Could Frisco see its first 6A school?

Frisco school trustees consider new high school attendance zones to accommodate the opening of Reedy High in August. (Eva-Marie Ayala/The Dallas Morning News)

Long ago, Frisco made a commitment to keep schools small so that officials could know every child by name and need, as the district’s motto goes.

But the realities of a fast-growth district mean constant building of new schools and frequently redrawing attendance zones. That’s particularly painful and tricky for high schools.

During last night’s rezoning workshop, much of the focus on how to draw lines to accommodate the new Reedy High opening in August focused on getting numbers down at Wakeland and Frisco high school.

“There is no solution that’s going to be presented that draws clean lines and opens Reedy at 9-10 (grades) that holds past two or three years,” Superintendent Jeremy Lyon said. “That’s our challenge.”

Numerous options were discussed, including one-time assignments such as zoning some Wakeland students to Reedy but noting students after them would be zoned back to Wakeland. Another option moved the eastern part of Wakeland to Frisco High, but then that would be complicated by numerous housing developments underway within Frisco’s zone.

Lyon suggested allowing next year’s freshmen and sophomores from Wakeland volunteer to attend another school regardless of where they lived.

Then he wondered if it would be worth asking Wakeland parents if they wanted the school to go to 6A level temporarily until another new high school in the north could offer relief in 2017.

To that, Wakeland parents in attendance cheered, yelling “Yes!”

But officials quickly said going to a 6A — even temporarily — would be more complicated than just allowing more students at Wakeland.

The state’s University Interscholastic League sets the 6A enrollment cutoff at 2,100 or more students. That determination decides which districts and zones schools compete in for athletics and fine arts competitions.

Frisco high schools typically have a 2,100-student capacity. Having 2,300 to 2,400 students would complicate not only classes but lunch schedules, parking, restroom facilities and more, said trustee Renee Ehmke.

Portables would need to be in place, and contracts with other districts could be at risk as sports schedules are set years in advance, officials said. Additionally, that would mean Wakeland would not compete against any other Frisco team in UIL and would have to travel for games.

“I don’t think we would be doing anyone a favor by doing that,” trustee John Hoxie said of a 6A Wakeland.

FISD officials plan to send a survey to Wakeland families asking more detailed questions about feelings for a 6A school, volunteering to leave Wakeland and other options being considered.

Trustees plan to approve new high school attendance zones in December. The proposed plans to accommodate the new Reedy High affect Frisco, Wakeland and Lone Star high schools.

Frisco morning roundup for Oct. 29, 2014

Frisco’s second annual Buffalo Stomp wildflower seeding event will be at noon Saturday in Freedom Meadow at Warren Sports Complex. The free event is hosted by the Frisco Garden Club and the city of Frisco Environmental Services Department. People are invited to spread and stomp wildflower seeds to celebrate Texas Native Plant Week.

The city of Frisco is collecting public comments on a Fair Housing Survey as part of a Five-Year Consolidated Plan and an Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice for the program years 2015-2019. Those documents are required as part of the city’s distribution of funds under the Community Development Block Grant. Click here to take the survey.

It’s the playoffs! FC Dallas will host Vancouver at 8 o’clock tonight at Toyota Stadium in the 2014 MLS Cup Playoffs presented by AT&T. In other news, FC Dallas and Texas-based health and wellness company AdvoCare plan to extend the multi-million dollar partnership through 2020. AdvoCare will continue to have a major presence throughout Toyota Stadium and Toyota Soccer Center. The sponsorship also keeps the AdvoCare logo on FC Dallas Academy and Youth jerseys. Click here for ticket information.

Congratulations to Jay Allison and Jenny Reid Allison of Frisco, who were honored last month as Baylor University’s 2014 Parents of the Year during the University’s annual Family Weekend celebration. The couple has hosted numerous student sendoff parties and served as a resource for Baylor parents. More than 30 Reid-Allison family members have attended Baylor over the last 60 years. Click here for the full news release.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Texas will offer a free presentation to senior citizens on ways to identify and prevent Medicare fraud. The session will include common schemes used as well as real-life examples of previous fraudulent activity. The session is not meant to offer advice on individual medical benefits or claims. But attendees will learn how to protect their personal information and who to contact if they suspect they are being victimized. The session will be at 2 p.m. Nov. 20 at the Allen Public Library, 300 N. Allen Drive. Click here for the full news release.

Registration continues for entries in the Frisco Community Parade, which is scheduled for 10 a.m. Nov. 8 in downtown Frisco. Frisco resident and World War II veteran Bob Smith is this year’s Parade Grand Marshal. This year’s theme is Wild Wild West. The parade honors Veterans Day and showcases community spirit. Entries include floats, school marching bands, youth sports teams, cheerleaders, scouts, civic organizations, Frisco-based professional sports teams and local businesses. Volunteers are also needed to help out with the parade. Click here to learn more.

The nonprofit Executives in Action is accepting applications for service grants for eligible nonprofits looking to enhance their efficiency, management and impact. Executives volunteer their expertise in business to grant recipeints. The deadline to apply is Nov. 14. Click here to learn more.

Early voting continues from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day this week through Friday for the Nov. 4 election. Among the measures on the ballot is one asking about late-night hours in Frisco. Currently, restaurants and bars in Frisco must stop selling alcohol at midnight six days a week and at 1 a.m. on Saturdays. Some businesses want the option to continue selling alcohol until 2 a.m. every night, which is the policy in many neighboring cities. A yes vote on the November ballot would put the decision for late-night hours back in the hands of the Frisco City Council. A no vote would leave the current hours in place. For more detailed information on the ballot measure, click here. For sample ballots and early polling places and hours,click here for Collin County and here for Denton County.

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Frisco morning roundup for Oct. 28, 2014

Frisco’s annual Arborfest celebration will be at 9 a.m. Saturday at Frisco Commons park, 8000 McKinney Road. The event starts with a ceremonial tree planting hosted by the city’s Urban Forestry Board and the Frisco Garden Club. The 2014 ‘Tree Champions’ will be announced followed by a tour of the park’s trails, where 42 speciies of trees grow. Attendees can also get tips on what trees grow best in the soils, plus how to plan and care for those trees.

The nonprofit Frisco Women’s League is hosting a Charity Casino Night from 7 to 11 p.m. Saturday at the Cascades Event Center, 5909 Stone Creek Drive in The Colony. Proceeds from the event benefit The Turning Point Rape Crisis Center of Collin County. The Turning Point works to treat and prevent bullying, sexual harassment and sexual assault through counseling, education and advocacy. It also operates 24-hour crisis hotline to provide resources for survivors. Tickets to Saturday’s event are $55 each. Click here for ticket information.

The Texas Legends will host a draft party at 2 p.m. Saturday at Henry’s Tavern, 5741 Legacy Drive in Plano. People can get a behind-the-scenes look as Donnie Nelson, Eduardo Najera and scouts draft this year’s roster for the D-League team that calls Frisco home. The team’s home opener will be Nov. 21 at Dr Pepper Arena. Click here to learn more.

Haven Behavioral Hospital of Frisco will hold an open house for its new facility from 3 to 7 p.m. Thursday at 5680 Frisco Square Blvd., Suite 3000, adjacent to Forest Park Medical Center. Haven provides inpatient psychiatric stabilization and treatment to senior adults experiencing acute symptoms of depression, anxiety, mood swings, or psychosis. The event will include light hors d’oeuvres, tours of the clinical units, and a meet-and-greet with medical and clinical staff. The Frisco Chamber of Commerce will do a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 4:30 p.m. Click here to learn more.

Entries are being accepted for the annual Collin County Poetry Contest until Feb. 1. The contest is sponsored by the Mockingbird Chapter of the Poetry Society of Texas. Poems will be accepted in three categories: K-12 students in Collin County, adults residing in Collin County and Mockingbird Chapter members. Click here for contest details.

An Evening of Hope Gala will be held at 7 p.m. Nov. 8 at the Westin Stonebriar Hotel in Frisco to benefit Hope’s Door, an agency that offers intervention and prevention services for domestic violence in Collin County. Jessica Bair and The Mary Kay Foundation will receive the Heroes of Hope Award for their efforts in helping with emergency shelter renovations. The Great Gatsby-themed evening begins with a cocktail reception and features a seated dinner, a live and silent auction and entertainment by DFW cover band Limelight. Click here to learn more.

Frisco Square continues to accept donations for Project Warm Us through Thanksgiving. Donations are being accepted for coats, jackets, sweatshirts, sweaters, blankets, scarves, knit hats, gloves, shoes and socks (new ones only). Items will go to the homeless in the Dallas area. Donations can be dropped off between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the Frisco Square Management Office, 8874 Coleman Blvd., next door to Dimples Cupcake Factory. Click here to learn more.

Mark your calendar: The next Chunk Your Junk will be Nov. 15 at Frisco’s Environmental Collection Center. Click here for details on what items will be accepted.

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Frisco morning roundup for Oct. 27, 2014

The Frisco Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a special meeting at 3 p.m. Tuesday to tour Frisco and surrounding communities and look at shading and screening methods along major thoroughfares. They will also discuss possible modifications to city ordinances on those topics. No votes will be taken. The commission will then hold its regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Frisco city hall. The agenda is brief and includes no public hearings.

FC Dallas will host Vancouver at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Toyota Stadium in the 2014 MLS Cup Playoffs presented by AT&T. Click here for ticket information.

The Odysseus Chamber Orchestra will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday at First United Methodist Church of Frisco, 7659 Preston Road. The orchestra is the city’s first residential orchestra, writes Tammy Meinershagen on the Frisco Insiders Blog. Click here to learn more.

Tickets are on sale for Nitro Circus Live, which is coming to Toyota Stadium on May 23. The show features more than 40 action sports athletes performing daring and record-breaking tricks in freestyle motocross, BMX and skateboarding. Tickets are available through TicketMaster.

Frisco Community Theatre presents Frisco Improv Players’ Evening of Laughter at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Black Box Theater in the Frisco Discovery Center. Tickets are $12. Click here to learn more.

Scott Levy of Frisco is a member of a Dallas-based skydiving team that took home the gold medal in their category last month at the United States Parachute Association National Skydiving Championship in Chicago. Click here for the story.

The board for the North Texas Municipal Water District voted last week on new restrictions that will ask its members to limit sprinkler use to once every two weeks beginning Nov. 1 as lawns grow dormant and the district’s need to save water grows from the ongoing Texas drought, reports DMN’s Michael E. Young. Click here for the story.

Early voting continues from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day this week through Friday for the Nov. 4 election. Among the measures on the ballot is one asking about late-night hours in Frisco. Currently, restaurants and bars in Frisco must stop selling alcohol at midnight six days a week and at 1 a.m. on Saturdays. Some businesses want the option to continue selling alcohol until 2 a.m. every night, which is the policy in many neighboring cities. A yes vote on the November ballot would put the decision for late-night hours back in the hands of the Frisco City Council. A no vote would leave the current hours in place. For more detailed information on the ballot measure, click here. For sample ballots and early polling places and hours,click here for Collin County and here for Denton County.

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Frisco morning roundup for Oct. 24, 2014

Traffic along the area’s toll roads will get a bit worse before it gets better. Elizabeth Mow with the North Texas Tollway Authority addressed the Frisco City Council earlier this week, letting members know that the agency plans to focus on internal improvements and expansion on its existing roads. An estimated $850 million worth of improvements is planned in the next five years. On the Dallas North Tollway, a fourth lane will be added and ramps improved from State Highway 121 to the Bush Turnpike. Improvements are also planned to alleviate congestion at the Bush/DNT interchange, she said. A fourth lane will be added on the DNT from the Bush Turnpike south to Belt Line Road with construction starting in March and finishing in 2018. Plans to widen the Bush Turnpike are also in the works. The section between the DNT and Central Expressway will be widened first with the sections on either side to be widened after that. The agency also plans to widen the Sam Rayburn Tollway. Mow told the council that residents need to be aware of the work ahead. “This will have an impact on your community,” she said. Her presentation is available online here (select the link to view the video from the Oct. 21 meeting and then choose agenda item 5 to see that presentation and access the PDF of her slides on the right side of the screen).

Lots of events are going on this weekend. Here’s a sampling of things to do in Frisco:

A Bull-O-Ween benefiting the Lone Star Bulldog Club Rescue group will be from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday at the Frisco Discovery Center, 8004 Dallas Parkway. Admission is $10 per person. Kids and dogs get in free. There will be vendors, games and a costume contest. Click here for details.

The eighth annual Trick-or-Treat at Frisco Fire Safety Town is from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday at Safety Town, which is at 8601 Gary Burns Drive next to the Central Fire Station. Kids are invited to come in costume. Food is available for a fee. A free shuttle is available beginning at 5 p.m. at the Frisco Athletic Center, 5828 Nancy Jane Lane. Click here to learn more.

The Gary Burns Annual Fun Run benefiting the Frisco Education Foundation starts at 8 a.m. Saturday outside Toyota Stadium, 9200 World Cup Way in Frisco. Registration will be taken on race day. Click here to learn more.

Texas Ford Aquatics will hold an open house of its new facility from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at 8353 Legacy Drive, just north of Cotton Gin Road. Click here for details.

More than a thousand motorcycle riders are expected to participate in the 22nd annual Teddy Bear Ride to benefit the Children’s Advocacy Center of Collin County. This year’s event on Sunday will begin at IKEA in Frisco and end at Rick Fairless’ Stroker’s in Dallas. The event is also meant “to send a message that there is no excuse for child abuse in our community.” Cost to participate is $10 plus one new teddy bear, which will go to the center’s Teddy Bear Room. Each bear eventually finds a home with an abused child. Click here to register.

Children in the Newman Village community will host the fourth annual Lemon Aid event from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday at Newman Village Central Plaza, 4131 Fallbrook Drive in Frisco. Proceeds will go to the Children’s Medical Center’s “Change for Children’s” program.

The Frisco Area Children’s Theater presents The Great Ghost Chase in the Black Box Theater at the Frisco Discovery Center at 7 p.m. today and Saturday. Tickets are available at the door – $10 for adults, $7 for seniors and $5 for children. Click here to learn more.

Elevate Life Church in Frisco is hosting its annual Family Fun Fest from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the church as an alternative to Halloween. The event includes carnival rides, inflatables, a petting zoo, cakewalks, games, face painting and hayrides. Unlimited rides and inflatables are available with $20 purchase of a wristband. People can also buy tickets at $1 apiece to go toward activities. Food trucks will be on site for an additional cost. Costumes are welcome. The church is at 8500 Teel Parkway. Click here to learn more.

The fourth annual Trick or Treat the Square will be from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday in Frisco Square. Children are invited to go trick-or-treating at their favorite businesses in the square. There will also be a petting zoo, a not so spooky Spook House, face painting and wagon rides. There will also be a Howl-Oween Pooch Parade and Costume Contest. Registration for pets is from 1 to 2 p.m. Sunday, and costume judging is from 2 to 3 p.m. Click here for more details on the pooch parade and here for Trick or Treat the Square.

FC Dallas will play its final match of the regular season on Saturday against Portland at Toyota Stadium. The game starts at 7:30 p.m. Click here for ticket information.

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Swindoll ministry files suit over health care mandate on abortion drugs

The Bible-teaching ministry of Pastor Chuck Swindoll filed suit on Wednesday over the federal government’s mandate requiring Christian ministries to provide health coverage to employees for abortion-inducing drugs and devices.

Swindoll is the founder and senior pastor-teacher of Stonebriar Community Church in Frisco and chancellor of Dallas Theological Seminary. His Insight for Living Ministries is operating from Plano while it builds a new headquarters at Lebanon Road and Parkwood Boulevard in Frisco.

The suit filed in the Eastern District of Texas is against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Department of Labor, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and the secretaries of each of those departments. Insight for Living Ministries is being represented by the nonprofit Liberty Institute. The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Richard Schell in Plano.

According to the suit, the ministry strongly believes in the sanctity of human life and the evils of abortion. But under the federal Affordable Care Act, the ministry states it must either to drop its health insurance and accept a religious accommodation in violation of its strongly held religious beliefs or pay crippling fines. Exemptions approved for many churches and businesses do not apply to the ministry, according to the suit.

Click here to read a copy of the complaint filed in federal district court.

Texas Ford Aquatics celebrates opening of new pool facility

Texas Ford Aquatics

Texas Ford Aquatics will celebrate the opening of its new facility this weekend. (Photo by Steve Manhart of Steven D. Photography)

Texas Ford Aquatics will celebrate the opening of its new facility this weekend.

It features an Olympic size competition pool and a warm-water training pool that will be used for a variety of community programs, including swim lessons and aquatics therapy. The facility also houses the club’s offices.

The swim club is believed to be one of only a handful of youth sports clubs in the country to build its own facility and seek corporate sponsorships.

Texas Ford Aquatics is a member of USA Swimming, SwimAmerica and US Masters Swimming. Its more than 600 athletes represent the club at local, regional, national and NCAA swimming competitions.  Its head coach, Dan McDonough, has produced world-ranked swimmers and national champions.

“We are beyond excited to be able to serve North Texas in this way,” marketing director Katy Motsinger said in a news release. “Aquatics is unique because it encompasses all ages and abilities. If you’re 4 or 104, we have a program to help you meet your goals and help you grow.”

A ribbon cutting ceremony will be at 11:30 a.m. Friday at the new facility at 8353 Legacy Drive, just north of Cotton Gin Road. Texas Ford Aquatics will then hold an open house for the public from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

Saturday’s event will include kids’ activities – a cake walk, face painting, corn-hole, and a coloring contest – in addition to raffle prizes and demonstrations of Texas Ford Aquatics community programming. Lunch will be available for purchase from Smokin’ Joe’s Catering. Available will be hot dogs, bratwurst, polish sausage or brisket sandwich, chips and drinks, ranging from $4 to $6.

Cammille Adams, a 2012 U.S. Olympian and former Texas A&M swimmer who specializes in 200-meter fly and 400-meter individual medley, will sign autographs from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday.

Earlier this year, the club formerly known as Frisco Aquatics landed a naming rights sponsorship with the North Texas Ford Dealers, which represents more than 50 dealers. That sponsorship prompted the name change for the team and the facility. Click here to learn more.

Frisco morning roundup for Oct. 23, 2014

Children in the Newman Village community will host the fourth annual Lemon Aid event from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday at Newman Village Central Plaza, 4131 Fallbrook Drive in Frisco. Proceeds will go to the Children’s Medical Center’s “Change for Children’s” program. Lemonade and baked goods will be sold. Last year’s event raised $2,000. Organizers are hoping to beat that amount this year.

GEA Food Solutions will host a blood drive from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday in its parking lot at the Frisco Discovery Center. The Red Cross Donor Coach will be at 8000 North Dallas Parkway in Frisco accepting donations. Click here to schedule an appointment.

Entries are due by Nov. 9 for the third annual Festival of Trees at the Frisco Art Gallery in the Frisco Discovery Center. People are invited to create a tree or wreath for a silent auction benefiting CASA of Collin County. The entries will be on display from Nov. 24 through Dec. 20. Click here to learn more.

Burton Gilliam, the actor from the 1974 film Blazing Saddles, will be signing autographs and posing for photographs at Norma’s Cafe on Friday in honor of the fourth annual Texas Chicken Fried Steak Day. Gilliam will be at the Frisco location at 8300 Gaylord Parkway No. 19 from 10 to 11 a.m. Friday. He will be at the Dallas location at 17721 N. Dallas Parkway No. 130 from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Click here to learn more.

FC Dallas will play its final match of the regular season on Saturday against Portland at Toyota Stadium. The game starts at 7:30 p.m. Click here for ticket information.

Fashion designer Nicole Miller will be at JCPenney at Stonebriar Centre mall from 6 to 8 p.m. today (Thursday) to offer styling advice, tips for holiday dressing and an exclusive look at the store’s holiday collection. Click here for details.

Greg Abbott, candidate for governor, will be at Mattito’s in Frisco at 9 a.m. Saturday to meet with the public. The restaurant is at 6129 Main St. Admission is free, but registration is required. Click here to register.

The eighth annual Trick-or-Treat at Frisco Fire Safety Town is from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday at Safety Town, which is at 8601 Gary Burns Drive next to the Central Fire Station. Kids are invited to come in costume. Food is available for a fee. A free shuttle is available beginning at 5 p.m. at the Frisco Athletic Center, 5828 Nancy Jane Lane. Click here to learn more.

The Frisco City Council on Tuesday approved its legislative agenda for the upcoming session that starts in January. Click here to see the city’s priorities at the state level (double-click on the first agenda item and select the PDF files on the right side of your screen).

Early voting continues for the Nov. 4 election. Among the measures on the ballot is one asking about late-night hours in Frisco. Currently, restaurants and bars in Frisco must stop selling alcohol at midnight six days a week and at 1 a.m. on Saturdays. Some businesses want the option to continue selling alcohol until 2 a.m. every night, which is the policy in many neighboring cities. A yes vote on the November ballot would put the decision for late-night hours back in the hands of the Frisco City Council. A no vote would leave the current hours in place. For more detailed information on the ballot measure, click here. For sample ballots and early polling places and hours,click here for Collin County and here for Denton County.

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Updated: Frisco firefighters end monitoring after natural gas leak

Updated: Residents can return to homes. Leak stopped. FD is clear of the scene.

Original: News release from the city of Frisco:

“Frisco firefighters are monitoring natural gas levels related to a leak in a neighborhood surrounding the intersection of Milestone Ridge and Ridgetop, located west of Coit Rd. and south of Canoe.

“Eight homes are evacuated as a precautionary measure; however, no gas is detected inside any of the homes, at this time.

“At approximately 5:09 p.m., Frisco dispatch received its first call from an area resident about a ‘gas smell’. Frisco firefighters were dispatched at 5:10 p.m. and arrived on the scene at approximately 5:17 p.m.

“Firefighters say a utility crew was installing cable lines when the gas line was cut. Atmos crews are working to repair the line. A time estimate for repairs is unknown at this time.”

Frisco morning roundup for Oct. 22, 2014

Early voting has started for the Nov. 4 election. Among the measures on the ballot is one asking about late-night hours in Frisco. Currently, restaurants and bars in Frisco must stop selling alcohol at midnight six days a week and at 1 a.m. on Saturdays. Some businesses want the option to continue selling alcohol until 2 a.m. every night, which is the policy in many neighboring cities. A yes vote on the November ballot would put the decision for late-night hours back in the hands of the Frisco City Council. A no vote would leave the current hours in place. If the measure is approved, the council would take up the issue at a subsequent council meeting. The wording on the ballot may be confusing to some, but that’s the legal language required to repeal the decision that voters made in 2008 to overrule the city council’s 2007 decision to allow late-night hours. For more detailed information on the ballot measure, click here for the city’s information. For sample ballots and early polling places and hours, click here for Collin County and here for Denton County.

Frisco’s Citizen Bond Committee will reconvene in November to decide what projects to put before voters for possible funding in the May 2015 election. Frisco voters previously approved a $197 million bond package in 2002 and a $198 million bond package in 2006. Only about $33 million is left from the 2006 bond package, all of which is tied to specific projects. Among the needs to be considered by the committee are a library expansion, more parkland, more hike and bike trails, new facilities for municipal court and parks administration, fire department needs, Grand Park, an expanded senior center and road improvements. Frisco City Council members filled some vacancies on the committee at their Tuesday meeting. For more information about the committee’s role, watch the presentation at Monday’s Frisco Town Hall meeting. Click here for a link to the video.

Congratulations to Centennial High School senior Mary Darden, who won a $3,600 college scholarship to the school of her choice in the video contest sponsored by Fireball Run and the Frisco Education Foundation. Her award was presented Tuesday. Click here to view her winning video entry on Frisco.

The Frisco City Council voted against starting the process to consider rezoning about 93 acres near County Road 26 and Preston Road. The city had received interest in rezoning the property from industrial to residential. But the request does not comply with the current comprehensive plan, which is in the process of being updated. Council members voted 5-0 on Tuesday against calling a public hearing on the request.

The city of Frisco has been doing a good job reducing its water use during the Stage 3 water restrictions. In 2013, the city used about 180 gallons per person per day. That compares with 153 gallons per person per day used so far this year. “Our water waste is being reduced by our good residents, which allows more water for all of us,” Frisco Public Works Director Gary Hartwell reported on Monday.

The Gary Burns Annual Fun Run benefiting the Frisco Education Foundation starts at 8 a.m. Saturday outside Toyota Stadium, 9200 World Cup Way in Frisco. Registration is being accepted for the one-mile fun run and 5K. Click here to learn more.

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