Tuesday, November 25, 2014

A press release from Preservation Texas:


The board of Preservation Texas, the only statewide nonprofit dedicated solely to preservation, visited Wharton, aka “Harrison, Texas” in playwright Horton Foote’s terminology, last week to hold its quarterly board meeting.

On Friday, the preservation group conducted their board meeting at the Carriage House at the Morris Ranch, and was hosted by Stewart Morris, whose company, Steward Title, funded the restoration of the Wharton County Courthouse Tower Clock.

That afternoon the group toured the Wharton County Courthouse with Paul Shannon and Jeffery Blair and afterwards held a public reception at the Plaza Theatre.  That evening, it was off to “Bountiful” and Bud Northington’s Egypt Plantation, for a meal and a history lesson to learn how early settlers and a “Sea of Mud” contributed to achieve Texas Independence.

On Saturday, the group toured historic sites and neighborhoods, including the restored Wharton Southern Pacific Passenger Depot Museum, Hopper Elementary and the 2oth Century Technology museum, before heading to Houston to hold the 2014 Preservation Texas statewide honor awards at the restored 1910 Harris County Courthouse.

The Wharton Chamber of Commerce organized the arrangements for the visit to Wharton, including catering from Hinze’s BBQ, and Mrs. T’s.  Special thanks to Colorado Valley Transit bus driver Lloyd Aldridge, who drove the bus for the Saturday tour.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

More grim news about surface water

A press release from LCRA on our surface water supply. It's not good:


With parts of Texas in the midst of a persistent, severe drought, the Lower Colorado River Authority will seek permission from the state to curtail releases of interruptible stored water from the Highland Lakes for downstream irrigation for the fourth year in a row.
LCRA also will ask permission to reduce the amount of water required to be released in spring 2015 to support the habitat of the blue sucker, a threatened fish that lives in the river downstream of Austin.
"This was not an easy decision, but we must protect the region's water supply," said LCRA General Manager Phil Wilson. "More than a million people depend on water from the Highland Lakes, and right now, there is just not enough water for everyone to have all they want.
"This is a significant drought. At times, it's been even more intense than the worst recorded drought in this region's history, and we don't know when it's going to end," Wilson said. "This action will help us manage our limited water supply to meet the essential needs of the region's communities and industries."
On Wednesday, the LCRA Board of Directors voted 11-2 to ask permission from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to curtail releases from the lakes in 2015.
LCRA is requesting drought relief identical to the relief approved by TCEQ for 2014, which cut off releases of interruptible water supplies for most downstream irrigation.
The Board said it also would continue limiting outdoor watering by LCRA firm customers and their customers to a maximum of one day a week. Firm customers include cities in Central Texas that depend on water from the Highland Lakes.
The LCRA Board decision to seek relief for a record fourth straight year comes on the heels of some of the lowest amounts of water flowing into the lakes from streams and tributaries since the Highland Lakes were formed in the 1930s through early 1950s. January to October inflows were the second lowest for that 10-month period since 1942. The monthly inflows were the third lowest on record for October.
With this vote, the LCRA Board again is asking to deviate from the existing state-approved Water Management Plan, which determines how water from lakes Travis and Buchanan, the region's water supply reservoirs, is managed. Without the state's permission to deviate from the requirements of the plan, LCRA would be obligated to provide about 170,000 acre-feet of interruptible stored water from the lakes for agricultural purposes in 2015. (An acre-foot of water is 325,851 gallons.) Although LCRA recently filed a revised request with TCEQ to amend the Water Management Plan, these changes are not likely to be in effect in time to impact release decisions for 2015.
With combined storage in lakes Travis and Buchanan at about 674,000 acre-feet (or 33 percent of capacity), the Board determined there is not enough water available to meet all requests and still protect the region's water supply.
The request would suspend releases from the Highland Lakes for most downstream agriculture users in 2015. However, even if TCEQ grants LCRA's request, customers in the Garwood Irrigation Division still may be entitled to limited amounts of water because of an existing contract with LCRA.
Requirements for blue sucker fish
LCRA also is seeking permission from TCEQ to reduce the required minimum instream flow from 500 cubic feet per second (cfs) to 300 cfs for six weeks in the spring for the blue sucker fish, which is considered a threatened species in Texas. (One cubic foot per second is equivalent to about 450 gallons a minute.) The request is identical to the request TCEQ granted for spring 2014. If this request is granted, the amount of water that might be saved in 2015 will depend on flow conditions downstream. In 2014, this emergency relief saved about 17,000 acre-feet of water that LCRA otherwise would have had to release.
The lower flow is consistent with more recent science and still protects blue sucker habitat.
Increasing the water supply
LCRA is aggressively working to increase the region's water supply. LCRA plans to break ground on a new off-channel reservoir in Wharton County soon. The reservoir will be the first significant new water supply reservoir developed in the basin in decades. LCRA also has drilled four groundwater wells on property it owns in Bastrop County. The LCRA Board of Directors has committed to increasing the water supply by 100,000 acre-feet by 2017.

Friday, November 14, 2014

A good time at Las Casona

A big thank you to Las Casona for their open house on Thursday and for cutting the ribbon as a new Wharton Chamber member. Lots of fine fellowship, food and drinks. And a big thank you to our board and ambassadors who came en mass. A special shout out to Abby King, our board chair, and Jessica Dunn, who chairs our ambassadors. It's folks like all of you there who make the world go round.
Stay shoulder strong!

Friday, August 22, 2014



We agree!

We agree that when you expect more you get more.

We agree it is best to have a destination if you want to go anywhere.

We agree that different people can get to the same place differently.

We agree we should celebrate our common humanity.

We agree that our children are the most important thing on earth.

We agree we should collectively make effort for children to succeed.

We agree that God made everyone special.

We agree that teaching our children is an honored, sacred task.

We agree that we are capable as a community of sharing a vision of success.

We agree that we can succeed.

We agree that we will succeed.

We agree to empower those we trust and with which we share a vision to carry it out.

We agree!


Friday, August 15, 2014

Wharton in the news

The Star section of the Houston Chronicle today puts the focus on Wharton.
The Alley Theatre will stage the Houston premiere of Horton Foote's The Old Friends at the Wortham Theatre.
The article notes that the play is about "Harrison, Texas," which is really the memories of Foote's hometown, Wharton, Texas.
Wharton is a great place, and Horton Foote is one the reasons.
In other news today, the wire services are reporting that a baby was born with pierced ears.


Thursday, August 14, 2014

Come on, everybody!

We have read out loud this story a couple of times at chamber-related gatherings. Some of you may have heard this before. Some may have not. 
If you have heard it, sorry. However, it might never hurt to hear it again. For first timers, we hope you find it entertaining and useful.
This is a little story about four people named Everybody, Somebody, Anybody and Nobody.  
There was an important job to be done and Everybody was sure that Somebody would do it.  
Anybody could have done it, but Nobody did it.  
Somebody got angry because it was Everybody's job.  
Everybody thought that Anybody could do it, but Nobody realized that Everybody wouldn't do it.  
It ended up that Everybody blamed Somebody when Nobody did what Anybody could have done.
We cannot discover the origins of this story. We got our copy from Abby King. Thank you, Abby. Abby got her copy from her father. Dr. Dwight King. Thank you, Dwight.
Other stuff:
Chamber member of the week: Small Blessings.
Number of referrals from whartontexas.com to our Chamber members' businesses during July: 738.
Also, thank you to everyone who came to our Membership Appreciation Fish Fry a week ago Thursday. And a big thanks to the Chamber Ambassadors for putting it together, Caney Auto Service for the sponsorship, and the Hungerford Volunteer Fire Department for frying fish second to nobody on this earth. And Leroy Dettling, who makes the best tarter sauce west and east of the Mississippi and beyond.
Also, we enjoyed speaking to a new crop of 37 Wharton ISD teachers on Wednesday morning. We also are appreciative to the many many many businesses, organizations and individuals who donated item to our teacher goodie bags. The bags have never been bigger! Thank you!
That is all.

Another credit card reader

Amazon is extending its reach. What's else is new?
The wire services are reporting today that Amazon will introduce its own mobile credit card reader. Small businesses, using Amazon rather than Amazon's competitors, could pricess credit card payments from smart phones or tablets.
In other wire news today, a talking moose has been discovered in Minnesota.

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

New members!

WELCOME ! WELCOME ! New Chamber members ALLSTAR, Woodforest National Bank, Sweetwater Apartments and individual members Gary Gates and Kate Holman. Proud to have these businesses and individuals as a part of our member listing and our community development.

Friday, July 18, 2014

1,029

1,029. That’s the number of referrals our business members received from our website, whartontexas.com, last month. 

Thursday, July 10, 2014


Members only Fish Fry on Tuesday, Aug. 5, at the KC Hall! If you are a Wharton Chamber members, you should have received your tickets in the mail. If not, give us a call! 979-532-1862.

New Chamber Direrctors elected


We are pleased to announce  four persons elected to the Wharton Chamber board of directors.
They are Jessica Dittrich with H-E-B, Marshall Francis with General Sales, Debbie Folks with Wolf Run Design and Wied Realty,  and Abby King with K-Mana LLC.
Their terms will start Oct. 1, and they are already getting ready.
We are very excited to have them join the board, as they will bring ideas and energy to further the efforts of making Wharton a better place.
The slate of candidates were sent to members last month. The results became official on Tuesday.
Carry-over board members are Greg Baines with Just Do it Now Inc., Landon McClain with Prosperity Bank, Bill Wallace with the Wharton Journal-Spectator, Carol Wootton with Congressman Blake Farenthold’s office, Timmy Barker with Wharton Feed, Linda King with Milam Street Coffee/Wall to Wall Words, Mickey Reynolds with Caney Creek Church and the Texas Colorado River Flood Plain Coalition, and Justin Coldeway with Exelon Energy’s Colorado Bend Generation Station.
Jason Coldeway has served as 2013-2014 board chair, King as vice chair, and Wallace as treasurer.
Retiring from the board will be Steve Wisnieski with Moonwalks ‘N More, Scott Lovejoy with H-E-B, and Joe Munoz with J&M Printing Co.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Exceptional Customer Service


We are collaborating with Dale Carnegie Training to present our next Lunch and Learn business seminar.

The title is "Exceptional Customer Service from Exceptional People." It will from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 5 at the Wharton Civic Center.

Lunch and Learn is series of short business seminars by the Wharton Chamber of Commerce & Agriculture. The seminar series has been sponsored by Exelon's Coastal Bend Generation Station, H-E-B, Moonwalks-N‑More and the Wharton Journal-Spectator.

The topic of customer service was chosen from surveying our members' needs.

Tickets are $15 each for chamber members and $20 for non-members. Reserve your tickets by contacting us at 979-532-1962 or helpdesk@whartonchamber.com.

Ken Marsh, a Certified Dale Carnegie Trainer and Founder and CEO of Fearless Networking, will be the presenter. Marsh is an award-winning author who has written two books on business networking and two books on networking for a job/career.

Marsh is a chair and facilitator of two CEO Peer Advisory Groups. He is a certified Master Senior Trainer in eight courses for Dale Carnegie, and he is also a Growth Coach for business owners and CEOs.

He is the host of "The Word on Fearless Networking" on 100.7 FM and KKHT.com in Houston.

In the past four years Ken has written more than 400 articles on how to build a life and a network for several online magazines.

Marsh is a Rotarian, serving as Co-Chair of the Rotary Youth Leadership Awards program and has been so for the past 11 years.  
He is also a Lee Alumni Mentors' of Hope "At-Risk-Youth" mentor for Lee High School in Houston.

Here is some of the points he will cover:



- Explaining why customer service is important.
- Knowing the value of following up and following through.
- Learning how to be a much more effective customer service provider.
-  Standing out from the Competition by providing customer service "Magic Moments".
-  Discovering how to build customer loyalty
-  Knowing the No. 1 way consistently to build long-term customer relationships.

Please plan to be there for this and much more at the next Lunch and Learn business seminar. You get a catered lunch, too!

Monday, June 9, 2014

Here's a link to a Dallas Morning News article on the Export Import Bank. Congress needs to reauthorize its existence, and there are serious doubts they will do so. http://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/latest-columns/20140608-critics-wrong-that-ex-im-bank-only-benefits-big-companies.ece

Thursday, May 29, 2014

The following resolution was unimously adopted Wednesday, May 28, by the Wharton Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture board of directors:

Resolution
of the Wharton Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture
WHEREAS the Export-Import Bank of the United States was established in 1934 by an Executive Order for the purpose of providing credit guarantees and other financial services that help foreign customers of U.S. companies secure financing they need from to buy American products; and
WHEREAS the Export-Import Bank of the United States has facilitated $586 billion in U.S. exports since its inception, supporting nearly $47 billion worth of exports in 2013; and
WHEREAS the charter of the Export-Import Bank of the United States provides that the Bank makes available not less than 20 percent of its lending authority to small businesses, which currently support nearly 290,000 export related jobs with more than 85 percent of all Bank transactions directly benefitting small business exporters; and
WHEREAS the Export-Import Bank of the United States has maintained a very low default rate of 1.5 percent through the recession and several years of strong growth and pays for itself through the fees it charges to foreign buyers and returns billions of dollars to the U.S. Treasury ($3.4 billion from 2006 to 2010); and
WHEREAS the Houston metropolitan area exported $110 billion of goods in 2012 and surpassed New York in 2013 as the number one U.S. market for exports with Texas having the most exporters by far that use the Export-Import Bank of the United States; and
WHEREAS, the Import-Export Bank of the United States has facilitated about $3 million in exports from Wharton’s Eco Prime Group, boosting the Wharton community’s employment and economic activity; and
WHEREAS eliminating the Export-Import Bank of the United States would not only increase the annual deficit by the amount deposited each year by the Bank in the U.S. Treasury but would also put thousands of export related jobs at risk;
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED:
The Wharton Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture fully endorses and supports the reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank of the United States because of  the significant economic impact that exports have on the regional economy and the nation.

Approved by the Board of Directors and signed on this 28th Day of May, 2014
Justin Coldeway
Board Chair

Thursday, May 8, 2014

have your say

The Texas Transportation Commission officials will meet to receive input on future highways in Wharton County. It will be 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 8, at the Wharton Civic Center.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Free Bus Tours


One of the things we love to do here at the chamber is bus tours. Most are senior citizens and church groups from Houston. They like Wharton.
We have a long list of things for them to do. Most will spend time at the Wharton County Historical Museum and the 20th Century Technology Museum, eat lunch, shop, tour the courthouse or the Morris Carriage House Museum.

Other attractions are our cattle ranches, the Sante Fe Railroad Depot, and historic homes that often include a drive-by of Horton Foote’s family home.

Many of these groups have long-standing relationships with the Chamber. We provide a free tour guide for them, too.

Harris County provides the buses and drivers.

We like our tour groups. And bringing outside dollars into our community is something to like, too.
To arrange a tour, call Kim at 979-532-1862.

http://whartonchamber.blogspot.com

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Wharton County Youth Fair, Wednesday, April 30

Wharton County Youth Fair, Crescent, TX - Wednesday, April 30 - Today is Preschool and Special Friends Day at WCYF. The Carnival opens at 5 and it's Buddy Night - 2 ride for the price of 1! The Creative Arts Open for Viewing and tonight Keith McCoy and the COC Band are in the Beer Garden and so much more. You can view the full schedule here:

http://whartontexas.com/uploads/wcyf%202014%20schedule.pdf

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Wharton County Youth Fair Today

Wharton County Youth Fair, Crescent, Texas, for Tuesday, April 29. The Steer Show, Bull Blowout, and much more!  See the full schedule at whartontexas.com/uploads/wcyf%202014%20schedule.pdf

Friday, April 11, 2014

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Lots and even more than that



Out goes the fireworks. In comes a laser light spectacular.

The Wharton County Freedom Fest has been revamped into something we think you are really going to enjoy. See you  Saturday, May 17.

What else will there be? Lots. Like zydeco, crawfish and shrimp, the car show, and more.

Monday, March 31, 2014

LCRA press release: water rate proposal


Press release from LCRA:
March 28, 2014

LCRA staff has revised an earlier proposal to change the rates LCRA charges firm and interruptible customers for raw water.

In January, LCRA staff presented its initial rate proposal to the LCRA Board of Directors. Since then, members of the LCRA staff have spent many hours talking with customers and the public throughout the basin to collect feedback. LCRA staff has revised its preliminary rate proposal for the Board's consideration as a direct result of that information-gathering process. Revisions to the proposal will enable LCRA to recover costs while mitigating future rate impacts to its customers.

LCRA has long been committed to being a responsible steward of the river and the basin's natural resources. LCRA is determined to responsibly manage the water of the lower Colorado River from the uppermost tributaries that feed the Highland Lakes down to Matagorda Bay.

Managing the basin's water system comes with financial costs, known as river management costs. LCRA is committed to allocating these costs among firm and interruptible customers in a fair and equitable way. After evaluating feedback from customers and the public across the basin, LCRA is proposing to allocate river management costs among firm and interruptible customers based on the amount of water they use.

LCRA also recognizes that proposed rates need to consider key factors, including:

LCRA has no taxing ability and must rely on rates to cover its costs.
Interruptible water can be, and has been, curtailed in times of severe drought. River management costs continue during these times, and LCRA must recover those costs.
LCRA needs to work toward rates that fully recover the costs of providing interruptible water. These costs are currently under-recovered.
After considering these factors and input from customers and the public, LCRA staff is proposing a change in water rates that differs from the January proposal. The revised proposal:

Allocates river management costs based on the amount of water used instead of a share of committed firm supply.
No longer includes costs of developing new water supply.
Includes updated cost information that has been developed since January.
Interruptible Water Rate Proposal
The revised rate proposal for interruptible water takes a significant step toward achieving full cost recovery.

The proposal calls for the new rates for Lakeside and Gulf Coast interruptible supply to be effective January 2015, with a goal to raise rates to reach full cost recovery over time. New rates for the Garwood Irrigation Division could be approved for 2014 as part of a separate rate process.

 All rates are per acre-foot of water. An acre-foot is the amount of water needed to cover an acre with one foot of water, or 325,851 gallons.

*As part of a separate rate process, LCRA is working on rates for 2014 that may be retroactively applied to Garwood and other irrigation customers that use LCRA groundwater and run-of-river water, or make use of LCRA canals to transport their own groundwater.

Press release from LCRA:
March 28, 2014

LCRA staff has revised an earlier proposal to change the rates LCRA charges firm and interruptible customers for raw water.

In January, LCRA staff presented its initial rate proposal to the LCRA Board of Directors. Since then, members of the LCRA staff have spent many hours talking with customers and the public throughout the basin to collect feedback. LCRA staff has revised its preliminary rate proposal for the Board's consideration as a direct result of that information-gathering process. Revisions to the proposal will enable LCRA to recover costs while mitigating future rate impacts to its customers.

LCRA has long been committed to being a responsible steward of the river and the basin's natural resources. LCRA is determined to responsibly manage the water of the lower Colorado River from the uppermost tributaries that feed the Highland Lakes down to Matagorda Bay.

Managing the basin's water system comes with financial costs, known as river management costs. LCRA is committed to allocating these costs among firm and interruptible customers in a fair and equitable way. After evaluating feedback from customers and the public across the basin, LCRA is proposing to allocate river management costs among firm and interruptible customers based on the amount of water they use.

LCRA also recognizes that proposed rates need to consider key factors, including:

LCRA has no taxing ability and must rely on rates to cover its costs.
Interruptible water can be, and has been, curtailed in times of severe drought. River management costs continue during these times, and LCRA must recover those costs.
LCRA needs to work toward rates that fully recover the costs of providing interruptible water. These costs are currently under-recovered.
After considering these factors and input from customers and the public, LCRA staff is proposing a change in water rates that differs from the January proposal. The revised proposal:

Allocates river management costs based on the amount of water used instead of a share of committed firm supply.
No longer includes costs of developing new water supply.
Includes updated cost information that has been developed since January.
Interruptible Water Rate Proposal
The revised rate proposal for interruptible water takes a significant step toward achieving full cost recovery.

The proposal calls for the new rates for Lakeside and Gulf Coast interruptible supply to be effective January 2015, with a goal to raise rates to reach full cost recovery over time. New rates for the Garwood Irrigation Division could be approved for 2014 as part of a separate rate process.

 All rates are per acre-foot of water. An acre-foot is the amount of water needed to cover an acre with one foot of water, or 325,851 gallons.

*As part of a separate rate process, LCRA is working on rates for 2014 that may be retroactively applied to Garwood and other irrigation customers that use LCRA groundwater and run-of-river water, or make use of LCRA canals to transport their own groundwater.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Join Us!

Open House and Mixer starting at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 27, at the ARC and Texana Center.

Use us!


Our website, whartontexas.com, serves as the virtual front door to our community. It serves as the gateway for travel information, plus, how to do business here, both for residents and out-of-towners. And it is much more.

Whartontexas.com, too, offers many services to chamber members.

Members can get tickets to chamber events like a luncheon or the annual banquet.

They can also update information that potential customers see about their business or organization on line.

And the general public — chamber members or not — can post items on our community calendar. Our calendar is the clearinghouse for scheduling events and finding out what’s going on in Wharton.

Using our website for these things is easy. But if you need help, just call us at the chamber office, 979-532-1862.

Also, find us on Facebook, where we post lots of information and activities, at Wharton, Texas Chamber of Commerce. And find our blog at whartonchamber.blogspot.com.

We are here for you. Virtually, too. 

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Interested in exporting your products oversees?


Interested in exporting your products oversees?

Felipe Guzman, general manager of Prime Eco Group Inc., invites you to a meeting to learn more about exporting.

Present will be a director and senior international trade specialist with the U.S. Commercial Services Office.

The meeting will be from 10:30 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. Thursday, March 27, at the Wharton Economic Development Corp., 1944 N. Fulton St.

This is good opportunity for existing exporters and future exporters in Wharton to meet the people that drive local, state and national policies as well as educational forums to export.

Also attending will be a representative from the District Export Council.  

Call 979-532-0999 for more information.


Thursday, March 13, 2014

Thinking of spring


Spring is in the air. Well, people are thinking about spring.
One reason is something brand new. The Wharton County Backyard Farm Tour. It will be Saturday, April 26 — the same day that the Wharton County Farmers Market starts up.
Seven homes will be opened up where you can view how people grow food here, from chickens to vegetables. More on this later.  Thank you Stephanie Kovicka et al.
Meanwhile, the Wharton Beautification Commission is planning the annual citywide cleanup, Spring Sweep on Saturday, April 5.
And the commission is planning much more, wanting to help beautify the city entrances, the downtown planters, and enhancements at the Santa Fe Trail. Dr. Mystan Gurkin is chair.
There’s also talk of a new community garden for Wharton.
What’s it take? People who care. People who want to make a difference. People working to make a difference. What a wonderful thing. Spring must be in the air.