‘A family business’ How a Precinct 4 electrician’s father sparked a 38-year career

Precinct 4’s Tomball Service Center is dark at 6 a.m., yet if someone ventures into the gravel lot, they will find a team of tradesmen standing among their trucks, excavators, and cherry pickers waiting to learn where they will be working that day.


Richard Francis, an electrician, stands next to his truck and waits to hear where everyone will be headed when the meeting ends. Today, he’s off to Bear Creek, along with the other three electricians, to get the rodeo arena ready for Precinct 4’s Winter Festival.


In the nearly seven years Richard has worked for the Precinct, no two days have been exactly the same, which is how he likes it.

“One minute you’re digging a trench, putting some underground (cable) in and the next minute, you could be at a park working on the stadium or ballfield lights,” said Richard. “And there’s 100 things in between that you could do at any given minute.”


An apprentice’s trade

Richard has been a full-time electrician for 38 years, but he’s been doing electrical work since before he started high school. He didn’t have the typical apprenticeship that many tradespeople take on, but he started learning the way many people pick up new skills: from their parents.


“It’s a family business,” Richard said. “My stepfather was a master electrician here in Houston and worked for one of the largest electrical companies during the 80s. During high school, he wouldn’t want (my brothers and I) to stay home, so he said, ‘it’s time to go to work.’ So, we started out with summers, and we’d work in the warehouse, and he would give us odd jobs to do.”


By the time he reached high school, Richard was going to school for the first half of the day and working the second half through a co-op program where he earned school credits. At that point, his father had started his own electrical business, and he put Richard under the care of a journeyman electrician who worked for the business, and, like many apprenticeships, it was with the journeyman that he really honed his skills.


Although Richard’s apprenticeship looked a bit different than someone who may not have direct access to someone in the trades, he still advises people interested in learning a trade to look for an apprenticeship. There, he said, they will learn under professional journeypersons, like he did.


After finishing high school, he worked for a number of private companies, including his dad’s, for over 30 years. Eventually, his younger brother convinced Richard to join him at Precinct 4.


“He kept telling me, ‘That’s a good, stable place to go. It’ll always need electricians, always has and probably always will,’” Richard said. “So, he nagged on me enough so that when there was finally an opening, I decided to go for it, and I’ve been here ever since. I’m not going anywhere.” 

By lbpxwhkvndfqycdw2mh3 January 3, 2025
Every Wednesday at 8:30 a.m., a small group of people, binoculars in hand, set out on the nearly 0.75-mile trail at Precinct 4’s Kleb Woods Nature Center. The trail is quiet. The only thing the visitors can hear is the soft hum of the highway and the crunch of leaves under their feet. But, if they’re still, they can hear what they came for—the occasional chirp of a bird hiding in the brush or flitting between the trees. Every year, thousands of people visit Kleb Woods, located between Hockley and Tomball, with the hope of spotting some of the more than 200 bird species that live in the Harris County area. The center hosts both weekly bird walks and an annual hummingbird festival in September. On a weekly bird walk in the winter, visitors can spot anything from sedge wrens and rufous hummingbirds to orange-crowned warblers, cedar waxwings, and great-horned owls. When someone spots a bird, they get to add it to the running list of nearly 50 recent bird sittings on the center’s wall.
January 2, 2025
December 23, 2024
Residents in Harris County Precinct 4—from Katy to Tomball to Spring Branch, all the way up to Hockley and Waller—have seen major changes in their neighborhoods. Commissioner Lesley Briones and her team of over 460 public servants dedicated 2024 to addressing urgent needs while laying a strong foundation for the future. From responding to disasters, to building sidewalks, to securing free healthcare, the Precinct 4 team is improving lives today while preparing for tomorrow. “Each and every day, my team and I work to prove that government can deliver for the people,” said Commissioner Lesley Briones. “We hustle for our residents because they deserve nothing less. In 2024, we expanded critical services, strengthened community partnerships, and connected with every corner of the Precinct. I am energized to ramp up our efforts even further next year.” Here are some key highlights from 2024 and the difference they’ve made in our communities: Justice and Safety Invested in key areas of Harris County’s Criminal District Courts to make the justice system more efficient and fairer, benefitting victims, defendants, and their families Expanded support for domestic violence survivors through funding for children exposed to DV , yearly investment in the Domestic Violence Assistance Fund, a new community outreach and education campaign, and a $1 million award to the Houston Area Women’s Center Strengthened law enforcement by adding funding for the TeleDeputy and VIPER programs into the county’s annual budget to reduce response times and target violent offenders Infrastructure Secured voter approval for Flood Control District Proposition A , ensuring repairs and upgrades to aging flood control infrastructure across the County Allocated $20M for n ew sidewalks to connect children and families to schools, work, places of worship and more Cleared several thousand truckloads of debri s while providing direct assistance to residents in need Invested $48 million in sustainable infrastructure across Precinct 4 through 2024 Places 4 People Health Launched a free health clinic with Baylor College of Medicine for teens and young adults ages 13-24, offering immunizations, sick visits, physicals, contraception, and mental health counseling Opened La Tiendita at Bayland Community Center to bring free, high-quality food, nutrition education, and other resources Installed four lactation pods in county court buildings to provide nursing parents a private place to pump Planted 1,200 trees in Alief through the Barbara Quattro Forest initiative to cool one of the hottest neighborhoods in Houston Education and Economic Opportunity Invested an additional $6.7 million into countywide apprenticeship program , bringing the total to $17.6 million in federal funds —the county’s largest-ever investment in paid training for quality union jobs Created a $17 million small business loan fund to support community growth Hosted over a dozen small business workshops to help business owners learn more about county contracts Good Government Approved a $2.67 billion budget after holding five town halls to gather community input, funding critical services like roads, drainage, law enforcement, and more Hosted six listening tours across the Precinct to hear residents’ ideas, concerns, and suggestions Increased property tax exemption for homeowners who are 65+ and/or disabled from $275,000 to $320,000 and exempted qualifying childcare centers from 100% of their County property taxes Received a $11.3 million National Park Service grant to improve Burnett Bayland Park In the Community Offered free summer programming to hundreds of children at Precinct parks and community centers Allowed the sale of fireworks for Diwali for the first time Showcased student artists through Precinct 4 bus design contest Precinct 4 is here to serve you. As we reflect on 2024’s progress, we are already planning for an even brighter future in 2025. Make it your New Year’s resolution to explore everything Precinct 4 has to offer—because when we invest in our communities, we all thrive.
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