Fort Worth Weekly Classifieds // August 20-26, 2025
Yacht Rock
Boat rentals offer a warm-weather passage to watery fun.
BY MARK HENRICKS
Many Fort Worthians survive August by staying in the air conditioning until, say, the third week of September. Others book vacations to cooler climes. For others, it means a boat ride on one of the area’s rivers or lakes, where they can pass a blissful afternoon skimming over the waves, enjoying the water-cooled breeze, and occasionally leaping in for a swim.
Unless you already own one of the 567,740 boats that the National Marine Manufacturers Association says are registered in Texas, buying may not be an option. The average watercraft of 26 feet or shorter in length sold for $91,000 in 2024, according to online boat marketplace Boats Group. Include outlays for insurance, storage, maintenance, equipment, accessories, taxes, and licenses, and it becomes apparent why watercraft owners often quip that “a boat is a hole in the water you throw money into.”
One solution: boat rental. Tarrant County lakes and waterways teem with opportunities to rent watercraft large and small for hourly rates that in some cases do not cost much more than tickets and concessions for a first-run movie. Here’s a how-to on boat rental.
Renting a kayak, canoe, stand-up paddle board, or other human-powered craft will get you on the water with the least expense and hassle. Rentals are available at many locations, including city-owned facilities like the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge, where the West Fork of the Trinity River joins Lake Worth, and Loyd Park on Joe Pool Lake in Grand Prairie.
METROPOLIS
In the heart of downtown, TC Paddlesports (480 N Taylor St, Fort Worth, 682-682-1313, 214478-7856) rents paddle craft from a Panther Island location. Manager Teresa Patterson has around 50 single and double kayaks, canoes, and stand-up paddleboards (SUPs) of varying lengths and styles available for rates starting at $20 an hour. That covers boat, life jacket, and basic instruction, including a warning not to get too close to the dam just downstream from the North Main Street bridge.
Patterson and her staff also guide organized outings like a sunrise float that backlights the skyline dramatically.
“On full-moon nights,” she said, “we have a full-moon paddle that’s our most popular.”
If you want more thrill and less exercise, consider a gasoline-powered craft. At Sam’s Dock Boat Rental (2500 Fairway Dr, Grapevine, 817-251-2628) inside Silver Lake Marina on Lake
Voter Suppression?
Tarrant County Commissioners Court cuts more than 100 polling sites.
BY ANTHONY MARIANI
Under the guise of saving money, Tarrant County Commissioners Court voted Tuesday to eliminate more than 100 Election Day polling sites while also greatly reducing the number of early-voting locations for the November elections.
The vote was 3-2 along party lines. The number of places for ballots to be cast is now 216, down from 331 in 2023.
Dozens of people spoke out against the change over the course of two hours. 97 had signed up to speak beforehand. Most of them argued
Grapevine, you can commandeer an 11-foot Sea Doo personal watercraft capable of carrying two passengers at up to 50 mph. Sea Doos there cost $179 for two hours. A 20-foot ski boat suitable for six passengers runs at 45 mph and costs $319 for two hours.
Pontoon boats are the most popular powerboat rentals, according to Ben Yeager, manager of Sam’s Dock at Grapevine. These stable and comfortable craft ranging from 23 feet to 25 feet rent for $299 for two hours. They can carry up to 12 people for fishing and sightseeing and tow riders on tubes at speeds up to 25 mph.
If you want more — a lot more — a full-blown party boat may be what you need. These behemoths, approaching 100 feet in length, include multiple decks sporting indoor air-conditioned dining rooms, dance floors, and other amenities. At Lynn Creek Marina (5700 Lake Ridge Pkwy,
that reducing polling sites amounts to the suppression of Black, Hispanic, and college-age voters.
The commissioners said the move is warranted to save money due to low voter turnout in nonpresidential elections. Elections Administrator Clinton Ludwig told the commissioners that about 12.5% of registered voters cast ballots in 2023, a paltry number.
There will now be 33 early-voting spots, down from 44 two years ago. Most of the cuts have come in the northeastern suburbs and cities outside the 820 Loop. None are on college campuses. The cuts may save about $1 million
“Cutting over 100 polling places in Tarrant County just months before an election is blatant voter suppression,” posted U.S. Rep. Marc Veasey. “Every Texan deserves fair & equal access to the ballot box — not longer lines, longer drives, and fewer voices heard.”
U.S. Rep. Marc Veasey’s letter indicates the influence of Donald Trump in Tarrant County Commissioners Court’s recent decision.
In a statement, he added, “These reductions threaten to undermine the fundamental principle that every eligible voter deserves reasonable and equitable access to the ballot box.
Grand Prairie, 817-640-4200) on Joe Pool Lake, The Wave Party Barge offered by Suntex Rentals — claimed to be the state’s biggest party boat — has twin water slides spectacularly snaking down from the upper deck into the lake.
Party boats can host up to 100 people for gatherings of all kinds, ranging from corporate team-building events to birthdays, anniversaries, and more.
“We had a wedding on here two weeks ago,” Yeager said of the Tejas, the largest of the party boats offered at Sam’s Dock. “They did the full ceremony and everything.”
That level of floating opulence will cost you, naturally. Any boat over the standard pontoon size typically comes with a captain to handle navigation and steering and often one or more crewmembers to operate the craft and serve passengers. For The Wave, to give one example, a three-hour weekend cruise will run you $1,875 before assorted extra fees.
Even if you can pay the freight, lake life on a rental boat isn’t all free and easy. Lifejackets are typically required, for instance. Renters will generally have to leave a credit card as a deposit. On busy hot weekends, it’s wise to call ahead and reserve to make sure your desired craft is available.
Also, younger renters must take a state-mandated boating safety course before piloting any powered watercraft.
“If you were born after September 21, 1993, you have to have the boater safety course,” Yeager said. “That’s the biggest challenge we’ve run into lately with new boaters.”
While you can take the course online for $10, it may take a couple of hours to fulfill the requirements.
Finally, keep in mind that, in addition to your terrestrial worries, you may want to leave your phones and key fobs behind. Dropping something on a boat often means hearing a splash instead of a thud. Patterson said so many of her clients have lost electronics to the Trinity that she provides free lockers.
“Anything you do not want to get wet, put in the locker,” she said. l
By concentrating voting locations away from urban and diverse communities, this proposal risks silencing the voices of working families, people of color, the elderly, and voters with limited transportation.
“Additionally,” he continued, “it’s concerning that this comes while President [Donald] Trump is also urging states to end mail-in voting, which would also significantly reduce voter access. Voting should not be a burden. It should be a right that is simple, fair, and accessible to every citizen.”
Allison Campolo, Tarrant County Democratic Party Chair, advocated against the reduction in polling sites. Afterward, she posted, “I am IMMENSELY grateful for everyone who answered the call. I’m extremely disappointed that this process played out this way (rushed, very little transparency or time to make changes), but I am enormously proud of Tarrant County today. You showed up. Let’s keep doing that ❤”
Paddlers in rental kayaks greet the dawn on the Trinity near Panther Island.
METRO
‘Pushing Back’
Fort Worth Democrat
Rep. Nicole Collier spends the night on the Texas House floor after refusing police escort.
BY KAYLA GUO, THE TEXAS TRIBUNE
A Texas House Democrat was confined in the Capitol overnight after she refused a police escort that Republican leaders imposed on lawmakers who participated in a two-week walkout over a GOP mid-decade redistricting plan.
Rep. Nicole Collier (D-Fort Worth) declined on Monday afternoon to sign a slip giving her permission from Speaker Dustin Burrows (R-Lubbock) to leave the House floor with a state law enforcement officer shadowing her.
“I refuse to sign away my dignity as a duly elected representative just so Republicans can control my movements and monitor me with police escorts,” Collier said in a statement Monday. “When I press that button to vote, I know these maps will harm my constituents — I won’t just go along quietly with [Republicans’] intimidation or their discrimination.”
On Monday, just over two dozen Democratic lawmakers, including Collier, ended their walkout over a congressional redistricting plan — demanded by Donald Trump just four years after Republicans last redrew Texas’ map — that is designed to pad
the GOP’s slim U.S. House majority in next year’s midterm election.
After the lawmakers returned to the Texas House, Burrows announced they would each be subject to an around-the-clock police escort to ensure their attendance when the chamber reconvenes on Wednesday morning to vote on the map. He added that Democratic lawmakers would be responsible for any state costs incurred in ensuring their attendance.
Most Democrats signed the permission slip required to leave the Capitol with a police officer in tow, even while objecting to the mandatory surveillance and emphasizing that they would not have returned to Austin on Monday if they planned to skip the vote on Wednesday.
Republican lawmakers “exercised control, and they tell us we can’t leave unless we do exactly what they say,” Collier said in a video Monday. “We’ve had enough. We’ve had enough of them taking all of our rights away, and so I’ve taken a stand. I’m pushing back.”
Collier slept at her desk on the House floor Monday night and remained there Tuesday, almost 24 hours after first arriving, though she said she’d received permission to go to her office in the Capitol. Rep.
Gene Wu of Houston, chair of the House Democratic Caucus, and Rep. Vince Perez, D-El Paso, stayed with her overnight, with other Democratic lawmakers and staffers coming by to provide moral support, food, clothes, pillows, and other necessities. All of it was captured on a livestream the House Democratic Caucus set up on the House floor, with up to 50,000 viewers tuning in at one point.
“Rep. Collier’s choice to stay and not sign the permission slip is well within her rights under the House Rules,” Burrows said in a statement. “I am choosing to spend my time focused on moving the important legislation on the [governor’s special session] call to overhaul camp safety, provide property tax reform, and eliminate the STAAR test — the results Texans care about.”
A handful of supporters outside the House chamber were arrested Monday night for “trespassing when the Capitol is closed.” They each received a criminal trespass warning barring them from returning to the building for a year, according to a video of the incident.
The order requiring Democratic lawmakers to keep a police escort is set to expire when the House grants final passage to the congressional map, House Bill 4, later this week.
To All Interested Persons And Parties:
Big D Concrete, Inc, has applied to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for an Air Quality Standard Permit, Registration No. 180118, which would authorize construction of a permanent concrete batch plant located at 3120 South Precinct Line Road, Hurst, Tarrant County, Texas 76053. Additional information concerning this application is contained in the public notice section of this newspaper.
A version of this story originally appeared in The Texas Tribune
Protesters cheer on state Rep. Nicole Collier (D-Fort Worth) after she chose to remain in the Texas House chamber until Wednesday.
FRIDAY, AUG 22ND
MADISON PAIGE
FRIDAY, AUG 29TH
NICK ZAMORA
FRIDAY, SEP 5TH
MITCHELL FORD
FRIDAY, SEPT 12TH
FRIDAY, SEPT 19TH
Moneyball College and professional football have officially swapped places.
BY BUCK D. ELLIOTT
Growing up a pro football fan in the Metroplex was magical in the ’90s. The Dallas Cowboys were the platinum standard for gridiron excellence, and Warren Moon’s Houston Oilers — though oft mediocre — offered a fun alternative if you were bored of America’s Team winning all the time. College football was the opposite. SMU was in postmortem reconstruction from the NCAA’s death penalty, and TCU was middling bordering on irrelevant. I sported a white Emmitt Smith and blue Troy Aikman jersey on alternating days — can’t even recall another article of clothing from 1991 to 1994.
Then something happened the Cowboys never seemed to recover from: the salary cap. The collective bargaining agreement would successfully keep more money in NFL owners’ pockets and try to temper the domination of just a few teams. Shortly after, the Frogs and Mustangs found themselves excluded from the Big 12 after the formerly prominent Southwest Conference disbanded in 1995. TCU and SMU dropped to mid-major status in the Western Athletics Conference (WAC), an all-too-appropriate name for their new station.
For the next 25 years, the professional and collegiate games mirrored similar financial restrictions and careful resource management. Sure, athletes found ways to make money at university, but it was always don’t ask/don’t tell. The jaw-dropping spending came in the form of the arms race of athletic facilities to attract the best recruits. Now, it’s all basically for naught. House v. NCAA now says colleges can revenue-share
more than $20 million per year with their athletes. Alongside what amount to venture-capital funds for Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL), we’ve entered what could be considered the college football cold war — outspend your enemy, even if you never fire a single shot.
Rankings and projections are starting and, rightfully so, are influenced by what each school is shelling out for their roster, which for most teams is shifting substantially every season. No longer do pundits and analysts have any earthly idea how good a team will be. They never really did (except yours truly, of course). But the incredible shifting of rosters and money-bombing of top recruits have turned collegiate football into a race of which school can shovel money into the fire the quickest. What will teams achieve for this incredible expense? Well, that remains to be seen. My instinct says not much. Previously, the big money was
levied at high-profile coaches and eye-popping facilities. Almost every competitive college boasts weight and recovery rooms that would make most Olympic training centers seem like prison yards, but most schools have not turned former winning into current success. Texas A&M comes to mind.
Only two years ago, the Ags paid former coach Jimbo Fisher almost $78 million to seek employment elsewhere. The College Stationites spend as much or more than any other program and don’t have any hardware to show for it.
Currently, the Big 12 team to watch is Texas Tech, whose NIL collective is one of the most aggressive and well-funded in the country. The Matador Club paid NiJaree Canady — one of the best softball pitchers in the country — $1 million to transfer from Stanford (the largest NIL deal for a college softball player — ever) and turned the acquisition into a College Softball World
Series appearance. Current estimates are that Tech will pay their footballers around $28 million this season, and their preseason ranking (23) is a reflection of that.
Locally, the Tennessee Volunteers attempted to lure TCU’s starting quarterback Josh Hoover from Fort Worth during the offseason. Hoover, who reportedly makes more than $1 million with the Frogs, turned down an offer from the Rocky Toppers for at least an additional million. And the Texas Longhorns are ranked No. 1 in the preseason poll, anticipating a roster spend between $35-40 million.
My most pressing concern is how this all feels, which can only be described properly as “ick.” I was fairly transparent that I thought college athletes should be entitled to compensation since their bodies and careers are the ones on the line, but players taking pay cuts on rookie contracts in the NFL just feels wrong. Combine that with the proliferation of players transferring en masse every single year, and the game is but a shadow from the early aughts, when there was still a tacit suggestion that these athletes were cosplaying as students and peers to their universities’ nonathletes in some way. It all gives a third-marriage vibe. The passion might be there somewhere, but it’s an afterthought compared to retirement accounts and liquid assets.
So far, NIL doesn’t seem to have affected on-field results in any concrete way. Teams that have been dominant still are, and the normal flux of teams on the precipice midseason, as well as the occasional surprise, seems within the margin of error to which we’ve become accustomed as fans. You can wager with good conscience that teams won’t find the level of success by simply paying more for players that Red Raider softball enjoyed with their pitching acquisition last season. Football is simply too complex and dynamic a game for one player, or even a group of players, to make that kind of a difference. Sure, there are outstanding game changers, but supporting pieces and coaching schemes make a more substantial difference in football than in other sports. You need look no further than the NFL to see teams completely whiff on draft picks and pay huge extensions to players that amount to no more wins than previous average seasons. There are simply too many factors to accurately predict how a team and their dynamic will evolve simply based on how that athlete played in a different season, on another team, or at a different level. In many ways, offering huge money — especially to high school players — might be the worst investment college football programs can make, but, hey, my portfolio is still half GameStop, so what do I know? l
Unlike other sports, one or two big-moneyed football players can’t make much of a difference on the field.
CLASSIFIEDS
Consolidated Notice of Receipt of Application and Intent to Obtain Permit and Notice of Application and Preliminary Decision Air Quality Standard Permit for Concrete Batch Plants Proposed Registration No. 180118
Application. Big D Concrete Inc, has applied to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for an Air Quality Standard Permit, Registration No. 180118, which would authorize construction of a permanent concrete batch plant located at 3120 South Precinct Line Road, Hurst, Tarrant County, Texas 76053. AVISO DE IDIOMA ALTERNATIVO. El aviso de idioma alternativo en espanol está disponible en https://www.tceq.texas.gov/permitting/air/newsourcereview/airpermits-pendingpermit-apps. This link to an electronic map of the site or facility’s general location is provided as a public courtesy and not part of the application or notice. For exact location, refer to application. https://gisweb.tceq.texas.gov/LocationMapper/?marker=-97.185001,32.805143&level=13. The proposed facility will emit the following air contaminants: particulate matter including (but not limited to) aggregate, cement, road dust, and particulate matter with diameters of 10 microns or less and 2.5 microns or less.
This application was submitted to the TCEQ on May 8, 2025. The executive director has completed the administrative and technical reviews of the application and determined that the application meets all of the requirements of a standard permit authorized by 30 TAC § 116.611, which would establish the conditions under which the plant must operate. The executive director has made a preliminary decision to issue the registration because it meets all applicable rules. The application, executive director’s preliminary decision, and standard permit will be available for viewing and copying at the TCEQ central office, the TCEQ Dallas/Fort Worth regional office, and at the Hurst Public Library, 901 Precinct Line Road, Hurst, Tarrant County, Texas, 76053, beginning the first day of publication of this notice. The facility’s compliance file, if any exists, is available for public review at the TCEQ Dallas/Fort Worth Regional Office, 2309 Gravel Drive, Fort Worth, Texas. Visit www.tceq.texas.gov/goto/cbp to review the standard permit. The application, including any updates, is available electronically at the following webpage: https://www.tceq.texas.gov/permitting/air/airpermit-applications-notices
Public Comment/Public Meeting. You may submit public comments or request a public meeting. See Contacts section. The TCEQ will consider all public comments in developing a final decision on the application. The deadline to submit public comments or meeting requests is 30 days after newspaper notice is published. Issues such as property values, noise, traffic safety, and zoning are outside of the TCEQ’s jurisdiction to consider in the permit process.
The purpose of a public meeting is to provide the opportunity to submit comments or ask questions about the application. A public meeting about the application will be held if the executive director determines that there is a significant degree of public interest in the application or if requested by a local legislator. A public meeting is not a contested case hearing. If a public meeting is held, the deadline to submit public comments is extended to the end of the public meeting.
Contested Case Hearing. You may request a contested case hearing. A contested case hearing is a legal proceeding similar to a civil trial in state district court. Unless a written request for a contested case hearing is filed within 30 days from this notice, the executive director may approve the application.
A person who may be affected by emissions of air contaminants from the facility is entitled to request a hearing. To request a hearing, a person must actually reside in a permanent residence within 440 yards of the proposed plant. If requesting a contested case hearing, you must submit the following: (1) your name (or for a group or association, an official representative), mailing address, daytime phone number; (2) applicant’s name and registration number; (3) the statement “[I/we] request a contested case hearing;” (4) a specific description of how you would be adversely affected by the application and air emissions from the facility in a way not common to the general public; (5) the location and distance of your property relative to the facility; (6) a description of how you use the property which may be impacted by the facility; and (7) a list of all disputed issues of fact that you submit during the comment period. If the request is made by a group or association, one or more members who have standing to request a hearing must be identified by name and physical address. The interests which the group or association seeks to protect must be identified. You may submit your proposed adjustments to the application which would satisfy your concerns. See Contacts section.
TCEQ Action. After the deadline for public comments, the executive director will consider the comments and prepare a response to all relevant and material, or significant public comments. The executive director’s decision on the application, and any response to comments, will be mailed to all persons on the mailing list. If no timely contested case hearing requests are received, or if all hearing requests are withdrawn, the executive director may issue final approval of the application. If all timely hearing requests are not withdrawn, the executive director will not issue final approval of the permit and will forward the application and requests to the Commissioners for their consideration at a scheduled commission meeting. The Commission may only grant a request for a contested case hearing on issues the requestor submitted in their timely comments that were not subsequently withdrawn. If a hearing is granted, the subject of a hearing will be limited to disputed issues of fact or mixed questions of fact and law relating to relevant and material air quality concerns submitted during the comment period. Issues such as property values, noise, traffic safety, and zoning are outside of the Commission’s jurisdiction to address in this proceeding.
Mailing List. You may ask to be placed on a mailing list to receive additional information on this specific application. See Contacts section.
Information Available Online. For details about the status of the application, visit the Commissioners’ Integrated Database (CID) at www.tceq.texas.gov/goto/cid. Once you have access to the CID using the link, enter the registration number at the top of this notice.
AGENCY CONTACTS AND INFORMATION. All public comments and requests must be submitted either electronically at www14.tceq. texas.gov/epic/eComment/, or in writing to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Office of the Chief Clerk, MC-105, P.O. Box 13087, Austin, Texas 78711-3087. Please be aware that any contact information you provide, including your name, phone number, email address and physical address will become part of the agency’s public record. For more information about the permitting process, please call the TCEQ Public Education Program, Toll Free, at 1-800-687-4040 or visit their website at www.tceq.texas.gov/goto/pep. Si desea información en Español, puede llamar al 1-800-687-4040. You can also view our website for public participation opportunities at www.tceq.texas.gov/goto/participation
Further information may also be obtained from Big D Concrete Inc, 10361 Bickham Road, Dallas, Texas 75220-4205 or by calling Mr. Muamar Anani, Vice President, Big D Concrete, Inc.at (214) 682-6495.
Notice Issuance Date: August 11, 2025
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EMPLOYMENT
American Airlines, Inc. has openings in Ft. Worth, TX for: Data Scientist, IT Operations Research & Advanced Analytics (Ref. 2016): Resp for deliver’g data & analytics driven projects from begin to end; Master’s degree in Comp Sci, Ops Research, or rltd field + 1 yr of exp as Analyst, Data Scientist, or any occup in which the req exp was gained & demos exp. Loc: Ft. Worth, TX. To learn more or to apply send inquiries &/or resume to Gene Womack via email: Gene.Womack@aa.com. Please include Ref #2016 in subject line. #LI-DNI
EMPLOYMENT
Ingram Micro Inc. seeks Sr. Professionals, ERP Applications in Fort Worth, TX. Responsible for the SAP MDG Solution Design & Development for processes in Order To Cash, Procure to Pay, Supply Chain Execution, Record to Report & SAP BRIM in an environment consisting of: S4 1909, ECC 6, GTS, RPE, APO, MDG, FSCM, EAI. BS in CS, Electronics Engg, or related field & 6 yrs exp in the job offered or in a software developerrelated occupation. Telecommuting / working from home may be permissible pursuant to company policy. $149,781/ yr.-$196,500/yr. CONTACT: Search by title and apply online at https://www.ingrammicro.com/en-us/careers/work-for-us
EMPLOYMENT
Pattonair USA Inc. D/B/A: Incora has a full-time opening for an EVP, Global Warehouse Operations in Fort Worth, TX. Duties include implementing /standardizing SC processes, methodologies and tools across the Americas; drive improvements in operational excellence;. Support future M&A, such as operational due diligence and operational programs. Work across all Lines of Businesses and functional areas to identify and jointly implement cost saving and service enhancing opportunities; Represent the Hardware Americas to internal stakeholders, Requires a Master’s or its foreign equivalent in Mechanical or Industrial engineering plus 3 years’ experience in a senior level management or an executive role in operations. SPECIFIC SKILL SETS: 1 year experience in: distribution center in senior management role, deploying and/or implementing Lean sigma programs, and in aircraft/aerospace industry implementing Lean Sigma programs. Hybrid position - inoffice presence required at least 1 day per week. Overall 35% short-term term travel of which 40% will be international and 60% will be domestic. Must live within metropolitan statistical area from worksite located at Fort Worth, Texas. Send resumes to: brian.briggs@incora.com.
EMPLOYMENT
Transportation Systems Services Operations Inc. DBA Wabtec seeks Lead Locomotive Diagnostic Specialist in Fort Worth, TX to collect and analyze data from GE/ Wabtec locomotives located across the globe, for the purpose of expert troubleshooting of mechanical and associated systems. Telecommuting permitted. Apply at www.jobpostingtoday.com Ref#35741.
EMPLOYMENT
Vytelle seeks Bovine Reproductive Specialist Team Lead in Ft Worth, TX. Perform ovum pickup procedures, embryo transfrs, & work w/ team members to perform all duties assoc’d w/ embryo production. Send CV to HR@ vytelle.com w/ ref# oug8uyedfl
JOIN POTTER’S HOUSE
Join the Potter’s House of Fort Worth (1270 Woodhaven Blvd, 817-446-1999) for Sunday Service at 8am and Wednesday Bible Study at 7pm. For more info, visit us online at www.TPHFW.org.
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice to Creditors Notice is given that original Letters of Independent Administration for the Estate of Patricia Lynn Wilbur were issued on August 19, 2025, in docket number 2025PR00559-2, pending in the Statutory Probate Court Number Two of Tarrant County, Texas, to Diana Marie Wilbur. All persons having claims against the estate, which is presently being administered, are required to submit them, within the time and manner prescribed by law, and before the estate is closed, addressed as follows: Representative Estate of Patricia Lynn Wilbur c/o Matthew Hancock 1908 Sutter Street Fort Worth TX 76107
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PUBLIC NOTICE
The following vehicles have been impounded with fees due to date by Lone Star Towing (VSF0647382) at 1100 Elaine Pl, Fort Worth TX, 76196, 817-334-0606: Chevy, 1965, C10, VIN C156S203073, $683.60.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following vehicles have been impounded with fees due to date by Texas Towing Wrecker, 205 S Commercial St, Fort Worth TX 76107, 817-877-0206 (VSF0000964): Great Dane, 2000, Trailer, VIN 1GRAA9629YB043255, $866.76; Great Dane, 2007, Trailer, VIN 1GRAA06257J62313, $823.47; Hyundai, 2007, Translead Trailer, VIN 3H3V532C87T388353, $823.47; and Hyundai, 2020, Translead Trailer, VIN 3H3V532C4LT376078, $780.18.
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