El Paso Local Pulse

El Paso Local Pulse: Airport Bust, Summer Heat, and Community Cleanups

3 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio El Paso Local Pulse: Airport Bust, Summer Heat, and Community Cleanups

Descripción

Good morning, this is El Paso Local Pulse for Friday, June 12, 2026. We start this morning with a major federal bust at El Paso International Airport. NBC News reports that FBI and DEA agents open a sealed cargo crate after a twenty two month investigation tied to cross border trafficking through our airport. Details are still coming out, but we know multiple suspects are in custody and federal agents say this disrupts a significant smuggling pipeline that runs through our community. We will keep an eye on how this affects security screenings and cargo delays for travelers using Airway Boulevard and the terminal area today. From city hall, council members move forward this week on a proposed budget adjustment that shifts more money toward street repairs in Central and the Lower Valley, especially along Montana Avenue and Alameda. That means we may see more lane closures and slower commutes over the next few weeks, but also a smoother drive by the end of summer. Looking at our weather, we wake up to warm, dry conditions with temps already in the mid 70s on the West Side. We head into the upper 90s this afternoon, with breezy winds around the Franklin Mountains, which could kick up some dust along I 10 and Loop 375. We stay hot and dry into the weekend, so we plan for extra water if we are heading to parks, hiking McKelligon Canyon, or taking the kids to Wet N Wild. On the jobs front, local listings show roughly two thousand open positions across the metro, with strong hiring in health care along the Medical Center of the Americas, warehousing in the Lower Valley, and customer service near the Fountains at Farah. Starting pay for many entry level roles is around fifteen dollars an hour, with some logistics jobs closer to twenty. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price in El Paso sits around two hundred seventy thousand dollars, with homes on the East Side near Zaragoza and Pebble Hills still moving faster than other parts of town. Rents for a two bedroom apartment average just under twelve hundred dollars, putting pressure on families but still below many other Texas cities. We also see new business activity along Mesa Street, where a new coffee and co working space opens near Kern Place this weekend, and a longtime family owned restaurant in the Lower Valley announces it will close later this month after more than thirty years. For community events, we have a Music Under the Stars style concert at Cohen Stadium Park tomorrow evening, a farmers market at Ardovino’s Desert Crossing on Saturday morning, and a low rider and classic car meetup scheduled near Ascarate Park on Sunday. In sports, our Chihuahuas continue their home stand at Southwest University Park tonight, with first pitch in the evening and postgame fireworks planned if winds cooperate. On the high school side, several El Paso track athletes bring home medals from recent state competitions, with Socorro and Eastlake students earning top finishes. Turning to public safety, El Paso police report a shooting investigation overnight in the Northeast near Dyer Street, with one person hospitalized and no public threat reported at this time. Officers also respond to a pair of serious crashes, one along I 10 near downtown and another on Joe Battle, both causing temporary closures but now cleared. As always, we stay alert on the roads and give first responders space to work. We end with a feel good story. Volunteers from several neighborhoods gather along the Rio Grande corridor this week for a riverbank cleanup, filling truckloads of trash and planting new native trees near the Border Highway trails. Organizers say they want our binational riverfront to be a place we are proud to show our kids. Thank you for tuning in and make sure to subscribe. This has been El Paso Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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Portada del episodio El Paso Local Pulse: Airport Bust, Summer Heat, and Community Cleanups

El Paso Local Pulse: Airport Bust, Summer Heat, and Community Cleanups

Good morning, this is El Paso Local Pulse for Friday, June 12, 2026. We start this morning with a major federal bust at El Paso International Airport. NBC News reports that FBI and DEA agents open a sealed cargo crate after a twenty two month investigation tied to cross border trafficking through our airport. Details are still coming out, but we know multiple suspects are in custody and federal agents say this disrupts a significant smuggling pipeline that runs through our community. We will keep an eye on how this affects security screenings and cargo delays for travelers using Airway Boulevard and the terminal area today. From city hall, council members move forward this week on a proposed budget adjustment that shifts more money toward street repairs in Central and the Lower Valley, especially along Montana Avenue and Alameda. That means we may see more lane closures and slower commutes over the next few weeks, but also a smoother drive by the end of summer. Looking at our weather, we wake up to warm, dry conditions with temps already in the mid 70s on the West Side. We head into the upper 90s this afternoon, with breezy winds around the Franklin Mountains, which could kick up some dust along I 10 and Loop 375. We stay hot and dry into the weekend, so we plan for extra water if we are heading to parks, hiking McKelligon Canyon, or taking the kids to Wet N Wild. On the jobs front, local listings show roughly two thousand open positions across the metro, with strong hiring in health care along the Medical Center of the Americas, warehousing in the Lower Valley, and customer service near the Fountains at Farah. Starting pay for many entry level roles is around fifteen dollars an hour, with some logistics jobs closer to twenty. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price in El Paso sits around two hundred seventy thousand dollars, with homes on the East Side near Zaragoza and Pebble Hills still moving faster than other parts of town. Rents for a two bedroom apartment average just under twelve hundred dollars, putting pressure on families but still below many other Texas cities. We also see new business activity along Mesa Street, where a new coffee and co working space opens near Kern Place this weekend, and a longtime family owned restaurant in the Lower Valley announces it will close later this month after more than thirty years. For community events, we have a Music Under the Stars style concert at Cohen Stadium Park tomorrow evening, a farmers market at Ardovino’s Desert Crossing on Saturday morning, and a low rider and classic car meetup scheduled near Ascarate Park on Sunday. In sports, our Chihuahuas continue their home stand at Southwest University Park tonight, with first pitch in the evening and postgame fireworks planned if winds cooperate. On the high school side, several El Paso track athletes bring home medals from recent state competitions, with Socorro and Eastlake students earning top finishes. Turning to public safety, El Paso police report a shooting investigation overnight in the Northeast near Dyer Street, with one person hospitalized and no public threat reported at this time. Officers also respond to a pair of serious crashes, one along I 10 near downtown and another on Joe Battle, both causing temporary closures but now cleared. As always, we stay alert on the roads and give first responders space to work. We end with a feel good story. Volunteers from several neighborhoods gather along the Rio Grande corridor this week for a riverbank cleanup, filling truckloads of trash and planting new native trees near the Border Highway trails. Organizers say they want our binational riverfront to be a place we are proud to show our kids. Thank you for tuning in and make sure to subscribe. This has been El Paso Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Ayer3 min
Portada del episodio El Paso Local Pulse: Heat Advisory, Cool Canyon Nights, and Weekend Events

El Paso Local Pulse: Heat Advisory, Cool Canyon Nights, and Weekend Events

Good morning, this is El Paso Local Pulse for June 11. We are starting with the heat, because it is already shaping the day across the Borderland. The National Weather Service has a Heat Advisory in effect for El Paso County through 9 tonight, and KVIA says we are heading for about 105 degrees in El Paso with only a small chance of light rain. That means we are planning around the heat, especially for anyone out near downtown, Mesa Street, or along I 10, where pavement and traffic will make it feel even hotter. [2][14] We are also watching the aftermath of yesterday’s suspicious package scare at the El Paso County Courthouse, which led to an evacuation on June 10, according to local reporting. Authorities have not said there is any wider threat, but it is another reminder to stay aware around civic buildings and major public spaces. [4] On public safety, the El Paso Police Department says it has arrested 25 year old Stefon Anthony Bonito for murder tied to an assault that started May 18 at an apartment. We are keeping this report factual and sensitive, and we are watching for any further court updates from police and prosecutors. [7] Around city life, the big story for tonight is community and culture. Cool Canyon Nights opens its June schedule this evening at McKelligon Canyon Amphitheatre, with free live music starting at 6 and the main act at 7. That gives us a cool evening option after a very hot day. Looking ahead, the weekend is filling up with Beauty and the Beast at the Plaza Theatre, a health and wellness expo at Bassett Place, and El Paso Locomotive hosting Phoenix Rising FC at Southwest University Park on Saturday night. [6][3][12] In sports, El Paso Locomotive just played to a 1 1 draw on the road against Detroit City FC after weather delays, so the club comes home with a point and momentum to build on. [11] For jobs and housing, local listing trends continue to show steady activity, with dozens of open concerts and events across the city and a packed summer calendar that keeps hospitality and service work active. The broader El Paso market remains tied closely to entertainment, tourism, and game day traffic, especially near the Plaza Theatre, the County Coliseum, and Southwest University Park. [15][3] And for a feel good note, the return of free summer concerts at McKelligon Canyon is exactly the kind of shared local moment that brings families together across El Paso. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11 de jun de 20262 min
Portada del episodio El Paso Local Pulse: Meta Data Center Decision Week, Zoo Low Sensory Hours, and Community Heat Relief

El Paso Local Pulse: Meta Data Center Decision Week, Zoo Low Sensory Hours, and Community Heat Relief

Good morning, this is El Paso Local Pulse for Sunday, June seventh. We wake up today watching what happens at City Hall this week, as El Paso City Council gets ready for a key discussion on whether to end the incentive agreement for the planned Meta data center in Northeast El Paso, a deal first approved in 2023. KFOX reports that council members are weighing concerns over taxpayer costs and water use against the promise of tech jobs and investment, and residents are organizing ahead of the Tuesday meeting to make their voices heard. As we plan our day, we are looking at hot, dry weather. Forecasts call for highs in the low nineties this afternoon across the city, from Mesa Street on the West Side to Zaragoza on the East Side, with plenty of sun, some breezy conditions, and a warm evening that should stay in the seventies for outdoor events. We will want sunscreen, water, and maybe an earlier start if we are heading out to hike the Franklin Mountains or walk along Scenic Drive. For families this morning, the El Paso Zoo on Paisano is hosting its Low Sensory Sunday from 8 to 10 a.m., giving our community a calmer experience before the crowds, something highlighted on the local events calendar at Todo El Paso. And downtown at the Convention Center, the Wheels and Ink expo rolls into its second day, bringing custom cars, motorcycles, and tattoo artists together from noon to about 10 p.m., according to El Paso Live. That means extra traffic and parking demand around Santa Fe Street and the ballpark. On the job front, local trackers show our unemployment rate holding near four percent, with health care, warehousing near the Zaragoza port, and border logistics along Loop 375 still posting dozens of openings, many starting around fifteen to twenty dollars an hour. In real estate, agents report that the median home price in El Paso sits in the mid two hundreds, with Northeast and Far East still the most active for new listings, while West Side homes near Coronado High and Rim Road remain tight and competitive. In sports, our El Paso Chihuahuas keep things exciting at Southwest University Park. Minor League Baseball highlights show Nick Solak driving in a run on a hit off J P France in last night’s game, a reminder that we can catch some solid offense downtown this weekend. On the education side, local school guides like BIC Homes’ overview of Northeast El Paso schools point to strong early college options and magnet programs, especially around the Parkland and Andress feeder patterns, giving our families more pathways to college credit before graduation. Turning to public safety, police report a relatively quiet last 24 hours, with routine arrests for traffic and minor offenses, and no major citywide alerts as of early morning. Still, officers remind us to secure vehicles, especially around apartment lots off Lee Trevino and Dyer, as summer thefts tend to tick up. We close with a feel good note. Local churches and neighborhood groups are coordinating food and water drives this weekend for seniors and unsheltered neighbors as the heat climbs, quietly delivering supplies along Alameda, Montana, and in the Segundo Barrio. It is one more example of how our city shows up for each other when the temperatures rise. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so we can stay connected with you each morning. This has been El Paso Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

7 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio El Paso Local Pulse: Budget Talks, Summer Events, and Community Green Efforts

El Paso Local Pulse: Budget Talks, Summer Events, and Community Green Efforts

Good morning, this is El Paso Local Pulse for Saturday, June sixth, twenty twenty six. We wake up under cloudy skies and mild temps in the mid 70s around the airport and along I 10. According to the National Weather Service in Santa Teresa, we stay warm and a bit muggy today, with highs near the low 90s and a slight chance of afternoon storms, especially on the East Side and over the Franklins. That could mean brief heavy rain and slick streets on Mesa, Zaragoza, and the Spaghetti Bowl, so we plan extra time if we are out later. From city hall, we continue to watch budget talks focused on street repairs and public safety staffing, with council members signaling more attention to potholes on major corridors like Montana and Lee Trevino, and to police overtime. That could affect how quickly crews get to our neighborhoods this summer. In breaking public safety news, Crime Stoppers of El Paso has released this week’s Most Wanted list and is asking for tips at their 566 8477 hotline. We remember, we never approach fugitives ourselves; we just share what we know. On a lighter note, downtown comes alive at noon with the Wheels and Ink Expo at the El Paso Convention Center. Organizers list custom cars, bikes, tattoo artists, live music, and food trucks running until late this evening. Over in Mission Valley, Visit El Paso and the county host free Mission Trail tours starting at 9 a.m. from the Mission Valley Visitor Center on Alameda, a chance to walk through our history at Ysleta and Socorro missions. If we are looking for something local and fresh, the El Paso Artist and Farmers Market celebrates its fifteenth anniversary season this morning, from 8 to 2, with vendors, crafts, and food near the Union Plaza area. La Nube children’s museum downtown also offers the Great Summer Boat Build Off this afternoon, giving kids a hands on science break. In our schools, the El Paso ISD board gears up for a finance committee meeting on June tenth, where they will weigh next year’s classroom and safety priorities, decisions that ripple into every campus. In sports, the El Paso Chihuahuas continue their homestand, with recent games featuring solid hitting, including extra base knocks from the middle of the lineup. If we head to Southwest University Park tonight, we should plan for warm first pitch temperatures and maybe a breeze off the river. Around town, real estate agents report that mid priced homes, around the 250 thousand dollar mark, still move fastest on the West Side and in Eastlake, while job postings stay strong in health care, logistics, and defense support, especially near Fort Bliss and around Loop 375. For a feel good story, county officials highlight volunteer groups cleaning trails around the Franklin Mountains and planting trees in city parks, a small but big hearted effort to keep our desert city cooler and greener for everyone. Thanks for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so we can keep bringing you our city’s story every day. This has been El Paso Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

6 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio El Paso Local Pulse: School Budgets, Summer Storms, and Graduation Season

El Paso Local Pulse: School Budgets, Summer Storms, and Graduation Season

Good morning, this is El Paso Local Pulse for June 5, 2026. We start with schools, where El Paso ISD is facing a major financial turning point after trustees vote to declare financial exigency, a move that opens the door to contract changes and possible layoffs as the district works to close a projected shortfall of about 42 million dollars. That is the kind of decision that reaches into classrooms, offices, and family budgets across our city. At the same time, El Paso High is celebrating graduation season tonight, a bright moment for students and families gathering near the school and downtown. City Hall and local public services are also in focus as we watch how tight budgets and summer demand shape daily life. For listeners planning their day, we are also dealing with stormy weather. Thunderstorms are in the forecast for El Paso this morning, with temperatures around the low 70s and a light south southwest breeze. That means slower drives, wet sidewalks, and possible delays around busy corridors like I 10, Mesa Street, and near the Zaragoza and Americas bridges. The outlook for the month suggests near normal temperatures and above normal precipitation, so we may be in for a wetter start to June than usual. On the jobs front, the school district uncertainty is the biggest immediate labor story, but local hiring still matters across retail, food service, and summer programs as families and students look for work. In real estate, the market remains tight, with buyers still watching rates and inventory closely, especially in east side and Kern area neighborhoods where move in ready homes continue to draw attention. We are also seeing community momentum on the education side at EPCC, where New Student Orientation Teal Days are set to begin June 17 across all five campuses, giving incoming students a clear next step before fall. For culture and music, graduation season and summer events are keeping the calendar busy across downtown, the Mission Trail, and the Plaza Theatre district, where local performances and community gatherings are starting to fill up weekends. In public safety, we are watching for storm related traffic hazards and asking listeners to stay alert for slick roads and low visibility. If any major overnight incidents develop, they will be part of the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Thank you for tuning in and please subscribe. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

5 de jun de 20262 min