FEBRUARY 23, 2022 BROADBAND
STATE WRESTLING
Hays County looks to expand broadband access.
Tigers send 12 to state tournament in Cypress; three place..
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News-Dispatch
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HaysNewsDispatch.com
Vol. 42 • No. 22
Serving Hays County, TX
Regenerative development denied by DS Council BY MEGAN WEHRING
DRIPPING SPRINGS — A proposal for a more sustainable neighborhood development was turned down by the Dripping Springs City Council on Tuesday. The project, Zoe Life Center, is a regenerative neighborhood development with a holistic ecological mindset with spaces for
living, co-working, comZoe Life Center is a regenerative munity and organic food production in one location. neighborhood development with The moratorium waiver a holistic ecological mindset with request, which was brought before the city council, spaces for living, co-working, was also associated with a community and organic food development agreement application for a mixed-use production in one location. development for approxUnit Equivalents],” said imately 100 single-family ed at 1111 Hays Country Avril Johnnidis, developer. homes, nine multi-family Acres Road. units and 10,000 square feet “What we have proposed of commercial space locat- is actually in LUE’s [Living DS SAYS NO TO ZOE, 10
Podium finish for Tigers at state meet Lady Tigers swim team earns bronze
DS extends development moratorium BY MEGAN WEHRING
BY WAYLAND D CLARK Dripping Springs swimming and diving team made the short trip to Austin where qualifiers competed in the UIL State Swimming and Diving Championships on the UT Campus with preliminaries last Friday and the Championships on Saturday. Dripping Springs boys and girls competed in eight events on Saturday including diving and brought home a bronze medal in the Girls 400 yard Freestyle Relay which was the 23rd of 24 events of the day on Saturday. Anna Hoskovec competed in the 500 yard freestyle, and the 200 and 400 yard freestyle relays on Friday and Saturday. When she took the start block in the third leg of the Championship Final in the 400 yard freestyle relay, the sophomore and automatic qualifier, had already swam the equivalent of 18 lengths of a football field and still had 400 yards more to go. The 400 yard free relay was one of the final events of the day and the first of four legs of the race started with Athena Turner a junior, then freshman Macie McCurry swimming next followed by Hoskovec and senior Riley Dalton, who swam fastest with a 53.20 on the final leg. The team won the bronze finishing with a time of 3:34.44, which was .08 ahead of the
90-day extension
PHOTO BY WAYLAND D. CLARK, WFOTOS.COM
Dripping Springs’ team of (L-R) junior Athena Turner, freshman Macie McCurry, sophomore Anna Hoskovec and senior Riley Dalton proudly display their bronze medals won in the Girls 400 yard freestyle relay with a time of 3:34.44, which was .08 ahead of the fourth place team time of 3:34.52.
fourth place team time of 3:34.52. The same team of Turner, McCurry, Hoskovec and Dalton barely came up short of a bronze medal in the 200-yard freestyle relay with a time of 1:38.43, less than a half a second behind the third place finisher’s 1:38.13 mark. Dripping Springs' girls competing were sophomores Audrey Wilson in diving and swimmer Anna Hoskovec who were automatic qualifiers, and joined by Athena Turner, Macie McCurry, and Riley Dalton. Boys competing for Drip were Colin O’Conner, Gage Hembree, Joseph Parsons, Aidan Jones, Wyatt Johnson and Nolan Granger. Coco Proctor who competed in the 100 yard Breaststroke represented the Wimberley Texans. Wilson, who dives at UT, attributes her improvement to maturity and practice, “I just love diving, and I hope we can get more people on the team – it’s so much fun.” Competing in the Finals as a freshman in 1 meter diving last year, Wilson improved on her total score this year moving up from eleventh place 274.15 to seventh place 392.60, setting a school record. UIL Swimming and Diving State Meet Qualifiers and Results including Heat Sheets and results for 5A and 6A can be found on the University Interscholastic League website at uiltexas.org
With ponytail up, Dripping Springs’ sophomore Audrey Wilson exhibits perfect form midair in this forward dive with two somersaults. Wilson set a school record with a total of 392.60 in 1 meter diving at the UIL State Swimming and Diving Meet.
Dripping Springs’ Anna Hoskovec takes a breath while competing in the Girls 500 Yard Freestyle event last Friday at the UIL State Swimming and Diving Championships. Hoskovec and teammates Athena Turner, Macie McCurry and Riley Dalton won the bronze medal in the Girls 400 yard freestyle relay in the Finals on Saturday.
OBITUARIES – Page 6
The News-Dispatch Barton Publications, Inc. The News-Dispatch (USPS 011-401) published weekly by Barton Publications, Inc., P.O. Box 339, Buda, TX 78610. Periodicals postage paid at Buda, TX 78610 and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Barton Publications, Inc., P.O. Box 339, Buda, TX 78610. ISSN#1087-9323
DRIPPING SPRINGS — The city of Dripping Springs will undergo its development moratorium for an additional 90 days. At its Feb. 15 meeting, the Dripping Springs City Council approved the extension that will last through May 21. The moratorium will continue to affect permits for new development of subidvisions, site planning, land use and construction in the city limits and the extraterritorial jurisdiction (ETJ) — this relates to both residential and commercial projects. A waiver or exception will have to be approved for a project to move forward. While the moratorium extension did get the green light, not all council members were in agreement. Council members Taline Manassian, Wade King and April Harris Allison voted in favor. But council member Sherrie Parks voted against and council member Geoffrey Tahuahua abstained. Harris Allison questioned the effectiveness of a 90-day window. “If the comprehensive plan is not going to be done until december,” Harris Allison asked, “where does another 90 days get us with regards to the comprehensive plan?” The extension gives the city extra time to assess the comprehensive plan; review the policies for accepting permit applications for development; and update the city’s requirements and processes for wastewater and transportation infrastructure. “In 90 days, I think we would be in a better position to negotiate a development
MORATORIUM, 10