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    Let Me Sum Up

    Highland Park ISD tries to convince students to drink less — and good for them

    Eric Celeste
    May 14, 2013 | 1:19 pm

    I didn’t drink in high school. Well, okay, I drank that one time. We had a party at my house one night when I was a junior in high school. I decided it was time to act like a kid and get drunk. So I drank 20 beers. (This was Oklahoma 3.2 beer, so about the equivalent of a 12-pack.) I threw up all night.

    Given that I diagnosed myself as someone who dives a bit too deep into new ventures, the next beer I remember enjoying was the one I drank with a friend to celebrate graduating from SMU.

    If you feel like this is the place where I should point out that I’ve since made up for lost time with whiskey and wine, that’s fair. But I also believe it was important to delay drinking until I was old enough to imbibe responsibly(ish), and I had enough money to call a cab when needed.

    That’s why, despite my cynical leanings, I think it’s great news that Highland Park ISD has hired a “coordinator for student integrity and compliance.” The hire, Jerry Sutterfield, seems to understand just how tough such a job is, telling the Morning News:

    We realize in our society today that alcohol is pervasive. It’s accessible. ... If you create an Advanced Placement program, but you do nothing to prepare [students] for the behavioral side of life, their education is incomplete.

    Sutterfield won’t just be talking to seniors. He’ll start with kids as young as seventh grade. You and I know that, especially in the Park Cities, this is necessary.

    It’s pretty well-known around DISD schools that if you want to do some serious partying, you hang out with kids from the wealthier areas of town. You find yourself some entitled private school kids or Park Cities kids who have access to cash and parents who have only used their hands to high-five their kids, never for a good ass-slap.

    I’m not saying it isn’t a problem in every school, within every demographic. I’m saying that as a collective, rich kids seem to have a desire — and the means — to grow up way too fast. And, too often, they think this is just their birthright.

    I’m glad HPISD is trying to do something about that. And I’m not entirely sure it won’t have an effect. I used to discount such programs when I was younger. I think that’s because my generation didn’t seem responsive to people trying to teach us the evils of the world. We seemed to have a more John Hughes-ian worldview: Old people are idiots and not worth listening to.

    With my daughter’s friends and acquaintances (she’ll be a college sophomore), I’m continually astounded at how thoughtful and mature they are, taking life lessons seriously and actually adopting that recommended behavior into their lives. One small example: When she goes out with her friends, they always appoint the “DD” (designated driver) before they leave the house. It’s ingrained in them.

    That’s one reason I’m hopeful such a program (it’s only a part-time position right now) works and that it gathers lessons for other districts to follow.

    Elsewhere

    I’m glad JFloyd takes on the guns-and-kids issue, but trying to address it while asking for this not to devolve into a gun-rights issue doesn’t work. Because those guns did what they were designed to do: kill whatever they were aimed at. That’s relevant to the debate.

    “Mass transit in Arlington” is an Onion story, right?

    Spider-Man! Where are you coming from Spider-Man! Nobody knows who you are!

    The Dallas Stars have fired head coach Glen Gulutzan! In related news, apparently someone named “Glen Gulutzan” has been the Stars’ coach for some time.

    Please please please please please run in 2016, Ted Cruz. Please.

    Retweets

    Your Lege at work.

    I know marriage license fraud keeps ME up at night. MT @scottbraddock: bill to require photo ID for a marriage license passes Senate #TxLege

    — Julie Montgomery (@juliamontgomery) May 14, 2013

    If you're going to talk about keeping kids from accidentally killing themselves with guns, you kinda have to talk about gun laws and attitudes at large.

    Rick Perry is pleased with his gun ownership
      
    Rick Perry YouTube
    If you're going to talk about keeping kids from accidentally killing themselves with guns, you kinda have to talk about gun laws and attitudes at large.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    income news

    Here is how Texans' income compares to the rest of the U.S. in 2025

    Amber Heckler
    Jun 3, 2025 | 6:27 pm
    Paycheck, check
    SimplifyYourMoney.com
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    Hardworking Texans are making less money per year than the national median, a new WalletHub study has revealed.

    The just-released report, "States Where People Have the Highest Income," found Texas workers are making a median annual income of $73,718, compared to the national median of $81,000 per year.

    The study examined the average annual income of the top five percent, the average income of the bottom 20 percent, and the median income for all residents in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Income was adjusted for the cost of living.

    Texas ranked 11th in the study's rankings of states where residents have the highest incomes, moving up one spot from its 2024 ranking. Virginia claimed the No. 1 spot, followed by New Jersey (No. 2) and New York (No. 3).

    Based on WalletHub's findings, the top five percent of Texans are making more than $504,000 per year. Meanwhile, the bottom 20 percent of Texas residents are making only $17,461 annually.

    In a major city like Dallas, income disparities may appear to be even wider than other Texas cities. Earning a "comfortable" wage in Dallas now costs $4,000 more than it did last year, and being a middle-class earner means making a minimum of $46,743 a year and as much as $140,242. Making a six-figure salary doesn't even go as far as it used to.

    Yet Dallas still ranks among the top 10 wealthiest cities in America with 16 billionaires and 135 multi-millionaires calling the city home. Even Dallas' suburbs are attracting more high-income households than many other U.S. cities.

    "The highest-earning 10 percent of individuals in the United States earn over 12 times more than those in the lowest-earning 10 percent, based on the latest Census data," said WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo. "By measuring the income of various percentiles against a state's median income, we can better identify where income disparities are more prevalent, which could help us better understand why residents of certain states struggle more to make ends meet."

    The top 10 states with residents earning the highest income are:

    • No. 1 – Virginia
    • No. 2 – New Jersey
    • No. 3 – New York
    • No. 4 – Connecticut
    • No. 5 – Washington
    • No. 6 – Utah
    • No. 7 – Minnesota
    • No. 8 – Colorado
    • No. 9 – Illinois
    • No. 10 – Massachusetts
    texaswallethubreportsincomedallas
    news/city-life
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