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Why didn’t Houston rank higher in a new list of the top 50 best U.S. cities for millennials?

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Niche, a publication, is helping young professionals find their place to land with a new list of the best cities for millennials.

According to its calculations, Houston made the list at no. 46, narrowly making it into a top 50 spot.

RELATED: Houston ranks among the top 25 cities for foodies

With our numerous parks, rich cultural diversity and happening restaurant scene, many Houstonians can’t help but wonder why the Bayou City couldn’t pull a higher ranking.

Locals argue there is a place here for every kind of millennial — energy enthusiasts, owl scholars, the creatives, the rodeo fans, bohemians, executives, start-ups and a whole slew of rocket scientists.

While Houston scores well with schools, homes, nightlife and diversity, crime and safety data may be dragging down the rankings; additionally, reviewers reportedly think the nation’s fourth-largest city comes with more of a “suburban” feel than urban vibe.

Surprisingly, and, perhaps, unfortunately, an abundance of avocado toast options around town did not receive considerations in the rankings, making it unclear if Niche really know millennials.

With several breakfast spots drawing lines out into the parking lot every weekend, not to mention a popping brunch scene, Houston is surely a great city for a future generation in many Texans’ eyes.

Perhaps Houston isn’t expensive enough to rank higher on the list; with cities like San Francisco, Seattle and Berkeley in the top 10, some could argue the list starts to read like a who’s who of the most costly cities in America.

Austin, which scored the same as Houston, but at a higher living cost, somehow grabbed the no. 11 spot.

The reviews for the city describe Austin as an oasis of acceptance where cowboys, yogis, young people and scholars flourish under the dual lights of history and technology.

RELATED: Dive into Texas tales with these stories from the Lone Star State

At least Dallas didn’t crack the top 50 at all.


Giving Whataburger another run for their money, Houston’s burger competition is heating up yet again

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Many Houstonians are excitedly awaiting the arrival of West Coast burger chain In-and-Out.

But, now, a second California burger joint is reportedly making moves to hit the Bayou City.

RELATED: In-and-Out Burger coming to Houston

Los Angeles-based burger chain Fatburger is expanding to Texas, and, according to reports, Houston is one of the stops on their list.

They are said to be opening restaurants in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, as well.

While locations remain to be determined in Houston, Fatburger said they are looking to open three to five locations across the metropolitan area.

No timeline is currently announced, but chain representatives said the company hopes to open the first location in Dallas within six months, coming down to Houston soon after.

RELATED: New artsy beer and wine garden joins Houston’s first ward

Fatburger features a variety of burgers and sides, all served with a signature, self-proclaimed West Coast flair.

Think they’ve got a fat chance against Whataburger?

Houston steals the headlines from Dallas when it comes to settling its Confederate past

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Dallas stands out among cities across Texas debating the future of their Confederate monuments, but Houston is now sweeping the headlines.

In Harvey’s aftermath, efforts to deal with Confederate monuments were put on hold in Houston, but a man accused of trying to blow up a Confederate monument in Hermann Park in August is headed to Lake Charles Memorial Hospital for a mental health lockdown.

RELATED: Feds arrest Houston man caught trying to bomb Confederate statue

Andrew Cecil Schneck, 25, was caught at the base of the statue with explosives. Schneck is charged with attempting to maliciously damage or destroy property. If convicted, he faces up to 40 years in prison.

Meanwhile, the Dallas City Council called a special meeting for Wednesday night so citizens could share their requested input on the changes recommended by a task force assembled by the city to address the city’s Confederate emblems.

These recommendations include the removal of Confederate monuments, the renaming of five streets and other tasks related to the issue, such as including explanatory signs next to remaining memorials.

Though the city is requesting public input on all of the changes, the council is particularly concerned with renaming streets, as property owners would be forced to change their addresses and all materials related to that address. The changes could be a costly burden for homeowners and business owners on those streets.

While the Robert E. Lee statue has already been removed, the council will soon vote on whether to remove a second Confederate memorial, which currently stands at Pioneer Cemetery. Both monuments would be displayed in a museum.

RELATED: Dallas officials face backlash after breaking Confederate ties

Houston falls from top of real estate investment list to No. 60

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A real estate survey conducted prior to Hurricane Harvey shows that Houston has fallen from the top of the list of most attractive real estate markets. The “2018 Emerging Trends in Real Estate” survey conducted by Price Waterhouse Coopers shows that Houston fell 20 spots to No. 60 on the list, after attaining the top spot in the survey in 2015.

The survey gathered data from interviews with real estate investors and market focus groups. Since the survey was conducted from June to August, the results were compiled before Hurricane Harvey struck the Houston area.

“Given the timing, the current and future impacts of Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma on the people, economies, and real estate sectors in a number of markets are not reflected in this year’s results,” the report read in part. “As of the publication of this year’s report, it is impossible to precisely determine the total impact on Houston and the rest of Texas.”


RELATED: Real Estate Investors Seize 40-Cent Opportunities in a Flooded Houston

According to Mitch Roschelle, a partner in Price Waterhouse Coopers, the survey participants viewed the Houston market as too dependent on energy prices to be seen as an attractive market for real estate investment.

“The sentiment from the real estate community was there didn’t seem like there was enough catalyst from the oil industry to really bring back Houston to its glory days,” Roschelle told Bloomberg News.

The survey ranked Seattle as the top real estate investment market, followed closely by Austin, which held the top spot last year. Dallas also made the top ten at number five.

The report ranked Houston at No. 60 in overall real estate prospects, No. 57 in homebuilding prospects, fourth among the four major Texas metro areas in local outlook.

RELATED: Houston’s Housing Market Headed For a Change, but Which Direction?

The report also mentioned several challenges that Houston faced prior to the hurricane that the city must handle to become a more attractive destination for real estate investment. Among those challenges were a shortage of skilled construction labor, a need for infrastructure improvements, and transportation issues.

Is Dallas vying to be the “New Silicon Valley?”

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With giant tech firms setting up shop and the creation of a new “smart district,” Dallas is trying to give California’s famous tech cradle a run for its money.

RELATED: This ‘Win’ for Dallas Roadways is Actually a Welcome Relief for Houston Drivers.

Tech manufacturer Taiyo America just opened an office in Dallas, with plans to use it as a base to expand into areas like electric vehicles and AI. The company manufactures specialty inks and solder masks used in computer circuit boards, according to dallasinnovates.com.

“We are targeting future growth in many emerging high technological business segments and view Dallas as the new Silicon Valley for such technological advances,” said Taiyo’s Director Tadahiko Hanada in a press release. Taiyo’s new office opened October 1.

Dallas developer Mike Hoque and real estate company KDC’s new 8-million square foot tech district is hoping to draw even more tech firms to the city, including Amazon. Hoque reportedly spent years buying up the 20-acre area of real estate to develop a city center replete with shopping, dining and living areas.

“If Amazon decided to be a part of our smart district—and they could be—they could drive a lot of change. But we are not banking on Amazon at all. We started designing this way before anyone began talking about Amazon coming to this city,” Hoque told D Magazine.

The district will be exactly the size in square footage Amazon listed in its RFP, and will also include a grocery store, which could be home to a Whole Foods location, a chain now owned by Amazon.

Hoque’s company Hoque Global hopes to break ground on the project on the first phase of this project by the end of 2018, and says they’ll “take our time [to find] someone who is thinking about the future.”

RELATED: Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex Surpasses Houston in a ‘Rat Race’ no One Wants to Win.

Houstonians are finally getting the recognition they deserve for their daily driving penance

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If you’ve ever spent time in the area, you’ll know Houston’s highways are indisputably a thorn in the side of everyone who lives in the Bayou City.

With highways seemingly becoming perpetual parking lots, it’s no surprise Houston ranked like it did on the list in a traffic study of the worst commutes in America:

Staffing firm Robert Half spearheaded the analysis, hiring a data collection firm to look at the commutes in 27 major cities across the United States.

RELATED: These videos of Houston traffic prove even traffic is bigger in Texas

Based on the data, the firm ranked the cities according to the longest commute and the most stressful commute, with Houston coming in at 11th longest.

They fell behind Dallas at No. 5 and Austin at No. 10, and, according to the study, the average commute in Houston is 50.56 minutes.

In terms of most stressful commutes, Houston broke the top 10 based on the data, which will come as no surprise to anyone who knows the H Town version of bumper to bumper traffic.

In a city where not having a fire on the roadway is a good day, it’s no surprise the study found stress levels to be high.

RELATED: New study concludes that Dallas is worse than Houston — at traffic

Houston ranked 6th for the most stressful commute, beating out Dallas at No. 7.

Austin took the 3rd spot.

After your commutes today and those to come, remember, someone knows your struggle.

Stay safe, Houston!

Buzzfeed throws shade after Houston’s World Series win — Astros still won

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Buzzfeed chose the oddest way to announce that the Houston Astros had won the World Series.

Clutch City took the Los Angeles Dodgers in a hard-fought 7 games, but you’d never know that from an article posted by a Buzzfeed reporter located in Los Angeles.

RELATED: Houston Astros make history and win World Series

“Dodgers Lose World Series” the title reads.

Buzzfeed World Series coverage, screenshot.

Not “Houston Triumphs in World Series,” “Houston Tops Dodgers in World Series,” or even “Houston Wins.”

The article’s summary says only that they lost to a team located 1,500 miles east of Los Angeles.

Not naming Houston, they just inserted this gif:

Um…what?

That’s just rude, y’all.

Even Dallas had something nice to say when we won:

RELATED: Astros’ World Series win has a romantic ending for Carlos Correa and his girlfriend

Thank you, Dallas! Truce until Sunday?

Houston Strong, y’all!

The Diwali Festival in Dallas beamed extra bright this year, especially for Houstonians

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Popularly known as “The Festival of Lights,” Dallas hosted the annual Diwali Mela Festival Nov. 4, which seemed to carry a torch for those attending from hurricane-ravaged areas.

RELATED: Chef Sheldon Simeon makes Indian sweets from scratch at this Houston restaurant

Diwali is a Hindi festival held to commemorate the victory of good over evil, and its name is derived from the Sanskrit word “deepawali,” which translates to “row of lights.”

According to the festival’s official website, when Lord Rama, hero of the famous epic poem the Ramayana, returned to India after exile, the people lit his way with small lights. Today, people light lanterns and candles and hang them in public places to light up the night in honor of the festival.

The festival’s hopeful message of light triumphing over darkness was especially important to Houstonians making the journey. After Hurricane Harvey, the DFW Indian Cultural Society anticipated a larger number of Houston’s Indian population than in years past, and are aiding the ongoing hurricane relief efforts.

“It’s not even a question. Whatever help we can provide.” said festival founder Satish Gupta.

Though cities like Chicago and New York have much larger populations of Indian diaspora, the New York Times reported around 60,000 people were expected in Dallas last weekend to participate in the festivities.

The Dallas festival draws such a crowd that Bollywood singers fly in from India to perform, and a massive live performance of the Ramayana is staged by a cast of volunteers every year. And there’s nothing quite like the food.

Vendors offered desserts like: chum chum, coconut-coated milk solids; jangiri, fritters soaked in sugar syrup; and payasam, a milk pudding flavored with saffron. Lines become so long that stands had to be set up for people to wait.

“We want to create an environment like the street markets in Bombay,” Anil Sukkagopal of Bawarchi Biryanis restaurant said in an interview. “We’ll be yelling and shouting about our food. People will be crowding around. It’s a sensory experience.”

RELATED: Houston breweries take gold at Great American Beer Festival


Proving our traffic really is lethal, Houston recently made a list of the 25 deadliest roadways – twice

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In news shocking no one, I-45 between Dallas and Galveston recently won the high honor of being the 2nd most dangerous highway in the United States, with Houston’s stretch being the deadliest.

Teletrac Navman, a company specializing in traffic solutions for companies, said it conducted a study to determine the 25 most dangerous stretches of roadway in the United States, along with the 25 deadliest cities on those roadways.

I-10 between Santa Monica, Calf., and Jacksonville, Fla., made the list as the 6th most dangerous highway, with Houston proving to be the most dangerous city along the same stretch of roadway.

RELATED: Houston commutes ranked highly in “worst commutes” study

According to the study, I-45 averages 1.018 traffic deaths per mile, with 290 deaths occurring on the 285 mile stretch of roadway between 2011-2015.

Data shows Houston is the most dangerous city along the interstate, with 83 of the deaths occurring in the Bayou City.

The study also examined the most dangerous month, date, day and time:

November is the deadliest month on Houston’s I-45, while the 12th is the most dangerous date; Saturday is the deadliest day, and the 2 o’clock hour is the worst time to be on the road.

The cross-country stretch of I-10 accumulated 1,730 deaths over 2,460 miles of roadway between 2011-2015, for an average of 0.703 deaths per mile.

Of those deaths, 58 were in Houston.

RELATED: New study concludes that Dallas is worse than Houston — at traffic

Data shows July is the most dangerous month for I-10, along with the first day of the month, Saturday, during the 2 o’clock hour.

Overall, Texas proved to be the most dangerous state for driving, making up seven of the 25 cities on the list – Dallas and Austin twice, San Antonio placing once.

Stay safe or stay home, Houston!

26-year-old Texas mom’s last moments alive before a mysterious fall to her death have been released

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A Texas family is seeking answers as it mourns the loss of a 26-year-old loved one and mother of two, who died a tragic and mysterious death on Sept. 23 at a parking garage.

RELATED: A toddler is the only survivor in a crash that killed 4 people

Watch the video

Taylor Gruwell-Miller’s family, convinced that she did not take her own life, wants the truth about what happened the night she died. A short video shows her in a parking garage with a former college football linebacker she met in rehab.

Gruwell-Miller had struggled with prescription drug addiction and entered rehab in August. The former football player was on probation for a drug conviction.

The father of the deceased is confident that the one person knows what happened that night.

“I just want the truth. My daughter didn’t take her own life,” her father Rich Gruwell told WFAA. “We talked about her kids, and how proud I was of her. I was always proud of her.”

“I think there’s one person at least that knows what happened to my daughter, and I just wish that person would tell the truth, whatever that truth is. Just come forward and say what happened,” he added.

The man shown in the video holding hands with Gruwell-Miller, WFAA reported, later gave police a statement that did not match up with the footage.

The Dallas Police Department has responded by releasing the last known footage of Gruwell-Miller alive, asking for help in identifying possible witnesses seen in the video.

Here’s what they said:

On September 23, 2017, at approximately 11:22 p.m., Dallas Police responded to a call for service at 1707 North Hall Street regarding the victim Taylor Gruwell.  Gruwell fell from a parking structure and died from her injuries.  The Dallas Police Department is seeking the public’s assistance in identifying several individuals seen at the location who are possible witnesses.  Anyone with information regarding the identity of the individuals in the video or information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact Detective Chaney at 214-671-3650 or derick.chaney@dpd.ci.dallas.tx.us.  Please refer to case #218587-2017

Although the man has neither been charged nor named, he has refused to meet with detectives or unlock his phone. The morning after Gruwell-Miller died he was found asleep in his car and cried as he told police someone “close to him” died.

He later said in a written statement that he did not know Gruwell-Miller died.

RELATED: Roy Halladay appears to be showboating in video from his plane crash

Another heartbreaking fact of the story is that Gruwell-Miller’s children Greyden and Emory, 2 and 4, don’t know that they’ll never see their mother again.

Relatives haven’t decided how to tell them.

(H/t NY Post)

If your debt payments are draining your wallet, Houston may be the city for you

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If you’re facing a mountain of debt in the Space City, then a new study has good news for you — Houston ranks as one of the best cities in the U.S. for paying off debt.

Texas-based financial education site Student Loan Hero conducted the study, which determined how much disposable income typical residents of major cities have after paying for living expenses.

Watch the video

RELATED: What the top Google searches in Texas reveal about us

Individuals with more disposable income, Student Loan Hero concludes, have more money to put toward their debt load.

They evaluated 159 American cities, considering average annual wages, tax burdens and the city’s cost of living, as well as the unemployment rate and VantageScore.

Houston cracked the top 3, falling behind Kennewick, Washington, and Durham, North Carolina.

According to Student Loan Hero, Houston’s average annual income is $52,870, giving residents $20,422 in disposable income each year.

Cost of living in the Bayou City is 2.3 percent below the national average, which helps keep more money in residents’ pockets.

“Living in one of the top 20 best cities gives you a disposable income of $18,000 left over, on average, after taxes and basic living expenses are paid,” said Elyssa Kirkham, who led the Student Loan Hero study, according to reports. “That’s a huge boon to residents of these cities who want to get out of debt faster. It gives them a lot of room to play with their budget and find extra money to put toward debt.”

RELATED: Texas falls into three different nations according to this theory

Four other Texas cities made the list: Amarillo came in at number 19; Dallas ranked at number 11; San Antonio took number 8; and Austin slid in at number 5.

In total, Texas cities make up one-fourth of the 20 best cities to pay off debt. Student Loan Hero is based in Austin, Texas.

On the flip side, a study by GOBankingRates revealed Texas ranks third in the country for the highest debt loads, with the average Texan owing $185,583 when all debts — including mortgages, student loans, automobiles, medical debt and credit cards — are taken into consideration.

Texas’ first Hispanic female sheriff who is openly gay announces her candidacy for governor

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Dallas Sheriff Lupe Valdez announced Wednesday in Austin she will challenge Gov. Greg Abbott in the upcoming 2018 election.

Running as a Democrat, Valdez will be the underdog in Texas, which hasn’t elected a blue candidate since 1994. However, Valdez’s career has been built on “firsts.”

RELATED: Texas’ 26th district could elect its first female US representative

An Army veteran, Valdez became the first female Hispanic sheriff as well as Texas’ first openly gay female sheriff 12 years ago when she took the helm of the Dallas Sheriff’s Office.

She is also a former senior agent for the U.S. Customs Service in the Department of Homeland Security.

She will resign her position as sheriff to run against Abbott for governor.

Valdez is running on a platform of increasing opportunity for all Texans and having a government that works for its citizens.

“Like so many hardworking Texans, I know it’s tough deciding between buying food, finding a decent place to live, and setting aside money for college tuition. Opportunity in Texas ought to be as big as this great state, but it is out of reach for far too many, that’s why I’m running for Texas Governor,” Valdez said in her announcement.

Abbott will seek his second term in office and has already raised $40 million for his campaign coffers. In 2014, Abbott beat his Democratic opponent, former state Sen. Wendy Davis, D-Fort Worth, by 20 points.

RELATED: Dallas sheriff Lupe Valdez honors fallen officers at DNC but is interrupted

Although she is not well-known across the state, Valdez has appeared on the national stage.

Last year, Valdez addressed the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, speaking about the Blue Lives Matter movement. Valdez lost five of her officers after they were gunned down in Dallas.

After announcing her campaign, Valdez plans to begin a Texas tour to introduce herself to the rest of the state and raise money for her campaign.

She has the following message for Texas: “I’m a proud Texas Democrat. I believe good government can make people’s lives better, and I intend to do just that.”

Justice is finally served 60 years after a Texas beauty queen went missing

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A former parish priest was convicted Thursday of strangling to death a woman who vanished in 1960 after going to confession at a Texas church he was serving.

John Feit, now 85, faces life in prison for the murder of Irene Garza. The 25-year-old teacher and former beauty queen visited Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen the evening of April 16, 1960, during Holy Week, and was never seen alive again.

According to the San Antonio Express-News, Garza’s body was found in a canal five days later, beaten and asphyxiated. Her autopsy showed that she had been raped while unconscious, then slain.

Feit, who was living at the pastoral house in nearby San Juan and filling in as needed at area churches, gave investigators conflicting statements, initially stating that another priest who was present at Sacred Heart the night of the murder took Garza’s confession, the Express-News reported. Two months later, he contradicted himself, telling detectives that he was alone on duty that night.

He admitted hearing Garza’s confession in the church rectory, but denied involvement in her death.

The Dallas Morning News reported that Feit, then 27, was an early suspect in Garza’s murder, but prosecutors in the case presented evidence that elected officials in Hidalgo County conspired with church officials to block the investigation and avoid scandal in the Catholic Church.

The young priest, who later spent time at a New Mexico treatment center, was later assigned to a supervisor role in which he cleared priests for assignment to parishes, the Morning News reported. One of the men he placed was James Porter, a priest who molested more than 100 victims before being defrocked and sentenced to prison.

Feit left the priesthood in 1972 and later married.

The Express-News reported that there was a lack of physical evidence pointing to Feit, but that two former clergymen came forward over the years and admitted that the former priest confessed his crime to them.

One of those men, former monk Dale Tacheny, testified Monday that Feit confided in him about the murder in 1963, three years after the fact. Feit showed little remorse, Tacheny said.

He did admit that he was still “haunted” by the sound of the heels Garza wore to the church the night he killed her, Tacheny testified. Those heels, along with other items of the victim’s clothing, were introduced into evidence at the trial.

Tacheny told the court that Feit confessed to attacking Garza in the church rectory before putting her unconscious body in the basement while he went next door to the church to hear another parishioner’s confession.

Feit took a break from his duties to move Garza to the pastoral house, the witness said. It was there that he left her to die, Tacheny said.

“He put the young lady in a bathtub,” Tacheny, 88, testified, according to the Express-News. “As he was leaving, the young lady said, ‘I cannot breathe. I cannot breathe.’ Then he left.”

Feit returned to the church to continue offering confession, Tacheny said. When he returned to the pastoral house the following day, Garza was dead.

Tacheny, who worked with Feit at a monastery in Missouri, told the court that it was not his place in 1963 to take the priest’s confession to authorities, the Express-News reported. Instead, the monastery tried to modify Feit’s behavior toward women.

When asked by prosecutors why he finally approached San Antonio police after decades of silence, Tacheny wiped tears from his eyes.

RELATED: Thief decides to take a selfie with the woman’s phone she stole

“She had parents,” he said, according to the newspaper.

Another colleague of Feit’s, Father Joseph O’Brien, told the Dallas Morning News in 2004 that Feit confessed to him that he killed Garza, the Express-News reported. O’Brien has since died and could not offer testimony at trial.

Prosecutors stated at trial that O’Brien helped cover up the crime, getting rid of some of Garza’s belongings found at the rectory.

Jurors heard from at least one acquaintance of Feit’s in 1960, who testified to seeing scratch marks on the young priest’s hands in the days after the murder, the newspaper said.

They also heard testimony from Ana Marie Hollingsworth, a friend of Garza’s, who said that Feit had previously pulled Garza from the confessional in the church to hear her confession in the rectory, a highly unusual practice. Garza was “disturbed” by the priest’s actions, Hollingsworth, now 83, said.

Hollingsworth’s testimony contradicted Feit’s 1960 statements to police, in which he claimed he had never met Garza before taking her confession the night she disappeared.

Jurors also heard about Feit’s threatening behavior toward women in the weeks before Garza was killed, including an attack on a woman at a church in Edinburg. He later pleaded no contest to assault and paid a $500 fine, the Express-News reported.

A former television reporter testified that the Hidalgo County district attorney, who is now deceased, admitted to him off the record in 1960 that Feit’s plea deal in the assault case was part of a deal struck with church officials.

The man who allegedly killed 3 in west Harris County reportedly arrested overnight in Dallas

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Authorities say they arrested the man wanted for a triple slaying in west Harris County overnight.

RELATED: Verdict delivered for a Houston woman who caught the eye of Dateline, stabbing her husband 31 times

Jeffrey Noble, 35, allegedly killed three people at a home late Friday afternoon, and witnesses said he fled in a red 1998 Honda or Acura.

His victims are identified as 22-year-olds Jessica Sciandra, John Sciandra and 25-year-old Jordan Michael Collier.

According to authorities, Noble, who they believe to be their killer, fatally shot them at a home on Creekhaven Drive around 4:30 p.m.

RELATED: Police search for a suspect in the slaying of a beloved nanny and mother of two

A woman at the home reportedly escaped uninjured.

If you would like to share additional information on this crime, contact your local authorities or Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS.

After Judge Emmett’s criticism, can Houston learn a lesson from Dallas’ light rail system?

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Since its launch in late 2003, Houston’s MetroRAIL line operates as a popular option for workers and tourists alike.

The city’s first light-rail line, which went from downtown Houston to then-Reliant Stadium, first proved its worth when the city hosted Super Bowl XXXVIII in February 2004.

The main line since expanded to include destinations on the city’s near North Side, and additional lines now connect Downtown to the University of Houston campus and the southeast side.

However, as Judge Ed Emmett recently reiterated, the rail line continues to lack options for Houston’s millions of suburban commuters, and there are currently no lines connecting the city’s airports to its downtown business district.

Meanwhile, some city planners say Houston could learn a thing or two from the Dallas Area Rapit Transit (DART) system in the Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) Metroplex, with its rail lines providing transport between most of the area’s major destinations, including suburban hubs.

RELATED: Man Recovering After Being Struck by MetroRail Train in Downtown

A recent Houston Press piece analyzed the reasons why Houston’s move to light rail is falling behind its Texas neighbors:

The article points out how Houston’s approach of starting from downtown and creating a short, experimental line, while successful at first, left a significant number of residents out of its plans for any future expansion.

Experts agree, rail lines, which could connect major suburbs, like Clear Lake, Katy or The Woodlands, to central Houston, could alleviate traffic jams and improve the city’s air quality.

When Dallas implemented its light rail system, for example, officials approached the suburban ridership issues first, then built the system around their demands, understanding this population to be the one most in need of commuter transit options.

Furthermore, geographically, DFW Metroplex also covers an area several times the size of Houston’s metro area, so the infrastructure issues they faced stood, arguably, as much larger obstacles than Houstonians might face with an extended light rail system.

RELATED: With Increased Demand For Electric Cars, Can Houston Survive in 2040?

With predictions of Houston’s population doubling in size in the next quarter-century, some city organizers and leaders argue an extensive light rail network may also provide a solution to expanding the area’s roads and freeways.

Furthermore, they say light rail could be implemented alongside or as an alternative to TxDOT’s plans to re-route the downtown area’s freeway system in the next decade.

All aboard?


Father fights for custody of child after his ex wife’s arrest for subjecting their son to more than 13 unnecessary surgeries

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Dallas resident Ryan Crawford is seeking custody of his son Christopher, after police arrested his child’s mother, his ex wife, on charges of injury to a child.

Prosecutors say ‘injury’ is an understatement:

Over the course of his eight-year life, they say Christopher’s mother Kaylene Bowen is responsible for 13 invasive, possibly unnecessary, surgeries conducted on Christopher during over 300 stays in the hospital.

RELATED:Parents face felony child abuse charges for the gruesome punishment they doled out at home

Christopher’s mother said she truly believed something to be wrong with her son, bringing him to the hospital for invasive procedures he didn’t need over and over again.

She would claim Christopher suffered from cancer or a genetic disorder, and even reportedly attempted to place him on the lung transplant list.

Child Protective Services (CPS) ultimately removed him and his two other sibling from Kaylene’s custody, and they are currently in foster care, according to WBIR.

Investigators say they believe Kaylene Bowen’s case is one of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, which doctors describe as a mental illness, where a caregiver makes up an ailment in order to gain attention or sympathy; often, the caregiver will cause the symptoms of a disorder, bringing even more harm to the afflicted person, commonly a child or someone who is elderly.

“They often frequent many emergency rooms over a wide geographic area. One doctor may never know that medical procedures or diagnostic tests have already been performed elsewhere, so it happens again and again and again.” Dr. Marc Feldman, an expert on the disorder, said in an interview. “These mothers tend to be master deceivers and liars. They’re very skilled at what they do.”

Kaylene reportedly evidenced Munchausen behavior since Christopher’s birth:

Records show Crawford tried to tell the judge there is nothing wrong with his son during custody hearings when the couple split, but, like the common practice in Texas family court, the judge sided with Christopher’s mother and placed him in her custody.

He even offered medical records to prove his claims in 2014, but he said the judge refused to examine the contents.

“It makes me feel as if the system wants to believe the mother all the time in situations, when the father is there fighting,” Crawford said in an interview.

Concerned medical staff at Children’s Hospital in Dallas reportedly alerted CPS to Christopher’s case; Bowen transferred her son there from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, but refused to provide Christopher’s records so more testing would need to be done.

When Bowen wouldn’t wean her son off his medication and medical equipment, staff in Dallas said they checked with Houston and contacted CPS.

Since being removed from Bowen’s household, Christopher is said to be doing much better.

“He looked as if nothing had ever happened to him,” Crawford said after visiting his son. “He’s a blessing. God has watched over him.”

Crawford said he will continue to fight for custody of his son:

“I need my son in my life. And my son needs me in [his] life.”

RELATED:When officers cane to arrest him, this child abuse suspect decided he wasn’t coming out

A teen and her unborn baby paid with their lives after a drunk firefighter got behind the wheel

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A Dallas firefighter is facing a charge of intoxication manslaughter after a fatal crash on Wednesday that killed a pregnant teenager.

The fireman, Horace Shaw, 45, was off-duty at the time of the incident that took the life of 18-year-old Alyssa Pimental. Police say Shaw was driving drunk. He has already posted bail, according the CBSDFW.

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Isaiah Perez, Pimental’s boyfriend, was in the vehicle with her and said she was expecting to give birth to their baby by Christmas. Perez survived the wreck and was released from the hospital on Wednesday night. He sustained bruises all over his body and also suffered a broken leg and a fractured neck.

“I didn’t feel it,” Perez, 21, told CBSDFW. “I just woke up on the ground, like somebody hit you on the back of the head.”

Police said the couple’s car was slammed into by a drunk driver, whom they say was Shaw, along Highway 67 in Cedar Hill, southwest of Dallas.
Investigators said Shaw, a 12-year veteran of Dallas Fire-Rescue, had been drinking at a Dallas bar prior to the crash. The department didn’t comment on his arrest and charges, but they did place him on administrative leave. More details could be forthcoming once police release the arrest affidavit.
Pimental’s family asked for privacy but released a statement on Wednesday, in which they expressed their grief at Pimental’s death and their disappointment that the cause was allegedly a drunk driving firefighter.

Friends and family members of the teenager are distraught after expecting to welcome a new member of the family in the coming weeks.

“I just miss the girl. I miss her giggle and her smile, and I was happy to have my son,” Perez said. “She’ll always be by my side.”

The hottest Harry Potter convention is hitting Texas and tickets may be hard to come by

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If you’re looking to bring a bit more magic to your Texan life in the new year, you’re not the only one. The Harry Potter convention will hit Dallas this coming April and the event is already sold out.

Leaky Con 2018 — an international festival run by popular Harry Potter fansite The Leaky Cauldron — will take over the Kay Bailey Hutchinson Convention Center in Dallas from April 10-12.

RELATED: Take a closer look at Texas’ 100-mile trail along with hiker

The Leaky Cauldron started running fan events in 2009, becoming an international spectacle with panels, guests and special features for dedicated Potter fans. Their most recent event was in Dublin, Ireland.

Leaky Con promises to bring celebrities. In the past, they’ve delivered popular names from the franchise including Evanna Lynch, who appeared throughout the franchise as Luna Lovegood, and Dan Fogler, the actor behind Jacob in the recent Potterverse film, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. 

While tickets are currently sold out, sites like Craigslist and Stubhub are bound to have a few for sale for the vigilant as the event nears.

RELATED: Relive Houston’s historic snow day with this aerial footage

A new study shows Houston is one of Texas’ most dangerous cities, but Sugar Land may be a Lone Star sweet spot

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As Houston’s population continues to swell, experts speculate it may soon overtake a reportedly shrinking Chicago as the 3rd largest city in America.

While they say the influx of people may be a sign of the city offering great jobs and a rich culture, some are left wondering what this may mean for the Bayou City’s safety:

According to a new study conducted by security company SafeHome, Houston is a relatively unsafe when compared to other cities across the state.

RELATED: Murders are down in Houston despite increase across nation

SafeHome’s website disclosed how it evaluated cities across Texas to determine which are the safest, reportedly focusing on those with a populations over 50,000.

In total, 65 Texas cities made the list.

With a safety score of 63.1 out of 100, Houston ranked number 61 in the Lone Star State, proving to be one of the least safe cities in Texas; scores above an 80 are considered safe, per the study’s metrics.

Although the city’s reportedly dense population is likely to blame for its lower ranking, crime stats are said to be improving in the Bayou City, with both violent crime and property crime currently trending downward.

In fact, Houston reportedly saw a drop in crimes like murder over the past year due to increased law enforcement efforts.

If you love the Houston metro area but want to carve out a safer spot in this world, you’re in luck, as Houston’s suburban Sugar Land ranked 7th in the state for safety, according to the study’s results.

The upscale suburb also ranked in the top 25th percentile across the nation, making it one of the safest cities in America, based on the data; Sugar Land posted a safety score of 85.08.

The Houston ‘burbs featured a few more times in the top 20 safest cities in Texas, as well, all of which posted a safety score over 80.

RELATED: Data reveals most “unusually popular” people in Texas

Nearby League City is “safe,” ranking number 10 in Texas with a safety score of 83.6; Missouri city ranked 13 with a safety score of 83.14, and Pearland ranked 18 with a safety score of 81.55.

Data showed Dallas, Fort Worth, Galveston and Austin all proved safer than Houston, ranking at 45, 47, 58 and 59, respectively.

Want to live in the safest city in Texas? According to the study, you’ll need to move to Flower Mound.

Stay safe out there, Houston!

Dallas newspaper names a Houstonian ‘Texan of the Year’ for his bipartisan leadership during Harvey’s rancor

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An editorial in a Dallas newspaper cites how the cooperation between Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and Harris County Judge Ed Emmett serves as an example of how Democrats and Republicans can work together in times of crisis.

James Ragland, a columnist with the Dallas Morning News, names Turner as his “Texan of the Year” for his handling of the Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath. He writes about how the united front of Turner and Emmett was able to set aside partisan politics for the good of Houston and Harris County.

“I won’t quibble with those who say the real heroes of Harvey are first-responders who put their lives on the line, or even the scores of volunteers who led search-and-rescue missions,” Ragland writes. “But behind the scenes, Turner, a Democrat, working closely with Harris County Judge Ed Emmett, a Republican, made decisions that kept matters from getting worse.

RELATED: Houston Mayor Turner, delegation visiting China on trade mission

Ragland points to the decision not to issue evacuation warnings during the worst of Harvey’s rainstorms, a decision Turner and Emmett reached together. The decision would have come from Emmett’s office as county judge, and that decision defied the advice of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a fellow Republican.

Still, the media targeted Turner for the decision not to evacuate.

“That whole [media] process was laughable,” Emmett told Ragland. “There was a guy on CNN saying we should evacuate. The mayor was up there having to defend the decision, and it wasn’t even his.”

In the editoral, Turner recalls: “I remembered back in 2005 when Hurricane Rita hit and the city did evacuate. The interstates were like a parking lot. The gas stations were running out of gas … and 120 people lost their lives. It would’ve just created pandemonium.”

As a point of comparison, 36 people in Harris County lost their lives, including two in Houston.

RELATED: Now with $50M in state funds, Turner turns back tax hike proposal

Ragland also credits Turner and Emmett with examining the consequences of Harvey and making some tough changes.

“The phrase I used all the time is we’ve had three 500-year floods in two years,” says Emmett. “Either our definition of a 500-year flood is wrong or maybe we’re safe for the next 1,500 years. But we don’t believe we’re safe.”

“When you’re a Republican or Democrat,” says Turner, “like the city or not, if the city looks good, the state looks good. … My goal is to look strictly at the results.”

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