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    Five pillars for the future

    Mayor Parker's inauguration speech: "We dream great dreams, but then make them happen"

    Annise Parker
    Jan 3, 2012 | 1:19 pm
    News_Mayor Parker_swear-in_January 2012_Mayor Annise Parker
    Second-term leader Mayor Annise Parker
    Photo by © Michelle Watson CatchLightGroup.com

    Editor's note: The following is the text of Mayor Annise Parker's speech at her second inauguration Tuesday at the Hobby Center. When she gave the speech, there may have been some slight deviation from the text.

    I love this city!

    I thank Houstonians for again honoring me with your trust, your hopes. To serve you remains my highest aspiration.

    I congratulate our City Controller and our City Council members. This is a Council representing the amazing diversity of our city, with two new seats to reflect our increasing population. For all our differences, we share the values of faith and family and community. Those values will unite us as colleagues.

    I salute, and thank, the women and men who make our city run. I know that the city’s workforce is one of the best anywhere. I see them every day; I know many of them—and I know the commitment they have to doing a good job. A global metropolis like Houston operates 24/7. It is a complex organism that requires intricate coordination and choreographed actions. We rarely notice the smooth workings of this city—how much of it goes right.

    But running a city is like riding a bicycle: you keep moving forward or you fall down. We rode long and far during the first term in office, and I am proud of what we accomplished together. But sometimes it helps to put things in perspective.

    But running a city is like riding a bicycle: You keep moving forward or you fall down. We rode long and far during the first term in office, and I am proud of what we accomplished together. But sometimes it helps to put things in perspective.

    This August the City of Houston was 175 years old. And we are America’s fourth largest city. That’s a pretty amazing fact. We are a city that by conventional logic should not be. We were founded at the confluence of two muddy streams meandering through the flat Texas coastal prairie in 1836. It was hot, humid and the land was dotted with ponds of stagnant water where mosquitoes bred in abundance.

    The city was rife with yellow fever for the first 60 years of its existence. There were no veins of gold in the earth, and precious little oil or gas. No scenic vistas. No sheltered harbor.

    Well, the mosquitoes are still here…but today we are home to the largest medical complex in the world, world capital of the petroleum industry, and the largest foreign tonnage port in America.

    We pioneered the artificial heart, and revolutionized heart transplants. We are the home of NASA. The first word spoken from the moon was …”Houston.” (And one day the first word spoken from Mars will be “Houston!”)

    Everything we have done as a city has been a matter of vision and will, of taking what we have and deciding what we want, setting an impossible goal, and then creating it. Vision, commitment, hard work and a leap of faith.

    That’s why Houston, in the middle of the recession, is still the number one job creating city in America and the best place to live, work and raise a family. And that’s why we must do even better in the future.

    My number one job for the next two years is to continue to bring more jobs to Houston. We will expand the programs we have already started to stimulate small business with access to loans and training. We will continue the Hire Houston First policy. We will work tirelessly to increase our role as the energy capital of the world and a world leader in the next high tech industrial revolution.

    My number one job for the next two years is to continue to bring more jobs to Houston. We will expand the programs we have already started to stimulate small business with access to loans and training.

    Hard times prompt us to chart the latitude and longitude of who we are. Hard times test our character. The economy still dominates every conversation, and colors everything we do. Too many Houstonians are struggling to find jobs, to make ends meet. Our city workforce has also felt that pain. City employees have been furloughed, and more than 750 were laid off. We are doing more with less.

    But…

    We did not raise taxes. We did not mortgage our future with debt. We did not compromise public safety. We did not lay off a single firefighter or police officer. Many of our civilian employees stepped up and volunteered additional furlough days to help save the jobs of their colleagues.

    We took bold steps to address our aging infrastructure - finally recovering the full cost of this precious asset, emphasizing conservation, and setting aside funds to complete long neglected maintenance. In doing the responsible thing, we unknowingly prepared ourselves to be able to respond to the worst drought in our history.

    And I cannot envision voters in any other city in America, in the midst of a recession, doing the right thing, the prudent thing, and creating the funding to invest in critically needed flooding and drainage infrastructure. This is a visionary step akin to that in the 1950’s and '60s which created lakes Conroe and Houston and secured the water rights which sustain us today, or the commitment to set aside land and other incentives to encourage medical institutions to locate together and so lead to the largest medical complex in the world.

    As we navigated this city through the toughest economy in generations, I built my administration on five pillars, and focused the work of the city around them:

    • Jobs and sustainable development,
    • Fiscal responsibility,
    • Infrastructure,
    • Public safety,
    • Quality of life.

    Those will remain our strengths — there is progress yet to be made on pension security for both the city and our retirees, an independent regional crime lab, phasing out the city jail and progress against homelessness — these are challenges we are committed to address and have already begun.

    Whether you find your strength in God, in family, in friends, or in your own two hands, Houston deserves no less than our shared vision, our firm commitment, our hard work and a continued leap of faith.

    Two years ago I asked of you three things: I asked for your prayers. I must have had them, for though I knew there would be challenges ahead, those challenges seemed to grow in depth and severity each day. It is telling that the task I had feared would be the hardest, redistricting, was actually one of the easiest and most successful.

    I asked for your patience. And I suspect that we tried it at times. But I have always believed in a principled compromise that achieves progress.

    And I asked for your perseverance. We rise and fall together. We succeed or fail together.

    And you have shown that through your deeds. You have committed your time and energy to Houston. You, the people of Houston, have collectively given more volunteer hours than ever in our history.

    When Fast Company magazine selected Houston as the City of the Year for 2011, there was a reference to us as “one of the world’s next great cities." Houstonians know that future is already here. It is the blessing and curse of Houston to never be satisfied with where it is, to always be reinventing itself. Ours is a city of opportunity and optimism — never stopping at why we can’t do something, but always seeking how we can get it done.

    We are a city that knows how to turn potential problems into possibilities.
    We dream great dreams, but then make them happen.

    Whether you find your strength in God, in family, in friends, or in your own two hands, Houston deserves no less than our shared vision, our firm commitment, our hard work and a continued leap of faith.

    Let us greet our future together!

    Thank you!

    unspecified
    news/city-life

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    that's baller

    Houston hypes FIFA World Cup with new Guinness World Record

    Eric Sandler
    Apr 13, 2026 | 1:00 pm
    World Cup Guinness World Records soccer balls
    Courtesy of Airbnb
    DaMarcus Beasley, Bun B, and the Guinness World Records adjudicator.

    Houstonians continue to show enthusiasm for the arrival of the FIFA World Cup this summer. On Saturday, April 11, local politicians, celebrities, and youth soccer players contributed to setting a new official Guinness World Record for the longest continuous line of soccer balls.

    Held at Hermann Park, the effort lined up more than 1,000 soccer balls to set the new record. DaMarcus Beasley, the only American to play in four World Cups, and Houston hip-hop legend Bun B participated in the event. An official Guinness World Records judge was on hand to confirm the feat.

    All of the more than 1,000 soccer balls used in the record-breaking event were donated to Grow the Game, a collaboration between the FIFA World Cup 2026 Houston Host Committee and the Harris County-Houston Sports Authority Foundation. The program aims to expand access to soccer for underserved youth across Houston through free and low-cost programming, including clinics, tournaments, and more.

    “Today’s event is about more than breaking a world record, it’s about celebrating Houston and investing in its future,” Airbnb executive Laura Spanjian said in a statement. “As the world prepares to come to Houston for the FIFA World Cup 2026, we’re proud to support programs that ensure local communities, especially young people, can be part of that moment in a meaningful and lasting way.”

    As Spanjian notes, Airbnb has committed more than $1 million to helping Houston get ready for the FIFA World Cup, which will feature seven matches between June 14 and July 4. These efforts include money for improvements along the Green Corridor, a 14-mile long path connecting multiple major landmarks in Houston through safe, walkable paths that include shade trees and other improvements.

    Airbnb expects that Houston will welcome more than 31,000 visitors during the World Cup, generating an estimated $372 million economic impact, according to Deloitte.

    World Cup Guinness World Records soccer balls

    Courtesy of Airbnb

    DaMarcus Beasley, Bun B, and the Guinness World Records adjudicator.

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    news/city-life
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