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Fort Bend / Southwest • Volume 47 • No. 42 • $1.00
FBISD to offer some employees retention bonuses Armors Your Glass From Burglars, Storms & Heat
713-213-5080 info@ArmorGlass.com ArmorGlass.com
2022
READERS’ CHOICE PLACE YOUR VOTES FORTBENDSTAR.COM
By Matt deGrood MDEGROOD@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
Fort Bend ISD will offer $1,000 retention payments to current and new employees in a select few areas in an effort to reduce turnover. The district’s board of trustees last week approved spending $2.1 million on $1,000 payments to current full-time and new police officers, special education teachers and aids, registered nurses, licensed voca-
tional nurses, bus drivers and monitors, according to the district. “With a budget deficit of $50 million, the decision to pay the supplemental incentives was a challenging one as we continue to work hard to reduce the shortfall and increase revenues,” Superintendent Christie Whitbeck said. “But I felt strongly about doing this because the safety, health and wellbeing of our students is always our most important objective.” Trustees approved the
expenditure at a special meeting called about a week after they approved a budget for the upcoming fiscal year with a shortfall of about $49 million, according to budget documents. To help pass that budget, the district devoted about $27 million in federal funding and some of its reserve funds to help alleviate the shortfall, according to the district. The $2.1 million retention funding will also come via federal funding, according to the district.
Whitbeck
Despite the district’s financial woes, some parents and families were upset that the retention
payments weren’t going to all the district’s employees, especially teachers. “I wholeheartedly agree that the employees who got a bonus needed it, however, if you can’t give something to all then don’t give it to none,” one resident wrote on a social media page dedicated to discussing the district. “I would have much rather they wait to announce something in which ev-
SEE BUDGET PAGE 7
Unprecedented growth
FBCSO still mum on officer-involved shooting By Matt deGrood MDEGROOD@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
More than two weeks after a Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office deputy shot and killed a man during a traffic stop in Fresno, officials with the office are declining to answer any questions about the incident. Investigators allege that at about 10:15 p.m. June 23, a deputy tried to stop a vehicle in the 2400 block of Naill Road in Fresno and that, during the stop, the driver “evaded and assaulted” the deputy, according to a news release. The deputy then shot and killed the man, according to the news release. The deputy was transported to a hospital, where he was treated and released, investigators assert. Jacqueline Preston, a spokesperson for the sheriff’s office, declined last week to release any further information about the incident, including the names of either the deputy or dead man. She also declined to elaborate on what was meant by “evaded and assaulted.” “The case remains under investigation and additional details will be released once the investigation has been completed,” she said. The Texas Rangers are investigating the incident and referred comments to the sheriff’s office. Preston’s comments about not releasing more information comes in opposition to an officer-involved shooting earlier this year, where office officials released more information about the specifics of the incident, along with the names of all involved, in the days after the shooting. Preston did not respond to a question about why the department is treating this case differently. Preston declined to provide video of the shooting.
Homestead exemptions have been increased around Fort Bend County in recent months, as local municipalities try to reduce residents' tax burdens amidst rising home prices. (Staff file photo)
Municipalities increase homestead exemptions amid rising prices By Matt deGrood MDEGROOD@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
Housing in Fort Bend County has been hot. So hot in recent months that several Fort Bend County communities, including Sugar Land and Missouri City have taken steps to reduce residents’ tax burdens. Missouri City, for instance, late last month unanimously approved an ordinance that will give senior residents a
tax exemption of about $250,000 and a 2.5 percent homestead exemption for residential homesteads, according to the city. “I am excited about joining my colleagues … to approve these muchsought-after Homestead Exemptions, on behalf of the taxpaying residents of MC,” Councilmember Jeffrey Boney wrote about the decision. All told, a 2.5 percent homestead exemption would save the average
Missouri City homeowner about $40 in property taxes, according to the city. The council’s decision comes just after Sugar Land’s council last month approved a plan that will increase the city’s homestead exemption from 12 to 13 percent for the 2022 tax year, according to a news release. That would provide the owner of a $420,000 home about $15 per year in savings, according to the city. Residents in the days
and weeks after the change were appreciative of the change. “This is magnificent,” one resident wrote on social media. “Thank you.” But it’s not clear the cities’ moves have made a major affect on the housing market, according to one real estate expert. “It’s a good move, but I don’t know if it’s been a factor in many peoples’ decision on when to buy or sell,” said Shane Light, a Sugar Land-based real estate agent.
The state’s homeowners have among the highest property tax bills in the country, according to a Texas Tribune article. That’s in large part because of the state’s reliance on property taxes to fund local governments, schools and lack of a state income tax, according to the article. That fact, combined with a skyrocketing Houston market, have meant a crazy few years in Fort Bend County real
SEE EXEMPTIONS PAGE 7
DA dismisses charges against Harris County judge By Matt deGrood MDEGROOD@FORTBENDSTAR.COM
Middleton
The Fort Bend County District Attorney’s Office has moved to dismiss criminal charges against a Harris County court at law judge, bringing the county into a burgeoning controversy in its neighbor’s
courtrooms. Harris County had asked Fort Bend’s District Attorney’s Office to look over a grand jury’s decision to file oppression charges against Judge Darrell Jordan, according to a news release. The county was tasked with the investigation because Harris
County District Attorney Kim Ogg recused her office from the prosecution, according to the release. Jordan had been accused of unlawfully arresting and detaining a former TV journalist, Wayne Dolcefino, who now works as a private media consultant, according to a Houston
Chronicle article from June 27. Jordan allegedly ordered Dolcifino jailed in contempt of court on Jun 30, 2020, according to the article. Dolcefino was later found guilty and sentenced to three days in
SEE CHARGES PAGE 7
JERRY FLOWERS
Real Estate Agent, MBA, CNE, ABE Army Veteran (RET) • 832-702-5241 Jerry@dreamhomesbyjerry.com
4500 Highway 6, Sugar Land, TX 77478