Northwest Houston Neighbor

Daily news and events from Cy-Fair and our neighbors

ISSUE #2  ·  WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 2026


Good morning, neighbors

We're midway through the week and the school year is in its final stretch — CFISD's last day is just around the corner. It's a quieter few days on the events calendar, but there's plenty happening across Cy-Fair: a big decision on flood-recovery dollars, a feel-good youth baseball story, and a new lakeside restaurant taking shape. Grab your coffee and let's dig in.

In today's issue

  • Harris County moves to protect post-Harvey flood-recovery funding
  • A Cypress youth baseball story with a championship ending at the new Cy-Hope complex
  • CenterPoint rehearses for hurricane season before it starts June 1
  • Dinosaurs and summer reading are coming to the LSC-CyFair Library
  • Walk-On's is on the way to the Towne Lake Boardwalk — here's the scoop

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What's happening today and tomorrow

Wednesday, May 20

A quieter midweek evening. No ticketed events on the calendar tonight, but a couple of dependable go-tos: the Boardwalk at Towne Lake is a lovely spot for waterfront dinner and a lakeside stroll (live music returns Friday and Saturday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.), and John Paul Landing Park in Cypress has free trails and a nature Discovery Room if you'd rather be outdoors.

Thursday, May 21

Weekly Bird Walk at John Paul Landing — 8:30–11:30 a.m.
Harris County Precinct 4 naturalists lead an all-ages walk along a scenic 2-mile route at the John Paul Landing Environmental Education Center (9950 Katy Hockley Rd., Cypress). It's free — just bring a hat, sunscreen, and bug spray, as there's little shade. Event details.

Looking ahead

Mark the calendar: CFISD's last day of school is Thursday, May 28, and the district's high school graduations run May 27–30 at the Berry Center. The Harris County Public Library's summer reading season also kicks off in June at LSC-CyFair (more on that below).


Today's stories

Harris County moves to protect post-Harvey flood-recovery funds

Nearly nine years after Hurricane Harvey, some of the flood-recovery work it paid for still isn't finished — and that's now a deadline problem. The Harris County Flood Control District told Commissioners Court on May 14 that six of its 11 Hurricane Harvey recovery projects won't be done by the Texas General Land Office's Feb. 28, 2027 deadline, putting a slice of roughly $322 million in federal disaster-recovery dollars at risk.

Executive Director Tina Petersen said the district will ask the GLO for a nine-month extension and work through contingency plans for any projects that slip further. She pointed to shifting federal environmental rules — a problem felt nationwide — as a big reason several projects had to be redesigned. Commissioners pressed for tighter oversight, and the district has committed to monthly public progress updates so residents can track where each project stands.

Why it matters here: Cy-Fair sits in some of the most flood-prone watersheds in the county, so the pace of these recovery and mitigation projects is about as local as it gets.

Read the full report at Community Impact


From borrowed fields to a championship at the new Cy-Hope complex

Here's one to make you smile. Dierker's Champs — a Cy-Fair youth baseball program that started with a couple of struggling teams playing on whatever fields they could borrow — just wrapped its first championship season at the brand-new Cy-Hope Sports Complex in Cypress, according to My Neighborhood News.

It's become one of the area's feel-good sports stories: a grassroots effort that grew into something real, now with a home field of its own. If you've got young athletes at home, the new complex is worth a look as summer ball ramps up.

Read the story at My Neighborhood News


CenterPoint rehearses for hurricane season — before it starts June 1

With memories of Hurricane Beryl and Ike still fresh, CenterPoint Energy ran an emergency-preparedness exercise this month aimed at sharpening its storm response, customer communication, and grid resilience ahead of the 2026 hurricane season, My Neighborhood News reports.

Atlantic hurricane season officially opens June 1, so now's a good time for the rest of us to do our own drills too — refresh the emergency kit, confirm how you'll get alerts, and make a plan for keeping phones and medical devices charged if the power goes out.

Read more at My Neighborhood News


Dinosaurs and summer reading are coming to the LSC-CyFair Library

Looking for a way to keep the kids busy once school lets out? The Harris County Public Library launches its 2026 Summer Reading Program at Lone Star College-CyFair in June, with dinosaur-themed programs, live performances, reading challenges, and hands-on activities for all ages.

It's free, it's local, and it's a reliable summer lifesaver for Cy-Fair families. We'll share specific dates and how to sign up as the library finalizes its calendar.

See what's planned at My Neighborhood News


Walk-On's is on the way to the Towne Lake Boardwalk

That prime waterfront spot at the Towne Lake Boardwalk where Sam's Boat used to be? It's becoming a Walk-On's Sports Bistreaux. The Louisiana-rooted sports bar — co-owned by NFL quarterback Drew Brees — is putting about $1.5 million into renovating 9955 Barker Cypress Road, and it's expected to open this year, with recent reports pointing toward the summer.

Think from-scratch Cajun classics (gumbo, étouffée, fried catfish), big burgers, wall-to-wall TVs, and a patio made for game day. It'll be Walk-On's seventh location in the Houston area and is expected to bring roughly 135 jobs to Cypress.

Get the details at My Neighborhood News


Thanks for reading

That's your Wednesday roundup. Spot something we should cover — a new business, a school event, a neighbor doing good work? Just reply and tell us.

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— Your Northwest Houston Neighbor team

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