Showing posts with label plans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plans. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Some families changing Mexico holiday travel plans due to cartel violence

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- The holidays are a time for families to come together, but when your loved ones live south of the border it can give you pause. With drug-related violence still a major concern, some families are changing their plans.

At the Mexican Consulate in Houston, the lines are always long; and during the holidays, even more so, with people going home to visit their families.

"They spend Christmas there and also New Years is a very important date for Mexicans," said Fernanda Villanueva with the Mexican Consulate.

The problem is getting there safely for those who travel by car. Cartel violence is ongoing and the military has been sent in to some areas after Mexican police officers were killed this month. The consulate provides a list of travel safety recommendations to those going home. Even so, Eddie Aragon says there's still a risk and fewer people are willing to take it.

"There aren't as many vehicles as there used to be and the other thing, the place where you're going, not as many of them; not half of the vehicles that used to," Aragon said.

Carmen Aguillar is one of those who's decided to let someone else do the driving after a bad experience across the border.

"I think it's better and more sure to travel by bus," said Aguillar.

Apparently more people are. It's a busy time of year for bus companies that serve cities in Mexico. It's the way this cab driver travels home.

"I take a bus. I don't take no money, no nothing," said Alfonso Vasquez.

The Mexican Consulate recommends not taking a lot of presents if traveling as that might attract unwanted attention and invite problems. And that, says Vasquez, is "pretty sad, I hope soon it gets better."

The consulate says there will be additional federal police on duty at checkpoints to assure travelers.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local, deborah wrigley

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Monday, December 17, 2012

METRO president George Greanias plans to resign

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- METRO has confirmed that its president and CEO is resigning.

METRO has not said what prompted Geoorge Greanias to resign, only that he is expected to hand in his letter of resignation on Monday.

Greanias took over on an interim basis in May 2010 after former President and CEO Frank Wilson resigned over a scandal involving alleged misuse of money and document shredding. The interim tag was dropped in September of that same year.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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Saturday, September 8, 2012

METRO puts off plans for university rail line

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- We're investigating millions of dollars in METRO's broken promises; money set aside for a major rail line that may now be wasted.

Over the last decade, METRO spent $71 million of your dollars to build a rail line. But the agency recently took that project off the table for at least another decade and no work has been done.

So where did all that money go?

Ten years ago, METRO promised to build a light rail line starting out on Hillcroft through Montrose, downtown, out past TSU, UH and stopping just east of 45.

Ten years later, nothing's been built on the University Line and nothing will be built until at least 2025 if METRO gets its way.

"It think this is a sad day for Houston," said David Robinson with the Neartown Houston Association.

Robinson lives along the route in Neartown. He patiently waited, even supported METRO's plan to wait. But now he feels duped.

"We don't understand how we were sold out," Robinson said.

"Why repair something you are going to tear up again? So currently, the streets have become really terrible," Former Houston City Councilwoman Sue Lovell said.

Lovell says the city held off on road repairs, waiting on light rail and now there's no money to fix the raods.

"Nobody's told us now what's going to happen on this corridor," she said.

"We're trying to close the gap," METRO Board Chairman Gilbert Garcia said.

METRO says they simply don't have the money to do this now and won't for more than a decade. But METRO's already spent $71 million on the project, even as recently as last year.

"We believe that every dollar of taxpayer money, whether it comes from the fare box, tax money or federal money, we need to spend it as wisely as possible," METRO CEO George Grenias said.

In fact, if METRO hadn't spent the money on studies and land and lawyers and meetings and newspaper ads, they could've taken $71 million bills and laid them down along the route, paving it from curb to curb and then some with your money.

"It's an enormous amount of money," Garcia said.

The agency spent $14 million studying on environmental studies that will soon be out of date. METRO spent another $2.5 million on land appraisals, and they're no good anymore. So that's $16.5 million gone. And METRO spent $54 million studying possible routes and picking the final one, only some of which may be useful in 10 years, but who knows.

"We're not going to get ahead of ourselves," Grenias said.

Not METRO. And they won't do the work to figure out how many of your dollars were really wasted until after a November METRO referendum.

"By why shouldn't voters have that information before they vote?" we asked Grenias.

"The voters, I think, have all the information that we have. We've told them everything we know," he said.

But it's not enough for the people who live along the rocky road that was going to be a rail line.

"Yeah ok, we're angry. I think that's a fair statement," Robinson said.

Tired of the bumps and tired of bad promises, some of METRO's strongest supporters have had enough.

"People feel betrayed," Lovell said.

METRO provided all the numbers for the money it's already spent, and points out that is proof they are approaching things differently these days - showing their hands warts and all.

METRO officials issued the following statement late Friday night:

"The METRO Board has not scrapped plans for the University Line. While work has slowed down METRO has not pulled this project out of its rail expansion program. The transit agency is being fiscally responsible, and as we have stated in the past, METRO will proceed with rail expansion as funds become available. Please keep in mind that we are currently constructing three new light rail lines that will be open to the public in 2014."

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more In Focus »


in focus, ted oberg

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

City of Houston plans to open all 38 of its pools this year

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Last year, a budget crunch kept several Houston swimming pools and community programs from opening. But this year, the city is singing a different tune.

The city of Houston will manage to open all of its 38 pools this year along with several recreation centers that were shuttered at the beginning of last summer.

A year ago, Houston Mayor Annise Parker made a sobering announcement that eight pools and seven community centers were closing down due to budget problems. The press conference caught many neighborhood leaders by surprise.

"It was horrible. We were appalled. I mean this is the heart of this community," said Carol Rensink.

She is the president of Friends of Cherryhurst Park, the nonprofit immediately formed after hearing their community center was slated to close last summer. The reason is that the Parks and Recreation Department claimed their building was in disrepair and program under utilized. So the neighborhood just north of Montrose took action, setting up after school HISD bus service to their community center.

Now 70 plus children utilize programs at the Cherryhurst Community Center.

"We worked with them, partnered and now we have four schools of elementary school, where children are bused and we work with them, partner with them and it just works beautifully," said Rensink.

North of the 610 Loop, the neighborhood of Independence Heights was told their pool was closing, but then a corporate donor stepped up and donated more than $350,000 to reopen the pools by the July Fourth weekend.

"I believe it will play a real positive role. Keep the kids out of trouble, like I said. Keep them mind frame at ease," said Marcus Cockrell, Independence Heights resident.

A new city of Houston budget begins in July and this time around, no closures are slated, for this year anyway.

"We're hoping the city will see that this is something that will not be on the chopping block, that there may be some other ways to cut that won't hurt families and young children," said Rensink.

Since the city of Houston is no longer facing the same budget constraints as last year, money is now appropriated to maintain hours to all pools and community centers. This weekend 20 pools open and by June 5, the remaining 18 will welcome swimmers.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local, erik barajas

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Thursday, May 10, 2012

GE Energy plans new training facility in Houston

See it on TV? Check here.Artists rendition of the new GE Energy training facility planned for the Houston area Artist's rendition of the new GE Energy training facility planned for the Houston area

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Good news for Houston's economy as GE Energy plans to invest millions in a new facility to train workers in the oil and gas industry.

The new $10 million facility is planned for the North Sam Houston Tollway near JFK Blvd. GE Energy says they'll use space to offer state of the art training in energy innovation, specifically when it comes to oil and gas.

The company also announced plans to create 100 new technical jobs in Houston.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Wednesday, May 11, 2011

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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

NRG scraps investment plans for Texas nuke plants

   HOUSTON (KTRK) -- NRG announced on Tuesday it is putting the future building of two nuclear facilities in South Texas on indefinite hold because of the disaster in Japan.

NRG had been in a joint nuclear development with the Toshiba American Nuclear Energy Corp. to develop the STP 3&4 nuclear units in South Texas via an initiative called the Nuclear Innovation North America (NINA). But the shaky finances of Tokyo Electric Power Company -- which had expressed an interest in owning 20 percent, or $2 billion, of the final project -- played a large role in NRG's decision to withdraw its investment, sources told Eyewitness News. They are not canceling the projects but are significantly scaling back ongoing planning. "The tragic nuclear incident in Japan has introduced multiple uncertainties around new nuclear development in the United States which have had the effect of dramatically reducing the probability that STP 3&4 can be successfully developed in a timely fashion," President and CEO of NRG David Crane said in a prepared statement. The news does not necessarily mean the project to develop the facilities will end; Toshiba will still seek a loan guarantee and permit from the federal government, Eyewitness News sources said. However, this makes it far more difficult for the project to go forward because unless another investor comes in willing to spend hundreds of millions of dollars, it is in serious jeopardy. NRG said it will continue to fund the projects on a minimum basis in order to maintain and preserve licensing and planning costs in the event the climate for future nuclear energy in the United States changes to the positive but will not invest additional capital in the STP development effort. "We continue to believe both in the absolute necessity of a U.S. nuclear renaissance and that STP 3&4 is the best new nuclear development project in the country bar none. However, the extraordinary challenges facing U.S. nuclear development in the present circumstance and the very considerable financial resources expended by NRG on the project over the past five years make it impossible for us to justify to our shareholders any further financial participation in the development of the STP project," Crane said. NRG expects to record a first-quarter 2011 pretax charge of approximately $481 million, for the impairment of all of the net assets of the Nuclear Innovation North America. The write down consists of $331 million of NINA net assets funded by NRG along with $150 million of net investment contributed by the energy corp. "As previously announced last month, NINA suspended indefinitely all detailed engineering work and other pre-construction activities and, as a result, dramatically reduced the project workforce. NINA, going forward, will be focused solely on securing a combined operating license from the NRC and on obtaining a loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Energy, two assets that are absolutely essential to the success of any future project development," the company said in a statement. "TANE will be responsible for funding ongoing costs to continue the licensing process. In concurrence with the substantial reduction in NINA's project workforce, and to support NINA's reduced scope of work, NRG expects to incur one-time costs, related to a contribution to NINA, which are not expected to exceed $20 million. These costs will be incurred, and expensed, primarily in the second quarter 2011." NRG Energy, Inc. is a Fortune 500 and S&P 500 Index company that owns and operates one of the country's largest and most diverse power generation portfolios, according to the statement. (Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)


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Friday, April 15, 2011

HISD board to discuss plans to close 17 campuses

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Budget cuts in the state's largest school district means some schools may be shutting down. HISD has a big budget shortfall to account for. It's already discussed laying off teachers and today, it will consider a plan to shut down or merge 17 schools.

Initially, HISD said Love, Grimes, McDade, and Rhoads elementaries were at risk of closing down. But now that list has increased to 17 schools across the city. They include both elementary and middle schools. With current budget cuts, the schools may not be able to stay afloat.

Memorial Elementary is one of those schools. A lot of parents don't like the idea, but he superintendent says it has to be considered to meet the budget shortfall.


"I don't believe they should shut down," said concerned grandparent Kathy Howard. "I think there are plenty of children to keep it running. It would just be devastating. These kids have gone here forever."


"If you take two small schools and merge them together, you may end up saving around $600,000 and we need to save $63 million," said HISD Superintendent Dr. Terry Grier.


Just this week, HISD announced their latest numbers for teacher layoffs. Budget cuts mean 567 teacher positions so far have been eliminated. Add to that 163 teachers not renewed because of performance and the number is up to 730 teachers gone starting next year.


Another option for the school district would be raising its tax rate.


If HISD closed every one of those schools, it would save about $10 million, nowhere near what is needed to cover the $63 million budget gap.

HISD's board of trustees can raise property tax up to 7 cents per $100 valuation without voter approval. Each 1-cent raise in tax would equal approximately $9.9 million in revenue. However, the possibility of raising tax is on not any agenda for vote. (Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

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