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Outdoors

SPORTS

HUNTING & FISHING

Commentary Kaz’s Korner

Capt. Chuck Uzzle Page 4 Section B

Joe Kazmar Page 2 Section B

ORANGE COUNTY

FISHING Capt. Dickie Colburn Page 1 Section B

RELIGION & LOCAL CHURCH GUIDE Page 6B

The       Record TheRecordLive.com

Vol. 58 No. 81

Distributed FREE To The Citizens of Bridge City and Orangefield

Week of Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Christmas comes to town with lights parade Larry Johnson For The Record

The Bridge City Chamber of Commerce, sponsor of that city’s Christmas Light Parade, announced Tuesday it will accept applications for parade entries through Thursday. All participants donate toys as their entry fee for the parade. The toys are then distributed through the Bridge City/Orangefield Ministerial Alliance. “Join us in making a difference in the lives of children in need this Christmas!” its release said. Anyone wishing to donate to the Christmas Toy Drive is asked to call the chamber at 735-5671 for more infor-

mation. To download a parade application, visit the Chamber website www. bridgecitychamber.com . Completed applications can be e-mailed to: bcchamber@bridgecitychamber. com or faxed to: 409-7456588 or dropped off at the chamber office (after hours, just slide them through the slot in the front door.) The Bridge City parade route will be down W. Roundbunch Road, from the First Baptist Church to Bridge City Elementary School. Friends of the Orange Depot host A Christmas Tea, featuring a women’s fashion show presented by Angie Hill McClelland of YaYa Clothing Company and

Christmas floral designs by JScott Aflorist. Both businesses are donating their efforts to the Depot cause. Special tea and refresh-

ments will be prepared by the Friends of the Depot, with Diana Hill chairing the event. Tickets are a $25 donation and can be purchased by

calling 409-313-1459. Seating is limited. Loulan Guillot and David Byrd, of 812 W. Pine, will start the Toy Coffee tour of two homes decorated to the

nines for Christmas, with the home of David and Kerri Clark 806 W. Pine, to follow. Admission to the Toy CofWEEKEND Page 7A

BC students collect 1,956 cans, $1,000 cash

Army of helpers base at barracks

During our annual canned food drive, Bridge City Intermediate donated 1,958 cans and $1,000 to Orange Christian Services and Ministerial Alliance. “ We are happy to know that we are able to help our community,” said Eryn Leleaux a teacher at BCI.

Runnels yields to newcomer in judge’s race Judge Camp of Flower Mound, Texas, gives a volunteer crew from Texas Baptist Men their morning instructions before they depart the Orange Navy Barracks to help clean up from Tropical Storm Harvey. RECORD PHOTO: Dave Rogers

Dave Rogers

For The Record

Orange’s old Navy Barracks has a new purpose. The main dormitory for what was once U.S. Naval Station Orange, home to 850 sailors and attached personnel during the Korean War, is once again a beehive of early morning and evening activity. It is serving as home-awayfrom-home for volunteers who come to help Orange County recover from Tropical Storm Harvey. “This is an answer to our prayer,” Henrietta Gentry of Texas Baptist Men Disaster Relief declared on a recent night when the building at the Port of Orange was filled with 111 volunteers, including 38 from the group AmeriCorps. Good Samaritans from throughout the state and nation who are part of Southern Baptist Disaster Relief and Texas Baptist Men have been in Orange County for more than three months now. They are among a number of faith-based groups on a mission of service to floodaffected Southeast Texans. They work to clear flood damage from homes and begin the rebuilding needed to get people back in their homes. “Showing other people you care in the midst of a crisis is one of the greatest things you can do,” said Rob Puckett, a volunteer from Guam. “Jesus loves us and tells us we need to love other people just like he does.” Originally, the Baptist vol-

unteers were headquartered at North Orange Baptist Church. “We usually go to North Orange Baptist Church, because of its size. This is the fourth time,” Gentry said, explaining the church hosted TBM after Hurricanes Rita and Ike and the 2016 Sabine River floods. “We wanted to bring more volunteers, and the church needed space, because it is also hosting Little Cypress Elementary students” whose classrooms were damaged by Harvey. “So Orange County was gracious enough to help us find lodging. It is an answered prayer for us to be here, because the county and the port were able to work together,” Gentry said. The Navy Barracks date back to the establishment of Naval Base Orange in 1945, just before the end of World War II. The base at the end of Green Avenue eventually grew to 168 acres in size with as many as 850 attached personnel during the Korean War. Its greatest use was as home to part of the navy’s “mothball fleet,” officially the U.S. Reserve Fleet. Its workers refitted and sent 30 ships to Korea during that conflict. Over the years, the base was downsized and closed. All but 18 acres were portioned off and sold, some to Lamar State College-Orange. The final piece, that included the barracks and ARMY OF HELPERS Page 7A

Dave Rogers

For The Record

Pete Runnels is not running for Orange County judge after all, but Dean Crooks is, and the retired Beaumont police lieutenant has come out firing. Oh, and Precinct 4 Commissioner Jody Crump has still not filed to run for reelection to his third term. Tuesday, he said, “That decision is yet to be determined.” A Port Arthur Thomas Jefferson grad who has lived in Orange County since 1994, Crooks says if he’s elected

from a field that so far includes three Republican candidates, he will: • Roll back September pay raises for the county judge and commissioners; • Make subsequent pay raises for those five elected officials subject to an election by all Orange County voters; • Reinstate vacation and retirement insurance benefits cut in September, 2016; • Not consider any tax increases, nor any new taxing entities. County Judge Stephen

Brint Carlton, who voted in favor of the benefits cuts in 2016 and earlier this year for pay raises for all elected county officials in an all-ornone vote as prescribed by law, is seeking re-election to his second term. Ken Luce, a former Deputy Emergency Management Director, filed a week ago to oppose Carlton. Carlton, Luce and Crooks will compete in a March 6 Republican primary election with the winner going on to the Nov. 6 general election next year.

So far, no Democrat has filed to run for the office. Vidor Mayor Robert Viator has filed with GOP County Chairman David Covey to run for the Precinct 4 seat held by Crump since 2011. Crump had announced back in the summer that he intended to run for a third term. But that was before Tropical Storm Harvey’s floodwaters swallowed his home north of Vidor, not to mention a nearly completed secCOUNTY BUSINESS Page 7A

Cardinals of Characters for the second grading period are: Pre-k, Caden Crowe, Greyson Babbitt, Adaleigh Haney and Braelie Govia. Kinder- Steelye Roberts, Maesyn Davis, Faith Rasberry, Liam Freeman, Paisleigh Dixon, Riley Osborne, Carlee Arnold, Madelyn Ledford, Sophie Jones, Yanira Figueroa, Austin McGuire, and Alexis Hernandez. 1st Grade- Emmery Golemon, Ryan Morgan, Lila Lee, River Dietz, Kinlie Moseley, Ariel Handley, Angelique Marrufo, Colton Grubbs, Slayton Tupper, Jayden Ruggles, Carter Pyle, Eileen Torres, and Cassandra Farias. 2nd Grade- Jackson Cobb, Rylan, Thompson, Ava Propps, Gavin Gordy, Lane Sleeman, Lauren Tran, Khylie Chance, Wyatt Ernst, Luke Leblanc, Angel Garcia, Ada Detrick, Lillyann Cook and Maynor Vazquez.

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