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League City dog park reopens after 2-week closure

The Bark Park at Lynn Gripon Park at Countryside reopened April 27 after being closed since April 13 while city crews installed a new irrigation system.

Why it matters: The city pursued the upgrades to support healthier grass, new trees and a better space for dogs to play, while also helping reduce seasonal ground cracking during hot, dry summers, according to previous reporting from Community Impact

According to visitors: Roger Gray said while the park was closed, he took his 8-month-old dog, Biggio, named after the retired Astros player, to Walter Hall Park, located at 807 SH 3 N., League City, and let her swim out of the boat ramp, but said his dog enjoys the Bay Area Avenue park’s areas shaded by trees. 

Suzanne Reader said she took her dog Ducky to other parks, but said she missed the convenience of being close to her “home base.”

 
On The Business Beat
Wellness-driven water technology brand expands to Baybrook Mall

NECOA, a brand that sells advanced filtration systems, is expanding its footprint in Texas. 

What we know: The Korean premium water care brand announced in an April 20 news release that it is expanding its showrooms in Texas with locations in Austin, The Woodlands and the Bay Area. 

NECOA uses purification technology and a 5-stage filtration system to filter out over 80 contaminants, such as heavy metals, through a certified reverse osmosis process, the release states. 

One more thing: The new showroom at Baybrook Mall will open in May, but a temporary outdoor activation on the Lawn at Baybrook Mall is now available for residents to view. 

  • 500 Baybrook Mall, Friendswood

 
Latest News
After first quarter of 2026, CenterPoint Energy on track to achieve 2026 goals

CenterPoint Energy has made key first-quarter progress in reaching milestones tied to the company’s Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative, according to an April 17 news release from the company.

Digging deeper: Launched after Hurricane Beryl, the initiative is a multiyear effort to strengthen resilience and improve reliability for its 2.9 million electric customers, and to help build the most resilient coastal grid in the nation, according to the release. 

Quote of note: “We are proud of the progress made in 2025 which helped deliver more than 100 million fewer outage minutes when compared to 2024, and we are determined to make even more progress in 2026 as we work toward our defining goal: building the nation's most resilient coastal grid,” said Nathan Brownell, CenterPoint's vice president of Resilience and Capital Delivery, in the release.

 
On The Transportation Beat
TSA PreCheck Touchless ID now available at IAH, Hobby Airport

TSA PreCheck Touchless ID is now available at George Bush Intercontinental Airport, or IAH, and William P. Hobby Airport, giving eligible travelers another way to move through security, according to an April 23 news release from Houston Airports.

What you need to know: The system "enhances security screening by using facial comparison technology to verify identity faster and more efficiently," the news release notes.

Enrolled travelers with participating airlines can move through dedicated lanes at Hobby Airport and at IAH TSA Checkpoints Terminal A-North, Terminal C-North and Terminal E.

More details: Passengers must meet the following requirements to be eligible for TSA Precheck Touchless ID:

  • Have TSA PreCheck
  • Have an active airline profile with a participating airline
  • Upload valid passport information to their airline profile

Eligible passengers will see a TSA PreCheck Touchless ID indicator on their mobile boarding pass.

 
Latest Education News
42K families awarded funds in first round of Texas Education Freedom Accounts

Some Texas families began learning April 22 if they were accepted to the state’s education savings account program for the 2026-27 school year, officials said.

The big picture: Over 42,600 students will receive funding notices through April 24, the state comptroller’s office announced April 22. The first awardees include low- and middle-income students with disabilities and their eligible siblings.

Families accepted to the Texas Education Freedom Accounts program will receive state funds to send their children to private school or homeschool them.

The details: The first round of awardees is set to receive about $400 million of the $1 billion allocated for the program. Up to 100,000 students are expected to qualify for the program's first year.

The comptroller's office will run a lottery the week of April 27 to determine which low-income students will be accepted based on a prioritization system.

Stay tuned: Families that do not qualify for funding will also be notified through April 24. Additional students will receive funding awards in the coming weeks, a program spokesperson said.

 

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