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Top Story
Houston ISD OKs partnerships bringing more autonomy for 4 schools

Four Houston ISD high schools and a prekindergarten program are one step closer to gaining more control over curriculum, hiring, assessments and calendars after the district’s board of managers approved a state-funded partnership initiative during a special meeting March 26.

The gist: During the March 26 meeting, HISD’s board of managers unanimously approved Senate Bill 1882 partnerships between five nonprofits, four high-performing high schools and a district pre-K program. The partnerships are slated to launch for the 2026-27 school year, but still need Texas Education Agency approval.

Quote of note: “We have several schools in this district who have earned the right to autonomy and with that, the opportunity to innovate,” HISD Superintendent Mike Miles said. “These partnerships will help our kids continue to thrive, and it will give our schools even more opportunity to change with the changing world.”

 
Coming Soon
Auto spa to open second location in Montrose

Aloha Auto Spa will open its second location in Montrose. The hand car wash and detailing shop currently has a location in The Heights.

What they offer: Aloha Auto Spa offers services from quick washes to interior detailing. Some services include:

  • Foam Cannon

  • Hand Wash

  • Interior Blow Out

  • Leather and vinyl conditioning

  • Wheel washing

  • No-streak window shine

  • Interior carpet shampoo

  • Interior surface spot removal

Officials with the car wash confirmed that the Montrose location is currently under construction and is expected to open in spring 2026.

  • 2620 W. Dallas St., Houston

 
Stay In The Know
District C residents can buy rain barrels for $10 through council member Kamin's office

District C council member Abbie Kamin is hosting the district’s annual Rain Barrel Sale, which will provide up to 150 District C residents with an opportunity to purchase a rainwater harvesting barrel at a subsidized cost of $10.

The details: The sale is for District C residents only, and participants must register to buy one. The limit is one per household, and it must be picked up between 9 a.m. and noon April 18 in Meyerland. The pick-up location will be announced at a later date.

Once signed up, Kamin’s office will verify the address and check the stock of rain barrels. If a resident is selected to purchase one, they will receive an email that will link them to buy the rain barrel. It must be bought within five business days of receiving the link or the offer will expire.

 
Metro News
Houston rental data shows more single-family homes available on the market

Houston’s single-family rental homes saw an 6.8% increase in leased properties compared to last February, according to the Houston Association of Realtors’ February Rental Market Update released March 18.

By the numbers: Alongside the higher number of leased single-family homes, the average lease price declined by 0.6% compared to last year. The number of days on market for homes, however, increased, jumping to 50 days compared to 44 days last year, per the report.

What else: The townhome and condominium market saw some movement this past month as well. There were 569 properties listed, representing a 4.2% increase from the 546 units last February. The lease price also dropped by 3.6%, and the days on market increased to 56 days, up from 52 the previous February, per the report.

 
What You May Have Missed
Seabrook restaurant reopens, Montgomery begins downtown upgrades: 5 trending stories in the Greater Houston area

Need to catch up on Community Impact’s coverage from this week? Check out five trending stories in the Greater Houston area from March 23-27.

  • 25-year old Seabrook Mexican restaurant reopened just six days after closing from strong community support

  • A ‘face-lift’ for downtown: Montgomery commencing with downtown upgrades, new plans

  • League City to consider rezoning land along League City Parkway from residential to commercial

  • Houston to return historic Freedmen’s Town bricks to the neighborhood after restoration

  • Conroe City Council ends executive contracts, approves nearly $1.85M in payouts

 

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Cassie Jenkins
Editor

Chloe Mathis
General Manager

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