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Montague County tax rate may go up almost a nickel

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By DANI BLACKBURN
Montague County Commissioners plan nearly a nickel increase to the tax rate after receiving the certified property values in a called meeting Thursday afternoon.
County Tax Assessor Collector Syd Nowell presented the certification of values and rates for 2017 Thursday.
Certified net values are $1,812,837,530 with rolling railroad stock of $11,930,173 for a total of $1,824,767,703. The values fall $14,800,397 below last year’s, which totaled $1,839,568,100.
The effective tax rate, which is the amount needed to generate the same tax revenue as last year, is 0.5172 cents per $100 in property value.
The rollback rate for maintenance and operation is 0.5399 with a debt rate of .0173. The total rollback rate equals 0.5572 per $100 value.
County Judge Rick Lewis recommended a 55 cent tax rate, a 6.13 percent increase over the effective rate.

Read the full story in your weekend News.

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Today is final day to register to vote in time for Nov. 5

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Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson reminds Texans that October 7 is the deadline to register to vote in time for the November election.  “This is the final weekend to register or update your registration ahead of the Monday, October 7, deadline,” said Secretary Nelson. “If you plan to vote in November, now is the time to register and make sure your registration is up to date.”   Texans can check their registration status on the My Voter Portal, which can be accessed through the “Am I Registered?” button at votetexas.gov.  (MVP VIDEO) To be eligible to vote in Texas, you must be: A United States citizen  A resident of the county where you register  At least 18 years old on Election Day  Texans can find a registration form at VoteTexas.gov. A voter will need to print, sign and mail in their registration application. Applications must be postmarked October 7 or earlier for the November election.   
 Texans who have moved should update their address before the registration deadline. For official information, please visit VoteTexas.gov or call 1-800-252-VOTE. 
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Bowie once more without emergency medical care

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By BARBARA GREEN
[email protected]
Starting at 7 a.m. Oct. 6 the City of Bowie will once more be without local emergency medical care as Faith Community Health System closes its emergency room, just a few weeks shy of its one-year anniversary.
It continues a tragic up and down cycle the city has dealt with since Bowie Memorial Hospital closed its doors on Nov. 16, 2015. That closure brought an end to 49 years of successful operation by a non-taxing hospital authority since May 1966.
That painful decision by the board back in 2015 came on the heels of the Nov. 3 election that failed to approve the creation of a taxing hospital district 1,732 to 1,548. About 130 hospital employees lost their jobs and another estimated 300-related jobs within the community were impacted.
This was the second failed hospital district election looking back to a May 2011 election that was defeated 1,644 to 973.
The controversy in this race came from including Forestburg Independent School District with Bowie ISD for the new district. The proposed tax rate offered to voters was 19 cents per $100 in property value and a rate not to exceed 40 cents.
When the hospital board began planning for this election it was announced some $1.2 million was cut from the hospital’s operating budget, while pending Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement cuts also reduced revenue with the hospital facing a cash shortfall of $900,000 in operations that year.
Unfunded federal mandates such as electric record management also hit the hospital to the tune of $1.2 million and had to be in place by 2013.
Those economic problems continued in the years that followed and rural hospitals continued to struggle and many close across the state. When the problems came to head again in mid-June 2015, former longtime administrator Lynn Heller said it is not an accident BMH got into this financial condition.

Read more on the history of the Bowie hospital in your weekend Bowie News.

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Bowie resident killed in Wise County crash

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Deputy Lex Love

A Wise County Sheriff’s deputy and Bowie resident was killed in a single-vehicle wreck in New Fairview on Oct. 2.
Wise County Sheriff Lane Akin announced Deputy Lex Allen Love’s death on Thursday.
He was killed in the line of duty during an accident on County Road 441, east of U.S. Highway 287 that occurred about 8:20 p.m.
The sheriff explained Deputy Love collided with a concrete barrier in a construction zone as he was rushing to the scene of the accident. Additional deputies were nearby and they responded to the scene only to find their fellow officer unresponsive as he was pulled from his vehicle.
Life saving measures were implemented and Wise County EMS arrived transporting him to Medical City where Love died late Wednesday night.

They live in Bowie with daughter, Blakely and son, Baker. He grew up in the Sunset area and was a 2017 Bowie High School graduate. A fund has been set up through Help a Hero called the Lex Love Memorial Fund visit https://helpahero.com/campaign/lex-love-memorial.
The Wise SO reported there will be a candlelight vigil from 7-8 p.m. on Oct. 6 at the Wise County Fairgrounds. The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Oct. 8 at First Baptist Church in Decatur.

Read more on this story in your weekend Bowie News.

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