October 11, 2012 · Together with the nation’s leading expert on college and career readiness, Generation TX San Antonio and Dr. David Conley launched SA Ready, a website to offer teachers a more targeted curriculum to prepare students for college.
“I think it’s a way to take all of the content knowledge students have and put it to use, and help it get developed in a way that the brain is going to organize so that it can be used for college,” said Conley. “I think that’s not something we think about very often. A lot of times, we just think about, ‘can they pass a test?’”
Conley’s sentiments are echoed by Terry Heim, a Generation TX teacher and a nominee for Texas Teacher of the Year.
She’s a 7th and 8th grade teacher who said teachers are teaching to a test, and she believes that doesn’t give children critical thinking skills.
Programs like SA Ready and San Antonio Mayor Julián Castro’s Pre-K 4 SA initiative, which will be voted on in the November general election, are ways to supplement educational challenges, said Heim.
But critics have blasted measures like Pre-K 4 SA for various reasons.
“We just know with the way technology is changing, I mean we’re getting our kids ready for jobs that don’t exist right now,” said Heim in response.
In his research, Conley said that of 100 middle schoolers nationally, he found 93 aspired to go to college, but only 26 received their degree.
It’s a signal to Conley that many students are being lost along the way.
Teachers in Bexar County developed materials that any teacher in the city, across the state or nation, are able to use in their classrooms.
Heim says it may not pick up immediately, because teachers have planned their semesters already, but she’s hopeful it will begin to snowball in the future.
Generation TX San Antonio Executive Director Mari Rodriguez is excited about the site as an additional resource for all teachers.
“It’s an open-source resource created by teachers, for teachers,” Rodriguez said. “I’m a former teacher myself, so I spent a lot of time looking for good quality lesson plans and resources and you just really couldn’t find them. And so we know these are the best lesson plans because they’ve been edited four times by the nation’s expert on college and career readiness.”
Rodriguez said that in San Antonio, 32 percent of jobs require post-secondary education, but only 18 percent of students are getting that education.
She and others say it’s not too late to do what’s needed to give kids the extra edge when it comes to education.
More online at: www.sa-ready.org
Generation TX San Antonio online at: gentxsa.org
Food Means Fall for Me
September 14, 2012 • The weather has been very reminiscent of fall lately. Even with the humidity it’s enough to send me falling head over heels for the upcoming season, which I believe begins officially in one week.
After the weather’s first signs that relief is around the corner, food is the biggest transition from tomatoes and cucumber salads to stews and pumpkin pies.
Speaking of pumpkin, our recent trip to Thai Dee proved pleasant to put me right in the fall mood. I’ve had red, yellow and green curries, sure, but never a pumpkin!
What a surprising twist on an otherwise traditional Thai dish!
Pictured, you will notice a deliciously beautiful coconut-based broth, red bell pepper, and the kick to this kicking’ dish - jalapeños! I even found a few slivers of the piping pepper with seeds peeking out at me!
We ordered this curious curry with beef as it seemed to be more comforting and encompassing of the flavorful Autumn time of year.
Fall has always been full of other appropriate foods like pumpkin soup (yes, I made pumpkin soup, complete with a pumpkin shell bowl!), homemade banana nut breads, spice cake, and Wassail. Who can forget the Wassail?
I am so excited about the fall that I’m considering ceremonializing the occasion with a few dishes of my own in the kitchen, creating a new tradition by putting up our Christmas tree…but changing it into a fall tree to distinguish the two seasons from each other, and rigging up a huge a/c for the front yard to blow cool air into the house as if it is December. Texans have to wait a while for legitimately cooler weather.
The fall is my favorite time of year and so I intend on taking full advantage of it, even before it officially is here and well before it really feels like it. And if I’m just delusional, then I will just pour myself into a stupor drinking my favorite fall-inspired brews, of which there will be plenty for passing around.
Happy Fall!
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Military Working Dog Receives Rare Honor
Layka entered a compound following a storm of bullets fired on it and met a terrorist who shot at her multiple times. She attacked regardless and saved the lives of Coalition Forces. Her right leg was amputated and she received injuries to her body, but was rehabilitated at JBSA-Lackland.
September 12, 2012 · Like any other four-legged friend, she’s pretty happy and lovable, but Layka, a Belgian Malinois, is more than man’s best friend. She is literally a life-saver.
During a ceremony to honor her at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, her certificate read in part:
“On June 4th, 2012, while assigned to a Special Operations Unit in Afghanistan, Military Working Dog Layka responded to a building housing known terrorists. Upon assuming a concealed position, Layka and her team received indirect small arms fire resulting in three Hellfire Missiles being fired into the compound.”
When the gunfire stopped on that June day, she went into a building to clear the area of explosives and enemy combatants; she was ambushed by a terrorist.
“She was shot up a couple times and still proceeded to attack the person that was shooting her. That can tell you that dog means serious business,” said Major Jason Harris, the 341st Squadron Commander where Military Working Dogs like Layka are trained.
JBSA-Lackland produces hundreds of working dogs for agencies like the Transportation Security Administration. They and their handlers do six months of training to get to the efficiency of Layka, a dog that goes directly into the line of fire to save lives.
“They’re just like us with learning abilities,” said Harris. “Some are smarter than others, and some are a little slower, but eventually they catch on. And not all dogs make it through. Some don’t want to bite, no matter what you do to it, it’s just a loving dog and just doesn’t want to bite anybody.”
At any one time, 800 dogs are being trained here. Colonel Jeanne Hardrath said they are valuable in day-to-day security forces, but in a war zone, they are irreplaceable.
“There are just certain missions that are easier for our four-legged warriors to be able to do rather than our two-legged warriors,” said Hardrath. “These dogs bring so much value added.”
Layka is a protective dog, so guys like Robert Hart, who helped rehabilitate her, respect her boundaries. She’s been through a lot, and he believes she knows that.
“Yeah, I do, honestly do,” said Hart. “I don’t know if she knows what’s going on today but I think she realizes what’s happened to her. I love them. Without them I don’t think the military could exist, I really don’t.”
Dogs typically only receive honorary decorations; official certificates are reserved for the human team member. This Certificate of Heroism could change the landscape of how working dogs like Layka are honored. Military leaders may request that it be recognized by the Department of Defense, and a memorial is in the works for dogs who have died in the line of duty.
With an amputated leg and shrapnel wounds on her abdomen, Layka is officially retired. She will leave Texas to be with her handler, a Special Operations officer now in Georgia who is her best friend in combat.
“It’s nothing less than heroic what she did” said Harris.
Major Harris thinks animals like this deserve the highest respect. He read from a poem called Guardians of the Night by an unknown author who wrote what combat missions are like from the dog’s perspective.
“Trust in me my friend for I am your comrade,” read Harris. “I will protect you with my last breath…”
Layka was a guardian, a friend and a comrade for several brave men who are alive today because of her.
Castro: “America didn’t become the land of opportunity by accident”
September 4, 2012 · Julian Castro, D-San Antonio, gave the keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention Tuesday.
(Transcript)
My fellow Democrats, my fellow Texans, my fellow Americans: I stand before you tonight as a young American, a proud American, of a generation born as the Cold War receded, shaped by the tragedy of 9/11, connected by the digital revolution and determined to re-elect the man who will make the 21st century another American century — President Barack Obama.
The unlikely journey that brought me here tonight began many miles from this podium. My brother Joaquin and I grew up with my mother Rosie and my grandmother Victoria. My grandmother was an orphan. As a young girl, she had to leave her home in Mexico and move to San Antonio, where some relatives had agreed to take her in. She never made it past the fourth grade. She had to drop out and start working to help her family. My grandmother spent her whole life working as a maid, a cook and a babysitter, barely scraping by, but still working hard to give my mother, her only child, a chance in life, so that my mother could give my brother and me an even better one.
As my grandmother got older, she begged my mother to give her grandchildren. She prayed to God for just one grandbaby before she died. You can imagine her excitement when she found out her prayers would be answered — twice over. She was so excited that the day before Joaquin and I were born she entered a menudo cook-off, and she won $300! That’s how she paid our hospital bill.
By the time my brother and I came along, this incredible woman had taught herself to read and write in both Spanish and English. I can still see her in the room that Joaquin and I shared with her, reading her Agatha Christie novels late into the night. And I can still remember her, every morning as Joaquin and I walked out the door to school, making the sign of the cross behind us, saying, “Que dios los bendiga.” “May God bless you.”
My grandmother didn’t live to see us begin our lives in public service. But she probably would have thought it extraordinary that just two generations after she arrived in San Antonio, one grandson would be the mayor and the other would be on his way — the good people of San Antonio willing — to the United States Congress.
My family’s story isn’t special. What’s special is the America that makes our story possible. Ours is a nation like no other, a place where great journeys can be made in a single generation. No matter who you are or where you come from, the path is always forward.
America didn’t become the land of opportunity by accident. My grandmother’s generation and generations before always saw beyond the horizons of their own lives and their own circumstances. They believed that opportunity created today would lead to prosperity tomorrow. That’s the country they envisioned, and that’s the country they helped build. The roads and bridges they built, the schools and universities they created, the rights they fought for and won — these opened the doors to a decent job, a secure retirement, the chance for your children to do better than you did.
And that’s the middle class— the engine of our economic growth. With hard work, everybody ought to be able to get there. And with hard work, everybody ought to be able to stay there — and go beyond. The dream of raising a family in a place where hard work is rewarded is not unique to Americans. It’s a human dream, one that calls across oceans and borders. The dream is universal, but America makes it possible. And our investment in opportunity makes it a reality.
Now, in Texas, we believe in the rugged individual. Texas may be the one place where people actually still have bootstraps, and we expect folks to pull themselves up by them. But we also recognize there are some things we can’t do alone. We have to come together and invest in opportunity today for prosperity tomorrow.
And it starts with education. Twenty years ago, Joaquin and I left home for college and then for law school. In those classrooms, we met some of the brightest folks in the world. But at the end of our days there, I couldn’t help but to think back to my classmates at Thomas Jefferson High School in San Antonio. They had the same talent, the same brains, the same dreams as the folks we sat with at Stanford and Harvard. I realized the difference wasn’t one of intelligence or drive. The difference was opportunity.
In my city of San Antonio, we get that. So we’re working to ensure that more four-year-olds have access to pre-K. We opened Cafe College, where students get help with everything from test prep to financial aid paperwork. We know that you can’t be pro-business unless you’re pro-education. We know that pre-K and student loans aren’t charity. They’re a smart investment in a workforce that can fill and create the jobs of tomorrow. We’re investing in our young minds today to be competitive in the global economy tomorrow.
And it’s paying off. Last year the Milken Institute ranked San Antonio as the nation’s top performing local economy. And we’re only getting started. Opportunity today, prosperity tomorrow.
Now, like many of you, I watched last week’s Republican convention. They told a few stories of individual success. We all celebrate individual success. But the question is, how do we multiply that success? The answer is President Barack Obama.
Mitt Romney, quite simply, doesn’t get it. A few months ago he visited a university in Ohio and gave the students there a little entrepreneurial advice. “Start a business,” he said. But how? “Borrow money if you have to from your parents,” he told them. Gee, why didn’t I think of that? Some people are lucky enough to borrow money from their parents, but that shouldn’t determine whether you can pursue your dreams. I don’t think Gov. Romney meant any harm. I think he’s a good guy. He just has no idea how good he’s had it.
We know that in our free market economy some will prosper more than others. What we don’t accept is the idea that some folks won’t even get a chance. And the thing is, Mitt Romney and the Republican Party are perfectly comfortable with that America. In fact, that’s exactly what they’re promising us.
The Romney-Ryan budget doesn’t just cut public education, cut Medicare, cut transportation and cut job training.
It doesn’t just pummel the middle class — it dismantles it. It dismantles what generations before have built to ensure that everybody can enter and stay in the middle class. When it comes to getting the middle class back to work, Mitt Romney says, “No.” When it comes to respecting women’s rights, Mitt Romney says, “No.” When it comes to letting people marry whomever they love, Mitt Romney says, “No.” When it comes to expanding access to good health care, Mitt Romney says, “No.”
Actually, Mitt Romney said, “Yes,” and now he says, “No.” Gov. Romney has undergone an extreme makeover, and it ain’t pretty. So here’s what we’re going to say to Mitt Romney. We’re going to say, “No.”
Of all the fictions we heard last week in Tampa, the one I find most troubling is this: If we all just go our own way, our nation will be stronger for it. Because if we sever the threads that connect us, the only people who will go far are those who are already ahead. We all understand that freedom isn’t free. What Romney and Ryan don’t understand is that neither is opportunity. We have to invest in it.
Republicans tell us that if the most prosperous among us do even better, that somehow the rest of us will too. Folks, we’ve heard that before. First they called it “trickle-down.” Then “supply-side.” Now it’s “Romney-Ryan.” Or is it “Ryan-Romney”? Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. Our economy failed. The middle class paid the price. Your family paid the price.
Mitt Romney just doesn’t get it. But Barack Obama gets it. He understands that when we invest in people we’re investing in our shared prosperity. And when we neglect that responsibility, we risk our promise as a nation. Just a few years ago, families that had never asked for anything found themselves at risk of losing everything. And the dream my grandmother held, that work would be rewarded, that the middle class would be there, if not for her, then for her children — that dream was being crushed.
But then President Obama took office — and he took action. When Detroit was in trouble, President Obama saved the auto industry and saved a million jobs. Seven presidents before him — Democrats and Republicans — tried to expand health care to all Americans. President Obama got it done. He made a historic investment to lift our nation’s public schools and expanded Pell grants so that more young people can afford college. And because he knows that we don’t have an ounce of talent to waste, the president took action to lift the shadow of deportation from a generation of young, law-abiding immigrants called dreamers.
I believe in you. Barack Obama believes in you. Now it’s time for Congress to enshrine in law their right to pursue their dreams in the only place they’ve ever called home: America.
Four years ago, America stood on the brink of a depression. Despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition, our president took action, and now we’ve seen 4.5 million new jobs. He knows better than anyone that there’s more hard work to do, but we’re making progress. And now we need to make a choice.
It’s a choice between a country where the middle class pays more so that millionaires can pay less — or a country where everybody pays their fair share, so we can reduce the deficit and create the jobs of the future. It’s a choice between a nation that slashes funding for our schools and guts Pell grants — or a nation that invests more in education. It’s a choice between a politician who rewards companies that ship American jobs overseas — or a leader who brings jobs back home.
This is the choice before us. And to me, to my generation and for all the generations to come, our choice is clear. Our choice is a man who’s always chosen us. A man who already is our president: Barack Obama.
In the end, the American dream is not a sprint, or even a marathon, but a relay. Our families don’t always cross the finish line in the span of one generation. But each generation passes on to the next the fruits of their labor. My grandmother never owned a house. She cleaned other people’s houses so she could afford to rent her own. But she saw her daughter become the first in her family to graduate from college. And my mother fought hard for civil rights so that instead of a mop, I could hold this microphone.
And while she may be proud of me tonight, I’ve got to tell you, mom, I’m even more proud of you. Thank you, mom. Today, my beautiful wife Erica and I are the proud parents of a three-year-old little girl, Carina Victoria, named after my grandmother.
A couple of Mondays ago was her first day of pre-K. As we dropped her off, we walked out of the classroom, and I found myself whispering to her, as was once whispered to me, “Que dios te bendiga.” “May God bless you.” She’s still young, and her dreams are far off yet, but I hope she’ll reach them. As a dad, I’m going to do my part, and I know she’ll do hers. But our responsibility as a nation is to come together and do our part, as one community, one United States of America, to ensure opportunity for all of our children.
The days we live in are not easy ones, but we have seen days like this before, and America prevailed. With the wisdom of our founders and the values of our families, America prevailed. With each generation going further than the last, America prevailed. And with the opportunity we build today for a shared prosperity tomorrow, America will prevail.
It begins with re-electing Barack Obama. It begins with you. It begins now. Que dios los bendiga. May God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.
September 2, 2012 · Texas made big headlines this week (insert “everything is bigger in Texas joke here”). Both the Voter ID law and redistricting maps as a result of the 2010 population census were ruled to be discriminatory by two Washington, D.C. courts.
It spurred a flurry of responses from elected officials across the state. State Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston, said of the Voter ID strike-down: “…the court handed down another victory for the voters of Texas and upheld the heart of the Voting Rights Act. It’s no surprise that Greg Abbott and his team were unable to make the case that the Voter ID Law would not have discriminatory or retrogressive results.”
Coleman said the legislation was created to disenfranchise minority voters, thereby preventing them from electing their candidate of choice.
“Not everyone has the ability to obtain or the luxury to afford an approved photo identification as prescribed by the Voter ID Law,” he said. “People of color, the elderly, and college students would have been particularly harmed by the law. Shame on Greg Abbott for continuing to assault the voting rights of minority voters by advocating for a modern day poll tax. We are fortunate that the federal government continues to prevent Texas’ attempts to use state law to suppress the votes of minorities, the elderly, and college students.
“Thank you to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and his team for continuing to protect voting rights for all Americans,” he continued. “I also thank the Mexican American Legislative Caucus (MALC) and the Texas Legislative Black Caucus for the long hours and hard work they put in to ensure that this law would not take effect. The fight is not over, as I have no doubt that Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott will continue to try to overturn Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. This must not be allowed to happen.”
Attorney General Abbott vowed to appeal both of the court decisions.
Bike ride michelada break (Taken with Instagram at The Friendly Spot)
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Price to Pay for Oil Boom
August 24, 2012 · The natural gas boom in the Eagle Ford Shale is transforming South Texas with jobs and money, but it’s coming at a price.
The boom in industry is putting stress on local infrastructure and the trucks that haul waste fracking fluids are contributing to unsafe driving conditions. A new study finds that Texas doctors who get in trouble at their hospitals are not being disciplined by the Texas Medical Board. A judge rules to give a Canadian company access to a farmers land in East Texas.
The town of Cotulla, between San Antonio and Laredo, is thriving.
Big trucks are everywhere hauling miles of pile, gravel and fracking sand for oil rigs that have popped up to cash in on the Eagle Ford Shale oil and natural gas boom.
“The revenue growth to these areas is just growing exceptionally. These are unheard of growth rates,” said James LaBas, a tax and fiscal consultant for the Texas Oil and Gas Association.
LaBas said that by the year 2020, the Eagle Ford Shale boom will support about 68,000 full time jobs - about the size of the city of Temple. To support these big expectations, LeBas said the state made $176 million more this year than last year in taxes in only four counties on the production of oil and gas; that’s twice what the University of Texas football program brings in every year.
“So the Eagle Ford is proving to just be an amazing jobs producing, revenue generating machine, especially for south Texas, but also for all of Texas,” said LaBas.
Prosperity doesn’t come without a few problems
La Salle County Deputy Sheriff Jose Garcia patrols the 1,400 square miles, with only seven deputies. Right now he’s short-staffed, but on a normal day before the boom, his department would only handle a handful of calls. Now up to 15 come in on a single shift. and many of them are deadly traffic accidents.
According to an open records request from the Texas Department of Transportation, there have been nearly 1,200 accidents involving 18-wheelers since 2011, and 25 deaths in the 19-county region of the Eagle Ford Shale exploration.
It’s not clear which accidents directly involved Eagle Ford Shale trucks, but it shows how the increase in traffic has contributed to growing traffic problems.
“The accidents have also increased in fatalities,” said Garcia. “We’ve had our share of traffic accident fatalities involving 18-wheelers and of course, regular motor vehicles.”
Garcia also said the roads are taking a beating, which could also be contributing to accidents.
“Our access roads are constantly being pounded by these 18-wheelers that are waiting on the side of the roadway for their next jobs and picking up loads and dropping off loads,” said Garcia.
One of those accidents involved 45-year-old Guadalupe Quintanilla, who was killed in a fiery crash two years ago. The family’s attorney, Jorge Herrera, settled a multimillion dollar case against a trucking company responsible for the crash.
Herrera said Quintanilla was driving in Jim Hogg County on December 2nd when a truck coming in the opposite direction slammed right into him. Both drivers died at the scene, and Herrera said the crash was caused by the other truck’s bad tires.
“These trucks were being run every day,” said Herrera, “long hauls, hauling thousands and thousands of pounds of load, going over highway, going over ranch roads, going into rough debris to get to the oil rigs. And so those tires are getting significantly worn out a lot faster.”
Herrera said the trucking company responsible for the crash did not follow safety regulations and he provided Texas Public Radio with an audio deposition involving the owner of the company that was declassified by the courts for the benefit of the public. In that deposition, Herrera asked the owner about his company’s safety manual.
• Herrera: “As the owner of the company, would you agree that you’re the head person in charge?”
• Owner: “Yes.”
• Herrera: “The buck stops with you.”
• Owner: “Right.”
• Herrera: “That you’re responsible for everything that goes on with the company.”
• Owner: “Yep.”
• Herrera: “Have you ever read it?”
• Owner: “Not every single page.”
• Herrera: “You didn’t even read the first paragraph of the first page?”
• Owner: “I might have.”
• Herrera: “So even the owner of the company didn’t even know what was in his own safety manual. So if the boss doesn’t know what’s there, how can he even expect for his employees to know?”
Herrera said it’s a profit-over-people attitude that allowed the owner to get away with little to no maintenance or safety inspections of his fleet. Herrera continued the deposition with the owner of the now-defunct company and asked the owner if the company trained its drivers on trucking regulations, which he finally admitted there was no training.
“They didn’t do the basic necessities to ensure safety,” and Herrera said there are more companies out there just like this that he wants to stop in their tracks. “These lawsuits will hopefully scare the industry to forcefully regulate itself and create safer companies,” he said.
Truck drivers like Bernard Garcia say they feel governmental regulations on trucking keeps them safe. Garcia is an eight-year veteran of highway hauling. In years’ past, he said drivers like his uncle would put the pedal to the metal to meet demands.
“He’d go to California and be back in three days, God bless his heart, rest his soul. Back then they didn’t have the law on the books,” said Garcia, “and he’d just drive and drive and drive.”
Now he gets paid per job so he’s not in a hurry, but everyone else dealing with the Eagle Ford Shale boom is definitely in hurry mode. Drillers are frantic to reach and pump out the oil while the price is still high. Area town mayors are scrambling to provide housing, water and public services. Cotulla Mayor Javier Garcia says a big problem for him right now is unwanted truck traffic where families live.
“We are hoping to reroute them and take them away from the neighborhoods, because they are going in through our neighborhoods right now,” said the mayor.
Local businesses hustle to cash-in, selling bar-b-que, bunks and beer to the migration of oil workers. Grocery stores struggle to keep shelves stocked.
State Senator Judith Zaffirini said there are wonderful opportunities – but also serious concerns.
“With an increase in population in the city, you need infrastructure,” said Zaffirini. “You need housing, you need retail stores, you need health care, etcetera.”
James LeBas said it seems the positive aspects of Eagle Ford Shale outweigh most of the negatives. Railroad Commissioner David Porter echoed that during a presentation in May on the shale’s economic impact study conducted by the University of Texas at San Antonio.
“The Eagle Ford Shale has the potential to be the single most significant economic development in our state’s history,” said Porter.
Attorney Jorge Herrera just doesn’t think the rush to profit from the boom should be paid for with people’s lives.
“In the oil industry, time is money,” said Herrera.
Armstrong Stripped of Titles
August 24, 2012 · The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency is stripping Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong from his seven titles, as well as his Olympic achievements. He is also being banned from cycling for life.
The USADA is taking these steps despite a lack of hard evidence that Armstrong actually doped.
Love him or hate him, the cycling pro has done much for cancer research. He just said: enough is enough.
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AETC Leader Meets with Third Party Sources to Improve Basic Training
August 22, 2012 · In light of the sex scandal at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, General Edward Rice has met with the Service Women’s Action Network, or SWAN, to find ways to better educate trainers and support women in the Air Force.
More than a dozen instructors have been convicted or are under investigation for sexual misconduct with upwards of 30 female trainees.
SWAN’s mission is to support, defend and empower women in the military, as well as female veterans, through advocacy and initiatives.
“As we continue to address this issue, we will reach out to those who may have an interest in understanding the situation we are dealing with at Basic Military Training,” said Rice of the meeting in a statement.
He went on to say the meeting with SWAN was helpful with an insight in doing what’s best for the Airmen.
Rice is in New York City for Air Force week.
Three trainers have faced Courts-Martial, including Luis Walker, who received 20 years in jail, the most severe punishment yet for his role in the scandal.
The next Court-Martial is scheduled for September 5th.