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smllieee.gif (1356 bytes) THE POCKET SCOPE
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
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Volume 49, Number 8
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May 1999
Scope
Notes
May Houston Section Meeting
Where:
HESS (Houston Engineering and Scientific Society)
5430 Westheimer @ Yorktown
When:
Thursday, May 27, 1999
6:00 - 6:30 p.m. Social
6:30 - 7:30 p.m. Dinner
7:30 - 8:30 p.m. Speaker
Cost
$15.00 for IEEE Members with 48 hours reservations
$20.00 non-members
$5.00 students
Call (713) 207-IEEE to make your reservations.

Students!

IEEE Section Meeting is now only $5.00! Come join us to hear relevant topics for today's engineers and to learn more about entering into this exciting profession.

This is the on-line version of The Pocket Scope.  Tell your fellow IEEE members to visit us here
MAY SECTION MEETING -------------------------------
Judge Robert Eckels
County Judge Harris County, Texas

County Judge Robert Eckels is changing the mindset of Harris County government and the region by leading more than 60 police agencies in the County to coordinate a war on crime. Judge Eckels' first priority has always been public safety, so he has added 243 new patrol deputies a 63% increase to street patrols in Harris County. Through coordinated dispatching of police cars and a Smart Zone regional-radio system, Judge Eckels plans to speed contact between squad cars, fire trucks and headquarters. He has also placed all emergency management locations in Harris County under one roof at TransStar-a model for the nation.  
Harris County schools are safer because Judge Eckels created two education programs for troubled youth.  Neighborhood schools are more secure because expelled students who otherwise would roam our streets are working in controlled environments on the four R's-reading writing arithmetic and responsibility. 
 
Since 1995, Judge Eckels has conducted several performance reviews which have cut the number of County departments in half and produced $14 million in savings. By restructuring , Harris County's debt payments, he has saved $60 million. In 1995, Judge Eckels sought and 

obtained a tax decrease; in 1996, he fought a tax increase  he believed to be unnecessary for the county's $1.2 billion budget and this year he opposed a tax increase for the Hospital District. 
Judge Eckels serves as Chairman of the Juvenile Board and as a member of the Houston City Planning Commission the Houston Galveston Area Council and is director of Emergency Management for Harris County.  He works on the Regional Water Board which will assess the water needs for the entire region as it moves into the 21st century. From the Houston Junior Chamber of Commerce to the Coalition for the Homeless, Judge Eckels' work has been recognized by a diverse cross section of the community. A former state representative, Judge Eckels was named an Outstanding legislator by Texas Monthly in 1991.
As the presiding officer of Commissioners Court, the five member governing body of Harris County, Judge Eckels is the only member of the Court elected by and representing all the citizens of the third most populous county in the United States. Harris County's three million residents make it larger 

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