DECEMBER 29, 2021 GIFT OF HEAT
TEXAS HISTORY
Local HVAC company gives deserving resident free heating services.
Stephen F. Austin’s right-hand man caused him some headaches.
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News-Dispatch HaysNewsDispatch.com
Vol. 42 • No. 14
posted Feb. 22, 2021
PHOTO COURTESY OF DSISD
While many Texans were still recovering from the Texas winter aftermath, several Dripping Springs students stepped up to help their fellow neighbors in several ways big or small. Dripping Springs Elementary second-grader Adelynn Pritchett helped her church clear out broken tree limbs in several neighborhoods and distribute water. Dripping Springs sophomore Logan Husch and eighth-grader Tyler Husch spent a few hours showing their support to the hardworking H-E-B employees by lending a hand to wrangle carts in the parking lot. DSISD students Brielle, Boston and Berklee Novickas (left) helped their church distribute free Chick-Fil-A sandwiches to members of the Dripping Springs community.
Serving Hays County, TX
posted March 10, 2021
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE BAXTER FAMILY Dripping Springs sisters Grace and Faith Baxter saw too many families trying to survive on a strict food budget, so they started working toward bridging the gap. In 2020, they provided more than 52,000 meals to families, which equals 9,600
pounds of beef and pork. There are other food assistance programs throughout the city of Dripping Springs, yet Center of the Plate is one of the only services that offers high-quality protein sources, according to Faith. The Baxters operated
their program at the Dripping Springs Presbyterian Church. Looking into the future of Center of the Plate, Grace said that she wants to see the next generation of 4-H and Future Farmers of America (FFA) students more involved.
A look back at 2021
posted April 17, 2021
PHOTO BY WAYLAND D. CLARK, WFOTOS.COM
Dripping Springs secured the school’s first girls soccer State Championship with a 2-1 win over Frisco Wakeland in the UIL Class 5A Final in April 2021. Dripping Springs finished the season as the Class 5A State Champion with a record of 26-1-1 and outscored all its opponents 104-8. Dripping Springs girls have now won four state championships – in Class 3A 1994 volleyball and basketball, in Class 5A 2015 volleyball and 2021 soccer.
posted July 6, 2021 The death of Dripping Springs High School lacrosse player Taden Frickel left a hole in many hearts and a lump in many throats. Taden died early in July. Frickel wasn’t known only as a lacrosse player, but was also part of a home movers business that employs high school-
ers and was involved with Life Dripping Springs church. Hundreds of people posted their condolences to the Frickel family and expressed sorrow for the loss of Taden and the story was the the most read online story for the Hays News-Dispatch and Hays Free Press website in 2021.
PHOTO BY WAYLAND D. CLARK
posted May 24, 2021
PHOTO BY WAYLAND D. CLARK, WFOTOS.COM Members of the Dripping Springs Tiger baseball team celebrate their advance to the Regional semifinals after beating the Alamo Heights Mules 1-0 in May 21 in the best of three series. They went on to beat Corpus Christi Veterans in playoffs before losing to Leander Rouse. They finished second in District, 31-12-1.
Clare Cunningham from Ireland, but now residing in Nashville, has toured all over the world. She was one of the many talented artists performing at the Dripping Springs Songwriter’s Festival in October.
posted June 15, 2021
PHOTO COURTESY OF TESPATEXAS.ORG/NEEDMORE
A Dripping Springs woman finally found a piece of herself she’s been searching her entire life for. Born in Da Nang, Vietnam in the midst of the Vietnam War, the only thing Tina Fretwell ever knew about her father was that he was an American soldier named David. It would be decades before she found anything
else — until a genealogy kit led her to her half-sisters in upstate New York. Unfortunately, Tina wasn’t able to get the chance to meet her father. He died in March 1994, just months away from his 45th birthday. In July 2021, Tina and her husband Ben still
FINDING FAMILY, 8
PUBLIC NOTICES See what’s developing in your neck of the woods.
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posted October 20, 2021 PHOTO BY WAYLAND D. CLARK Tiger football fans and fans who travel from near and far agree the catfish is some of the best in Central Texas. Brian Tuohy (above) holds a hot pan of freshly fried catfish ready to go.
It was a fight between two aquifer districts, but in the end House Bill 3405, passed in 2015, meant that a permit allowing pumpage of more than 289 million gallons of water had to be granted. A lawsuit filed by Trinity Edwards Spring Protection Association (TESPA) in early 2020 combatting the permit ended with slight oversight of the permit through 2027. In 2019, the Barton Springs Edwards Aquifer Conservation District (BSEACD) granted a well water permit to Needmore LLC. to withdraw 289,080,000 gallons of water annually, then got sued over the
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decision. Needmore, a 5,000 acreranch just outside of Wimberley, is allowed to withdraw this maximum amount of water for agricultural irrigation and wildlife use. In 2015, when House Bill 3405 passed, it gave BSEACD jurisdiction over previously unregulated portions of the Trinity Aquifer in Hays County, including Needmore’s land. HB 3405 entitled existing well owners to to use maximum production of their well. The BSEACD did not favor the requirement, but were legally bound to comply, according to a press release from BSEACD.