Howe grad is mayor of Arlington

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He’s the mayor of the city that has the most known professional football team in the universe. One of the star players on the Dallas Cowboys is veteran Jason Witten who wears the jersey number 82 and is one of the most known players in football history. But Arlington, Texas Mayor Jeff Williams once wore the number 82 and played his games, not at the new legendary Cowboys Stadium, but at one of the oldest football stadiums in all of Texas – Bulldog Stadium in Howe.

The Leon and Linda Williams family lived in the north edge of Sherman for a specific reasons so that their three boys and a daughter could attend Howe schools. Jeff Williams, the oldest of the four started school in Howe in the fifth grade in 1970.

Williams’ class of 1977 was the first to start the tradition of the ribbon-cutting ceremony which is still a part of outgoing senior activities at the end of each year.

“Our class was really close.” said Williams. “We did a lot of good projects and actually helped start the fall festival. We also raised money to put a marquee sign in front of the high school. My dad was on the school board at that time and that was a special memory. We set records for the amount of money that a class would raise.”

Four teachers at Howe High School stood out to Williams as being major influences at his time there. Janie Finney, Pat Stewart, Bettye Mullins and Norman Bennett.

1977L.compressed-page-023 (2)“Those are just some of the examples of the quality teachers that we had.” said Williams. “When I left Howe and went to Texas Tech, I didn’t know hardly anyone, but they had prepared me very well. That was a big step to go from 48 in our graduating class to go a university of 24,000.”

Williams said that being in a small school meant that almost everyone was involved with a lot of projects and activities, which made everyone feel needed.

“I think that translated into our lives realizing that we needed to contribute to the community and the schools for our kids.” said Williams. “It taught us a lot of responsibility.”

Williams went to state in UIL speech and served as class president for several years. Those leadership skills that would later make him mayor of a major city were being honed and developed in Howe. While at Howe High, he took a test that would tell a student what they might be suited for in a career field. Williams tested high for becoming an attorney. His score was so high in math, that the school counselor, Norman Dickey, told him to consider getting an engineering degree before law school.

Williams, with his family deeply trenched in the construction business went on to get his civil engineering degree from Texas Tech and while there was elected vice president of student body.

“The reason I ran for that instead of president was because the vice president was the student lobbyist said Williams. “So I spent my senior year in Austin and Washington D.C. a whole lot.”

Seeing so much corruption in both of those high-powered capitol cities soured him in politics. But he wasn’t soured by a girl he met that year that eventually became his wife.

Soon after college, he was recruited by several engineering firms and while wanting to get married, took a job and fell in love with engineering and the building communities.

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Williams had his civil engineering fingerprints on projects such as The Ballpark in Arlington (now Globe Life Park) and Cowboys Stadium (now AT&T Stadium), Southlake Town Square, Park Central at US75 and 635, Parks Mall in Arlington. He’s also done parks projects such as River Legacy Park in Arlington and numerous others.

“I just really enjoyed it and enjoyed working with the communities and design things.” said Williams who decided not to go to law school and instead focus on his engineering career.

That career began with the Arlington based company called Graham Associates in 1984, which he later purchased in 1988. Williams has expanded locations to Frisco and Fort Worth as well as Arlington where he still gives strategic direction even while serving his term as mayor of Arlington.

It is most common for a mayor to be elsewhere employed while holding office. Former mayor of Arlington, Richard Greene, was the manager of Vandergriff Acura while serving as mayor from 1987-1997. It was Greene who reached out to Williams to recruit him along with dozen community leaders to provoke him to run for mayor of Arlington.

Williams took a few weeks to chew on the idea of whether or not it would affect his engineering firm. With the life expectancy now going up, it was a major consideration and factor of whether or not this would affect his life beyond the mayor’s office.

“I’m not interested in making a career out of being mayor.” said Williams. “I want to come in and help my community and get us moved to another level.”

Williams says that Arlington is not in bad shape, but is not to the high level that they need to be and want to be in his opinion.

“We have incredible attractions and venues here in Arlington with Six Flags, Globe Life Park and then the greatest special events center anywhere in AT&T Stadium.” said Williams. “But yet we have not attracted other entertainment venues or other businesses so to speak of to add to that and that’s been very frustrating to the leadership in Arlington. I think they thought that when AT&T Stadium was built, that they would come. And you just can’t sit back and wait on that. Other cities are too aggressive.”

Williams as an engineer with a leading engineer firm, has been asked to recruit businesses from other large cities. One of those that he just finished was Nebraska Furniture Mart in The Colony. He says it will be the largest retail store in America. Williams did all of the civil engineer work on property.

“We were also there to help sell them on the land that The Colony was wanting to locate.” said Williams.

The 1.9 million square feet project was a Warren Buffett Berkshire Hathaway project which in comparison is larger than the 1.2 million square feet Stonebriar Mall. By the way, IKEA is a trifling 200,000 square feet.

“They will draw around ten million visitors a year and will become the top tourist attraction here in the metroplex.” said Williams.

After a 400 acres purchase, Williams’ company put in all of the infrastructure so that it is ready for a future town center and a small community in itself. Nebraska Furniture Mart took up 100 acres leaving the 300 acres ready to make The Colony set to become one of the largest tax-toting cities in the country.

The Colony, with a premier piece of land, recruited Buffett to invest in their city so that they would have better police, fire and all that comes with a larger tax base.

All of those dealings and relationships, Williams found himself in attracting city leaders to recruit him and his expertise to be the front man for Arlington. After a successful campaign, he was elected mayor on May 9 and defeated incumbent Robert Cluck 10,161 votes to 7,119.

“We will be becoming very aggressive in going after businesses and bringing in jobs here to Arlington.” said Williams. “Also, we want to create more attractions in the entertainment district to once again become ‘The Entertainment Capital of Texas.’ We have the best geographic location being in the center of the metroplex and right at the entrance to DFW International Airport. All of that factors in.”

Williams also says that he wants to partner with all of the educational institutions from The University of Texas at Arlington to Tarrant County College to the school districts and private schools.

“Great cities have education as their foundation and we have let that slide and I would like that to be back on the front burner.” said Williams.

Williams also wants to partner with other surrounding cities due to the fact that North Texas is one of the top places for people to live work and play.

“The projections are that we will have three million people moving into the metroplex over the next 12 to 15 years, so that provides great opportunity.” said Williams.

As impressive as the mayor, the first lady of Arlington is also a community leader. Karen Williams is a PTA Lifetime Achievement Award winner and headed up many organizations in the school district. She’s been the president of the Arlington Martin High School Choir Booster Club as well as heading up the Education Foundation events. The family attends First Baptist Arlington and she’s been a 20-year Bible Study Fellowship leader. For the past 15 years, she has headed up the women’s ministry.

Family-photo-2As now ’empty nesters’, Jeff and Karen Williams have three children, Natalie Pollitte, Suzanne Taylor and Ryan Williams. Oldest daughter Karen is a teacher at Wylie ISD, while Suzanne is the Director of External Affairs at Texas Tech. She was the president of the student body and was recruited to come back to Tech for the position she holds. The youngest Ryan, is a senior at Tech and will graduate this August. He was president of president select which was over the academic and athletic recruiting.

As the Howe High School Class of 2015 walked off the stage on Saturday, one can only wonder which student just might be headed for tremendous success after leaving this village on top of the hill. There have been some very impressive students graduate from this small school in North Texas, however, none have gone from Bulldog Stadium to AT&T Stadium or Haning Street to Nolan Ryan Expressway.

 

Baker

Howe’s Summit Salsa gets spicy news from Kroger

A leap of faith, blind luck and a craving for salsa, Darrin Savage and his family have gone from making a batch of salsa just for kicks to finding out that their sweet peppered surprise will soon be on the shelves at 144 Kroger locations in Texas and Louisiana. Back in the summer of 2011, Savage having never made salsa before started throwing around some recipe ideas and made a batch that he says that accidentally turned out really good. After eating it at their house, they decided to take it to a church luncheon where they attend at the Howe Church of Christ. He and wife Amber didn’t say anything to anybody about the salsa at the Mexican food luncheon. It wasn’t long before everyone started talking about it and wondering where it came from.

“I was shocked because I didn’t know what I was doing. It was just luck.” said Savage.  “We told them (at the church) that we made it and then we started getting people calling us wanting orders.”

It was taking Savage two hours to make three jars after buying the ingredients, cooking it and letting it sit. He began to stay up late every night making salsa due to the demand from friends. Upon doing some research, he found that it was illegal to make it and sell it out of his home, so he decided to try to rent space in a restaurant to use their kitchen to make the salsa there. Without luck from that angle, Savage discovered copacking. A copacker is a company that manufactures and packages foods or other products for their clients. To market and distribute, a copacker works under contract with the hiring company to manufacture food as though the products were manufactured directly by the hiring company. Savage used County Fair Foods from Arlington as their copacking company. Later, they went with Renfro Foods out of Fort Worth.

His researchsummit salsa began with a simple internet search and County Fair Foods were one of the few copackers that had a website, so Savage became familiar with the program.  Savage had to visit the Arlington company and do several ‘recipe runs’ to make sure his recipe was precisely duplicated by County Fair Foods. After a month of tweaking, they sent the salsa off to a lab to verify its acidity to make sure it was shelf-stable and see how long it is shelf-stable. Once that was all approved, it was time to start ordering.

Savage, a Howe native who went kindergarten through graduation in Howe ISD, tipped his salsa hat to his roots and named the product Summit Salsa.

“When Howe was first found, it was named Summit and we really wanted somehow to include our town in our name to include in our branding. Howe Salsa just kind of sounded weird.” Savage joked. “We went with Summit Salsa Company. The people that aren’t from around here expect to see mountains on the logo, but for us locals, we all understand what that’s about.”

Summit Salsa Company has two different products available. It is a sweet salsa that has a lot of green bell pepper that makes it stand out from the others that flood the southwest salsa market. They currently offer sweet hot or sweet mild salsa, both of which are going on the shelves in the Kroger locations. Summit Salsa Company products were originally on the shelves at Diamond Food Stores and then Green Market stores.

With Savage using Renfro Foods as a copacker, he does have a nondisclosure agreement with them that protects him from anyone else copying his ratios of ingredients for the salsa.

In a uniq1074843_543322969062667_459533250_oue industry, Summit Salsa Company’s customer is the distributor (which is Jake’s Finer Foods of Houston) and not the grocery store although they want to interact with them as they are.

“We sell at wholesale price and they cut us a check.” said Savage. “As far as receiving revenue, that’s where it ends for us.”

The distributor will put a 13 percent markup on it and sell it to the grocery store, who will put their markup on it to sell it off of the shelf.

“We will work with the grocery stores to do coupon runs and in-store price reductions.”. said Savage. “We have to pay for all of that.”

When asked whether this is a highly profitable business, Savage laughingly said that he would highly discourage anyone from getting in to it.

“When I got in this, I just thought you dropped off big quantities at grocery stores and everyone is happy.” said Savage. “It’s not like that at all, but we will become profitable with this. Maybe not in the first six months to a year, because any profits made will go back into the in-store marketing, but probably starting next year, we will be profitable.”

While the salsa is exactly the same lucky mixture that was served at the Howe Church of Christ back in 2011, everything is now outsourced. Savage does however do some store deliveries to local Diamonds and Green Market stores, but for the product that will be going to Kroger shelves, he won’t see the salsa made or hauled out of the warehouse to the distributor.

“Our goal one day is to bring it back in-house, but for me being a one-man-show, this works out the best.” said Savage.

The Kroger story began with a trip to Houston by Savage and his family. They stayed there overnight and met with the buyer for Kroger. After touching base several times without trying to be too pushy, Savage went for a month without hearing anything. Recently, while sitting with his family at restaurant in Sherman, he received an email with a purchase order from the distributor. With that, he knew Kroger had bought in.

“I kind of did a little ‘woo hoo’ in the restaurant and everybody looked at me funny.” said Savage. “I didn’t care. I was excited.”

He says that his wife has been fully supportive throughout the process and it’s been a leap of faith for her wondering how long he was going to sink money into the salsa dream.

“This was validation for us that we have a good product that people like.” said Savage. “It’s not just friends and family trying to make you feel good saying we like your salsa. It’s a good product and a good price.”

The good news for The Summit Salsa Company is that once product hits the shelf and sells, it will stay on the shelf for an extraordinary amount of time.

The system is set summit salsa (2)up to weed out guys like Savage – the ‘mom and pops.’ Most people in his situation don’t go for copackers that do bigger batches so they’re not able to get their cost down. Those end up hand delivered to specialty stores. But Savage’s dream is to be a large manufacturer one day with Summit Salsa all over the country.

“We’ve got other recipes that we’re working on, but we wanted to wait until we were with a big chain to bring them to market.” said Savage. “We’ve been patient. We’ve played the game and got our cost down. We can’t compete with Pace on cost, but we can compete with anyone else.”

Summit Salsa Company is getting very close to being available in two other big named grocery stores in the south. But for now, if anyone is interested in purchasing the hometown sweet salsa, it is available at Diamonds in Van Alstyne or Green Market in Sheman.

Getting a salsa company on the shelves in the south is like trying to get wine on the shelf in Napa Valley. Everyone has a salsa or a barbecue sauce that claims to be different than the rest. Distributors and grocers have become deaf to those two products in particular. However, Savage’s product seems to be rising to the summit.

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Baker

Summer Library Programs at Howe Community Library

Howe Community Library

Summer 2015 Programs

 

Every Hero Has a Story

Crafts and Storytime – Hero theme with community heroes, superheroes, superhero training camp, and spectacular sidekicks.  Keep a reading log and earn prizes throughout the summer months.   Tuesday mornings for younger elementary students with programs geared for older children on Wednesdays.

Ages:  entering Pre-K through 2nd grade

Time: Tuesday mornings – 10-11:00

Dates:  June 9, 16, 23, 30

 

Ages:  entering 3rd-5th grades

Time:  Wednesday mornings – 10-11:00

Dates:  June 10, 17, 24  July 1

 

Unmask – Teen (and preteen) time

Thursday afternoons for big kids only!  Explore the universe of superheroes and villains.  Maybe even plan a mini comic con event!   Pick up a reading log to read and earn cool prizes throughout the summer.

Ages:  entering 5th – 8th grades

Time:  Wednesday afternoons – 2-3:00

Dates:  June 10, 17, 24  July 1

 

Wee Readers Storytime

This storytime is for babies, toddlers, and preschoolers.  Join us as we explore our world through songs, poems, puppet shows, and books.  Earn a free book after 4 visits.  Wee Readers is an on-going program (during the school year, hours are 9-10:00)

Ages:  Birth though preschool ages and parents/caregivers

Time:  Friday mornings – 10-11:00

Dates:  June 12, 19, 26  July 10, 17, 24, 31

 

Garden Club

We have an awesome garden area with beds for vegetables, flowers, and herbs.  Just needed:  Workers to help pull weeds, trim plants, plant, water, harvest, and dry herbs.  Come prepared to sweat and get dirty!!!

Ages:  entering 1st through 8th grades

Time:  Thursday mornings 9-10:00

Dates:  June 11, 18, 25  July 2, 9, 16, 23, 30

 

 

 

 

 

Have a Heart for Art

Have fun experimenting with different art techniques and materials (paint, pastels, wire, etc.)

Ages:  This art time is geared for little children but all ages are welcome.

Time:  Thursday afternoons 2:00-2:30

Dates:  June 11, 18, 25  July 2

 

Mini – Spanish Camp

This four day program will give us a chance to learn about the Spanish language. We will play fun games, learn basic Spanish words, try new foods, and explore online resources.  We hope to take a field trip to a Spanish Market.

Ages:  entering K-3rd  grades

Time:  10:00-11:00

Dates:  July 20-23  (4 days)

Need to preregister:  space is limited

 

Baker

Most students taking STAAR end-of-course exams pass on first try

teaAUSTIN – The first try for most high school students taking the five State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR®) end-of-course exams was a successful one, according to preliminary statewide results released today by the Texas Education Agency. The results reflect passing rates for the spring 2015 administration of STAAR.

Texas students are required to pass five STAAR end-of-course exams – Algebra I, English I, English II, Biology, and U.S. History – in order to receive a high school diploma. In preliminary statewide results for the 2014–2015 school year for first-time testers, Texas students posted the highest statewide passing rates across the five tests in Biology, U.S. History and Algebra I.

SUBJECT 2013-2014 2014-2015
Biology 93% 94%

U.S. History

92% 92%
Algebra I 86% 85%
English II 73% 73%
English I 72% 71%

 

“Across the five required subject areas, most high school students taking STAAR end-of-course exams are passing on their very first try,” said Commissioner of Education Michael Williams. “That’s good news for students who are completing this component of their graduation requirement, often times successfully completing their end-of-course exams before beginning their senior year.”

Heading into the 2014–2015 school year, 83.5 percent of students in the Class of 2015 had already passed all five assessments and faced no state-mandated tests during their senior year. Currently, the Texas Education Agency does not have comparable information for Class of 2016 students starting their senior year.

The 2014–2015 school year represented the second time the STAAR U.S. History end-of-course exam was administered statewide. Students posted a passing rate of 92 percent, equaling last year’s inaugural rate.

Students who did not pass STAAR end-of-course exams required for graduation will have the opportunity to retake the tests during the week of July 6–10.

Please note that TEA does not have district-level test results at this time. Those results are available from your local school districts and charters.

Comparison charts of statewide results and summary charts provide greater detail on all STAAR results. To review state-level reports, visit the Texas Education Agency website at http://tea.texas.gov/staar/rpt/sum/.

 

Baker

Howe’s own salsa company gets spicy news

The Summit Salsa Company announced that they will soon be available in July in 144 stores in Kroger throughout Texas and Louisiana.  The company, owned by Darrin Savage and wife Amber Tomberlin Savage.  Full story in Monday’s Howe Enterprise.

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Howe Police Reports

HPDOn May 30 at approximately 11:50pm, Howe police officers Keith Milks and Jordan Clark arrested two women, both of Comanche, TX, late Saturday night after stopping them on US 75 at Haning Street for a traffic violation.  Police reports state that a consent search led to the recovery of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia from inside the women’s vehicle.  The 38-year-old driver was arrested for Driving While License Invalid.  Police say the 39-year-old passenger claimed ownership of the drugs and that she was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance in Penalty Group 1, Less than one gram.

On May 31 at approximately 1:15am, Howe police officer Jordan Clark arrested a 20-year-old Heath, TX man for DWI after stopping him on SH 5 at N. Collins Frwy for a traffic violation.  A police press release states that the suspect failed sobriety testing, and that he subsequently consented to providing a blood sample for alcohol testing.  The suspect was taken to a local hospital for the blood draw and then booked into the Grayson County Jail.

Baker