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Information From a Nurse Aide Class at the Paris Junior College Sulphur Springs Campus

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Information From a Nurse Aide Class at the Paris Junior College Sulphur Springs Campus

NURSE CLASS

PJC-Sulphur Springs Center Instructor Kristi Shultz, right, answers a question for student Selene Leon of Sulphur Springs during her recent Certified Nurse Aide class. 

Paris Junior College Sulphur Springs nurse aide class
Paris Junior College Sulphur Springs nurse aide class

Paris Junior College — located in Paris, Texas, about 100 miles northeast of Dallas — has been a part of the Lamar County community since 1924.

Paris Junior College offers Associate in Arts, Associate in Science and Associate in Applied Science degrees, as well as Certificates of Proficiency in technical/workforce fields. The college has expanded its academic curriculum through the years to encourage associate degree and university transfer candidates. Since establishing its first vocational program — jewelry and watchmaking in 1942 — the college has been aggressive in adding technical/workforce programs that will benefit students entering the workforce.

The campus of 54 tree-shaded acres includes 20 major buildings and residence halls and provides students a unique and pleasant environment for learning.

Paris Junior College also operates centers in Sulphur Springs, Texas, and in Greenville, Texas.

Vision

To be the educational provider of choice for the region.

Mission

Paris Junior College is a comprehensive community college serving the region’s educational and training needs while strengthening the economic, social and cultural life of our diverse community.

Police Seek Help Identifying, Locating Suspect In Bank Robbery

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Police Seek Help Identifying, Locating Suspect In Bank Robbery

As of Thursday morning, local authorities had yet to apprehend or identify a suspect in the June 15 Pilgrim Bank robbery, according to police. Sulphur Springs Police and Lake Country Crime Stoppers are asking anyone with video or information to call in tips.

The bank robbery reportedly occurred during the noon hour at the South Broadway Street bank. SSPD was notified at 12:55 p.m. June 15, 2022.

The suspect was reported to be a heavier set, white male, approximately 6 feet tall, who was wearing a light blue hoody, glasses, a blue face mask and khaki colored pants, according to Sulphur Springs Police Chief Jason Ricketson.

Police at approximately 2:20 p.m. Wednesday disseminated the images (below) of the suspect, hoping someone could identify the suspect based on the image and writing on the back of the shirt.

SSPD later Wednesday afternoon identified a white vehicle with sunroof and luggage rack, but no front license plate, as a possible suspect vehicle or connected to the suspect. Thursday, investigators said the suspect vehicle is a Chevrolet Suburban.

Police investigation into the bank robbery remained ongoing Thursday morning, but new leads were slim.

Anyone in the area who may have seen or have information about the suspect or vehicle shown below — especially businesses who may have captured the suspect’s image on video, or anyone who may be able to identify the suspect — is asked to contact Sulphur Springs Police Department at 903-885-7602 or call Crime Stoppers at 903-885-2020.

Tips to Crime Stoppers are handled in such a way that the tipster’s name remains confidential. Tips to Crime Stoppers leading to an arrest and/or conviction could result in a monetary award.

KSSTRadio.com publishes Sulphur Springs Police Department reports and news. The Police Department is located at 125 Davis St., Sulphur Springs, Texas. Non-emergency calls can be made to (903) 885-7602.

If you have an emergency dial 9-1-1.

The Sulphur Springs Police Department continues to serve its citizens with pride in its overall mission and will strive to provide the best possible police force in the 21st century.

If you have an emergency, dial 9-1-1

The Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office is located at 298 Rosemont Sulphur Springs, TX 75482. You can reach them for non-emergency matters at (903) 438-4040.

Chamber Connection – June 15: Digital Advertising Expert Featured At Lunch And Learn

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Chamber Connection – June 15: Digital Advertising Expert Featured At Lunch And Learn

By Butch Burney

Small business owners will want to come to our Lunch and Learn, set for Wednesday, June 22, at the upstairs room at Corner Grubhouse, entitled Digital Marketing 101, by April Bliss, founder of Bliss Digital Innovations. We had scheduled April for this workshop in January, but had to postpone it due to COVID.

Learn from Digital Advertising Expert April Bliss, who brings her unique perspective as a digital marketing and business consultant bringing over 30 years of extensive marketing and sales expertise in radio, national magazines, newspaper, automobile industry, and retail management, as well as owning several small businesses.

The fee is $15 for Chamber members, $20 for nonmembers. You can register by calling the Chamber at 903-885-6515 or emailing [email protected].

Blood Drive

Red River Credit Union will team with Carter BloodCare for a blood drive on Monday, June 27, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the parking lot of RRCU at 822 Gilmer St. Donors will receive a T-shirt while supplies last. For more information, contact Stephani Britton at 903-735-3000, ext. 2107, or email [email protected].

Mental Health First Aid

Lakes Regional will host a two-day event for Mental Health First Aid (MHFA), which is free and open to the public. The adult MHFA is 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 14 at the Lakes Regional Sulphur Springs location on Airport Road. The youth seminar will be 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 26.

To register, call 972-977-7295 or email [email protected].

Baby Benefit

Heritage Home Health and Hospice is hosting a baby wipe and onesie drive benefitting Heart of Hope, a pregnancy resource center in Sulphur Springs.

Donations of baby wipes and white onesies (sizes 0-3 months) may be dropped off at Heritage Home Health & Hospice (1325 Shannon Rd E, Suite A, Sulphur Springs) or at the Hopkins County Chamber of Commerce (110 Main Street, Sulphur Springs) now through June 24.

Children’s Grief Camp

“Mending the Mess,” a grief camp for children ages 6-12, will be held June 23-24, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. each day, at t First United Methodist Church. The camp is part of Cypress Basin Hospice’s Camp Brave Heart.

For more information, go to the website CBHospice.org.

International Yoga Day

One Soul Yoga & Wellness Center invites everyone to come and join the celebrations for 8th International Day of Yoga on Tuesday, June 21. The global theme this year is “Yoga for Well-Being” and everyone in the community is encouraged to come join. One Soul will offer free classes all day.
International Day of Yoga is celebrated world-wide every June 21 to help spread awareness of the mental and physical benefits of practicing yoga.

One Soul’s schedule for the day includes:

  • 6:30-7:30 a.m.: Solstice Kundalini Yoga-DeAnna
  • 9:30-10:30 a.m.: Beginner Flow-Rachel
  • 12:10-12:50 p.m.: Family Yoga-DeAnna
  • 6-7 p.m.: Open Flow-Allison
  • 8-9:15 pm: Candlelight Flow & Nidra-DeAnna & Rachel

Classes that day are free and open to everyone. One Soul Yoga & Wellness Center is located at 1008 Main St., in Sulphur Springs. To learn more about the classes or to sign up go to www.OneSoulYogaStudio.com.

Ribbon Cuttings

  • Tolleson Family Market will have a ribbon cutting at noon on Friday, June 17, at their shop at 300 Connally St. Please help us welcome them to the community.
  • Vosh Graphix will host a ribbon cutting at noon Thursday, June 23, at the Chamber office. Please welcome them to the business community.
  • Greenleaf Mortuary will have a ribbon cutting at noon Friday, June 24, at 200 Putman St. Please join us for this event.
  • Humana hosted a ribbon cutting at noon on Wednesday, June 8. Please welcome them to the community.
Humana ribbon cutting

Hopkins County Officers Track 2 Murder Suspects To Missouri

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Hopkins County Officers Track 2 Murder Suspects To Missouri

Hopkins County officers tracked two murder suspects to Missouri, where they were reported to have been apprehended and were in custody Wednesday at 8:35 p.m., according to Hopkins County Sheriff Lewis Tatum.

Sheriff’s deputies found an abandoned vehicle when checking out a report of someone’s personal items being located on a county road north of Sulphur Springs Monday evening. The vehicle came back as being from the Dallas area. Authorities at that time believe it had been dumped in Hopkins County, but continued to investigate, Hopkins County Chief Deputy Tanner Crump stated in a release.

A further search of the area was conducted and deputies located a deceased male who they believed to be associated with the vehicle and a victim of homicide that started in the metroplex, with the deceased male and vehicle dumped in rural Hopkins County, HCSO authorities reported.

“This evening two investigators from the Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office, Texas and a Texas Ranger traveled to St Louis Missouri and arrested the two suspects in the homicide that was discovered Monday evening,” Crump noted in update at an 8:35 p.m. June 15, 2022.

The victim of the homicide has been identified as Giovanni Alexis Najarro of Dallas, a Hispanic male born in 1987.

Through continued investigation, authorities followed leads in the homicide investigation all the way to St. Louis, Missouri. Two members of Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office and a Texas Ranger traveled Tuesday to Missouri, where suspects Diamonye Jakeli Payne of Fort Worth and Aleigha Denise Coble of Colbert, Oklahoma, were taken into custody Wednesday evening in connection with the homicide, Crump reported.

The pair remained in custody there Wednesday night, but are expected to be extradited back to Texas on the charge at some point, officials reported.

“Although the investigation is ongoing we do not believe anyone else is involved. I would like to commend all the officers involved for a job well done,” Tatum said of the local law enforcement’s work in making arrests in identifying suspects and getting arrests in the homicide case in 2 days.

Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office investigator and a Texas Ranger arrested two suspects in connection with the homicide of a Fort Worth man whose body was found in rural Hopkins County, Texas, earlier this week.

If you have an emergency, dial 9-1-1

The Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office is located at 298 Rosemont Sulphur Springs, TX 75482. You can reach them for non-emergency matters at (903) 438-4040.

Construction On Bill Bradford Road Overpass Slow Going Due To Road Construction

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Construction On Bill Bradford Road Overpass Slow Going Due To Road Construction

It’s definitely summer in Texas. Not only is air acrid and humidity so thick you almost swim in it, but road construction abounds. In fact, you’d be hard pressed to find a Texas community without some type of road construction — whether on state highways or farm-to-market roads, city streets or county roads —within a stones throw. Construction businesses take advantage of those hot summer months to get as much work done as possible on roads, homes.

College Street road construction on June 10, 2022

In Sulphur Springs alone, College and League streets are both under construction this week, with a big section of College closed a couple of blocks from the square. This street is part of a major rebuilding project that could take a year or more to complete. Work on League Street is progressing quickly, with both lanes graded down requiring very slow travel through the area. Crews will have section of the road from just off the I-30 overpass to Bellview/Tate Street closed to allow for repaving work this week. This street, like Lee Street shouldn’t take too long to complete.

This week, traffic is slow going and at times stalls completely on eastbound I-30 through Sulphur Springs, especially on the Bill Bradford Road overpass due to road construction.

Additional roads within the City of Sulphur Springs scheduled for repairs this summer as part of the annual Street Improvement Plan include:

City of Sulphur Springs Street Improvement Plan for 2022, as noted in the June 7, City Manager’s Report.

Texas Department of Transportation for the Sulphur Springs reports the following are scheduled for work this week, June 13-18, 2022, in Hopkins County:

  • Lane closures and traffic delays as crews begin surfacing operations on Interstate 30 from Loop 301 to the Franklin County line.
  • Lane closures and short delays as crews begin upgrading cross drainage structures on FM 1536 from State Highway 19 to FM 71.
  • Lane closures and short delays as crews perform surfacing operations on FM 3389 from I- 30 to FM 1567.

As improvements are being made, motorists are reminded to slow down, exhibit caution and make a conscious effort to watch for road workers and stopped or slow-moving vehicles while traveling in construction zones. Not only is it the law, but by doing so, you help save lives, as well as potential vehicle damages, fines and possibly even time in jail someone is injured or killed in a crash.

Stop and go traffic at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Those who can are recommended to avoid these stretches of roadway by finding alternate routes of travel.

The week of July 6, 2022, work to create a four-way stop at the intersection of FM 69 and State Highway 11 in Como, Texas, is scheduled to begin.

TxDOT will place stop signs necessary to convert this intersection to a four-way stop in all directions, officials said. Advance warning signs and message boards will be placed near this intersection soon. The work to install the stop signs at this intersection should begin on July 6, weather permitting.

Motorists who frequently travel in this area are asked to pay special attention to all barricades, traffic controls and signs, and to reduce their speed as they approach and travel through work zones. They should also be prepared to encounter rough pavement and brief traffic delays, and should avoid distractions such as cell phones, eating, drinking, or car audio or navigation systems.

* Updated: Local Authorities Investigating Bank Robbery

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* Updated: Local Authorities Investigating Bank Robbery

** Last updated at 3:27 p.m. June 15, 2022**

Local authorities are investigating a bank robbery reported on South Broadway Street Wednesday afternoon. Police are asking for the public’s help identifying and locating the suspect.

Sulphur Springs Police Department at approximately 12:55 p.m. June 15, 2022, received notification of what was reported to be a robbery at Pilgrim Bank. The suspect was reported to be a white male, approximately 6 feet tall, who was wearing a light blue hoody, glasses and khaki/tan colored pants, according to Sulphur Springs Police Chief Jason Ricketson.

Police at approximately 2:20 p.m. Wednesday disseminated the images (below) of the suspect.

SSPD have now identified a white car with sunroof and luggage rack, but no front license plate, as a possible suspect vehicle.

Anyone in the area who may have seen or have information about the suspect or vehicle shown below — especially businesses who may have captured his image on video, or anyone who may be able to identify the suspect — is asked to contact Sulphur Springs Police Department at 903-885-7602.

Officers from SSPD and Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office were still searching and following up on potential leads at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 15, 2022.

KSSTRadio.com publishes Sulphur Springs Police Department reports and news. The Police Department is located at 125 Davis St., Sulphur Springs, Texas. Non-emergency calls can be made to (903) 885-7602.

If you have an emergency dial 9-1-1.

The Sulphur Springs Police Department continues to serve its citizens with pride in its overall mission and will strive to provide the best possible police force in the 21st century.

If you have an emergency, dial 9-1-1

The Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office is located at 298 Rosemont Sulphur Springs, TX 75482. You can reach them for non-emergency matters at (903) 438-4040.

10 Fruits For Health

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10 Fruits For Health

By Johanna Hicks, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension, Family & Community Health Agent, Hopkins County, [email protected]

With summer upon us, many individuals turn to cool, refreshing fruits to satisfy taste buds. Those with diabetes can benefit from the vitamins and minerals provided by fruits but must be mindful of the carbohydrate counts. Fruits have several health benefits, including reducing the risk of obesity, heart attack, and stroke.

However, all fruits contain sugar, and this can be challenging for those living with type 1 or type 2 diabetes. Understanding the carb content will help individuals enjoy the healthy and delicious food without spiking blood sugar. Keep in mind that fresh fruit and frozen fruit are always better choices than fruit in a can or jar because of potential added sugars in those products. Dried fruits also contain extra sugar.

Allison Caggia with Diabetes Daily provides a list of 10 fruits that are lower in carbs while still providing fiber which can help keep you feeling fuller longer, promote good digestion, and help overall blood sugar management. These fruits have 10 grams net carbs or less:

  • Tomatoes: the tomato is a fruit and perhaps one of the most versatile to work with. They can be eaten over a salad, served with fresh mozzarella and a drizzle of balsamic vinegar, roasted to bring out the flavor, or turned into a sauce to add to a favorite protein. Tomatoes contain a plethora of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants and only contain 4.8 grams of net carbs for an average-sized tomato.
  • Avocados: This is a great choice that is full of healthy fats and antioxidants, while containing only 1.7 grams of net carbs per 3.5 ounces. Avocados are high in fiber and contain potassium, Vitamin K, Vitamin C, and folate. Adding avocado to a salad is a flavorful way to get some good nutrients without spiking blood sugar, or turn it into guacamole to serve with your favorite crunchy dipping veggies.
  • Strawberries: A favorite for many, this fruit contains 8 net grams of carbs per cup. Strawberries are high in vitamins, fiber, and antioxidants, along with other health benefits. This versatile fruit can be used to make smoothies, toss them on your favorite leafy green summer salad, or dice them into Greek yogurt.
  • Lemons and limes: While people don’t actually eat whole lemons and limes, either is a great addition to water. Both contain only 7 net carbs per serving, so use them generously in your water and to season meals as well. And the are a great source of Vitamin C.
  • Blackberries: Of all the really fruity fruits, blackberries contain the lowest amount of carbs – only 8 net carbs per cup. Blueberries, by contrast, contain 17 net carbs per cup. Blackberries are packed with vitamins and high in fiber, making them a great choice.
  • Kiwi: Kiwis are actually berries, and like most other berries, they have minimal sugar, containing 8 net carbs per kiwi. They are packed with vitamins and antioxidants, and high in fiber, which helps aid digestion.
  • Plums: This fruit only contains 7.5 net carbs per averages-sized plum. They have been found to reduce blood sugar thanks to a hormone, adiponectin. The fiber may also help avoid a quick spike in blood glucose levels.
  • Rhubarb: Coming in at only 1 gram of net carbs per cup, this super fruit is packed with vitamins and antioxidants, along with numerous health benefits, such as aiding collagen production and fighting inflammation. Most recipes use a lot of sugar to take an edge off rhubarb’s sour and bitter flavor, but a zero-carb sweetener could easily be used instead.
  • Watermelon: With only 8 grams per 3.5 ounces, watermelon is deliciously refreshing. Not just high in vitamins and antioxidants, watermelon also contain lycopene which has been found to lower blood pressure among many other health benefits.
  • Cantaloupe: Like watermelon, cantaloupe only contains 8 grams of carbs per 3.5 ounces. It is full of vitamin A, C, and potassium. Try this succulent fruit alone or add it to water for a little flavor.

Closing Thought

Our greatest fear should not be of failure but of succeeding at things in life that don’t really matter.

– Francis Chan

Contact Johanna Hicks, B.S., M.Ed., Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Family & Community Health Agent at the Hopkins County office at P.O. Box 518 or 1200-B West Houston St., Sulphur Springs, TX 75483; 903-885-3443; or [email protected].

Sheriff Offers Measures To Help Better Prepare Rural Schools For Threats To Campus, Lives

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Sheriff Offers Measures To Help Better Prepare Rural Schools For Threats To Campus, Lives

Hopkins County Sheriff Lewis Tatum, like most of the country, has had the safety of local school children and staff since the Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, Texas, on May 24, 2022. Friday, he told Hopkins County Commissioners Court he’d come up with two measures to help better prepare rural schools to respond to any threats, should they arise, on their campuses until law enforcement can arrive to assist.

Hopkins County Sheriff
Hopkins County Sheriff Lewis Tatum

Collaborating with Texas Ranger John Vance and Texas and Southwest Cattle Raisers Association Special Cattle Ranger Bo Fox, Tatum has invited all rural school administrators, including principals, and school resource officers to a training session Friday, then step up training with designated campus “guardians” (addressed and designated by each district) and staff and presence at school. He said there will be some very frank discussions regarding school safety and security along with the training. Special Ranger Fox previously attained and helped schools with ALICE training.

Because of the distance from all of the county schools to the nearest law enforcement and emergency response agencies, the idea is to train with the school personnel, SROs and guardians more frequently so they can do everything possible to protect students and staff should a threat arise on campus and give the best possible outcome until the sheriff’s office, DPS, Cumby Police (for CISD) and Mount Vernon authorities (for Saltillo ISD) can arrive.

“We are not looking to overwhelm them, but ultimately it is the responsibility of the county to protect our kids. It’s going to be point blank information, not worrying so much about possible lawsuits as doing what needs to be done,” Tatum said.

Tatum said he talked to Donald Washington, a former Hopkins County resident and current Louisiana attorney who served as the director of the US Marshals Service from 2019 to 2021, about it and Washington says the training is a good program.

The Commissioners Court, Sheriff’s and District Attorney’s Offices also are partnering to fund safety equipment to help school personnel prepare themselves should they encounter the unthinkable -a very real threat of life and safety. Ten pieces of equipment will be purchased, one each furnished to the six rural schools districts in Hopkins County — Como-Pickton, Cumby, Miller Grove, North Hopkins, Saltillo and Sulphur Bluff ISDs — and four to go with the four HCSO shift officers on duty daily to equip them with safety equipment to better help them respond should someone bring a weapon on campus or in another way place lives in danger.

The $10,000 worth of equipment should help protect school officers or guardians, allow them to get closer to suspect who is a threat to get them out of or away from the school. If an SRO is “taken out,” Tatum said, the guardian then will have to step up. The training will help prepare the guardian (and SROs, administrators and other personnel) prepare for different possibilities. Guardians not only have to be willing but able to respond in a perilous situation; wanting to train, being able to hit a still target and carry a weapon is very different from having bullets flying directly at you. Training helps ingrain the body’s reaction in emergency situations, so that the individual instead of panicking or freezing in fear the person’s acts in a manner for the best outcome for the situation, regardless what it might be.

For instance, Tatum said, a teacher or administrator is made aware of a social media threat made toward one of the six rural school districts in Hopkins County. Upon notification, Tatum said the sheriff’s office will respond immediately. The issue will be addressed by his department. However, if the threat is on campus, the school district will have the duty to respond proactively until HCSO can arrive at the school or wherever the threat may be located, the sheriff noted.

“We’ve got to do anything we can to protect our kids,” Tatum said. “We will train with each superintendent and police department, train the guardian on how to use the special protective equipment. God forbid it does, but if something happens, it will take us a while to get there. I think this is what we need to to get a handle on our kids and their safety. We have to. The Texas Ranger will work with us if we get information. We will not look over it. It will be under investigation. We will alleviate any threat. We will handle it swiftly and justly.”

Precinct 2 Commissioner Greg Anglin during the June 10 meeting, noted that during his time serving as a trustee on Como-Pickton CISD school board, a situation arose that required investigation. From that he’s seen just how much every little bit that can be done to help matters. Most rural districts have only one SRO. School security is most important, something that districts and school officers can’t become complacent about, even during the last month and weeks of schools, when students, staff and visitors and in and out frequently. Uvalde if nothing else showed that schools and SROs have to be on guard at all times, for the safety of children and staff, the official noted.

“We are already training some. We are going to step up training and presence, work with superintendents to help however we can to keep our kids safe,” Tatum said. “This is just the beginning of what we are going to do to help . This is what we can do right now to start out.”

Possible Causes For Twisted, Curled Vegetable Leaves

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Possible Causes For Twisted, Curled Vegetable Leaves

Dr. Mario Villarino, Texas AgriLife Extension Agent, Agriculture and Natural Resources, Hopkins County Agent, [email protected].

If the leaves on your vegetable plants are twisted or curled, the problem could be environmental, chemical, or biological.

Sometimes, all the leaves on a plant are twisted or curled; sometimes only new growth has symptoms while older leaves are normal. Damage may start moderately then quickly begin to affect new growth. Damage to tomato and other vegetable plants may have one or a combination of causes.

There are five primary reasons that tomato leaves twist:

  1. Wind damage
  2. Herbicide drift
  3. Herbicide residue
  4. Broad mite
  5. Tomato viruses

Vegetables can be damaged by herbicides left in mulch or compost made with hay or manure from fields that have been sprayed with herbicides. The active ingredient aminopyralid can persists for 18 months on treated hay and hay products. It also persists in the manure of animals that eat herbicide-treated hay. These herbicides products are commonly used in pastures because they kill about 100 difficult broadleaf weeds.

Some herbicide labels state that any plant matter collected from fields sprayed with aminopyralid may not be used in compost or where vegetables are to be grown. The label also states that the “applicator must provide the land manager with a copy of instructions regarding uses of forage from areas treated with aminopyralid.”

Anyone who sells hay, silage, haylage, green chop, or bedding material that was treated with aminopyralid, is responsible for alerting the buyer that it was treated and must not to be used in composting or where vegetables are grown. Buyers must also ask whether aminopyralid was used on the source forage within the last 18 months.

For more information on this or any other agricultural topic please contact the Hopkins County Extension Office at 903-885-3443 or email me at [email protected].

Digital License Plates Are Now Available For Commercial Fleets in Texas

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Digital License Plates Are Now Available For Commercial Fleets in Texas

AUSTIN, Texas – Everything is going digital these days – even license plates! Eligible commercial fleet owners now have the option to put a high-tech tool on the back of their vehicles. Digital license plates can add a new level of convenience, safety, and security to fleet management.

NEWS RELEASE – Tuesday, June 14, 2022

State law authorizes the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles (TxDMV) to offer digital license plates to government and commercial fleet vehicles. These plates, manufactured by Reviver, became available on June 1, 2022. Multiple plate models are available at different prices through Reviver. The vehicle must already be registered in Texas to qualify for a digital license plate. An additional annual $95 administrative fee is applied to digital license plate orders.

“Texans rely on commercial vehicles for the safe and efficient movement of goods and services that are crucial to supporting the state’s economy” said TxDMV Executive Director Daniel Avitia. “Offering digital licenses plates to commercial fleets is part of our ongoing commitment to streamline and modernize motor vehicle services.”

Eligible commercial fleet owners interested in upgrading to digital plates or reviewing pricing options may visit Reviver.com/geo-expansion/texas/.