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Professional Headshots (Nacogdoches County)

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Headshots_02

January 14 @ 2:00 pm 3:00 pm

Every businessperson needs a professional headshot!

Polished Professional Package
Two high-resolution image downloads with retouching*

*Retouching minimizes lines, evens skin tone, corrects blemishes and fly-away hairs, plus whitens teeth and brightens eyes

$50 CHAMBER MEMBERS ONLY
Use the registration link below. After you have registered you will be redirected to the pre-order page where you will be able to pay the $50 and receive a gift certificate via email.

Registration is requested to save your spot: 

Register for January 14 HERE:
https://orders.tssphotography.com/QPPlus/SearchNames.aspx?EventID=2384765&_AccountNumber=91189&EventName=&EventDate=

Click to register.

$50 Chamber members only
203 West Main Street
Nacogdoches, TX United States
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Chamber Lift Off (Nacogdoches County)

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January 14 @ 3:00 pm 4:30 pm

New, current, and prospective members of the Nacogdoches County Chamber of Commerce are invited to come for a FREE Member Success Orientation.

Learn how to maximize your Chamber membership through the Chamber website and Chamber programs. BRING YOUR LAPTOP OR TABLET IF YOU WOULD LIKE!

Nacogdoches County Chamber of Commerce

Since you’ll be in our office that day, why not come a little early and get your FREE headshot?!  
Registration is required to save your spot:
http://regis.viewyour.photos/direct/91189/27255376

Artist Ireland Opening Exhibition at Angelina College

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‘Dead Letter Office’ Display to Run Through February

Angelina College’s School of Visual and Performing Arts will host artist/photographer Chris Ireland for an exhibition at the Angelina Center for the Arts Gallery.

Ireland’s display, titled “Dead Letter Office”, will open Jan. 11 and will close with an artist’s reception starting at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 10 with an artists’ reception in the ACA foyer. 

Ireland’s bio relates how he “risked being grounded as a child” when he borrowed his mother’s camera without her permission. His love for creating art through a lens led to his pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography degree from the Cleveland Institute of Art and a Master of Fine Arts in Digital Media from Washington State University. 

With a current focus on “representations of family and personal experience through the vernacular of photography,” Ireland’s works have been featured in exhibitions at numerous venues both nationally and internationally, including the Center of Contemporary Art in Seattle, WA, the Colorado Photographic Arts Center in Denver, CO, Filter Photo Space in Chicago, IL, Umbrella Arts Gallery in New York, NY, the San Antonio Public Library, and the Houston Center for Photography.

Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, Ireland currently lives and works in Fort Worth, Texas. Most recently, he was the founding head of the Department of Visual Arts & Design at Tarleton State University, and now serves as the Executive Director of the Texas Photographic Society. 

From the artist’s statement: 

“The images I use in my work come from databases of images, real estate sites, social media, and archives. Created from multiple images captured in a variety of spaces (and non-spaces), each composition is shaped slowly, over time, layer by layer, to replicate a mental experience. The work probes my relationship to home, marked by the loss of its certainties and an overall sense of placelessness. Fragmented images, full of overlaps and distortion, like a corrupted hard drive dreaming of a place to return to.” 

Admission to the exhibition and reception is free and open to the public.

For further information, contact Le’Anne Alexander at lalexander@angelina.edu.

Why Winter Lawn Care Matters More Than Most East Texas Homeowners Realize

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East Texas winter lawn care

When winter arrives in East Texas, lawns may look inactive—but appearances can be deceiving. While grass often goes dormant during colder months, what happens below the surface can have a major impact on how your yard performs in spring.

Dormant grass is still alive, storing energy and protecting its root system. Winter damage—such as soil compaction, early weed growth, or freeze stress—often goes unnoticed until warmer weather reveals thin grass, bare patches, or invasive weeds.

Winter is also a critical time for weed prevention. Many common weeds begin establishing roots while lawns are dormant, giving them a head start before spring growth begins. Addressing weeds early is far more effective than trying to control them later.

Flowerbeds benefit from winter attention as well. Mulching helps regulate soil temperature, retain moisture, and protect plant roots from sudden cold snaps—something East Texas weather is known for.

Perhaps most importantly, winter is a season for planning. Evaluating problem areas, preparing beds, and scheduling maintenance early can save time and money when spring arrives.

A little attention during winter can make a big difference in how your yard looks and performs all year long.


About the Author

Billy Forrest is a seasoned East Texas lawn care professional with decades of experience in lawn maintenance, weed control, and landscape care. His practical, no-nonsense approach is shaped by years of hands-on work in local soil and weather conditions, helping homeowners protect and improve their property year-round. Connect with him at www.A1LawnandLandscape.com

The Leadership Reset: Why January Is More Than a Fresh Start

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January has a way of whispering promises.

New calendars. Clean inboxes. Fresh goals.
We tell ourselves, This year will be different.

But if you’ve been leading long enough – whether in business, ministry, or your own home – you know something sobering:
A new year doesn’t automatically produce a new leader.

Real change doesn’t come from flipping a calendar page. It comes from something far deeper – a reset of direction, priorities, and obedience.

That’s what January is really for.

A Reset Is Not the Same as a Restart

Most people treat January like a restart.
Leaders treat it like a reset.

A restart assumes everything was broken.
A reset assumes the mission still matters – but alignment drifted.

In leadership, drift is dangerous because it’s subtle. You don’t wake up one morning off course. You wake up busy, productive, and slightly misaligned. And before long, momentum replaces mission.

That’s why January matters.

It gives leaders space to ask the uncomfortable but necessary questions:

  • Why am I really doing this?
  • What am I carrying that God never asked me to carry?
  • Where did success quietly replace stewardship?

Scripture gives us the framework:

“Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established.”
Proverbs 16:3

Notice the order.
Commit first. Then plan.

Leadership Begins With Alignment, Not Activity

One of the biggest leadership mistakes I see – especially among high-capacity entrepreneurs – is confusing motion with obedience.

We measure leadership health by:

  • Revenue
  • Growth
  • Engagement
  • Expansion

God measures leadership health by:

  • Faithfulness
  • Integrity
  • Stewardship
  • Obedience

January is the checkpoint where those two scorecards collide.

If your calendar is full but your spirit is tired, that’s not a time-management issue.
That’s a leadership alignment issue.

Strong leaders pause long enough to ask:

Am I leading where God has assigned me – or just where opportunity is loudest?

The Hidden Power of a One-Sentence “Why”

Early in my entrepreneurial journey, I learned something the hard way:
When your “why” is fuzzy, everything else becomes negotiable.

Margins erode.
Standards slip.
Shortcuts start looking reasonable.

That’s why January is the perfect time to distill your leadership purpose into one clear sentence.

Not a mission statement for the website.
Not a slogan for social media.
A sentence that governs your decisions when no one is watching.

Something like:

  • “I lead to steward people and resources in a way that honors God and serves others.”
  • “I build businesses that create value without compromising integrity.”

This sentence becomes your filter.

If an opportunity doesn’t align with it – no matter how profitable – it’s a distraction.

Faith-Driven Leaders Reset Before They Build

The world tells leaders to build faster.
Scripture tells leaders to build wisely.

Jesus Himself warned about skipping the reset:

“Everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand.”
Matthew 7:26

January is where wise leaders inspect the foundation.

Not:

  • How big do we want to grow?
    But:
  • What are we called to steward?

Not:

  • What’s the next move?
    But:
  • Is this move aligned with God’s direction – or just momentum?

A Simple Leadership Reset Framework

Before the year accelerates, take time to walk through this:

1. Release

What carried you through last year that no longer belongs in this one?

2. Realign

What values or disciplines drifted under pressure?

3. Refocus

What is the one priority that, if done well, makes everything else easier?

4. Recommit

Where do you need to recommit your work – not just your words – to the Lord?

This isn’t about perfection.
It’s about intentional leadership.

Your Action Step This Week

Don’t overcomplicate it.

Before this week ends, write one sentence that defines why you lead this year.

Post it where you’ll see it.
Read it before big decisions.
Measure every opportunity against it.

That single sentence will protect you more than any productivity system ever will.

That’s a Wrap

January isn’t magic – but it is meaningful.

It’s the moment leaders choose alignment over autopilot, stewardship over success, and obedience over noise.

The best leaders don’t rush into the year.
They reset before they run.

Next week, we’ll talk about why vision without discipline is just a dream – and how leaders turn God-given vision into daily obedience.

Lead well.

Cheers with The Chamber (Angelina County)

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January 15 @ 5:30 pm 8:00 pm

Join us Thursday, January 15 at 5:30 PM for the first Cheers with the Chamber of the year, hosted by Parkwood in the Pines.

Cheers with the Chamber is a great opportunity for networking and building connections within the community. It is also a wonderful way for Chamber Investors to showcase their business and all that they have to offer.

We will see you there!

902 Hill
Lufkin, United States
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The Texas Electricity Renewal Mistake Most Business Owners Don’t See Coming

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by Lee Miller

Most Texas business owners don’t wake up one morning and choose a bad electricity rate.

It usually happens quietly—without warning.

Electricity contracts across Texas often include automatic renewal clauses. When a contract reaches the end of its term, the account may roll into a higher rate unless action is taken in advance. Many owners don’t realize anything changed until months later, when the cost shows up on their bill.

Why Timing Matters More Than People Think

In Texas, electricity pricing is influenced heavily by timing. The most competitive rates typically appear 90 to 120 days before a contract expires. That window gives customers options. Miss it, and pricing leverage drops quickly.

This is why experienced energy buyers plan ahead rather than reacting at the last minute.

Why Doing Nothing Is Still a Decision

Leaving an account unattended doesn’t keep it neutral. In deregulated markets, doing nothing often means paying more than necessary—especially during high-demand periods.

The takeaway for business owners is simple: knowing your contract end date matters just as much as knowing your rate.

A Practical Next Step

A quick bill review can reveal:

  • When a contract expires
  • Whether a rate is competitive
  • What options exist before renewal

This article is part of an ongoing energy education series provided by Amerigy Energy.

Alive After Five hosted by Cason Monk-Metcalf Funeral Directors (Nacogdoches County)

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January 15 @ 5:30 pm 7:00 pm

You are invited to join Alive After Five!

All Chamber members are entered in a $900 cash prize drawing – but you must be present to win.

Enjoy live music, refreshments and chances to win door prizes at The Chamber’s monthly business-after-hours event.

Ribbon Cutting Ceremonies (Nacogdoches County)

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Ribbon Cutting celebrating the grand opening of new Chick-fil-A location.

January 13 @ 4:30 pm 5:30 pm

Carr, Riggs & Ingram, Jan 13
Location: 3524 NE Stallings Dr. Nacogdoches TX 75965

International Farmers and Ranchers, Jan 28
Location: 320 North St., Suite 309

East Texas Community Health Services, Jan 29
Location: 1210 Douglass Rd. Nacogdoches TX 75964

Flexible Staffing, Feb 24
Location: 407 E. Hospital St.

Submit Art for Texas Blueberry Festival 2026 (Nacogdoches County)

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June 13 @ 8:00 am 3:00 pm

The Nacogdoches County Chamber of Commerce is requesting Commemorative Art Proposals for the 36th Annual Texas Blueberry Festival presented by Tipton Ford to be held on Saturday, June 13, 2026, in Nacogdoches.

Many of our valued Chamber members have asked for their festival art proposals to be considered. The Chamber is offering that opportunity! 

Deadline to submit art is Jan. 20, 2026.

Click and download the art submission form.

202 E Pilar St, Rm 218
Nacogdoches, TX 75961 United States
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