Thứ Bảy, 18 tháng 1, 2014

Austin or bust!

It's been a busy week around Lone Star headquarters.  It started Monday with the packed earthquake meeting in Azle.  Several local activists showed up to catch the residents up on HOW you save YOUR town.  Several new local activists joined the ranks on Monday.

They will be on a bus headed to Austin to show down with the Railroad Committee on January 21st.  YOU need to be on that bus. 

Then there was the fiasco with one of the drillers and his so called "credentials".  His spin didn't sit well with the author or anyone else.

There's also a Flaming Faucet Fundraiser for Lon Burnam at the Lipsky house.  Bring your burning questions.

You can also about the updated contaminated Lipsky well happenings in the Houston Chronicle.

Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 1, 2014

Did they just say that?

Did the notoriously weak on all city matters, "news" paper just go after the DA office and the PD?

We had to read it to believe it.

But if there is new evidence, the residents of Fort Worth have a right to know what it is. After all, serious allegations have been made against members of the city’s police department.

If, on the other hand, these charges were unwarranted in the first place, the public and the officers involved have a right to know that.

We need an explanation as to why a case largely based on signed, dated documents by sworn officers, would be severely jeopardized by the unavailability or faulty memory of witnesses. And why it took more than two years to reach this conclusion.

50 years, will be too late

A letter to the editor in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram makes an excellent point.  WHO is going to answer?

Smoking and ’quakes

Two items on page 11B of Friday’s paper, one about tobacco control programs and the other on gas industry operations and earthquakes, provide a startling juxtaposition.

Fifty years ago death and disease from cigarette smoking was dismissed by defenders claiming no evidence, no scientific link. However, anecdotally we knew better. Fast forward to today and everyone — even the tobacco industry — acknowledges the dangers of using tobacco.

As reported by Mike Norman, Railroad Commissioner David Porter’s “we need facts not speculation” comment could easily be a quote from a tobacco industry defender from 50 years ago. Yet perhaps anecdotally we know better.

So can we just skip to the part where we agree gas operations cause small earthquakes? Why wait fifty years?

— Ross Bannister, Grapevine

It smells bad and it tastes bad

But the Tarrant Regional Water District says it's ok to drink.

Do YOU trust them?

Last week, the Tarrant Regional Water District switched the water supply for two treatment plants to Lake Benbrook because of maintenance work on the pipeline from the Richland-Chambers Reservoir. Also, the water line from Cedar Creek Lake was shut down Friday because of a break on the line, the news release said.

Customers bothered by the taste of the water can try adding a slice of lemon or lime or by refrigerating the water in an open container.

Thứ Tư, 8 tháng 1, 2014

The Calvary is coming...to Azle

Folks living in Azle need to get caught up on Gas Drilling 101.  The meeting held by the paid politicians didn't help at all.

So in rides some of our favorite activists to the rescue.

North Central Texas Communities Alliance in partnership with Earthworks’ Oil & Gas Accountability Project and Calvin Tillman will host their own meeting in Azle, Monday January 13th @ 6:30 at the Azle Community Center.

 Be there.  YOU can't afford not to be.

More info in the FW Weekly.

“Don’t ask questions, demand answers,” Wilson said. “Learn how. Come to the Azle Community Center on Jan 13th.”

The meeting to “force our ‘regulators’ to do their jobs and protect our property and communities” begins at 6:30 p.m. on Monday at Azle Community Center, 404 W. Main St.

Thứ Ba, 7 tháng 1, 2014

Fort Worth Star-Telegram promises to do better

The heavily biased S-T put out a long apology, after being talked about on a national radio show.

One could only hope they carry this new found sense of duty and promises into the upcoming elections.

Don't hold your breath though, they already left out candidates for many local races.  And we've all seen the drivel they write about the candidates they don't like.

The bright side is, there is something worth reading in the FWST today.

From the S-T's mild editorial mea culpa...

Blogger Maggie Mahar writes for healthinsurance.org, and in a two-part post over this past weekend she criticized the Star-Telegram for doing what she considered a poor job of fact-checking the story before publication.

Specifically, Mahar said her research showed that claims the people made concerning their efforts to get affordable insurance were exaggerated and that a Google search revealed that three of the four people quoted in the story as “losers” under Obamacare were all Tea Party members and more likely to be predisposed to find fault with the Affordable Care Act.

One of the women quoted in the story, Whitney Johnson, told us Monday that, although she is not a member of the Tea Party, her mother is the founder of the Parker County Tea Party chapter. Johnson also wrote a letter to the Concerned Women For America that appeared on the Tea Party website, in which she makes her feelings about the Affordable Care Act pretty clear.

Johnson later found affordable insurance at the healthcare website with the help of a Fort Worth broker. Tea Party members, of course, need insurance just like members of other political parties.

Knowing the background of the person quoted can give readers important clues about someone’s motives, but you didn’t learn that from reading our story, because we neglected to investigate the background of the people we quoted. That’s something you learn to do in Journalism 101. I remember my old professor saying “If your mother says she loves you … check it out.”

Thứ Sáu, 3 tháng 1, 2014

Azle, Welcome to Fort Worth

Seems many at the Public Meeting last night in Azle were surprised that it would be a meeting where questions wouldn't be answered.  Even some "news" reporters were baffled and irritated.  Have these "news" reporters never attended a meeting in Tarrant County?  This is how the dog and pony show rolls.

The Railroad Commissioner didn't get off to a good start.  Usually when you open a meeting, you introduce yourself.  And you don't say you're leaving early because you're busy and there is a football game on.

Doesn't sound like Geren made a good impression either.   Of course those in Fort Worth already know this.  Now those in Azle do.  We're thinking voters may remember this meeting when it's time to reelect these paid positions.

The FW Weekly and Fox News links are both interesting.  Clarice Tinsley getting fired up was too.  Never a dull moment in Tarrant County.

Popular Posts

Recent Posts

Categories

Unordered List

Text Widget

Được tạo bởi Blogger.