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H H H H H YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER SINCE 1960 H H H H H

The       Record TheRecordLive.com

Vol. 51 No. 41 Week of Wednesday, January 11, 2012

The Penny Record of Bridge City and Orangefield • Founded 1960

Good things for BC after Ike flood Abortions in Texas will likely require sonagrams

David Ball

For The Record

After a long wait, Bridge City residents will soon see most of their streets repaired that were damaged from Hurricane Ike.

The Bridge City City Council met Tuesday night for a quarterly workshop to receive an update and to discuss grant projects from the Texas General Land Office. City Manager Jerry Jones said the round one of funding listed more

projects than the city requested and all were not completed. “We had projects that were set aside and we had projects we had to do,” Jones said. Some of those “had to do” projects included installing generators, starting street

work and identifying leaks in the sewer system. Jones reported there is $1 million left over to repair the majority of streets in the city using hot mix and chip seal. Chip sealing will begin when the weather warms up. All streets should

McAlpin BCCC ‘Employee of the Month’

Staff Report

For The Record

AUSTIN— A Texas abortion law passed last year that requires doctors to show sonograms to patients can be enforced the Associated Press reported. While opponents challenge the measure in court, a federal appeals court said Tuesday in a ruling that signaled the judges believe the law is constitutional. Gov. Rick Perry, on the presidential campaign trail in South Carolina, praised the court’s decision. “Today’s ruling is a victory for PERRY all who stand in defense of life,” Perry said. “Every life lost to abortion is a tragedy, and this important sonogram legislation ensures that every Texas woman seeking an abortion has all the facts about the life she is carrying, and understands the devastating impact of such a life-ending decision.” When the state would begin enforcing the law was not immediately clear. A spokesman for the attorney general’s office said the matter was under review. The group that brought the case, the Center for Reproductive Rights, could appeal the ruling. It did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a temporary order against enforcing the law and then went further to advise U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks how he should ultimately rule in the case. Chief Judge Edith H. Jones used her opinion to systematically dismantle the argument that the Texas law infringes on the free speech rights of doctors and patients, the key argument against the law. “The required discloABORTIONS SEE PAGE 3A

Inside The Record • SHERLOCK BREAUX Page..................... 4A • Obituaries Page......................7A •Dicky Colburn Fishing..................1B •Outdoors Weekly Chuck Uzzle..........5B • CHURCH NEWS Page......................7B • CLASSIFIED ADS Page......................8B

be completed in a year-and-ahalf time. Another $1 million is to be used for sewer plant repairs after it experiROCCAFORTE enced salt water intrusion. The city is waiting to receive the go ahead for bids. City workers have begun working on manhole tops and will then start pipe bursting. Round 2, Phase 1 funding was restricted to low to moderate income areas. The city had to certify sections of the town met the criteria through BRIDGE CITY PAGE 3A

VA office wants Facebook for vets Penny LeLeux For The Record

Monday, at Orange County Commissioners’ Court the Veterans’ Service Officer was authorized access to the Facebook network. “The VA and all the clinics and hospitals have all gone to Facebook,” said Gene Smith. “That’s their way of communicating right Bridge City Chamber Ambassador Shirley Zimmerman is pictured with Employee of the Month, Orangefield High School Principal Shaun now, to us and McAlpin. to the public.” Smith said they Employee of the Month at the scientious, high-energy, fair, summers for the district in Staff Report DUBOSE need the access For The Record January monthly Networking consistent and a good Chris- their work program between in order to keep abreast of evcoffee hosted by Orangefield tian role-model for young peo- his junior and senior year of The Bridge City Chamber of High School and presented at ple, those are the words that high school, served as an of- erything going on in the VA community. Commerce presented Shaun the Orangefield-Cormier Mu- describe McAlpin, this fice aide his senior year, and “I haven’t been on the proMcAlpin, high school princi- seum located on FM 105 in months recipient. was a 1996 OHS graduate. He gram, I have no idea what it pal with the Orangefield Inde- Orangefield. McAlpin has deep roots in does,” said Smith. He said until pendent School District as the MCALPIN PAGE 2A Steadfast, dependable, con- Bobcat Territory. He worked he looked at Facebook and evaluated it, he only wanted access for him and his assistant. County Commissioner Precinct 3 John Dubose moved to staying the district court’s court’s interim redistricting maps, the Supreme Court pre- plans. The district court’s in- give Smith the access and the vented 2012 legislative and terim redistricting plans whol- discretion to decide who uses congressional elections from ly disregarded the will of the it at the office. COUNTY BUSINESS PAGE 2A proceeding under the district Texas Legislature.

Abbott attends Supreme Court on Texas’ redistricting

BCISD observes School Recognition Month

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott

Staff Report

For The Record

WASHINGTON, D.C.— Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott today attended oral argument before the U.S. Supreme Court, which granted the State’s emergency stay request after a federal district court improperly redrew redistricting maps enacted by the Texas Legislature. The State of Texas is urging the Supreme Court to overturn the interim map order and reinstate the State’s duly enacted maps until the preclearance process concludes. “The Texas Attorney General’s Office is committed to ensuring that Texas elections are conducted using legally enact-

ed redistricting maps,” Attorney General Abbott said. “No court has, at any time, found anything unlawful about the redistricting maps passed by the Texas Legislature. It is judicial activism at its worst for judges to draw redistricting maps of their own choosing despite no finding of wrongdoing by the State of Texas. The court-drawn maps, which give no deference to Texas’ duly enacted legislative plans, cannot be allowed to stand.” In early December, the U.S. Supreme Court granted Texas’ request for a stay of the interim redistricting plans imposed by a federal district court for the Texas Senate, Texas House of Representatives and U.S. House of Representatives. By

Texans benefit every day from the tireless work and countless hours dedicated by a group of more than 7,300 men and women in communities across the state. These public servants are elected to serve by local constituents and receive no compensation for their efforts. These men and women are the school board members of Texas. January is School Board Recognition Month and Bridge City ISD will take this opportunity to thank these local leaders for devoting time to support public education and serve our local schools. The board members serving Bridge City ISD are: Mark Anderson, Thad Hill, Kirk Ellender, Jerry McInnis, Rebecca Rutledge, Lon Hubbard and Mike Johnson.

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