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January 27, 2026

Old Conroe Road: Coincidence or Calendar?

A Magnolia Native’s View on Infrastructure Timing

By Dock Line Magazine

If you’ve lived in Magnolia long enough to remember when FM 1488 was a quieter two-lane corridor and “rush hour” was more suggestion than reality, you know the rhythm of this town. You’ve watched the population surge, rooftops multiply, and infrastructure struggle to keep pace.

Over the past year, however, another rhythm has become harder to ignore: the timing of long-delayed solutions aligning closely with the election calendar.

This piece does not allege wrongdoing. It documents public statements, reported decisions, and official announcements, then asks a question voters are increasingly asking themselves: why now?

Magnolia Ridge: A Long-Running Safety Concern

For years, residents of Magnolia Ridge have raised concerns about emergency access and the risks created by limited ingress and egress. Those concerns became more urgent as development intensified around FM 1488.

On January 13, 2026, Montage Community Services on behalf of Magnolia Ridge Board of Directors alerted homeowners that there would be road construction impacting the neighborhood’s single entrance. This was posted by a local impact group after being forwarded by a resident: See the post here: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1ZbCi2B3Jw/

Just days later, on January 16, 2026, the City of Magnolia announced that the Heron Run route to SH 249 was open and would remain open permanently, providing a second access point for the subdivision.
City announcement: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17rvs5Hida/

Residents welcomed the decision. Many also noted that safety concerns tied to access had been raised publicly for years prior — including after a gas line incident in late 2024 that temporarily blocked access to the neighborhood for hours and reinforced fears about emergency evacuation and response.

Earlier community discussions and traffic concerns:

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1Avi2yms2n/

Old Conroe Road: A Funding Dispute, Then a Reversal

The Old Conroe Road widening project has faced delays for more than a decade.

In May 2025, Conroe City Council voted to halt funding for the project, citing the need to prioritize water infrastructure. During that meeting, Councilman Harry Hardman stated that the City had sent Montgomery County an invoice for $2 million to assist with the project and that the County refused to pay. According to reporting, county officials declined to comment at the time.

Community Impact reporting:
https://communityimpact.com/houston/conroe-montgomery/government/2025/05/23/conroe-city-council-votes-to-reallocate-funding-away-from-old-conroe-road-project/

The project subsequently stalled.

Fast forward to January 2026.

On January 22–23, 2026, Conroe City Council approved an agreement transferring the Old Conroe Road project to Montgomery County. As part of that agreement, Montgomery County agreed to pay $3.4 million to Conroe for engineering and right-of-way work already completed. Commissioner Charlie Riley was quoted as saying the county would not “put the brakes on it” until the project was done.

Your Conroe News reporting:
https://www.yourconroenews.com/news/houston-texas/trending/article/old-conroe-road-montgomery-county-21311017.php

Earlier community discussion of the stalled project:
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17kEdBTv6y/

Older community discussions:

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1C8pqqw8yS/

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1G8bk1aqkc/

The Timeline Residents Are Noticing

Placed side by side, the sequence is what many residents find striking:

A Fair Question for Voters

Residents are grateful for progress. A second entrance at Magnolia Ridge improves safety. Movement on Old Conroe Road is long overdue.

Still, voters are left to consider a reasonable question:

If solutions and funding agreements were possible in January 2026, why did similar urgency not materialize earlier, particularly after public safety incidents and years of documented concern?

This is not an accusation. It is an observation rooted in dates, decisions, and publicly available information.

As Election Day approaches, Montgomery County voters must decide whether responsiveness that accelerates during campaign season is sufficient or whether consistent, proactive leadership should be the standard year-round.

Editorial Note

This commentary is based on publicly available reporting, official announcements, and community records. It invites discussion, not personal attack.

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