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Inside Today: Urban Winery opens on T.C. Jester Blvd. • 1B
Come Check Out What’s 50% OFF
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Covering the Heights, Garden Oaks, Oak Forest & the neighborhoods of North Houston
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10570 NW Frwy 713-680-2350
Saturday, July 19, 2014 • Vol. 60 • No. 37
Poultry plant owner bails By Jonathan McElvy jonathan@theleadernews.com
ABOUT US 3500 East T.C. Jester Blvd Suite A (713) 686-8494
www.allenSOLDit.com
news@theleadernews.com www.theleadernews.com Facebook/THE LEADER.
Michael Bastian bought the former Lone Star Poultry plant in the Heights, hoping to develop three nice homes on the lots.
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The man who bought an unsightly poultry plant in the middle of the Heights says he is so fed up with the bureaucracy of trying to build nice homes that he has all but thrown in the towel on the project. Michael Bastian, who owns Bastian Homes, bought the five lots that once housed Lone Star Poultry. Any resident of the Heights who passed the commercial building knew the drab, gray concrete walls, rickety fencing and mangled parking lot were the worst of eyesores in one
Michael Bastian says it is almost impossible to work with the city’s historic commission of Houston’s most popular neighborhoods. Bastian closed on the property in June 2013, and he knew that to complete any sort of construction, he’d have to get approval from the Houston Archaeological and Historical Commission. “If I had known then what I know
Best Backyards
THE BRIEF. Parks Department awarded recycling bins
The Houston Parks and Recreation Department (H.P.A.R.D.) will receive 24 recycle bins designed specifically for placement in city parks. H.P.A.R.D. was one of 26 local and county governments in 19 states to receive durable, permanent recycling bins as part of the Dr. Pepper Snapple Group /Keep America Beautiful Park Recycling Bin Grant program. The bins will be distributed within five H.P.A.R.D. parks, including 10 in The Leader area – five in Stude Park, 1031 Stude – and five in T.C. Jester Park, 4201 W. T.C. Jester Blvd. “These bins will greatly reduce the amount of waste plastic being thrown away in Houston parks,” said Joe Turner, Director, Houston Parks and Recreation Department. “Where park visitors have the option of tossing their bottles in the trash or depositing them in a neat, clean recycle bin, most will choose the environmentally sound alternative. The plastic will gain a new use and won’t end up in a land fill, and everybody wins.”
More than 7,000 votes were cast in the Best Backyard contest, and these are your winners. At top, April and Jeff Burns yard, complete with gazebo and waterfall on DuBarry won the category that included yards with pools. Judy Gutierrez’s magnificent yard on Stonecrest won for yards without pools. For more images from this contest, please see Page 9B.
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FIND IT. CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES FOR SALE: Male and female, $50 each. 713-688-1275. ESTATE SALE: 501 Highland, July 18-19-20, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Antiques, furniture, appliances, glassware, dishes. LOCAL COURIER SERVICE needs owner operator with small trucks/SUVs and minivans. Eight immediate openings. 281645-2196. BARMAID/WAITRESS NEEDED: Apply in person. FT/PT, days, nights, weekends. Catty-Corner Ice House, 895 Wakefield, 713-691-9197. info@cattycornericehouse.com.
Readers pick top backyards More than 7,000 votes were cast in the inaugural Best Backyard Contest to select two of the best backyards in The Leader area. April and Jeff Burns, 1730 DuBarry, won the Best Backyard with a pool category, and Judy L. Gutierrez, 1018 Stonecrest, won the Best Backyard without a pool. “We designed and constructed our backyard ourselves,” the Burns family said. “We are one of the few homes with no large trees so we made our backyard a tropical oasis day and night – complete with a saltwater pool. The pride of barbados in the
back center will soon be covered in orange and yellow blooms. We have yet to see the wisteria over the swing bloom, but we are sure it will dazzle.” The yard has cannas with different colors, along with elephant ears, jasmine, bleeding heart vine, fig ivy and roses. Various birds, butterflies, squirrels and the couple’s three dogs visit the backyard. The Burns made curtains and all of the furniture cushions. “This was 100% a do-it-yourself yard,” they said. Gutierrez is proud of her awardwinning yard.
“In the spring I sit out in my back yard with the hummingbird feeders, the lush greenery, the hibiscus blooming, and realize that there truly is a God,” Gutierrez said. “In the summer there are so many flowers and the fragrances are wonderful. In the fall I watch the beautiful leaves fall, one by one, never thinking for a moment that soon all the leaves will be gone.” Even in the winter, this magnificent yard has lots of flowers, trees and shrubs. -Staff Reports
By Kim Hogstrom For The Leader
The Oak Forest/Garden Oaks area was a happening place for veterans-related events last Saturday. There was barbecue, beer, music, and laughter, everywhere. Although there were actually two events in progress, both were hosted by partner veterans’ organizations, and both offered big fun and warm friendship while
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When Pinemont Park resident Helen Spencer was growing up, she wanted to be a teacher. During her years at Texas A&M, her talent in communications became apparent and she began a successful journalism career. Now, she’s proud to say that she’s combined her two lifelong interests - education and communications – to one of the most important positions in the Houston Independent School District, Helen Spencer the largest district in the state and seventh largest in the nation. Spencer was promoted to HISD superintendent Terry Grier’s Chief of Staff, from General Manager of HISD Communications where she served for three years. She works directly with Grier and communicates with him throughout the day. “He is a very focused, dedicated individual,” Spencer said of Grier. “He has a lot of ideas, but values input, too. He has a great sense of urgency for children. He’ll often tell us that children only have one time in school.” One of the main parts of Spencer’s job is working on “Implementation Fidelity” of the district’s initiatives. “We want to ensure that initiatives are launched the way they were intended to be,” Spencer said. She’s also responsible for monitoring the initiatives over time and “seeing how it’s being used and seeing the results driven by the change.” As general manager of communications, Spencer played an important role in educating voters about the district’s $1.89 billion bond proposal, which passed in 2012. “We demonstrated the need to rebuild the district’s high schools into See SPENCER, P. 10A
Veterans celebrate weekend for two good causes
THE INDEX. Church
Pinemont Park resident helps shape HISD policy By Michael Sudhalter
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michael@theleadernews.com
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now, I never would have bought those lots,” Bastian said. “Not in a million years would I ever again buy a lot [in the Heights historic district].” According to Bastian, he has worked through a maze of amateur city employees and “dogmatic, religious zealots” who care nothing about history and only care about “preserving the existing stock.” Margaret Wallace-Brown, deputy director of the City of Houston Planning & Development Department, disagrees. She said her office, including her staff, have done every-
5A 6B Local resident David Martinez, a military veteran, attended a benefit last Saturday for Legionnaire and fellow veteran Michael Hardie. (Photo by Kim Hogstrom)
benefiting community-oriented causes. The United States Naval Academy Alumni Association, Texas Gulf Coast Chapter, held its first annual “Top Gun Benefit” at the Wakefield CrowBar. About 100 veterans, most of whom live in the community, met for volleyball, “battleship beer pong,” limbo contests, and more. The shared camaraderie, vitality, and great humor of these men
and women were a joy for all in attendance. “This is our first event, and we were not sure how it would turn out, but it’s already a success... and it’s still early,” Michael Vlachakis stated with a laugh. This eloquent veteran is a Naval Academy graduate, pilot, and organized the benefit. “The Gulf Coast Chapter See VETERANS, P. 10A