12/26/2018 Edition of the Fort Bend Star

Page 1

Skeeters GM leaving for Wichita post: Page 5

WEDNESDAY • DECEMBER 26, 2018

Jack’s

JOIN US NEW YEAR’S EVE LIVE MUSIC BY THE BAND TNT 281-498-3410 11720 Wilcrest Houston, Tx. 77099

Visit www.FortBendStar.com

Fort Bend / Southwest • Volume 43 • No. 19

Internment of Sugar Land 95 lingers in court

$25

(1) LARGE & (1) MEDIUM PIZZA Pick-up or Deliver Open 7 days a week

15215 Southwest Freeway Sugar Land, TX 77478 281-201-8525 Exp. 12/31/2018

Going for it all Reginald Moore, head of the Convict Labor and Leasing Project, speaks during and candlelight vigil Sunday in Sugar Land Town square for the “Sugar Land 95,” the 95 remains found in an unmarked historic cemetery on the grounds of a school construction site. (Submitted photo)

FBISD plan to rezone has parents School district, advocates uphappy in at odds over reburial of Quail Valley remains from cemetery By Theresa D. McClellan THERESA@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

Thurgood Marshall and Willowridge high schools need students. The proposed options by the Fort Bend ISD to fix that problem by rezoning Quail Valley students to Marshall, however, has parents who expected their students to attend Elkins High School crying foul. Marshall parents, weary of the image of their school as failing, say they just want the district’s full support after a history of being neglected and treated as a pawn. The emotional issue of rezoning is once again back on the table with the district holding information sessions three nights in December with the expectation that participants would fill out surveys. FBISD Superintendent Charles Dupre told the parents their voices will be heard and encouraged them to be specific. “Give us detailed information. Not, ‘I don’t like this,’ but give us your suggestions. Tell us ‘here are some ideas you may not have thought of’ and we will combine all the data in the survey. This is where the work is done. We had a focus group of 25 citizens. We had staff working and now we need to hear from as many community members in all neighborhoods that could be affected,” Dupre said. The district will be taking survey information through Jan. 2. The rezoning options are necessary to fix the issue of overcrowding in the newer portions of Fort Bend ISD and underutilization in the older sections of the district. Some parents attending the Marshall session were dubious. After watching a video presentation that is available online with the same information presented for three nights, Jennifer Carter, a mother of three teens who will graduate from Ridge Point High School, started yelling as she walked out of the auditorium. “Why isn’t Dulles in the mix? Why aren’t you looking at Dulles?” she yelled Some parents in the audience said she was only expressing what others were thinking. Carter said she grew up in Quail Valley and now lives in Sienna and she graduated from Dulles. She does not want her family attending Marshall. “They have underperforming schools and they are driving kids out to balance socio-economic deficits and performance rather than fixing education,” said Carter.

SEE REZONE, PAGE 2

By Theresa D. McClellan THERESA@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

The wait continues. The day after a Dec. 18 status hearing where the courts said more time is needed to review information from all sides regarding the remains of 95 people found in an unmarked historic cemetery on a Fort Bend Independent School District (FBISD) school construction site, the district filed a new “emergency” motion asking Judge James Shoemake to expedite the process. The delays are costing the school district and eventually taxpayers more money than was planned to build the James Reese Career and Technical Center, a school district lawyer argued in court motions filed Wednesday in the 434th District Court. This district wants the remains reinterred at the nearby Old Imperial Prison Farm Cemetery. Advocates for the “Sugar Land 95” prefer to have the remains reburied where they were found. The district is building a $58 million state-of-the-art career and technology center that was approved by voters as part of the 2014 bond. The delays in building the center, originally slated to open in the fall of 2019, are hurting the students, the district argued. “The high school students of FBISD who had hoped to begin enrollment and course selection for programs to be offered in the impacted wing of the CTE campus are in limbo, unsure of their prospects to pursue technical and dual credit courses next year in pursuit of their graduation and career path programs,” the six-page emergency motion stated. The center will offer advanced courses providing career opportunities in agriculture and natural resources, architecture and construction, arts and audio video communications,

culinary arts, cosmetology, education and training, information technology, law, and public safety, manufacturing, transportation, and logistics. Students will have access to dual credit courses and multiple opportunities to earn industry certifications while completing coursework at the center, the district said. For those in the community concerned about the 95 skeletal remains of what are believed to be post-Civil War era convict laborers, time is the answer. Advocates want the courts to take the time to determine the identity of the bodies in hopes of finding living ancestors. They also want to shine a light on a dark, little-known piece of Sugar Land history. The “convicts” were black former slaves who were imprisoned on minor offenses and trumped-up charges and then leased to sugarcane plantations for hard labor. The state program ran from 1878 to 1910. The Sugar Land 95 are believed to have been leased convict laborers who died and were hastily buried at the site. Local prison historian Reginald Moore, head of the Convict Labor and Leasing Project and the man who has been a watchdog on the matter, issued a prepared statement saying, “the rush to reinter the 95 bodies without the proper genealogical and historical studies is disrespectful to these individuals and the painful history they represent. This critical historic site represents the historical memory of the Brazos Valley’s use of captive labor for growing and harvesting sugarcane, the cash crop from which came the name of Sugar Land." Because of the many voices involved, Judge Shoemake named attorney Michael W. Elliott the special Master in Chancery – or court aid - to gather

SEE CEMETERY, PAGE 4

A candlelight vigil was held Sunday in Sugar Land Town square for the “Sugar Land 95,” the 95 remains found in an unmarked historic cemetery on the grounds of a school construction site. (Submitted photo)

Members of the Marshall High School football team celebrate winning the Class 5A-District 2 state semifinal game. The team played in Dallas for the state championship against Aledo on Friday. Due to early holiday deadlines, this edition of the Fort Bend Star went to press before the game was played. For results, visit www.FortBendStar.com or see next week's paper. (Photo by Bill McCaughey)

Out with the Old Judge, commissioner leaving office with combined 35 years experience Bob Hebert makes way for George By Joe Southern JSOUTHERN@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

When Robert Hebert first ran for Fort Bend County Judge 16 years ago, he didn’t come in with a set political agenda. “I’m a problem solver. I’m a businessman. I came in with a charge to work with my commissioners to modernize the flow of work in the county and we’ve done that over a period of years,” he said. Ironically, it was a political agenda that removed him from office, but Hebert doesn’t mind. Going into the Nov. 6 election, Democrats across the county and state predicted a Blue Wave that would wash the Republican stronghold out and return control back to the Democrats. That’s exactly what happened. “I didn’t expect it to end as abruptly as it did, but

Robert Hebert sits at his desk, reflecting on 16 years as county judge and looking forward to new opportunities. (Photo by Joe Southern)

that’s politics,” he said. “Nobody voted against me or for KP (George), they voted for or against the party based on issues that neither KP or I had any control over and he won.” His words echoed softly off the barren walls of his office in the historic county courthouse. By mid-December Hebert had cleared most of his belongings out, leaving the desk, chair, computer and other county furnishings for George to inherit on Jan. 1.

“I’ll move out of this office on the 26th. The day after Christmas I’ll be gone. That allows him to set his office up in that off week,” Hebert said. Even though he didn’t win another term, Hebert is pleased with what has been accomplished under his watch. “We’ve set up an executive management structure that put our departments

SEE HEBERT, PAGE 2

Patterson reflects on 19 years as commissioner By Joe Southern JSOUTHERN@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

His office is empty now, swept clean like the Blue Tide that washed Precinct 4 Commissioner James Patterson and many other elected officials out of office last month. Although Patterson would have preferred to leave on his own terms, he is not bitter. He understands the nature of politics and knows that his 19 years in office made a difference. “My wife and my family and I have worked very hard to make a positive difference and at the end of the day people will be able to say that county commissioner, he was certainly a statesman,” Patterson said. He lost his election to Democrat Ken DeMerchant, who will be sworn in on Jan. 1. Right now, Patterson is one of DeMerchant’s biggest supporters. “I want Precinct 4 to be the most fabulous place and so what can I do to help him? He’s made an offer to all three members of the staff here and all three have accepted his offer for them to stay right here and continue on,” he said. Being a commissioner was

a second career for Patterson. He came to Sugar Land in 1965 as a teacher and later worked as a principal at Dulles and Elkins high schools. In 2017, the Fort Bend ISD honored him by naming a new elementary school after him. “There was eight bus routes. When I started driving there was one high school, one junior high school, and two elementary schools, that was ’65,” he said. “Dulles Avenue was Lester Lane. Watched a lot of growth. I was principal of Dulles High School when we had over 4,400 kids.” When Patterson was first elected in 1998, Fort Bend County was a backwater bedroom community to Houston. According to the Houston-Galveston Area Council, Brazoria County was projected to grow more than twice as fast as Fort Bend County. “All this growth in First Colony and Sienna and Aliana and the Katy area, these were just old rice fields and nobody would ever develop those. These were prison properties and nobody would ever sell those. It wasn’t taken into account,” Patterson said. Grow it did, and Patterson played a large role in guiding

James Patterson is leaving office as the county commissioner for Precinct 3 after 19 years of service. He is working with incoming commissioner Ken DeMerchant to make the transition as smooth as possible. (Photo by Joe Southern)

that growth. “Becoming a member of the transportation policy council and eventually the chairman of the transportation policy council, I was able to go back in and show folks the plats that were on books and what was coming at us,” he said.

SEE PATTERSON, PAGE 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.