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A Daily Conversation About Dallas

Books

Jesuit Grad Gabs About New Novel Set in Dallas

| 13 mins ago

Sean Desmond went to Jesuit before making his name in book publishing. He’s now the publisher of Twelve, an imprint of Grand Central. He’s also got a new novel out called Sophomores. The dust jacket blurb:

It’s fall 1987 and life as normal is ending for the Malone family. With their sterile Dallas community a far cry from the Irish-American Bronx of their youth, Pat and Anne Malone have reached a breaking point. Pat, faced with a debilitating MS diagnosis, has fallen into his drinking. Anne, his devoutly Catholic wife, is selected as a juror for a highly publicized attempted murder trial, one that raises questions — about God, and about men in power — she has buried her entire life. Together, they try to raise their only son, Daniel, a bright but unmotivated student who is shocked into actual learning by an enigmatic English teacher. For once, Dan is unable to fly under the radar, and is finally asked to consider what he might want to make of his life.

Tonight at 6, Desmond will do a Facebook Live chat with Dallas’ own Harry Hunsicker, whose authorial career Desmond launched when he bought Harry’s debut novel, Still River. Interabang is the host. You can catch the event here. Harry promises there will be lots of course language and tales of cocaine-fueled book publishing debauchery. (I made up that last part. But, still, I bet it’ll be worth your time.)

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Local News

Mike Rhyner Is About to Launch a New Videocast

| 1 hour ago

Last January, Mike Rhyner announced that he was retiring from The Ticket, the station he had helped found, and The Hardline, the show he had hosted for the better part of 26 years. In March, we ran a story I wrote about Rhyner, looking back on his long career, not just with The Ticket but going back to his days with The Zoo and his life before that playing in local bands. I am reminded of the story on the rare occasions when I go back to our office, because it was in the last issue we finished in the same building, so the tiny copies of its pages are still up on the boards in the hallway.

The end of the story was a bit vague because Rhyner himself wasn’t exactly sure what he was going to do. We now know at least one thing that is on the books: on February 11, he will begin hosting a weekly videocast called Your Dark Companion. One of the first guests will be new Texas Rangers general manager Chris Young. If you’ve missed The Old Grey Wolf, Your Dark Companion gets going at 5 p.m. at VOKALNow.com (as well as the VOKAL Now app and pretty much all major podcast platforms). Until then, as he would say, stay hard and keep jamming.

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Local News

Leading Off (1/28/21)

| 5 hours ago

Former Dallas Financial Adviser Faces Felony Chargers. Sarah Helen Hancock, who had her license revoked five years ago, was indicted by a Dallas County grand jury last week for theft, misappropriation of fiduciary property, and securities fraud. The 61-year-old is charged with taking money from clients’ accounts and putting it into her own business account where it “would all but evaporate.” One account, with a listed portfolio value of $1.6 million, only contained $24,000. After the Texas State Securities Board revoked Hancock’s license for collecting “money from clients in amounts that far exceeded what those clients were contractually required to pay” from 2007 to 2015, Hancock started an interior design and remodeling company. Meanwhile, back in 2010, her 1,610-square-foot, one-bedroom Highland Park West cottage, which she had recently bought post-divorce, was featured on the Park Cities Historic & Preservation Society’s Historic Home Tour. At the time, she told the Dallas Morning News that she had taken several trips to France with her architect to shop for items for the home. “Being single again,” she said, “I loved buying everything and anything that I liked.”

Dallas County Hits Another COVID-19 Death Milestone. Dallas County reported 1,671 new coronavirus cases yesterday and 40 more deaths, the most reported in a single day. Two of the women were in their twenties, one of whom did not have underlying health conditions. Starting today and running through Saturday, City of Dallas employees plan to inoculate 5,000 people at a drive-through site at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center. They will be distributing Moderna vaccines to residents in phase 1A or 1B who previously registered with the county. Here’s what you need to know about getting shots.

The DEA’s Dallas Field Office Reports the Largest Seizure of Meth and Heroin in the Branch’s History. A dog sniffed them out at a traffic stop of a refrigerated tractor-trailer in Denton County on October 8. Special Agent Eduardo A. Chávez said the drugs had been smuggled across the U.S.-Mexican border by traffickers working with the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, or CJNG. Apparently the pandemic has forced smugglers to travel less and carry heavier loads. Here’s what 1,950 pounds and $45 million worth of drugs looks like.

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Arts & Entertainment

Dallas Opera Cancels Spring Performances

| 1 day ago

When I reached Ian Derrer on the phone a couple of weeks ago, the Dallas Opera’s Kern Wildenthal General Director and CEO was on the verge of making a difficult decision.

At the beginning of February, the first members of the cast of the upcoming world premiere of the Diving Bell and the Butterfly were set to arrive. The opera is a collaboration between English composer Joby Talbot and American librettist Gene Scheer, the same creative duo that had written the successful Everest for the Dallas Opera in 2015. Over the past few months, Derrer and his team had been making major preparations to ensure the opera premiere could be staged safely during the COVID-19 pandemic. The plans for testing, isolating, and distancing performers and crew sounded a little like the NBA bubble, only for opera

But by early January, the situation had changed dramatically. Cases in Dallas were surging, hospital beds were filling up, and the death toll mounted. In the end, Derrer had to make the difficult — though, ultimately, correct — decision to postpone. Today, the Dallas Opera announced that it has canceled its entire spring subscription season. Opera will return to Dallas in February 2022, though the planned Joyce DiDonato “Viva Diva” “socially distanced” concert will still take place on May 10.

“It is with profound disappointment that TDO has made the decision not to proceed with the 2020/2021 Season performances planned for March and April of this year,” Derrer said in a release. “The ongoing spread of COVID, the level of hospitalizations in our area, and the rate of vaccine rollout is such that we believe we cannot proceed with the modified season we had planned. On the advice of medical experts, and with the full safety of our artists, patrons, and staff of paramount importance, we are moving all our subscribers to the new 2021/2022 Season in the Winspear that will begin February of 2022 with four, full-scale grand opera productions.”

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Local News

Leading Off (1/27/21)

| 1 day ago

COVID. Dallas County announced 1,858 new cases and 22 new deaths yesterday, and new forecasts suggest hospitalizations could reach 1,600 by Feb. 5. Tarrant County’s COVID deaths include an infant as well as a nine-year-old boy. A Plano fire chief was released after being hospitalized with COVID for 16 days. The president promises to ramp up vaccine delivery, and local epidemiologists are studying the emergence of new strains of the virus.

Burleson Man Arrested for Storming the Capitol. Nicholas DeCarlo, 30, is the seventh North Texan charged in connection to the January 6 riots. There are multiple photos of DeCarlo inside the Capitol building, smoking cigarettes, posing with members of the Proud Boys, and wearing Murder the Media News apparel.

Did a Mountain Lion Kill Hood County Man? According to the Tarrant County medical examiner, Christopher Allen Whiteley was killed in a a rare and vicious animal attack, possibly involving a mountain lion. But Texas Parks and Wildlife officials, as well as other animal experts, disagree. Whiteley’s body was found in the woods in Hood County last December, and law enforcement officials have now closed the case. But if the animal experts are right and Whiteley wasn’t killed by a mountain lion, how did he die?

Rough Week for North Texas Workers. This is the new face of labor in America: Walmart plans to replace warehouse workers with robots, a Cedar Springs Kroger tests ditching check-out clerks altogether, and an Uber Eats driver was killed during a delivery.

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Local News

A Specially Called Council Meeting Didn’t Make for a Fun Monday Night

| 2 days ago

The Dallas City Council seems confused. A special meeting called to clarify the city’s role in the deployment of the COVID-19 vaccine ate up the last five hours of Monday night. It was an FAQ come to life, a gumbo of legalese, repeated explanations of state-mandated processes, and a challenge to the mayor’s authority in a time of disaster that went nowhere.

The meeting ended a little after midnight, after which it was abundantly clear that the City Council is having trouble communicating with one another and city staff about what’s being done in terms of outreach for vaccine registrations. Most do seem to approve of the job that Rocky Vaz, the longstanding director of emergency operations, has done in coordinating the city’s response with that of the county. But they all called for more clarity about where to point their constituents for information.

Monday’s meeting had three action items. Council voted to give City Manager T.C. Broadnax unilateral control over doling out city resources like laptops and protective equipment for help in registration drives. The mayor, in his state-appointed position as the city’s emergency management director, had ordered the city manager not to supply council members who wanted to quickly set up physical registration sites to help sign up constituents for vaccine appointments. That is part of why council members Chad West, Paula Blackmon, and Adam Bazaldua called the special meeting. That item passed 10-5.

During a disaster declaration, the state allows the mayor to name an emergency management coordinator. He chose Vaz over Broadnax, in part, he said, because that is always the arrangement. Blackmon contended that this is no ordinary disaster, that it will last longer and affect far more people than emergencies like tornadoes or even Ebola.

She wanted Broadnax in that lead role and supported efforts to “urge” the mayor to reconsider Vaz as his appointed emergency management coordinator. However, that proposed change was withdrawn before it could be put to a vote. That was likely because supporters lacked the votes for approval. A third item to require the mayor to brief the Council regularly about the coronavirus response also failed.

“This is just another silly item,” said North Dallas Councilman Lee Kleinman, who asked the city attorney whether the mayor could simply choose to say there was nothing to report. (He could.)

Monday’s exercise showed the challenge of incorporating local governments into a complicated, fast-moving vaccine rollout, the largest in American history. Disparate communication styles are smashing together, creating frustration among elected officials and blurring public messaging about the response. Some on Council are more aware than others about how things are moving behind the scenes, a contrast that led last night to mind-numbing repetition, as members asked who can get the vaccine and when.

The reality is that demand is far outpacing supply, limiting how creative the city can be when it comes to getting shots into arms—and which arms go first. Vaz said the city is preparing to expand operations to hubs in the south at some point, locations like Paul Quinn College, UNT Dallas, Bahama Beach Waterpark, or the Singing Hills Recreation Center. But the city’s hands are currently tied: putting a hub near a neighborhood wouldn’t change the state’s order of who can get the vaccines. And there aren’t currently enough doses to even get strategic.

“We need more vaccines. We get more vaccine and more supplies, then we’ll open up more hubs,” Vaz said. “We need to start identifying those locations now.”

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Commercial Real Estate

Hear the Old Parkland Bell for the First Time

| 2 days ago

For the January issue of D Magazine, I wrote a short piece about the new bell at Old Parkland. Its name is Horatio, and it is the fourth-largest working bell in the country. I must tell you that our own Matt Goodman, when I informed him about this bell, was not pleased. Old Parkland’s owner, Harlan Crow, plans to ring the thing at noon and 6 every day, once the bell tower is finished (right now it’s just a concrete core; the cladding comes later). Matt lives not far from the Old Parkland campus, and I think he is worried about daily ringing disturbing his naps. Or he just hates bells. I’m not sure.

In any case, yesterday there was a small ceremony for the first official ringing of Horatio. Below is a short video I took. I was told that the tone of the bell will change slightly as its 30,000 pounds of Dutch bronze settle into their new home. But it won’t get any louder. I asked the head Beck construction guy on site, and he told me the clapper doesn’t have a volume knob. It can’t hit the bell any harder than it did yesterday. So here you go, Matt:

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Local News

Leading Off (1/26/21)

| 2 days ago

COVID Update. Dallas County report 1,698 new cases yesterday and 22 more deaths. County Judge Clay Jenkins said in a written statement that last week was the deadliest of the pandemic, but the numbers are improving. The average number of daily cases and the testing positivity rate are both down. The state says Collin County had 835 new cases and one death. Good news: Dallas is opening a drive-thru vaccination center at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center. First up are 2,000 city employees who need their second shot. Then come 5,000 first shots for people who qualify and who have registered.

Frisco Pastor Plays ‘Cancel Culture’ Card. Before Joe Biden’s inauguration, KingdomLife pastor Brandon Burden urged his flock to keep their guns loaded and talked about the Castle Doctrine. Now he says he’s a victim of cancel culture. Brandi Addison reports in the DMN: “The pastor also said that some of his comments ‘were not said the way that I meant to say them,’ and that he’s seeking the Lord’s help to communicate more clearly.”

Mavs Lose. For a minute, things looked great last night. The Nuggets’ Jamal Murray got tossed after hitting Tim Hardaway Jr. in the twig and berries, spurring the latter to score seven consecutive points and tie the game late in the third quarter. Alas, the final tally was 117-113.

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Local News

Chief Hall Didn’t Work Out. Here Is How City Hall Will Judge Our New Top Cop

| 3 days ago

We find ourselves in an insanely fraught moment for a new chief of police to start in Dallas. These times are not normal by any measure. What makes it worse is that we’ve had some terrible chiefs before. We have also had great ones. But in this moment, when we look at a new chief, is there some measuring stick by which we might at least guess what may lie ahead?

And, by the way, because of magazine deadlines, I am writing this fully two weeks before the decision is announced. I have my own favorite candidates from within the department. Maybe the job goes to somebody I have never heard of. I’m not sure that makes a difference to what I have to say here. Whoever it is, we won’t know what we’ve got until she or he gets going.

Laura Miller, our mayor from 2002 to 2007, a former journalist and shrewd observer of serial police chiefs, has an early vetting system. “There are two things that, if the new chief does them, you know that they’re not going to make it,” she says. “No. 1 is to fire all the people around them, because then you know that they’re paranoid. No. 2, if they go out and get a new car or whitewall tires, it’s the death knell. Mack Vines [chief from 1988 to 1990, indicted for perjury, fired] got whitewall tires, and everybody knew it was over.”

On the other hand, Miller is among several people I checked with who all had the same rubric for spotting a good one. It’s the Kunkle factor.

David Kunkle was chief of police from 2004 to 2010. He quit to run for mayor and lost. During his tenure as chief, Dallas saw dramatic drops in the murder rate and overall crime. Kunkle also instituted a set of reforms that presciently anticipated what will now be the new police chief’s most pressing challenge, resolving an unsettling rise in crime with the community’s urgent post-George Floyd demand for reform.

Kunkle’s emphasis on community policing—the forging of personal bonds between communities and cops—included a major dose of humility, a quality foreign to most old-school cops. The idea is that cops don’t “solve” crime. Communities do. By encouraging the community to trust them, the cops help enlist the community in the rule of law.

Kunkle’s style at Dallas PD never wavered. It was an iron grip on the wheel, a fierce sense of direction, an unshakable self-confidence, and unfailing humility. His public persona stayed down at about the wattage level of a Christmas tree bulb—the kind that blinks very slowly.

Asking the leaders of Dallas police unions to name a favorite Dallas police chief is usually like asking them to point to the tooth they’d like to have drilled on first. But when I do get the heads of the two biggest associations to cough up some examples, they both put Kunkle at the top of their lists.

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Local News

Leading Off (1/25/2021)

| 3 days ago

Tony Romo Predicted a Chiefs-Bucs Super Bowl in Week 12. Back in late November, after the Buccaneers lost to the Chiefs at home, dropping them to 7-5, the former Cowboys QB said: “ I think there’s a better-than-good chance—I don’t know what even that percentage is—that these two teams are gonna be here in Tampa [for Super Bowl LV].” It must kill Troy Aikman that Romo probably prepares about a quarter as much as he does and is not only more entertaining but also is right a ton.

B.1.1.7 COVID-19 Variant Is ‘In Our Community.’ Four cases have been identified, but Dallas Health and Human Services Director Dr. Philip Huang does not think those are the only ones out there. “This just reinforces even more why we can’t let our guard down,” he said. “We just need to do everything that we can to continue to slow the spread.” The variant, first seen in the U.K., is expected to be the dominant strain by March. The good news: while it is more contagious, it is not more deadly, and the vaccine does appear to be effective against it. So mask up, maybe double mask up, keep your distance, and let’s hope the vaccine rollout picks up the pace a bit soon.

Why Can’t the Mavs Win at Home? The squad has been much better on the road going back to last season. They haven’t played many games at home so far in 2021, but three of their most dispiriting losses have come at the AAC, including Saturday night’s game against the Rockets. Tonight, Denver comes to town, and the short-handed Mavs need to start figuring this out.

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Local News

Surprise! In-Fighting on Dallas Council Actually Brings Progress on Vaccinations

| 6 days ago

The city of Dallas is receiving 5,000 vaccine doses from the state next week, allowing fire department paramedics to vaccinate members of the public for the first time.

The city is also establishing its own vaccine registration sites to help sign up residents who may lack a computer or internet access, or who are just unaware that they need to register with the county. Prior to this, the state had only provided vaccine doses to the county, outside of some for EMTs and other first responders. Now city employees will take a more proactive role in the distribution of the vaccine as well as signing up residents for appointments.

There are now two city registration efforts working independently of one another: a more grassroots-style sign-up push led by individual council members and another approved by the mayor’s office that is being promoted as more intentional and targeted but may take more time, perhaps days, to set up and execute.

The bitter memos written by council members that led to these two initiatives have also triggered a specially called City Council meeting on Monday night. Council members Chad West, Adam Bazaldua, and Paula Blackmon requested the meeting and will “urge the mayor … to designate the city manager as the emergency management coordinator.” The council members also want clarity on the city’s plan to administer the vaccines to the public; they say they have not been briefed. The city says it will use the existing Dallas County registration database and prioritize residents based on recommendations from the state and federal governments. Dallas-Fire Rescue paramedics will administer the doses at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.

This is the latest conflict between the mayor and a bloc of council, but, rather ironically, the split this time might generate more resources for the public. We just had to walk through mud to get here.

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Law

How Hospitals Are Asking the Legislature To Enhance Insurance Coverage

| 6 days ago

The Texas Hospital Association is advocating for expanded health coverage, improved Medicaid reimbursement rates, and increased behavioral health funding as the 87th Texas Legislature convenes this month. 

The pandemic has created massive revenue shortfalls that could total $4.6 billion, so the ask for increased funding may be a tall order. Still, THA officials are optimistic that the health challenges wrought from the pandemic will increase the likelihood of advancing their goals. 

Medicaid expansion has become a dirty word for many of those with the power to bring bills to the Texas Legislature floor, even with ample evidence that expanding coverage could boost the state’s revenue. For several years, Texas has led the nation in the number (5 million), and rate (18 percent) of uninsured residents, and expanding the eligibility for Medicaid would not only give vulnerable populations access to regular healthcare, but decrease the amount of uncompensated care provided by hospitals to uninsured residents who have nowhere to go but the emergency room.

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