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Why ERCOT Keeps Coming Up in Conversations About Texas Power

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ERCOT is often mentioned during extreme weather events, but its role extends far beyond emergencies.

Behind the Scenes of the Grid

ERCOT manages electricity flow across most of Texas, ensuring that generation keeps pace with demand. As Texas grows, that balancing act becomes more complex.

What Growth Means for the Future

Population increases and new industries place sustained pressure on the grid. Over time, that reality influences pricing and planning decisions.

Understanding these forces helps Texans make more informed choices — without panic.

This article is part of an ongoing energy education series for Texas Forest Country Living.

Culture Is Built Daily – Not in Mission Statements

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Every organization has a culture – whether it admits it or not.

Some cultures are intentional. Others are accidental. But none are neutral.

Culture doesn’t come from what’s framed on the wall or posted on the website. It comes from what leaders tolerate, repeat, reward, and ignore – day after day, decision after decision.

That’s why culture is one of the most misunderstood aspects of leadership. Leaders often believe they can declare culture. In reality, culture is something you demonstrate, long before you ever describe it.

What Leaders Do Speaks Louder Than What They Say

Most culture problems don’t start with employees. They start with leadership inconsistency.

A leader says integrity matters – but looks the other way when a top performer cuts corners.
A leader says people come first – but constantly sacrifices relationships for results.
A leader says excellence is expected – but tolerates mediocrity when it’s convenient.

Over time, the message becomes clear. Not from a meeting. Not from a memo. But from behavior.

Scripture understood this long before leadership books did:

“These words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently… when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way.”
Deuteronomy 6:6–7

Culture is formed in the everyday moments – when leaders think no one is paying attention.

Culture Is the Residue of Leadership Decisions

Culture isn’t built in grand gestures. It’s built in small, repeated choices.

It’s shaped by how leaders respond under pressure. By what gets addressed immediately – and what gets postponed indefinitely. By whether values are enforced consistently or only when it’s easy.

Over time, those moments accumulate. They leave a residue.

And that residue becomes culture.

You can feel it when you walk into an organization.
You can sense it in how people speak, act, and decide.
You can spot it in what gets celebrated – and what gets quietly ignored.

Faith-Driven Culture Requires Intentionality

For faith-driven leaders, culture carries even greater weight.

You’re not just shaping performance – you’re shaping people.

Culture teaches your team what really matters, regardless of what you say from the front. It shows them how faith is lived out in pressure, conflict, and decision-making.

Jesus didn’t shape culture with slogans. He shaped it through consistent example.

He washed feet.
He spoke truth calmly.
He held firm to conviction without spectacle.

And over time, those actions formed a culture that outlasted His physical presence.

The Cost of Ignoring Culture

When leaders don’t intentionally shape culture, something else will.

Fear fills the gap.
Politics take root.
Silence replaces trust.

Most leaders don’t realize culture is slipping until symptoms appear – turnover, disengagement, cynicism, or quiet resistance. By then, repairing culture takes far more effort than shaping it ever would have.

Culture doesn’t erode overnight.
It erodes through neglect.

Culture Begins With the Leader’s Daily Example

If you want to understand your culture, ask one question:

What behaviors are consistently modeled at the top?

People don’t follow values.
They follow examples.

And leaders are always teaching – whether they mean to or not.

Your Action Step This Week

Pay attention this week – not to what you say, but to what you show.

Notice:

  • How you respond to problems
  • How you speak about people who aren’t present
  • How you handle pressure

Then ask yourself:

If my team copies this behavior, is that the culture I want?

Because they will.

That’s a Wrap

Culture isn’t built in meetings.
It’s built in moments.

It’s shaped quietly, steadily, and relentlessly by leadership behavior.

If you want to change culture, don’t start with words.
Start with example.

Next week, we’ll explore why consistency – not intensity – is what sustains leadership over the long haul.

Lead intentionally.

Angelina College Students Hold Q&A Session with Area LEOs, Attorneys and Dispatchers

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Members of area law-enforcement, along with attorneys, dispatchers and other administrators, pose with Angelina College staff following Thursday’s “Q&A” session with students currently enrolled in AC’s Law Enforcement Academy, Criminal Justice program and Paralegal program. (Gary Stallard photo for AC News Service)

Angelina College students on Thursday participated in “Question and Answer” session inside Hudgins Hall featuring several area law enforcement officials, attorneys and dispatchers.

Wayne Haglund (center), Attorney at Law with the Haglund Firm, answers a question during Thursday’s “Criminal Justice Q&A” event held at Angelina College. The audience included students currently enrolled in AC’s Law Enforcement Academy, Criminal Justice program and Paralegal program. Picture with Haglund are (L-R) Krystal Riley, Attorney Partner and Tara Triana, Special Projects/Emergency Management Coordinator, Nacogdoches County.  (Gary Stallard photo for AC News Service)

The audience included students currently enrolled in AC’s Law Enforcement Academy, as well as Criminal Justice and Paralegal students.

With AC Director of Career and Transfer Connections Alex Barney serving as the host, the panel fielded student questions ranging from career origins, daily duties and actual life in a chosen profession. Panelists shared their backgrounds and experiences related to their careers in order to give students a “real-life” view of their future careers. 

Angelina College’s Alex Barney (far right) conducts a “Q&A” session with panelists including members of area law-enforcement, along with attorneys, dispatchers and other administrators. Their audience included students currently enrolled in AC’s Law Enforcement Academy, Criminal Justice program and Paralegal program. (Gary Stallard photo for AC News Service)

Panelists included Amy Wren, District Attorney, Angelina County; Kristi Skillern, City Attorney, City of Lufkin; Michael Skillern, Chief of Police in Diboll; Krystal Riley, Attorney Partner, Skelton Slusher Barnhill Watkins Wells PLLC; Ally Peterson, Associate Attorney, Law Office of Kay Alderman; Dan Taravella, Assistant Chief, Nacogdoches Police Department; Wayne Haglund, Attorney at Law, Haglund Firm; Tara Triana, Special Projects/Emergency Management Coordinator, Nacogdoches County; Joel Barton, Chief, Nacogdoches ISD; Ivette Flores, Secretary/Dispatcher, Nacogdoches ISD; and Corey Bean – Staff Sergeant, Recruiting, Texas Department of Public Safety.

For further information on AC’s Career and Transfer Connections programs, contact Alex Barney at hbarney@angelina.edu.

For further information on this press release, contact Krista Brown at kbrown@angelina.edu.

February Is Not Spring: What East Texans Plant Too Early

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Small plant of cannabis seedlings in greenhouse. Nutrient deficiencies in marijuana plants, herbal alternative medicine, cbd oil concept.

Every year about this time, East Texans get fooled by a few warm afternoons. The sun feels good. The soil looks workable. Garden centers start stacking transplants. Even some forecasts for next week show we may reach the upper 70’s! And suddenly, people start planting like spring has already arrived.

It hasn’t.

February in East Texas is a transition month. And that distinction matters, because planting too early doesn’t give you a head start. It usually gives you dead plants, wasted seed, and a false sense of progress.

Our weather pattern this time of year is predictable: mild days, cold nights, and at least one more hard cold snap before winter fully releases its grip. Remember that our average last frost is in mid-March.  Warm afternoons do not change soil temperature, frost risk, or plant physiology. They just make people impatient.

The most common mistake is planting warm-season vegetables too early. Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, squash, cucumbers, melons, okra, and beans simply do not belong in East Texas gardens in February. These crops require warm soil to germinate properly and warm nights to grow. Cool soil slows root development, reduces nutrient uptake, and stresses plants even if the tops look fine for a while.

When a late freeze hits — and it usually does — those stressed plants don’t recover. They stall, yellow, rot, or die. Even if they survive, early cold stress often sets them back so badly that later-planted crops outperform them.

In other words, early planting doesn’t create earlier harvests. It creates weaker plants.

Another common mistake is confusing “cool weather” with “cold tolerance.” Lettuce, spinach, carrots, cabbage, broccoli, onions, and other cool-season crops can handle cold — but even they have limits. February planting should be strategic, not reckless. These crops tolerate cold soil better than warm-season plants, but extended freezes, saturated soils, and repeated freeze–thaw cycles still cause damage.

February is also when people overestimate what soil can handle. Working wet soil leads to compaction. Compaction leads to poor root growth, drainage problems, and long-term productivity loss. You don’t fix that with fertilizer — you live with it all season.

Then there’s the transplant trap. Those beautiful tomato and pepper plants sitting in garden centers are not a signal to plant — they’re a signal to wait. Retail availability is driven by supply chains, not local growing conditions. Plants don’t care what the calendar or the store display says.

So, what should East Texans actually be doing in February? Go ahead and get your onions, potatoes and other cool season vegetables. Other than those, February is for preparation, not production.

This is the right time to build beds, add compost, correct drainage issues, improve soil structure, and get your garden physically ready. It’s the time to plan crop layout, rotate planting areas, and think about spacing and sun exposure. It’s the time to start warm-season crops indoors if you want transplants ready later — not to rush them into cold ground.

If you’re planting anything outside right now, it should be limited to true cool-season crops that tolerate cold soils and fluctuating temperatures — and even then, with the understanding that protection may still be needed.

February gardening is about restraint. It’s about resisting the urge to confuse a warm afternoon with a warm season. It’s about understanding that East Texas weather doesn’t shift cleanly — it staggers, stalls, and backtracks.

Gardening isn’t rewarded by enthusiasm. It’s rewarded by timing.

The most successful gardens aren’t planted first — they’re planted right. And in East Texas, February is not spring. It’s preparation season.

Kids Talk About God by Carey Kinsolving and Friends

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How Does the Holy Spirit Show People They Need Christ?

“The Holy Spirit is here to help us believe when Christ is with his father,” says Hannah, 11.

When Jesus told his disciples he was going away, I wish we could have seen their faces. Rather than Jesus being physically present with them, he sent the Holy Spirit. Furthermore, Jesus presented his departure and the Holy Spirit’s advent as advantageous for his disciples.

I suppose this was like taking off the training wheels when learning how to ride a bike. For three years, Jesus had taught them about his Father and the ways of his kingdom. Jesus even told them he was going to die in Jerusalem and rise again to ascend to his Father, but they couldn’t imagine it at the time.

Jesus’ disciples were too busy jockeying for position in his kingdom. They couldn’t imagine Jesus being crucified as a common criminal. This didn’t line up with their Messianic expectations.

Regarding the Holy Spirit, Jesus said, “And when he has come, he will convict the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: of sin, because they do not believe in me,” (John 16:8-9).

The Holy Spirit is the world’s greatest evangelist. Consider the experience of Francesca, 11: “I was so scared having to watch my dad be so close to death. That was when the Holy Spirit moved me to accept Christ into my heart. After that, I had faith that God would help my dad get better, and he did.”

Our conscience speaks to us about individual sins. The Holy Spirit convicts or convinces us of our need to trust the Lord Jesus Christ as our savior. People imagine they are destined to hell because of their personal sins. However, Jesus said the Holy Spirit would convict all people “of sin, because they do not believe in me.”

Jesus said, “He who believes in him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God,” (John 3:18). The only issue that determines one’s eternal destiny is belief in Jesus Christ or unbelief in him.

Jesus purchased everyone’s ticket to heaven, but we must receive that ticket by believing in him alone for our salvation. The Holy Spirit wants every person to believe in Christ.

“If we are made aware of the Holy Spirit’s conviction, we are made aware of God’s perfect love for us,” says Kaina, 11.

We live in a world of conditional love where our performance determines whether love is given or withheld. God’s perfect love doesn’t depend on our performance. God pursues us even when we sin. We can’t comprehend a love that persists even when we resist. 
This is where the Holy Spirit’s job comes into play.

Despite our desire to earn God’s approval through our own efforts, the Holy Spirit convinces us that God’s love doesn’t depend on our worthiness. God pursues everyone, but especially those who realize they need God’s grace.

Think about this: When religious leaders criticized Jesus for eating with sinners, Jesus said he didn’t come to save the righteous, but to save sinners (Luke 5:32). The righteous of whom Jesus spoke were religious leaders who didn’t see their need for a savior. They trusted in their religious rules and traditions.

Memorize this truth: John 16:8-9 previously quoted.

Ask this question: Have you heard the quiet voice of the Holy Spirit telling you that you need forgiveness and a righteousness that is not your own?

Alive After Five (Nacogdoches County)

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February 26 @ 5:00 pm 7:30 pm

Alive After Five is a come-and-go reception hosted by a Chamber member offering excellent business networking opportunities in a casual atmosphere.

Bring guests and business cards and make new contacts!

All Chamber members are entered in a cash prize drawing, but you must be present to win!

Sponsored by NMC Health Network
Beverages sponsored by: R&K Distributors
Food catered by: NMC onsite dietary services.

Lufkin Creative Announces Full Day of Art, Music, and Community on April 18

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LUFKIN, TX
Lufkin Creative invites the community to mark their calendars for Saturday, April 18, 2026, as Downtown Lufkin transforms into a full-day celebration of art, creativity, and community connection.

The day will feature three signature events, offering something for all ages and interests, from morning through evening.

The celebration begins with Mimosas & Masterpieces, a ticketed morning experience that pairs local art with conversation, curated creative moments, and a welcoming social atmosphere designed to kick off the day in style.

From there, Art Walk takes over downtown, inviting the public to stroll through participating businesses and outdoor spaces filled with local and regional artists. Artists will display and sell their work, turning everyday spaces into pop-up galleries while supporting creatives at all stages, including student artists.

The day concludes with Roots & Rhythm, an outdoor evening concert featuring  local and regional artists. This relaxed, hometown-style concert brings live music to Downtown Cotton Square and serves as a community fundraiser supporting Lufkin Creative’s ongoing arts programming.

“April 18 will be a celebration of creativity in all its forms,” said Lufkin Creative representatives. “By bringing together visual art, live music, and shared public spaces, we’re creating an experience that reflects the heart of our community.”

More details, including artist registration, ticket information, and sponsorship opportunities, will be released in the coming weeks.

For updates and event information, visit www.lufkincreative.com or follow Lufkin Creative on social media.

Pre-Emergent Weed Control: Why East Texas Lawns Win or Lose the Weed Battle Before Spring Begins

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In East Texas, the most important weed control decisions of the year often happen before spring officially arrives. While many homeowners wait until weeds are visible, the reality is that the success or failure of a lawn is often determined weeks earlier—below the surface.

Pre-emergent weed control is a preventative strategy designed to stop weeds before they ever appear. Instead of treating weeds after they’ve already taken root, pre-emergents work by preventing weed seeds from germinating in the first place.

Why East Texas Lawns Are Especially Vulnerable

East Texas soil and weather patterns create ideal conditions for early weed growth. Mild winters, fluctuating temperatures, and early soil warming allow weed seeds to activate long before grass begins actively growing. This gives weeds a significant head start if preventative steps aren’t taken.

Many homeowners rely on visual cues—waiting until weeds are seen in the yard. Unfortunately, by that point, weeds have already established root systems that compete aggressively with grass for nutrients, sunlight, and water.

The Importance of Soil Temperature

Weed seeds respond to soil temperature, not the calendar. Even if winter temperatures fluctuate, soil can warm enough to trigger germination well before spring officially arrives. Applying pre-emergent weed control too late allows weeds to slip through before the protective barrier is in place.

This is why timing matters more than the specific product used.

Long-Term Benefits of Pre-Emergent Control

Lawns protected with timely pre-emergent treatments typically experience:

  • Fewer weeds throughout the growing season
  • Thicker, healthier grass
  • Reduced need for post-emergent chemical treatments
  • Lower overall maintenance costs

Over time, consistent weed prevention strengthens the lawn’s ability to crowd out invasive plants naturally.

Weed Control Is About Prevention, Not Reaction

Healthy lawns are rarely the result of one-time treatments. They’re built through a season-by-season approach that focuses on prevention, soil health, and proper maintenance. Pre-emergent weed control is one of the most important early steps in that process.

Homeowners who address weed pressure early often enjoy greener, more resilient lawns with far less frustration as the year progresses.

Integrity Under Pressure: Who You Are When It Costs You

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Integrity is easy when it’s inexpensive.

When the deal is clean.
When the numbers work.
When everyone agrees.

The real test of leadership integrity doesn’t come in moments of applause – it comes in moments of pressure. Moments when cutting a corner would solve the problem faster. Moments when silence would be safer than truth. Moments when doing the right thing feels like the slowest, most painful option on the table.

That’s where leaders are revealed.

Pressure Has a Way of Clarifying Character

Pressure doesn’t create character.
It exposes it.

When deadlines close in, margins tighten, or conflict surfaces, leaders don’t suddenly become someone new – they default to who they already are. Values either hold, or they bend.

Scripture doesn’t sugarcoat this reality:

“Whoever walks in integrity walks securely, but whoever takes crooked paths will be found out.”
Proverbs 10:9

Integrity isn’t just about morality.
It’s about stability.

Leaders with integrity can stand firm when pressure rises because their footing isn’t shifting underneath them.

The Quiet Temptations Leaders Face

Most integrity failures don’t begin with bad intentions.

They begin with rationalizations.

Just this once.
No one will notice.
We’ll fix it later.
This is for the greater good.

Pressure whispers permission slips that sound reasonable in the moment – and devastating in hindsight.

Leaders who fall don’t usually wake up planning to compromise. They drift there one justified step at a time.

Integrity requires something increasingly rare in leadership today:
the courage to absorb short-term pain for long-term trust.

Why Integrity Is a Leadership Asset – Not a Liability

Some leaders believe integrity slows them down.

In reality, it protects them.

Integrity:

  • Builds trust you don’t have to constantly defend
  • Creates clarity in decision-making
  • Eliminates the need for constant explanation

Leaders without integrity spend enormous energy managing perception. Leaders with integrity spend their energy leading.

The irony is this:
Integrity may cost you opportunities – but it will never cost you credibility.

Faith-Driven Leaders Answer to a Higher Standard

For faith-driven leaders, integrity isn’t just professional – it’s spiritual.

You don’t lead for approval.
You don’t decide for popularity.
You steward influence under God’s authority.

Scripture reminds us:

“The integrity of the upright guides them.”
Proverbs 11:3

Integrity becomes a compass when options are unclear and pressure is loud.

It answers questions before they’re even asked:

  • Can I defend this decision in the light?
  • Would I make the same choice if no one ever knew?
  • Does this align with who I claim to be?

Integrity Often Costs More Up Front – and Less Over Time

Leaders who choose integrity may lose:

  • Speed
  • Convenience
  • Short-term wins

But they gain:

  • Trust
  • Stability
  • Endurance

Shortcuts always demand repayment – with interest.

Integrity pays dividends quietly, steadily, and faithfully.

Your Action Step This Week

Think about a decision you’re currently facing – or avoiding.

Ask yourself:

What does integrity require here, even if it costs me?

Then choose accordingly.

Leadership doesn’t reward every right decision immediately – but it always records them.

That’s a Wrap

Leadership isn’t tested when everything is working.
It’s tested when doing the right thing feels costly.

Integrity is not what you claim – it’s what you choose under pressure.

Next week, we’ll shift from personal character to organizational impact and explore why culture isn’t created by statements – but by daily behavior.

Lead with integrity.

Color Me Drug-Free: An Obstacle Challenge Course

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March 28 @ 9:00 am 11:00 am

On Saturday, March 28, from 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM, the Angelina County Drug-Free All Stars will host Color MeDrug-Free: An Obstacle Challenge Course to encourage students to live a healthy, substance-free life. Participants will go through a fun obstacle course — and yes, color will be flying as students are marked drug-free! All participants will receive a free white t-shirt to wear during the event, and free swag will be given out while supplies last. Join us at the Boys & Girls Club of Lufkin field on Saturday, March 28. For more information about this free event or how to register, contact The Coalition at 936-634-9308 or follow @TheCoalition936 on social media.

(936) 634-9308

View Organizer Website

909 South Angelina Blvd
Lufkin, TX 75901 United States
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+19366327467
View Venue Website