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Local News

Meet the Seven Finalists for Chief of the Dallas Police Department

| 12 hours ago

Four of the seven finalists to become the city’s new police chief are current or former Dallas cops. City Manager T.C. Broadnax announced the final slate of hopefuls for the department’s top job on Thursday afternoon, which also includes the police chiefs of Irving, San Jose, California, and Charlottesville, West Virginia.

The three who are either current or former department employees include former Deputy Police Chief Albert Martinez, who ran the Southwest Division before leaving to become the top security official for the Catholic Diocese of Dallas; Assistant Chief Avery Moore, who was the East Patrol Division commander; Major Malik Aziz, the longtime head of the Northeast Division; and Deputy Chief Reuben Ramirez, who oversees the department’s Criminal Investigations Bureau and previously was over Internal Affairs.

Aziz was a finalist in 2017 and is currently one of two finalists for the top cop job in Milwaukee, earning support from the local NAACP chapter and the National Black Police Association. Hall demoted him to major in a reorganization shortly after she became chief.

Broadnax has invited 55 organizations to participate in digital panel interviews beginning on December 15. The city manager expects the next chief to begin in early 2021. In the meantime, Deputy Chief Lonzo Anderson, the 23-year veteran and head of patrol who has been a calm and reassuring voice during recent Council meetings, will serve as interim chief ,starting December 15.

Broadnax will make the ultimate decision between the internal candidates and the external: those include Eddie Garcia, the police chief in San Jose; Jeff Spivey, the police chief in Irving; and RaShall Brackney, the police chief in Charlottesville. In 2017, when Broadnax chose U. Reneé Hall to run the department, just three finalists were internal.

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Police

How Transparent Is the Dallas Police Chief Search?

| 15 hours ago

Over the past few weeks, Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson has repeatedly complained that the city’s search for a new police chief has been less than transparent. During a recent local radio appearance, he said he wishes the City Council’s Public Safety Committee could handle the hiring process. In a newsletter emailed last week, Johnson said he was concerned about the qualifications in the job description and wondered why Dallas couldn’t hold a public form with the candidates in the midst of a pandemic. In Tuesday’s state of the city address, Johnson spoke about his desire to continue to push for more public involvement in the police chief selection process.

But has the public really been shut out of the hiring process? Late Tuesday night, not long after Johnson finished delivering his speech in the Hall of State in Fair Park, City Manager T.C. Broadnax sent a memo to the mayor and the Council that laid out how the final stages of the hiring process will unfold over the next few weeks. This morning, the city manager announced the seven finalist candidates.

The search began in October, when the city put the selection process in the hands of Gary Peterson, a recruitment consultant who has led police chief searches in cities like Nashville, Seattle, and San Francisco. Peterson first met with the mayor and the Council and used that feedback to craft a candidate profile and job description. The City Council Public Safety Committee received monthly briefings as the search unfolded, and in November the city conducted a community survey to seek public feedback on the qualifications sought in the next chief. More than 4,500 people responded.

The city manager’s memo states that 36 people applied for the position, and he hopes to make a hire by January 1. Per the city charter, the city manager has sole authority to hire the next chief. However, Broadnax says the next few weeks of interviews will be collaborative and will include feedback from the mayor and Council. Dozens of stakeholder groups are expected to meet with the finalists.

In many ways, the process mirrors the approach Broadnax took when hiring outgoing Chief U. Reneé Hall, with one key exception. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, much of the process has shifted online. Gone are the informal meet and greets hosted by business associations at downtown hotels where council members could hobnob with candidates. Gone are the community meetings at City Hall, where residents were encouraged to visit with the finalists. Those events will be replaced by the video conferences that have become a ubiquitous part of pandemic life.

If anything, that shift online has made the process even more transparent, says Councilwoman Jennifer Staubach Gates, chair of the council’s Public Safety Committee.

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Sports & Leisure

Mavs Release J.J. Barea, End an Era

| 17 hours ago

In a move that most people have seen coming for a couple of weeks, the Mavs are set to release J.J. Barea, the 5-foot-10 guard who has played 11 of his 14 seasons in the NBA with the team. The Mavs had 16 players under guaranteed contract and had to get rid of one of them before the season started to meet the NBA’s 15-man roster limit. The 36-year-old was the likely choice, pretty much as soon as he signed his new $2.6 million deal. It was like a going-away present.

If Barea doesn’t play another second in the league, the Puerto Rican guard is a success story, an undrafted player shorter than me—though he was hilariously listed at 6-feet in game programs for years—who carved out a valuable role for himself on a championship team. His play against Miami in the 2011 Finals earned him a big contract with the Timberwolves, which ultimately didn’t work out. But he was welcomed back in 2014 and played the best basketball of his career after returning to Dallas, leading the second unit and forging an unstoppable two-man game with Dirk Nowitzki. In the process, he became a fan favorite—not something he had always been during his first stint in the city. And that doesn’t even touch on the humanitarian work he did when Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico.

Other than Mark Cuban and coach Rick Carlisle, Barea was the last public-facing link to that title-winning squad. He wants to keep playing and asked to be released sooner rather than later if they were going to do it anyway so he could try to catch on with another squad. (The Mavs are replacing Barea in camp with veteran Courtney Lee, who is also not expected to make the final roster.) If he doesn’t, I’d expect him to make an appearance or two here as the team celebrates the 10th anniversary of its championship season. And then again when his jersey is retired, which I expect to happen at some point. The only question: will it be the No. 11 he wore the first time, or the No. 5 (his favorite) that he wore when he came back?

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Local News

Leading Off (12/10/20)

| 20 hours ago

City Council Approves $8 Million for Ammo, Tear Gas, and Rubber Bullets. The money allows the city to enter into another 5-year agreement with law enforcement equipment company GT Distributors Inc. Council members Lee Kleinman and Adam Bazaldua were the only two to vote against the proposal. Kleinman cited concerns about the federal TRO that was issued over the summer banning the city from using less-lethal weapons on protesters, and he questioned the need for the police department to maintain 500 high-powered, assault-style rifles.

Thirty-Six Applicants Are in Contention for the Role of  Dallas’ New Police Chief. Six different community groups will start vetting candidates next week, and City Manager T.C. Broadnax has said he plans to pick U. Reneé Hall’s successor by the time she leaves on December 31.

Kewon Dontrell White Is Arrested for the Fatal Shooting of Dallas Rapper MO3. The 22-year-old faces a murder charge in connection with the November 11 death of 28-year-old Melvin Noble, who was killed after exiting his vehicle on I-35E near the Dallas Zoo.

Dallas County Reports 1,348 New COVID-19 Cases and 33 Deaths. Tarrant County reports 1,536 coronavirus cases and 15 deaths, including the first death of a child, a 17-year-old boy.

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Politics & Government

Dallas City Council Christmas Sweaters 2020: Who Wore It Best?

| 1 day ago

If you’ve been around FrontBurner for any length of time, you know that today is Christmas for your correspondent because today is Dallas City Council Christmas Sweater Day. This is the day on which I turn my considerable attention to a City Council meeting, and even though the discussion there might be about the proposed expenditure of millions of dollars on lethal and non-lethal munitions for the Dallas Police Department, as happened this morning, and even though the Geneva Convention and other important matters might come into play, I instead focus on what our elected representatives chose to wear. When people talk about the collapse of local news media, this is the sort of important coverage they bemoan the loss of. Here’s the lifeblood of democracy:

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Business

Where Do You Invest in the Most Uncertain Market Ever?

| 2 days ago

Since the pandemic began, I haven’t duked anyone. I’m beginning to worry that I might never duke anyone again.

By “duke,” I of course mean that I haven’t tipped anyone extravagantly—and in cash—in months. Way back in the times before our cash seemed to be crawling with contaminants, Frank Sinatra dubbed that kind of tipping “duking.” He was famous for carrying neatly folded $50 and $100 bills and pressing them into the hands of maître d’s and bartenders, anyone whose hard work might help fuel a gasser of a night. 

Me, I couldn’t afford to operate like the Chairman of the Board. When I was duking, I used twenties. Still, it adds up. And now that my wife and I haven’t hit the town since March, we’ve accumulated some cash. There’s a bit more to it than just a lack of tipping, but either way, we’ve added this savings to cash we shielded from investments just as the pandemic began. 

I don’t feel good about that money sitting in a bank account that earns almost exactly what I’d make if I’d stuffed the cash in my mattress. But what’s the alternative? Dipping into savings and playing the market right now, in a time when 8 million people have fallen into poverty, when more government stimulus is far from certain, when the fallout of the election is still falling out, and when the virus is still spreading and unpredictable, seems more like gambling than investing. It actually seems almost as irresponsible as duking people with stacks of twenties. And that’s why I’ve decided to do it. Here are a few things I’ve considered in preparing to place my bets:  

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Local News

Leading Off (12/9/20)

| 2 days ago

COVID. Yes, we’re close to a COVID-19 vaccine. Gov. Greg Abbott says Texas is ready for the rollout, and it is possible that additional vaccines will continue to come on the market. But there is some tricky science at play here. We are in the midst of a sustained surge in cases — Dallas County reported another 1,105 cases yesterday and 8 new deaths, Denton County has only six available ICU beds — and new research suggests that the vaccine will be less effective in controlling the spread of the disease in places where the virus is raging. In other words, the vaccine is not a get out of jail free card. Step 1: control the spread of COVID-19 by wearing masks, social distancing, and introducing rapid-testing. Step 2: Vaccinate. Step 3: The long nightmare ends.

Dustin Marshall Wins DISD Board Runoff. The race could be viewed as a referendum on the current DISD administration’s data-driven approach to things like teacher evaluation and merit pay. Marshall, a champion of these approaches, retained his seat on the board by winning his second runoff election.

Mayor Johnson Takes Public Scolding to Fair Park. The Dallas mayor has earned a reputation for reprimanding council members and the city manager around the virtual horseshoe during council meetings. At last night’s State of the City address — presented via livestream amidst the regal trappings of the Hall of State in Fair Park — the mayor repeated many of his now familiar complaints about how the city he leads is operating.

Cowboys Exposed to COVID, Lose Game. Fans were robbed of the intrigue of seeing Dez Bryant take the field against his old team when the wide receiver tested positive for COVID-19 right before kickoff. Inexplicably, the NFL allowed the game to be played nonetheless, and the potential super spreader event also signaled the effective end of the Cowboy’s season.

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Media

Mary Brown Malouf, R.I.P.

| 2 days ago

Mary Brown Malouf was the dining critic and then executive editor of D Magazine just as I was coming onboard, in 2001. She went on to work at Wine.com and become the executive editor of Salt Lake Magazine. Some of you will remember her late husband, Glen Warchol, who wrote for many years at the Dallas Observer and went to work at the Salt Lake Tribune. Mary was great friends with our former dining critic Nancy Nichols. God, those two were trouble together. So our hearts go out to the staff at Salt Lake and to Mary’s family and especially to her sister in crime, Nancy.

Mary died yesterday when she was swept off a jetty by a rogue wave in Northern California. She was 67. The Salt Lake Tribune quoted something a family member wrote on Mary’s Facebook page: “Only she — perhaps the world’s foremost lover of Bronte, BBC mysteries, and, of course, Moby-Dick — would appreciate such poetic drama.”

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Transportation

What If Northwest Highway Looked Like This?!

| 3 days ago

An alert law-practicing FrontBurnervian pointed me this morning to a presentation that TxDOT made yesterday to folks interested in the stretch of Northwest Highway from Hillcrest to Inwood. Me personally, I avoid that road like it’s Rudy Giuliani with a dry cough and snot-filled kerchief tied around his neck. What I’m saying is, I don’t go near it, at least not during peak hours. It’s a nightmare. So it makes sense that TxDOT would be looking at ways to improve it. What doesn’t make sense is the early concept of elevating the road (shown above). Do you realize what Laura Miller is going to do when she sees this? Oh, my gosh. Good luck to Mohamed “Mo” Bur, the head engineer for TxDOT’s Dallas District. She’s about to make his life more miserable than Ken Paxton’s. Lots of political references here, huh?

Anyway, the tunnel option looks great to me, as soon as gold is discovered in the Trinity River and we can afford to pay for it. Barring that pleasant surprise, the “road diet” option intrigues me, mainly because it would freak out all the people who love to ask, “But where will all the cars go?” And I suspect we’ll eventually land on the “operational improvements” option, which looks doable.

Hang in there, Mo.

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Chefs

The Incredible, Unsurprising Story of Dallas’ Dining Community Rallying Behind a Chef in Need

| 3 days ago

The week before Thanksgiving, when many of us were busy considering our smaller gatherings and hunting for family pecan pie recipes, word spread that Justin Holt had recently been diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a cancer of the blood and bone marrow. Salaryman, his Oak Cliff izakaya and ramen shop, closed immediately. The dining community reeled.

Call it the times. The news of the closure and Holt’s diagnosis galvanized chefs and devoted diners in a way that points to something that’s true of the Dallas dining scene: that it supports its own. In this tumultuous year that has made us painfully aware of what is broken—the absent safety nets, the missing precautions—the camaraderie of the culinary community hasn’t waned. Indeed, it’s grown. And in these moments, it becomes something beautiful to see.

Trina Nishimura, Holt’s partner and an integral part of the Salaryman team, expressed her gratitude for the outpouring of support, finding herself “so fortunate to be part of the Dallas dining community.” A GoFundMe immediately set up by one of her closest friends began with an initial $25,000 goal. It rapidly rose more than $75,000 and counting.

Then came another fundraiser spearheaded by Meat Fight’s Alice Laussade, Jeff Bekavac of Zoli’s NY Pizza, and fellow chef Danyele McPherson, with “mystery boxes” for sale, filled with goods made by chefs and culinarians, available for pick up drive-thru style. The sign-ups began last Monday morning, and by midday that day, Laussade says they had sold 148 of 200 boxes to the public. The rest of the box sign-ups whisked away in short order, raising more than $25,000 for Holt. Laussade updated me later that evening: “We have officially sold out. [Six] hours and they flew.”

“Honestly, I don’t know if that would happen anywhere else,” says Nishimura, noting the “incredible, heartwarming efforts on all sides…. People have given not only from their hearts, but from their pocketbooks—a bright spot in the otherwise dumpster-fire of a year.”

But gratitude at the deluge of donations hardly seems to encapsulate it. Donating was matched by small kindnesses of a more intimate kind, like “little notes that people leave on the GoFundMe page [which] are inspiration” or “the funny texts that Justin gets from other chefs, just giving him shit,” says Nishimura.

Large kindnesses, too, soon came.

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Local News

Leading Off (12/8/20)

| 3 days ago

COVID Update. Dallas County reported 1,663 additional cases and three COVID-19 deaths yesterday. Our hospitals in North Texas are running at 15.87 percent of beds occupied by COVID patients, so businesses must still operate at very reduced occupancy. You know what I’m going to say next, but I’m going to say it anyway. Wear a mask and keep your distance whenever possible. A few more months, people. Hang in there.

DISD Runoff Election. Do you live in DISD’s District 2? Here’s a map. The district spreads from Preston Hollow to Uptown to Lakewood. Here’s where you can vote. Incumbent Dustin Marshall faces challenger Nancy Rodriguez. Here are three recent FrontBurner posts about Rodriguez written by Jim Schutze: vote wisely, please.

Plano Perambulators Plead for Sidewalk Repairs. The pandemic has driven more folks to stretch their getaway sticks. That’s the theory as to why the city is getting more requests for sidewalk repairs. City officials say that they’ve fixed 35 percent more sidewalk area compared to a year ago.

Dez Bryant Returns to Dallas. Weird Tuesday game for the Cowboys, and the onetime owner of Dallas the monkey faces his old team as a receiver for the Ravens. From the Baltimore Sun: “The Cowboys will play the Ravens after a rare 12-day rest, and they’re still not out of contention in the awful NFC East. But they’ve suffered through a disastrous season under coach Mike McCarthy and showed few signs of moving in the right direction in that Thanksgiving loss to Washington. The Cowboys’ three wins have come by a combined seven points and they’ve lost to both AFC North teams they’ve played.” From Tim Rogers: “Ravens will win 37-6.”

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Restaurants

Dallas Dining Was Still Special in 2020

| 3 days ago

A few months ago, when it was relentlessly sunny and conference room confabs were held outside among cardinals and feral cats, I sat in on an editorial meeting with my D Magazine colleagues in Kathy Wise’s backyard. It was time to talk December.

The last issue of the year is usually the Best New Restaurants feature. But 2020 isn’t usual. While we’d normally recount the most exciting restaurant openings of the year, we wanted to—needed to, really—reimagine our approach because we weren’t dining the same way. Yet, in a year rife with challenges for businesses, so many brave souls were bringing Dallas new, thrilling things to eat, from vegetable “charcuterie” (you’d see that at Graham Dodd’s Elm & Good) to the slew of spots selling Nashville hot chicken. We weren’t going to let them go unnoticed.

Oh, we noticed.

We noticed pop-ups thriving, taquerias beckoning with birria de res, bagels getting their fair due, Detroit finally getting some pizza representation. That’s what the Best New Bites of Dallas is about: nodding to the true grit and fiery determination it takes to do something new in 2020. The cover story is online today.

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