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Houston City Council delays decision on $30M abandoned building demolition project

On Dec. 17, Houston City Council opted to postpone a decision on whether to use $30 million of the city’s Storm Water Fund to demolish dilapidated buildings throughout the city.

The overview: The $30 million Houston Public Works projects would impact “dangerous buildings throughout the city,” and include assessing buildings, getting rid of asbestos, removing hazardous materials and demolishing structures. City Council considered three contracts with firms for the projects before pushing the decision to a future meeting.

Dive deeper: Each Houston City Council district has at least one building included in the work recommended by Houston Public Works. However, 86% of the buildings are located in districts B, D, I and H with the totals being:

  • 112 buildings in District B
  • 86 buildings in District D
  • 50 buildings in District I
  • 48 buildings in District H

During the meeting, multiple Houston City Council members expressed concern about whether Storm Water Funds could be used to demolish buildings.

 
On The Business Beat
Lululemon, La La Land cafe open under one roof near River Oaks

Athleisure brand Lululemon opened its latest Houston store in collaboration with coffee chain La La Land Kind Cafe, both companies announced on social media Dec. 21.

The details: The new store in the Highland Village shopping center at 4007 Westheimer Road, Ste. 100, Houston marks Lululemon's first café-in-retail experience, per the announcement.

One more thing: Located inside the Lululemon store, the La La Land coffee bar is the fourth Houston location for the Dallas-headquartered chain, according to La La Land's website. The growing chain, known for its lattes and matcha drinks, previously opened in Upper Kirby, Montrose and the Heights. 

  • 4007 Westheimer Road, Ste. 100, Houston

 
Key Information
See what grocery stores will be open, closed in Houston, Dec. 24-25

With the holiday season right around the corner, see what grocery stores in the Houston area will be open and closed Dec. 24-25. This list is not comprehensive.

Trader Joe's

  • Dec. 24: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
  • Dec. 25: Closed

Kroger
  • Dec. 24: 6 a.m.-9 p.m. (stores), 9 a.m.-4 p.m. (pharmacy)
  • Dec. 25: Closed

H-E-B
  • Dec. 24 6 a.m.-8 p.m. (stores), Closes at 5 p.m. (pharmacy),  7 a.m.-7 p.m. (curbside), 7 a.m.-6:30 p.m. (home delivery)
  • Dec. 25: closed

 
Latest News
Harris County dedicates historic downtown building honoring Sylvester Turner

A historic 20-story downtown Houston building has officially been renamed and dedicated after the late U.S. Rep and former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner on Dec. 17.

The gist: ​​​​​The Harris County Sylvester Turner Administration building is located at 1010 Lamar St., Houston, and houses Harris County’s Department of Economic Equity and Opportunity and will be the future site for members of the Harris County Attorney’s Office, according to county officials.

Quote of note: Members of Sylvester Turner’s family attended the ribbon-cutting ceremony alongside both the city of Houston and Harris County officials. His daughter Ashley Turner Captain said her father took a lot of pride working with the county.

“Thank you all so much for voting unanimously to honor my dad in this way by naming a building after him,” Captain said. “You know, he took a lot of pride in working closely with the county. That wasn't by accident. He really did feel like we needed to work together as the city of Houston and Harris County.”

 
Statewide News
State moves forward with grants to help counties install sirens after deadly floods

Central Texas counties could begin receiving up to $1.25 million each in state funding for flood warning sirens in the coming weeks and months, officials announced Dec. 16.

The overview: The funding comes less than six months after historic flooding hit parts of Central and West Texas over the July 4 weekend, killing at least 137 residents and visitors. During special legislative sessions this summer, state lawmakers approved requirements that 30 counties included in a July disaster declaration install flood warning systems with the help of $50 million in state grants.

Zooming in: Each county is expected to receive up to $1.25 million from the Texas Water Development Board. Counties seeking more money will need their requests approved by the three-member board.

Counties are required to submit detailed project plans to the TWDB and can use the grants to install physical infrastructure such as sirens, rain gauges, flood gauges and solar panels to power the warning systems. The money can also be used for local flood education, outreach and training programs, TWDB staff said. 

 

Your local team

Cassie Jenkins
Editor

Chloe Mathis
General Manager

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