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    Let Me Sum Up

    While Irving mayor settles scores, city loses money, talent and time

    Eric Celeste
    May 30, 2013 | 1:26 pm

    What the sweet hell is going on in Irving? And when will people start holding its mayor responsible?

    Granted, I make fun of suburbs like Irving and Arlington a lot in this space. That’s because it’s fun (especially Arlington because, c’mon, it’s freaking Arlington). But I lived in Irving the first five years or so of my time in DFW, and I have an affinity for it.

    I also like some of the business leaders there, people with whom I’ve worked and tippled. After having conversations with them the past few days, I’m becoming more shocked that no one is calling out the city’s mayor for the way she seems to be letting her personal vendettas cripple Irving.

    I know you probably have no idea what’s been going on, so let me give you some background, as pared down as possible: There was an election two years ago in which former councilwoman Beth Van Duyne beat the longtime mayor. She promised to end development deals she didn’t like, including this one for a $250 million multiuse entertainment complex that sparked allegations of overcharging the city.

    This led the developer, Billy Bob Barnett, to back the former mayor’s campaign to the tune of a half-million dollars. Which is perfectly legal, but folks like the Dallas Morning News got their panties in a wad over, you know, so much legality. They backed Van Duyne, and she won the election.

    Almost two years later, here’s where Irving is: Van Duyne got the city out of the deal with Barnett, which is fine except that everyone in town believes the complex is necessary to kick-start development, and it now sits in limbo. The city is being sued by Barnett’s group and has a pretty good legal case that, minus argued overcharges, it’s owed nearly $40 million for the work it did. Meanwhile, the mayor already is complaining about a new developer who has agreed to make Barnett’s group whole and take over the project.

    Oh, yeah: She also got her ass handed to her in public when Dallas recently stole the Byron Nelson tournament, and now the Dallas Cowboys are looking at moving from Valley Ranch to another city (probably Arlington — of course).

    But according to folks in the city, she's doubling down on her aversion to striking a deal that can put the lawsuit behind her and get the complex development moving again. “This [lawsuit resolution] is clearly personal to her,” a lifelong Irving businessman told me from his Las Colinas office this week. “We all think the complex is a good idea, it will help the city, and Irving is really suffering right now. But she can’t get past her personal hatred.”

    Look, maybe she’s right. Maybe everyone against her is evil. Maybe the longtime, respected Irving city manager is set to leave not because Van Duyne is being unreasonable, but because he would just rather live in Nowhere, Florida, and make a lot less money. Maybe the Irving ISD chief is participating in online interviews to move somewhere else because he can’t handle’s Van Duyne’s awesome vision for the city. (Avi Selk does a great job covering what he suggests is "a reality show" in Irving on the paper's blog.)

    But I think a mayor committed to doing what is right would be looking for an equitable solution, because you can’t naysay your way to prosperity. Will it be tough to find an answer to which all parties agree? Will she have to swallow some pride? Of course! It’s a freaking tough job! But that’s what leaders do.

    All I know is, if this were happening in Dallas, the paper that endorsed the mayor would be asking some tough questions right now. Like, what in the sweet hell is going on in Irving?

    Elsewhere

    Steve Blow asks the same question, but he’s talking about DISD. I’ll have some thoughts on this tomorrow.

    Retweets

    We call this the “Strip-club DJ at 1:55 am model.”

    Indeed. And it has to be RT @stevemouzon: Talen: "the New Urbanism is intrinsically top-down and bottom-up"Andres Duany #CNU21

    — patrick kennedy (@WalkableDFW) May 30, 2013

    The proposed entertainment complex was to complement the Irving Convention Center.

      
    Photo courtesy of Irving Convention Center
    The proposed entertainment complex was to complement the Irving Convention Center.
    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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