Big Creek E. coli reduction project inches forward - Page 2
The Ridge Point Lady Panthers basketball team may have lost their regional semifinal game, but all signs still point to a bright future. Read the story inside today's edition on Page 5. (Photo by Landan Kuhlmann)
WEDNESDAY • MARCH 4, 2020
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Fort Bend / Southwest • Volume 44 • No. 80
Missouri City fires Snipes at contentious special meeting By Landan Kuhlmann LKUHLMANN@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
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In December 2015, Anthony Snipes was unanimously appointed city manager of Missouri City. A little more than four years later, some of the same council members who appointed him were among those to oust him. During a contentious spe-
Snipes
cial meeting Feb. 24, the Missouri City Council voted 4-3 in favor of terminating Snipes’ contract. The meeting lasted more than two hours, during which there was much back-and-forth between council members and audience uproar that necessitated multiple calls to order. Mayor Yolanda Ford, Mayor Pro Tem Chris Preston and council members Vashaundra Edwards and Cheryl Sterling
voted in favor of Snipes’ termination, which was effective immediately. Jeffrey Boney, Floyd Emery and Anthony Maroulis voted against the motion. “I’m floored by this motion, and even the thought that our city manager is worthy of termination,” Boney said during the meeting. In a news release, Missouri City said assistant city mangers Bill Atkinson and
Glen Martel will provide administrative services to the city until a new city manager is hired. The city council planned to discuss the appointment of an interim city manager at its meeting on Monday. As cause for Snipes’ termination, Ford cited multiple alleged infractions under his watch. Included among the
SEE SNIPES PAGE 5
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Anastasia Lindo Anderson, left, stands with her mother, Miriam Lindo, at the Mayor's History Makers Awards on Feb. 28 in Houston. The Richmond resident and Promise Community Schools superintendent was honored for her contributions to the education community. (Photo by Quy Tran)
Richmond resident honored for educational impact on Houston community McElvy Media launches coronavirus news site From Staff Reports
Houston-area residents concerned about the coronavirus can find news reports and other important information at a new website, houstoncoronavirus. com. McElvy Media, the company that publishes the Fort Bend Star, created the site as the world copes with the outbreak of COVID-19, the infectious disease caused by the new strain of coronavirus. Houstoncoronavirus.com is dedicated to providing the Greater Houston community with up-to-date information about the virus, its outbreak and the impact it could have on the region. The site contains a daily briefing that provides a rundown of coronavirus-related stories from a wide range of local, state, national and international news sources. There also are links to news stories as well as health organizations, including Harris County Public Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. So don't stay in the dark about a virus that could affect you, your family and your business. Stay informed by visiting houstoncoronavirus.com.
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Page 3
By Landan Kuhlmann LKUHLMANN@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
Many say that teachers don’t often receive due praise for the work they put in. For one area resident and longtime educator, however, her contributions to the community have not gone unnoticed. Comcast and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner honored seven community volunteers, including Richmond resident and educator Anastasia Lindo Anderson, during the third annual Mayor’s History Makers Awards on Feb. 28. They were recognized for their commitment to making a difference in the Houston community through volunteerism, mentorship, advocacy and civic engagement, according to Comcast.
“We don’t always have to look back 100 years ago (to see history being made),” Turner said. “We can look at what’s taking place right now.” Anderson serves as Superintendent of Schools for Promise Community Schools, a charter school system within area nonprofit BakerRipley. She previously served as an elementary and middle school principal as well as in an administrative role for Houston ISD for more than two decades before taking Promise’s top position a few years ago. “We often talk about children being our future, but I truly believe the future leaders are sitting in those classrooms today,” she said. “I’ve dedicated my life to trying to figure out how to get kids to learn at the highest
Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner gives remarks at the ceremony. (Photo by Quy Tran)
level and find their talents so they can pursue their passions and aspirations.” As superintendent of the
system’s five Houston-area campuses and nearly 2,000 total students from elementary through high school,
Anderson and Promise serve students of all backgrounds,
SEE IMPACT PAGE 8
Fort Bend prison to be shuttered later this year By Landan Kuhlmann LKUHLMANN@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
A Richmond prison will be shutting down later this year amidst declining inmate population and understaffing issues. Senator John Whitmire’s office announced Feb. 20 that two Texas prisons will close in the coming months, including the Jester I Unit at 1 Jester Rd. in Richmond near the Aliana and Harvest Green neighborhoods. The other unit closing is the Garza East Unit in Beeville. According to the most
The Jester I prison unit in Richmond will be closed in the coming months. (Photo by Landan Kuhlmann)
recent Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) data, the Jester I Unit holds a maximum of
323 inmates – mostly related to substance-abuse offenses – and employs 119 people.
Since 2007, the Texas Legislature has put a higher priority on funding treatment, diversion and rehabilitation programs in efforts to reduce inmate population, according to a news release from Whitmire’s office. “Texas was at the forefront of criminal justice reform last decade,” Whitmire said in the release. “With sustained funding for treatment and prevention programs and a continued focus on additional reforms, Texas will continue to show the nation what it means to be tough, but smart on
crime.” The state has now closed 10 prisons over the last nine years, while inmate population has dropped from 157,000 in 2011 to just over 140,000, according to the release. There is no firm date for closure of either facility, though TDCJ Communications Director Jeremy Desel said the Garza East unit will likely close first followed by Jester I Unit. “We’re always looking for the ways to be as efficient as we can possibly be
SEE PRISON PAGE 8