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PHARR, TEXAS— fficers with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Office of Field at the Pharr International Bridge seized $1,567,000 in marijuana that was concealed within a commercial shipment of fresh produce. On Friday evening, August 9, 2013 a green 1994 International tractor pulling a white 1997 Utility trailer arrived at the Pharr-Reynosa International Bridge cargo facility with a manifested commercial shipment of fresh avocados. A CBP officer referred the shipment to the vehicle non-intrusive imaging system and after noting anomalies within the trailer, the shipment proceeded to the secondary inspection dock for further examination of conveyance and commodity. During the course of the secondary examination, officers discovered packages of suspected narcotics concealed within the roof of the trailer. CBP officers removed 120 packages of alleged marijuana weighing approximately 711 kilograms (1,567 lbs.). CBP-OFO seized the marijuana along with the tractor/trailer. “This substantial interception of marijuana was accomplished due to our officers’ excellent commitment to the CBP mission and the outstanding teamwork displayed on a day-to-day basis,” said Efrain Solis Jr., Port Director, Hidalgo/Pharr/Anzalduas.
ANZALDUAS,TEXAS U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Office of Field Operations (OFO) at the Anzalduas International Bridge seized $4,748,000 worth of narcotics and arrested a man from Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico in connection with the failed smuggling attempt. In a separate, unrelated incident, CBP officers at the Hidalgo International Bridge arrested a Houston, Texas woman who allegedly attempted to smuggle a one-year-old male infant into the United States.
New ratings coming from Texas Education Agency
CHRIS TOMLINSON,Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The Texas Education Agency will roll out a new accountability system for districts and schools this year that may not bring many immediate surprises but will change how many schools are rated in the long run.
Education Commissioner Michael Williams will release ratings on Thursday using the new system he helped create to better reflect how well schools prepare the state's children for adulthood.
The ratings take into account more than just the STAAR standardized tests, which makes up the first of three indexes to a school's rating. The others include student progress on those tests, the school's pace in closing the performance gap for disadvantaged kids and the student's readiness for life after high school by looking at graduation rates and scores on college placement tests.
Williams called the new accountability system more comprehensive than the previous one and promised it will reward schools that more quickly help low-performing students meet state standards. He said this is particularly important since 65 percent of Texas children are either black or Hispanic and 60 percent come from impoverished household, the most at-risk groups for dropping out of school.
"We're attempting to weight (the closing the gap component) a tad bit greater than the others because of the significance of closing the achievement gap," he said at a media briefing. "In this first iteration it is predominantly ... about STAAR scores, but it will add more components."
Schools and districts will no longer receive the exemplary, recognized, academically acceptable and academically unacceptable ratings, which school administrators complained were unfairly based solely on test scores. For now districts and schools will have either "met standard," ''met alternative standard" or "improvement required."
Individual campuses can earn distinctions such as "Top 25 percent: Student Progress," ''Academic Achievement: Reading/English Language Arts" and "Academic Achievement: Mathematics." The agency will grant the higher ratings based on exceeding the minimum goals set out in the accountability system.
Beginning in 2016-2017, though, districts will earn an A through F letter grade. The agency did not release any school ratings in 2012.
Shannon Housson, director of performance reporting, declined to preview the results of the new system except to say that by definition 5 percent of schools will not meet the standard for student progress, a new rating index that looks at how much students learned in the past year using STAAR scores.
The four indexes are computed using a complex system of analyzing STAAR test scores and breaking down the results at times by ethnicity, English fluency, disability and family income. Each school is assessed in comparison with 40 other schools or similar size and demographics so that a wealthy school in the suburbs is not compared to a poor inner-city school or a tiny rural campus.
Williams said the goal was to make the ratings more useful for students, parents and teachers in working to improve their schools rather than just a round-up of test scores.
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Texas Education Agency 2013 Accountability Rating System:http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/account/2013/index.html
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.