The Top Neighborhood for Austin Texas Real Estate is Steiner Ranch!

Category : Region IV

The Top Neighborhood for Austin Texas Real Estate is Steiner Ranch!

Steiner Ranch, in MLS area RN, or zip code 78732, was named “Best Master-Planned Community” in the greater Austin area from the Austin Business Journal in 2004. And for good reason. This mega-community, bordered by RR 620 to the north, Lake Austin to the West and South, and neighboring River Place to the east encompasses a nature preserve-like atmosphere to complement its stellar location of rolling hills and the winding placidity of Lake Austin, which, moderated by the LCRA, retains a constant depth year round. 

With 819 acres set aside for preservation and 12 miles of trails, Steiner prides itself in fusing well with its environment. The 27,000-acre Balcones Canyonland Conservation Preserve surrounds the development, offering many homes and sites the backyard of a consistent greenbelt. The general area hosts 10 golf courses, eight boat launches, 19 marinas and 15 public parks. Water enthusiasts are within 5 minutes of either Fritz Hughes, Selma Hughes or Mary Quinlan Parks, all providing public access to Lake Austin.

Within Steiner, homeowners are required to respect the design standards and upkeep of the community by paying two installments totaling 0 in HOA dues. These dues not only include trash and recycling service, but also employ a full-time activities director who helps organize events such as summer camps and wine tastings. Gated areas within Steiner Ranch have additional fees to cover the gates and private street maintenance.

The University of Texas’ own Golf Club, a 71 – 7,225 yard championship course, sprawls over 275 acres in the middle of the neighborhood. Wincing and regrouping from a fire that downed the clubhouse at the beginning of 2008, the home course for the University’s Men’s and Women’s varsity golf programs offers very limited membership opportunity for local golfers.
Lake Austin Spa, the only destination health spa in the country with a waterfront location, is located at the southern tip of Steiner Ranch. Ranked #2 by Conde Nast Traveller as the best destination spa in North America, the spa has recently renovated its rooms with an eye on the top spot. Housing an intimate 40-room resort with a new 25,000 sq foot spa facility, their laid back approach on 19 acres continues to live up to its reputation.

Not surprisingly, schools get good marks at Steiner Ranch. Served by the Leander Independent School District, students attend Recognized Steiner Ranch Elementary, and both Exemplary Laura Welch Bush Elementary and Canyon Ridge Middle Schools, all located within the community. Nearby Cedar Park High is the destination for 9th-12th grade students.

With so much to offer, Steiner Ranch still manages to offer homes for many different types of buyers. Starting in the low 0’s (and heading well over million), homeowners enjoy larger homes ranging from 2,000-7,000 sq feet. 

Texas adds 17,300 to payrolls; jobless rate falls to 8%

Category : Region IV

Texas adds 17,300 to payrolls; jobless rate falls to 8%

The Texas economy has added jobs for two months in a row after about a year in recession, providing a strong indication the state is in the early stages of a recovery.

Employers in the state expanded payrolls by 17,300 jobs in November across a broad range of industries, the Texas Workforce Commission said Friday.

That followed a gain of 52,300 jobs in October, according to revised figures also released Friday. The revised October number was higher than the 41,700 preliminary figure announced last month. The Texas unemployment rate fell to 8 percent in November from 8.3 percent the month before.

“Two months don’t necessarily constitute a trend, but I really think we are seeing a trend line going up now,” said Bernard Weinstein, an economist with Southern Methodist University’s Cox School of Business. “It’s going to be a slow process of recovery, but that process seems to be under way.”

During October and November, the state’s employers added nearly 70,000 jobs, with gains in such categories as education and health services, hospitality and leisure, professional and business services, and finance. The data are adjusted to account for seasonal factors.

But some industries continued to lose jobs, particularly manufacturing and construction. Moreover, more than half the job gains during the two-month period came from the government, not the private sector.

According to job data kept by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, private-sector employment fell in October but edged up in November.

Overall employment posted two consecutive months of gains for the first time since mid-2008, the Dallas Fed said.

“It’s very slight, but positive nonetheless,” said Keith Phillips, an economist in the Dallas Fed’s San Antonio branch. “It does show the process of bottoming out.”

Like the Texas Workforce Commission, the Dallas Fed relies on employment data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. But the Dallas Fed performs its own seasonal adjustments and incorporates updated information from unemployment insurance records more frequently than the state and federal agencies.

National figures

At the national level, unemployment fell in 36 states and the District of Columbia in November.

The U.S. economy has not added jobs since the end of 2007. But the pace of losses has slowed significantly in recent months, with 11,000 job losses in November – the smallest monthly decline in nearly two years.

The national unemployment rate stood at 10 percent last month, down from 10.2 percent in October.

Texas avoided job losses until late 2008, but employment plunged during the first nine months of this year, shedding about 325,000 jobs during that period. Now the economy appears to be turning the corner, analysts said.

“We’re in the early stages of this recovery,” said Dana Johnson, chief economist of Dallas-based Comerica Inc., a financial services company. “Texas had a recession that started later and was shallower than in the rest of the country. It makes sense to me that we would be one of the first states to exit the recession.”

Gains by category

In Texas last month, jobs increased in several categories. Employers added 5,100 jobs in mining and logging, a category that includes oil and gas drilling.

Other net gainers included leisure and hospitality, with 4,800 jobs; financial activities, with 4,700; and professional and business services, with 3,300.

Jobs in trade, transportation and utilities, which includes the retail business, fell by 4,500. Employment in manufacturing fell by 4,200 jobs, while employers cut 2,500 construction jobs.

Unemployment in Dallas fell to 7.9 percent in November, down from 8.3 percent in October.

Unemployment in Dallas was only 5.7 percent in November 2008.

The local figures on joblessness, unlike state data, are not adjusted to reflect seasonal variations.

The Texas State Dinosaur Gets A New Name

Category : Region IV

The Texas State Dinosaur Gets A New Name

For about a decade, the Texas state dinosaur has been designated as the Pleurocoelus, an enormous sauropod that reportedly roamed the Texas Hill Country millions of years ago, leaving behind an extensive fossil record in the central Texas area. Recent paleontological research, however, indicates that the dinosaur bones previously identified as belonging to Pleurocoelus may actually be the fossilized remains of an entirely new species of dinosaur. The new species, dubbed Paluxysaurus jonesi after the owner on whose land the new fossil evidence was discovered, is apparently unique to Texas and is of equal mass with the Pleurocoelus, which was originally discovered in Maryland in the late 1800s.

The new evidence was uncovered by Southern Methodist University (SMU) graduate student Peter Rose, who was studying the bones in the course of pursuing a master’s degree at the university. SMU was analyzing the fossils in conjunction with congruent studies at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History and Tarleton State University; paleontological digs took place at the Glen Rose site near Fort Worth. The new species is classified as a brachiosaurid, making it part of the sauropod family. The dinosaur’s unique status was determined by analysis of a leg bone, which exhibited unusually width at mid-shaft, and characteristics of vertebrae, teeth, and various other limb bones.

Paluxysaurus jonesi would have been an enormous four-legged herbivore supporting a small head on an elongated neck and weighing approximately twenty tons. The dinosaur roamed throughout Texas during the Cretaceous Period approximately 112 million years ago. It has never been found outside Texas, and recent research indicates it is the source of the majority of dinosaur fossil remains found in the Glen Rose dig. Four separate individuals have been identified within the dig, which also contains petrified logs from the same era.

As a result of this research, Texas State Representative Charlie Geren introduced a resolution in January 2009 intended to change the name of the Texas state dinosaur from Pleurocoelus to Paluxysaurus jonesi to more accurately reflect the species found in the Texas area. Geren represents the Fort Worth area and gained state-wide recognition for his efforts in unseating Republican Speaker of the House Tom Craddick, who had served in this role in the Texas House of Representatives since 2003 and was replaced in 2009 by a more moderate Republican from the San Antonio area. Geren was a vocal opponent of Craddick since Craddick’s support of school voucher programs that would have reduced funds for public schools throughout Texas; Geren is credited with helping to oust him from the Speaker position.

The resolution is intended to correct the public record and gain attention for this dinosaur unique to the Texas area. Texas has long been noted as a center for paleontological studies; three separate geologic time periods are represented in various excavations throughout the state, making it an invaluable resource for paleontologists and researchers. Geren’s resolution is a valuable step forward not only for the accurate depiction of the Texas state dinosaur, but for the field of scientific study and paleontological research throughout Texas.

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Austin Texas Neighborhood Profiles : Clarksville

Category : Region IV

Austin Texas Neighborhood Profiles : Clarksville

The West Austin area of Clarksville was originally a freedman’s colony for slaves freed after the Civil War. It now has a very diverse population, and this diversity is reflected in the various nationalities of the residents. There is an excellent public grade school in Clarksville, named Mathews Elementary.


Every fall, Mathews holds a carnival on the grounds, which includes the Clarksville Annual International Dinner and the Octoborama Festival, which is held at the end of October. During Octoberama, local musicians, many of whom are the parents or relatives of Mathews School students, perform at the carnival. Also, most of the kids bring large quantities of food to be sold at the International Dinner, to reflect the cuisine of the countries of their origin.


Since most of the University of Texas Division of Housing apartment complexes are located in the West Austin area, and the grade school children residing there with their parents attend Mathews, many ethnicities and heritages are represented at the dinner, including Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Mexican, and various African and other nationalities. While at the Octoberama Festival, you can hear local musicians, sample all kinds of homemade food, watch contests such as two-legged races and relay races, and enjoy juggling and face-painting, which all of the kids love.


Right down the street from the school is another Austin legend, Nau’s pharmacy, which has one of the oldest soda fountains in Austin. You can have eggs for breakfast or a shake after school at Nau’s, and then head down to the 9th Street dog park.


There are many good restaurants in the Clarksville area, and this area is a short bus ride or long walk to Lady Bird Lake, and the jogging trails, or you can go downtown by bus or on the sidewalk, just a mile or so in the other direction. There are also a number of historic homes in the area, including a home referred to by the children as “the Castle”, since it looks just like a medieval castle, but which was originally a military college building.


There is also a “Moonlight Tower”, another local landmark, in the area of the Castle. Austin and Clarksville are home to many local politicians and well-known Austinites. Ann Richards was a regular at the drug store soda fountain, and most Hollywood celebrities visit the restaurants when in Austin.


The Johnson Creek Hike and Bike Trail skirts the western edge of Clarksville, and winds along under the Loop One freeway, also called the MoPac for the Missouri Pacific rail line which runs directly alongside the freeway. You can walk, ride a bike, or jog up and down the hike and bike trail, which crosses Johnson Creek in one place and begins at Austin High School, on the northern shore of Lady Bird Lake.


From the Austin High School access point to the trails, You can cross the lake, which is actually the Colorado River, and hike through Zilker Park or swim in Barton Springs, or go north, and once past Clarksville, you eventually wind up in the Brykerwoods area, if you go south you can head down to the Barton Hills and Travis Heights.


Clarksville is also home to various arts and crafts establishments, and the yearly Eeyore’s Birthday Party Celebration, another fun local event, which is held in Pease Park, on the north-eastern perimeter of the Clarksville area. All in all, The Clarksviile area of Austin is truly a great place to live, whether you’re raising a family, a student, retired, or any one of the varied lifestyles which flourish in Austin. You will always feel at home in Clarksville.

University of Texas Apartments

Category : Region IV

University of Texas Apartments

The University of Texas is home to over 50,000 students, both undergraduate and graduate, as well as over 16,000 faculty and staff. This Big 12 school is one of the largest universities in the entire nation, and sits smack dab in the middle of Austin, Texas, a fun city that is well suited for college life.

The University of Texas has its own apartments on campus, but if you’re an incoming freshman longhorn, don’t count on being able to snag any of these. The UT, like many colleges and universities, has very specific rules on which students are allowed to live in the on campus and which aren’t.

There are three major apartment complexes that are actually on the University of Texas (Austin main campus), which are:



Brackenridge Apartments
Colorado Apartments
Gateway Apartments

The problem is that these apartments are specifically reserved for certain types of students. To get one of these on campus apartments, you have to be a married student, a single parent student, graduate students, or undergrads who have a minimum of 30 hours of course credits and are also in good academic standing with the school.

It’s not hard to see why students would prefer an apartment over a tiny cramped dorm room. All three of the apartment builds on the U of T campus offer all the following:



1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments
Family environment
Excellent maintenance
Playgrounds
Laundry rooms
Cable TV
Easy access to the expressway
24-hour University Police patrol
Parking
Excellent public schools nearby
Apartments are non-smoking
No pets allowed

But if you don’t fit any of the requirements laid out by the school, then you’re out of luck and will need to look elsewhere. The good news is that there are many different apartment complexes in Austin, with many of them located very close to the University. To find an apartment relatively close to the University, you could be looking at a price range anywhere from 5 on the cheaper units to ,300 or even more.

Even further away from the U, it’s hard to find cheaper apartments than that. Austin is a rapidly growing city that has a great job market and a lot of positive things going for it, so cheap housing just isn’t as available as it might be in other cities, but there are some decent deals on apartments if you’re willing to look for the right fit.

If you’re a true freshman going into the University of Texas and can’t really stand the idea of being crammed into a dorm room like one of a group of sardines, then looking around the city ahead of time for a University of Texas apartment could be the way to go.

Music and Entertainment Around the University of Texas

Category : Region IV

Music and Entertainment Around the University of Texas

With over 50,000 students there are numerous entertainment venues around the University of Texas.  Austin is frequently referred to as the live music capital of Texas.  And although when people talk about the music scene in Austin they usually think of downtown the campus area also reflects this saying with nightspots such as the Hole in the Wall, which is an Austin institution and has been the home of many local recording artists for more than twenty-five years, as well as the U.T. campus itself, which hosts regular live music performances in the Cactus Café, which is adjacent to the student union and which is located in the West Mall area. There are also faculty-oriented clubs and restaurants such as the Campus Club, at the corner of 24th and Guadalupe, which offers a daily special and a variety of top-notch choices in a buffet-style setting.

Other notable establishments in or around the campus area include the Frank Erwin Center, which hosts Longhorn basketball, and many other national as well as local sporting events and concerts and is located on the eastern rim of campus, adjacent to Interstate 35. The Darrell K. Royal Memorial Stadium, which is a few blocks north of the Erwin Center,  is home to the University of Texas Longhorn football team, and nearby Disch-Falk Field hosts U.T. Longhorn baseball games, and is directly across the highway from Royal Memorial Stadium on Interstate 35. One of the largest Austin metropolitan area hospitals, Brackenridge-Seton Hospital, is also just a few blocks south of campus, and is the oldest public hospital in Texas. The hospital complex includes the Children’s Hospital of Austin and the University Medical Center, all of which offer first class medical treatment for acute as well as long term care, ample parking, and many other facilities in a very convenient location.

In addition to football and basketball, the university sports and recreation department provides track facilities, including one of the only lighted intramural fields in the country, at the intramural fields complex, which is situated along the intersection of 51st and Guadalupe Streets in the North Loop neighborhood. The complex is about a mile north of the campus itself, and the intramural fields are home to the U.T. Rugby team.    In the neighborhood of Hyde Park, just north of the University of Texas, there are also museums and golf courses including the Elizabet Ney Museum, which is one of the oldest museums in Texas. The Hancock Golf Course, which was established in 1899, is just a few blocks away as well, and allows golfers to play the course on a daily fee basis. All and all, the University of Texas campus area in Austin offers something for everyone, and is one of the most popular destinations for locals, University students and tourists alike.   There is always something to do on or near campus.

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famous people from the city of Houston Texas – Famous people born there such as Patrick Swayze..

Category : Region IV

famous people from the city of Houston Texas – Famous people born there such as Patrick Swayze..

famous people from the city of Houston Texas – Famous people born

11.
1952-08-18 – Patrick Swayze, Houston Tx, actor/dancer (Dirty Dancing, Ghost)
American actor, dancer and singer-songwriter. He was best-known for his roles as romantic leading men in the films Dirty Dancing and Ghost and as Orry Main in the North and South television miniseries. He was named by People magazine as its “Sexiest Man Alive” in 1991.
Died on September 14, 2009

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10.
1954-04-09 – Dennis Quaid, Houston TX, actor (Big Easy, Dreamscape, Right Stuff)
American actor. He became known during the 1980s after appearing in several successful films.
Quaid dropped out of the University of Houston before graduating and moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career.

09.
1955-02-02 – Brent Spiner, Houston TX, actor (Data-Star Trek the Next Generation)
American actor, best known for his portrayal of the android Lieutenant Commander Data in the television and film series Star Trek: The Next Generation.

08.
1960-10-19 – Jennifer Holliday, Houston Tx, singer/actress (Dream Girls)
two-time Grammy Award-winning African-American singer and Tony Award-winning actress. She started her career on Broadway in musicals such as Dreamgirls, and later became a successful recording artist. She is best known for her debut single, the Dreamgirls showstopper and Grammy Award-winning R&B/Pop hit, “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going.”

07.
1963-07-13 – Bobby Rock, Houston Tx, rock drummer (Nelson-Love & Affection)
Rock first came into national awareness with the Vinnie Vincent Invasion. Following his two album/tour stint with Vinnie Vincent he recorded with Nitro before joining the band Nelson. He would then go on to work with the bands Brunette and Hardline. He reunited with former Vinnie Vincent Invasion bandmates Mark Slaughter and Dana Strum, when he toured with Slaughter, filling in for drummer Blas Elias who had prior commitments to performing with the Blue Man Group in Las Vegas.

06.
1964-07-21 – Susan Swift, Houston Tx, actress (Chisholms)
American former child actress, active in late 1970s and 1980s

05.
1967-06-29 – Melora Hardin, Houston Tx, actress (Family Tree, Best Times)
daughter of acting manager/coach and retired actress Diane (née Hill) and actor Jerry Hardin. She is the sister of Flock CEO Shawn Hardin. She was raised in San Francisco, California, after her family moved there when she was 4 years old.

04.
1967-11-28 – Anna Nicole “Vickie” Smith, Houston Tex, playmate (May 1992)

03.
1970-07-14 – Mark Brandenburg, Houston TX, pitcher (Texas Rangers)

02.
1976-02-06 – Kim Zmeskal, Houston TX, US gymnist (Olympic-92)

01.
1978-08-24 – Melissa McElroy, Houston Tx, rhythmic gymnast (US team-96)

famous people from the city of Houston Texas – Famous people born

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Vocational Schools In The State Of Texas

Category : Region IV

Vocational Schools In The State Of Texas

When people don’t want to study for four years to get a job, there are always other places of learning. These institutions provide career advancement through hands on training that is needed in today’s workforce.

One of these places is the Texas Vocational School also known as TVS located in Victoria. There are only a few programs available for people to choose namely business, paralegal and welding.

Those who have a fascination for airplanes can try Redstone Institute in Houston that offers a diploma in airframe and power plant. People who graduate can work as part of the maintenance crew of one of the major air carriers in the United States or even abroad.

Everest College in Fort Worth, Texas offers the student business administration, medical billing or assisting, pharmacy technician and paralegal. The person will just fill the application form so that a brochure can be delivered to the home.

Women can also do well in a vocational school as the Milan Institute of Cosmetology in San Antonio offers people the opportunity to become a manicurist, a cosmetologist or an instructor that will teach people how to beautify the face.

People who are unable to go to campus during the day will be happy to know that evening classes are being offered. Some of these schools offer a ,000 scholarship for qualified students so those who are interested should fill up the application form.

Not everybody may be able to avail of the scholarship due to budget constraints. Those who would still like to enroll can try getting a Federal Pell Grant or aid from such organizations such as the Texas Commission for the Blind and the Texas Rehabilitation Commission among others.

People who graduate from any of these vocational schools will not have difficulty in getting a job. This is because the Texas Workforce Commission and the Proprietary Schools Section accredit most of the programs being offered.

Students who are interested in enrolling in one of the programs should have a high school diploma and passed the General Education Development Test or GED. Those who haven’t can take the entrance exam instead.

After this first step, the applicant will have to take a personal interview conducted by the administrator or by another representative from the school. This person will serve as a counselor in focusing on the program of study that will help attain the student’s long-term goals.

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University of Texas Professor, Turned Arbitrator-mediator

Category : Region III

University of Texas Professor, Turned Arbitrator-mediator

On a recent Southwest Airlines flight from Dallas to Oklahoma City, I happened to meet someone who is called into the situation only if there is a dispute between a labor union and management that cannot be resolved by the parties themselves. Yes, he belongs to an elite group of men and women in the US, who are called into play only when labor arbitration is required. Arbitration in the U. S. is voluntary in the private sector and mandated in the federal sector, but the parties don’t need to go through the federal government and often don’t to decide on an arbitrator.

Further, at age 65, he too definitely reinvented himself from a University of Texas Graduate Business School professor to what he is today, a US labor arbitrator-mediator. After nearly 30 years at the University of Texas at Austin, I. B. “Beber” Helburn went from teaching Labor Relations, HR Management, Negotiation and Arbitration, with a part-time job of serving in his current capacity, to now practicing what he had preached full-time.

Of course, since Beber Helburn had begun his University of Texas at Austin Business School stint in January, 1968, UT Austin has steadily risen in prominence to what it has become today. Modestly, Helburn doesn’t choose to take any particular credit for the school’s current reputation, although in all honesty being able to take classes from such a professor would be exciting for any student.

After completing his Ph.D from the University of Wisconsin Industrial Relations Institute, with a major in Industrial Relations, Dr. Helburn principally served as a university professor, but he also briefly functioned as a consultant to the Committee on Wages and Employment to the House of Representatives, State of Texas for approximately one year (which report led to the passage of the first state minimum wage law). Helburn has been listed on the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, labor arbitration panel from 1972 until the present, the labor panel of the American Arbitration Association since 1974 and the labor panel of the National Mediation Board since 1992.

Helburn has been involved with Arbitration panels over the years, which have included all of the following companies: AT&T and the Communications Workers of America; Continental Airlines and the International Association of Machinists (Flight Attendants); Continental Airlines and the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA); Federal Express Corporation and ALPA; GAF Corporation and PACE International Union; Internal Revenue Service and the National Treasury Employees Union; International Paper Company and PACE plus the IBEW; Lone Star Steel and the United Steelworkers of America; Lucent Technologies and the Communications Workers of America; Major League Baseball and the Major League Players Association (Salary); Southwest Airlines and the International Association of Machinists (Reservation Agents); Southwest Airlines and TWU Local 555 (Ramp Personnel); U. S. Customs Service and the National Treasury Employees Union; U. S. Postal Service and the American Postal Workers Union, National Association of Letter Carriers and the National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association; and the Veterans Administration Medical Center and the AFGE Local 1633.

On that day, he was flying to Oklahoma City and, then, driving to Elk City, Oklahoma in order to arbitrate a dispute between the US Postal Service and the American Postal Workers Union there over a staffing issue. In fact, Helburn has often arbitrated contract interpretation and discipline issues in the past at many other US Post offices in the Southwest and Southeast, as he has also done at Federal Express and Southwest Airlines too, among others.

For Beber, his typical Tuesday-Thursday weekly schedule now does not represent as much “a reinvention as more of an evolution,” he said. As an exception, he commented that he was willing to take a Southwest Airlines case on Monday because, unlike many clients, Southwest Airlines and its unions are willing to set cases for Monday hearings. Further, he sometimes but not always works long hours to get disputes resolved. Please bear in mind that before his “official” retirement from UT Austin, he was certainly able to pepper his Graduate B-School lectures with many real world examples that sometimes were “stranger than fiction,” he concluded.

Today, Helburn may hear two or even three cases, each in a different location, and maybe each in a different state, in the course of a week. This labor arbitrator currently experiences a 50-55% settlement rate, before the parties get to Beber. Often, he said just the threat of an imposed resolution rather than a voluntary settlement motivates the conflicting parties to reach an agreement before meeting with him.

In fact, a tactic that he often uses in these situations goes something like this. Before beginning the hearing, Helburn will tell the opposing parties that perhaps they should each “take one last shot at it” in an attempt to reach a settlement that both sides can accept. In fact, he told me that this tactic, by itself, periodically results in a settlement.

When he’s not dealing with arbitration matters, Helburn stays involved as the co-chair of a .5 million capital campaign for Congregation Beth Israel in Austin, Texas. Others have served more total times as president than he has, but he is the only one in the congregation’s 128 year history to have served two separate terms (10 years apart) as president.

Helburn, who turned 65 in August, 2003 now qualifies for Medicare plus he and his wife Judith, whom he met on the first day of freshman English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, also continue to receive medical coverage through his university group health insurance plan. Judith and Beber have two married children and four grandchildren living nearby. Judith is a Certified Sageing Leader for the Spiritual Eldering Institute. She has also been active in and on the board of Story Circle Network for Women with Stories to Tell, which has been organized as an international organization since 1998.

Over the years, this stalwart adopted Texan has written books and monographs such as “Public Employer-Employee Relations in Texas: Contemporary and Emerging Developments” (1971), he has contributed chapters and proceedings toward a better understanding within his profession, he has written articles for professional journals and published teaching cases.

In conclusion, we should certainly realize that there will always be labor disputes, which will continue to provide valuable work for a seasoned professional like I. B. Beber Helburn. While not an employee, this independent contractor does perform a valuable function for our economy as a whole. Plus, he continues to be well compensated, too, for his time (including travel) and his skilled arbitration efforts.

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Lack Of Health Insurance In Texas Results In A Critical Shortage

Category : Region IV

Lack Of Health Insurance In Texas Results In A Critical Shortage

Need for Texas Health Insurance Is Worst in the Nation

In 2008, Texas fell from 37th to 46th on the United Health Foundation’s ranking of the states based on healthcare statistics. According to the Houston Chronicle, Texas is among the states that are best prepared to respond to a public health emergency, but this is the same state that has the highest percentage of residents surviving with no Health Insurance in Texas.

Ironically, literally hundreds of Texas Health Insurance Plans are available, including plans from Aetna, Assurant, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Celtic, Humana, and United Healthcare. The largest health insurance providers in Texas have also added mail delivery of prescription medications to make it easier for members to obtain many of the most common maintenance medications for conditions like diabetes and heart problems. Aetna, Anthem, and Humana are providing these mail-order prescriptions.

A Critical Shortage of Nurses in Texas Is Met with New Nursing Programs

In addition to a lack of Health Insurance for Texas residents, a critical shortage of nurses has been a problem. This nursing shortage is being challenged in South Texas with plans to graduate more nurses at all educational levels.

The University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio plans to transform nursing education thanks to the largest donation that their School of Nursing has received in its 40-year history. Methodist Healthcare Ministries of South Texas Inc. gave .9 million to fund new nursing education.

A co-owner in Methodist Healthcare System, Methodist Healthcare Ministries is the largest faith-based, not-for-profit, private funding source for health care services to low-income families, and those without health insurance in Southern Texas.

Hiring and supporting qualified nursing faculty had been a problem at the university since many faculty members were retiring, and state dollars failed to cover the university’s expenses. The university plans to use .7 million of the donation for faculty and curriculum specialists, and to teach three new nursing degree programs.

One such program will be an accelerated bachelor’s degree in nursing for students who currently have a bachelor’s degree in a different field. This program starts in May of this year, and has 70 students. A second program, an accelerated online master’s degree for nurses with an associate’s degree in nursing, begins next January in 2011 with 46 students. That same month, the university is also starting a doctorate in nursing practice with 10 students.

When fully implemented, these new programs will help the school admit an additional 20 traditional undergraduate students, 70 accelerated undergraduate students, 46 additional master’s students, and 10 doctoral students.

New Hospital Opens in Dallas Area

The recent opening of Methodist McKinney Hospital exemplifies the need for nurses in Texas. Methodist McKinney Hospital is a 65,000-square-foot project in the Dallas area. The new hospital offers comprehensive diagnostic imaging with CT and MRI services, six operating rooms, and 15 private patient rooms.

The hospital will also offer a wide range of physician specialties, such as general surgery, gynecology, neurosurgery, orthopedics, otolaryngology, pain management, and primary care. Within a year, the division also expects to begin taking patients at another million hospital in the Dallas-area.

Health Insurance for Texas Residents Needed to Benefit From New Hospital

Health Insurance Quotes for Texas can be found online along with contact numbers to reach expert advisors who can answer questions about how the available plans fit individual needs. Short-term and student health plans are available online, too, for temporary situations.

By Wiley Long – President, eTXHealthinsurance.com – Texas’s leading independent online health insurance agency specializing in individual and family Texas Health Insurance plans. Get an online Texas Health Insurance quote, compare plans, apply online, and Save!

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