Austin, TX
Trimlight Austin South Partners with Local Charities for Holiday Lighting Donation Program
Austin, Texas – July 18, 2024 – Trimlight Austin South, a leading provider of permanent holiday [https://austintrimlight.com/used-for/permanent-led-lighting/] and exterior lighting solutions, announces a new initiative in partnership with local charities to bring joy and light to the community this holiday season. The Holiday Lighting Donation Program aims to provide free holiday lighting installations to families and organizations in need across Austin.
This innovative program, spearheaded by Trimlight Austin South, dedicates a portion of the company’s resources to brightening the holidays for those who might not otherwise be able to afford such luxuries. By collaborating with local charities, Trimlight Austin South ensures that the lighting installations reach the most deserving individuals and groups.
Justin Parr, CEO and owner of Trimlight Austin South, expressed his enthusiasm for the program: “The holidays are a time for joy and togetherness, and we believe that everyone deserves to experience the magic of festive lights. Through our Holiday Lighting Donation Program, we aim to spread cheer and make a positive impact on our community. We’re excited to partner with local charities to identify families and organizations that will benefit the most from our services.
“Trimlight Austin South is renowned for its high-quality, customizable lighting solutions. Their services include permanent holiday lighting, exterior lighting, accent lighting [https://austintrimlight.com/used-for/accent-lighting/], driveway lighting [https://austintrimlight.com/used-for/driveway-lighting/] and event lighting. Each installation is designed to enhance the beauty and safety of homes and businesses, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere.
The Holiday Lighting Donation Program reflects Trimlight Austin South’s ongoing commitment to community involvement and support. By providing free lighting installations, the company hopes to inspire other businesses to engage in similar efforts and contribute to the well-being of the Austin community.Families and organizations interested in applying for the Holiday Lighting Donation Program can find more information and application details on the company’s website [https://austintrimlight.com/]. Trimlight Austin South encourages everyone to spread the word and help bring light to those in need this holiday season.
About Trimlight Austin South
Trimlight Austin South is a premier provider of permanent holiday and exterior lighting solutions in Austin, Texas. Specializing in customizable lighting installations, the company offers a range of services including permanent holiday lighting, exterior lighting, landscape lighting, and event lighting. With a commitment to quality and customer satisfaction, Trimlight Austin South enhances the beauty and safety of homes and businesses throughout the Austin area.
For more information, visit austintrimlight.com [https://austintrimlight.com/].
Media Contact
Company Name: Trimlight Austin South
Contact Person: Justin Parr
Email:Send Email [https://www.abnewswire.com/email_contact_us.php?pr=trimlight-austin-south-partners-with-local-charities-for-holiday-lighting-donation-program]
Country: United States
Website: https://austintrimlight.com/
This release was published on openPR.
Austin, TX
Central Texas ICE operations called ‘not American’ as concern of future raids grows
AUSTIN, Texas — The organization Mano Amiga and U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett have voiced strong opposition to recent Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations in Central Texas. Natasha Martin from Mano Amiga expressed concern over the impact of these operations, stating, “Fear is definitely the emotion that is at the forefront of the community.” Martin added that ICE’s actions are “eroding community trust, and it is putting vulnerable families at risk.”
Rep. Doggett criticized ICE agents after viewing footage of an arrest in Hays County, which reportedly resulted in a detainee being injured. “ICE is going out and deliberately causing violent situations,” Doggett said, emphasizing that such actions are “not American.”
Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, defended ICE officers, stating they are trained in “driving training, firearm training, de-escalation training.”
While Doggett supports the removal of undocumented immigrants causing trouble, he insists on demanding more information from ICE.
ALSO| ICE operations confirmed in Hays County, local officials respond
Most notably, transparency when it comes to notifying the appropriate officials, saying, “what we can do is continue to demand more information from them,” and that a lack of notification, “It’s unfair to them. It’s unfair to our neighbors to have these kinds of mask operations dragging people out of cars and homes.”
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office did not directly respond to inquiries about whether they were notified ahead of the operations, but reiterated support for the Trump administration’s deportation efforts. Press Secretary Andrew Mahaleris stated the following:
Governor Abbott fully supports using every tool and strategy to aid in the Trump Administration’s deportation of illegal immigrants, and city and county officials across the state should fully cooperate in those efforts. Texas is a law-and-order state, and it works hand in glove with ICE every single day to uphold the laws of this country. Texas will continue to assist the Trump Administration in arresting, detaining, and deporting illegal immigrants.
Doggett announced he would not support an upcoming appropriations bill for the Department of Homeland Security, advocating instead for border security. Meanwhile, Austin city leaders plan to review local police policies regarding compliance with ICE.
Austin, TX
Austin private schools shut out of Texas voucher program. Why?
Dozens of Austin private schools are currently shut out of participating in Texas’ new school voucher program because of alleged ties to foreign governments or terrorist organizations.
Many private schools in Texas accredited by the nonprofit Cognia have been unable to apply to the state’s new voucher program, the Houston Chronicle reported this week. Of the almost 40 private schools in Austin that have only been accredited by the group, just one has been approved to participate in the new $1 billion education savings account program, the Statesman found.
The discrepancy comes after Comptroller Kelly Hancock, who oversees the new voucher program, sought an opinion in mid-December from Attorney General Ken Paxton on whether some private schools could be prohibited from participating in the program over alleged ties to the Chinese government or the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a nonprofit Gov. Greg Abbott has declared a terrorist group.
In his letter to Paxton, Hancock raised concerns about schools that he claimed hosted events organized by CAIR and schools that he said may be owned or linked to “an adviser to the Chinese communist government.” In both cases, the schools were accredited by Cognia, he wrote.
To be eligible, private schools must be accredited and in operation for at least two years. The schools also must administer a nationally norm-referenced test to students in third grade and above. Schools that provide virtual-only education can also apply.
The vouchers will provide students up to about $10,500 toward private school tuition per year, with students who receive special education services eligible for up to $30,000. Homeschooled students can receive up to $2,000 for tutoring, courses or materials. Vendors who provide these services must also receive approval from the comptroller’s office.
Austin, TX
2026 Pro Swim Series — Austin: Day 2 Finals Live Recap
2026 PRO SWIM SERIES – AUSTIN
Thursday Finals Heat Sheet
Welcome to the 2nd finals session of the 2026 Pro Swim Series in Austin, and we are in for an exciting one tonight.
We will start the session with the event finals for the 200 IM and 50 freestyle, which swam their semifinals yesterday. World Record holders Summer McIntosh and Leon Marchand hold the top times in both 200 IM events, which will be the first two events of the meet.
Simone Manuel and Maxime Grousset had the fastest semifinal times in the 50 freestyle and will each lead tonight’s event finals.
We will then move into the semifinals of the men’s and women’s 50 breaststroke where Skyler Smith and Van Mathias are the top seeds. Mathias is fresh off a Pro Swim Series record in the event, swimming 26.57 in prelims.
Charlotte Crush and Kieran Smith are the top seeds in the first typical event finals of the evening, though they aren’t far ahead of their competition with Teagan O’Dell coming in behind Crush and Marchand and Yohann Ndoye-Brouard sitting less than a second behind Smith.
The women’s 100 fly could be one of the most exciting events of the session with Regan Smith coming in as the top seed ahead of Summer McIntosh. On the men’s side, Caeleb Dressel earned the top time, about half-a-second ahead of Grousset.
The session will wrap up with the 400 freestyle finals where last night’s 1500 champion Katie Ledecky is the top women’s seed, 11 seconds ahead of Rylee Erisman, who is looking for a strong swim to match her electric 500 from Winter Juniors.
The men’s 400 free could be a close race with Daniel Wiffen leading Ilia Sibirtsev and Bobby Finke by just over a second. Ryan Erisman is also in the mix there, and is coming off a massive best time in last night’s 1500 freestyle.
WOMEN’S 200 INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY – Final
- World Record: 2:05.70 – Summer McIntosh, CAN (2025)
- American Record: 2:06.15 – Ariana Kukors (2009)
- US Open Record: 2:06.79 – Kate Douglass, USA (2024)
- PSS Record: 2:06.82 – Summer McIntosh, CAN (2025)
- World Jr Record: 2:06.56 – Summer McIntosh, CAN (2024)
Pool Record: 2:08.51 – Madisyn Cox
Top 8 Finishers
- Summer McIntosh (TXLA) — 2:08.48
- Cyrielle Duhamel (FRA) — 2:13.73
- Teagan O’Dell (CAL) — 2:14.06
- Emma Weyant (GSC) — 2:14.23
- Lindsay Looney (TXLA) — 2:17.86
- Ava Chavez (CAL) — 2:18.86
- Rowyn Wilber (CLOV) — 2:18.92
- Maren Byrne (ALTO) — 2:19.05
Summer McIntosh swam to an easy victory in the women’s 200 IM, stopping the clock in 2:08.48 to come in more than five seconds ahead of the rest of the field and break Madisyn Cox’s pool record in the process.
McIntosh was out in 27.44, claiming the lead at the very start as the only swimmer under 28 seconds on the opening 50. She split 31.82 on the backstroke, the fastest in the field by more than two seconds. Nobody else was even under 34 seconds.
The breaststroke leg saw McIntosh touch in 38.65 before she came home in 30.57 on the freestyle, locking up the top spot and the fastest split on all four 50s.
France’s Cyrielle Duhamel finished 2nd after sitting in 3rd for most of the race. She was out behind Teagan O’Dell, splitting 28.52/34.27/39.47 on the first 3 50s, but her final 50 of 31.47 was more than a second faster than O’Dell and moved her into the silver medal position.
O’Dell was 28.42/34.17/38.97/32.50 to finish 3rd in 2:14.06, three seconds off her lifetime best 2:11.24 from July.
Emma Weyant finished 4th in 2:14.23, another new personal best, dropping from the 2:14.74 she swam in the semifinal
MEN’S 200 INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY – Final
- World Record: 1:52.69 – Leon Marchand, FRA (2025)
- American Record: 1:54.00 – Ryan Lochte (2011)
- US Open Record: 1:54.43 – Ryan Lochte, USA (2010)
- PSS Record: 1:55.68 – Leon Marchand, FRA (2023)
- World Jr Record: 1:56.99 – Hubert Kos, HUN (2021)
- Pool Record: 1:55.50 — Hubert Kos
Top 8 Finishers
- Leon Marchand (TXLA) — 1:57.65
- Carson Foster (NYAC) — 1:58.96
- Kieran Smith (RAC) — 1:59.86
- Grant Sanders (UN-FL) — 2:01.93
- Gerhardt Hoover (CS) — 2:05.80
- Cullen Kahl (MAC) — 2:06.18
- Ethan Heasley (HEAT) — 2:07.57
- Rafael Arizpe Arriaga (IM) — 2:07.69
Leon Marchand picked up the win in the men’s 200 IM final, touching in 1:57.65 to earn the top time by more than a second.
Marchand was the fastest on the first three 50s, splitting 24.97/29.79 and 33.57 on the fly/back and breaststroke splits, and his freestyle leg of 29.32 was 3rd behind Carson Foster and Kieran Smith.
Texas teammate Carson Foster finished 2nd in 1:58.96, a little more than three seconds off his lifetime best 1:55.65 from the 2024 Olympic Trials. Foster was 2nd through the entire race, splitting 25.48 on the opening 50 to get out just ahead of Kieran Smith. He was 30.03 on the backstroke and 34.50 on the breaststroke to put himself comfortably in the 2nd place position. He brought the race home in 28.95, the fastest freestyle leg in the field for the silver medal.
Kieran Smith was 3rd in 1:59.86 after splitting 25.60/30.01/35.16/29.09 to also come home faster than Marchand on the final 50. His final time was about three seconds off his best 1:56.97, also from the 2024 Olympic Trials.
-
Montana6 days agoService door of Crans-Montana bar where 40 died in fire was locked from inside, owner says
-
Delaware1 week agoMERR responds to dead humpback whale washed up near Bethany Beach
-
Dallas, TX1 week agoAnti-ICE protest outside Dallas City Hall follows deadly shooting in Minneapolis
-
Virginia6 days agoVirginia Tech gains commitment from ACC transfer QB
-
Montana7 days ago‘It was apocalyptic’, woman tells Crans-Montana memorial service, as bar owner detained
-
Minnesota6 days agoICE arrests in Minnesota surge include numerous convicted child rapists, killers
-
Oklahoma5 days agoMissing 12-year-old Oklahoma boy found safe
-
Lifestyle2 days agoJulio Iglesias accused of sexual assault as Spanish prosecutors study the allegations