June 2024

Midlo Memo

Bill Spinks wspinks@cherryroad.com A calendar of events in the Midlothian and surrounding areas. Clubs and organizations are encouraged to send meeting and event notices to… Login to continue reading Login Sign up for complimentary access Sign Up Now Close

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Beaming with pride: City leaders celebrate topping-off of new public safety facility

Bill Spinks wspinks@cherryroad.com A major project that has been a longtime goal of the city of Midlothian celebrated a milestone moment on Tuesday morning with the topping-off of a long-awaited new facility. Midlothian City Council members, appointed officials, first responders, and community leaders gathered to sign the pinnacle structural steel beam that will become a permanent fixture of the city’s new Public Safety and Municipal Court facility. Approved by voters in the 2021 bond election, the 77,000-square-foot facility will be the combined home of city police and fire administrations, as well as the Midlothian Police Department, city Emergency Management Services, and the city’s Municipal Court. Mayor Justin Coffman called the facility “a legacy of our community” that will serve Midlothian “for the next 50-plus years and serve the brightest and best men and women the city of Midlothian has to offer.” Coffman added that he is excited that the building is placed where it is, at the Ninth Street exit off of U.S. Highway 67 next to the existing MPD headquarters. “As people drive south from Dallas, the first thing they’ll recognize in the city of Midlothian is that we are a safe city, as our police station is right there at our gateway,” Coffman said. The mayor added that the new facility bears witness to the city’s standing as one of the 50 safest cities in Texas as well as the fire department’s recent attainment of the highest insurance fire rating, which impacts home insurance policies greatly. The new facility is set to come online in the spring of 2025. The new public safety facility was only one of four propositions approved in May 2021 by city voters. The first, a new City Hall and Library, will open in November. Two other propositions, a city recreation center and city […]

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The Lowe Down: Hostages in the war on morality

As citizens, living in what the world sees as a free country, should our state or federal government mandate the books we read, websites to visit, social media outlets to enjoy, who to love, and enforce reproductive laws? Would such a condition be classified as democracy? I’m not asking if these issues in and of themselves are right or wrong. The question is, should your state or federal government maintain this much control over citizens’ lives? Where does the freedom of citizens of the United States begin and end?

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