Panthers go 2-0 to start loop play

The Midlothian Panthers are off to a winning start in District 15-5A with a pair of victories over Ellis County rivals at MHS Arena.
The Midlothian Panthers are off to a winning start in District 15-5A with a pair of victories over Ellis County rivals at MHS Arena.
The District 15-5A champion Midlothian volleyball Lady Panthers were recently honored with all-district selections by the coaches in the district.
With Highland Park’s 32-20 loss to Smithson Valley on Saturday at AT&T Stadium in the Class 5A Division I state championship game, the postseason honors for the teams in District 7-5A (I) were finally released that evening.
For the last 20 years, Manna House has been led by beloved community servant Sissy Franklin. That era of leadership is now drawing to a close as Franklin has announced her retirement at the end of this year.
Bill Spinks wspinks@cherryroad.com A new state juvenile justice facility appears to be headed to a location in Ellis County. The Ellis County Commissioners’ Court has… Login to continue reading Login Sign up for complimentary access Sign Up Now Close
Bill Spinks wspinks@cherryroad.com Meeting for the first time inside the new City Council chambers, the Midlothian Planning and Zoning Commission last Tuesday unanimously denied a zoning change to allow for a single-family residential planned development off Ashford Lane. The 48.59-acre property, previously zoned Agricultural, was to be rezoned to a planned development called Ashford Estates that would include 36 one-acre-minimum lots with two common area lots. City assistant planning director Colby Collins said the application for the rezoning was filed before the City Council updated Midlothian’s comprehensive plan in October. Therefore, the developer will be held to a one-acre minimum lot size standard under the “country module,” rather than the two-acre minimum under the new plan. An emergency gate was proposed for the west end of the project, but Collins said the city received about two dozen letters of opposition to that, mostly from the adjacent Rolling Wood subdivision. Staff’s main concern about that, Collins told the commission, was traffic connectivity. Planner Trenton Robertson told commissioners he saw restricted traffic as a plus. Robertson said the intent of the emergency gate was to limit traffic through the neighborhood to and from Rolling Wood while still allowing access to emergency vehicles. Two commissioners spoke against the project from different perspectives. Commissioner Jackie McDonald was concerned about the existing 90-degree turn on Ashford Lane on the northeast corner of the proposed project, citing a traffic hazard. McDonald was also against the 1,900-foot straight main road. Commissioner Dan Altman said he wasn’t opposed to letting traffic flow freely through the new neighborhood because traffic will follow a better option in the area. While McDonald said she was OK with the lot sizes, Altman favored larger lots, up to two acres. Five nearby residents spoke against the development, citing the possibility of the gate […]
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
As the holiday season was approaching, student groups across Midlothian ISD stepped up to give back to their community through a variety of service projects and initiatives.
We have overdosed on Hallmark Christmas movies at our house. A friend shared the other day in a social media post that, “Basically, Hallmark has made 437 Christmas movies using 17 actors, five locations and three different plots.” That’s truth.
An Ellis County jury on Dec. 20 found a local attorney guilty on two charges of criminally negligent homicide following a crash that killed a man and his son more than three years ago in Ferris.