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The Victoria Advocate on our new Victoria Branch

From The Victoria Advocate yesterday. We are excited to be able to better serve our members in Victoria:

Texas Dow Employee Credit Union broke ground Tuesday on a new bank at 1514 E. Rio Grande St.

The 4,900-square-foot branch will be a full-service site with tellers, a drive-through, ATM machine and lending services, said Luke Billeri, regional vice president of branch operations for TDECU's west market.

The site will bring 10 to 15 new jobs to the city, according to a TDECU news release.

There are a couple of reasons the credit union chose to expand in Victoria, Billeri said, explaining its positive response by the community tops the list.

TDECU receives about 300 new members a month from the region, he said. With that type of increase, the company had to grow to keep up its service levels.

It chose the site on Rio Grande Street to better serve South Victoria, he said.

The bank currently operates locations at the Victoria Mall and Mockingbird Lane and has a new site for mortgage, insurance and direct-lending services going in on North Navarro Street.

Construction on the new site is slated to begin Sept. 21, according to the release.

The project will cost about $2 million, Billeri said.

That location is slated to open during the first quarter of 2010.

The company is looking forward to the expansion, Billeri said.

"We're just really happy to be in Victoria," he said. "It's really a great community."

TDECU was founded in 1955. It operates 19 service locations and maintains more than 125,000 members, according to the release.

Categories: What's Happening

Ways To Save: Say NO to Cable

I don't have cable, and I don't plan on getting it. There was a time when, because of picture quality that I might have been convinced. Since the switch to digital broadcasting picture quality is just as good through antenna.

Services like Hulu.com and Netflix do more than their fair share to offset the content loss in not having cable. I was looking at various plans and a package including internet (the slowest connection) and basic cable cost about $94 a month. With this service if I only got internet (the fastest connection) it would cost $55 a month. I could then add an account with netflix to have any 3 DVD's out at a time for $18 a month. I could choose to go through entire television seasons, or work my way through all the classic movies I have never seen. For regular TV use I still have access to the major networks and there are even more channels available because of the digital broadcast.

If I can be patient I don't have to pay the premium to watch the cable shows I like because I can wait until they are available on DVD. Netflix also offers movies on demand through a set-top box, and I can watch Hulu on my television if I connect my laptop.

In short, there is no quality advantage offered by cable, and I will not want for content. I will make a few concessions, I do not watch television for news. I follow news outlets on twitter, and read their websites. I also do not watch sports. I can live without ESPN. For some of us ESPN, Fox News, CNN, MSNBC are reason enough for cable and there is nothing wrong for that. You are paying for those channels.

I do think this is an easy way to save some money that might not be obvious at first. I put together a chart showing the yearly cost below:

Service Cost Savings
Fast Internet + Netflix $876  
Slow Internet + Cable (Basic) $888 $10
Slow Internet + Cable (Maxed Out) $1608 $732
Fast Internet + Cable (Basic) $1248 $402
Fast Internet + Cable (Maxed Out) $1968 $1092

Photo Credit

Categories: On the cheap | Savings


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