A look at Medina County’s $1.4 million investment in local broadband

Thanks to funding provided by federal COVID-19 stimulus legislation, availability of wireless internet in Medina County is expected to greatly improve before the end of the year.

Medina County Comissioners granted $700,000 each to two local broadband companies to assist in putting up more towers, as well as $25K to third company.

Sago Internet of LaCoste and R Networks of D’Hanis have been designated by the Medina County Commissioners Court to receive $700,000 each from an initial $5 million grant for the county through the American Rescue Plan Act, a $1.9 trillion economic stimulus bill passed by Congress in 2021.
To date, each company has drawn $200,000 to begin work on the broadband improvements, said Joe Arnett, co-owner of R Networks.
“We’ve used that money to order equipment,” he said. “We’re going to be building towers all over Medina County in underserved areas.”
Likewise, Sago Internet is moving forward on expanding its service to Medina County residents, said Rodney Hitzfelder, president of Sago Internet.
“We’ve bought towers, antennas and radio equipment,” he said. “We’ve contracted with an installation company to come in and do the installations. It’s a long process to put these things up.”
The ARPA funds can only be used for capital expenses – towers, equipment, antennas or construction costs, Hitzfelder said. None could be used for salaries, computers, attorney fees, land or tower leases or tapping fiber optic lines. Sago accepted the grant knowing that while it was a large sum of money for the capital costs it would create ongoing costs to the company as the system was being built.
Both Sago and R Networks operate as wireless internet service providers (WISP) using a system similar to cell phone networks. WISPs are generally found in rural areas not covered by cable television or fiber optic telephone lines capable of carrying a high-speed internet signal.
“Our wireless systems at this time require line of sight, from the customer’s antenna location to an antenna on one of our towers,” Hitzfelder said. “Not all residences can be reached. Hills, buildings, and most especially trees complicate the lives of a WISP installer. However, with our modern equipment the reach of each towers radius can be up to seven miles. This means the service footprint of one of our towers is over 150 square miles.”
A third company, CASCOM, also known as Castroville Computers, received $25,000 of the ARPA internet funds. Unlike Sago and R Networks, CASCOM specializing in using a wide range of technology to provide customized internet service to customers beyond the reach of more conventional internet providers.
“The money given to the other two companies is going to be well spent,” CASCOM owner Robert Peterson said. “They’ll get to the areas that need service.”
Of the two major WISPs based in Medina County, R Network has the deepest roots. Founded in 2012 by Arnett and his wife Shanna, the company began operations as a cell phone provider serving western Medina County and points beyond.
“I’ve always been in the wireless business,” Arnett said. “I was working from home and didn’t have fast enough internet. I knew just enough to be dangerous. After I managed to get better service at home, my neighbors started asking me if I could do the same for them.”
A business was born, he said.
The proposal put before the commissioners called for adding new towers to expand R Networks’ reach from its primary tower in Hondo, Arnett said.
“We’ve already got two leases done for two new towers building from our Hondo connection,” he said. “We already have a fiber optic connection outside of Hondo. We’re going to feed the new towers from this connection to expand to the east back to Castroville.”
Even after the $700,000 in ARPA funds is exhausted, R Networks plans to continue expanding across the county using its own money, much as the company has in previous decade, Arnett said.
“I’m forecasting that eventually we’re going to be able to build 10 to 20 more sites,” he said. “Some are not going to be full blown giant towers but smaller secondary towers.”
Hindering progress on the expansion are the same supply chain issues being experienced by industries nationwide.
“We’ve got equipment on order,” Arnett said. “We have just now started receiving some of it.”
Like R Networks, Sago Internet grew out of frustration with the available internet service in Medina County. When he retired as public information officer for the San Antonio Fire Department several years ago, Hitzfelder lost the use of the high-speed integrated services digital network (ISDN) line at his LaCoste home.
“AT&T was up, down, slow or never did anything,” Hitzfelder said. “I went with VIASAT and it was the same thing. As soon as you ran out of high speed data they shut you off.”
When still another alternative failed, the internet expert Hitzfelder conferred with, gave him some advice that worked – “Start your own WISP.”
“The startup money was not huge,” Hitzfelder said. “So I decided to do it. Now I’ve got everything I want.”
Sago operates four towers ranging between 100 and 160 feet in height – one south of LaCoste, one near Pearson, one south of Chacon Lake, all guyed wire towers, and a monopole tower on Potranco Road. All are now complete and operational and we are adding customers at this time.”
“We were very fortunate to get the towers relatively quickly because they are in short supply right now,” Hitzfelder said.
Also, Sago Internet has been in negotiation for several months with a landowner north of Devine to use a pre-existing tower with its own fiber optic connection.
“We have to pay for that out of our own pocket,” Hitzfelder said. “The grant money is only for capital items. These are very expensive lines from AT&T that we have to get enough customers to pay for.”
If a deal cannot be made for the desired site, Sago is also in talks with a landowner south of Natalia, he said.
The next phase will be four to five towers servicing the Natalia, Devine and Castroville areas, the area between Rio Medina and Quihi, and possibly an area near FM1283 and FM 471. After this deployment, Hitzfelder believes Sago may be able to complete two more similar phases, covering over half of Medina County.
Both Hitzfelder and Arnett noted that the bulk of the business they hope to attract will be with conservatively priced packages offering speeds adequate to check email and the news rather than internet gaming and other high speed pursuits.
“We have packages for folks that don’t have 10 kids streaming at once or playing games,” Arnett said. “I think that’s where Elon Musk and Starlink comes in. I don’t see any of my $40 a month customers switching to him at $110 a month because it’s three or four times as fast.”
For Medina County internet customers who value speed and service at any price, the alternative to Sago and R Networks has been Robert Peterson’s CASCOM. The company has operated in Medina County for more than 15 years.
“Don’t come to me looking for a bargain,” Peterson said. “You come to me when all the other internet providers have failed to give you good quality broadband. When people visit our customers, they say ‘Wow, how did you ever get internet out here?’”
A U.S. Navy veteran, Peterson said he learned his trade by keeping ship in radio communication by using satellite technology.
“If I can do it on a ship that is bouncing up and down on the water I can do it on the land a whole lot easier,” he said.
CASCOM uses a variety of options ranging from cell towers, high-powered antennas, repeaters used to amplify signals via fiber optic communications and various other technologies.
“It’s really on a case by case basis,” Peterson said. “In some spots we can double the available speed. In some spots we are equal in price to the other services available. But it’s a very customized decision because of all the extreme conditions.”
Providing internet for the most difficult to reach clients is a relatively small outgrowth of Peterson’s computer repair business in Castroville, he said.
“They couldn’t get the computer support they needed because they couldn’t get any internet,” Peterson said. “When I solved their internet problems for them they told their friends and so on and so …”
Companies solely dependent on WISP technology must focus on areas with the greatest customer density, Peterson said.
“I go after everybody else,” Peterson said. “I go after the ones where there is only one customer every mile and it is not a good return on the cost of putting up a tower.”

By Kayleen Holder News Correspondent

3 Airplanes, all depts called in to assist firefighters battling 8+ hour blaze in what felt like “quick sand”, saving 20+ homes

You can see the shadow of a hero, here on the left, one of our many volunteer firefighters who give so much of their time to help when neighbors are in need. Devine VFD was relieved to receive lots of aide from the Texas Forest Service with 3 airplanes and dozers and more manpower. Assistant Fire Chief DuBose estimates it’s been over two decades since the Devine area had a fire with such difficult conditions requiring aerial support. Courtesy Photo.


Local volunteer firefighters have been working tirelessly to contain the 120-acre fire that broke out in Devine on Monday around 1 pm just south of Great Oaks. Firefighters saved many, many homes in the blaze. Crews worked relentlessly for around 8 hours to get control of the blaze.
“It was a huge fire and it moved very, very fast. I believe we saved at least 20 homes that were threatened in the path of the fire,” firefighter Shelly Watson said. “With our trucks getting stuck, it was a very dangerous situation. From what I saw, it got as close as 10 yards to at least one home.”
Winds changing direction, heat, and thick brush were also an issueAssistant Fire Chief Patrick DuBose said, “The sand out there was like quicksand, and trucks were getting stuck, so when the Texas Forrest Service came in with 3 airplanes and 3 bulldozers it really helped out. I believe it’s been over 25 years since we’ve had to call in Texas Forrest Service in the Devine area.”
Crews got control of the fire around 9 pm, but kept watch throughout the night. Around 3 am, they were still out there. Chief Atkinson stated, “We have stationed a fire watch up to keep an eye on the area until suppression teams can re-enter in the morning.”
Bigfoot, Moore, Lytle, Natalia, Yancey, Castroville, and Hondo all assisted at the scene.

By Kayleen Holder
Editor

A pressing issue….
Correction and more info on fire protection in Devine area

Correction and more info on fire protection in Devine area

Devine VFD’s tender truck (which hauls a majority of the water to the scene of fires) is broken down, beyond repair. It’s a pressing issue for the City of Devine and rural Devine community.
“Our other trucks, the fire engines, can carry 1,500 gallons of water, but on a house fire, that literally lasts about three minutes,” Chief Atkinson said. “If we have two engines there, that’s about six minutes that we have water to fight a fire. Whereas if we have a tender truck, it hauls around 3,000 gallons to the scene and goes back and forth to supply water to our engines as we fight a fire.
A new tender truck is estimated to cost between $350,000 and $500,000. Right now, Devine Volunteer Fire Department is relying on mutual aide to bring their tender trucks from other cities when a working fire hydrant is not available or there is a fire outside City limits where there are no hydrants.
“Our ESD is great and they can budget for the purchase of a tender truck in the future, but that might take a couple of years, and then once it’s ordered, it takes another year to build it. There aren’t a lot of good used tender trucks for sale, because fire departments tend to hang onto them as long as they can. So we are looking into grants, and we are speaking to city and county leaders as well, to see if they want to pitch in to make this happen sooner,” Chief Atkinson said.
NOTE OF ERROR LAST WEEK:

There was a misunderstanding in the headline of the article about fire hydrant testing in Devine last week. According to Fire Chief Greg Atkinson, 1 out of every 7 tested was not functional, a concerning trend, but not as drastic as the numbers reported last week which we had gotten backwards.
There are 125 fire hydrants in the City of Devine in all, and about 50% of them have been tested so far. With one in seven not working, and fire hydrants not being placed every 1,000 feet as recommended, the tender truck is important for fighting fires in city limits as well.
“They are already not spaced out at 1,000 feet (which is the length of hoses), so if you have a fire hydrant not working at the scene of a fire on top of that, then you’re really in trouble,” Atkinson said. “So far, we’ve not had that situation happen yet in the short time I’ve been here. We’ve been very lucky. And we are also fortunate to have area departments willing to provide mutual aide with their tender trucks, but there are times when you have a fire in your own community and you aren’t able to provide mutual aide.”

By Kayleen Holder
Editor

Lytle and Devine Election Results

Gonzalez re-elected Lytle Mayor, Rodriguez to council, Ritchey wins Devine City Council seat, Davis and Frieda re-elected to Devine ISD board

City of Lytle…
Mayor Ruben Gonzalez was re-elected with 363 votes to challenger Tom Cate with 174.
Michael Rodriguez won the District 4 Alderman race 50 to 21 over Marshall Witter.
District 5 Charles Cate was unopposed.

Ruben Gonzalez was re-elected Mayor for the City of Lytle.
Michael Rodriguez was elected to Lytle City Council.

City of Devine
Josh Ritchey won the District 5 seat with 39 votes over Cassandra Maldonado 15 and Wilburn Woody Woodrow 3 votes. Councilman D1 Rufino Vega and D3 David Espinosa were unopposed.

Josh Ritchey was elected to Devine City Council.

Devine ISD
Trustees Chris Davis and Renee Frieda were re-elected to their At Large seats over challenger Brenda Burford. Davis had 246 votes, Frieda 206 and Burford 95. Trustees SD1- Ali Buvinghausen and SD2-Carl Brown were unopposed.

Renee Frieda was re-elected to the Devine ISD school board.
Chris Davis was re-elected to the Devine ISD school board.

Devine Acres Farm open all day for huge event, fun for the whole family

Get your tickets now…A family fun day fundraiser will be held on May 14 at Devine Acres for Audrey Capps, 4 of Devine. Photo by Aubree Lorraine Photography

Little Audrey Jane Capps, of Devine, has sweet chubby cheeks, blue eyes, strawberry blonde hair, and a smile with a light inside. Her light shines brightest on the darkest of days. Days like this past July when she was diagnosed with a cruel disease that has no known cure (yet). On that day, her family cried all around her. Audrey, on the other hand, smiled and laughed and danced, telling her tearful grandmother “We got this!” with a thumbs up mid-dance. 
You’re invited to join in a day of family fun at Devine Acres Farm, and morning fun run/walk on May 14, 2022 in honor of little Audrey Jane.  Audrey just celebrated her 4th birthday, and she is battling a rare disease called Ataxia-Telangiectstacia (A-T). The Capps/Calame crew and team “Audrey Jane’s Light” will be hosting this event as a fundraiser for the local family and for the A-T Children’s Project (ATCP), whose sole mission is to find a cure for Audrey and all A-T warriors!   
The event will kick off with a Some Run/Walk at 9 am. Then, purchase your tickets for a day full of family fun activities at Devine Acres Farm from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and a barbecue plate sale and with live music by The Jeremy Richard’s Band that evening from 6p.m. to 10 p.m.
A-T is a neurodegenerative genetic disorder that typically impairs movement and coordination, weakens the immune system, and causes an increased risk for cancer. A-T is rare (approx. 500 known cases in the U.S.) and often comes with many other physical and medical challenges. We have been told that kids with A-T typically need a wheelchair by the age of ten and that life expectancy is limited by the disorder due to the impaired immune system and risk for cancer. There is currently no cure for A-T.  With your help, we are working to change that!! 
Audrey’s mom and dad, Josh and Brittany Capps stated, “We have been to the Johns Hopkins A-T Clinic in Baltimore and we have a good team of doctors on our side locally as well.” 
“We have been connected with the AT Children’s Project, a nonprofit formed/supported by families affected by A-T and they are doing everything they can to fund research and trials and find a cure. They have been a huge blessing these past few months.” 
“We have learned that every child with A-T is so different in their individual symptoms and know of some who have lived into their 30s and even early 40s. Intellect is typically not affected which is a blessing. Only time will tell how this disorder will affect our baby girl.” 
“Right now, she is a bit wobbly and off balance (she has been since she started walking at 15 months), but she is happy and smart and has a zeal for life like no other! “ 
“We have also been told that kids with A-T typically start losing physical abilities step by step between ages (4-8). We are in a race against time to find a cure for our Audrey Jane.” 
“God has been with us every step of our journey so far, putting so many good people and resources in our path. God has also blessed us with the best family, friends, and community support we could ever ask for.” 
“We will not let A-T defeat us, we will not let it suck the joy from our lives, and we will not give up hope! “ 
“God’s light shines brightly through our Audrey Jane and we have faith that he will lead us to a cure! And when he does, he will get all the glory!” 
“That being said…we are excited to host this fundraiser in May to help raise funds for the research that is actively being done to find a cure.” 
“In the meantime, we appreciate any prayers you can spare for our Audrey Jane and all the families affected by this terrible disorder, and the doctors working to find a cure. Please spread the word to anyone looking to support a good cause or anyone you know in the medical community. You never know what may spark the cure.” 
“Thank you to everyone who has already reached out to us and that have been praying for us. We are eternally grateful for your love and support!”  
All ticket sales from the event, Some Run registration, and corporate sponsorships, will go directly to ATCP’s search for the cure. Activities at the farm, the silent auction, and food/drink sales will go into a trust for Audrey to help pay for new potential treatments and/or needed medical equipment for Audrey that may come up. 
Audrey is surrounded by a large and amazing team of family, friends, and community who are determined to change A-T through Audrey’s Light, including grandparents Ken and Debbie Capps, Tommy and KK Calame, great grandparents, and numerous aunts, uncles, siblings, and friends. 
In the words of Audrey Jane, “we got this!”

Get your tickets for the fun day at Devine Acres or sign up for the race at:
www.atcp.org/AudreyJanesLight

By Kayleen Holder 
Editor 

Elections this Saturday, May 7 for City of Devine, City of Lytle, Devine ISD and Statewide

Four different elections are taking place this Saturday, May 7, 2022 in our area. City of Devine voters in District 4 can vote, all voters in Devine ISD can vote, and all voters in the City of Lytle can vote in those elections. Statewide all voters can vote in the Special Constitutional Amendment elections hosted in their county.

Continue reading “Elections this Saturday, May 7 for City of Devine, City of Lytle, Devine ISD and Statewide”

Litte boy makes it to “Home plate”

May is National Foster Care Month. This is Jacob’s story.

This touching poem was written by 11-year-old Jacob Cantu for a class project earlier this year. It tells the story of his life in foster care, before sliding into “home plate” in Lytle, Texas, where he and his brothers found their forever home.

Continue reading “Litte boy makes it to “Home plate””

Football and jerseys autographed by Dallas Cowboys up for auction in Devine May 14

This Dallas Cowboys jersey autographed by Jason Witten, and football autographed by the team, were donated for the May 14 silent auction fundraiser at Devine Acres for Audrey Capps. This awesome memorbilia was donated in memory and honor of the late Ken Lee, of Lytle, by his loving widow Bernie.
Several other jerseys for the Dallas Cowboys and Texans were also donated and will be used to help lots of charities and people throughout the year, thanks to the genorosity of the Lee family. Each one comes with an official certificate of authentication.
“I hope this helps a lot of people,” said Mrs. Lee. “I think Ken would like that.”

Today More than Ever, The World’s Looking for a Little Kindness

Two stories written by Devine News Editor Kayleen Holder were chosen to appear in one of the latest Chicken Soup for the Soul books, a national book chain. The stories focus on two awesome things happening right here in our community, HANK INC and the yearly Christmas Gift Drive for area foster children.

Writer Kayleen Holder with her little rascal Tucker who inspires many of her stories. Two of the Chicken Soup for the Soul books that Holder is featured in can be found at local stores including at A Bushel & A Peck, Country Gals, and Mag’s Place.


Chicken Soup for the Soul: Kindness Matters was released this March, and features 101 feel-good stories that restore our faith in people. The book is for sale on Amazon, Barnes and Noble and most major bookstores.
“Getting stories into Chicken Soup for the Soul is a dream come true for me,” Holder said. “One of the stories in this book is about my favorite local charity, HANK, INC, and the two angels in our community who founded it, John and Debbie Southwell. I first met the Southwells while covering county court for the newspaper, and I was so amazed by what they do for local foster kids in Medina County and surrounding counties. They are very special people.”
“The second story I have in this book is about the beautiful way our community comes together to buy dozens of Christmas gifts for children in foster care. It is like ‘Santa’s Workshop’ at The Devine News around Christmastime, and I absolutely love that!” Holder said. “SO many awesome people in Devine and the surrounding area make this possible. Our little town is an awesome place to live, and whoever made that sign that says ‘small town with a big heart’ absolutely nailed it. That’s what makes our community special. I only wish I could have listed all of the names of the many angels in our community who have helped make the annual gift drive a reality over the years. Our community makes sure each and every kiddo gets exactly what they wished for, and more.”
The following is a press release from Chicken Soup for the Soul:
Press Release–COS COB, Conn. – When Donna Schulte saw a thin homeless lady outside a restaurant, she followed her impulse and invited the woman to have lunch with her. Although the waitress inside didn’t want to serve the young woman, Donna insisted. And then she learned that this woman who the world was ignoring was a veteran who was fighting cancer and couldn’t get a job due to her treatment regimen.
Following the impulse to be kind is a central theme in a new Chicken Soup for the Soul collection about how kindness matters. Everyone’s talking about kindness, too, because the world has been through a lot in the past couple of years, what with the pandemic, divisiveness in our society, and conflicts around the world.
The message is that it’s easy to create miracles for yourself and others. If people just think outside the box and look around, they’ll see the need. The 101 stories cover a wide variety of tales of good deeds, helping hands, and wise words, from the everyday to the extraordinary.
According to Chicken Soup for the Soul’s author and editor-in-chief Amy Newmark, “Scientific studies have shown that ‘doing good’ is not only beneficial for the recipient of the good deed, but also for the person doing it, making that person happier and healthier. Performing random acts of kindness is a proven way to make yourself feel good.”
“Each story in our new book is unique,” continues Newmark, “but we learn this universal lesson from all of them: We are all capable of both needing help and providing help. And it is this give and take, the ability to be a provider and a recipient depending on our circumstances, that make us part of a united community of people who really do care about one another. No matter what divides us, our basic humanity reunites us.”
ABOUT CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL
Chicken Soup for the Soul publishes the famous Chicken Soup for the Soul book series. With well over 100 million books sold to date in the U.S. and Canada, more than 300 titles, and translations into more than 40 languages, the phrase “chicken soup for the soul” is known worldwide and is regularly referenced in pop culture.