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‘His life and legacy will live on’: Community remembers Jimmie C. Edwards during memorial service

Community members and public officials gathered at the Montgomery County Veterans Memorial Park on May 2 to remember the life and legacy of veteran Jimmie C. Edwards, the park’s founder and former county judge.

Some context: Edwards, who died March 31, was a Vietnam veteran, served as Montgomery County judge and state representative, and founded the Montgomery County Veterans Memorial Commission, which oversees the park.

Quote of note: “I just want to thank Jimmie and the Edwards family and also the commission that stood behind Jimmie during all of his vision to make sure that this place is what it is today,” state Rep. Will Metcalf said. “This is only the beginning. The best is yet to come. Although our founder and our spokesperson is no longer with us, his life and legacy will live on for many decades to come.”

 
In Your Area
Omni Construction Services launches Omni HomeWorks 

According to an April 23 release, Omni Construction Service announced it launched Omni HomeWorks, a new service focused on small repairs, maintenance and everyday home needs. Omni Construction Services is a family-owned contractor serving The Woodlands, Conroe and Montgomery.

The details: Per the release, while Omni Construction Services has built a reputation for full-scale remodeling and construction projects, Omni HomeWorks was created in response to a growing demand from homeowners who wanted quality help for smaller jobs.

Quote of note: “Over the years, we’ve had so many people reach out needing help with repairs that felt too small for a full construction project but still important to their home,” Pete Ringo Jr. said. “Omni HomeWorks is our way of showing up for those needs with the same care, professionalism, and attention to detail we’re known for.”

 
Across The Region
Greater Houston struggling to keep up with growing demand for childcare

Forty-four ZIP codes in the Greater Houston area have childcare deserts, with 28 of those ZIP codes designated as chronic childcare deserts, according to April 9 data released by the research and advocacy nonprofit Children at Risk.

The 2026 analysis shows childcare facilities tend to open in areas where it is already attainable, whereas more rural and low-income regions are overlooked.

Zooming in: An area is considered a childcare desert when the number of children under six years old with working parents surpasses the number of childcare providers by three times in a certain ZIP code, according to Children at Risk’s website. A ZIP code becomes chronic once it is listed as a childcare desert for three sequential years.

The bottom line: During the 2026 Children at Risk’s child care desert April 13 press conference, Santrice Jones-Hare, director of the Greater Houston Strong Start Alliance at Children at Risk, said Houston’s overall childcare quality has improved; however, families' ability to access that care remains an obstacle.

 
Latest Education News
51K low-income students to receive Texas Education Freedom Account funding

More than 53,000 students will be invited to join Texas’ education savings account program this week, the state comptroller’s office said May 4.

The details: Families will be notified by email between May 4-6 if they were awarded funds in the second round of the Texas Education Freedom Accounts program, per a news release from the comptroller’s office.

To date, nearly 96,000 students have been selected to participate, with these students set to receive about $820 million of the $1 billion state lawmakers allocated for the program, an agency spokesperson said. Of the 53,000 second-round awardees, over 51,000 are from low-income families. The other 2,000 students accepted this week were found to qualify for disability-related funding, the agency said.

The background: Families accepted to the TEFA program will receive state funds to send their children to private schools or homeschool them for the 2026-27 school year.

Proponents of the new program have said it will expand educational opportunities, while critics have expressed concerns that the program will unfairly benefit students already enrolled in private schools.

 

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