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Poured Right Here: Texas Materials Welcomes Lufkin’s Contractor’s Supplies

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A nearly 80-year-old Lufkin concrete company joins a fast-growing East Texas family of builders.

When a business has been mixing concrete in the same East Texas town since 1947, it stops being just a supplier and becomes part of the foundation — sometimes literally — of the place it serves. That is the story of Contractor’s Supplies, Inc., the Lufkin-based ready-mixed concrete and masonry company that has now joined Texas Materials, the Texas-and-Louisiana operating arm of global building-materials company CRH.

Locals know the company simply as CSI. For nearly eight decades it has poured the slabs, driveways, foundations and parking lots that quietly hold our region together, while keeping contractors stocked with everything from rebar to safety gear. Over the years it grew well beyond Lufkin, adding ready-mix plants and supply yards in Nacogdoches, Tyler, Longview, Marshall and Athens — a footprint that traces the working heart of East Texas.

According to public source information, CSI will bring seven ready-mix plants, a fleet of mixer trucks and an experienced group of team members into the Texas Materials operation. Current concrete operations are led by Kevin Kipp, vice president of ready-mix for the East Texas and Louisiana area.

For readers wondering who Texas Materials is, the short version is: big. The company is part of CRH, the Dublin-based building-materials giant that trades on the New York Stock Exchange and operates more than 1,700 locations across North and South America. Texas Materials supplies much of the asphalt, concrete and aggregate behind the state’s road and infrastructure work, and it runs its East Texas operations out of offices in Lufkin.

What makes this more than a routine corporate deal is the pattern behind it. The CSI acquisition is the latest in a steady run of East Texas additions that has quietly reshaped who pours the concrete in Forest Country.

In 2024, the same company took on Few Ready Mix, the Jasper-area family business that Arthur Few started in 1954 and ran for years under the motto “our reputation is poured all over East Texas.” Few’s most visible job may be the emergency spillway at Lake Sam Rayburn, poured in the early 1990s and still standing guard west of the dam. When the family sold after roughly 70 years, they were assured the name, the phone number and the local crews would stay in place.

The roots run deeper still through East Texas Asphalt, the Lufkin company that has supplied the region’s asphalt and aggregate since 1958 from hot-mix plants in Lufkin, Paxton, Center and Livingston. It, too, now operates under the Texas Materials umbrella, tying aggregates, asphalt and ready-mix concrete into one connected operation.

Add it up and a picture emerges: aggregate from the pit, cement and asphalt from the plant, and concrete in the mixer truck — increasingly drawn from a single, vertically integrated network with deep East Texas ties. Company leaders point to infrastructure investment and steady population growth as the forces driving demand across the twelve counties of the Texas Forest Country.

For the families and business owners who read this magazine, the headline isn’t really the logo on the side of the truck. It’s that the people who pour our foundations, widen our highways and patch our county roads are still, mostly, our neighbors — now backed by a company with the scale to keep the trucks rolling. In a region built on hard work and long memory, that kind of continuity matters about as much as the concrete itself.

Lufkin District Construction Updates

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Below is a description of the work planned for June 15 through June 19 in the Texas Department of Transportation’s (TxDOT) Lufkin District.

Project timelines are subject to change due to material availability and weather conditions.

TxDOT offices will operate with reduced staff on Friday, June 19, in observance of Emancipation Day.

Our summer impaired-driving prevention campaign, “Drive Sober. No Regrets.” kicks off Tuesday, June 16. Follow TxDOT’s social media accounts for messages educating the public about the consequences of intoxicated driving. Feel free to share this messaging. It can save lives and make our roads safer. 

District-wide Projects: Contract sealcoat work is underway in the Lufkin District. Next week, work continues in Shelby County. It will progress through the district’s counties in this order: Sabine, San Augustine, Nacogdoches, Angelina, Houston, Trinity, Polk and San Jacinto.

This is a moving operation requiring lane closures.

Area Office Projects

Lufkin Area Office (Angelina, Houston, and Sabine counties)

Angelina County

  • US 59, Redland Project.
    Contractors will continue dirt and embankment work, and drill shafts at the Mill Creek Bridge. Northbound main lane closures will occur.
  • Business (BU) 59/Timberland Drive. 
    Night-time paving, striping, and milling will occur. There will be lane closures.
  • FM 324, bridge replacement and roadway rehabilitation.
    Concrete bridge girders will be delivered and installed. There will be lane closures for construction vehicles and equipment to enter and exit the jobsite. Expect delays if traveling in the area.
  • US 69, cable median barrier.
    Contractors will be pouring concrete mow strip for the cable barrier on U.S. 69 south of Zavalla. Lane closures will be required. Watch for construction traffic entering and leaving the work zone. The speed limit will be lowered in the work zone limits.
  • State Loop (SL) 287, auxiliary and turn lanes.
    Widening on the eastbound main lanes near Scenic Acres Drive will occur. Scenic Acres Drive at SL 287 will be closed to traffic daily and will be reopened at the end of each day’s work.

Houston County

  • SH 7 (Houston and Leon counties) Trinity River bridge and reliefs.
    Contractors will place sod, mow, and seed in the project area.
  • US 287 at Beaver Creek.
    Work on a temporary earthen wall, the abutment backwall, and wingwalls will occur.
  • Bridges on County Roads (CR) 4700 and 4050 at Lee Creek and Hart’s Creek tributary
    Expect lane closures as workers install guard fencing and crash cushions on the new bridge. 
  • SL 304 overlay.
    Paving from SH 21 east to SH 21 west along SL 304, as well as work on curbs and gutters will continue. Traffic will need to follow a pilot car in the area.
  • FM 2076 rehabilitation and roadway widening.Widening of FM 2076 inside SL 304 and installation of drainage infrastructure outside the loop will continue. Intermittent lane closures will occur. 

Livingston Area Office (Polk, San Jacinto, and Trinity counties)

Polk and San Jacinto counties

  • US 59 Cable Median Barrier
    Cable-barrier installation in the median will continue between Leggett and Livingston.

Polk County

  • US 59, Corrigan Relief Route
    Contractors will: tie reinforcing steel for the US 287 bridge; prepare to pour deck on the south railroad bridge; set deck panels and tie steel for the north railroad bridge; work on the north tie-in at the southbound exit; place rock at the north tie-in drainage outfall. On US 287, they will: continue removing old asphalt, install a culvert, and perform dirt work at the south tie-in; build shoulders at the north tie-in. At various locations, they will: cut concrete pavement; tie steel for bridge decks and pavement; drill holes for overhead and roadside signs.
  • FM 2610 at Menard Creek
    Cleanup work preparing for dirt work and form bridge-rail ends will occur.
  • County road bridge projects
    • Big Sandy Creek on Sunflower Road: Establishing vegetation.
    • McManus Creek on Kennedy Road: Fence installation and clean up.
    • Piney Creek on Carmona Road: Building steel structures for bridge caps.
    • Bluff Creek on Darden Road: Fence installation and clean up.
    • Long King Creek on Old Bearing Road: prepare to set bridge box beams.  

San Jacinto County

  • US 59, Shepherd to Cleveland upgrade to interstate standards.
    Workers will: set bridge-deck panels and tie bridge steel at Tarkington Bayou; pour bridge end supports for the overpass; place road base near Red Road; install retaining wall panels and perform dirt work on several walls; prime-coat the north and southbound lanes.   
  • SH 156, Stephen Creek bridge replacement.
    There will be ongoing debris clean-up and bridge demolition.
  • SH 150 sidewalk project.
    Install concrete riprap.

Nacogdoches Area Office (Nacogdoches, San Augustine, and Shelby counties)

Nacogdoches County

  • US 59 intersection improvements at SL 224
    Crews will continue demolishing the old pavement.
  • BU 59, SH/BS 7, SH/BS 21 and FM 2259 striping
    Nighttime lane closures to complete striping operations in various areas will occur.
  • SH 7 and CR 724, Moral Bayou bridge project
    Hot mix will be applied to the bridge.

Sabine County

  • US 96
    Hot mix application will require daily lane closures.   

Shelby County

  • FM 139 at Teneha Bayou
    The contractor will be pouring tie beams for the bridge.
  • County road bridge projectsHot mix will be applied to bridges on County Road (CR) 3689 at Cypress Creek, CR 1440 at Irish Creek and CR 1049 at Straw Creek. 

Reminder to Motorists
Drivers are urged to remain alert in work zones, obey posted traffic controls, and watch for construction crews and equipment. Remember to move over or slow down to 20 mph below the posted speed limit when passing or approaching TxDOT vehicles, law enforcement, tow trucks, utility vehicles, municipal waste trucks, and emergency responders with activated overhead lights.

Please remember to buckle up, stay sober, and Drive like a Texas: Kind, Courteous, Safe.

Tim Monzingo
Public Information Officer
TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Lufkin District
timothy.monzingo@txdot.gov | 936-208-5651 | TxDOT.gov

Practical Ways to Lower Your Electric Bill This Summer

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The Texas summer is coming. Here’s a straightforward, no-nonsense guide to what actually works — and what doesn’t.

There’s no shortage of advice out there about saving money on electricity. Some of it is genuinely useful. A surprising amount of it is either trivial or actively misleading. After eight weeks of going through how the Texas electricity market works, this column takes a turn toward the practical: what should a regular East Texas household or small business actually do to keep summer bills under control?

The honest version is that there are no magic tricks. Most of the savings come from a handful of straightforward steps that anyone can do, plus a few investments that pay back over a year or two. Here’s the rundown.

The Big Wins

Cooling is where the money goes. In the average East Texas home, air conditioning accounts for roughly half of the summer electric bill. Everything else — refrigerator, water heater, lights, appliances — is splitting the other half. That means almost every meaningful saving is going to come from how you manage your cooling.

Set the thermostat realistically. Every degree warmer you can tolerate saves real money. The standard recommendation is 78 degrees when you’re home and a few degrees warmer when you’re away or sleeping. A programmable or smart thermostat handles this automatically and is one of the fastest-paying upgrades you can make. A $150 thermostat that saves $20 a month pays for itself in less than a year.

Change your air filter monthly during the summer. A dirty filter forces your system to work harder, costs you money, and shortens the life of expensive equipment. Set a reminder on your phone for the first of every month from May through September.

Get an HVAC tune-up every spring. A trained technician can spot problems — low refrigerant, dirty coils, failing components — that quietly cost you 10 or 20 percent on your cooling bill. The hundred dollars or so spent on a tune-up almost always pays for itself within the first month.

The Quick Fixes

  • Seal the obvious leaks. If you can feel air coming in around a door or window, you’re paying to cool the outdoors. Weatherstripping and caulk are inexpensive and easy. Don’t forget the gaps around plumbing under sinks and where wires come into the house.
  • Use ceiling fans when you’re in the room. A ceiling fan doesn’t cool the air — it cools the people standing under it through evaporation. That means you can comfortably set the thermostat several degrees higher when fans are on. Just remember to turn them off when you leave the room.
  • Close the blinds on the sun-facing windows. Direct sunlight through a window can add a remarkable amount of heat to a room. South-facing and west-facing windows are the worst offenders during the long summer afternoons. Cellular shades or thermal curtains make a noticeable difference.
  • Run the dishwasher and dryer at night. Both produce heat, and running them in the evening reduces the load on your air conditioner during the hottest hours of the day. They also tend to be cheaper to run during off-peak hours if you’re on a time-of-use plan.

There are no magic tricks. Most of the savings on a Texas summer electric bill come from a handful of simple steps almost anyone can do. The mistake is doing none of them.

The Investments That Pay Back

Attic insulation. Most Texas homes built before the early 2000s are under-insulated by today’s standards. Adding insulation in the attic — bringing it up to current code — typically pays back in two to four years through lower cooling bills, and it makes the house more comfortable on extreme days.

Radiant barriers. A radiant barrier is a foil layer installed in the attic that reflects heat away from the living space below. In hot, sunny climates like East Texas, it can reduce attic temperatures by 20 or 30 degrees and cut cooling costs measurably. Often paired with insulation upgrades.

LED lighting. If you still have any incandescent or CFL bulbs in your house, replacing them with LEDs is one of the easiest upgrades available. The bulbs use a fraction of the electricity, last for years, and have come down dramatically in price.

Smart thermostats. Mentioned earlier, but worth repeating. The newer models learn your patterns and adjust automatically, and most can be controlled from your phone.

What About the Bigger Stuff?

Solar panels, whole-home generators, battery storage — all of these can make sense for the right household, but they require more careful analysis. The economics depend on your roof orientation, your usage patterns, your retail plan, available incentives, and a number of other factors. Anyone selling you on these systems with a quick pitch and a fast close is not your friend. A proper analysis from someone who doesn’t depend on the sale to make their living is worth the time.

For Small Business Owners

All of the above applies. A few additional items specifically for businesses:

  • Look at your operating hours. If you have flexibility on when energy-intensive equipment runs, shifting it out of the 4-to-8 p.m. window can reduce both your demand charges and your contribution to grid stress.
  • Consider a commercial energy audit. Most utilities offer them at low or no cost, and they can identify specific opportunities tailored to your operation.
  • Review your contract terms with the seasons in mind. A contract that worked great when you signed it three years ago might not be the right structure for your current operation.

None of this is exotic. It’s the boring, fundamental stuff that adds up over time. The households and businesses that get serious about a few of these items consistently pay less than their neighbors. That’s not theory. That’s what the data shows, year after year.

— Lee Miller

Lee Miller publishes Texas Forest Country Living and is co-founder of Amerigy Energy, a Texas-based electricity brokerage.

Mid Morning Coffee (Houston County)

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June 18 @ 10:30 pm 11:30 pm

Thursday, June 18th – Mid-Morning Coffee at Cattleman’s Country Cafe 9:30 AM
Join us for our June Mid-Morning Coffee at Cattleman’s Country Café!

Start your day with great coffee, friendly faces, and meaningful connections as we gather with fellow Chamber members and community businesses. Each month, a different local business welcomes us in to share their story, highlight their goals, and connect with others who help make the Crockett Area thrive.

Whether you’re looking to grow your network, promote your business, or simply stay in the loop with what’s happening in our community, Mid-Morning Coffee is the perfect place to be!

What to expect:
• Networking with local business leaders and community members
• Updates on local events, businesses, and opportunities
• Coffee, snacks, and fellowship — all free to attendees
• Door prizes and raffle giveaways contributed by participating businesses
• Opportunities to introduce yourself, share your business, or promote upcoming events

Want to speak?
Businesses are invited to give a 2–5 minute presentation during the event. Speaking time is available for $2 per minute, or just $1 per minute for Chamber members. All proceeds benefit the Crockett Area Chamber Scholarship Fund.

Come sip, share, and connect — we’d love to see you there!

Cattleman’s Country Cafe
893 TX-7 West
Crockett, TX 75835
Face Book: Cattleman’s Country Cafe
936.546.7477

Community Fun Day (Sabine County)

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June 16 @ 2:00 pm 5:00 pm

Hemphill Care Center is gearing up for Community Fun Day!

June 16 will be a great time with a bounce house, good food, and plenty of fun for everyone.

Catch all the details here:
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1HPX4w3u1L/

The People You’re Developing (Or Aren’t)

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On the slow, deliberate work of raising up the leaders who come after you

There is an old hand who used to work the lumber yards near where I grew up, a man who had taught maybe a hundred younger men the trade over forty years. I asked him once how he chose who to invest in. He said, “I did not choose. I just paid attention to who was paying attention.” Then he added, “And I made sure I taught while I was working, not after. If you wait until the work is done to teach, you will never teach. The work is never done.”

I have thought about that conversation more times than I can count. It contains, in two sentences, what most leaders get wrong about developing the people who come after them. We tell ourselves we will invest in our team when things settle down. We tell ourselves we will start mentoring next year, after this initiative wraps. We tell ourselves the development will happen later, in dedicated time, when the calendar opens up. The calendar does not open up. The work is never done. And the people we said we would develop, eventually, leave or stagnate or are quietly passed over for the next opportunity, because the development we promised them was always going to happen later, and later turned into never.

“The leaders you are developing are the ones you are developing right now, in the work you are already doing. The rest is intention without action.”

Why we postpone what we know we should do

If developing people is so clearly the work of leadership, why do so many leaders postpone it? I have come to believe the reason is rarely a shortage of time. It is something more honest, and harder to admit. Investing in another person’s growth is slow, expensive, and often invisible in any current quarter. The return shows up years later, sometimes after we are no longer in the role, sometimes in the success of someone who will not remember to credit us. None of those outcomes scratches the itches that drive most of us in our seasons of greatest output. The work of developing others has to be done for its own sake, or it does not get done at all.

Scripture is direct about this. Paul, writing to Timothy from prison, gives a charge that has shaped my own thinking about leadership development for many years. “And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also” (2 Timothy 2:2, KJV). Notice the chain. Paul to Timothy. Timothy to faithful men. Faithful men to others also. Four generations in one verse. Paul is not telling Timothy to build a platform. He is telling Timothy to build a chain that will outlast both of them. That is what leadership development is. It is the work of building a chain that does not break when one link steps out of the role.

The deception of generic investment

Most leaders, asked whether they invest in their people, will say yes. They believe it. They genuinely care. They go to the team functions. They say encouraging things in performance reviews. They mean well, and the people around them know they mean well. But generic care is not the same thing as deliberate development, and the difference shows up in the lives that get changed.

If I asked you, right now, to write down the names of the two or three people you are deliberately developing this quarter — with a specific stretch you are putting them through, a specific conversation you owe them, a specific experience you are engineering for them in the next ninety days — could you do it? If you could not, you are doing what most leaders do, which is generic care that feels like investment but does not produce leaders. There is no shame in this. It is the default. But the leaders who actually build chains are the ones who refuse to settle for the default, and who pay the price of being specific.

Jesus, who could have built any organization he wanted, chose twelve. Out of the twelve, he poured deeper investment into three. Out of the three, he had a particular friendship with one. The pattern is striking, and it is not accidental. The leader who tries to develop everyone equally develops no one well. The leader who develops a few well changes the trajectory of an organization for a generation.

“You cannot disciple a crowd. You can only disciple people, one at a time, with their names written somewhere only you see.”

Three disciplines of the leader who actually develops people

Name them, specifically and privately

Pick two or three. Not because the others do not matter — they do, and they will receive your general care and competence as a leader. But your deliberate development can only be deliberate if it is specific. Write the names down on a piece of paper, or in a journal, or in some place that only you see. Then, for each name, write three things. What stretch do they need this quarter that they cannot give themselves? What conversation do I owe them that I have been postponing? What experience can I engineer for them in the next ninety days that will grow capacity faster than another year of doing what they already do well?

If the answers come quickly, you are already doing the work. If they come slowly, or vaguely, that is information. The development is not happening. The intention is. The two are not the same.

Give them work that is genuinely uncomfortable

People do not develop by doing what they are already good at. They develop by being put one step beyond their current capacity, in conditions where the stakes are real but recoverable, with a leader nearby who will not rescue them from the discomfort. The discomfort is the development. The stumble is the development. The look of bewilderment when they realize they are responsible for something that is harder than what they expected — that is the development.

The hardest part of this, for most leaders, is not finding the stretch work. It is resisting the urge to step in and take it back the moment the person struggles. We tell ourselves we are helping. We are usually protecting our own discomfort with watching them struggle, and we are stunting their growth in the process. The proverb captures it. “Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend” (Proverbs 27:17, KJV). Iron sharpens iron through friction, not through ease. If your developmental relationships have no productive friction in them, they may not be developmental at all.

Talk about their future, not just their performance

Performance conversations look at what someone has done in the last quarter. Development conversations look at who someone is becoming over the next several years. Most leaders have plenty of the first kind and almost none of the second. The result is teams full of people who are well-managed and underdeveloped, who know exactly what they did last week and have no idea where the relationship is taking them.

Once a quarter, sit down with each of your two or three. Set the deliverables aside. Ask, “Where do you want to be in three years? What is in your way? What am I doing that helps, and what am I doing that hinders?” Then listen, slowly. The first answer is usually rehearsed. The second answer, if you wait for it, is more honest. The third answer is sometimes the one that changes everything you thought you understood about the person you have been working with for years.

Leadership Reflection

•  If I asked you to write down, this minute, the names of the two or three people you are deliberately developing this quarter — with the specific stretch each one is in — could you do it?

•  Which person on your team has been given work in the last ninety days that genuinely stretched them, and how did you handle the moment they stumbled?

•  When was the last conversation you had with someone on your team that was entirely about their future, not their current deliverables?

•  What chain are you building? Who, on your watch, is being prepared to do for someone else what no one ever did for you?

The chain that outlasts the role

The lumber yard man I mentioned at the beginning of this essay died several years ago. I went to his funeral. The room was full of men in their fifties and sixties and seventies who had passed through that yard at some point in their early lives, and many of them got up to speak. They did not talk about lumber. They talked about a man who had taken time, in the middle of the work, to teach them how to think about it. Most of them, by then, were running their own crews. A few were running their own businesses. One was a foreman on a job site bigger than anything the old man would have been able to imagine when he first hired the kid in question.

That is what leadership development looks like, when it is real. It is not a program. It is not a quarterly initiative. It is the slow, deliberate, often invisible work of pouring into specific people, in the middle of the regular work, while there is still time. It does not pay in any current quarter. It pays for decades, in the lives of the people who learned, on your watch, how to do for others what you did for them.

Whoever the two or three are, in your world right now, write the names down today. Then, before the week is out, do one thing for each of them that you would not have done if you had not written the names. That is how the chain begins. The work is never done. So you might as well start teaching now, while you are doing it.

———

A note from Lee: If any of this lands where you are right now, and you would value an unhurried conversation with someone whose job is to help you see clearly, the door is open. connect.msgresources.com/leadership-advisory

36th Annual Texas Blueberry Festival (Nacogdoches County)

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June 13 @ 8:00 am 5:00 pm

The Sweetest Weekend in Texas Is Here!

The wait is over! The 36th Annual Texas Blueberry Festival presented by Tipton Ford is happening this Saturday in historic downtown Nacogdoches, and you won’t want to miss a minute of the fun.

Bring your family and friends for a day packed with live entertainment, delicious festival food, unique shopping from hundreds of vendors, blueberry treats around every corner, and activities for all ages.

Whether you’re a longtime festival fan or making your first visit,

there’s something sweet waiting for everyone!

Join us as we celebrate one of Texas’ most beloved traditions and experience the charm, hospitality, and community spirit that make Nacogdoches so special.

Hazard Mitigation Action Plan Update

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Nacogdoches County and the City of Nacogdoches are updating the Nacogdoches County and City of Nacogdoches Hazard Mitigation Action Plan (HMAP).

As part of this process, the County and City’s Office of Emergency Management are holding public meetings to gather community input for developing the HMAP.

The next such meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, June 24 at 5:30 p.m. at the C.L Simon Recreation Center (1112 North Street in Nacogdoches). All residents are invited to attend and participate in the discussion.

Leadership Session (Angelina County)

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June 17 @ 10:00 am 12:00 pm

Great leaders don’t just know what to do. They know what they stand for.

Join Demetress Harrell, Executive Director of Hospice in the Pines, on Wednesday, June 17, for Chamber University as she explores Core Values: The Foundation of Leadership. Learn how clearly defined values guide decision-making, build trust, and create stronger leaders and stronger organizations.

Register today >>> bit.ly/CU-0617

Summer Library Programs for Adults

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(Nacogdoches, TX) – The Nacogdoches Public Library is joining other libraries across the country in celebrating reading with the universal theme of Unearth a Story. Kids are not the only ones who can join in on the fun and win prizes. Some of the adult programs include Fiber Arts Club on the first Monday of each month, Books & Banter on the second Thursday of each month, two America 250-themed Paint Parties in June, weekly citizenship classes, and Bad Art Night in July. Adults can earn prizes at the end of the summer by attending library programs and tracking their reading using the ReadSquared app. For more information on specific program times and how to track your program
attendance and reading, please visit nactx.us/library or visit the library. All library
programs are free, but some may require registration.