Monday, August 29, 2011

Driest year on record plagues Texas ...


VOA: Weather forecasters and agriculture experts in the southwestern U.S. state of Texas say there is no relief in sight for what already is the worst drought year on record. The searing heat and dry conditions have caused devastating wildfires in the western part of the large state and led to crop losses, cattle deaths and water rationing in areas of east Texas that are normally wet at this time of year.

Driving through the countryside northwest of Houston, one sees dried up fields, dying trees and livestock ponds that are not much more than a puddles of fetid, algae-covered water. In some towns, farmers' markets have been cancelled because local growers have little to offer. Those with wells for irrigation are struggling with the high cost of fuel to run their pumps.

Debbie Cross, who operates a farmers' market near Cypress, Texas, says people are becoming discouraged by the lack of rain and the high temperatures, which are around 40 degrees most days.

“The drought is hurting everything. It is hurting all the crops, the cattle, the hay. There is no grass. The chickens are miserable. I mean everybody is just miserable. We need water,” Cross said.

Cross says local farmers are unable to supply much fruit and vegetables and that she is getting by with produce trucked in from other states where conditions are better.

“We are getting it from the local southern states and southwestern states are kicking in -- Arizona, New Mexico, Louisiana, Oklahoma. Everybody knows that the Texas market is a great consumer market, so they are helping out a lot here,” Cross said.
a\
One of the hardest hit agricultural sectors is livestock. Texas is the biggest cattle producer in the United States and ships beef to many foreign markets. Earlier this year, ranchers endured one of the worst winters on record, with several days of subzero temperatures in a region where freezes are rare. The drought has made it even harder, driving up the cost of hay and leaving some areas so dry that cattle have died of thirst in their pastures.

One rancher who has managed to get through this crisis with most of her stock in fairly good condition is Dorie Damuth, owner of the Flying D ranch near Magnolia, Texas.

Damuth raises prize-winning Texas Longhorns for breeding and she has managed to find hay and enough water to keep them alive. She says she has seen dry spells before, but nothing that compares to this year.

“The drought is something I, as a cattle woman, and all of my fellow cattlemen and cattlewomen have never experienced before. This is probably the 100-year drought, just like you can have a 100-year flood. It is very devastating for all of us ranchers who work so hard to provide beef for our country as well as for around the world,” Damuth said.

In a dried up lake on her property, there is a Longhorn skull sitting on top of cracked earth that is muddy and soft underneath.

“We have had lakes and stock ponds on the ranch that have dried up because of no rain, no rainfall. They will dry down to a little mucky place in the middle that is still wet and the cattle will sometimes go down and try to get water and they can't. And they step into that mucky mud and it is kind of like quicksand, and they can't get out.”

Lately, there have been beautiful fluffy clouds floating over the area. But ranch hand Chris Quinters is not encouraged by them.

“Those are some nice clouds, but it don't look like they are going to bring any rain,” Quinters said.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Family struggles to keep roadside monument alive in Friendswood


FRIENDSWOOD, Texas—It happened in the 3500 block of West Bay Area Boulevard in Friendswood on the night before Thanksgiving. Keith Vargas was riding the motorcycle that once belonged to his father, when a truck pulling a trailer drove into his path. Vargas, 30, was killed instantly.

"There’s a void that will never be filled," said Stacie Burcl, Vargas’ sister. "There’s a holiday that will never be the same, and there’s a 4-year-old little girl that will never have her father again."

That little girl helped her family erect a memorial cross honoring Vargas on the roadside. That was on Easter. The following day, Burcl said she received a phone call from the nearby HOA’s management company.

"I was instructed that I had 24 hours to remove the cross that was called a distraction," said Burcl.

Burcl opted not to remove the cross, but just a few days ago, someone else did.

"Some people ask why do we have this cross here," said Diane Vargas, the victim’s mother. "It’s to honor where my child died."

The HOA said if the city doesn’t object to the cross, it doesn’t either. Some residents in the area, however, do.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Friendswood schools "Exemplary"

READ THE REST OF THE STORY HERE

When the Texas Education Agency released the accountability ratings for 8,526 public schools and 1,228 school districts, Friendswood ISD had reason to celebrate. Once again all six campuses are rated Exemplary along with the district being Exemplary.

This is the district’s third consecutive year to obtain the highest ranking awarded by the state.

“Even though this is the third consecutive year for an Exemplary rating, this year, it is more significant,” Friendswood Superintendent Trish Hanks said. “Despite the distractions caused by unprecedented state funding reductions and a last minute increase in the accountability standards, our teachers kept their focus where it needed to be.”

The Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) test ratings are based on passing rates, dropout rates and high school completion rates. For 2011, standards were increased and the Texas Projection Measure (TPM) was eliminated. These changes resulted in fewer districts and schools earning the top Exemplary rating for the year.

The number of Exemplary districts decreased from 241 in 2010 to 61 for 2011 and Exemplary campus numbers dropping from 2,637 in 2010 to 1,224.

Friendswood joins 44 other districts excluding charter operators (61 with charter operators) in reaching the Exemplary status. FISD is in the top 5 percent of schools to reach this. Out of the 61, only 5 others are as large or larger than FISD who has 6,000 students. The other five are Frisco ISD, Lake Travis ISD, Eanes ISD, Carroll ISD and Highland Park ISD.

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin