HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-01-08 Euless Articles DISTRIBUTED TO: PAGE l �0 0
MAYOR CITY CNCL CITY ATTNY CRIM MCKAMIE BROWN YOUNG ANIMAL CNTR
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DATE DISTRIBUTED !/ blip DATE OF ARTICLE �v2//`7 -020 1 09 NEWSPAPER Z h.113p
L a real
Aft-
0.1
„,
Aleshia Howe
Business solutions provider takes
L Euless office space
Canon Business Solutions Inc., a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Canon U.S.A.,
signed a 4,528-square-foot office lease at
L150 Westpark Way in Euless.The new of-
fice is part of Canon's nationwide expan-
sion and will house sales and service
personnel and a state-of-the-art showroom
to support a growing customer base within
the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
Darrel Higginbotham with SCM Real
L Estate Services represented the landlord in
the transaction and Will James of Jones
Lang LaSalle represented Canon Business
Solutions.
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Cabaret to build near D FW Airport
Rick's
•
Rick's Cabaret International Inc.,an op-
erator of adult nightclubs, announced
plans to build a gentlemen's dub near Dal- —
• las-Fort Worth International Airport sched-
uled to open in summer 2010.
Company President and CEO Eric Lan-
gan said Rick's Cabaret will pay$2.4 mil-
lion for the land on Highway 183 near
D/FW Airport in a turnkey agreement for
the construction and furnishing of a
10,000-square-foot building.The land will
be acquired after a certificate of occupancy
has been received for the building.
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.MAYOR CITY CNCL CITYATTNY CRIM iVICKAMJE BROWN YOUNG ANIMAL CNTR
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'Customer'robs Euless doughnut shop
Dec. 14,2009
BY DOMINGO RAMIREZ JR.
EULESS — A man posing as a customer robbed a doughnut shop Saturday
morning of an undisclosed amount of money after he ordered some donuts,
police said Monday.
The holdup happened about 11:17 a.m. at the Donut Palace, 1009 W. Harwood
Road.
The man walked into the store, ordered some doughnuts and then brandished a
handgun when the clerk opened a cash drawer, police said.
The robber walked around the counter, took the cash and fled on foot, police
said.
No one had been arrested as of Monday.
_ The cashier described the robber as an African-American man about 5-feet-8,
weighing 180 pounds, wearing a dark zip-up fleece sweatshirt, jeans and black
shoes.
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Acme Brick makes first m
a or
'green'
..product launch
...,
"We've committed to taking in a lot of manufacturer in the United States and ,
BY ALESHIA HOWE stock at a time when economically, busi- has been part of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
ahowe@bizpress.net ness is down for us, but we feel like the since 2000.
demand for this product is out there and Smith said the product boasts up to 95
Fort Worth's Acme Brick is launching athe timing was right to get our sales force percent post-consumer,recyded content.
new brick product available in six colors, trained andet started with this type of
but all of them will be green. gThere is no scrap in the production
As part of its first major green'product product both residentially and commer- process,and VAST pavers are 100 percent 6.1launch, Acme Brick is now the exclusive wone-third
recyclable.Also, the product is
dealer of VAST composite pavers, which VAST Enterprises, which is based in the weight of an average paver and can be
are environmentally friendly brick pavers Minnesota, opened in January 2007 and cut with standard wood saws, thus mak-
made from used auto tires and plastic has primarily sold its products in the ing them easier to install, Smith said, am
mid-west, according to VAST President which cuts down on the cost of installa-
containers. and Co-Founder Steve Smith. Acme will
Among the product types, VAST ma- tion.
sonry products include landscape pavers, be the company's sole distributer in 22 "Our product will cost more up front,
states in the south.And talks with Acme, but the total cost isn't substantially "'
permeable pavers for storm management, Smith said,progressed quicklyafter start
deck pavers and thin brick, p g greater,"he said. "To put it in perspective,
ing just this year. 'because our product is composite,we can
According to Acme President and CEO "It's a small world and we've known fit three times more on a truck,it's less fa- —
Dennis Knautz, the introduction of the about Acme for a longtime," Smith said.
tiguing for people to install so it's done
VAST product type is part of the corn- ,
pang's well-laid plans to take part in the "We're from Minnesota, but even there quicker so you'll spend more on the raw
they're seen as a great company. We like material,but less on the labor.
'green'movement. to keepupour relations with our distrimoib-
market for green building mate- The VAST product will come in six col-
rials is projected to expand by 7 percent utors, but Acme is the expert in this area ors,as Acme products do,but the key dif-
annually over the next five years, and and they know more about this area than ference, Smith said, will be the make-up
Acme Brick is committed to being our we ever will so we partnered with Acme of the product,which will consume tires
customers' partner in green building," because they're known nationally as a and plastic containers coming straight 7
Knautz said. "That's why we have intro- leader in the industry and in our view, from landfills.
duced new alternatives like our lean they have the premium sales team in get- "We're not looking to replace products
brick, and that's why we are distributing ting premium products to market - and that are out there, but this is a productmi
VAST composite masonry products.VAST . when you're selling something new,it re- that can complement. For consumers, to
gives our customers,especially those pur- quires some strong marketing teams." know you're helping to pull tires and
suing LEED certification for their projects, Acme is the largest U. S.-owned brick plastic containers out of landfills, here's
another exceptional option for green something a consumer can purchase that
building." has a true impact.And they can be proud
According to the company,VAST corn- of that,"he said. "It's done in an environ-
posite pavers can contribute up to six mentally friendly way.We're not stepping
Leadership in Energy and Environmental over the dollar to save a nickel here."■
Design credits, or LEED credits, which is
two to three times more possible credits
than any other paver.LEED credits are tal-
lied to give developers certifications in
energy efficiency through the U.S. Green
Building Council.
—
Ron Carbonaro, purchase products
sales manager at Acme's corporate office,
said more and more developers and ar-
chitects are in search of green products —
and the VAST line at Acme seemed like a
perfect fit.
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Acme Brick is now the exclusive dealer of VAST composite pavers which are environmentally friendly
brick pavers made from used auto tires and plastic containers.
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For the record, Euless police chief can sing
December 28,2009
By DIANE JENNINGS/The Dallas Morning News No
d iennings(a,dallasnews.com
Michael Brown works hard to keep his two lives separate.
• 6
wv
KYE R. LEE/DMN
Euless Police Chief Michael Brown jokes that he turned to music 'to keep me off the streets and
out of trouble.'
By day he's police chief in Euless, heading up a department of 85 officers; by night he's a
singer/songwriter.
"Most musicians don't like hanging out with police officers," he explained. "And most police
officers don't like hanging out with musicians."
"I don't have posters in the office or anything," he stressed.
What he does have is a CD of songs he has written and recorded called The Summit Ridge
Session.
But don't think he's signed with some big recording label. "Summit Ridge is the name of the
street I live on," he said. "I did it at the house—complete do-it-yourself project."
The reaction around the department has been low-key,he said.
"I'm the boss, so they're not going to come in and tell me it's horrible," he said. "You're not going
to know what they really think of it, but they all tell me it's good."
Brown has been playing guitar for years, and began writing songs about five years ago. —
"I decided, 'Well, this is kind of fun,' " he said. "And I needed something to do to keep me off the
streets and out of trouble." —
At 54, he said, he's not interested in changing careers. "I'm too old," he said. "I would like to stay
with what I'm doing unless they run me off." —
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Brown has been a law enforcement officer for more than 30 years, spending 26 years in Euless,
followed by four years as chief of the University of North Texas Health Science Center police
department in Fort Worth. He returned to Euless as chief three years ago.
Brown said he has no formal musical training. "I play by ear until my ears get sore."
And his performance track record is thin. "My biggest claim to fame was I played at Poor
David's one time in their B.W. Stevenson songwriting contest. That was the big time for me."
But he knows what he likes, and he doesn't find a lot of it in popular music. "I'm a storyteller," he
said, describing his music as "on the folk side of country."
Brown isn't pushing his CD hard, having produced only about 200 of them. But, "If I could trick
somebody into buying one, I'll sell 'em," he said. "My wife's charging$10 apiece."
Potential customers can listen to a sample on the Web site of the music magazine
nodepression.com. The address is nodepression.com/profile/MichaelBrown.
His favorite song from the CD is called "The Case." And no, it's not about a criminal case. "It's a
_ song about a haunted guitar," he said. "There are just not enough haunted guitars out there."
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//e raid
WACO TRIBUNE-HERALD
LETTERS: Our readers sound off on patriotism
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Patriotism in the air
With the exception of the local Veterans Day parade, the most magnificent
display of patriotism I've seen in years occurred on Dec. 12 at a high school
football game between Euless Trinity and Round Rock's Stony Point at the Waco
ISD stadium.
About 10,000 football fans were eagerly awaiting the kickoff of the playoff game
between the Trinity Trojans and Stony Point Dragons when the public address
system suddenly shut down.
The players had taken the field. The crowd was pumped. Spectators were
standing. The school songs had already been played and everyone was waiting
for the national anthem to start the game. _
Folks were already facing the American flag and expecting the anthem to begin
as technicians scrambled to fix the problem.
Suddenly, a small group of home fans on the Euless side began singing the
national anthem a cappella. The volume increased as others exponentially joined
the chorus. Before long, the entire stadium filled with the voices of football fans,
resembling a huge choir concert.
There were no instruments. Just voices ringing out our nation's beloved song. It
was superb!
Thank you, Euless fans, for getting it started. And thanks to everyone for joining
in. By the way, the sound system was soon restored and the football game was
pretty good, too. —
Dale Caffey
Spokesman
Waco ISD —
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Otpe Keller Cgiti en
Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2009
U.S. Justice Department certifies child-abduction team
By A.LEE GRAHAM
When it comes to child abduction response, nowhere in Texas is law enforcement
more prepared than in Northeast Tarrant County.
That's according to the U.S. Department of Justice, which recently awarded a
national certification to the Northeast Tarrant and Denton County Child Abduction
Response Team (CART).
Only six teams nationwide hold that credential, with no others in Texas touting the
distinction.
"It's pretty rigorous," said Haltom City Police Chief Keith Lane, a former Keller
lieutenant who co-founded the team with Colleyville Police Chief Tommy Ingram.
That rigorous training came after Lane, Ingram and other area police chiefs learned
about a national program dedicated to training officers in locating children who are
abducted or reported missing.
"What happened was Northeast Tarrant chiefs at the time learned of it and got
together and said, 'Hey, this is something we need to look into,"' Lane said.
So members of several police departments joined the cause. Departments
represented on the team are Bedford, Colleyville, Euless, Grapevine, Haltom City,
.,, Hurst, Keller, North Richland Hills, Richland Hills, Roanoke, Southlake and Watauga,
with additional support from the Tarrant County Sheriffs Office, the FBI and the U.S.
Marshal's office.
Following guidelines established by the National Child Abduction and Response
Team, the Texas team underwent hundreds of hours of training, responded to actual
missing child alerts and discovered what each department had to offer.
"We have capabilities in our emergency operations center," Roanoke Police Capt.
Robert Crawford said. "We have a setup where we can have up to 10 different
computers and phone lines."
When child abductions or missing children are reported, each department has more
available resources than they would without team support.
"We're one of the smaller agencies on the team," Crawford said. 'When this takes
place [a reported abduction], we're going to need some resources rather quickly."
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Lane also acknowledged the benefits of pooled team resources. ..
"It's a force multiplier," said Lane, touting the benefits of having several agencies'
resources at his disposal. "If you need a helicopter, it's a phone call away." —
Before earning certification, the team underwent a two-day review by the U.S.
Department of Justice and Office of Juvenile Service, administered in cooperation
with Fox Valley Technical College in Appleton, Wis.
The team also tackled a full-scale mock child abduction exercise in determining —
whether it could meet national standards.
The team learned it met certification requirements in October while attending this —
year's sixth annual Amber Alert symposium in Tampa, Fla. Two months later, it was
presented its national certification.
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OBITUARIES
Troy Fuller Troy was :an active civic and
community figure.He was a mem-
ber of the Board of Managers,Tar
4. 3.Z V �� rant County Hospital District,John
s >a� = Peter Smith,and a master Mason
- for over 60 years. He volunteered.
. for the Euless Historical Preserva-";
• tion Committee,and enjoyed men-
toring children. Troy donated his
body to Southwestern Medical
• Center. •
His greatest joys in •life includ
ed traveling in his RV,flying his pri-
vate planes,gardening,fly,fishing
in Colorado, and playing with his'a
great-grandchildren. He was. a
member of Trietsch Memorial
United Methodist Church in Flower
HIGHLAND VILLAGE _ Mound.He spent a lifetime cheer
Troy Fuller, 82, entered. fully helping family and others
alike.
into life eternal at home SURVIVORS: His wife, Ginger
in Highland Village on Latta-Fuller;children,Michele Pap
Sunday,Jan. 3,2010,after an ex- pas,and husband, Art,. Deborah
tended illness. Jung and husband,Dexter,Jan Fik-
SERVICE: A celebration of er and husband, Dean, all of Fort
Troy's life will be observed at 2 Worth, and Patrice Wilton and
p.m. Saturday at First United husband,John,of Wimberly;step
Methodist Church, Euless, 106 daughters, Kimberly Hoskins and
North. Main, Euless, Dr. Lamar husband, David, of Lewisville and;
Smith of First United Methodist Sherry Ethridge of Aledo;a host of
Church, Fort Worth, officiating. grandchildren and great-grandchil-
Visitation:to follow the service, dren;sister,Veta Boswell and hus
MEMORIALS:.May be made to band, Dr. George M. Boswell, of_,
the American Cancer Society, or 'Dallas;three nieces;and other,reI.
First United Methodist Church atives and friends.
Building Fund,106 North Main,Eu- View and sign guestbook at
less,Texas 76040. www,star-telegram.com/obituaries
He was born Jan. 11, 1927, in
Euless to Warren and Jessie Fuller.
He served in the U.S.:Navy during
World War II and graduated from
the University of Texas at Austin
with a major in geophysical sci-
ence.For 16 years he was associat
ed with the Continental Geophysi-
cal Co.
He returned in 1967 to Euless
to pursue a career in real estate.As
a Certified Commercial Investment
Member,Fuller's list of real estate
achievements is long and varied.
He had been a director of the Texas
Association of Realtors since 1973,
was past president of the North-
east Tarrant County Board of Real
tors and was cited as Realtor of the
Year in 1972. A quote from 1980
Chamber of Commerce publica-
tions stated, "Troy M. Fuller has
just about done it all in the Hurst-
Euless-Bedford area."
a
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REAL ESTATE No. 9 on a "hotness" ranking,
determined by comparing
Nlorth Tex c pending sales with active list1 V ings.
Euless ranked No.5._In De-
cember, sales in.Euless were
home sales up 70 percent frr while the median price in-
flI
P Ocreased1percent,to$145,900e � SANDRA BAKER,817-390-7727
—
Decembe_. r
Consumers may have stopped buying
when it was thought that the$8,000
first-time-buyer federal tax credit
— would end,but a rebound is expected.
By SANDRA BAKER
sabaker@star-telegram.corn -
- The federal home-buyertax credit spurred
home sales in North Texas in October and
November,'but that waned in December,
numbers released Thursday show.
�' In a 24-county North Texas region that
includes Tarrant and Dallas counties,
homes sales slipped 1 percent compared
with a year ago,to 4,933,the Texas A&M Uni-
versity Real Estate Center said.Sales in all of
2009 dropped by 11 percent,to 67,963.
The center compiles data from the Real-
tor-fed Multiple Listing Service.
December sales were likely down'be-
cause consumers stopped buying when it
was thought that the$8,000 first-time-buyer
— tax credit would end, said Jim Gaines,a re-
search analyst at the center.Sales also lend
to slow over the holidays,he said.
The slight drop is not cause for concern,
— Gaines said. The tax credit has since been
extended, and sales may see an uptick be-
ginning in February, with the first quarter
possibly showing positive numbers,he said.
"All of that may change by the second half
of the year,"Gaines said,when the tax credit
ends and mortgage rates may rise.
A few Tarrant County areas
saw big sales increases in De-
cember and a rise in the medi-
an sale price.Half of all homes
cost less than the median,and
half cost more.
Home sales in Watauga
jumped 140 percent,`although
the median price fell 8 per-
cent, to $83,650.The city was
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- Homes: Watauga, Euless
buck December trend_
..
lDTO( � � Percent Percent
WSECC�UNTY CaIfEVTY ` 73i••�' Lake change Median - change_
732 Gra evirie Sales year ago price year ago
.�.�- _ P Area
j 702 ;r'; ��- [' 82 NEArl€ngton 17' Oho $1699Q0 9%
109 i ' j „..-..-,,,4:::•-..--.725 --nA24 83 Central west Arlington 27 50% $119,200 -20%
Ea /ntaln sw 126 f - 84 Central east Artington 18 6l $51 OQ0 0%
Lake r, ..Js” 723 17241�O 85 Arlington, 39 26% $142,4 (:).„. 8%
(=r -,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,T • if.:,...,,,,., Dalworthington 0-
'1 e ..„ 2 2I'''''''''''T"'::'''''''''''';'-'4 "..:Si20® `� ' Gardens,Pantego
o h a 1 i IA- 86 SE Arlin on a
y '. il`z gt 12 -29 „:,...._...,„....:•,„
$87,50 ; 17° i
c ;724 " ' ' 87 Far SW Arlington 54 29% $163 500 7%
• , 82 " ; 88 Far$E Arlington = 70 -30% $120,000.- -▪ 3%
o Jx 'i, 30 T 89 Mansfield 61 -10% $171,500 2%
,„107.� ( 704 a 83 94 liennedale o
� 30; F. � .:v a Ig4 t � 6' ^14l $224,OQQ 100°/a '.
< , ,z Arlin orl .. 11
„� �°1;ClS � 101 FW,downtown 4 na $725,000 na
zo `I0 8S gb "102 Saginaw/Borth side 88 -'t0%• $120,000 3%
�. 112 �,� � f •-•,---:-0:-2-"-..;.-'—'-- 104 FW,east 42 8% - $81,000 7%
-< l enbr ok ' •Y§ 90 i '105'SE Fort Worth(Rosedate)„,,,,,,,„...„.„.1.:8„,,_,.,:,,....E...:!,_,:4,,,,,:::,.1,
18 f....tow,.
00 0'. $23,550 1▪ 4%
88t13ae J ° $45,000 _14%
iifilis Ben Q � h �„ ,; , �• 106 FW south ... 19 -54
— g•Igil .,7 (Everman/Forest Hill)
{{ 107 FW centra!west 40 18% $21d,00Q 7118%
- 2!Z.. iSf)L Ca g9, futetc t
$c 5outhtrest(TCU)
;
.JH i 108 FW central west 39 11% $2040
00 1%.. , w ,N ‘ s.iks,„1,0 - 109 FW W(Eagte Mtn81 3I $132,C00 3
;
Lake/fiver Oaks/Azle)
111 FW(south of 1-20 108 ,-7% $121,690..',2,::710%
•
/Crowley ;-:”
11Z Fk1r far west(Benbrook 39 =2274,' $1110,000 •4%
J i./White Settlement)
120 Bedford 23 -26% $135,000 -9%
121 Eliless 39 70"%'; $145,900 1%
122 Hurst 27 -31% $134,000 9%
'123 Colleyville 31 48% $512,500 . 28%i
124 Grapevine 20 -29% $281,250 26%
125 Southlakei 26 18% $510,000 ;5
w.
126 Keller 42 -25% $297,500 3%
1271%Richland Hills/ I 50 10
-7% .$ 0,000 -27,%
Richfarid Flips
11. 128 Watauga 36 140% $83,650 -8%
129 Haltom City/Riverside 22 -39%I. $55,'700 =27�"o
130 FW Summerfield/ 120 ,-10% $148,050 ,-1%
Park Glen ,
131 Roanoke 7 -46% $122,000 -4/'
,132 Trophy Club/Westlake 16 78% •, $322,510 40%
- - Source.Rea(Estate Center,Texas A&M University.