Latest news with #HouseBill2621
Yahoo
25-04-2025
- Yahoo
Bill would require TxDOT to retain traffic camera video to help solve crimes
The Brief A Highland Park widow testified before the Texas House Transportation Committee on Thursday in support of a bill that would require TxDOT to record and save video from traffic cameras. Christina Murzin's husband, Chris, was killed in a road rage shooting on I-20 in Dallas in 2021. Investigators have told her that video from traffic cameras may have helped to solve her husband's murder. DALLAS - The widow of a University Park man killed in an apparent road rage shooting urged lawmakers on Thursday to pass a new traffic safety bill. What we know House Bill 2621 would require the Texas Department of Transportation to record and retain video from its traffic cameras for 30 days. TxDOT has cameras all around the state. But they only serve as a live window to the highways. The cameras don't record or retain any video. The bill would make the recorded footage available to law enforcement to help solve crimes. What they're saying "This legislation aims to enhance public safety by ensuring crucial evidence is preserved," said State Rep. Morgan Meyers of Dallas, the bill's author. Jennifer Szimanski, the deputy executive director of the Combined Law Enforcement Association of Texas or CLEAT, also spoke in favor of the bill. "As a law enforcement officer for the last 17 years, nothing is more frustrating than not having the tools you need to solve a crime," she said. The other side TxDOT has said that archiving the video would cost $48 million over five years. But lawmakers questioned how the department came to that conclusion. What's next The House Transportation Committee is expected to vote on the bill on Friday morning. Dig deeper Christina Murzin told lawmakers about Feb. 11, 2021, the day the world changed for her and her three children. "My husband, Chris Murzin, was shot and killed at 1 p.m. driving westbound on I-20 in Dallas," she said. The 53-year-old was found dead in his SUV. Police were only able to find one image of a small silver SUV believed to be involved in the road rage shooting. "Despite a 911 caller providing a description of the suspect's vehicle, Chris's murder remains unsolved four years later," his widow testified. Investigators told her recordings from a TxDOT camera may have helped to solve the case. What they're saying "Today should have been my 32nd wedding anniversary. Instead, I stand here a widow," Christina Murzin said. "I can't help but wonder if there had been recorded TxDOT footage on the day Chris was killed, would his murderer already have been brought to justice? Sadly, my children and I will never know. But moving forward, oher families should not have to live with that same uncertainty." Chris Murzin's story hits close to home for Rep. Meyer. "Chris and Christina attend our church. They live six or seven blocks from us. It is something incomprehensible to most of us that Chris was just driving, road rage incident. And you would think it would be easily solved," he said. Dig deeper Daniel Wilson testified about the road rage shooting that took his 17-year-old daughter's life. Louise Wilson died on Dec. 10, 2023 while traveling southbound I-45 in Houston on her way to Galveston. What they're saying "1,648 feet. That was the distance to the nearest camera. But TxDOT could only watch as the killer's car drove by. No recording was captured and crucial evidence was lost. To this day, her killers have not been brought to justice," Daniel Wilson said. The Source The information in this story comes from Thursday's Texas House Transportation Committee hearing on HB 2121, as well as interviews with Chris Murzin's wife, Christina.
Yahoo
30-01-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
APCo Rate Reduction Act aims to lower power bills in Southwest Virginia
SOUTHWEST, VA (WJHL) — January has been one of the coldest on record for Southwest Virginia and as the thermometer falls, electric bills rise higher. Virginia Delegate Terry Kilgore (R-Scott) said prices are too high. 'You know, a lot of the calls from consumers are over higher electric rates, especially during this last month when it was so cold,' Kilgore told News Channel 11. Kilgore and Delegates Israel O'Quinn and Jason Ballard co-sponsored a bill that he said would lower Appalachian Power's rates. The APCo Rate Reduction Act passed 9-0 in the energy subcommittee. Still, Kilgore and other Southwest Virginia delegates need support from their fellow lawmakers to the north whose constituents aren't Appalachian Power customers. 'That it has been a challenge,' admits Kilgore. 'There's not many of us from Roanoke West. There are seven members in the House of Delegates, and in Fairfax County (alone), there are 18. So that there's your problem right there. And we've had to convince our folks shown on these electric bills that folks have and that folks have emailed us at $900 to a thousand dollars for a single-family house. That's outrageous.' House Bill 2621 calls for an overhaul of the rate-setting process of Appalachian Power that delegates say will lower bills for customers, including: Bans rate increases during winter months Bans rate increase until March 2026 Review rates yearly instead of every two years Requires State Corporation Commission to review 'seasonal rates' Simplify customer bills Fuel Cost reduction 'Securitize' or refinance existing coal plants Co-sponsor Delegate Israel O'Quinn (R-Washington County) stated that the potential cost savings for customers could be historic. 'It is the largest single decrease that anyone around the capital can remember happening all at once,' said O'Quinn via Zoom. 'So, again, this is certainly a work in progress. But what we've been able to piece together with this bill is a significant amount of savings for ratepayers and will help to ease some of that sticker shock that people get when they when they open their bills during the cold winter months.' O'Quinn said there is a companion bill in the Senate, and he expects some tweaks to the current bills as they move through committees, but said the legislation could be up for a vote in just weeks. Lawmakers aim to reduce the average customer's kilowatt-hour cost by 13 percent. News Channel 11 has reached out to Appalachian Power for a statement but did not receive one. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.