HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-05-22 Euless ArticlesSalman Bhojani Got Elected to
Euless City Council. What Now?
Salman Bhojani has won a seat on Euless City Council; expect angry tweets from state Rep. Jonathan Stickland.
Euless lawyer Salman Bhojani did it. After a losing run for City Council two years ago, he
scored an apparent victory Saturday night, finishing 37 votes ahead of Molly Maddux when all
the ballots were counted. While he still faces a potential recount — Maddux has not conceded,
talked to the press or issued a statement since the results were announced — Bhojani looks set to
become Euless' first minority City Council member when he's officially sworn in six days from
now.
In and of itself, an immigrant lawyer who happens to be a Muslim winning an election in
suburban Texas is news. That Bhojani did it in the face of his state representative makes it all the
more impressive. During the last couple of weeks of the campaign, Republican Rep. Jonathan
Stickland made it his personal mission to help Maddux beat Bhojani.
Stickland called out Bhojani for being a Muslim. He called him a Democrat with dangerous
values. He called him "sneaky." Somehow, even in one of the reddest districts in Texas, it didn't
work.
"He brought out a lot of good people, so I guess it backfired on him," Bhojani told
the Observer on Tuesday. "There was an amazing outpouring of support from the community
in Euless. That's what I cherish. There is so much diversity in Euless, and it was amazing to
reach out to everyone and really celebrate them."
After Stickland's attacks, Bhojani said, he received support from pastors and ministers across
North Texas, including Bedford pastor Scott Fisher, who ran against Stickland in the 2016
GOP primary. In the end, Bhojani pulled out a victory despite trailing by 74 votes when early
voting and absentee ballots were released.
"I really, really was awed by the support that we had," Bhojani said, "not just from people who
voted for us, but people came from Plano, McKinney, Southlake, Colleyville and Bedford and
said, 'We can't vote for you, but we're here with our kids to show them what it means to have
American values.'"
Stickland messed up, said Rice University professor Mark Jones, when he brought up
Bhojani's religion, whether he views it as disqualifying or not, and raised Bhojani's profile.
"By intervening into a race, you call attention to the person that you're attacking. That can
boomerang against you," Jones said. "It can increase sympathy or support for that candidate,
or it educates voters that the candidate actually exists, where they might not have known that
previously."
Stickland attempted to make a local, nonpartisan race about national issues, despite the fact
that Bhojani, a member of the city's park board, never brought them up during his campaign.
"I have no agenda [beyond helping the city of Euless] at all. If it was there, you would have
seen it during my four years on the park board. There isn't one thing, one vote where you can
look back and say, 'Look, here is his agenda,'" Bhojani said. "There's nothing. I've done good
work on the park board, and I've worked for the citizens of Euless. [The people who voted
against me] will see the benefit of that as well."
Another hotel coming to
the Airport Freeway
corridor in Euless
BY ELIZABETH CAMPBELL
liz@star-telegram.com
A hotel is headed to the Airport Freeway corridor in Euless. Paul Moseley pmoseley@star-
telegram.com
EULESS
Work will start soon on a Comfort Inn and Suites in the Airport Freeway corridor.
The Comfort Inn and Suites will be along Airport Freeway, near Service King, the
Bandera Ranch Apartments and the Bowlero Bowling Lanes.
The bustling Airport Freeway corridor boasts a traffic count of approximately
126,000 vehicles a day.
Meena Patel, who is developing the property, said the four-story hotel will have
91 rooms, an indoor pool, a large breakfast area and a workout room.
“We won’t have any kitchenettes; this will not be an extended stay hotel,” she
said.
Patel added that the hotel will be designed to blend in to the “cityscape” for the
Airport Freeway corridor.
The hotel is expected to bring 25 jobs to Euless and an additional $250,000 in tax
revenue. The 2.2 acre-site once had a retail store, but the building was
demolished because of the Texas 183 expansion project.
The Aloft Suites in Glade Parks is scheduled to open in June.
EULESS ISN’T CLUELESS Don’t Mess With This Muslim
From Texas —He Just Got
Elected!
In a north Texas city of 50,000, a Pakistani immigrant just won a
seat on the City Council. Not that there weren’t those trying to
block him.
Something truly wonderful happened in Texas on Saturday night. In between a
rodeo championship in Fort Worth, a country music festival in Austin and people
honky tonkin’ from Amarillo to San Antonio, history was being made in the mid-
size city of Euless, Texas.
In this north Texas city that boasts a population of a little over 50,000, the good
people there elected the first minority ever to the Euless City Council. And not
only that, the person they elected by a 37-vote margin was both a Muslim and a
Pakistani immigrant by the name of Salman Bhojani.
A Muslim immigrant winning an election in Trump’s America, where he’s made
anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant bigotry a cornerstone of his campaign, is truly
inspiring—especially in a red state like Texas. While Bhojani was subject to anti-
Muslim attacks during the campaign, his win truly represents a victory of
American values over Trump’s un-American views.
But this wasn’t an easy win for Bhojani, who possesses all the qualifications of
someone who should easily win a local race. He’s a Boy Scout leader, a family
man, has served on the city’s parks board for four years and is a lawyer practicing
in the area. If he were Christian and white, I bet the GOP would’ve loved to
recruit Bhojani.
But he’s not. Bhojani is a brown, Muslim Pakistani immigrant who came to
America in 1999. And while the election was non-partisan, that didn’t stop a
Republican state representative—who was not even a candidate in the race—from
trying to gin up anti-Muslim animus. So there was Texas representative and
Trump wannabe Jonathan Strickland doing his best to scare local voters about
the dangers of a Muslim American seeking elected office.
Strickland, a Tea Party darling (but of course!), warned in a Facebook post that
Bhojani was a Muslim, adding that “His ideas for our community would scare a
majority of our residents but he’s very sneaky in how he presents himself.”
(Interestingly, Strickland uses “sneaky” which historically had been used to
smear Jews but now is also used to demonize Muslims.) Strickland warned that if
elected, Bhojani would make "massive changes" to their mid-size city, clearly
playing on fears of changing demographics and anti-Muslim sentiment.
While Strickland also slammed Bhojani for being a “lifelong Democrat who
supports raising your taxes,” it was his Muslim faith that Strickland tried to use
as a wedge issue just like his beloved Trump. So Strickland posted a video on
Facebook of Bhojani in his volunteer work as a Scout leader at a 2017 Euless City
council meeting. There, Bhojani presented an American flag and then recited a
general prayer from the Quran to start the council meeting that spoke of being
welcoming and tolerant of other faiths.
Well, Strickland was appalled. “How dare any faith other than Christianity be
invoked at government meetings?!” has long been a theme by the far righters who
truly want to impose Christian sharia law. So Strickland stated in connection with
the video that it was “thanks to Mr. Bhojani that the Koran was read for the first
time at a city council meeting.”
And bingo, there you have good, old-fashioned “dog whistle politics,” as
Strickland was warning people that Bhojani is not like them. The response to
Strickland’s anti-Muslim bigotry was swift, with local faith leaders uniting to
denounce it. As one of the Christian ministers who joined in condemning
Strickland’s “hateful rhetoric” stated: "We are committed to following Jesus
better today than yesterday, thus loving God and loving our neighbors as
ourselves. This means all of our neighbors, whether we look alike, think alike or
believe alike." Amen to that!
Sadly, anti-Muslim hate is a big part of mainstream Republican politics. After all,
Trump openly employed it with his call for a complete Muslim ban and by
declaring that “Islam hates us.” That’s why it’s not surprising that in the current
race to be the next governor of Michigan we’re seeing anti-Muslim bigotry being
spewed by a Republican elected official against Democrat Abdul El-Sayed, a 33-
year-old medical doctor who previously headed Detroit’s health department. The
Michigan born El-Sayed is the living example of the American dream. The son of
Egyptian immigrants, he was captain of his Michigan high school football team,
played lacrosse at University of Michigan and went on to win a Rhodes
scholarship and earn a medical degree from Columbia University.
But as is the case with Bhojani, all many on the right see is that he’s a Muslim. So
in the last few weeks El-Sayed has been smeared with lies by Michigan
Republican state Sen. Patrick Colbeck, who is trying to use anti-Muslim bigotry to
bolster his own failing run for the GOP gubernatorial nomination. Colbeck,
offering zero evidence to support his vile attacks on El-Sayed, has claimed that
the Democrat is part of the Muslim Brotherhood and is waging a “civilization
jihad” to in essence take over America.
Funny, you know who else uses the idea that any visible Muslim American is
waging a “civilization jihad”?! Anti-Muslim bigots Frank Gaffney and Brigitte
Gabriel, who are closely tied to Trump’s new Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and
his new national security adviser, John Bolton.
In the case of Watergate and the new scandal involving Trump’s personal lawyer
Michael Cohen apparently selling access to the White House, you follow the
money. In the case of bigotry, you follow the hate. And in this case it, too, leads
right to the White House.
The primary in Michigan isn’t until Aug. 8, so we won’t know until then if
Colbeck’s anti-Muslim venom is successful. But thankfully last Saturday in
Euless, Texas we saw American values trump bigotry—even if just by 37 votes.
Meet the Muslim
Immigrant Elected to the
Euless City Council
Salman Bhojani will be the North Texas suburb's first minority City Council member.
Bhojani poses for a photo during his successful campaign for a seat on the Euless City Council. Photo by Amina Khan.
PUBLISHED IN FRONTBURNER MAY 10, 2018 On Saturday, Salman Bhojani was elected to the Euless City Council, triumphing over
a conservative state lawmaker’s ugly campaign attacks on his religion and immigrant
background. Bhojani, who will be the city’s first minority council member, defeated
his opponent Molly Maddux by a margin of 37 votes.
Bhojani, a lawyer who moved to the U.S. from Pakistan 18 years ago, has portrayed
his win as a victory for diversity and acceptance. In a city with 55,000 residents, about
50 percent are people of color, which should be reflected on the council, he says. But
both during and after the campaign, Bhojani has tried to focus on nonpartisan local
issues. Bhojani spent the last four years on the city’s parks and recreation board, and
ran unsuccessfully for a council seat two years ago.
It was Jonathan Stickland, a Republican state representative backing Maddux, who
injected Bhojani’s Muslim faith into the race via social media posts. Bhojani says he
had to field some questions and endure innuendo about his religion while
campaigning—a voter who told him to go back to his country, another who asked him
if he intended to institute Shariah law in Euless. Bhojani attributes much of that to an
ignorance of Islam, likening it to the suspicion that many voters in 1960 felt toward
President John F. Kennedy’s Catholicism, never mind the separation between church
and state.
“People don’t know about my faith, and because they don’t know they get
concerned,” he says. “Words like ‘Shariah’ and ‘jihad’ are buzzwords that rile people
up. Muslims follow the law of the land, so I vow to uphold the Constitution.”
Most voters clearly rejected Stickland’s attacks, and Bhojani says he’s proud to have
the support of Euless residents. (Stickland’s office did not return messages seeking
comment, but he congratulated the election winners in a Facebook post.)
“It’s powerful. People who have shown support say I’m representing true American
values by fighting the good fight, so our kids don’t face discrimination tomorrow,”
Bhojani says. “It’s uplifting to lay a foundation for people of different faiths and
ethnicities.
As an immigrant who went from mopping gas station floors, to owning several stores
while attending law school, to opening up his own law firm, Bhojani has lived the
American Dream. It’s what encouraged him toward public service, and to give back to
his country, he says. That, more than his faith, is what should resonate with Euless
residents.
“You need to know the actions of people,” he says. “I have only done good for the
city of Euless.”
Bhojani hopes to bring a unique perspective to governing Euless, informed by his
legal background and his work as a small business owner. In a statement after the
election, he pledged to “represent all Euless residents, regardless of whether and for
whom they voted, where they come from, how long they have lived in Euless, what
faith they practice, or what political party they support.” He’ll be sworn in later this
month.
Here‘s what‘s changing at Hopdoddy
May 12, 2018
Hopdoddy Burger Bar is opening and later in Southlake, but some old friends aren‘t coming along.
The lamb “Greek” burger and several milkshakes next week in Hopdoddy‘s biggest menu revamp since the Austin
burger favorite came to Dallas-Fort Worth five years ago.
A new four-meat highlights the new menu, with bacon, eggs and shoestring potato “hay” added. There‘s also a
“Hoss‘s” Hot Chicken sandwich (as tested in Fort Worth).
The menu of milkshakes will be completely overhauled, with a bananas Foster shake, S‘mores and a “birthday cake”
shake. (The salted-caramel and Nutella pretzel shakes are going by the wayside.)
Our journalism takes a lot of time, effort, and hard work to produce. If you read and enjoy our journalism, please
consider subscribing today.
The exact new menu items won‘t be known until later this week. The Euless location opens May 7 in .
Hopdoddy has been teasing fans on social media, saying it‘s “shakin‘ things up” and that diners should let the lost
items go the way of an old Ramones T-shirt.
But the fact of the matter is that Hopdoddy has expanded outside its Austin comfort zone — to — and needed to step
up its game in the better-burger bracket.
Pro tip: Go at happy hour weekdays, when there‘s a $5 burger and drinks. (That is, if Hopdoddy keeps that on the
new menu.)
Watch for the Euless location at , between Outback Steakhouse and Lazy Dog Restaurant & Bar.
Then wait for the next Hopdoddy at , Southlake Town Square, across the street from TruFire Kitchen & Bar.
Hopdoddy is open for lunch and dinner daily in Fort Worth at , across from Trinity Park; , .
First Reading
Our take on what's trending in politics in Austin and across Texas, from
the Statesman's chief political correspondent Jonathan Tilove.
In Salman v. Stickland, a celebration
of diversity in Euless is tested
Good Monday Austin:
On Saturday, one week to the day after he was narrowly elected to the City
Council in the little Tarrant County city of Euless – population about 55,000
and half white – Salman Bhojani and his supporters gathered at one of the
parks that are the city’s pride to celebrate his victory.
Bhojani spoke and then delivered some of the 140 awards he had prepared
for the many folks who, in one way or another, had helped with his winning
campaign.
Here is what Bhojani had to say:
We have made history here in Euless. There has never been a Muslim
candidate for City Council. No member of an ethnic minority has ever been
elected to office in Euless. And, to the best of my knowledge, no other City
Council candidate has had to run not only against their opponent, but also
against their own representative in the Texas Legislature.
To prevail against these odds truly is a historic achievement. That’s why
stories about our campaign continue to appear daily in local papers, in the
statewide press, and now in the national news media.
Folks, this is a big deal, and I’m glad you’re all here to experience this with me
and my family.
Friends, when people refer back to this historic race, I hope they will not just
focus on the victory itself, but our journey and the values we displayed. The
great people of Euless voted for us because they saw something in our
campaign. Chances are they were drawn to our values. These values
underpin every piece of communication that came from our campaign,
whether it was a Facebook post, a tweet, a mailer, a press interview or a
conversation with a voter, and in my humble opinion, there are three important
values that we displayed.
Number one: Hard work. Boy, have we worked hard on this campaign. We
knocked on more than 5,000 doors. Made thousands of phone calls. Sent out
at least three mailers. And were out at the polls every day from dawn to dusk.
Second: Resiliency and perseverance. We received a lot of hateful speech
and anti-Muslim bigotry. But we persevered through it and always brought
back the focus of my love and passion to serve this great city. We did not give
up.
Third: Honor and humility. We took the high road. We did not let negativity and
hatred drag us down. But instead, we made it help us pull upwards. As
Michelle Obama aptly put it, when they go low, you go high.
And these are the values that I have grown up with in my family, in my faith
and in my community, and these are the values I will continue to display in the
coming months and years as I work to improve our city.
For my Ismaili friends, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the importance of
this victory during the year when millions of Ismailis are celebrating the
Diamond Jubilee of our beloved leader, his Highness, Prince Karim Aga
Khan, who is the 49th hereditary spiritual leader of the Ismaili Muslims. For
the past 60 years, the Aga Khan has worked tirelessly to improve the quality
of life of people around the world and he is my role model. Hence, this is
doubly historic for me and the entire Ismaili community, and I wish everyone
Diamond Jubilee Mubarak.
(Note: From the official website of the Ismaili Muslim community: The Shia
Ismaili Muslims are a community of ethnically and culturally diverse peoples
living in over 25 countries around the world, united in their allegiance to His
Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan (known to the Ismailis as Mawlana Hazar
Imam) as the 49th hereditary Imam (spiritual leader), and direct descendant of
Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him and his family.)
Friends, I’ve been congratulated many times in the last week – in person, on
the phone, in text messages, and on social media. I’ve been especially moved
by people who wrote to say that this win restored their hope in America, or in
democracy, and in their neighbors. I do think that people have been losing
hope. The man who is now president of the United States launched his
campaign by declaring, “The American dream is dead.” Well, the American
dream is not dead here in Euless. It’s alive and well in this cities and cities like
it, here in Texas and all across the nation.
I knew nothing about Euless politics a few days ago. Since then I have
learned something about the recent municipal election and I think what
happened there provides a useful microcosm of Texas politics, and where it
may be headed. At its crux is the state’s changing demography and the
political meaning of diversity, which can be the most benign even insipid of
terms, or most the most loaded and charged in the modern American political
vocabulary.
Euless is also interesting because Bhojani’s opposite number – his own
representative in the Texas Legislature – is Republican state Rep.
Jonathan Stickland, who lives in neighboring Bedford.
Neither Bhojani or Stickland have ever met or talked to one another.
But I’ve spoken to them both at length in the last few days, both to try to figure
out what happened in Euless, but also because I felt some obligation as, I
would humbly submit, a leading Sticklandologist.
One of the first stories I wrote after moving to Texas to cover politics for
the Statesman was a Jan. 16, 2013 piece about the huge incoming class of
newly elected Republican representatives. It began as follows:
State Rep.-elect Jonathan Stickland is 29. He left high school early and got a
GED. He had never held or run for office before. His local elected officialdom
was virtually unanimous in its preference for his Republican primary opponent.
If he has a charisma it’s in his super-ordinariness. And he doesn’t even have
the “r” in his last name that everyone assumes is supposed to be there.
And there, in brief, are the keys to Stickland’s stunning success. Every strike
against him, he marvels, turned out to be an advantage in what turned out to
be a crushing, 20-point primary victory. Each provided a way for people to
remember and identify with him. He just had to own it, live it, be it.
Now, Stickland is one of the reasons why the new Texas House, when it
convenes Tuesday for its biennial session, will be swollen with freshman – 43
in all. Together with 24 sophomores, the new and the near-new will make up
close to half the 150 members of the House.
“It’s an incredible number,” said James Henson, director of the Texas Politics
Project at the University of Texas.
Much of that has to do with places like Stickland’s home turf – Tarrant County
– a tea party stronghold where voters gave one well-tenured Republican after
another the boot.
Said Stickland, “Tarrant County lost a lot of seniority in this wave – Northeast
Tarrant Tea Party. They won every single race they endorsed in.”
So, as Stickland proclaimed to huzzahs at a well-attended NE Tarrant Tea
Party gathering in December, “Tarrant County just sent the most conservative
group down to Austin that this state has ever seen.”
And Stickland said in an interview, “I plan on having the most conservative
voting record in the entire House of Representatives.”
Later in the story, I explained that:
Stickland was “discovered” by Julie McCarty, president of the board of the NE
Tarrant Tea Party, who was especially impressed with the way he confronted
U.S. Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Flower Mound, at a town hall meeting after
Burgess voted in 2011 to raise the debt limit.
“Jonathan was so well spoken, and it wasn’t just that he had good points to
make. They were so well-thought out and easy to understand,” said McCarty.
“It was truly the voice of the people.”
“Honestly, I never considered running until I got an email from Julie McCarty
at 11:45 at night, sitting in front of my home computer eating a bowl of ice
cream,” recalled Stickland. “My wife was leaning over me and started
laughing. Then she said, ‘Crap, you might be able to do that.’”
Suffice it to say, Stickland has more than fulfilled the promise that first Julie,
and then I, saw in him.
So it was not at all surprising on Thursday, when Stickland came up at Evan
Smith’s interview of Austin’s Lawrence Wright, a staff writer for The New
Yorker, and the author of, among many books, The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda
and the Road to 9/11, which won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction in
2007, Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief, and his newest, God
Save Texas: A Journey into the Soul of the Lone Star State.
EVAN SMITH: Which is more in inscrutable, impenetrable institution: Al-
Qaeda, Scientology or the Legislature?
LAWRENCE WRIGHT: Well, I spend a lot of time studying cults.
SMITH: I was asking about the people. Bin Laden, L. Ron Hubbard or
Jonathan Stickland? Who’s a better character to write about?
WRIGHT: If they had a swap, you might not notice some of the differences.
Let me put this in a more sober way. These are all people that believe in what
they are doing.
These three entities are filled with true believers, and depending on what they
believe they can act for good or ill.
We first met Jonathan Stickland on page 233 of God Save Texas.
Which brings us to the recent Euless City Council election in which Hubbard,
who died of a stroke in 1986 played no role, and Bin Laden, having been killed
by the chancellor of the University of Texas, makes only a cameo, but
Stickland is the looming tower.
Bhojani, a Pakistani immigrant, moved to Carrollton 18 years ago. He moved
to Bedford in 2007 and in 2010 he bought a home in Euless after reading an
article in the Dallas Morning News about how it was the best place to raise a
family in North Texas.
An attorney, he has served on the Euless Park & Leisure Services Board for
four years.
Last year, he ran for council, challenging Place 2 City Council Member
Jeremy Tompkins. He lost.
In March of last year, as he wrote, “For the first time in Euless history, a verse
of the holy Quran (and its English translation) was recited to start the City
Council meeting. Blessed to be part of this momentous occasion (with Amir
Makhani) and hope to bring more diversity in the Euless City Council!
#VoteBhojani”
Bhojani, a Boy Scout leader, was invited to the ceremony by the affiliated Cub
Scout troop, which had been the ones invited to recite the pray.
“I got a lot of heat for it,” Bhojani said.
But, he said, the concerns were unfounded.
“For decades, or for a century, for more than a century, we’ve read a Christian
invocation before City Council and I have not taken offense at that. Every
single Park Board meeting I have attended starts out with a Christian
invocation, and I have not taken any offense at that,” Bhojani said.
That, one time in a century, the Quran was recited, should not have been
cause for alarm.
“What’s wrong with it?” Bhojanni said. “Even the words that were recited were
about unity among faiths.It was a proud moment for all the City Council
members. Everybody that was there commented on it.”
But the Cub Scout invocation had roiled the waters, Stickland said, not so
much the event itself but, he said, Bhojani’s touting of it in his campaign.
STICKLAND:
There’s foreign media doing this big international story – `It’s great we’re
reading from the Quran for the first time in the city of Euless.”
It totally freaks out the establishment, energizes my people. This guy’s got an
agenda here way bigger than I wanna fix the roads or help out the police
officers, just the way that he did it.
It was that that was the centerpiece of his campaign. Nobody campaigns on,
“Oh we need t to change the prayers at City Council.”
It’s, “we’ve got roads to fix.”
That’s the normal stuff. This guy’s running a hard-core crazy campaign, this is
what he is about, this is what he wants, to turn the city of Euless into a news
story,
This is a little small bedroom community, this is suburbia, people move out of
Dallas to get away from this sensationalized stuff.
And then there is cricket.
STICKLAND:
Theres a major park here in Euless and he started campaigning on changing
the park and turning it into a cricket field and people are saying, “No one plays
cricket except a small, small portion of people and then we are going to get all
these cricket players coming into Euless taking up our park.”
Bhojani didn’t win in 2017, but he ran a strong second.
Stickland said, it
was a rare local election in his district since he’s been elected, that he didn’t
get in the middle of – with, he acknowledeged, uniformly disastrous results.
STICKLAND:
I literally, especially when I was first elected, came in with guns ablazing. I
had candidates, a conservative, tea party candidates, running in every (city
council and school board) spot in the district and I got crushed. I have never,
ever backed a candidate who won any local election.
Why? Stickland said he has clout in partisan election, but not the ultra low-
turnout non-partisan elections.
Of Bhojani’s 2017 campaign, Stickland said:
It was under the radar, it wasn’t on anyone’s radar, this guy comes out of
nowhere, spends a bunch of money and nearly takes out the establishment
which, frankly, we had been trying to do for years, unsuccessfully. Anyhow, I
had a lot of people who support me voting for him just because they’re so
used to voting for whoever is running against the establishment. It’s usually a
conservative, but we didn’t run anyone.
So he nearly wins, the Euless Council folks frankly freak out a little bit, come
to me behind the scenes and say, “Hey we almost lost and we’re a little bit
worried about this guy,” and I’m, “Ah, whatever, I’m not going to help you
guys, you guys don’t like me, whatever.”
Fast forward, and about six months later, he is, “I’m going to run again,” and
he totally does a 180 on who he is and what he’s doing, and he starts
exposing himself as a hard-core progressive liberal hanging out with some of
the known Democratic leaders in the area, and starts getting active on
Facebook and it’s all centered around this one theme that we didn’t hear in
the first race, Oh, we need diversity. We’ve got enough white Christian types,
Euless is diverse, which it is, and he makes it all about this racial diversity and
religious diversity that we need.
They don’t have a candidate, usually the establishment has their little
hierarchy, they’re like, “Hey, do you have anybody who could run?” And I’m
going through my Rolodex and there’s this sweet little old lady, Molly Maddox,
retired teacher who’s kind of political, lived in Euless for like 42 years, lot of
people know her, she still substitutes up at Trinity High School up to this day,
regularly, so we convince her to run and I promise to help fund the race.
And frankly, when they didn’t have a candidate and were wiling to take mine, I
was like, maybe I can sneak a conservative on there. Win-win.
(I was in contact with the mayor and three members of the Euless council who
dispute Stickland’s version of events. More on that later.)
Meanwhile, the Texas Democratic Party endorses Bhojani, even though the
election is non-partisan.
From a March 12 release:
Texas Democrats Endorse Local Candidates
Austin, TX– Today, the Texas Democratic Party endorsed progressive
candidates enrolled in our Project LIFT (Local Investment in the Future of
Texas) program for the May 5th elections.
Project LIFT works with local party leaders and progressive partners to recruit,
train, and support candidates – with a special focus on winning local, non-
partisan races.
Meet the Texas Democratic Party’s Project LIFT endorsed candidates:
• Salman Bhojani, Euless City Council Place 6
Salman is a young, but experienced, progressive leader with a passion
for connecting citizens with their local government. In addition to being a
lawyer and having worked at one of the nation’s top law firms, he is a
successful business owner. Salman has taken a leadership role in
various community-focused organizations and currently serves on the
Euless Parks and Leisure Services Board. Salman has lived on three
different continents, he calls Euless his home, where he lives with his
wife Nima, two children, and his parents.
STICKLAND:
It got to the point where we felt like, hey, we need to put out the alarm and we
put up that first Facebook post.
STICKLAND:
If you go back and you look at it, it’s all about, this guy’s a Democrat, he only
votes in Democrat primaries, he’s only donated to these Democrats, these are
the issues he is campaigning on, and up at the very top of the stupid thing
I described him as a “Muslim, lawyer, liberal Democrat,” because that’s the
way he’s described himself all over this deal, and on it I put a link to a video
on his campaign Facebook page to this news article about how great it was
that for the first time we were reading from the Quran and I just regurgitated it
back out to the public
And then, oh man, the gates of Hell open up and it’s like, `Oh, he’s anti-
Muslim, he’s an Islamophobe, he’s a racist bigot”, all that stuff starts, and it
blows up, and it kind of shocks you to be honest with you, because in my own
head, I’m he least Islamophobic guy in the Legislature being a Ron Paul
Republican. I’m the only guys who has spoken out publicly against the wars in
the Middle East. I’m the only guy who endorsed Shahid Shafi for Southlake
City Council.
Stickland said he’s been a big backer of the very diverse Harmony Public
Charter School in Euless.
I have been a hardcore advocate for these people in the community and taken
a ton of heat for it. I spoke at their graduation ceremony. I teach there like
three times a year. It’s very diverse, got a lot of Muslims there.
As a libertarian-leaning Republican, I’m not anti-Muslim at all. In fact, that’s
the main platform of me being a libertarian is I hate all that crap.
I could care less about how he prays to or any of that kind of stuff. My problem
is I don’t want to turn the city of Euless into a circus, trying to bring in media
and everything else. And I don’t like his politics.
I agree we have great diversity in our district. I spent thousands of dollars last
session to sponsor and charter a bus – we’ve got a large Tongan community
in Euless – and we had our first Tongan Day at the Capitol, and I chartered a
bus and we had a Tongan celebration at the Capitol and recognized them, I
paid for every cent of it because I think that’s great. But when you stand up
and say, vote for me because of my skin color, that’s a problem. He literally
made campaign videos about this issue.
There’s a difference between, “Vote for me because I’m diverse,” and
celebrating diversity.
The second you say this matters, you are at the same time casting out the
white folks.
I think it became a problem when he said it was a reason to vote for him.
“Vote for me because I am this.” If I stood up in a crowd and said, “Vote for
me because I’m a white Christian,” I think that’s a problem.”
If I sand up and say I’m Christian conservative and use that in my speech and
talk about my values, that’s completely fine. If I stood up say, “Vote for me
because I’m the only Christian,” or, “That person’s not a Christian, that’s when
it becomes a problem.”
I don’t care, like Joe Straus for instance, if people are like, “I don’t like him
because he’s a Jew,” that’s ridiculous, I never cared about that all, because
you know what, I cared about his positions on the issues. I would vote for
Craig Goldman for speaker tomorrow if I had the chance to and he’s a Jew.
It’s completely irrelevant.
I think it’s fair to talk about who you are as a person, because I really do think
your faith determines values in a lot of instances, but his faith is not what I had
a problem with. What I had a problem with, what I thought was offensive, was
that he was using this as a way to create a schism in the community.
Bhojani said that is a complete mischaracterization of his campaign.
BHOJANI:
(Stickland’s Facebook) comments were very hurtful and excited people in a
very negative way. Those were Islamophobic comments just deliberately set
up to rile up people and rile up support for his investment in Molly Maddox.
A lot of people who had Islamophhobia in their minds, they turned them out,
that’s why it was close. We ran a very positive campaign and tried to talk
about the city issues.
My kids (9 and 12) are getting an education of a lifetime because they would
not get this education anywhere, in any college, any university or any school,
so I was very blessed to run a positive campaign that was away from hatred
and negativity.
Bhojani said he and his wife were at the Euless Library every day of early
voting from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., talking to voters.
Some people would say, `America is for Americans, you need to go back to
Pakistan.’
I would be telling them that, with all due respect, I am an American citizen as
well. The United States government has issued a passport to me. I have two
kids that were born here. Where else would I go. `No, you’ve got to go home
to your country.” But this is my country. “No, you’re not born here.” By your
definition, only American Indians would be Americans. “You’re not a true
American. I won’t vote for you.”
That’s one rhetoric.
Another rhetoric would be about religion, They would ask, “What religion do
you follow?”
First I would answer back and say religion has no place in politics. There is no
religious test to run for office . But they wouldn’t want to hear that answer and
they’d spit out hatred, “No, you’re a Muslim, we are not going to vote for you.”
For others, I would say I am a Muslim, and they would say, “We don’t vote for
terrorists.”
Another man told his wife that if he were elected the crime rate would soar
and there would be retaliation against him.
She was really concerned.
They said, “We like Euless he way it is right now. We don’t want any change.”
A couple of people, really educated, talked about friends they had who were
Muslim, and at the end asked, “What do you think of Osama Bin Laden?” I
said, “What do you mean?”
They wanted to know if I thought the Pakistani government had harbored Bin
Laden.
I said that’s a good question, I have no idea, I have no ties to the Pakistani
government I left Pakistan when I was ten-years-old. I have no idea.
He said. “You’d be very naive to think I should not hold you accountable for
that.”
Hold me accountable for being on the Park Board for four years. Hold me
accountable for being a Boy Scout leader.
A Texas A&M professor asked my wife whether I wanted to bring Sharia .aw.
She said absolutely not.
I came in and said I vowed to defend the Constitution twice, once when I
became a citizen and then when I became an attorney. The Constitution is
the law of the land. Sharia law is not. I don’t practice Sharia law.
There are millions of moderate Muslims that live their lives and are
contributing citizens of the United States They give so much back, more than
they take and they have the true American values and ethics.
It was disheartening, but a lot of people came from Colleyville, McKinney,
Plano, Bedford, they couldn’t even vote for us but they’d bring a snack, a
sweet, and they brought their kids as well saying, “You’re fighting the good
fight. and we want to celebrate and we want to show our kids that when you
have adversity, negativity and hatred, this is how you fight, you keep your
chin up and shrug off all the negativity and fight with a smile.”
That’s what we did and it worked out.
During my first campaign, a person asked what kind of pork do you eat? I said
I’m not sure I heard you correctly. I didn’t know here were different kinds of
pork but I don’t eat pork and I’m not sure how that’s relevant to serving on the
City Council. He said, “It’s important for me to know. If you don’t eat pork, you
don’t have my vote.”
I don’t go out and tell people that I’m Muslim. There’s no need for telling
people that. There’s a lot of Islamophobia that’s out there already.
We all know that Islamophobia is rampant in our country. We know how our
president feels about Muslims. it’s just given them a license to speak, however
they choose to speak about Muslims.
Why was there a need (for Stickland) to say that and not say, “He’s a father,
he’s a son, he’s a Boy Scout leader, he’s an SMU graduate?” There is a
reason why, he had basically made a $15,000 investment in my opponent and
now he was trying to make his investment pay off, and he’s trying to make
other people worried about me, and where does he get this idea of a scary
agenda or a dangerous agenda?
How could I have a sneaky agenda? Show me where I”ve gone wrong. There
is no basis for that.
On cricket.
There are lot of Nepalese people that play cricket. I have not played cricket for
like decades. I don’t even watch cricket. (My wife is from India, so our
marriage is already sort of taboo. Luckily we don’t watch cricket so we have a
harmonious marriage.)
They had told me there are a lot of baseball fields, soccer fields, why is there
not a cricket field? And I mentioned that in my speech to the Nepalese people
at their Holy Festival (in March). Remember, these guys don’t come out to
vote. They are in their own world. I’m not saying hat in a bad way. That’s a
reality.
I’m trying to talk to them, you guys don’t come out vote and then you
complain to me. Oh nobody listens to us, we don’t have a cricket stadium.
Well, they’re not going to listen because you don’t go out to vote. If you guys
want something to happen, you’ve got to petition your City Council and I want
to serve on that City Council.
Stickland said that it was Bhojani and his supporters who inflamed matters by
focusing on him as a purported symbol of intolerance, and successfully
selling that story to a willing media.
BHOJANI:
What he did was wrong, first of all. And we did not call the media, the media
called us and he media saw that he was wrong and the media wanted to call
him out on that. I did not call people to say come interview us or come see
what Jonathan had to say.
It’s crazy that I have not only my opponent to run against but I have a
Jonathan Stickland to run against, my own state representative. OK, that’s a
challenge I have to surmount.
State Representative Jonathan Stickland wrote a Facebook post referencing
Bhojani’s religion. In it, he speaks against “progressive liberals” stepping into
a non-partisan council race and points out that Salman Bhojani is a Muslim
and what he calls a “lifelong Democrat” responsible for having a passage from
the Koran read for the first time at a council meeting. The passage referenced
having an openness to different religions and was read by a local Boy Scout
troop.
“I don’t think that by itself is something that means he’s unfit for office,” said
Rep. Stickland. “But what I think is this is just a foreshadowing of some of the
massive changes that he would like to see in the city of Euless.”
Representative Stickland points to Bhojani’s own speeches calling for diversity
on the council.
“He can’t have it both ways,” Stickland said. “If he wants to use it as a plus, he
has to be OK with other people thinking it’s a relevant issue as well.”
“I think that’s totally inaccurate. I have not brought my religion public,” Bhojani
countered. “He should have come and asked me about my beliefs because
I’m also one of his constituents.”
Bhojani said religion would never influence his council decisions but he does
want a fresh perspective. He would be the council’s only minority.
“Any time you have a homogenous group of people who came together and
make decisions for people who are not like them I think you can be blindsided
by your own tunnel vision,” Bhojani said.
From a Texas Democratic Party April 30 email.
Austin, TX – Last week, Texas Republican Jonathan Stickland found it
pertinent to mention that Project LIFT candidate Salman Bhojani is a Muslim
and ‘lifelong Democrat’ on Facebook.
Salman Bhojani is a father, successful lawyer and running for Euless’ City
Council Place 5.
Democratic State Representative Rafael Anchia came out in Bhojani’s
defense, “Religious tests were something that our founding fathers rejected
when we revolted against the crown. The only thing that matters in this
election is each candidate’s vision for Euless and North Texas.”
Rafael Anchía
✔@RafaelAnchia
I know Salman personally and have practiced law with him. In addition to being a
really smart lawyer, he is a great person & family man.
Bhojani had spoken to Anchia of his concerns for the safety of his family amid
the rancor after Stickland’s Facebook post and Anchia negotiated a rhetorical
cease-fire between Bhojani and Stickland.
But it quickly broke down with each accusing the other of not abiding by it.
Bhojani had gotten to know Anchia when he worked as a summer associate at
Hayes and Boone, Anchia’s law firm.
BHOJANI:
He’s a great guy and I really respect him and we had a conversation and he
said, “I can help turn the volume down on this thing and if you don’t post
anything on him he won’t post anything on you.”
Bhojani said he held to the agreement until he saw Stickland was back at it on
his personal Facebook page.
BHOJANI:
I forwarded it to Rafael and said, “I thought we had a cease-fire.”
It’s just not worth it. How can I trust that guy? I said Rafael, let’s forget it, he’s
done the damage already. He should pay for not having a filter. So I called
Rafael and told him that he could call Stickland and tell him the deal is off.
STICKLAND:
We tried to amp it down and I agreed to do it, but this is what he wanted the
whole time.
Hostilities resumed
Bhojani won, but not by much.
BHOJANI:
When we received the early voting results at 7:00, 7:15, we we were only 74
votes behind so that assured us that we would win. because we felt we had
75 to 80 percent of the votes that were counted on Election Day..
Surprisingly, we were only 112 votes ahead (in votes cast on Election Day),
which is really, really surprising. I’m not sure how that even happened. I said,
“It’s a win, we won fair and square. We don’t want to ask a lot of questions
about what happened inside.”
People truly told us as they were going in, we’re here to vote for you, we’ve
read what happened in the newspapers, we’ve read about all that negativity
that was thrown at you by Stickland. A lot of people came in and said, “We
hate Stickland. We don’t like him. Why is he messing with a City Council
election? We don’t like that. We’re here to vote for you.” So that’s what made
us feel like we had a huge lead, at least 200 or 300 votes for sure. So i was
very surprised by the election results. It came out much closer than we had
thought.
I went out door-knocking every night after early voting, because that’s the way
to get votes. To tell our story. Because once they heard our story it was the
American dream, it was very consistent with American values and ethics and
so they really resonated with people regardless of their skin color or faith.
I will be he first minority elected in the history of Euless to the City Council.
That is a very powerful end in itself. You see a lot of people of color, but the
City Council is not reflective of that diversity.
Also I will be the only City Council member with young children. All the others,
their children are grown.
About a thousand people usually come out to vote. in local elections.. Last
year there were 3,084, so I brought out at least a thousand first-time voters
that never voted in their lives before. And then this year we surpassed that
with about 4,201.
Historically, usually minorities don’t come out to vote as much in local
elections especially. They don’t know about it. Some people come from
countries where politics is a corrupt profession.
A lot of people come from Tonga. I think Euless is home to the second largest
Tongan population outside of Tonga. It has a lot of people from Nepal, Indian,
Pakistan, Sri Lanka. I think 24 percent of Euless is Hispanic, there’s a big
African-American population as well, that may or may not be
immigrant. There’s a Nigerian and Sudanese group as well.
The Texas Democratic party crowed about Bhojani’s victory
It was the perfect twofer for them, electing an up-and-coming minority
candidate and casting Stickland as the diabolical heavy.
Project LIFT Candidate Salman Bhojani Wins in Euless Defying the Hate
Campaign Led by Rep. Stickland
After an attack on his faith and integrity, led by Texas Republican Jonathan
Stickland, Salman Bhojani, a Project LIFT Candidate, was elected to city
council in Euless by a margin of 37 votes. [Fort Worth Star-Telegram, May 5,
2018]
Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa issued the following
statement:
“Salman Bhojani faced down hate and brought his community together to
march forward and fight for progressive solutions for the city of Euless.
“Never let anyone tell you your vote doesn’t count. By a margin of a few dozen
votes, the people of Euless elected a candidate that is qualified, hard-working,
and a family-man deeply rooted in his community. Americans across the
country are rejecting Trump style hate and fear-based politics.
Congratulations on a well-deserved win, Salman!”
The whole point of Project LIFT is to groom candidates to take out folks like
Stickland.
STICKLAND:
Look, I’m going to win my race, it’s a Republican district, but they are definitely
making a concerted effort in my House district fort the long-term. This is the
first legitimate candidate they have put-up. He’s raising money, he’s block-
walking, he’s a smart guy.
The Democratic candidate Stickland is referring to is Steve Riddell, who, with
his wife, were among those Bhojani gave an award to for their help at
Saturday’s victory celebration.
STICKLAND:
They’re building the infrastructure for a serious run.
I think it’s trouble when you let your enemy get their foot in the door, but I
don’t think they’re going to go through it.
BHOJANI:
If you look at any of my posts I have never, ever stated any party affiliation or
said I’m leaning this way or the other because that’s not needed in city
politics. I may favor one side or the other, because that’s my right, but when
I’m looking at the city I’m independent. And the issues that the parties are
(focusing) on, don’t matter in city government. It’s bascially you have your
police, fire, water, streets, park and library.
People ask me about abortion or gun rights, all stuff that doesn’t come into
play in city elections. I’m not a lifelong Democrat. It’s weird for anybody to be
a lifelong anything.
“He’ll be a good fit on the council,” Mayor Linda Martin told me. “We will work
very well together.”
Martin said that Stickland ran a candidate against her in the past and the idea
that she would have asked him to find a candidate to run against Bhojani is
“patently false,” and she can’t imagine any of the members of the council
approaching Stickland either.
“We do just fine on our own,” said Martin, who said that Stickland always says
he’s going to stop messing around in local non-partisan politics, and never
does.
She said Stickland’s contribution to the campaign was unfortunate, “because
we celebrate out diversity.”
She said her grandson is in the first grade at a school where 42 different
languages and dialects are spoken.
“He has friends of every different race. They just love each other. They are
crazy about each other.”
I talked with Place 1 City Council member Tim Stinneford:
STINNEFORD:
When Perry Bynum announced that he wasn’t running for re-election, I was
home with the flu and strep throat and I guess Salman had already filed and
Jonathan called me and said, “Do you have anybody to run against him?” and
I said, “I’m home sick right now and I don’t know of anybody running against
him but the guy’s a pretty nice guy, I don’t really see an issue.”
And he said, “Well, I’m going to find somebody.” And I said, “Fine, OK.”
And it’s kind of funny that he would say anyone would have called him
because two re-elections ago, the first time I had ever spoken with Mr.
Stickland, was when he came out on an election Saturday campaigning for
my opponent, and he walked up to me and said, “Hello,”and I said, “Rep.
Stickland, it’s nice that after all these years being a representative the first
time you speak to me is to try to get somebody else elected in my place.”
We’ve gotten along fine since them. When he said he was going to find
somebody, “Fine.” I of course didn’t realize he was going to contribute that
much money. There was more money spent in this election than I spent in
four elections combined. It’s crazy.
I can’t speak of the other council members, but I can’t imagine anybody called
him
As I told Molly, the candidate that he was supporting – I’ve known Molly for
years, I volunteer with Molly on a lot of things – and I told her, “Molly if I were
an undecided voter, and I read what Stickland put out there, I would have
immediately voted for Salman, no matter what because that was such vitriol,
hatred, anger, I just don’t know how to describe how awful that was.”
We are non-partisan, that’s the only reason I run. I am a Republican but in
every election I’ve run the Mid-City Democrats have supported me. I’ve gone
to their meetings and gone to their dinners that they have once a month and
I’m introduced as a Republican. On our council, we’re not Republicans or
Democrats, we’re Euless citizens, and our only agenda is what’s best for the
city of Euless, and that’s why I have no interest to go beyond this because
then it becomes all about party and not about what’s right.
Tompkins, the council member who defeated Bhojani last year, emailed me, “I
had several inquiries from Euless Citizens for the open seat of Place 6, and
sat down and talked with 3 persons. Molly Maddux was one of the
persons. There was not a call out for recruitment from me.”
Place 4 Council member Linda Eilenfeldt, who I believe is the only Democrat
already serving on the council, was among those receiving recognition for her
support at Bhojani’s victory party Saturday. She told me that she can’t imagine
any of her colleagues seeking Stickland’s help to field a candidate against
him.
Bynu, the retiring Place 6 incumbent, backed Maddox.
STICKLAND:
The establishment folks begged me to find and fund a candidate for them to
get behind and then as soon as race got interjected into it, none of them
followed through with their public endorsement. I’m never helping the with
anything again.
BHOJANI:
My effort going forward is how to unite the city behind the outcome and make
sure that I can lead and represent those who voted for me and those who
didn’t vote for me and those that gave me hatred because it’s not personal,
they don’t even know me and once hey see my actions they will really respect
me for who I am.
I really hope for a tolerant Euless where people can respect each other’s faith,
their ethnicity, their national origin and say we can all work together behind a
united goal and make Euless a better place.
I think (Stickland) hurt the city of Euless because it is divided by him injecting
politics in this race. He made people see black and white instead of shades of
gray and we need to focus on shades of gray and not say, this is white, this is
black in all kinds of different ways.
It never helps to bring negativity.
I last spoke to Bhojani just after his victory celebration Saturday.
BHOJANI:
One of my supporters, a Republican, said today, “Let’s go buy a cake and let’s
go to Stickland’s office, Let’s go and let’s thank him and say, `We couldn’t
have done it without you.'” He was serious. And I was like, I haven’t met him
and I don’t feel the need to meet him.
Letters to the editor:
May 17, 2018
Re: May 14 blog, “In Salman v. Stickland, a celebration of diversity in Euless is tested.”
I live in the Hurst-Euless-Bedford community in state Rep. Jonathan Stickland’s district
— and I was alarmed at the antics in Jonathan Tilove’s post “In Salman v. Stickland, a
celebration of diversity in Euless is tested.”
As a former Euless resident now living in Hurst, I was completely unaware of the
strategy that Stickland and the Northeast Tarrant tea party was doing for the past few
years in recruiting “tea party” sympathizers in city council elections.
Using fear-based tactics about religion is despicable — and I am glad the people of
Euless spoke up against it. The Democratic Party is just doing what he did first.
Stickland has the million-dollar backing of Empower Texans — and local city councils
should not be held hostage in important areas, like planning and zoning, to dollars that
come from outside the city. Let’s hope this is not a foreshadowing to other Texas
election campaigns.
HEATHER BUEN, HURST
Orange barrel alert! Huge
lane closures coming to
Airport Freeway
May 18, 2018
The Ector/Euless Main Street exit on Texas 183. Paul Moseley pmoseley@star-telegram.com
EULESS
Motorists may want to avoid Texas 183 — also known as Airport Freeway — this
weekend in Euless and Irving.
Contractors working on the massive, $847 million Midtown Express project on
Texas 183 are planning to close two lanes at a time in each direction at various
locations near the south entrance to Dallas Fort Worth Airport this weekend. As a
result, motorists may find themselves crammed into just one working lane, which
can cause long delays.
"These closures are necessary for paving operations and main lane traffic pattern
changes," project spokeswoman Selma Santin said in an email.
The closures are expected to take place at various times between 9 p.m. Friday
and 6 a.m. Monday. The road work is "weather permitting," Santin said —
although it is expected to be a mostly hot and dry weekend.
For example, on Texas 183 from Main Street to Ector Drive, two lanes at a time
will be closed as needed. The closures could be on either the left or right side of
the road, depending upon workers' needs at the time — but one lane will remain
open at all times, Santin said.
Also, the westbound off-ramp to Main Street will be closed during that time.
Other intermittent closures drivers can expect during the weekend:
▪ Two right lanes will be closed on westbound Texas 183 from the President
George Bush Turnpike to Texas 360 in Irving.
▪ Northbound and southbound Texas 161 ramps to westbound Texas 183.
▪ Westbound 183 entrance ramp from County Line Road.
▪ Westbound 183 exit ramp to Amon Carter Boulevard.
▪ Westbound 183 exit ramp to northbound and southbound SH 360.
▪ Westbound 183 exit ramp to DFW Airport (only from 10 p.m. Saturday to 6 a.m.
Sunday).
▪ Alternating left or right lane closed on westbound 183 over Loop 12 in Irving.
Continuously closed:
▪ Southbound Spur 482 to Westbound SH 183.
▪ Westbound SH 183 exit ramp to Carl Road.
▪ Both directions of O’Connor Road under 183.
Portable changeable message boards will be on roadsides to help motorists
navigate their way around the mess.
If possible, just avoid the area. If you have to go that way, be ready for long traffic
delays.
The 28-mile Midtown Express project includes expanding Texas 183 from Texas
121 in Euless to Interstate 35E in Dallas, and Texas 114 from Texas 183 to the
Texas 121/International Parkway intersection (which serves as the north entrance
to DFW Airport).
Also, a portion of Loop 12 is being improved from Texas 183 to I-35E.
And, managed toll lanes are being added.
Motorists who need to reach the Midtown Express hotline may call 844-418-3114.
U.S. Concrete Names William J.
Sandbrook Chairman of Company's
Board of Directors
PR Newswire
EULESS, Texas, May 18, 2018
EULESS, Texas, May 18, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- U.S. Concrete, Inc. (NASDAQ: USCR) ("U.S.
Concrete" or the "Company") announced today that its Board of Directors ("Board")
appointed William J. Sandbrook Chairman of the Board at the Board meeting immediately following
the Company's 2018 annual meeting of stockholders on Thursday, May 17, 2018. Mr. Sandbrook,
who currently serves as President and CEO of U.S. Concrete, succeeds Eugene I. Davis, who
previously announced he would not seek reelection. Michael Lundin will remain in his position as
Lead Independent Director of the Board.
"Bill's strategic vision for U.S. Concrete has resulted in the Company establishing market-leading
positions in some of the most active construction markets in the country and continuous year-over-
year increases in revenue and pricing growth," said Mr. Lundin. "In addition, throughout his tenure as
President and CEO, he has proven adept at driving returns for our stockholders and managing risk
accordingly. For these reasons, we are honored to appoint him to this position."
Mr. Sandbrook has served as President and CEO of U.S. Concrete since 2011, during which time he
has solifided the Company's balance sheet and significantly expanded its ready-mixed concrete and
aggregates capacity. Over the course of his tenure, U.S. Concrete has made a series of strategic
acquisitions, which have resulted in the Company being the supplier of choice in non-commoditized
concrete offerings for highly specialized projects across all construction verticals in these markets.
Mr. Sandbrook stated, "I am honored to assume the role of Board Chairman and am grateful for the
support of the Board and our stockholders. While we have a great foundation in place, our focus will
be on continuing to execute our highly differentiated strategic initiatives to further grow our business,
our backlog and stockholder returns. I look forward to working with Michael and the rest of the Board
to achieve these shared objectives."
About U.S. Concrete, Inc.
U.S. Concrete, Inc. (NASDAQ: USCR) is a leading supplier of concrete and aggregates for large-
scale commercial, residential and infrastructure projects in high-barrier-to-entry markets across the
country. The Company holds leading market positions in the high growth metropolitan markets
of New York, San Francisco, Dallas-Fort Worth and Washington, D.C, and its materials have been
used in some of the most complex and highly specialized construction projects of the last decade.
U.S. Concrete has continued to grow organically and through a series of strategic acquisitions of
independent producers in our target markets.
For more information on U.S. Concrete, visit www.us-concrete.com.