After 12 years of successes at Texas Capitol, Edinburg looking to extend lobbying to D.C.
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September 28th, 2009 by
Legislativemedia@aol.com

The Texas A&M Health Science Center (HSC) on Wednesday, September 23, launched the Biosecurity and Import Safety Initiative – a collection of service, research and educational activities designed to ensure the health of the Rio Grande Valley, a region at risk of infectious disease, environmental threats and natural disasters. “With the Rio Grande Valley and the Coastal Bend serving as two of the largest ports of entry for people and commerce, we have direct access to the people and data relevant to detecting threats to public health,” said Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen. “The border is the front line for expanding our knowledge base as to specific risks and solutions for identifying, containing and treating the spread of communicable infections and viruses.” To help address complex biosecurity issues along the Texas-Mexico border, the Texas A&M Health Science Center was tasked by the 81st Texas Legislature with developing a Biosecurity and Import Safety Initiative headquartered in McAllen. The initiative is an integrated program that fosters training, education and enhanced environmental laboratory capacities in support of preparedness and increased local public health infrastructure. Featured at the event, from left: Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen; Scott Lillibridge, M.D., Assistant Dean and Professor, HSC-School of Rural Public Health; Director, National Center for Emergency Medical Preparedness and Response (NCEMPR); Sen. Hinojosa; and Rep. Tara Ríos Ybarra, D-South Padre Island. See story later in this posting.
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Cecile Richards, featured right, daughter of former Gov. Ann Richards, and STC President Shirley A. Reed pose with a photographic portrait of the late governor, which is prominently hung in the college’s Pecan Campus Ann Richards Administration Building. STC leaders are giving credit to Ann Richards, who in 1993 signed into law the legislation – authored by Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, and sponsored by Rep. Roberto Gutiérrez, D-McAllen – that converted the McAllen branch campus of Texas State Technical College into STC. Since then, the two-county community college system has reached an unprecedented student enrollment, with more than 27,000 students signed up for the fall 2009 semester, compared with an enrollment of just several hundred students when STC was created. See story later in this posting.
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Leaders with the University of Texas-Pan American, Region One Education Service Center, and the City of Edinburg on Thursday, September 24, hosted a press conference at the university to mark the 10th anniversary of GEAR UP, the Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs. GEAR UP is designed to increase the number of low-income students who are prepared to enter and succeed in post-secondary education, and provides six-year grants to states and partnerships to provide services at high-poverty middle and high schools. Featured at the news conference are, from left: Jack Damron, executive director of the Region One Educational Service Center; Jack Damron; Tina Atkins, director, Region One GEAR UP; Alma Garza, Edinburg city councilmember; Dr. Martha Cantú, director, UTPA GEAR UP; and Dr. Charles A. Sorber, interim president, UT-Pan American. See story later in this posting.
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Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, featured second from left, on Wednesday, September 23, was joined by Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, featured center, and other area leaders at Texas State Technical College in Harlingen for Lucio’s State of the District Conference. “I can promise you that one day, Senate District 27 will have premiere educational facilities competitive with the best institutions in the state,” Lucio predicted. “When I look to our future, I see a people with greater ability to afford health insurance. I see a community economically powered by a diversity of fields, including high-tech and green industry jobs. I envision the creation of an interstate highway vital and essential to our economic development. Featured, from left: Mayor Chris Boswell of Harlingen; Sen. Lucio; Lt. Gov. Dewhurst; Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg; and Dr. César Maldonado, president, TSTC-Harlingen. See story later in this posting.
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South Texas College’s History Department and Futuro McAllen, a citizens’ organization dedicated to quality-of-life issues in McAllen, are hosting a forum on Thursday, October 1, at 7 p.m. entitled An Introduction to Rail Mass Transportation in McAllen in the Rainbow Room of the STC’s Pecan Campus Library, located at 3201West Pecan Boulevard. The proposed track starts at McAllen Miller Airport, continuing north through downtown McAllen, then along Bicentennial Boulevard, with stops at half-mile intervals. Each stop forms a unique node of mid-rise developments where people can live, work, and play. These pedestrian-friendly nodes will drive vertical growth in the city, expand the tax base and create new opportunities for business, tourism, urban living, arts, and entertainment. The line extends to Edinburg, stopping at the County Courthouse complex and The University of Texas-Pan American, making it a very different type of commuter school. See story later in this posting.
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