Inside Today: Smart swaps for healthy eating in 2016 • Page 1B
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Covering the Heights, Garden Oaks, Oak Forest & the neighborhoods of North Houston Saturday, January 9, 2016 • Vol. 62 • No. 2
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Turner’s vacant seat in House leaves dilemma for district By Jonathan Garris jgarris@theleadernews.com
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Sylvester Turner taking the office of mayor earlier this week may have been easy. But Turner assuming a new political office also means he just left another one. Turner served as State Representative for District 139 which covers much of The Leader’s coverage area, but because he can’t govern in City Hall and in the Austin statehouse at the same time, you might wonder who’s representing contituents’ needs at the state level. The short answer is “nobody.” The more complex answer is that there could be six elections in one year just to get the seat filled (and stay filled). First, the State House of Representatives is partisan, meaning candidates must qualify
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as Democrats, Republican and Third Party. That means any election to replace Turner’s seat would need a Democrat and Republican primary (election number one). Next there could be a run-off candidate if no candidate secures 50.1 percent of the vote (election number two). Then there would be a special, general election for the seat (election number three). However, where the water gets murky is that while there would need to be a special election to replace Turner, this is also the year Turner would have run for re-election in November, giving voters the opportunity for three more elections. There’s the regular primary on March 1 – a partisan election with a Republican
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Contributed Photo Sylvester Turner is likely very pleased to be taking office as the next mayor of Houston but questions still linger over the process by which his vacant House of Representatives seat will be filled.
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HHA wants to go ‘green’ for Yale Street trees By Jonathan Garris jgarris@theleadernews.com The Urban Forestry Committee of the Houston Heights Association will be petitioning the city of Houston to designate a two-mile stretch of Yale Street as a new Green Corridor in an effort to preserve hundreds of trees along the road. According to a press release, the committee has teamed up with residents and businesses along Yale Street to petition the city to create the Yale Green Corridor. The designation would be a first for Houston, according to the release, but the initiative is not the first time Heights residents and organizations have come together for the environment. In the 1980s, with the help of the Heights Chamber of Commerce
Getting ready to ‘Run the Grove’ Last year’s Run the Grove 5k event was a major success for Timbergrove Manor and the Friends of West 11th Street Park. Local residents are now gearing up a second time for the event, as the community continues to reap the benefits of last year’s run.
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Contributed Photo Family medicine physician Melissa Montoya Celi, M.D. (right) was one of 15 volunteers, staff and affiliated physicians who helped conduct free physical exams for 92 area students on Saturday, Aug. 29, 2015 at Memorial Hermann Greater Heights Hospital.
‘Smoothie Operator’ Looking for a fresh take on healthy eating (perhaps for your New Year’s Resolution)? In this month’s edition of Our Health, we look at numerous tasty concoctions combining the best of both the vegetable world and the fruit world for nutritious smoothies.
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FIND IT. AUTOMOTIVE WAREHOUSE HIRING parts stockers/order pullers. Heavy lifting, background checks. Apply in person. 3810 Dacoma. 8-5, M-F. (1-16) THE PURPLE CAT RESALE AND GARAGE SALE: Friday 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 2126 W. 34th St. Benefiting Animal Rescue. (TF)
The INDEX. Church
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Classifieds
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Food/Drink/Art Obituaries
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Opinion
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Public Information Puzzles
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Memorial Hermann Greater Heights celebrates milestones as part of 50th anniversary in the community
Through the Years · Jan. 5, 1966 – Memorial Hospital Northwest opens as the third satellite facility to Memorial Baptist Hospital
By Jonathan Garris jgarris@theleadernews.com Few physicians understand the bond between Memorial Hermann Greater Heights and the surrounding community, forged over the last 50 years, like Dr. Tara Shani and Dr. Raj Shani. Tara Shani, a family medicine doctor, first began working at Memorial Hermann Greater Heights in 1980. She moved from Lonton, Ontario and received a family practice residency here in Houston and originally started at Memorial Southwest. Tara Shani said she had first become interested in moving to Houston after visiting another friend who had moved from Canda. “The weather was good,” Tara Shani recalled. “There’s so much snow in London.” When she first started working, Tara Shani said the facility was more like a community hospital, smaller in both its design and its personnel. “The technology then was much less available than what we have now,” Tara Shani said. “The whole thing has changed and the hospital has really grown into focusing on numerous specialties. Even the section for maternity and labor delivery has dramatically increased and the building has changed completely from its original two-story, small hospital.” The Heights area has continued to evolve alongside the hospital as well, Tara Shani said. What was once primarily an older population has given way to a diverse population with a large amount of young professionals and families looking for local solutions for their healthcare needs. Keeping those solutions local has been one of the biggest changes for Tara Shani. “I don’t have to send my patients somewhere else
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· 1991 – The hospital’s Cancer Center opens. It has treated more than 20,000 patients since.
Photo by Betsy Denson Judy Pfardresher with a customer at Oolala in the Heights is closing shop.
· November 4, 1997 – Memorial and Hermann health systems merge, hospital name changed to Memorial Hermann Northwest Hospital
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· July 14, 2003 – The 165,000 sq. ft. South Tower is opened, featuring a revamped family birthing center (increasing from 15 beds to 30), ambulatory medicine center, 8 additional ICU beds and a 40-bed orthopedic/surgical unit. The addition helps to expand the number of affiliated physicians with the hospital to more than 600. Three months later, the hospital opens its outpatient testing center. · August 2005 – The hospital begins performing openheart surgery and interventional cardiology · September, 2015 – TIRR inpatient services added to hospital · October 14, 2015 – Hospital renamed Memorial Hermann Greater Heights Hospital; Memorial Hermann announces plans for Urgent Care Center (2016) and Convenient Care Center (2017) to further meet the healthcare needs of the surrounding communities. · Jan. 5, 2016 – Hospital turns 50 years old
2016’s First Bundles of Joy
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Turn to Our Health on 1B to read about some of our area’s first born babies of the New Year.
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By Betsy Denson betsy@theleadernews.com There’s a lot going on around The Leader area which, despite a lag in the oil and gas market, is still drawing retailers and restaurateurs to make a go of it in neighborhoods booming with an increasingly prosperous populace. Here’s a partial round up of who is coming - and in some cases, going, in the area. North Shepherd People were excited at the announcement last August that Mellow Mushroom Pizza Bakers signed a contract to open shop at Braun’s forthcoming development at 1919 North Shepherd. At the time Braun, also responsible for Ella Plaza and Harold’s in the Heights, said that there will be space for a few more retailers. Now comes word of a new tenant. Moody Ice, a shaved ice shop with an entrepreneur spirit, will be opening at the site this summer. According to the proprietor, “the possibilities are endless with these fresh ingredients See Developments, P. 8A