The Week in the Rearview Mirror

Two state prisons are slated to have access management installed on their telephone systems before the end of the year. Smuggled cell phones have been a particular problem at two units, the Stiles Unit in Beaumont and the McConnell Unit in Beeville. The new system, funded by the company that operates the prisons’ pay phone networks, monitors all outgoing calls to ensure that only pre-authorized numbers can receive calls from the prison.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice is reporting a dramatic increase in the number of homicides in its facilities this year. Officials have already logged 10 of them in 2012, with the year only about two-thirds complete. That makes it the deadliest year in more than a decade. A spokesman for the agency said there hasn’t necessarily been an increase in violence or weapons but that the homicides tended to be between cellmates.

El Paso’s Fort Bliss played host to President Barack Obama, who spoke to the 5,000 soldiers about his plans for their future. He also took the opportunity to outline an executive order expanding services for veterans and detailing the assistance that members of the military could expect when they leave the service.

Paul Decker, director of the Harris County Probation Department, was forced to resign after a Houston defense attorney exposed mistakes his department made in its handling of drug tests. The attorney, Lisa Andrews, reviewed more than 40,000 emails after her client claimed that his drug test showed a false positive. Andrews presented evidence in a Houston courtroom showing mislabeling of samples, data-entry errors and sloppy oversight of testing. It’s unclear whether others will be asked to leave the agency as well.

West Nile virus cases continue to mount both in the illnesses reported and the number of deaths. In two weeks, the state saw a 58 percent increase in the number of cases, and health officials are predicting an end to the infections only when Texas gets a hard freeze. The volume of cases is the worst the state has seen since West Nile was first discovered, in 2002.

As Texas A&M faced its first game as a member of the SEC, some Aggie fans got a little too enthusiastic. Residents of Gainesville, Fla., were surprised to spot a billboard in their town proclaiming that they had been annexed by Aggie Nation and promoting the school as having the cleanest program in the SEC. School spokesman Jason Cook immediately declared that the school had no role in placing the advertisement, and the owner of the sign, Clear Channel Outdoor, quickly took down the sign.

A dispute between a national and local church group over property in Tarrant County is headed to the Texas Supreme Court. In 2008, bishop Jack Iker and a group of 56 congregations in the Fort Worth area left the national Episcopal church over its refusal to ordain a gay bishop. At issue are the assets of the diocese. Iker claims that anything not specifically designated by the remaining congregations became the property of his group, known as the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth and now part of the Anglican Church of North America. The national Episcopal church has disputed this, and a Tarrant County civil court agreed with it, prompting Iker’s direct appeal to the high court.

Stakeholders gathered for the first meeting of a task force designed to address the issue of windstorm insurance. The Coastal Windstorm Task Force was created this summer by Rep. Todd Hunter, R-Corpus Christi, and includes members from 14 coastal counties who will tackle the problem of reforming windstorm insurance coverage in the wake of financial problems created after Hurricane Ike. Proposals will not be limited to rate increases, and could include replacing the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association, which struggled to pay claims after the 2008 storm.