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Re: “Let young athletes call their own plays — Having them make the on-field decisions teaches humility, leadership off field,” by Arnold Holtberg, Saturday Opinion.
This opinion piece by Holtberg about letting young athletes call their own plays was outstanding. I had no idea it had gotten to this extent. His point is spot on. It’s developing young people through decision-making.
Gary Tutt, McKinney
Re: “EPA rule threatens Texas manufacturing — Proposal endangers a variety of things from transit projects to semiconductor facilities,” by Tony Bennett, Monday Opinion.
Bennett, president and CEO of the Texas Association of Manufacturers, stated in his opinion column that a proposed rule by the Environmental Protection Agency tightening the limits on fine particulate matter would do ”little to benefit the environment while placing an undue burden on American manufacturers, threatening thousands of jobs.”
He also states that some local residents have raised concerns about particulate matter from concrete batch plants operating in their communities but that investments made by concrete manufacturers in “innovative technology” prioritize the health and safety of their neighbors and employees.
Bennett is most likely referring to efforts underway in the Joppa community by residents to protest the Texas Star Ready Mix plant that has been operating without the proper permit since September 2022. Without appropriate oversight by regulatory agencies such as the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and the EPA, how can residents of Joppa, West Dallas and other impacted communities be protected?
Bennett correctly states that concrete is needed for homes, businesses and infrastructure. I wonder if Bennett would welcome a batch plant in his neighborhood.
Paula Day, East Dallas
Quote from Bennet’s column: “Locally, some Dallas residents have raised concerns with PM2.5 emissions associated with concrete batch plants. The reality is cement manufacturing represents only 0.2% of Texas PM2.5 emissions.”
A cement manufacturing plant is not the same as a concrete batch plant. The health effects of particulates from a concrete batch plant on local residents cannot be determined by the percent of particulate sources across the entire state of Texas. A similarly useless comparison would be to say that local Texas residents have raised concerns with mass school shootings. The reality is that the number of bullets flying in Texas at any one time is very low, on average across the entire state.
Joel Graber, Richardson
Re: “Just move along now,” by Steve McCluer, Saturday Letters, and “Plan boosts public safety — $4.6B proposal cuts property tax rate, raises police, fire funding,” Aug. 9 news story.
Dallas homeless services need more resources, but many homeless often refuse aid because they are mentally ill or addicted. They cannot be forced by law to accept aid. The federal and state laws need to change to aid the afflicted.
Owners of vacant lots are crime victims and repeatedly fined by the city for vagrants and their trash that spill over from city properties because the city is slow to police and clean its own properties. No-trespass signs on lots are destroyed. Complaints to 311 and 911 about encampments and trespassing too often become a Catch-22 due to city regulations and scattered responsibility.
The city needs more staff and money for fencing, camps removal and cleaning. Private property owners should not be treated as criminals. Just ask property owners in southern Dallas. including old Kleberg where 94% of the residents are Hispanic or Black. They need relief from vagrants, drug dealers and code inspectors.
Dallas needs to remove encampments and illegal dumping on both public and private properties rather than penalizing property owners with cleaning costs and fines.
Marcus Wood, East Dallas
Re: “Teen’s discipline sparks changes — Lewisville ISD moves to ensure punishments ‘fair and consistent,’” Sunday news story.
This is an extremely long story in which the Lewisville ISD seems to dance around the (maybe) wrongful punishment of a Black teen girl for doing exactly what I have understood schools have instructed students to do — to report if they see or hear apparent threats or behaviors which may lead to school shootings or other dangerous behavior.
The girl witnessed a classmate tell another boy not to come to school the next day. She reported it. Follow-up should not have been a “hard administrative decision.” Her statement was true, not false.
The boy in question didn’t do anything the next day. How was she supposed to know that? If he had brought a gun and started shooting, she would have been faulted for not telling. What was she supposed to do? Wait to see if something happened before reporting? Stay home just in case?
Has anyone told the boy not to say anything like that ever again? Was she punished when a white girl would not have been? I believe the school needs to totally rethink its policies, apologize to the girl and her family and pay for her mental health therapy as long as it’s needed.
Carol Stephenson, Mesquite
Re: “Behold the humble hut — Architect creates stunning Fort Worth development from a wartime fixture,” by Mark Lamster, Aug. 6 Arts & Life column, and “Ugly housing,” by Larry Huddleston, Monday Letters.
I understand many of the original hideous Quonset huts from World War II were “recycled” across the United States after the war. That was enough, perhaps even too much.
I remember two of them squatting in the middle of the otherwise beautiful Louisiana State University campus in Baton Rouge. They were still there when I graduated in 1963.
I agree with letter writer Larry Huddleston that sometimes some things are better left in the past.
Martha-Allison Blewer, Coppell
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is exploring options for a new head coach following the departure of Mike McCarthy, and one name generating buzz is franchise legend Jason Witten. Known as the best tight end in Cowboys history, Witten has long been a favorite of Jones and is being considered for the high-profile role.
McCarthy and the Cowboys parted ways after five seasons, ending a tenure that included three consecutive 12-5 records but just one playoff win. The coaching search is officially underway, and Witten’s name has surfaced alongside other contenders.
Witten, an 11-time Pro Bowler and the franchise leader in games starts, receptions, and receiving yards, has deep ties to Dallas. While his coaching experience is limited to leading a private high school team to a state championship, his leadership qualities and familiarity with the organization make him a compelling, albeit unconventional, option.
If hired, Witten would follow a path similar to Detroit Lions head coach Dan Campbell, another former Cowboys tight end. Campbell transitioned to the NFL coaching ranks after years of assistant coaching experience, a step Witten has yet to take. However, Jones has a history of making bold decisions, and Witten’s intimate understanding of the Cowboys’ culture could give him an edge.
While some question whether Witten’s high school coaching background is sufficient preparation for the NFL, Jones values loyalty and passion for the franchise, qualities Witten embodies. His connection with the Cowboys and leadership on and off the field could make him an intriguing choice to guide the team into its next chapter.
Jones’ next coach will be his ninth. The first four were first-time NFL head coaches, starting with Jimmy Johnson when Jones bought the team in 1989. The former University of Miami coach won back-to-back Super Bowls before an acrimonious split with Jones, his college teammate at Arkansas.
Three of Jones’ past four hires had NFL head coaching experience, including Super Bowl winners Bill Parcells and McCarthy. The exception was former Dallas quarterback Jason Garrett, the longest-tenured coach under Jones at nine-plus seasons.
The Cowboys have yet to release updates on the search, but Jason Witten remains a name to watch as the process unfolds.
About four minutes into the Dallas Mavericks’ recent contest against the Denver Nuggets, starting center Dereck Lively left the contest with an ankle injury.
Evidently, the Mavericks are already dealing with massive injuries to Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving. Those two superstars lead the team and Lively is right up there as one of the more impactful players on the team.
However, just one day after the injury, Lively has already gotten X-ray updates back on his sprained right ankle, and it’s a bit of a relief for Mavericks fans. Chris Haynes provided the recent update.
“Dallas Mavericks center Dereck Lively II received an X-ray on his sprained right ankle and results were negative. No timeline established as of now,” Haynes reported.
The Mavericks are struggling to stay healthy, though doing so by April is the main goal and it’s just January. Lively has had issues remaining on the hardwood for the club in his inaugural two seasons, and it’s leaving some fans concerned.
READ MORE: Latest Timeline for Luka Doncic’s Return to Dallas Mavericks Revealed
Stick with CommanderGameday and the Locked On Commanders podcast for more FREE coverage of the Washington Commanders throughout the 2024 season.
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The Dallas city manager search has unspooled in the chaotic style we’ve come to expect from this City Council. There was the ho-hum recruitment brochure draft featuring the wrong skyline. There was the council civil war over the timeline of the search and the flow of information about candidates. And nothing says “we’ve got our act together” like eleventh-hour candidate interviews the day before Christmas Eve.
When two original semifinalists and a former Dallas city official dropped out of the race, no one was surprised.
We wish the next city manager the best of luck because no amount of talent and hard work can overcome a fundamental flaw of this search, and that is the lack of formal, measurable goals by the City Council. Our city is about to hire its CEO, but its board of directors has no metrics to set expectations or hold that person accountable for the most important job in Dallas.
If you want to understand how dysfunctional the situation is, start with the fact that the council’s appointees — the city manager, city attorney, city secretary and city auditor — haven’t had a performance review in more than two years. Our last city manager, T.C. Broadnax, had his last evaluation in August 2022. He left in May 2024. Interim City Manager Kimberly Bizor Tolbert, the front-runner for the job, hasn’t had an evaluation since her appointment last spring.
The council has hired a consultant over the years to help conduct the evaluations of its appointees. But no consultant can fix this council’s main problem, and that is its inability to come together to develop a consensus around four or five priorities and the metrics to measure progress in those areas.
Even when performance reviews for council appointees were happening, the process was broken. The council’s consultant called council members individually to solicit feedback, with the consultant identifying “themes” shared verbally with the council, and with no particular comments attributed to specific people, according to a 2022 memorandum from Management Partners, the firm hired to do the work. The city manager and other appointees were “invited” to prepare a report on their accomplishments and goals for next year, with the potential for “refinements” based on council input.
There was no written report from the performance evaluation, other than any goals reports produced by the appointees.
It’s a shockingly wishy-washy approach to evaluating an employee, let alone a C-suite executive.
And don’t expect even a veneer of transparency for taxpayers. Last year, we requested Broadnax’s goal reports and were told by the city that there were no responsive records, only to hear a council member remind her colleagues last week that Broadnax produced a memo with his goals after his last performance review in 2022. City staff failed to release this memo in response to our request. Such a document should be public under the Texas Public Information Act.
Now, on the brink of hiring its next city manager, the council is panicking about the fact that it hasn’t evaluated its council appointees in a long time and that it has no measurable goals for any of them. The council committee whose job it is to codify the annual review process can’t seem to agree on how to move forward.
Mayor Pro Tem Tennell Atkins chairs the committee. In a December meeting, he led a discussion on next steps to resume performance reviews of council appointees. Council members learned that their previous consulting firm, Management Partners, had been acquired by Baker Tilly, the company that is leading the messy city manager search. But the woman who had worked closely with the council on previous performance reviews was no longer associated with either company.
The committee gave city staff mixed signals on how to proceed. Some council members said they wanted to continue working with the previous consultant. Others asked to hear from Baker Tilly. Some said they were dissatisfied with the previous consultant or concerned about Baker Tilly and wanted to hear from other vendors. Council members said to move quickly.
By the time the council committee picked the conversation back up this month, confusion reigned. Baker Tilly prepared a presentation that described a performance review process very similar to what the council had with its previous partner. Atkins indicated that the council was moving forward with Baker Tilly using an existing contract, and other committee members pushed back. Meanwhile, an assistant city manager and an assistant human resources director couldn’t answer a council member’s simple question about when the council appointees were last evaluated.
“Yes, we are overdue for these reviews, but I think that they should be pursued seriously with the appropriate time periods involved,” said council member Paul Ridley. “I don’t think we should out of convenience select someone who is doing other work for the city at the present time.”
Council member Jesse Moreno asked whether Baker Tilly would have a conflict of interest in facilitating the performance review of an executive the firm helped hire. A representative tried to assuage Moreno, but he is right to bring that up, given that Baker Tilly would be required to conduct a new search at no cost to Dallas if the city manager doesn’t last a year. Council members should be skeptical. (Keep in mind it was Baker Tilly that produced the hiring brochure for Dallas city manager. The cover photo was a shining image of the Houston skyline.)
The council now seems poised to consider other consultants for the performance evaluations. Council members should do their due diligence instead of repeating their sloppiness for the sake of comfort.
Hire a consultant, if you must, to moderate the conversation or offer pointers, but a management firm can’t do the hard work for you.
Outgoing council member Jaynie Schultz said it best: “This problem is ours as a council. We have not done our work. And so we can try spending all of our time diverting all the problem and the blame on Baker Tilly. … The delay is us, 100% us.”
The council’s job is not to run the city but to set clear, measurable expectations for the people it hires to do that. It’s telling that council members have relied on a consultant to remind them to perform a fundamental duty.
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
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