Leader June 5

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SUMMER

Inside Today: A new clinic is coming to the area • Page 4A

FASHIONS Have Arrived Stop in &

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MICHAEL SILVA

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Covering the Heights, Garden Oaks, Oak Forest & the neighborhoods of North Houston

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Saturday, June 5, 2021 • Vol. 66 • No. 23

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Deed restriction bill leaves residents wanting more By Adam Zuvanich azuvanich@theleadernews.com According to the original language in her deed restrictions, State Rep. Penny Morales Shaw should not be allowed to own property or even reside in Garden Oaks. That privilege was reserved only for members of the “Caucasian race,” and Morales Shaw is Hispanic. In a few months, though, she might be able to fill out some legal documents, file them in a Harris

County court and have the racist, unenforceable restriction removed from her deed – without having to pay a filing fee or other administrative court costs. Morales Shaw, the District 148 representative who serves part of Garden Oaks, was among the 177 state legislators who voted to pass Senate Bill 30 during the biennial Texas Legislature session that concluded earlier this week in Austin. She was a sponsor of the bill along See Legislation, P. 5A

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Morales Shaw

Love for Mr. Davis

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New park opens in Heights area By Landan Kuhlmann landan@theleadernews.com The Houston Parks Board announced Friday that Bayou Greenways Park has opened to the public at the intersection of White Oak Bayou Greenway and the Heights Hike and Bike Trail. Part of the Bayou Greenways 2020 Project aimed at transforming underutilized land along Houston’s major waterways into linear parks, the parks board said in a news release that the new park will “provide an oasis for the highly used trails along White Oak Bayou.” The 1.47-acre space is framed by woodland on the southwest and a line of sycamore trees along the northeast, and includes a broad grass knoll that offers views of the Downtown Houston skyline. “I congratulate the Houston Parks Board on another important park addition to the Bayou Greenways network,” Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said in the news release. “The new park provides another opportunity for Houstonians to enjoy the outdoors.” The Bayou Greenways Park will feature trail connections to the White Oak Bayou Greenway and Heights Hike and Bike Trail as well as views of White Oak Bayou from an overlook and shaded boardwalk area. There will also be a trailhead and parking lot located at 1648 Studemont St. in the Heights. Additional attractions of the park include eating areas with custom benches and brick-clad seating walls, bike racks and plantings of native trees, wildflowers and bioswale. “The opening of the beautiful new Bayou Greenways Park is another example of the united effort to make Houston one of the nation’s most park accessible cities,” Houston Parks and Recreation Department interim director Kenneth Allen said.

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INSIDE.

Keep composting. A weekly composting event in the Heights has been extended.

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Summer nights. The First Saturday Arts Market is shifting to evenings for the summer.

Photo from gofundme.com Longtime Travis Elementary crossing guard John Davis, right, takes a break to have a photo taken with a young student.

Travis community rallies around crossing guard

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By Adam Zuvanich azuvanich@theleadernews.com

Wolf of 20th Street. Wolf Capital Partners has big plans for the property at 742 E. 20th St.

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In need of a home. Pet columnist Dear Tabby writes about Addison’s disease.

Heather Easterly’s daughter has walked to and from Travis Elementary for the last six years, developing a twiceper-day routine involving the school’s longtime crossing guard. In the morning and again in the afternoon while school was in session, John Davis would greet Easterly’s daughter with a hello, a friendly smile and sometimes a high five. They would engage in conversation, too, with Davis taking an interest in the Heights-area fifth grader and brightening her mood with words of encouragement and “great energy,” according to Easterly. Her daughter is so fond of Davis that she once made him a birthday card to tell him how much she appreciated him. “He really is the heart of the school,” Easterly said. Generations of Travis students and their families have had a heavy heart for the last two weeks, and current students such as Easterly’s daughter have missed seeing Davis at the intersection of Omar Street and Florence Street. According to a GoFundMe page set up May 20 by Andrea

French, the president of the Travis PTA, Davis suffered a medical emergency and is fighting to recover. As of Wednesday morning, more than 380 people had donated more than $32,500 to the online GoFundMe account (www.gofundme.com/f/we-love-mr-davis) to help Davis and his family cover medical expenses. Nearly two dozen donors also wrote heartfelt messages about Davis and their interactions with him, with some saying they love him. “Our community is known for pulling together when someone is in need,” French said. The Houston ISD press office did not grant requests to interview Travis principal Tom Day or a member of Davis’ family. The office also did not answer emailed questions about Davis and his employment with the district. A spokesperson for the Houston Fire Department said it was dispatched to a call regarding an unconscious man on the ground near Travis, located at 3311 Beauchamp St. in Woodland Heights, at about 7 a.m. May 18. HFD’s Emergency Medical Services (EMS) arrived to find a bystander See Davis, P. 5A

Timbergrove honors late Heights Mobil employee By Betsy Denson betsy@theleadernews.com

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THE INDEX. Church....................................................... 4A Classifieds.............................................. 5A Coupons. ................................................. 3B Food/Drink/Art................................... 7A Obituaries.............................................. 4B Opinion. ................................................... 3A Public Information......................... 2A Puzzles...................................................... 3A

Photo from Houston Parks Board Bayou Greenways Park recently opened near Studewood Street (road at left) and White Oak Bayou in the Heights.

Photo by Betsy Denson Lisa Mills’ sister, Cheryl Hicks, stands in front of a memorial bench dedicated to Mills on the Sinclair Elementary campus Tuesday as Timbergrove residents Courtnie Hays, right, and Adrienne Thorp look on.

Lisa Mills was beloved in the community where she worked. The former clerk and right-hand woman to Heights Mobil Car Care owner Heather Mouzourakis, Mills died last fall due to complications from lupus. But she is still remembered every day by those who loved her – and a new memorial at Sinclair Elementary will be a more tangible reminder of her sphere of influence. A buddy bench bearing Mills’ name was recently installed at the school with an outdoor library soon to follow. The tribute is a result of $300 in donations from the Timbergrove community, spearheaded by resident and Mobil customer

Courtnie Hays. That money was matched by the Sinclair PTO. A dedication of the bench and a celebration of Mills’ life took place Tuesday and was attended by her family and co-workers as well as Hays and PTO members, including PTO president Adrienne Thorp. Mills’ sister, Cheryl Hicks, said that although Mills did not have children, she served as a mother to everyone. “She was that aunt,” Hicks said. “Whatever anybody needed, she would get it, school supplies and clothes.” Hays remembered Mills’ sense of humor and the way she was invested in the lives of the customers who soon became her friends. See Mills, P. 5A

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