Sugar Land | Missouri City Edition July 2016 17 …...permits concealed carrying of handguns on...
Transcript of Sugar Land | Missouri City Edition July 2016 17 …...permits concealed carrying of handguns on...
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FocusHIGHER EDUCATION
Sugar Land | Missouri City Edition • July 2016
By Amelia BrustUniversities in the Greater Houston area are
finalizing their policies for campus carry, which takes effect Aug. 1. The law, known as Senate Bill 11, permits concealed carrying of handguns on college campuses and requires public institutions to allow guns on parts of their campuses with exceptions.
SB 11 takes effect Aug. 1 for four-year institutions and Aug. 1, 2017, for junior colleges. Open carry, also known as House Bill 910, which allows licence holders to openly carry holstered handguns in pub-lic spaces, is still prohibited at all colleges.
Local universities The University of Houston system’s four presi-
dents must sign weapons policies for their respective locations at the main, downtown, Clear Lake and Victoria campuses.
As of July 1, Shawn Lindsey, director of media relations and digital programming, said the main and downtown campus policies had been signed. It is unknown whether the policies for the Clear Lake and Victoria campuses had been approved.
“In drafting our policy, it was not an issue of whether individuals agreed or disagreed with the law—our task was to draft a policy that is compliant with the law and protects the health and safety of the campus community,” said Marcilynn Burke, associate dean of the UH Law Center and chair-woman of the UH Campus Carry Work Group.
All four policies identify sporting venues, health
facilities and some residential facilities as exclusion zones, which are areas identified by the school or the law as being gun-free. Guns are allowed in faculty and staff offices except those within exclusion zones.
Private institutions can opt out of campus carry. In Houston, Rice University, Houston Baptist University and the University of St. Thomas have decided to opt out.
Clemente Rodriguez, patrol operations captain for the Rice University Police Department, said campus violence could increase and officers’ safety could be at risk if students were permitted to carry handguns.
“College-aged students are prone to more risky behavior, such as drug use, alcohol abuse and depression,” he said. “If you add weapons on cam-pus to that mix, there is a potential for more harm than good.”
Handguns are still banned at collegiate sporting events, but Traci Bennett, assistant district attorney for Harris County, said an exception is made if the handgun is being used as part of the sporting event.
Junior collegesJunior colleges have another year to implement
campus carry. In the meantime, the Houston Com-munity College and Lone Star College systems are watching how four-year institutions’ policies are received before crafting their own.
“At this point in time the [review] committee has basically been soliciting terms and ideas,” HCC
Campus carry law takes effect Aug. 1 at four-year public institutions
Handguns in a belt or shoulder holster
Public two-year and four-year institutions must allow campus carry in some places. Private institutions can opt out.
Chief of Police Greg Cunningham said.He said excluding guns from areas such as child
care facilities was common sense.“We don’t have a hospital, but those are the kind
of places [that could be exclusion zones],” Cunning-ham said.
LSCS Chief of Police Paul Willingham said the college is using town hall meetings to gather infor-mation from the community. Potential exclusion zones for the college system include locker rooms or rooms with dangerous equipment.
Willingham disagreed with Rodriguez’s opinion that allowing concealed weapons on campus would lead to increased campus violence.
“Some people, I think just because they hear the word gun they think it’s going to be a shootout,” Willingham said. “Nobody really anticipates that.”
WHERE CAN THEY BE CARRIED?
WHAT GUNS CAN BE CARRIED?
WHAT IS CAMPUS CARRY?
SB 11 permits the concealed carry of handguns on college campuses, not open carry.
CONCEALED CARRY: Q&A
UH-MAIN
UH-CLEAR LAKE
UH-DOWNTOWN
RICE UNIVERSITY
HOUSTON BAPTIST UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS
CLASSROOMS LABS HEALTH FACILITIES
SPORTING VENUES
DORMITORIES PRIVATE VEHICLES
OFFICES
No, except Calhoun
Lofts
Not when dangerous
materials are present
Not when dangerous
materials are present
Yes, unless employee
demonstrates risk
Yes, unless employee
demonstrates riskN/A
CONCEALED CARRY: RESTRICTIONS & PERMISSIONS
Yes, except where academic or disciplinary hearings, or employee
evaluations are being held
N/A
X
X
X X X X
X X X X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X X XXX
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Community Impact Newspaper • communityimpact.com20 Community Impact Newspaper • communityimpact.com20
SOUTHEAST TEXAS AREA COLLEGES, UNIVERSITIES
ALVIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE Tuition: $675 (in-district), $1,350 (out-of-district), $2,100 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 5,293Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 17.4 percent3110 Mustang Road, Alvin www.alvincollege.edu • 281-756-3500
ART INSTITUTE OF HOUSTON Tuition: $23,424-$90,355 (full cost of degree or program)*Enrollment: 1,987 (both Houston campuses) Most notable programs: culinary arts, audio production, graphic design, fashionTest averages: open admissions policyGraduation rate: 36-80 percent*4140 Southwest Freeway, Houston www.artinstitutes.edu/houston 713-623-2040
COLLEGE OF BIBLICAL STUDIES - HOUSTON Tuition: $4,110 (in-state and out-of-state)Enrollment: 427 Most notable programs: biblical studies, biblical counseling, Christian leadershipTest averages: open admissions policyGraduation rate: 70 percent (figure is an estimate; most students take longer than seven years to graduate)7000 Regency Square Blvd., Ste. 110, Houston www.cbshouston.edu • 713-785-5995
COLLEGE OF THE MAINLAND Tuition: $1,773 (in-district), $2,973 (out-of-district), $3,873 (out-of-state) Enrollment: 1,495Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 15.1 percent1200 Amburn Road, Texas City www.com.edu • 409-938-1211
HOUSTON BAPTIST UNIVERSITY Tuition: $26,280 (in-state and out-of-state)Enrollment: 2,288 (both Houston campuses) Most notable programs: nursing, business, life science Test averages: 470-580 SAT critical reading, 480-580 SAT math, 450-550 SAT writing, 20-25 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 48 percent7502 Fondren Road, Houston
www.hbu.edu • 281-649-3000
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE-CENTRALTuition: $1,015.50 (in-district), $2,095.50 (out-of-district), $2,343 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 16,619Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 24.4 percent1300 Holman St., Houstonwww.central.hccs.edu • 713-718-6000
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE-NORTHEASTTuition: $1,015.50 (in-district), $2,095.50 (out-of-district), $2,343 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 10,857Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 24.4 percent555 Community College Drive, Houstonwww.northeast.hccs.edu • 713-718-8300
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE - NORTHWESTTuition: $1,015.50 (in-district), $2,095.50 (out-of-district), $2,343 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 19,410Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 24.4 percent1550 Foxlake Drive, Houston www.northwest.hccs.edu • 713-718-5757
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE-SOUTHEASTTuition: $1,015.50 (in-district), $2,095.50 (out-of-district), $2,343 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 13,088Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 24.4 percent6815 Rustic Street, Houston www.southeast.hccs.edu • 713-718-7000
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE-SOUTHWESTTuition: $1,015.50 (in-district), $2,095.50 (out-of-district), $2,343 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 19,410Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 24.4 percent10041 Cash Road, Stafford www.southwest.hccs.edu • 713-718-7800
PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY Tuition: $4,979 (in-state), $11,639 (out-of-state)**Enrollment: 8,268 Most notable programs: nursing, business, engineering, architecture, criminal justiceTest averages: 370-460 SAT critical reading, 390-480 SAT math, 360-450 SAT writing, 16-19 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 38 percent100 University Drive, Prairie View www.pvamu.edu • 936-261-3311
RICE UNIVERSITY Tuition: $43,220 (in-state and out-of-state)Enrollment: 6,719 Most notable programs: psychology, economics, biochemistryTest averages: 680-760 SAT critical reading, 710-790 SAT math, 670-770 SAT writing, 31-34 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 93 percent6100 Main St., Houston www.rice.edu • 713-348-0000
SAM HOUSTON STATE UNIVERSITY Tuition: $4,757.75 (in-state), $10,877.75 (out-of-state)**Enrollment: 20,301 Most notable programs: criminal justice, mass communication, education Test averages: 450-550 SAT critical reading, 460-550 SAT math, 19-23 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 53 percent1806 Ave. J, Huntsville www.shsu.edu • 936-294-1111
SAN JACINTO COLLEGE - CENTRAL Tuition: $750 (in-district), $1,425 (out-of district), $2,400 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 13,591Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 19.9 percent8060 Spencer Highway, Pasadena www.sanjac.edu • 281-998-6150
SAN JACINTO COLLEGE- MARITIMETuition: $750 (in-district), $1,425 (out-of district), $2,400 (out-of-state)
Enrollment: N/A***Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: N/A***3700 Old Hwy. 146, La Porte www.sanjac.edu • 281-974-2200
SAN JACINTO COLLEGE-SOUTHTuition: $750 (in-district), $1,425 (out-of district), $2,400 (out-of-state) Enrollment: 10,700Test averages: open admissions policy Transfer rate: 23.8 percent13735 Beamer Road, Houston www.sanjac.edu • 281-998-6150
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Tuition: $10,030 (in-state), $30,208 (out-of-state)** Enrollment: 58,515 Most notable programs: engineering, agriculture, business, architecture Test averages: 520-640 SAT critical reading, 550-670 SAT math, 480-610 SAT writing, 23-30 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 80 percent400 Bizzell St., College Station www.tamu.edu • 979-845-3211
TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY Tuition: $4,493 (in-state), $10,343 (out-of-state) Enrollment: 9,700 Most notable programs: business, law, engineering, biomedical science, communications Test averages: 360-440 SAT critical reading, 370-460 SAT math, 350-435 SAT writing, 15-18 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 20 percent3100 Cleburne St., Houston www.tsu.edu • 713-313-7011
TEXAS STATE TECHNICAL COLLEGETuition: $1,395-$2,055 Enrollment: 127Most notable programs: cybersecurity, weldingTest averages: open admissions policy Graduation rate: N/A***26706 Hwy. 59, Rosenberg www.tstc.edu/campuses/fortbendco 855-605-7336
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON Tuition: $8,605 (in-state), $19,693 (out-of-state)**Enrollment: 40,750 Most notable programs: biomedical engineering, computer engineering, business, liberal artsTest averages: 500-610 SAT critical reading, 540-640 SAT math, 22-27 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 48 percent4800 Calhoun Road, Houston
www.uh.edu • 713-743-2255
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON-CLEAR LAKE Tuition: $3,965 (resident), $11,459.50 (non-resident)**Enrollment: 8,331
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FocusHIGHER EDUCATION
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Most notable programs: interdisciplinary studies, business, psychology, social sciencesTest averages: 470-580 SAT critical reading, 490-570 SAT math, 20-25 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 13 percent2700 Bay Area Blvd., Houston www.uhcl.edu • 281-283-7600
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON-CLEAR LAKE PEARLAND Tuition: $3,965 (resident), $11,459.50 (non-resident)** Enrollment: 854 Most notable programs: business, nursing, criminology, education, behavioral science Test averages: 470-580 SAT critical reading, 490-570 SAT math, 20-25 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 23 percent1200 Pearland Parkway, Pearland www.uhcl.edu/pearland • 281-212-1700
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON DOWNTOWN Tuition: $2,745 (in-state), $8,720 (out-of-state) Enrollment: 13,830 Most notable programs: accounting,
interdisciplinary studies, psychology, homeland security Test averages: 390-470 SAT critical reading, 430-510 SAT math, 380-480 SAT writing, 16-20 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 28 percent1 Main St., Houston www.uhd.edu • 713-221-8000
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON-SUGAR LANDTuition: $8,605 (resident), $19,693 (non-resident)** Enrollment: 1,672 Most notable programs: supply chain and logistics, digital media, education Test averages: 470-580 SAT critical reading, 490-570 SAT math, 20-25 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 48 percent14000 University Blvd., Sugar Land www.uh.edu/sugarland • 832-842-2900
UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS Tuition: $15,760 (in-state and out-of-state)Enrollment: 3,411 Most notable programs: business, pre-med, engineering, liberal arts Test averages: 490-600 SAT critical reading, 500-620 SAT math, 480-580 SAT writing, 22-27 ACT compositeGraduation rate: 72 percent
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UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
E D U C A T I O N S P O N S O R S
3800 Montrose Blvd., Houston
www.stthom.edu • 713-522-7911
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS Tuition: $9,830 (in-state), $34,836 (out-of-state)Enrollment: 50,950 Most notable programs: liberal arts, engineering, medicineTest averages: 600-700 SAT critical reading, 600-700 SAT math, 600-700 SAT writing, 30-36 ACT composite
Graduation rate: 81 percent110 Inner Campus Drive, Austin www.utexas.edu • 512-471-3434
WHARTON COUNTY JUNIOR COLLEGE Tuition: $2,750**Enrollment: 7,416Test averages: open admissions policyTransfer rate: 32.4 percent911 Boling Highway, Wharton www.wcjc.edu • 979-532-4560
Listed tuitions are for one semester and calculated for 15 credit hours unless noted otherwise. Tuition totals do not include fees unless noted otherwise. All transfer rates are to four-year universities, and graduation rates are for a six-year period.
This guide represents a selection of not-for-profit institutions in the area. It is not meant to be comprehensive. For a full list visit communityimpact.com.
*Depends on degree or program **Tuition rates include fees***Information unavailable because campus opened this spring
Compiled by Tracy Maness and Christina Nichols
Sugar Land | Missouri City Edition • July 2016
POPULAR PROGRAMS FASTEST-GROWING JOBS:
MOST NEW JOBS:
Based on graduation data from UH from fiscal year 2015, psychology was the college major with the most awarded undergraduate degrees.
The Texas Workforce Commission projects a high growth rate for specific jobs within the medical, hospitality, welding and computer programming fields from 2012-2022.
Occupations that typically require a bachelor’s degree to enter the occupation, projected 2014-2024
With awards, certificates and degrees completed in the 2014-2015 academic year, HCC’s most popular area of study was in the liberal arts and humanities.
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PSYCHOLOGY
ACCOUNTING
HOTEL/RESTAURANT MANAGEMENT
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
BIOLOGY
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON
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LIBERAL ARTS, HUMANITIES
EARTH, LIFE & NATURAL SCIENCES
HEALTH SCIENCES
BUSINESS
GLOBAL ENERGY
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE
GENETIC COUNSELORS
100% 59%DIAGNOSTIC MEDICAL
SONOGRAPHERS
58%DIAGNOSTIC MEDICAL
SONOGRAPHERS
64%
55%COMPUTER-CONTROLLED MACHINE PROGRAMMERS
100%GAMING CAGE
WORKERS
51%WELDING, SOLDERING
MACHINE SETTERS
46%GEOGRAPHERS
50%TRAVEL GUIDES
49%INTERPRETERS & TRANSLATORS
49%SKIN CARE
SPECIALISTSPETROLEUM ENGINEERS
45%
REGISTERED NURSES COMPUTER SYSTEMS ANALYSTS
439,300 jobs 118,600 jobs
151,100 jobs103,400 jobs
142,400 jobs 92,300 jobs
135,300 jobs 78,300 jobs
GENERAL OPERATIONS MANAGERS MANAGEMENT ANALYSTS
SOFTWARE DEVELOPERS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHERS
ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS
MARKET RESEARCH SPECIALISTS
GU
LF
CO
AS
TT
EX
AS
BA
CH
EL
OR
’S
DE
GR
EE
COMPUTER-CONTROLLED MACHINE PROGRAMMERS
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics/Community Impact Newspaper
Source: University of Houston/Community Impact Newspaper
Source: Houston Community College/Community Impact Newspaper
Source: Texas Workforce Commission/Community Impact Newspaper
JOB GROWTH PROJECTIONS IN % INCREASE FROM 2012-2022
JOB GROWTH PROJECTIONS 2014-2024
Community Impact Newspaper • communityimpact.com22 Community Impact Newspaper • communityimpact.com2222 Community Impact Newspaper • communityimpact.com22
FocusHIGHER EDUCATION
By Amelia Brust Fort Bend County’s educational opportunities are
growing along with its population. The University of Houston-Sugar Land, Houston Community College and Texas State Technical College are all building or planning new structures for the area, starting with a new TSTC campus opening in Rosenberg in the fall.
HCC will open its Missouri City campus on Texas Parkway in 2017, followed by UH-Sugar Land’s new academic building in the 2018-19 school year.
“We anecdotally hear a lot about the presence of higher education being an important asset to the com-munity,” said Jennifer May, director of economic devel-opment for Sugar Land. “The higher education work-force opportunities that it offers are most important.”
UH-Sugar Land and HCC officials said they hope to bring more course options while TSTC leaders said they aim to capitalize on what it sees as a greater need for technically skilled workers in the county. Fort Bend County had a 22.4 percent population increase from 585,375 people to 716,087 people between April 2010 and July 2015, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
“Fort Bend County has enough people all on its own, without even considering Houston, to support a TSTC [campus],” said Randy Wooten, vice chancellor and chief execution officer of the new campus. “A popula-tion to support, an industry base to support us is not really the issue.”
TSTCClasses at TSTC’s upcoming $40 million Rosen-
berg campus are scheduled to start Aug. 29. A 125,000-square-foot building—Phase 1 of the proj-ect—will open off Hwy. 59 and will support up to 700 students, Wooten said.
Welding, precision machining, cybersecurity, HVAC, industrial maintenance and telecommunications
convergence courses will be offered. The school hired about 12 faculty members for the new campus and is looking to double that, he said.
“The reason those programs were selected for this area is because they’re in demand,” Wooten said.
Phase 2 includes a second building, named the Bra-zos Center and will open in 2017. It will measure 50,000 square feet and house programs for electrical power and controls; occupational safety and environmental compliance; mechatronics; and electrical line work.
John Kennedy, field development officer for the cam-pus, said most students at TSTC’s new Rosenberg cam-pus will come from a 25-mile radius, and school lead-ers expect graduates will work within 30 to 40 miles of the school after graduation.
A 2008 study by Waco-based analysts The Perryman Group determined the annual economic effect in Texas of a typical TSTC graduating class was $485.7 million in gross product dollars, $311.5 million in personal income and 5,689 permanent jobs.
“When our graduates go across the stage, around 80 percent of them either have jobs or job offers,” Wooten said.
Fort Bend ISD trustee K.P. George said he expects the new campuses and expansions to offer greater tech-nical education and dual-credit enrollment options to the district.
“Now we are communicating with Wharton [County Junior College] and we are communicating with HCC, and I believe we are communicating with the technical center,” he said.
HCCHCC’s $21.5 million, nearly 70,000-square-foot
Missouri City campus will focus on entrepreneurship, technology and health care, according to HCC South-west President Madeline Burillo. Core classes for math,
English, government, chemistry and biology will also be available.
“That ever-growing public safety and health care arena [is] where there’s a continual demand for new technology or customer service or high responsiveness from law enforcement from public life safety,” Burillo said.
The new campus’s health care program will be sup-ported by HCC’s Coleman College and Center of Excellence in Health Science, located in Houston, Burillo said.
The building is on track to open in the fall of 2017. Crews have begun the building pad excavation, deten-tion pond excavation, spread footing operations and site utility operations, Burillo said.
“Giving these dual-credit opportunities is going to make these students think about the future,” George said. “There’s so many programs out there, [and] these students can come out and make a living right away.”
UH-Sugar LandIt will be at least two years until UH-Sugar Land
opens a new 150,000-square-foot academic building at its site near the corner of University Boulevard and Hwy. 59. The $54 million expansion will allow the uni-versity to expand on-site course options for the College of Technology and the College of Education.
Both colleges already offer some courses at the Sugar Land campus and UH-Victoria will move its programs to a new UH campus in Katy.
Robert McPherson, UH-Sugar Land interim asso-ciate provost for academic affairs and operations, said the Fort Bend Economic Development Council recom-mended the school add more technology classes at the site.
“In the end, I think we’ll see some programs and some engineering faculty on this campus,” he said.
College expansion projects on track for Fort Bend County
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OPENING FALL 2016
NEW BUILDING OPENING 2018-19
OPENING FALL 2017
$40 million budget • 125,ooo sq. ft.
150,000 sq. ft.
69,340 sq. ft.
$54 million budget •
$21.5 million budget •
University of Houston - Sugar Land
Houston Community CollegeTexas State Technical College
From manufacturing and welding, to health care and biotechnology, area colleges are trying to appeal to the area’s industry and workforce needs.
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Plans include an exhibit hall in the new building and a water feature made out of water retention channels on-site. No designs are finalized. UH-Sugar Land has about 5,000 stu-dents, and McPherson expects the campus to be able to support up to 8,000 students upon full build-out. A second building, also 150,000 square feet, is planned after the first building opens in the 2018-19 school year.
The southwest corner of the property is proposed for public-private partnerships, McPherson said. Fluor Corp. gave the school $1 million to create the Fluor-UH Industrial Construction Management Education Part-nership for research and professional devel-opment.
“Each of those partnerships will probably be very unique and specific to who the partner is,” he said.
2323Sugar Land | Missouri City Edition • July 2016
State Rep. John Zerwas, R-Richmond, sponsored House Bill 100 in the 84th Texas Legislature, which allocated funds for both UH-Sugar Land and Phase 2 of TSTC’s Rosenberg campus. He also
authored HB 658, which allowed for TSTC’s construction.
“It was a good accomplishment for Fort Bend County and the surrounding area,” Zerwas said. He said the impact from the three schools’ projects on Fort Bend County would be “enormous.” Going forward, he said the legislature’s job will be to ensure the schools have adequate funding.
STATE SUPPORT FOR COLLEGE PROJECTS
CLASSES OFFERED TSTC and HCC are building new campuses while UH-Sugar Land’s new building will allow for more class options.
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON - SUGAR LAND
TECHNOLOGYNURSINGEDUCATIONBIOTECHNOLOGY COUNSELING
TEXAS STATE TECHNICAL COLLEGE
WELDINGTELECOMMUNICATIONCYBERSECURITY INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE
HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE
ENGLISH MATHCHEMISTRY TECHNOLOGYHEALTH CAREGOVERNMENTBIOLOGY
Sources: TSTC, HCC, UH-Sugar Land/Community Impact Newspaper
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