0810 – Joe Y. with supreme court stuff.
0838 – NOAA web changes.
Law leak/off shore accounts.
Can an apple a day work?
Bravo Brazos Valley.
0854 – Bank robbery story.
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0810 – Joe Y. with supreme court stuff.
0838 – NOAA web changes.
Law leak/off shore accounts.
Can an apple a day work?
Bravo Brazos Valley.
0854 – Bank robbery story.
Audio PlayerSpring enrollment at Blinn College, with registration continuing for remaining four and eight week classes, is expected to exceed last spring. An update during February’s meeting of Blinn’s board of trustees shows 15,822 students. That’s compared with 15,953 in 2024, 15,685 in 2023, and 15,167 in 2022. Compared with 2024’s final spring numbers, 2025 spring enrollment is already higher at the RELLIS campus and the number of high school students taking dual credit classes. Trustees and administrators were pleased with the number of Waller High School students who are enrolled, which is Blinn’s newest location. In a related item, trustees awarded a contract to design Blinn’s first academic building in Waller. Currently, Blinn is using space at Waller High School and Waller Middle School. On the Bryan campus, where in 2015 there were more than 12,000 students, so far this spring the number is 3,982. Vice chancellor Becky McBride said 36 public universities, including Texas A&M, have increased the number of freshman students. Since A&M has put a freeze on undergraduate enrollment for the next five to seven years, McBride says they have strategies to recruit students who are not admitted to A&M. With registration continuing for remaining spring classes, Blinn has 3,966 online students, 3,540 at RELLIS, 2,631 high school students, 1,509 at the home campus in Brenham, and about 200 at other locations. Blinn trustees also received final enrollment numbers from the Christmas break minimester. That showed 2,152 students, which is 24 more compared to the year before. Click HERE to read and download presentation materials from the February 20, 2024 Blinn College trustees meeting. Click below to hear comments from the February 20, 2025 Blinn College trustees meeting: Listen to “Blinn College is nearing a third consecutive enrollment increase for the spring semester” on Spreaker.
February’s Bryan city council project update included four items in and near Midtown Park and two involving Old Hearne Road. Click below to hear city manager Kean Register’s report at the February 18, 2025 Bryan city council meeting. CITY OF BRYAN CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS • The contract for the Midtown Park Boardwalk was awarded by Council at the January meeting and the contractor is preparing submittals for review. Project should start in March and finish as early as October this year. This portion of the Midtown Park Project is one of the reasons the Schulman Movie Bowl Grille has been delayed, as the boardwalk goes around and ties into the MBG property lease and parking lot. The delay, however, did result in a re-design of the boardwalk and bulkhead, with savings to the City of $4.5-5M. • In addition, we have received the permits from TCEQ to complete work at the lake which will allow us to fill the lake to its planned capacity upon completion of the boardwalk, dam and spillway projects. • The City is staking the well locations for the Midtown Park Water Wells Project; the contractor will then begin work, with completion expected by the fall. • South College is now open from Villa Maria to Waverly. Rountree is currently used to bypass the Williamson intersection, which is closed to construct the roundabout. Larry Young Paving continues to work northward and will open sections as they are completed. • The Old Hearne Road Extension Project has commenced and will extend approximately 1,800 linear feet of new curb and gutter street, sidewalk, and storm sewer, making the connection to the N. Earl Rudder Frontage Road and the new BTU Administration Building. Construction is expected to complete by end of 2025. • The pedestal for the Chick Lane Elevated Storage Tank is complete, and the contractor is welding the bowl before it will be lifted into place later this summer. • The Old Hearne Road contractor recently corrected the work from Producer’s Co-op’s driveway to Texas Avenue, and work continues on the punch list items from Texas Avenue back to Wilhelm. • The Commerce Street Reconstruction project is complete. • The Sulphur Springs Roadway, Sanitary, and Waterline Rehabilitation project is substantially complete and in punch list phase. • Construction continues on the Bristol Street and Esther Boulevard Drainage Improvements. This project, which includes adding extensive drainage structures to greatly improve the drainage in the area, is expected to finish by the end of the year. • The Hillside Drive/Old Oaks Drive Drainage Improvements Project is substantially complete and in the punch list phase. • Construction of the Traffic Signal Replacements at Villa Maria at Briarcrest and Briarcrest at Broadmoor are underway, with concrete flatwork in progress at the intersection of Briarcrest and Villa Maria. Completion is expected by the end of next month. PARKS AND POOLS UPDATES • The Bryan Aquatic Center will be closed from Saturday, February 22, through Wednesday, March 19, pending weather and construction delays, to replace the bulkhead, which is a movable barrier that divides the pool into sections. • The Bryan and Oakwood Cemeteries Quarterly Cleanup Event will take place Monday, February 24 to Friday, February 28. During these cleanups, staff removes non-compliant items such as loose objects like glass, ceramics, statues, decorations and faded or tattered flowers, whether live or artificial, in accordance with cemetery ordinances (Section 22-5). For more information, call 979-209-5230. • The Grand Slam Cruise-In Car Show is rolling into Travis Fields at Travis Bryan Midtown Park on Friday, February 28, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. This free, family-friendly event will feature classic and modern cars, live music, food trucks, and a local vendor market. To register to show a car or for more information, go to: travisfields.com.
College Station Councilman William Wright visits with WTAW’s Scott DeLucia about a new legislative subcommittee, improving or redesigning the Wolf Pen Creek Amphitheatre, being a Texas film city, future federal grants, the former Macy’s store building, real estate decisions, and more during his appearance on The Infomaniacs on Friday, February 21, 2025. Listen to “College Station Councilman William Wright on The Infomaniacs” on Spreaker.
Bryan Broadcasting Corporation