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US, Mexican officials discuss border, immigration 

EL PASO, Texas (AP) — A panel of U.S. and Mexican diplomats, politicians, and business leaders are meeting in West Texas to discuss cross-border commerce, infrastructure investments and immigration reform.

The talks are happening at a conference Wednesday in El Paso focused on the relationship between the U.S. and Mexico.

Among the conference speakers are Anthony Wayne, the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, and Mexican counterpart Eduardo Medina. The conference also will include U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke, an El Paso Democrat, and Mexican Federal Congress member Javier Trevino. Council of the Americas Chairman John Negroponte organized the event.

The event is co-hosted by the University of Texas at El Paso. A UTEP statement says participants will discuss the economic relationship between the two countries nearly 20 years after the North American Free Trade Agreement was implemented.

 

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

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Uresti amendment would have set guidelines for gravel road conversions

 

AUSTIN — State Sen. Carlos Uresti on Monday filed an amendment to House Bill 1 in the 3rd called session that would have required the Texas Department of Transportation to follow specific guidelines and seek local input before converting paved highways into gravel roads.

 

Amendment 1 to HB 1 was filed in response to TxDOT's announced plan to tear up some 83 miles of asphalt roads in West and South Texas and convert them into gravel roads, due to the agency's funding shortfall and its inability to address the impact of the state's oil drilling boom on state roads. The plan also calls for reducing the speed limit on the converted roads to 30 mph.

 

Uresti, whose district includes both the Permian Basin and a large part of the Eagle Ford Shale region, called TxDOT's proposal "drastic" and said it was being imposed without input from the Legislature or local officials in the affected communities.

 

"The agency needs to take its foot off the gas, slow down, and think about this approach before going any further," Uresti said. "In its hasty solution to our state's pressing transportation needs, particularly in high impact oil and gas producing areas, the agency just might be going down the wrong road."

 

Uresti's amendment would have required TxDOT to develop a set of well-established criteria to be used in assessing any segment of the state highway system for conversion to gravel. If the assessment determines that a roadway is a candidate for conversion, the local community would be given an opportunity to mitigate the situation.

 

"There could be ways in which communities, industry, and possibly the state could work together to achieve alternatives to gravel conversions,"Uresti said.

 

For segments in which gravel conversion is a viable solution, the amendment would require TxDOT develop a set of criteria to assess the practicality and timeline for converting a gravel road back to a paved road.

 

"This amendment will help TxDOT in its planning process and give rural communities some confidence that most gravel road conversion will be only temporary," Uresti said.

 

Sen. Uresti represents Senate District 19, which covers more than 35,000 square miles and contains all or part of 17 counties, two international ports of entry, ten state parks, 51 school districts, almost 9,000 miles of highways and county roads, and more than 29,000 producing oil and gas wells. The district is larger than 11 states and 124 Nations, and contains almost 400 miles of the Texas-Mexico border.

 

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NOMAAN MERCHANT, PAUL WEBER, Associated Press FORT HOOD, Texas —

The military trial of an Army psychiatrist accused in the 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood has started under heavy security at the Texas base. Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan on Tuesday entered a military courtroom on charges of killing 13 people and wounding 32 others. Hasan doesn't deny committing one of the worst mass shootings in American history but was forbidden to plead guilty under military law. That's because Hasan faces the death penalty — a rare punishment in the military. The last execution in the U.S. military justice system was 1961. A long row of shipping freight containers, stacked three high, created a makeshift fence around the courthouse on the first day of the trial. The trial is expected to last several weeks. Copyright 2013 The

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