent Dr. Carman is on record saying “Yes, we do have an MOU I don’t see it
attached to this measure if they did sent one for next year, We have one for the CURRENT YEAR. “

Dr. Carman is also on record saying ““Yes I will make sure by the time the board book goes out for
Tuesday’s (April 9, 2019) meeting that the MOU and “Engagement Letter” are in there. It will be in
there.”

There are two possible conclusions here; (1) I am being lied to about “there is no documentation
responsive to your request” and/or (2) Trustee Mendez and the rest of the Finance Committee were
lied to about an existing “Letter of Engagement” and/or Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for the contract expiring on April 10, 2019.

In regards to the amended two-year and approved contract (link below) on May 9, 2019, there are some interesting contract items that attracted my attention. https://tinyurl.com/y4z74coc

I am not an attorney but have had enough experience negotiating contracts (with legal assistance)
that I do have some knowledge of contracts. What gained my attention were the following Sections of
the Contract.

SECTION V TERMINATION OF CONTRACT………“In order to terminate this agreement prior to the contractual expiration of the contractual period, both parties must mutually agree to do so, in writing executed by both “ABC GROUP” and “DISTRICT.” If agreement is terminated prior to the contractual expiration of the contractual period, the remaining monthly fee as specified in Section IV shall be paid in full for the total number of months that remain for the contract period.”

In layman terms, I am interpreting that “Section V Termination of Contract” allows ABC GROUP to be paid the entire contractual period (24 months) amount if both parties agree, in writing, to terminate the contract before the end of the contractual period.

In plain English, the taxpayers pay ABC GROUP the remaining total number of months in the 24 month contractual period total of $216,000 even if the contract is mutually terminated any time before the end of the 24 month contractual period. It’s a good deal for the vendor but not so much for the taxpayer.

SECTION III TERM OF CONTRACT…….”This contract shall be for a period of two (2) years,
beginning on the Approval Date by the Authorized Representative of the “DISTRICT” and the
Execution by Signature of this agreement by all parties and ending two (2) years from that date.

Unless prior to ninety (90) days before the Expiration Date, “DISTRICT” or “ABC GROUP” notifies the other in writing that it does not wish to continue this Agreement beyond its initial term, this Agreement shall be automatically extended in its entirety without the necessity of any further action by either party.

In the absence of any such ninety (90) day notice by either “DISTRICT or “ABC GROUP,” this
Agreement shall continue to automatically renew in its entirety.”

Basically, this means that if the DISTRICT does not notify in writing prior to 90 days before the two (2) year contract expires, the two (2) year contract is automatically extended with no action required by the Board of Trustees.

None of these terms or the entire contract in general was discussed in detail by either the Finance
Committee or the Board of Trustees. It makes me wonder if the Board of Trustees even knew what
they were approving. My impression from the questions asked was that it would be a one year
contract renewal.

FYI, the motion to approve the renewal of the contract with Absolute Business Consulting Group and
the SB CISD was made by Board President Michael Vargas and seconded by Trustee Orlando Lopez.

The time has come for every level of Texas government – state, counties, cities, and school districts –
to fully reveal themselves to those footing the bill. Taxpayers deserve, and should demand, more
authority in how government spends tax dollars. Only then can we return the reins of power back to
rightful owner: the taxpayer.

Again, “Where is the openness and transparency?” and “What are they hiding?”
One-Year Contract approved April10, 2018                  https://tinyurl.com/y6m53b5t

A FACILE HEADLINE, A FUDGING OF FACTS, AND DESTRUCTION

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                         GBIC'S LOZOYA SLIPS MARIN A COOL $2.9 MILLION!!!

By Juan Montoya
That headline came from a local blog that featured only a picture of Greater Brownsville Incentives Corporation CEO Mario Lozoya and Ambiotec CEO Carlos Marin.

The insinuation is that Lozoya somehow gave Marin $2.9 million in return for some favor, or other unsavory insider deal on real estate. About the only expenditure recently was the purchase of 141 acres east of the 350 acres it already owns.

That land was owned by a company called Shades of Earth which owned 68 acres and Orestes which owned 71 acres which was handled by the same law firm in the sale to GBIC. The land is adjacent to the 350 acres GBIC owns.

If you will remember, GBIC was trying to acquire all the land around their acreage to attract a steel company. The company told Lozoya and the board that they were taken off the list because they didn;t have the necessary acreage.

When Lozoya told them he thought he could get the necessary property by purchasing land around their planned industrial corridor, they told him the GBIC was again on their short list. GBIC figured it could acquire the necessary acreage (1,100-acres for an industrial park)for their operation. Lozoya looked at the land available east and west of the GBIC property and ran against some entrenched interests who saw the potential coming of the steel mill and saw dollar signs.

The first problem was to the east. One day after Lozoya told his board in executive session that they were going to approach the land owners east  of the 141 acres that were bought recently, they ran into a road block.

Somehow, local real estate speculator Patricio Sampayo had somehow heard of the GBIC plans and by the time GBIC representatives approached the owners of the 110- and 142-acre tracts owned by the MD Wheeler Tract and the 37 acres owned by the Nunez Family, he had a contract with an option to purchase the entire 289 acres.

In other words, the owners told GBIC reps, they would now have to deal with Sampayo instead of them. The price, of course, would not be anywhere near the appraisal value, but instead would include a hefty profit for the speculator. How did Sampayo know if no one but the board members and the GBIC attorney knew of the impending purchases?

No one is saying, but now he still holds the option on the land with no one to sell it to. However, if the GBIC had been able to acquire the land without Sampayo involved, it would have brought a $1.8 billion development which would have doubled the ad valorem (property tax) revenue for the city.

Why? After the steel company was told about the hangup on GBIC acquiring the property, they informed Lozoya they were on a fast track and that they were moving on to Corpus Christi which had the necessary acreage for them to start their operation.

That was to the east. To the west, the Community Development Corporation of Brownsville owns 215 acres it wanted to build a housing development. But that ran head on into the GBIC' Brownsville Industrial Area Plan from 2011, in turn based on the area’s designation as an industrial corridor in 2009.

Having a housing development next to an industrial corridor, south of a correctional institution, and bordered on the south downwind of the United Pacific switching yard was not only incompatible but also dangerous because of the hazardous materials carried by the railroad.
 The CDCB ran into a road block when the city commission tabled their request to rezone the property to accommodate its second phase of the planned housing development. Instead, they have been approached by the GBIC to sell thte 2015 acres for the planned industrial corridor.

Un turn, the Planning and Zoning Commisison, with land owner Abraham Galonsky pushing against it, denied the GBIC request for rezoning of the 350 acres to an industrial classification. Galonsky was said to have told the steel mill people that they should look for land north of FM 511. Insiders say that Galonsky and some of his partners own land in the direction of the Port of Brownsville.

How do you spell conflict of interest?

GBIC has agreed in principle to pay what CDCB is asking for the property, though CDCB Executive Director Nick Mitchell-Bennett said his organization has only offered a “ballpark figure” for how much cash it would require for the land, hasn’t discussed an exact dollar amount with GBIC, and hasn’t signed a contract.

What' the holdup? The CDCB is asking for $25,000 per acre, $12,000 more per acre than when they  bought the land or $15,00 an acre. The GBIC has refused to pay that amount. Some sources say that Sampayo was also involved in the original sale of that 215 acres to the CDCB, with Mayor Tony Martinez acting as an intermediary. 

The CDCB property is far from a main road frontage and behind a correctional institution, and is not worth anywhere near the $25,000 per acre price it is asking from the GBIC.

Now, as to Lozoya "slipping" Marin a "cool $2.9 million,",that's not only misleading, if not just plain incorrect. Marin did have an interest with four other in vestment partners (the 68 acres under Shades of Earth). But when the GBIC said it was interested in potential purchase of  the  plot, Marin told Lozoya he had divested himself of the property to avoid any potential conflict of interest.

The GBIC got the 141 acres that include frontage to FM 511, access to the UP railroad to the south, and retaining ponds necessary for flood prevention for $2.7 million, averaging about $19,000 an acre, far less than the $31,000 upper level market rate for similar properties in the area and $8,000 less per acre than CDCB is demanding.

So Brownsville lost a $1.8 billion steel plant which would have doubled its property tax revenue because of land speculation based on insider knowledge from the GBIC board and is now being held hostage on the 215 CDCB acres because CDCB Executive Director Nick Mitchell-Bennett thinks it has the GBIC over a barrel and wants to make a tidy profit. 

Having paid $3,335,000 for them, it now wants GBIC to pay the $5,805,000, a neat $2,580,00 profit. 

Who is trying to "slip" anyone a "cool" $2.5 million?

SNAKES-IN-THE-GRASS MARTINEZ, TETREAU SPEW VILE VENOM

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By Juan Montoya
One carries himself off as a devout Christian, has a private chapel in his back yard, and repeatedly calls for guidance from the "angels of our better nature."

The other fancies herself a cyber queen used to flaunt her new diamond rings, claims she's worth more than $4 million and at the last City of Brownsville commission meeting sponsored a proclamation National Day of Prayer observed this past Thursday.

If ever the paraphrased saying that "religion is the last refuge of the scoundrel," applies, then Mayor Tony Martinez and District 2 commissioner Jessica Tetreau are poster children for the motto.

As they're beating their chest in penance, their actions through the allegations against their opponents in their campaign mailouts belie their deceptively benign words.

Martinez  who has kept his public utterings borderline civil with the exception of the time he accused one of his opponents - Texas Southmost trustee Trey Mendez - of squandering public monies after federal jury issued a verdict against the board and awarded her a $13 million settlement which perfunctorily is under appeal.

He made his accusations knowing that since he was the last to make his closing statement in the forum, Mendez would not have a chance to respond tho the serious allegations.

And he has take a potshot at his other challenger former city manager Charlie Cabler
who he claims was "under investigation" by a city commission audit committee and that he was issued a severance check for more than $215,000 in accordance to his contract but that it was not approved by the current commission.

The firing of TSC president Lily Tercero has been the one issue that Martinez's professional political consultants from San Antonio have hammered home in the mail outs. Mendez - who has opted to take the high road and has not attacked Martinez's performance in the last eight years - has not used the numerous peccadilloes and perhaps high crimes that Martinez has committed in his two terms.

Like a snake in the grass, Martinez has lain low playing the good angel, but in the last week before the election, he and District 2 commissioner Jessica Tetreau have pulled out all the stops and spewed their venom, sometimes unwarranted, at their opponents. Tetreau faces former Brownsville Independent School District trustee Catalina Presas-Garcia and former mayor Pat Ahumada.

Like Martinez, Tetreau has publicly prayed for her fellow men at Sams Stadium while at the same time issuing campaign materials blaming Presas-Garcia for suing her fellow BISD trustees after they tried to "censure" and "censor" her to the point where the board legal counsel tried to remove her from the board.

Press-Garcia eventually non-suited the district and did not get a penny from the lawsuit. The BISD, as it does in any lawsuit, spent money to pay for its legal counsel.

The attacks by Tetreau caught Presas-Garcia by surprise.

"I didn’t sue the district I sued the board members who allowed the item (to remove me) on the agenda," she said. "The board attorney during an open  meeting accused me publicly of asking him to take me to bed. It was an accusation that anyone should have defended themselves for defamation. It’s a shame people believe or say I received money from the law suit."
,
"I have a husband, I have three fine young sons and I wouldn’t never ever stoop that low,' she said. "I will stand strong to defend myself when accused or taken advantage of and I will defend also the rights of our citizens."

In a desperate attempt to remove her from the ballot, Tetreau sued Presas-Garcia in district court. The attempt failed. 

Likewise, Mendez said that the failures of former TSC president Tercero to save the college's nursing program, her continued use of trustee's signatures on more than $1 in checks when those trustees were no longer in the board, and her unilateral extension of a multi-million windstorm contract made his decision to terminate her a no-brainer.

"If I had to vote to terminate her I would do it again," he has stated.

And after the TSC board voted too separate from UTB, they had to fight off the attempts by Martinez to give away Lincoln Park and many of the community college's real estate to the oil-and-gas wealthy University of Texas System.

Martinez used the excuse that the UT System needed the Casa del Nylon to stay downtown and convinced the city commission to buy his buddy Abraham Galonsky's building for the extravagant sum of $2.3 million. The building has remained empty and a magnet for the homeless since. UT said it never wanted the building in the first place.Image result for martinez, casa del nylon

At one time city workers at the City Plaza building were told to pack to move the next day because the  city was transferring the building to the UT System. But again, UT didn't want it.

But while TSC has not paid a penny to Tercero and BISD did not pay $2 million to Presas-Garcia, Brownsville utility rate payers have - since December 2012 - paid electric rates that have increased by 36 percent from 2013 to 2016, water rates 20 percent from 2013 to 2016, and waste water services 6 percent based on votes by Martinez and Tetreau.

They were raised to pay for $325 to build a $500 million natural-gas fired electric plant with private energy company Tenaska to have been completed in 2016.

The plant was never built, but the rates have remained artificially high. So far, the city ratepayers - mostly residential - have been charged more than $125 million more for the plant's construction.

By that measure, the $13 million verdict which is under appeal by TSC and the $2 million BISD non-suit by Presas-Garcia are red herring distractions by the snake-in-the-grass Christian hypocrites Martinez and Tetreau seeking to blind the voters to reelect them.

TODAY'S THE DAY! THE FUTURE OF OUR CITY IS IN OUR HANDS

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Given the fact that there are 14 candidates for four positions, there is a high probability that no one candidate in each of those races will garner the required 50 percent plus one vote that would prevent a runoff.

If that bears out, fatigued voters should brace themselves for another month of campaigning by the surviving candidates for a decreasing voter turnout.

Elections Administrator Remi Garza said there are some 107,689 registered voters eligible to voter in the city commission elections, making the projected 10,500 votes less than 10 percent of the registered voters casting ballots in the municipal elections.

A wag puts it this way: Make believe that the City of Brownsville is a lifeboat and there are 10 people in it. Given that there is only a 10 percent voter turnout, this means that one person in that vote will decide who gets to share in the food, has water to drink, gets shelter, or even who gets to stay on the boat.

A low turnout effectively places the decisions in a very small group of people who gets to decide who gets the public assets and control over them. In some countries, people die for a chance to cast a vote. Veterans died in wars to give you that right. Walk over to your precinct and exercise your right and privilege to decide your own future.

CELEBRATE SOUTH TEXAS' MOST HISTORICAL CITY TODAY!

TREVINO NOT ONLY A MOOCHER, BUT ALSO AN INGRATE

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(Ed.'s Note: It turns out that despite the fact that the city pulled out all the stops and went all out to help with his Gringo de Mayo fundraiser event in memory of the late Jeff Lewis, local convenience store mogul (and Brownsville Community Improvement Corporation member now) Arturo Trevino is still griping about the Market Square venue.

In the screenshot dialogue above with Ruben O'Bell he makes it clear that he is not pleased with the lighting and lack of electrical outlets available. He complains that he actually had to spend some of the organization's money (perish the thought!) to pay someone to work the electricity and buy some equipment. If there was some other place with a roof and with air conditioning, he says, things would be much better. Can we suggest the gym at St. Joseph Academy? But wait! The brothers there would probably want to get paid for using the gym and having to put up with the traffic.

As it is, many local restaurants and businesses had to endure the rerouted traffic and loss of business to let Arturito stage his money-making gig. The Spanish phrase "limosnero y con garrote" seems very apropo for this gent. He even mentions El Rrun-Rrun's name in vain. Te va a pegar un relampago, Turi. 

Next time he comes up with another of his "building new traditions" money-making schemes to be subsidized by the city someone should remind him not to badmouth his benefactors, the people of the City of Brownsville who paid for all the  venues he takes for free, and for granted.)

ARM BANDAGED, FROM TWO-WEEKLY PLASMA TAKING...

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Wind and Ground
Eugene "Gene" Novogrodsky

.,.have done that,
Too easy,

The wind drives branches and leaves bending,
Like a woman's hair tossed,

Her face hidden ....
Easy ....

Not as easy, her arms.
One bandaged from two-weekly plasma taking.
About 70 dollars,

More than her Mexican border factory job week.
Her other arm.
Wrist wrapped.

Scar to elbow.
Factory machine ripped her.

Tired, woozy she is.
And the wind powers ....

1926 TILLER FIRE ENGINE COMES BACK HOME TO BFD

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(Ed.'s Note: It took a few decades but the refurbished engine that once helped Brownsville Fire Dept. firefighters battle blazes here from the late 1920s on is back on the streets of the city. This morning it was unloaded from a city trailer and will be on display not far from where it was originally housed, at the Central Fire Station on Adams and 10th streets. The official unveiling will be at 5 p.m. on Adams just a stone's throw from the main fire station. The public is invited. Welcome back home!)
 

THE PEOPLE HAVE SPOKEN: TETREAU SURVIVES, 3 RUNOFFS; HIGHEST VOTE GETTERS ALL HANDLED BY MORENO'S PINK APE

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(Ed.'s Note: Get ready for another round. Against all odds, only incumbent City of Brownsville District 2 commissioner Jessica Tetreau won her reelection outright, and mayor Tony Martinez was handed his walking papers by the voters. Tetreau's 1,311 votes were 46 more than the combined total of 1,265 of her two competitors (1,265).

District 1 commissioner Ricardo Longoria will face newcomer Nurith Galonsky who beat him by 92 votes (690 to 598) . A surprise showing of 486 votes by Michael Rodriguez gave him the third place in that race and threw it into a runoff.

Trey Mendez will face off former city manager Charlie Cabler for mayor after he drew 1,436 more votes than incumbent Martinez. Mendez beat Cabler by 933. 

John Cowen came up 44 votes short of getting the required 50 percent plus 1 vote to avoid a runoff even though he swamped his three competitors. The nearest one was Jessica Puente Bradshaw who must  make up 2,353 votes against him in the runoff there.

So it will be Mendez vs. Cabler, Cowen vs. Puene-Bradshaw and Galonsky vs. Longoria. Until then, the  commission will be under the holdover provision with Longoria and Martinez staying in office until the final results from the runoff election come in.

And despite criticism from certain quarters, it is worth noting that the three candidates with the most votes in the runoffs -Mendez, Cowen and Galonsky - were all clients of political consultant Rodrigo Moreno, owner of the Pink Ape ad agency. Campaign cost money and this city election will probably set records in that category.

Even Martinez's expensive hired guns from Austin Message, Audience, Presentation, Inc., could not overcome the voters' rejection.

Other candidates to the various boards such as that of the Brownsville Independent School District, the Port of Brownsville, Texas Southmost College, and districts all spend good money to run for election and serve without pay. But their votes guide the direction of our economic, educational and social development, which makes them critically important to our region's development.
Image result for pink ape media
                                        Welcome to our Brave New World. )

HERO OF CINCO DE MAYO WAS A TEXAS HOMEY

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(The hero of Cinco de Mayo Ignacio Zaragoza was born in present-day in Goliad, Texas. Goliad, named for Father Miguel Hidalgo, is an anagram, minus the silent H. After his family moved to Matamoros to escape persecution from the soldiers of the Texas Revolution, he attended school there and then moved to Monterrey to further his schooling. Brownsville didn't exists when Zaragoza was here, but it was communal property of Matamoros on the other side of the river. After that, he joined the Mexican military on the side of Benito Juarez's Liberal army. A chronology of his life follows.)


1829: Ignacio Zaragoza Seguin was born on January 14, 1829 to Capt. Miguel Zaragoza and his wife Maria de Jesus Seguin in the Bahia del Espiritu Santo. The site is near present-day Matagorda Bay, between Houston and Corpus Christi. The State of Texas has included his birthplace in the Goliad State Park and the house where Zaragoza was actually born is still standing.

1833: With fierce Comanches as neighbors and the incipient Texas Republic in the offing, the Zaragozas stay in Texas was relatively brief. When he was four, his family moved to Matamoros and he attended the San Juan elementary school, although little is known about his stay there. 


A street bears his name in Matamoros, but apart from that, there is little to indicate the hero of Puebla lived there. The Original Townsite of Brownsville was once that city's communal land, so in a sense, Zaragoza lived here, too. Zaragoza’s family had originally come from Monterrey, where many of the settlers of the South Texas area originated. In fact, that Nuevo Leon city was the launching point for many Mexican families who lived in then-Mexican Texas.


1840s: In Monterrey Ignacio entered the seminary, a traditional haven for young men who saw the church as a way to a profession. He interrupted his clerical studies to enter commerce. He worked for Felipe Sepulveda, a prominent Monterrey grocer. In 1846, when U.S. troops invaded Mexico, he joined the Mexican national guard.

He attained the rank of captain and was stationed in Victoria, Tamaulipas, the capital of the state. Later, one of Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana’s usurpations of the national presidency drew Zaragoza into the regular army and he served under the liberal generals who adhered to the constitution defended by Benito Juarez. He soon attained the rank of colonel. His performance on the battlefield and his knowledge of military tactics earned him the confidence and respect of his superiors.

1855: In the Battle of Silao, Zaragoza – then only 25 – played a defining role in the Liberals' victory. That battle is recognized as one of the bloodiest of the war. Zaragoza knew what stakes were in play. At the heart of the civil war was the dispute between the constitutionalists who wanted the laws of reform followed, and the conservatives, who wanted to hold on to power.

The church, a powerful institution, backed the conservatives. Clerics feared the state would carry out the separation of church and state called for in the reformed constitution and financed the conservatives in their quest to retain their power.

1856-61: Interim President Ignacio Comonfort refused to relinquish power and uphold the precepts of the constitution and it ignited civil war. In battle after bloody battle, the liberals moved toward the Mexican capital as the conservatives delayed their progress by inciting peasants to battle the "devil-driven" liberals.
In one of these battles, General Jesus Gonzalez Ortega took ill with fever. The Battle of Guadalajara was to mark an important turning point in the war. The city – which lay between the Liberal Army and the capital – was an important tactical site and the conservatives fought hard to deny them a victory.

Gonzalez-Ortega hand-picked Zaragoza over higher-ranking officers to lead the assault against the city. The Liberal siege of the city lasted for weeks and saw hand-to-hand combat in the city’s streets. Time and time again the Liberals charged only to be driven back by the determined defenders.

With typhoid fever raging through the city, the weary defenders finally succumbed to Zaragoza’s Ejercito del Centro and asked for a truce that would allow them to retreat and abandon the city. A truce was worked out and the defeated army was allowed to depart. But another surprise awaited the Liberal soldiers. Unbeknownst to them, another conservative army had arrived in the outskirts of the city and the two armies met at a bridge to the city. Zaragoza’s army would not be denied their victory and the conservatives were defeated.

December 22, 1861: Before them, the road to the capital lay waiting. Gathering their forces, the Liberals organized around San Miguelito. They faced an army of 8,000 well-equipped men with supplies bought for them by frightened church prelates and clergy. They had at their disposal several dangerous artillery pieces. The task of defending the most vulnerable site on the battle field was assigned to young Ignacio, then only 31.

He was given the task of defending the hills overlooking the battle. If the high ground was lost, the result could very well decide the war between the Liberals and Conservatives – and the future of Mexico. He did not falter. Bearing the brunt of the attack, Zaragoza’s troops held the hills as the enemy’s troops fought for their survival. Bloody and fierce clashes occurred where the defenders of the hills foiled the attacks and Zaragoza aided his fellow generals to execute the battle plan. His troops held. The Liberals prevailed. The next day, the defeated conservative generals came to secure guarantees for their remaining troops and officers.
zaragoza.jpg

December 25, 1861: With the city theirs for the taking, the Liberal armies gathered to enter it. On Christmas Day General Gonzalez-Ortega, ordered one of his generals and an escort to enter the city and assure of a peaceful takeover. The general he chose for this honor – and great risk– was Ignacio Zaragoza.

Thus, it came  that on that day when the constitutionalist forces of Benito Juarez took the city the man leading the takeover force was the same who was born a scant 32 years before in the rolling hills of Goliad, Texas.

January 1, 1862: Benito Juarez and his constitutionalist armies joined Zaragoza in the city. Later in April, Juarez named him minister of War of Mexico. By then he was all of 33 years old.

May 5, 1862: He was to be tested again, but this time it would be by seasoned French troops who had entered the country under the pretense of getting debts repaid to their country. Having heard that the French had started their march toward Mexico City, Zaragoza led his troops to meet the most feared imperial army in the world of the day.

He left behind a gravely ill wife he would never see again.On the hills of Puebla and the plains below, Zaragoza and his army withstood and defeated the French troops. For half a day, the soldiers repelled the charges of the imperial soldiers and left the field in victory. Among the defenders were future Mexican dictator Porfirio Diaz and Brownsville's own guerrilla leader Juan Cortina.

"The national arms have been covered with glory," he wrote Juarez in a one-line letter after the May 5th battle for Puebla. ("Las armas nacionales se han cubierto de gloria.")

September 8, 1862: Four months later, Ignacio Zaragoza died of typhoid fever. His victory, however, remains celebrated to this day.

MAYOR'S DEPARTURE INSPIRES ONE OF OUR SEVEN READERS

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I DID IT , Y QUE GUEY?
Image result for tony martinez, brownsville, rrunrrun
And now, the end is here 
And so I faced the final curtain 
My friends, I'll say it clear 
I'll state my case to the DA,
(of which I'm certain I'll be freed,)


I've lived a life that's full of dough 
I've traveled each and highway 511, 
And more, much more pesos 
I did it my way 

Regrets, I've had nary a one 
But then again, none to mention 
I did what I had to do las transas and more 
And saw it through without exemption 

I planned each charted course and made sure, 
Each careful step along the byway 
And more, much more than this you'll never know, 
I did it my way 

Yes, there were times, I'm sure you knew 
When I bit off more than I could chew
But through it all, when there was doubt 
I ate it up and spent it all, 

I spend it all and I stood tall
And did it my way 


I've laughed,
I've laughed and laughed 
I've had my pockets full with my share... 

And now… 

STATE: NO INDICTMENT AGAINST CATALINA PRESAS-GARCIA

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By Juan Montoya

A post on a Facebook page posted by one Juan Garcia in social media has been labeled "totally false" by the Cameron County District Attorney's Office.

In the posting, the person identified as Garcia labeled it "Breaking News" and alleged that City of Brownsville District 2 commission candidate Catalina Presas-garcia had been indicted by a grand jury this past Wednesday and that Cameron County District Attorney Luis V. Saenz had staved off the service because he wanted to help her defeat incumbent Jessica Tetreau in this past city election.

The post featured a photo taken with Presas-Garcia and Mario Saenz, Luis Saenz's brother, during a campaign rally.

In it, "Garcia," who investigators suspect is a fake Facebook persona,  urges readers to oppoe the DA's reelection and "get him out."

"It's such a shame that we allow this bullshit," Press-Garcia said. "My mother is worried sick. I spoke with the DA's office and they tell me this is totally false. I suspect it's Saenz's political enemies thi are working against him and they mixed us together.

"I say, if anyone has and issue or don't like Saenz man up and let him know personally. Unfortunately, these men and women lack fortitude and hide behind false ads like this.

"Como dicen en Mexico, les faltan producto de gallina..."

Garcia said that she was contemplating filing a complaint against the unknown Garcia and is now trying to locate the source, hut suspects that Saenz's political enemies might have included her as a way to cast suspicions upon the DA.

However, she says she has to narrow the search for the perpetrators. Already, she said, the post has been shared in various Facebook accounts.

"You commit libel not only when you post falsehoods, but also when you repeat the falsehood as many other people on the Internet are doing," she said.

"I promise that we will get o the bottom of this. You just can't do this kind of thing and expect no one to do anything to defend themselves."

FROM HUMBLE LAS PRIETAS, GARDEN PK. TO CHESS NATIONALS

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By Juan Montoya
In the bad old days of educational benign neglect in the Brownsville Independent School District, Garden Park Elementary in the impoverished Las Prietas barrio, literally across the tracks from the city, was one of those schools who made do with what it could to teach its students.

It was mentioned in the same breath as was Palm Grove, on the opposite side of town also along the Rio Grande. Both were small schools with facilities that dated back to the 1940s and before that. The classrooms were refurbished military barracks or plantation structures dating back decades. Both had septic tanks years after the rest of the BISD schools had sanitary sewers.

That's why it is so notable that of all the schools in the BISD, Garen Park will be the only elementary school that will represent the district and the city in the national chess finals in Nashville, Tenn.

"I tell people not to judge us from what they see outside," said principal Victor Caballero. "Judge us by what we do with our students on the inside."

Caballero has good reason to be proud. It is the fifth time that Garden Park has represented the district in the national chess tournament, each time climbing up the ranks. It was the only school that represented the district in regional, state and national competition and has risen from a 10th place to  third national ranking with its K-3 team.

Academically, the Texas Education Agency ranks it and Ortiz Elementary in the top 10 schools in Texas in terms of comparative academic growth.

This year, its K-1, K-3 and K-5 teams will compete in the nationals after qualifying at the regional and state competition and look forward to finally getting a crack at a national title this weekend.

"We've made a lot of noise," Caballero said. "when we go to national competition we are always asked where Garden Park is from. I tell them that we a re a little school in the tip of Texas along the Rio Grande river. We've made a lot of noise and this year we're hoping to bring back a national title."

Caballero said the Garden Park students will leave on Thursday for Nashville and return May 13.

Let's go Tigers!
Image result for garden park elementary "mascot"
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