Obituary: Travis Lee Perkins

Travis Lee Perkins of Flower Mound, Texas passed away on Feb. 13, 2013 at the age of 89.

Travis was born on Feb. 27, 1923 to Lem and Mary Essie Perkins in Baxter, Texas.

He is survived by his loving wife of 66 years, Cheno Genivie Perkins; daughters, Sharon Genivie Beard, Brenda Joy Wells and Deborah Janice Perkins; son, Travis Duane Perkins; grandchildren, Sonja Brune Herrera, Sheree Brune, Clinton Williams, Bretton Hopkins, Bart Macmanus, Travis Macmanus, Sabrina Macmanus; and 14 great-grandchildren. He is also survived by his brother Lem Treman Perkins and sisters Mary Lou Tapley, Evelyn Dubberly, and Odie Vee Hickman.

He was preceded in death by his parents, and sister Veltus Perkins.

Visitation will be held on Feb. 19, 2013 from 5-7 p.m. at Huckabee/Tomlinson funeral home in Malakoff. Service will be held on Feb. 20, 2013 at 11 a.m. at First Assembly of God in Malakoff with the Rev. Tommy Hayes officiating.

In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to the Wounded Warriors, Fisher House, or any charity of your choice.

Online condolences can be made at www.tomlinsonfuneral.com.

Nichols files legislation to help water customers

waterThree different times since 2007, Henderson County residents have battled what they called unfair water and sewer rate hikes by investor-owned utilities, often fighting a system that seems geared toward supporting the big guys.

Now, customers could be getting some help thanks to legislation filed last week by State Senators Robert Nichols (who represents Henderson County) and Kirk Watson.

The two senators co-authored a bill that would “ensure that customers have an advocate in cases over excessive rates.”

The legislation reflects the work of Senate subcommittees led by Senators Nichols and Watson in 2012. These subcommittees held hearings on steep increases in water and sewer rates that were imposed by investor-owned utilities. The policy recommendations regarding these rapidly escalating water and sewer rates, reflected in S.B. 567, will bring relief to Texans living in rural and unincorporated areas of the state.

The legislation:

  • Transfers economic regulation of water and sewer utilities from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUC);
  • Establishes IOU classifications based on number of connections; and
  • Gives the Office of Public Utility Counsel (OPUC) authority to intervene in water rate cases on behalf of residential and small commercial customers.

This is the fourth consecutive Legislative session that Nichols has tried to change the system.

“There is no incentive under the law for (water utilities) to ask for a reasonable rate or to settle quickly,” he told me in 2011. “I am trying to create an incentive.”

Henderson County has been at the forefront in the battle between consumers and water utilities, with area residents fighting rate increase requests by Monarch Utilities Inc. (twice) and Lakeshore Utility Company.

The Lakeshore battle saw a judge grant interim rates for the first-time ever in September 2010, and the Monarch battle gave rise to the grassroots group Texans Against Monopolies Excessive Rates (TAMER), which has grown into a powerful lobbying organization.

TAMER Chairman Orville Bevel said, “Of course we are happy the bill has been filed and we will be working with the legislature to get it passed.”

TVCC Sports Notes: Softball on a roll

By Benny Rogers, TVCC Sports Information

The Lady Cardinals have reeled off five straight wins, which is one short of tying the school record.

Coach Ashley Johnston’s squad is 10-4 on the season after sweeping Grayson and Grambling State in doubleheaders Friday and Saturday at Cain Park. The Lady Cardinals defeated Grayson 3-1 and 10-1 and Grambling State 4-3 and 4-1.

Against Grayson, Erica Jordan and Shelby Eddington had two hits each in Game 1, Eddington had two doubles. In the second game, collecting two hits each were Melissa Boland, Jazmine Hicks, Taylor Wilson and Thomas. Boland slammed a walk-off grand slame home run, ending the game via the eight-run rule. The top hitter was Andrea Sitter, who went 3-for-3 with two RBI and two stolen bases.

Jordan went 3-for-3 in the first win against Grambling State. Chyna Phipps went 2-for-3. In the second game, Melissa Billingsley and Wilson had two hits each and Jordan Olivares and Chantelle Whitehead one each. Olivares had a triple and Wilson a double.

The Lady Cardinals are scheduled to be at home today in doubleheader action against North Central Texas. Action starts at Cain Park at 1 p.m.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

The No. 1-ranked Lady Cardinals outscored Jacksonville 31-7 in a 10-minute stretch in the second half Saturday afternoon to pull away for a 76-57 win.

The Lady Cardinals, 26-1 overall and 13-0 in conference, trailed 28-27 at the half.

Krystle Henderson led a balanced Lady Cardinal scoring effort with 16 points. Savannah Carter had 14, followed by Shannon Smith and Victoria Wells with 12 each and Roddricka Patton and Adut Bulgak with 11 each.

The Lady Cardinals hit 26 of 30 free throws.

The Lady Cardinals now close the regular season with three straight games at Cardinal Gym, where they have won 41 straight games. First up is Angelina at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Wednesday’s game is the only game for the Lady Cardinals this week. They observe an open date Saturday.

MEN’S BASKETBALL

The Cardinals, 16-10 and 7-8, are scheduled to return to action Wednesday at Carthage against Panola. Game time is 7 p.m.

The next home game for Coach Kris Baumann’s squad, which had Saturday off, is Saturday against Paris at 4 p.m.

ON THE AIR

Wednesday’s Lady Cardinal game against Angelina will be webcast by the Cardinal Sports Network at www.tvcc.edu. Pregame programming begins at 5:20 p.m.

Saturday’s Cardinal game against Paris will also be webcast. Pregame programming starts at 3:50 p.m.

Brad Smiley discusses this year’s football recruiting class on the current edition of “Cardinal Weekly.” Check it out.

Obituary: Ina Lou Stephens

Ina Lou Stephens
Ina Lou Stephens

Services for Ina Lou Stephens, 87, of Athens, are scheduled for 2 p.m. Sunday Feb. 17, 2013 at County Line Baptist Church of Athens, with Bro. Mark Parkerson officiating, under the direction of Eubank Funeral Home, Canton.

Burial will be in Oaklawn Memorial Park, Athens.

She passed away Feb. 14, 2013 in Athens.

Mrs. Stephens was born Nov. 9, 1925 in Athens to R. L. and Luvester Loller Parrott.

She was a member of the County Line Baptist Church of Athens. She was married to Luther Stephens for 52 years before his passing in 1998. She loved baking brownies for her great-grandkids. She loved reading, her church and gospel music. She also enjoyed traveling and having her family around her.

Surviving are daughter, Shirley and Glenn Wallick of Amarillo; daughter, Marylin and Tom Elwood of Naples, Fla.; daughter, Cathie and Dan Godwin of Athens; sister, Colleen Parrott of Athens; five grandchildren, Kevin Wuest, Jeff Wallick, Scott Wallick, Leah Rayburn, Stacy Mills; five great-grandchildren; other relatives and friends.

Ina Lou was preceded in death by her parents; husband Luther Stephens; daughter Glenda Aldridge; brother Buford Parrott; brother John Louis Parrott.

Family will receive friends Saturday 6-8 p.m. at the Carroll-Lehr Funeral Home in Athens.

Sen. Robert Nichols: My five cents

Press release from State Sen. Robert Nichols

This week the pace at the Legislature picked up as almost all Senate committees are now meeting and House committees were announced. Bills now begin the long process of being referred and then heard in committee. The legislative process kills more bills than it passes, which I consider a good thing. Only the best legislation that has survived the hearing process and has had significant public input should become law.

Five things that happened this week at your Texas Capitol are:

1. Safe passage bill for highway and construction workers

On Wednesday, I filed Senate Bill 510 to require motorists near stopped highway or construction vehicles- with lights activated- to either vacate the lane closest to the highway maintenance/construction vehicle or slow down. This bill is intended to create safer highways for both motorists and workers.

As a former Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) Commissioner, I believe that safety should be a top priority. These men and women are at risk every time they put on their orange vests and work on our roads.

There is already a ‘move-over/slow-down’ law to protect emergency vehicles such as police, EMS and fire trucks. Tow trucks are even protected. This bill will simply offer the same protection to our state highway workers.

Since 1938, 101 TxDOT employees have been killed while working within the work zone or on the shoulder of a roadway. Seven of these fatalities were within the last 10 years, with two occurring in August and September of 2008.

Even one preventable death is too many. In my opinion, this legislation is past due and I look forward to seeing it passed into law.

2. State water outlook

In 2011, Texas suffered one of the worst droughts in state history, which we are still recovering from today. As horrible as it was, this drought helped bring attention to the even larger problem of Texas’ projected long-term water shortage as the state’s population continues to increase.

This week Senator Troy Fraser presented a bill dealing with state water resources to the Natural Resources Committee. Senate Bill 4 would create the State Water Implementation Fund of Texas (SWIFT) to provide a fund to finance projects in the State Water Plan. There will be an emphasis on conservation, reuse and rural projects.

This will go a long way towards funding our 50 year water plan and I predict SB 4 will be a “bill to watch” this session.

3. Senate Transportation Committee’s first meeting

This week was also the first Transportation Committee meeting of Session. As chair, I emphasized my goals for the coming months. I believe it is important to move people and goods safely, effectively and efficiently. I am hopeful that as we consider legislation this session, we will keep this mission in mind. Additionally, I plan to work with state leadership to fundamentally fix our long-term funding for transportation.

4. Texas Electric Cooperatives at the Capitol

On Wednesday, representatives of electric cooperatives from across the state came to the Capitol to discuss legislative issues important to them. Electric cooperatives are unique from other power providers because they are tax-paying, not-for-profit businesses owned by the consumers they supply.

Senate District 3 is served by eight different cooperatives, each with their own board of directors, general manager and employees. They are integral parts of the communities in which they operate.

5. Governor’s appointments

Having served six years on the Senate Nominations Committee, I am very aware of the impact state boards have on Texas and I am encouraging more Senate District 3 constituents to apply for these positions. The governor is responsible for filling around 400 appointments for everything from the Animal Health Commission to the Soil and Water Conservation Board, and these decisions are then confirmed by the Senate. Our communities are blessed with so many individuals whose expertise and backgrounds could really benefit our state as a whole and I encourage you to get involved. For an application and more information, please visit www.governor.state.tx.us/appointments.