There’s a coordinated statewide campaign? We can do that?

Who knew?

Colin Allred

U.S. Rep. Colin Allred and the Texas Democratic Party are launching a coordinated campaign to consolidate resources for races up and down the ticket, the party and Allred campaign announced Wednesday morning.

The initiative, dubbed “Texas Offense,” will allow candidates down the ballot to share data and information resources, letting different Democratic candidates better coordinate as they knock on doors, call voters and engage in other campaign activities. It’s the party’s first coordinated campaign of its kind focusing on the grassroots in over 20 years. Allred is running to unseat U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz.

“Throughout my football career at Baylor and the NFL, I’ve always played defense. But now, along with Texans from all across our state, we are fully on offense to beat Ted Cruz,” Allred said in a statement. “I am a fourth-generation Texan, and no matter what Ted Cruz says, this election is about giving 30 million Texans a Senator who will do the job for all of us. Our grassroots campaign of Texans is ready to win because we cannot afford six more years of Ted Cruz.”

“Texas Democrats are fired up and ready to beat Ted Cruz,” said Gilberto Hinojosa, chair of the Texas Democratic Party. “This is a historic partnership that will help galvanize grassroots excitement for Congressman Allred across our state. One conversation at a time, with Texans talking to Texans – we are going to send Ted Cruz packing.”

Having a coordinated campaign prevents duplicating outreach efforts by different Democratic candidates to the same audiences, said Matt Angle, director of the Lone Star Project.

“In Texas, that’s important because you got such a large diverse state,” Angle said. “You’ve got giant urban centers as well as significant suburban areas, and then you’ve got the rural parts of the state. And so having a framework for people who are coordinating to work efficiently is really important.”

The coordinated campaign does not allow candidates to share money across the board. Candidates for state office face restrictions in sharing financial resources with federal candidates.

Allred will officially unveil the initiative at a Houston rally on Sunday — 100 days before Election Day. Former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and Amanda Zurawski, an Austin woman who sued Texas over its abortion restrictions and has since become a Democratic campaigner, will both be present.

[…]

The Democratic consolidation differs from past Democratic statewide campaigns, which were largely solo operations.

“Some candidates have done a better job than others in celebrating and bringing down ballot candidates along and uplifting them alongside what they are doing,” former state Sen. Wendy Davis, who led a widely watched but unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign in 2014, said in an interview. Praising Allred, she added: “I feel like this coordinated effort is a true reflection of how he functions. He is a former football player. He is a team player to his core.”

Some Democratic campaigns for U.S. House have coordinated in the past. U.S. Rep. Martin Frost, a North Texas Democrat, coordinated with other candidates to turn out the Democratic vote in the 1990s, Angle said. But Angle said it was not on a statewide scale.

It’s always seemed like whatever the top-ticket statewide campaign was in a given year, they did their thing, and the next top-ticket statewide campaign that came along did their thing, with each one starting from scratch. Some were better than others at working with downballot candidates, as Wendy Davis says, but there was never any consistency and no continuity. Whatever happens this year, I hope at the end of it we have something to build on for the next election. I don’t know why it’s taken so long to get to this point, but better late that never.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Another Paxton attempt to harass a migrant shelter halted by a judge

How much do you have to hate migrants to keep doing this?

A crook any way you look

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton cannot depose the leader of a McAllen migrant shelter, a Hidalgo County judge ruled Wednesday.

District Judge Bobby Flores’ decision shuts down attempts to compel the executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley to submit to questioning on the shelter’s operations.

An attorney for Catholic Charities, William Powell, said he hoped the ruling put an end to the attorney general’s investigation into the organization’s work.

“We would hope that at this point they’ve realized that Catholic Charities complies with the law in all the work they do,” Powell said.

In a statement after the ruling, executive director of Catholic Charities, Sister Norma Pimentel, said the organization would “always strive to fulfill its legal obligations” while continuing its mission.

The attorney general’s office did not respond to a request for an interview.

The attorney general’s office filed a petition to depose Catholic Charities last month, saying it was investigating whether the organization is illegally harboring migrants or illegally encouraging them to enter or remain in the country.

Catholic Charities, a nonprofit that provides food, shelter and other basic necessities to asylum seekers, people experiencing homelessness and others in need, said it has not violated any laws and the attorney general’s office has not presented any evidence to the contrary.

[…]

Catholic Charities argued that the attorney general’s office failed to show that there would be any benefit to the deposition.

“The petition represents a fishing expedition into a pond where no one has even seen a fish,” attorneys for Catholic Charities wrote in their response to the attorney general’s petition.

The attorney general’s office initially requested documents from Catholic Charities in April. Over the course of a few months, Catholic Charities turned over more than 100 pages of documents regarding how it hires and trains staff as well as its rules and procedures for admitting migrants, including required documentation, its process for applying for federal funds, and its relationship and communication with federal, state and local law enforcement.

The organization also submitted a sworn statement from Pimentel, its executive director, in which she responded to questions on operations, funding and communication with U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The attorney general’s office, however, said the documents did not shed “meaningful light” into their operations and that Pimentel’s statement was non-responsive and evasive.

The parallels with Annunciation House are obvious. It is my sincere hope that Paxton is alienating some Catholic voters, but it’s too soon to tell about that. I first heard about this case when Paxton appealed the Annunciation House ruling to SCOTx. I don’t know any more about it than what I’m reading in the current stories, but you can count on Paxton to be maximally dickish and dishonest about this. This raises the stakes for the appeal on the Annunciation House case. He’s not going to stop until he’s forced to.

Posted in La Migra, Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Council approves Prop A rules

Finally.

On Wednesday, [Houston City Council] approved, in a 13-2 vote, a set of rules offering members two mechanisms to push forward their policy proposals.

Under the new rules, members can still directly request the administration place their proposals on the City Council agenda. Alternatively, they can go through a newly created Proposition A Committee and ask for an initial review before the item heads to the full council for consideration.

The committee pathway has in the past few months generated strong pushback from several council members, who said the additional step would create unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles and violate the spirit of the ballot measure.

“I don’t think the Prop A Committee is necessary because we have all these other committees that if something wanted to get referred to a committee, there’s a mechanism for that,” said Council Member Edward Pollard, who voted against the rules Wednesday.

He said a proposal he spearheaded sat in the committee for about three months because meetings were postponed due to weather or not enough members showed up to meet a quorum requirement.

[Mayor John] Whitmire said the committee structure would offer a chance for council members and department officials to workshop more complex proposals and for the public to offer input.

“Yes, three members can bring anything to council under Prop A,” the mayor said Wednesday. “But the financial consequences, the impact on one district versus another district need to be heard in a committee.”

To ease members’ concerns that their proposals might languish in the committee, Council Member Amy Peck on Wednesday successfully pushed through a change to the proposed rules before they were passed.

Per Peck’s amendment, if fewer than nine members show up to a Proposition A committee meeting, resulting in a lack of a quorum, the proposal can be resubmitted directly to the full council for a vote.

See here and here for the previous updates. I’m fine with this setup, it seems reasonable to me and tries to comply with the will of the voters. I’m curious if there will be a burst of pent-up Prop A activity now that this process has finally been determined and approved, or if there just wasn’t all that much demand (at this time, at least) for Council-pushed agenda items. We should learn soon enough. Houston Landing has more.

Posted in Local politics | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dispatches from Dallas, July 26 edition

This is a weekly feature produced by my friend Ginger. Let us know what you think.

This week, in news from Dallas-Fort Worth, we have Texans who are probably not going to be the VP candidate; the Dallas County Juvenile Justice Department blows up; the Star-Telegram has some questions for Tim O’Hare; the fire at politically-significant First Baptist Church; last fall’s Dallas County data breach; shenanigans at Fair Park claim its leader finally; what’s going on at Fort Worth ISD; NBC tells all about the would-be book-banners in Granbury; the vile folks at VDARE are about to go out of business thanks to the New York State Attorney General; another historical souvenir in an odd place thanks to Harlan Crow; the previous works by the architects designing the expansion of the Dallas Museum of Art; and zoo babies, even if they are scaly rather than fuzzy. And more.

This week’s post was brought to you by the music of Glass Animals, who are coming to town in September. I don’t have tickets yet but we’re considering it, hence the listening spree.

Let’s get right into it:

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Former Chief Finner says city is trying to bury HPD dropped cases issue

Explosive stuff, with a strong pushback from the Mayor.

Ever since Troy Finner suddenly retired in May, he has kept a low profile.

The former Houston police chief has declined to speak with most members of the media and, aside from a small retirement celebration, rarely appeared in public. Meanwhile, a massive internal investigation continues into the department’s suspension of more than 200,000 cases – a scandal Finner first went public with earlier this year that eventually led to his ouster.

But now, as city leadership prepares to name Finner’s permanent replacement, the 34-year veteran of HPD said he feels compelled to speak.

In a series of exclusive interviews with the Chronicle, Finner said he’s concerned that the city and police department are trying to bury the full details of a disturbing truth he aimed to expose: That the police department in the nation’s fourth-largest city had for almost a decade been routinely shelving investigations into serious criminal activity by labeling them with the code “Suspended – Lack of Personnel,” or “SL.”

“This failure is gonna come back and bite us,” Finner said. “And that’s what I was trying to prevent.”

When Finner was still chief, he pledged to confront the issue head-on. He launched a sprawling internal probe in February and released bi-weekly updates about its progress to the public. He also committed to releasing a full report of the department’s findings, at one point indicating that could happen in early May 2024, shortly before he left.

Finner is worried the department won’t keep those promises now that he’s gone. Updates have dried up, he pointed out. The commander of HPD’s internal affairs department has been reassigned to another division. And the report has yet to come out.

“Agencies all across the country are watching us,” he said. “This is our opportunity to do something and lead the way. So I’m proud to take the blows. But tell the whole story.”

In a brief interview Monday, Mayor John Whitmire rejected Finner’s concerns and insisted that the report would be released soon, though he did not commit to a firm date.

“It’s coming,” he said. “It will be comprehensive.”

The police department did not respond to requests for comment.

Ray Hunt, executive director of the Houston Police Officers’ Union, said he was disappointed Finner had chosen to speak out about the investigation before it was complete. He agreed with concerns that the department has reassigned its internal affairs commander, but otherwise said that Finner is wrong.

“Anyone who believes this is being swept under the rug, I think they’re mistaken,” he said. “HPOU will not allow that to happen, and I’m confident the mayor won’t allow that to happen.”

See here for the last update, in May, when the Mayor’s committee on the dropped cases issued its report to him and City Council. I assume this is the report Chief Finner is referring to, as it has not yet been made public. Be that as it may, whether by coincidence or not the Mayor soon gave a release date for the report.

Mayor John Whitmire said Wednesday that he planned to bring the final, comprehensive report on the Houston Police Department’s suspended cases scandal to city council next week.

In a prepared statement, Whitmire said he looked forward to presenting the report at Wednesday’s council meeting. His comments are the latest firm date the mayor has set for the report, which will provide details about the 264,000 cases suspended since 2016 using an internal code citing a lack of personnel.

The statement came hours after a Chronicle report detailing former Chief Troy Finner’s concerns that without a public discussion, the department might never grapple with the severity of the problem.

“Chief Finner’s comments don’t deserve a response because he knows the facts don’t support his statements,” Whitmire said. “I can’t say what motivated him to make such allegations, but I’m personally disappointed he has.”

Whitmire has pushed back the planned release of the report several times since Finner’s retirement.

OK then. I look forward to seeing the report and what it recommends. I’ll hold off on further comment for now.

Posted in Crime and Punishment | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Class action lawsuit #3 filed against CenterPoint

Once, twice, three times a Beryl-related class action lawsuit related to CenterPoint’s failure to get the power back in a timely fashion.

Seen at I-10 and Sawyer

A firm representing 19 medical professionals and other business owners in Harris County filed a class action claim Monday against CenterPoint Energy, alleging the company’s response to Hurricane Beryl cost them millions of dollars.

The suit, the third class action brought against CenterPoint in the past week, was filed on behalf of beauty, health and wellness businesses in Harris County. The plaintiffs are suing for damages in excess of $100,000,000.

Representing the case are husband and wife duo Erica Rose and Charles Sanders of the personal injury practice Rose Sanders PLLC. Rose said they are not charging for their services, and have filed the case in the interest of bringing change to the Houston energy market.

“This is something I’m very passionate about,” Rose said Tuesday. “We’re not charging out clients anything up front. Many of the businesses we’re representing are run by women and other minorities and CenterPoint’s response to Beryl has left them in a pretty tough spot financially.”

At least three doctors and dentists are named as part of the suit. They argued CenterPoint’s failure to promptly restore service resulted in the loss of sensitive medical equipment and supplies. Property loss and other damages, the suit claimed, disproportionately impacted minority and women-owned businesses.

“This disruption likely will cause permanent irreparable harm to some of Houston’s most influential, devoted and successful business owners,” the plaintiffs’ original petition stated. “It had a disproportionate impact on doctors in the Asian community as well as other minority business owners and female doctors.”

The suit also claimed CenterPoint’s restoration efforts were hampered by logistical failures and mismanagement. The plaintiffs alleged company executives failed in their duty to adequately communicate with employees, and that a lack of clear guidance left many linemen waiting for hours or even days before they could begin repairs.

[…]

Rose and Sanders said they’ve been in communication with prominent Houston attorney and former mayoral candidate Tony Buzbee, who filed a similar case last week. Buzbee, who is representing restaurant owners impacted by the blackout, has worked informally with Sanders and Rose to direct clients to whichever case suits their business better, Rose said.

Another case was brought by Michael Fertitta, son of Rockets owner and Landry’s CEO Tilman Fertitta, representing Houston residents.

“Tony’s only doing restaurants, we’re focused more broadly on a larger class of businesses,” Rose said. “We send him any restaurants that contact us and he, likewise, reaches out if anyone contacts him that would be a better fit for our case.”

See here and here for the background. It’s nice that Rose and Sanders are working with Buzbee to make sure the right clients get to the right lawyers. Wouldn’t want to confuse things. What’s not so nice is that for the third straight article, not a single frickin’ lawyer or law professor is consulted to answer the basic questions about why these lawsuits are being filed as class action, what has to happen for them to be certified as class action (and what happens if they aren’t), what if any precedent exists for this type of lawsuit against a utility, and what the odds of success may be. We’re left to ponder it all for ourselves. On the plus side, we are told more of these lawsuits are coming, so there will be more opportunities to address those basic questions. Or not.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina, Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Could Montgomery County replace CenterPoint?

We’ll see. I’m very skeptical, but I consider this to be an interesting test case of the proposition that CenterPoint’s service area could be reduced.

After Beryl wiped out power in the [Creekside Park] neighborhood and the county, officials within The Woodlands Township’s board of directors and Montgomery County are pushing to have Entergy Texas take over CenterPoint’s service area in The Woodlands.

Entergy Texas was not immediately available for comment.

Up to 75 percent of Montgomery County residents lost power during Beryl. And while both Entergy and CenterPoint both took more than a week to restore power to residents, Entergy had more consistent and accurate communication, The Woodlands Township board director Brad Bailey said.

“It’s not always what you want to hear, but Entergy is very good at saying, ‘We’re going to be out there between the hours of such and such, but we can’t give you a timeline that we’re going to be putting up,'” Bailey said. “The first time (CenterPoint) showed up in Creekside just to do eyes on what they’re dealing with was (July 12) at 5 p.m.”

CenterPoint had 75,000 outages in the county July 11 as Montgomery County Judge Mark Keough began pushing for more accurate updates from the electricity provider.

“Of 12 counties in their power grid, in all but two days, (Montgomery County was) the lowest in activations but the fourth largest in their power grid,” Keough said. “Our ability to communicate with Entergy was much greater (than CenterPoint,)…it was the hardest thing in the world to get to a decision maker.”

Keough said that he has begun working with legislators to see if portions of CenterPoint’s service area, including Sterling Ridge in Montgomery County and Creekside Park in Harris County, could eventually be serviced by Entergy.

“Your voice of wanting to do something in terms of breaking away from CenterPoint is a topic that is of discussion…but it is no small task,” Keough said. “If I had it my way….we’d want all of Montgomery County going over to (Entergy,)” Keough said.

Gov. Greg Abbott threatened to consider reducing CenterPoint’s service territory in greater Houston after Beryl “to make it smaller so maybe they can do a better job of managing it.” But the likelihood of the state diminishing CenterPoint’s territory is low, given the complexity of the undertaking, said Alison Silverstein, an independent consultant who previously worked as a senior adviser for both the PUC and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

See here for some background. Despite the reference to an expert in these matters, we still have no clear idea of what would actually need to happen for CenterPoint to be swapped out in some locations. How would it work? What are the obstacles – legal, regulatory, logistical, physical – that would need to be overcome? How long might it take? Why is an expert being name-checked if that expert is not quoted? I have no idea. As such, and until some evidence is given to the contrary, I see this all as empty threats.

And as a reminder and for what it’s worth, Entergy was the hated utility that failed to do its job and caused a lot of harm as a result back in the 90s. That was a long time ago and needn’t be a reflection on the company today, but it is a reminder that yesterday’s goat can be tomorrow’s hero. That they did a creditable job communicating about their outages is a good reason to look at them favorably, but that at least is something that even CenterPoint ought to be able to fix.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Texas blog roundup for the week of July 22

The Texas Progressive Alliance mourns the passing of Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Continue reading

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged , | Leave a comment

We are starting to hear some names in CD18

The first potential candidate to publicly acknowledge an interest in CD18 is former Mayor Sylvester Turner.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee

Former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner has confirmed with KHOU 11 News anchor Len Cannon that he is “seriously considering” a run for Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee’s seat after it was left vacant when she died Friday.

Jackson Lee died at the age of 74 after battling pancreatic cancer.

Turner told Cannon that only the passing of his friend at this critical junction in the election cycle would cause him to come out of retirement. He said that with all that’s happening at the national level, he believes the 18th Congressional seat needs stability and continuity.

Turner told KHOU 11 that he would make a decision in the coming days.

Turner, 69, served as mayor of Houston from Jan. 1, 2016, to Jan. 1, 2024. Prior to that, he served as a member of the Texas House of Representatives from 1989 to 2016.

He also had his own battle with cancer back in 2022, which he underwent treatment for.

See here for some background. An earlier story on Click2Houston mentioned another name:

“Those are big shoes to fill. I don’t think anyone can fill the shoes of the great Sheila Jackson Lee,” said State Representative Jarvis Johnson. Johnson confirmed his candidacy during a phone call on Monday afternoon with KPRC 2 Investigates Mario Diaz, adding, “Everybody else is going to play footsie; that is the difference with me.”

Johnson emphasized that the 18th District has had a “fighter” representing them in Washington D.C. for nearly thirty years, and he plans to continue that legacy.

As for why he’s running, Johnson said, “These are consequential times. This is one of the most important races in the country. Districts like the 18th have to excite the new generation of voters. I hope to invigorate the youth movement. I want to engage this district because I want to get more people to the polls to help the presidential race.”

Who else is in the mix? Democratic sources have confirmed that several well-known names are considering their options.

Former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner is reportedly looking to make a run, with one source stating, “It’s a done deal.”

Thanks to Campos for that link. Given how vindictive Mayor Whitmire has been to his predecessor for the sin of having endorsed SJL in the Mayoral runoff, it would be pretty funny if Turner won this election. Not saying that’s what should happen or what will happen, just that I got a chuckle out of the thought.

I’m aware of some other names out there, but at this point it’s all speculation. As a precinct chair in CD18 and having gone though this before in 2016 for Commissioners Court, I will note that while anyone can say they’re running for the now-open Democratic nomination for CD18, one has to be nominated by one of the precinct chairs during the selection meeting in order to be considered. I’m sure both Mayor Turner and Rep. Johnson will be able to get a Chair to do that, I’m just noting this for the record. There were a couple of people in 2016 who said they were running for Commissioners Court Precinct 1 but did not get nominated by a Chair.

Couple other points to note. We precinct chairs had a call on Monday night to talk about the process. There will be a candidate forum – details to come – organized by Melanie Miles on August 10. We ought to get a reasonably clear idea of who is interested in this at that event, though I will note that some potential candidates, mostly current Houston City Council members, would be subject to “resign to run” if they announced themselves as candidates then. They might wait until the actual nomination meeting if they’re fully invested in pursuing this.

As to when that meeting will be, that is still to be determined. It will have to be before the DNC in Chicago because several precinct chairs will be travelling there. The most likely time for the nomination meeting is August 11-16, somewhere in there. I’ll let you know when I know.

UPDATE: More names from the Chron.

State Reps. Jolanda Jones and Jarvis Johnson are among the current elected officials that serve in districts overlapping with the late congresswoman’s district. Johnson announced Tuesday his bid for Jackson Lee’s seat.

“In light of her recent passing, we approach this announcement with utmost care and reverence for her legacy,” Johnson said. “Given the tight timeline — Democratic party decisions looming within a month — we must continue meeting the people’s needs.”

Bishop James Dixon, a longtime friend of Jackson Lee’s family whose church held a prayer vigil for the late congresswoman before her passing, told the Chronicle on Tuesday that many in his community have encouraged him to run for the seat. He said he is humbled by the possibility of continuing Jackson Lee’s legacy in the district and that he is “thinking about it very seriously and praying about it even more seriously.”

Former Houston City Councilmember Dwight Boykins, a district resident and friend of the late congresswoman, also confirmed his interest in the race on Tuesday. He said, however, that he does not yet wish to make an official announcement out of respect for Jackson Lee and her family.

“I think it’s inappropriate to be campaigning for her seat before she is buried, so I’m not going to do it,” Boykins said. “I owe her the respect to at least let her be laid to rest before I officially make any announcement.”

Edwards is among the other candidates potentially interested in the seat. She did not respond to requests for comment on whether she plans to re-enter the race.

Note that this doesn’t say that Rep. Jones is running, just that she’s a potential candidate. Also still in the “potential candidate” group is Amanda Edwards, and I have to say I’m a little surprised that we haven’t heard from her yet. It’s still early, but as noted above the timeline for this is very short.

UPDATE: “The meeting likely will take place Aug. 15 or 17, [HCDP Chair Mike] Doyle said, per the Houston Landing. No new names in that article.

UPDATE: The Trib weighs in, and brings a new name.

Among the declared and potential Democratic candidates are former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, state Rep. Jarvis Johnson and Houston Councilwoman Letitia Plummer. It was not immediately clear whether Amanda Edwards, who finished second in the district’s original primary last year, would seek the seat again.

[…]

Edwards, a former intern in Jackson Lee’s office, has not said whether she intends to seek the nomination.

Plummer, who holds an at-large seat on Houston’s city council, said she was interested in a bid but would wait for legal advice on whether the city’s policy of requiring council members to resign before seeking other offices would apply to the unusual nomination process in the House race. Resigning her seat without securing the nomination would be difficult, Plummer said, but added that this race is an “opportunity that will probably never come again.”

“Sheila Jackson Lee delivered, and you have to find an advocate and also have the relationships to deliver,” Plummer said. “Whoever takes that seat has to be able to know have to drive dollars from the federal government down to the city and the county.”

Now that her name is in print elsewhere, I will say that I had CM Plummer in mind when I mentioned candidates who might not want to be overt about their interest until the last minute. We’ll see what happens with her from here.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Women affected by the abortion ban banding together

This story is equal parts heartwarming and rage-inducing.

One morning last spring, Hollie Cunningham’s father was drinking coffee and watching “Good Morning America” on his patio when he saw Austin Dennard, a Dallas-area OB-GYN, on the screen.

Through tears, Dennard described the devastation of having learned her pregnancy wasn’t viable. Then, she recounted the struggle of leaving Texas for an abortion the state wouldn’t allow.

It sounded all too familiar — it was the same situation Cunningham had faced just months earlier. Her father encouraged her to reach out to Dennard, and within hours, the two were on the phone, commiserating and sharing their stories.

In the two years since the Supreme Court overturned federal abortion protections and Texas began banning the procedure in nearly all instances, dozens of women have come forward to share their stories about being denied care in the face of dangerous pregnancies. Many, like Dennard, have joined litigation against the state, claiming the exceptions built into its abortion restrictions are too vague for physicians to intervene.

But they have also found each other, building connections around an increasingly shared trauma. Dennard and Cunningham, now close friends, for instance, are part of a group text with other women – most of them plaintiffs in the lawsuit Dennard is part of – where they share their challenges and advice, recommend medical specialists and discuss their grief and coping mechanisms.

“They are probably my biggest support group,” said Cunningham, 37, of the Dallas area. “Just connecting with others who had similar experiences reduces my feelings of isolation, and they are the only ones that truly know what it feels like mentally, physically, emotionally to go through what I did.”

Dr. Bhavik Kumar, medical director for primary and transgender care at Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast in Houston, occasionally travels to perform abortions in states where it’s legal.

Kumar said in the last couple years he has seen on a more regular basis that patients are connecting with each other and opening up more in waiting rooms. He overhears that they’ll ask each other things like how far along they are or how far they had to travel to be there.

“The fact that folks sort of have to rely on each other to build this community and support one another, it’s unfortunate, but there’s also some beauty in that,” Kumar said. “While this is not the scenario we would have chosen for one another, it is something that I see happening in a way that wouldn’t have happened otherwise, especially on this scale.”

Read the rest. Dr. Dennard is a plaintiff in the Zurawski litigation; the story didn’t specify that and it got me to wondering if there were some other lawsuits that I had missed. If there are, I’m still missing them. Anyway, I’m glad these women have each other. I wish the reasons why they know each other were different, but here we are. I’m sadly certain their ranks will grow. I’m going to stop now before my head explodes.

Posted in The great state of Texas | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

MLB to Austin?

It could happen.

[W]ith expansion teams on the horizon, the MLB believes that Austin is one of a few cities that has the potential to host a team. Exactly when the league may expand is a question that hasn’t been answered, but there are plenty of reasons why Texas could be in line for another professional baseball team.

[…]

Central Texas, specifically Austin, has been one of the fastest-growing cities in the country. With a city population closing in on one million and San Antonio an hour away, placing a team in the right spot could capture the fandoms of two cities starved for pro sports.

While the Rangers’ Triple AAA affiliate, the Round Rock Express, is in the north, Austin is one of the largest markets in the U.S. without an NFL, NBA, MLB, or NHL team. The Texas Longhorns and Austin FC dominate most of the area’s sports fans, but the long offseason of college football and the reach of the MLB compared to the MLS mean that there are still plenty of untapped markets in the city.

The Austin Baseball Commission, a new site that’s hoping to gain momentum in the MLB movement, cites Austin’s economic strength as another key advantage for the city. Also, the Austin Bats would have to be the name of the team, right? It makes too much sense.

Thus far, it seems that Nashville, Tennessee, Portland, Oregon and Salt Lake City, Utah would be the three cities with the most credible case for expansion over Austin, according to the Austin Baseball Commission.

Each of those cities has proven that they have the capability to support a pro sports team from the NHL or NBA, giving it a distinct advantage over Austin. Also, a team in Central Texas would still have to compete for national attention with the Rangers and Astros.

The Austin Baseball Commission website goes into more detail on the case for Austin, in case you’re curious. We’ve discussed the case for San Antonio, which is sometimes paired with Austin as an expansion co-location, the case for Salt Lake City, and the case for a second D/FW team. This seems like the most definitive statement I’ve seen that Austin is a real candidate for a team, and the first I’ve heard of an organization behind the effort. Doesn’t mean they’ll succeed, but it’s at least a credible showing. I’m sure there’s more in this Austin Business Journal story, which I found via Monday’s Hey Austin newsletter, but it’s paywalled, so this is what I’ve got.

Posted in Baseball | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

July 2024 campaign finance reports – Senate and Congress

I know there’s been a real firehose of news lately, but it’s July and that means it’s time to review campaign finance reports. This list will be a little smaller than the previous one as again there are fewer races of interest now. The April 2024 reports, where we could again combine the Senate and Congressional candidates, are here. The January reports for Senate are here, the October 2023 reports are here, the July 2023 reports here, and the April 2023 reports are here. The January reports for Congress are here, and the October 2023 reports are here. The earlier reports had both Senate and Congress, as the fields were small enough then to do them together.

Colin Allred – Senate

Sandeep Srivastava – CD03
John Love – CD06
Michelle Vallejo – CD15
Sheila Jackson Lee – CD18
Amanda Edwards – CD18
Kristin Hook – CD21
Sam Eppler – CD24
Melissa McDonough – CD38


Dist  Name             Raised      Spent    Loans    On Hand
============================================================
Sen   Allred       38,433,747 27,983,265        0 10,450,482

03    Srivastava      308,779    290,585  543,233     21,786
06    Love             93,405     84,082        0      9,976
15    Vallejo       1,341,298    671,740  100,000    682,275
18    Jackson Lee     546,872    893,651    4,906     22,130
18    Edwards       1,626,347  1,626,205        0        142
21    Hook            279,387     61,938    2,170    217,449
24    Eppler          707,569    499,476        0    208,093
38    McDonough       143,310    130,374  107,415     14,716

Colin Allred keeps on raising a ton of money, and stays ahead of Beto’s pace from 2018. He also keeps on spending money, which keeps his cash on hand total stationary. Indeed, though he outraised Ted Cruz again, Cruz now has more cash on hand. Not a big deal, certainly not as long as he can keep this up, but noted for the record.

I’ve taken Rep. Lizzie Fletcher and Pervez Agwan from CD07 and Michelle Johnson from CD32 off the report, as there’s not much of interest in those spots anymore. As noted in April, Agwan was still raising money to retire his debt. He succeeded, raising and spending over $1.7 million for the result he achieved. Also as noted in April, he’s disappeared from the scene. It is what it is.

I had thought that I could also retire CD18 from this list, but the death of Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee re-casts the spotlight here. As I said before, I don’t want to speculate about who might be interested in being the new candidate in CD18, but for obvious reasons Amanda Edwards will be in the conversation. The precinct chair process for picking a new nominee isn’t exactly expensive, but if one wants to publicize one’s candidacy, even to such a limited audience, it takes resources. Edwards doesn’t have any cash remaining in her Congressional account, so she doesn’t have that advantage going in, if indeed she intends to enter. I feel icky talking about all this now, but this process will move quickly once it gets started, so for better or worse here we are.

As for Rep. Jackson Lee, the remaining cash in her account will need to be reimbursed, spent on some limited items, donated to charity, or contributed to other campaigns or PACs within a couple of years.

There’s a new name among the other candidates, Dr. Kristin Hook, who is running against the odious toadstool Chip Roy in CD21. This district is not particularly competitive thanks to the 2021 redistricting, but Dr. Hook (and let’s face it, that’s a Grade A name) has raised a more than respectable amount of money, and that gets her on the list. I wish her all the best in her endeavor.

Beyond that, Michelle Vallejo and Sam Eppler are doing what you’d want them to be doing in the two biggest target districts, while Sandeep Srivastava barely collected $15K this past quarter. We need to figure out a better way to ensure candidates in even these marginally viable districts can get the resources they need, and also make sure we’re finding and supporting the candidates who can help make that happen for themselves. That’s an exercise for another time. I’ll have more of these reports soon.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Another Tuesday Beryl roundup

Hurricane Beryl killed at least 22 people in the Houston area. More than half were heat-related deaths.

Hurricane Beryl claimed at least 22 lives in the Houston area. Recent additions to the list include 11 people who died from hyperthermia, or overheating, after sitting without power for days in homes pummeled by a feverish Texas summer. At the height of the outages, CenterPoint, Houston’s main power distributor, had over 2.26 million customers with no electricity. When Cox died three days after the storm hit, over a million were still waiting on a fix.

Beryl’s official death toll will likely continue to climb, but experts said the final number is expected to have major gaps, especially among those found dead in powerless buildings with triple-digit temperatures.

“The count of people dying from heat-related illness is underestimated,” said Dr. Sadeer Al-Kindi, a cardiologist at Houston Methodist who has researched environmental health.

“Especially when people pass away at home. Even if you do an autopsy, there are no specific characteristics that you would find on an autopsy that would link to heat,” he said.

Instead, high temperatures cause victims’ organs to fail faster, and medical examiners often list a person’s cause of death as the liver failure, kidney failure or heart attack they can see, rather than the hyperthermia they cannot. Though Houston officials have kept tabs on Beryl losses, any “natural deaths” not filed as heat-triggered remain uncounted.

[…]

Data from heatstroke patients who have been treated since Hurricane Beryl offer a sense of proportion that death counts could be missing. In the days after the storm, the Houston Health Department tracked heat-related visits to area medical providers and saw that they ballooned to almost 3½ times the previous week’s tally.

Even before Beryl marked Houston’s second days-long power outage this year — a straight-line storm, or derecho, was the first culprit, in May — Texas’ heat death counts were on the rise. Data from the Department of State Health Services shows that at least 362 Texans died from the heat in 2023, the third record-breaking tally in as many years.

“We’re in this new climate right now. And all we know is it’s getting more unpredictable, more chaotic and hotter,” said Jeff Goodell, Austin-based author of “The Heat Will Kill You First.” Goodell said he thinks we’ll never know the full number of lives Beryl took because the heat death tallies we have now in the state are “the vaguest kind of guesses.”

I feel like we encountered a similar issue following the 2021 winter freeze, but that comparison wasn’t explored in this story. For obvious reasons, this is going to be a bigger problem going forward. Both the city and the county, as well as numerous private organizations, had cooling centers for people who needed them, but those people needed to know about them and be able to get to them. I don’t know what a good solution for this is, but surely making this part of the grid more resilient is on the menu, to reduce the number of people affected and the length of time power is out.

‘We were better prepared than ever’: John Whitmire defends Houston preparations for Hurricane Beryl.

Mayor John Whitmire and leaders of various first responder departments pushed back against claims the City of Houston was unprepared for Hurricane Beryl, which hit the city nearly two weeks ago as a Category 1 storm and left millions without power.

Whitmire said he called Sunday’s news conference at the Office of Emergency Management building to address what he said were comments by Council Member Edward Pollard that lives could’ve been saved if the city had been better prepared. Whitmire said the comments were made in news stories honoring Russell Richardson, a civilian employee of the Houston Police Department who was found dead in a car submerged in floodwaters near City Hall.

“I don’t know if Councilman Pollard got us confused with CenterPoint and their preparation,” Whitmire said, referencing CenterPoint Energy, the Houston-area electric utility under fire for the widespread power outages. “We were better prepared than ever, and to claim otherwise, it’s either dishonest or misinformed or both.”

Mary Benton, chief of communications for the mayor’s office, said after the news conference that Whitmire was referencing an ABC13 news story remembering Richardson. It included a clip of Pollard saying: “We were not fully mobilized. We were having our officers come in on the day of the storm, on the morning of the storm, putting those lives at risk.”

Pollard said his comments in the ABC13 story weren’t in response to questions about Richardson’s death but rather about city preparations. In an email statement, Pollard said his heartfelt condolences go out to Richardson’s family. Pollard said he hasn’t cast blame on any individual and has the “utmost respect” for first responders.

“It is deeply disheartening to see our city resort to a press conference aimed at smearing me politically. My comments were solely focused on the logistics of mobilizing our officers a day earlier to ensure their safety and readiness before Hurricane Beryl hit,” Pollard said.

Honestly, I have no particular complaint with the city’s response to Beryl. I agree that CenterPoint was the big problem. The Mayor has said he plans to hold them accountable. It’s not clear to me what he has the power to do, but I look forward to seeing what he has in mind.

Not directly related to Beryl, but on the subject of excessive heat and the danger it represents, there’s this: A federal utility assistance program favors cold-weather states, giving less money to hot places like Texas.

Air conditioning is increasingly necessary to keep homes at safe temperatures during the summer — especially in states like Texas, where temperatures can exceed 100 degrees for weeks on end. That creates dangerous situations as electric bills overwhelm low-income households’ budgets.

The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) is the federal government’s answer to that, helping people keep the heat on in winter and the AC running in the summer.

But the program’s funding formula favors cold-weather climates. Advocates and researchers say that funding for LIHEAP, administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, should be increased to address the impacts of climate change and better reflect the need in hot states like Texas, Florida and Arizona.

LIHEAP, which also provides funding for weatherization to make homes more energy efficient and crisis assistance for households at imminent risk of being disconnected, was first conceived to address the rising cost of fuel oil for heating coming out of the energy crisis in the 1970s and early 1980s. Today, the program covers only 7.6% of low-income residents’ total heating and cooling costs in Texas, compared to nearly 23% of total costs in a northern state like Minnesota, according to an analysis by Grace Jensen at Georgetown University.

A Duke University study found that only 5% of program funds were used for cooling assistance nationwide between 2001 and 2019. Half went to heating.

“You have a program that was stamped in time during a crisis 40 years ago that hasn’t been revisited in this current moment of climate change and extreme heat,” said Diana Hernandez, a sociologist at Columbia University who studies energy insecurity in low-income communities. “It’s really to the detriment of people that endure extreme temperatures but don’t have the safety net to support them through those hard times.”

LIHEAP, launched in 1981, at first distributed money in part based on how often a state experienced cold weather. That changed several years later after senators urged Congress to rethink the calculation.

Even so, distribution of funds still disadvantages hot states because it averages cold and hot days over a 30-year period, which doesn’t reflect how quickly the planet is warming now.

“The rules haven’t caught up with the change in temperature,” said Mark Wolfe, executive director of the National Energy Assistance Directors Association.

Many states provide supplemental funding to help close the gaps. Others, like Texas, do not. “The lack of federal funding is amplified,” Wolfe said.

Of course we don’t. I don’t know how much of this could help in power outage situations, but plenty of folks need assistance in normal times too, even more so with temperatures rising. Congress and the Legislature need to get on this.

After Beryl, Houstonians rush to rescue injured and abandoned wildlife left by the storm.

Almost immediately after Beryl tore through Houston, leaving a path of torn-up trees and battered homes and more than 2 million homes and businesses without power, the Houston Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals faced a day-long line of Houstonians with injured wildlife at its center just north of Memorial Park. The storm had knocked hundreds of baby birds from their nests, separated week-old opossums from their mothers and destroyed the habitat of many others.

Normally, the intake at the SPCA is about 40 to 50 animals a day. A day after the day after the storm, that figure surpassed 700. By week’s end, some 1,800 animals had come through the doors.

More than a week later, [Brooke Yahney, director of wildlife at the Houston SPCA] and others still are caring for hundreds of animals.

“We were moving so fast,” Yahney said. “It was hard to really think about it, but we’d take an animal in, triage to see what it needed, settle it down and then repeat.”

Extreme weather, such Hurricane Beryl, can have an immense impact on wildlife in the Houston area, according to the National Wildlife Federation. Hurricanes destroy coastal and green habitats, displace wildlife and increase human and animal conflict.

Usually, wildlife is able to bounce back from drought, flooding or storms. However, as hurricanes and other extreme weather events become more intense or frequent due to climate change, increased habitat destruction and displacement could leave wildlife struggling to rebound.

The intake level is back to normal now, thankfully. There are some nice animal pictures in the story if you want to see them.

Finally, do you wonder if your neighborhood is unlucky with power outages? Well, this story with maps about the problem areas that CenterPoint has will either ease your worries or send you into a state of rage. Click carefully. My neighborhood is fine, but there’s a significant swath of the Heights that isn’t. See for yourself.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Brace yourselves for the 2028 RNC in Houston

Just a reminder, this is looming in our future.

Houston isn’t taking any chances.

As host of the next Republican National Convention in 2028, the city has dispatched teams to Milwaukee this week to get a handle on how to prepare for the crush of visitors, intense security and traffic that comes with hosting what is the biggest political gathering for the GOP in the nation.

Since Friday, officials from the city have been taking note of the security logistics and overall operations to try and see what is working and what they might have to do differently when the convention comes to Texas, bringing with it 50,000 visitors and an estimated $200 million economic impact.

“It’s an invaluable amount of time we are able to spend so we can assure 2028 the best convention that the Republicans have ever hosted,” said Michael Heckman of Houston First Corporation, city’s destination marketing organization.

While Houston has plenty of experience hosting big conventions and sporting events, the intense security measures over a week make hosting a national convention a different challenge.

Wisconsin County Executive David Crowley said about 4 square miles of downtown Milwaukee has been completely blocked off to residents. Military grade barriers and law enforcement-manned checkpoints strictly control all access in and out of the downtown.

“Making sure that this is secure is probably the biggest logistical thing you have to deal with,” Crowley said.

See here for the previous entry. My advice remains the same, avoid at all costs. I feel bad for the shops and restaurants that will be inside the security perimeter, as they will get hosed by that restriction, but I feel worse for the rest of us.

Posted in Elsewhere in Houston, The making of the President | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

President Biden drops out of 2024 race

I think we all were expecting this to happen at some point. It was still quite the jolt to see the first breaking news alert on a Sunday afternoon. Lots of people had their weekends cut short. One of my first reactions was a generalized plea to the universe to live in a slightly less consequential time. I don’t think I’m going to get that wish.

Anyway. You can read all you want about this elsewhere. I join President Biden in endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris as his successor on the ballot, and hopefully for the next four years. If we’re going to do this, let’s get it done.

And because I’m sure you’re wondering about this:

The Texas election code states that the Texas Secretary of State can certify a political party’s replacement nominee for president or vice president if the original nominee withdraws, dies or is declared ineligible by the 74th day before the presidential election day, which is Aug. 23 this year, if the party’s state chair submits the replacement nominee no later than 5 p.m. of the 71st day before the election day, which is Aug. 26.

This means if Biden drops out of the presidential race against Donald Trump, the Democratic Party could select a new nominee during its national convention Aug. 19-22 just in time for the nominee to appear on the Texas ballot.

A timely article, that one. I’m happy to be part of the process to pick a nominee in CD18, but that’s way above my pay grade. Let’s get this done and get back to focusing on the main issue, which is beating that other guy. We all have our work to do to make that happen.

Posted in Election 2024, The making of the President | Tagged , , , , | 10 Comments

What happens now in CD18

The Chron is already raising the question.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee

Under state law, the Harris County Democratic Party’s executive committee will have until Aug. 26 to nominate a candidate to run in the Nov. 5 general election.

If the committee does not choose a candidate in time, then the Texas Democratic Party would have two days, or until Aug. 28, to make the choice.

Chad Dunn, a lawyer for the Texas Democratic Party, said state party rules advise that, if possible, there should be at least 10 days from the creation of the vacancy before a meeting is called.

County executive committees will sometimes create an informal filing period, or they may create a survey for candidates to fill out, or they may notice the meeting and ask the candidates to show up in person and make their pitch in front of the committee, Dunn said.

The relevant law is here. It’s the same as it was when then-Commissioner El Franco Lee died in 2016, with the Democratic precinct chairs in Precinct 1 – a group that includes me – picking a new nominee for the office, as he had been up for election that year. Given that, I expect it will be more or less the same this time around, with the precinct chairs of CD18 – again, a group that includes me – convening sometime between now and August 26 to name a nominee for November.

I don’t care to speculate beyond that at this time. I’m sure there are plenty of people who will be interested in being that nominee, and I’m equally sure it won’t be long before the first announcement of such interest appears in my mailbox. I’ll let you know when that happens and as we proceed.

As the story notes, there should also be a special election to fill out the remainder of Rep. Jackson Lee’s term. Greg Abbott has the discretion to call that election and set the date for it. I don’t know when that might be – it could be in September, it could be on Election Day. Assuming we have a nominee for November, that person ought to be the clear frontrunner, but strange things can happen. The Trib has more.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Behold the US High Speed Rail map

May I live long enough to see this happen.

The U.S. High Speed Rail Association (USHSR) published a map outlining its proposal for a new 17,000-mile national high-speed rail network across the United States, which it claims will “cut our carbon footprint by epic proportions.”

Under the plan, which the USHSR proposes to build in four stages, it would be possible to travel between Seattle, Washington; San Diego, California; Miami, Florida; and Boston, Massachusetts, entirely on 220-mile-per-hour high-speed rail lines.

The past few years have seen a renaissance in high-speed rail interest across the United States, following decades of little activity. A number of lines are either proposed or under construction. Integrated high-speed rail networks already exist across much of Western Europe, Japan, and China, which, according to Statista, had a 25,000-mile-long network in 2021.

The first stage of the new network proposed by the USHSR would see construction focused around seven regions, including lines connecting Dallas to San Antonio and Houston, Chicago to Minneapolis and Detroit, and New York City to Washington, D.C.

This stage includes the completion of the California High-Speed Rail, a line already under construction that is intended to run between San Francisco and Los Angeles. It also proposes a line linking Las Vegas, Nevada, to Los Angeles, similar to a line currently being built that will connect Las Vegas to southern California.

Also incorporated into this stage are plans to build a new high-speed rail line connecting Houston and Dallas in Texas, which President Biden endorsed in principle in April but has yet to receive full approval. Planning is also underway on a high-speed rail line linking Dallas to Fort Worth, though details remain vague at this stage.

The second stage of the USHSR’s plan would extend the lines built in the first stage, with the northeast corridor line going all the way up to Boston and Charlotte, North Carolina. The Texas line would be extended to the east and north via New Orleans and Nashville, linking up with the network built in the first stage around Chicago.

[…]

Speaking to Newsweek about the plan, Andy Kunz, CEO of the USHSR, said: “The Obama-Biden Administration set a goal of giving 80 percent of Americans access to high-speed rail within 25 years. Such nationwide access remains our goal.”

The last mention I have of the U.S. High Speed Rail Association is back in 2015. There was a lot of train-based optimism in the early days of the Obama presidency, then there was the 2010 election and pretty much everything came to a screeching halt. I can only imagine where things might be if we had started building some of this stuff 15 years ago, but if I go too far down that rabbit hole I will also start thinking about the Universities line and what could have been here, and I don’t need that kind of black cloud today. Suffice it to say that if the USHSR comes anywhere close to that 25-year goal, it will be a miracle and a wonderful accomplishment.

Two additional notes: One, while there’s a Dallas-San Antonio line proposed for Phase 1 of this project, I’m not aware of any serious effort to make it happen as yet. The idea gets noted in the occasional story, but if there’s an actual entity working on it, it has escaped my notice. And two, building a line from Houston to New Orleans makes at least as much sense as Houston to Dallas. Too far to drive comfortably, yet a hassle to fly, whereas a train ride at that speed would make a day trip very doable. If I’m gonna dream about this stuff, I’ll put that on the list.

On a related note, if we are going to try to build some high speed rail, let’s do it right.

In that context, the NYU researchers argue, now is the time to adopt some best practices. For example: Washington should make sure that all American high-speed rail projects are designed with the same standards and equipment, rather than letting each state or company reinvent the rolling stock. With compatible trains, tracks, and wiring, these nascent projects may one day connect to form a national network. States may be laboratories of democracy, but they do not need to be laboratories of high-speed rail technology.

Otherwise we’ll end up repeating the mistake of railroads in the American South, which in 1886 had to move all their tracks three inches closer together to be linked with the more developed northern network. A more modern-day debacle along those lines is CalTrain, which pursued a signaling system at great expense that was incompatible with the future California High-Speed Rail project, which may one day connect San Francisco to Los Angeles.

Standardization has another benefit. Currently, it’s hard for railroads to buy things like trains in the U.S., since the market is too small to support domestic suppliers. The nation’s various high-speed projects could catalyze a domestic industry by all buying the same stuff.

For that to happen, explains Eric Goldwyn, one of the report’s authors, Washington must take the lead on planning American high-speed rail. No other country has built this infrastructure without a coordinated, national approach that can impose standards, supply funding, and concentrate expertise. “We don’t need more maps. That is not our problem,” Goldwyn says. “What we need is someone who has the power to translate map into steel and concrete—a five- and 10-year plan with funding and someone saying what’s happening.”

National leadership could do other things, too, like spearhead workforce development and university programs to deepen the talent pool for HSR development and operations, and forge connections with companies. Who among us had the chance to take High-Speed Rail Engineering in college?

With a bank of rail experts in Washington and universities churning out grads with relevant skills, individual projects could reduce their reliance on consultants and do more work in-house. (This was also a recommendation of a previous Transit Costs Project study about local mass transit.) To take a related example, for the price of one consultant contract to study whether to put trash in garbage bins or not, you could hire 10 in-house experts for four years to create a culture of trash expertise at the heart of local government.

Finally, the report suggests, the U.S. should reform the way big infrastructure projects get planned and permitted—also a hot topic at the moment for transmission lines, solar farms, and wind farms. Most rail projects in the U.S., for example, spend most of their planning phase trying to overcome federal environmental review, rather than paying attention to non-environmental planning basics like relocating underground utilities and buying land. This winds up costing them later, when they need to study everything all over again, and in some cases change plans entirely.

Similarly, fear of litigation can force infrastructure planners to submit more than a dozen detailed routes for some sections in order to show that they have studied all possible alternatives. Imagine the time and expense of doing that for a home improvement project. Now imagine doing it for 300 miles of trains running at 220 miles per hour.

This is the cited report. There’s only one way to get this stuff, and that’s an all-Democratic federal government. (Well, that and federal court reform too, which again as long as I’m dreaming I may as well include.) The 2024 election is about a lot of important things. This is not high on the list of them. But it’s there, and this is how we get it. Take it from there.

Posted in Planes, Trains, and Automobiles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Weekend link dump for July 21

“Utah’s Republican Governor Spencer Cox has said he won’t vote for Donald Trump in November”.

“Why Abortion Bans Keep Getting Passed, Even Though They’re Unpopular”.

Softball will once again be an Olympic sport in 2028, when the Games are in Los Angeles. The softball games, however, will be in Oklahoma City.

Here’s another story about the abandoned hippos of former Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, the havoc they have been wreaking, and the increasingly desperate attempts to control their population.

RIP, Jacoby Jones, former wide receiver for three NFL teams including the Houston Texans and Baltimore Ravens, with whom he won a Super Bowl.

RIP, Ken Hoffman, longtime Houston culture and food writer and radio personality. His “Drive-Thru Gourmet” reviews of fast food offerings were always fun to read. There’s no one in the local media landscape like him. He will be missed.

RIP, James B. Sikking, actor best known for Hill Street Blues and Doogie Howser, MD.

“But Murray lived in an era of Jim Crow and legalized ethnic terror, and “Mother Maria” lived in Nazi-occupied France. If they could find the courage to live and act in hope, rejecting violence and despair, then perhaps so can we.”

“Alec Baldwin Trial Ends On ‘Technicality’ Also Known As ‘Basic Constitutional Rights‘”.

“The Teamsters are sending a shot across the bow, warning that they remain “far apart” in talks with the studios with less than three weeks to go before their contract expires.”

On the plus side, IATSE has ratified a new three-year deal.

“If you can’t take in this nonsense and say, nope, I’m going to head straight to Milwaukee and make the case against this dangerous degenerate, then you just need to resign or get out of the way and make room for someone who can. No complaining, no whining. Act.”

RIP, Joe “Jellybean” Bryant, former NBA player and WNBA coach, father of Kobe Bryant.

That Ingrid Andress National Anthem was pretty wretched, wasn’t it? Didn’t start out all that bad, but I couldn’t listen to it all the way through. Too much secondary embarrassment on her behalf. Anyway, that led me to this list of great National Anthem performances. The 1943 Duke Ellington one was a treat – I loved the snappy tempo (it came in at under a minute!) and the arrangement. I just can’t believe there’s no recordings of Grover Washington doing one of his legendary renditions.

RIP, Bob Newhart, legendary comedian and actor whose classic The Button Down Mind of Bob Newhart album was recorded right here in Houston, at the now-defunct Tidelands club.

Also, Lou Dobbs has died.

“A new proposal to start the women’s [college] basketball season days earlier than the men’s season could amplify the growing spotlight on the women’s game.”

“Vance was one of only eight Republican senators willing to go this hard for menstrual surveillance by state law enforcement agencies. The other 20 signatories are members of the House and a quick review of the names shows they are mostly hardcore Freedom Caucus types. But think about it: even in the House GOP caucus, they could only get 20 people to sign this thing. That’s how extreme it is. But JD Vance signed.”

RIP, Abner Haynes, AFL MVP running back for the Dallas Texans, Kansas City Chiefs, and others. He also overcame an infamous coin toss error in the 1962 AFL Championship Game.

Happy third anniversary to Nowhere Bookshop.

“One emerging theory by investigators, based in part on the timing and subjects of his online searches, is that the shooter was looking to carry out a mass shooting and that the Trump event’s proximity and timing offered the most ready opportunity.”

Congratulations to Brittney and Cherelle Griner on the birth of their son.

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged | 1 Comment

RIP, Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee

Very sad news.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee

U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, a towering political figure in Houston for decades and one of the longest-serving members in Congress, died Friday. She was 74.

Earlier this year, Jackson Lee had announced that she’d been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. She had been in remission for over a decade from breast cancer.

Often a gusty public speaker with a driving work ethic, Jackson Lee appeared at countless community meetings, funerals and official and unofficial events in her district each week. But she had curtailed public appearances in recent weeks and looked frail at the few recent events she attended.

“Today, with incredible grief for our loss yet deep gratitude for the life she shared with us, we announce the passing of United States Representative Sheila Jackson Lee of the 18th Congressional District of Texas,” her family wrote in a statement. “A fierce champion of the people, she was affectionately and simply known as ‘Congresswoman’ by her constituents in recognition of her near-ubiquitous presence and service to their daily lives for more than 30 years.”

Jackson Lee was waging a reelection battle in the Democratic stronghold where she was first elected in 1994, cementing her status as a relentless campaigner who logged commanding back-to-back wins.

She became known as a fierce advocate for women and people of color, her House floor speeches and her zeal to use the media to get her message out. Hardly a week went by in which she wasn’t on a local TV station or stepping to the microphone at any number of events or news conferences.

Most recently, she’d lent her support to a federal version of the CROWN Act, aimed at ending discrimination based on hairstyles favored by people of color.

Jackson Lee gained a reputation as a demanding boss who sometimes could be tough on staff, brought to light most recently after a recording of a politically damaging exchange with a low-level staffer surfaced during her unsuccessful mayoral campaign last year.

After her mayoral loss to state Sen. John Whitmire, Jackson Lee changed course and announced she’d run for her congressional seat again. She was poised to secure a 15th term in office this fall after achieving a decisive victory in the March primary against upstart challenger Amanda Edwards.

Former Mayor Sylvester Turner said Friday night that what made Jackson Lee “truly exceptional” was “her uncanny ability to be everywhere, working every day for those who needed a champion.”

“Even if you disagreed with her politics, you had to respect her work ethic,” Turner said. “We can honestly say Sheila Jackson Lee left it all on the field.”

There’s a ton of coverage on this, and I’ll link to some at the end of this post. There are many tributes to Rep. Jackson Lee on social media as well, and most of the ones I’ve seen on Facebook include a photo of her with the person posting about her. That’s who Rep. Jackson Lee was, she was of the district, and she was there for the people she represented. I was running errands yesterday with Audrey, who brought up Rep. Jackson Lee’s death. I told her that she had been my Representative in Congress for almost 30 years, that she worked tirelessly for the district and her constituents, and that it was a little disconcerting for me to think about not having her as my Representative any more.

One of the criticisms you hear sometimes about long-term elected officials – “career politicians”, said with a snarl of contempt – is that they lost touch with the people that elected them. That was the exact opposite of the case with Sheila Jackson Lee. I’ve talked to a lot of people about her and what might happen after we got the news of her cancer diagnosis, and the thing everyone said in our conversations was that she was always there. Community meetings, school events, political rallies and parades and protests and celebrations, funerals and disaster recovery efforts, she was there. Here’s a couple of Twitter posts to illustrate:

Those are all reporters, not political allies. There’s so much more that could be said, and I hope we get a good and proper biography of her in the near future. Speaking as a longtime constituent, she was one of a kind and will truly be missed. Rest in peace, Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee. Here’s additional coverage from the Chron, and the Associated Press, the Trib, Houston Landing, Reform Austin, and the Press have more.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

No more “CenterPointLe$$”

We’ll always have the memes.

No longer seen at I-10 and Sawyer

Drivers passing by the I-10 West freeway will no longer see the “CenterPointLe$$” graffiti tag.

Friday morning, city workers removed the words aimed at the utility company’s response to Beryl — a hurricane that left more than 2 million customers without power last Monday. Mayor John Whitmire’s office did not immediate respond to request for comment.

By midday Friday, CenterPoint Energy’s outage map showed less than 4,000 customers without power, restoring about 99% of its consumers’ power.

Not a word about why it was removed? I mean sure, it was graffiti, in particular graffiti in a dangerous-to-reach place, and the city is correct to want to discourage people from mimicking that (though that didn’t seem to stop the “Be Someone” tag). But did they have to rush? I guess the point was made, and now we move on. Whoever did the original artwork, I salute you.

Posted in Elsewhere in Houston, Hurricane Katrina | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Maybe the Texas Lottery Commission shouldn’t be helping to pick winners

Great followup to an earlier bonkers story about guaranteeing a Lottery win.

Last spring, a small group of Texas lottery retailers received word that a single customer wanted to arrange a guaranteed lottery win. No player had matched all six numbers for months, so by mid-April the Lotto Texas jackpot had soared to $95 million. To acquire it, the customer was prepared to spend millions of dollars to buy up every, or nearly every, possible numeric combination in the draw — about 26 million tickets.

The operation should have been apparent to the Texas Lottery Commission, which closely monitors sales. Then-Executive Director Gary Grief later described buying in the days leading up to the April 22, 2023, draw as “through the roof.” Instead of the typical 1-2 million tickets Lotto Texas games sell, it sold more than 28 million.

[…]

Records show the agency first helped the big buyer by jumping to fill several unusual last-minute requests for large orders of extra equipment.

To process millions of tickets in the 72 hours between Lotto draws, the retail outlets behind the operation needed to quickly and dramatically ramp up their operations. Lottery tickets must be purchased and printed on state-issued lottery terminals; most retailers have one or two of the machines.

The outlet owned by an Austin-based company, Lottery.com, hadn’t sold any tickets for months, records show. But on April 19, the day buying for the April 22 Lotto draw began, the company submitted an urgent order to the lottery commission.

“Retailer has requested 10 additional terminals,” the request read, adding: “Will need lots of terminal paper. Install ASAP per CK” — referring to a lottery commission employee. The request was filled, records show.

The same day, a Waco retailer affiliated with Lottery.com, ALTx, filed another rush order. It, too, had sold virtually no tickets in recent months, according to state lottery sales data. Now, correspondence with the lottery commission stated, “Retailer has requested 5 additional terminals ASAP.” Records show the terminals were delivered.

In North Texas, meanwhile, a third retailer owned by a company called Lottery Now also sprang to life. At the beginning of the year, its store outside of Fort Worth had a single lottery terminal. As the big-jackpot game approached, however, it asked the Texas Lottery Commission to help it acquire another dozen ticket terminals, which records show was done.

A Texas Lottery Commission spokesman characterized the last-minute orders and the agency’s response as business as usual: “Retailer requests for additional lottery terminals for the specified period followed the agency’s standard process.”

In its eagerness to help the retailers with their last-minute equipment requests to handle the big operation, the lottery commission also appears to have ignored its own rules.

Because the Austin-area outlet owned by Lottery.com had been idle for so long, it required the lottery commission to reactivate its state-issued retailer license before it could start processing tickets for the April 22 draw.

“We are ready to resume operations,” a Lottery.com representative wrote on April 19 at 9:42 a.m. An agency contact replied seven minutes later: “Your status is now active.”

Yet state regulators appear not to have conducted due diligence. Texas law requires lottery retailers to conduct business other than ticket sales. They also must be open and accessible to the public when processing tickets.

Lottery.com’s Austin operations appear not to have met those requirements during the frantic April 22 operation.

Yet the agency did more than merely observe as one buyer effectively stacked the odds of securing the jackpot, records show. Behind the scenes, the lottery commission actively helped orchestrate a sure-thing win in a state-sponsored game of chance, seemingly ignoring its own rules in the process.

See here for the background, and be sure to read the rest. As the story notes, nothing illegal happened here, but the Lottery Commission (allegedly, they dispute at least some of the allegations in the story) violated their own rules. While it’s possible that they took this course of action because why not, they didn’t think there was any reason not to, it’s not at all hard to imagine some kind of shady, possibly illegal, arrangement at the bottom of it all. I’m sure there’s more investigation going on, perhaps we’ll see something.

In any event, the company at the forefront of this was at best in poor operating condition and a financial risk, with their ability to pay for the tickets in question, which the Lottery Commission seems to have overlooked. It’s honestly a little confusing why the Lottery Commission helped these guys out; I hope that question continues to be pursued. Again, nothing illegal happened here, but other states have seen things like this happen before, and some of them have changed their rules to prevent repeats. Perhaps the Lege should look at that.

I’m also still kind of hung up on the logistics of this all. I mean, 26 million tickets were sold, and if they all had to be printed on those terminals, there had to be a hell of a lot of them working on that to accomplish the task in the short amount of time available. That presumably means a lot of coordination, and likely a small army of people to handle and index the physical output. How exactly did they pull this off? And how hilarious would it have been if they had had to split the jackpot with one or more other winners? I hope we get some more answers in the future.

Posted in Jackpot! | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Another class action lawsuit filed against CenterPoint

You’re involved in this one.

Seen at I-10 and Sawyer

Michael Fertitta, son of Rockets owner and Landry’s Inc. CEO Tilman Fertitta, is one of three lawyers representing plaintiffs in a lawsuit against CenterPoint Energy in the wake of Hurricane Beryl.

The lawsuit, which was filed on behalf of all Houston residents who lost power, claimed CenterPoint’s response in the aftermath of Beryl constituted fraud, gross negligence and created a public nuisance. The firm is hoping to get it certified as a class-action lawsuit.

“Despite the frequency of storms, CenterPoint failed to prepare the grid against a predictable weather event and has refused to take accountability for their incompetencies and system’s failure.” the plaintiffs’ original petition stated. “CenterPoint’s grid is one of the most unstable despite being in a hurricane-prone location.”

[…]

The plaintiffs accused CenterPoint of failing to devote adequate resources — both in terms of tree maintenance and available linemen — in preparation for Beryl, which made landfall ten days ago. In some cases, the plaintiff’s claimed the company failed to trim trees overhanging power lines for years.

“Customers have reported that trees on their property have not been trimmed in over five years, despite the fact the trees were touching the wires on their property,” the suit alleged. “Those trees were in prime position to take out power lines, and on July 8, they did so.”

A representative for CenterPoint told the Chronicle that the company does not comment on ongoing litigation.

The company’s communication with customers also plays a central role in the plaintiffs’ allegations. The suit claimed CenterPoint committed fraud by allegedly lying about the number of lineman on standby.

The company’s outage map, which was released shortly after the storm, also misled customers into believing they had power when they did not, the lawsuit alleged.

“Many of its customers received inaccurate, false statements regarding the restoration of power,” the suit stated. “CenterPoint either knew that these representations were false when it made them or it made these representations recklessly.”

Add this to the Buzbee/restaurants lawsuit. I’m sure there will be others.

Here are some questions I would like to see addressed the next time there is a story about one of these lawsuits:

1. What has to happen for this to be certified as a class action lawsuit? What happens if that certification is denied?

2. If the Feritta lawsuit is certified as a class action, what if anything do we the plaintiffs have to do to collect on whatever damages there may be?

3. How likely are any of these lawsuits to succeed? If they win at the district court level, how likely are they to survive the appeals process?

4. How long is it likely to take to get to a resolution?

Not all of these questions have straightforward answers, of course, but some informed speculation based on similar lawsuits from the past would be fine. Right now, I have no idea what to expect. Are all the usual lawyer and law professor media contacts on vacation right now or something? Please send help.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina, Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

In case you’d been nostalgic for Y2K…

Here’s CrowdStrike to remind you what could have been.

A massive IT outage that disturbed Microsoft customers and businesses across the world on Friday caused flight delays and cancellations at Houston airports, led to the temporary closure of Port Houston and forced Texas A&M University to cancel classes.

The far-reaching outages stemmed from a faulty software update for the Texas-based cybersecurity firm, CrowdStrike. It affected users of Microsoft Windows from Sugar Land to Germany to India.

The company said the problem did not stem from a security incident or a cyberattack, though it later warned hackers may try to take advantage of the technical issues.

“The system was sent an update, and that update had a software bug in it, and caused an issue with the Microsoft operating system,” CrowdStrike CEO and President George Kurtz said on the TODAY Show. “And we identified this very quickly, and remediated the issue, and as systems come back online as they’re rebooted, they’re coming up and they’re working.”

Affected users opened their computers to find what’s known as the “blue screen of death,” with a message that read: “It looks like Windows didn’t load correctly.” CrowdStrike boasts nearly 300 of the Fortune 500 companies as customers, and the outage led five airlines to ground all flights for a time.

In Houston, the outages briefly shut down the city’s ports, among the largest in the world, on Friday morning. It affected computers at Houston’s airports, along with operating systems for United and American airlines, leading to flight delays and cancellations.

Harris Health System, the region’s safety net system for poor and uninsured residents, canceled most elective procedures and shuttered outpatient clinics Friday morning. And Texas A&M nixed classes as it dealt with its own effects.

The outage did not affect local 911 operations or Houston police, nor did it hinder CenterPoint Energy, Houston’s electricity provider, as the company continued its effort to restore customers who lost power during Hurricane Beryl 11 days earlier. As of Friday afternoon, the company had reduced the number of customers without power to less than 4,000.

By the afternoon, many systems returned to normal and airlines resumed operations, trying to catch up on schedule interruptions. In the afternoon, Kurtz said the company had mobilized all of its resources to help customers restore service.

For the record, my team uses CrowdStrike quite a bit. It’s a great tool for cyber security. We’re not the ones responsible for fixing it at our workplace, but I spent a bunch of time on conference calls with those who are. Mostly I’m glad it didn’t make any lingering effects from Beryl worse. Hope your Friday wasn’t too badly affected by this.

Posted in Technology, science, and math | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Yeah, COVID is still out there

Not the threat it once was, thankfully, but still a threat.

The arrival of summer is once again coinciding with an uptick in COVID-19 infections in Houston.

Infections are on the rise for the fifth summer in a row in the Bayou City, with hospitals reporting an increase in patients with COVID-19 and the viral load in Houston’s wastewater at its highest level in more than five months. Texas is also among seven states where the virus is circulating at “very high” levels, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The increase is driven by the prevalence of what experts have dubbed the “FLiRT variants,” named for the technical names of their mutations. All of them, including the KP.3 variant that now accounts for 36.9% of infections nationwide, are descendants of the JN.1 variant that was widespread earlier this year.

Experts told the Chronicle that the FLiRT variants appear to be more adept at evading the immunity that someone might have from a COVID-19 vaccine or a prior infection. But the vaccine or an infection should still offer at least some protection, and medications like Paxlovid are still effective at treating an infection caused by the latest variants, experts said.

“People who are vaccinated or (previously) infected still have some degree of immunity,” said Dr. Cesar Arias, the co-director for the Center for Infectious Diseases Research at Houston Methodist. “That’s probably why we see a respiratory illness that tends to be mild in most cases.”

[…]

“We’re not seeing the huge numbers (of hospitalizations) we saw before,” said Catherine Troisi, an epidemiologist at the UTHealth Houston School of Public Health “It’s really a personal assessment of your risk.”

I’ve seen a few people in my circle post about getting COVID in recent weeks, so there’s your anecdotal data. Hadn’t heard many complaints about getting COVID in awhile. I’m up to date on my shots and am ready for the next booster when it comes down. Be careful and do be sure to stay at home till you feel better if you do get sick. Your Local Epidemiologist has more.

Posted in Elsewhere in Houston | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Another Friday Beryl roundup

Still lots to keep up on, so let’s get to it.

CenterPoint spent $800M on mobile generators. Where are they post-Hurricane Beryl?

Seen at I-10 and Sawyer

Over the last three years, CenterPoint Energy – the company in charge of delivering power to millions of customers in the Houston region – has spent $800 million on 20 massive generators. The hefty price tag was controversial at the time, but state regulators approved it because CenterPoint claimed the generators would keep the lights on during an extended power outage.

Last week, Hurricane Beryl led to massive outages in and around the nation’s fourth-largest city, leaving more than a million people in the dark for days. So, where were those generators?

It turns out that almost none of them were deployed in the wake of Hurricane Beryl, the Chronicle has found – even as some 90,000 people remained in the dark as of Tuesday afternoon.

That’s partly because even though CenterPoint has referred to the equipment as “mobile generation,” the vast majority of it is not actually that mobile. Fifteen of the generators – each with a capacity of 32 megawatts, big enough to power entire neighborhoods – take several days to assemble and cannot be moved without a special permit, which itself can take days to secure.

None of those generators have been put in service since CenterPoint first began renting them in 2021. Indeed, the company told the Chronicle this week that they are “not for rapid response use” and “are not designed to be ‘mobile’,” even though it has repeatedly described them as “mobile” in news releases, regulatory filings and memos to investors.

In Beryl’s wake, CenterPoint has deployed three of its remaining five large generators at a water processing plant and two senior living centers. Each of those is the size of a tractor-trailer and has a capacity of about five megawatts.

“It’s something that we have seen tremendous value from,” said CenterPoint executive Eric Easton in an interview with the Chronicle on Tuesday. He acknowledged that the larger 32-megawatt generators have never been used, but said they serve as a crucial “insurance policy” for even bigger power outages.

Houston-area leaders, consumer advocates and many trade groups disagree. They launched a fierce protest when CenterPoint first asked in 2022 to hike rates to cover the cost of leasing the generators.

But state regulators overruled them, ultimately allowing CenterPoint to recoup the cost of the generators – plus a 6.5% profit. They’ve already added about $1 per month to the average residential customer’s bill, and are expected to hike rates by at least another $3 a month in the coming years, records show.

“The math of these things just doesn’t work,” said Doug Lewin, a Texas energy analyst and publisher of the Texas Energy and Power Newsletter. “There are far better ways to spend money to get resiliency and reliability.”

It’s a long story that I knew little about, so read the rest. One of the more interesting pieces of this was the news that Oncor, a much bigger utility, went a lot smaller in its initial generator investment. This is the sort of thing that the Public Utility Commission and the Lege could reasonably and productively investigate, if they’re actually interested in making things better. Maybe this was a defensible idea that didn’t work out, and maybe it was a total boondoggle that should have been avoided. Either way, there ought to be lessons to learn from it, if we pursue them.

CenterPoint’s $2.3B plan is supposed to protect against extreme weather. Houston is skeptical.

Opposition to CenterPoint Energy’s nearly $2.3 billion “resiliency plan” to shore up its electric transmission and distribution infrastructure against extreme weather and other risks was already brewing among some Houston-area cities and consumer groups before Hurricane Beryl left a record number of the utility’s customers in the dark.

CenterPoint is now facing the ire of politicians and regulators who will investigate if it was underprepared for the Category 1 storm that crippled the company’s power lines and poles in the Houston region. Under pressure to do more to prepare for future storms, questions about whether CenterPoint’s desired investments are prudent have become even more relevant.

The plan, filed with the Public Utility Commission of Texas in April, includes such measures as replacing and upgrading equipment most susceptible to severe weather, elevating substations to avoid flooding damage, wildfire mitigation, moving of certain power lines underground, vegetation management and funding a city of Houston employee who would oversee implementation of power resiliency projects for city facilities.

Katie Coleman, managing partner at the Austin office of O’Melveny, the law firm representing the Texas Industrial Energy Consumers trade group, said her clients are concerned that CenterPoint includes existing projects in the resiliency plan. The trade association filed comments with the PUCT protesting the plan in June.

“It’s stuff that they were going to do anyway and that they should do anyway,” Coleman said.

Under House Bill 2555 passed last year, CenterPoint and other utilities can get approval from the PUCT for a rate increase to recover the costs of resiliency plans before those investments are made and the improvements are in service. In typical rate cases, they can only recover costs already incurred. That structure incentivizes utilities to recategorize existing programs as resiliency measures, Coleman said.

In Beryl’s aftermath, Coleman said she was worried CenterPoint and the PUCT will feel compelled to green-light proposals that could improve storm preparedness and response even a little bit, regardless of cost to consumers.

“What I’m worried is going to happen is, utilities are going to feel pressure to propose all these crazy undergrounding schemes and ridiculous resiliency plans, and then the commission is going to be under pressure to approve it,” Coleman said. “Because if they don’t, next time there’s an event, is it going to be their heads that roll? My concern is that people are going to lose sight of what’s actually effective, not to mention cost-effective.”

See above in re: things the PUC and the Lege could be doing to make things better. Really, the PUC should be feeling some heat here as well, since they approved CenterPoint’s plans. This is what “oversight” is about, y’all. See the Houston Landing story on the same topic for more.

There’s also this: What can state officials do to punish CenterPoint for Beryl failures? Here’s what history tells us.

Hurricane Beryl was not the first storm to test the performance of a Texas utility company after paralyzing much of East Texas’ power grid.

Entergy, the utility company that serves areas north and east of Houston, became so overwhelmed during its response to a rare ice storm in 1997 that municipal employees handled live wires on their own in the company’s absence. It took the company seven days to restore power to 120,000 customers during a week of freezing temperatures.

Not only was Entergy’s emergency response found lacking — much like critics have found CenterPoint’s hurricane response problematic — state regulators discovered that the company had slashed its maintenance spending, enhancing the storm’s natural ability to take down power lines.

“The January 1997 ice storm was certainly a severe storm that would have adversely affected even the best-maintained distribution system,” the state’s Public Utility Commission said in a 1998 order denying Entergy millions in profits it requested. “(Entergy’s) distribution system, however, is not the best-maintained.”

The 26-year-old case shows the rare but not unprecedented mechanism that the state’s regulators can use to hold utility companies accountable for failures when they find them. In the wake of Beryl, it could serve as a model for how the PUC might penalize CenterPoint if it is found to have acted negligently.

CenterPoint’s profits are guaranteed as part of the regulated monopoly it maintains in Houston, where the utility owns the network of electrical poles and wires carrying power into homes and businesses. Yet regulators have demonstrated they have discretion to reduce those profits when a utility fails to provide adequate maintenance and service to its customers.

I agree that could happen. Certainly enough people are mad enough to demand that it happens. Whether it will happen, well, let’s just say I’ll believe it when I see it.

And from the national perspective: Houstonians Are Using EVs to Power Their Houses After Beryl.

After Hurricane Beryl left more than 2 million people without power in Houston last week, Ford CEO Jim Farley noticed something interesting: Hundreds of F-150 owners in the Houston area were suddenly using their trucks to generate electricity.

Ford calls this system Pro Power Onboard, and it’s been marketed mostly as a way to run power tools in the field, in true car-commercial fashion. Let’s say you’re out on some rugged outcropping and you need to jump on your jackhammer for a few minutes. No problem.

But last week, it seemed, Houston-area drivers were suddenly using their cars to pinch-hit for their hapless local electricity provider. It’s a phenomenon that the company first noticed during the 2021 Texas ice storms and saw again last summer, when tornadoes hit Michigan, according to Mike Levine, Ford’s comms director. But the scale of the Houston blackout has coincided with the rise of Ford’s F-150 Lightning. Not only can the company’s massive electric truck put out four times as much power as the older gas-fueled models, but it can do so without noise or pollution for days at a time.

At present, most Houstonians who generate their own current after disasters (the city has seen more than its fair share) do so with diesel generators. But those are loud, dirty, dangerous, and expensive—creating a post-disaster “generator divide” between rich and poor neighborhoods. What if those generators one day yield to a world of electric vehicles, instant power sources at practically every suburban home?

“The use of an EV for disaster response, especially for residences, has been theorized for a long time,” observes Scott Shepard, director of EV research at the Center for Sustainable Energy, a nonprofit research group. After Japan’s earthquake-tsunami disaster in 2011, early electric vehicles played a key role in the recovery. But it has taken a while for EV manufacturers to adopt “bidirectionality,” making it easy to feed car power back to a fridge, a home, or the grid.

At the vanguard here, surprisingly enough, is the familiar yellow school bus. Vermont has purchased a fleet of electric school buses to serve as mobile power sources in the event of a blackout. What’s more, the vehicles can help deliver a little extra juice to the grid in the summer, taking the weight off dirty “peaker plants” called into service on hot days.

“Many people who work in the space have been captivated by that big vision, that electric vehicles will be part of the power grid in the U.S.,” says Jeff Allen, the head of Forth, a Portland-based electric-mobility think tank. Wind and solar power tend to deliver lots of energy on windy and sunny days, but little on still or cloudy days, presenting a challenge for power companies that need to send out essentially the same amount of energy regardless of the weather. “We have a lot of renewables. We need a lot of storage. We’re already paying for it—it’s just they’re on wheels.” Conveniently, these wheeled bundles of energy spend 95 percent of their time parked.

Fascinating, and not something I observed directly; we have a lot of old school generators in my neighborhood. I will just note that both Metro and HISD have both purchased or received funds to purchase electric buses. If any of them were mobilized for the immediate recovery efforts, I’m not aware of it. Maybe this should be a bigger part of our preparation and response for the next time we have a big power outage.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Still discussing the HISD bond proposal

There could still be changes, if the Board of Managers decides to do something other than be the usual rubber stamp.

About three weeks before its potential vote, Houston ISD’s Board of Managers held a special meeting Tuesday to question parts of the district’s plans for a $4.4 billion school bond package.

In response to dozens of questions from board members before the meeting, HISD leaders provided further details on the bond development process, the district’s planned career-and-technology education investments, and plans for oversight and community engagement if the bond passes. The board, which was not initially scheduled to meet in July, is expected to vote Aug.8 on whether the bond will appear on the Nov. 5 ballot.

[…]

At the board’s previous meeting in June, members heard from leaders of the school bond Community Advisory Committee, who shared a report outlining more than 20 recommendations that address “challenges, opportunities and questions” with the largest proposed bond in Texas history.

The committee said that the district also should reconsider spending $425 million on new CTE centers and instead plan to invest its resources on renovating or rebuilding existing campuses. During Tuesday’s meeting, multiple board members, including Janette Garza Linder and Cassandra Auzenne Bandy, questioned whether having a center in all four divisions was necessary.

“I’m still trying to wrap my head around the need for four (CTE) facilities,” Auzenne Bandy said. “We have talked a lot about ensuring that our students have access to state-of-the-art equipment, facilities to make sure they’re upskilled for the future. … It seems like we are bearing the burden of maintaining a state-of-the-art CTE facility times four.”

Miles said the new centers, if built, would help increase the number of students in HISD who have easy access to CTE programs that lead to high-wage careers and are prepared for college or career success after graduation.

He said HISD is building three new CTE centers because it’s not financially feasible to develop equitable, quality career programs at all the district’s high schools. The district currently has one career center — the Barbara Jordan Career Center — in the North Division, which would see renovations if the bond is approved.

“We have an obligation to help our students to be in the best position possible once they graduate, whether it’s going to college… (or) whether they pursue the marketplace with the high-skill, high-demand, high-wage jobs,” Miles said. “That is the challenge that we have.”

See here and here for some background. There’s more in this story about “no trust, no bond” and concerns about “co-locating” certain schools, which some people fear is a prelude to closing them. I don’t want to get into all that, I just want to say that I’m increasingly convinced that the CTE proposal is gilding the lily and it should be removed. Part of that is the feeling that the proposal is a back door way of expanding vocational education without having a proper policy discussion, and part of it is the belief that Mike Miles’ spending priorities remain out of whack, at least to me. Whether that will be reflected in the Board’s actions is not clear. They had some “concerns” about the budget as well, but didn’t do anything about it. I’ll keep my expectations low, thanks.

Posted in Election 2024, School days | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dispatches from Dallas, July 19 edition

This is a weekly feature produced by my friend Ginger. Let us know what you think.

This week, in news from Dallas-Fort Worth, it’s a grab bag of national, state, and local news. From important matters like reactions to last weekend’s shooting and Texas and the Metroplex showing up at the RNC to the trivial like the arrival of the Michelin Guide, we have something for everybody.

This week’s post was brought to you by the 40 best songs of 2024, according to the New York Times. Their music playlists are better than their opinion writing and their presidential news coverage.

Let’s dive right into things:

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Buzbee draws a crowd of plaintiffs

Apparently, lots of people would like to sue CenterPoint. Can’t really say I’m surprised.

Seen at I-10 and Sawyer

It took a week after Hurricane Beryl swept through Houston for CenterPoint to fully restore the power at Mechelle Tran’s Gulf Coast-inspired resaurant Riel.

She and Ryan Lachaine, the chef-partner of the well-liked neighborhood joint in Montrose, said there was a brief sense of relief Monday when the A/C and kitchen hood clicked on.

“It was like being on pins and needles the entire time,” Tran said. “Then there was also a sense of, ‘Am I going to survive this?’”

When the May derecho shut down Riel for three days, Tran said the restaurant simply “sucked it up” and reopened as soon as they could.

This time around, the financial loss is more significant: a majority of the inventory was thrown out, workers were still being paid even though the restaurant remained dark. On the first day back, they could only serve a limited takeout-only menu.

Houston restaurant operators expect to face severe weather events like Beryl; but keeping a restaurant closed for an extended period of time due to power outages could shut down business for good — especially during the already slow summer months.

Riel joined more than 100 restaurants that are now part of Tony Buzbee’s class-action lawsuit against CenterPoint. They claim CenterPoint’s negligence led to restaurants losing thousands of dollars and could contribute to businesses’ demise. The lawsuit mentions plaintiffs including restaurateurs such as Ben Berg and Hugo Ortega, along with restaurants such as Killen’s and Fung’s Kitchen.

“Nobody is in this to just get money from CenterPoint,” Tran said. “We’re so much at a loss for the dollar that the end goal is to fix a system that’s broken.”

[…]

Buzbee said class-action lawsuits require countless hours of documentation but that restaurants may have a stronger case because successful restaurateurs often “keep track of every penny they’ve lost.”

Houston restaurants of all sizes have signed onto the lawsuit, but it also includes a handful of plaintiffs in Galveston, including Mario’s and Saltwater Grill. Restaurants also tend to be in the spotlight more when it comes to media coverage and social media, he added.

“There has to be some sort of accountability on behalf of CenterPoint or they’re never going to change,” Buzbee said.

The Chronicle reached out to CenterPoint for comment but did not receive a response before publishing this story.

See here for the background. I have nothing but love and respect for the restaurants and their owners, who were absolutely put in a terrible position by the storm and CenterPoint’s response to it. They deserve to be made whole for their losses. Insurance will cover some of that, perhaps quite a bit of it, but I agree that providing some incentive for CenterPoint to do better next time is a good goal. The mechanism by which courts do that is monetary damages, so as far as that goes it is about getting money from CenterPoint. And I wish them well in that regard.

Beyond that, I’m mostly curious about the mechanics and likelihood of success of this lawsuit. I found this overview of class action lawsuits in Texas, which I googled around for because we usually don’t get those, just regular ol’ torts. I’d love to know what some actual lawyers think about this. How good a case does Buzbee have? Please let us know.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina | Tagged , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Five Texas cities to get into the 2024 Michelin Guide

All of the state’s food media goes crazy.

Buckle up, Texas, we are (finally!) getting a Michelin Guide. The French tire company and prestigious food authority confirmed via press release on Tuesday that Texas will be the newest location featured in its longtime travel guides.

According to the officials, Texas is the newest recipient of the dining honor. Pointing to Tex-Mex, barbecue, seafood and steaks, Michelin reps called Texas an easy choice. In the release, Michelin’s international director Gwendal Poullennec said, “Texas is a perfect fit for the MICHELIN Guide, based on the experiences of our anonymous Inspectors.”

The newest guide is set to be released later this year, with restaurants in Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio and Houston featured.

Michelin is secretive about its process, so it’s not clear if reviewers have already been to Texas, are being sent to Texas, or something in between. When the guide is officially released, expect (even) more tourists and longer reservation times at popular restaurants.

[…]

Though originating in France, Michelin Guides were first adopted by the U.S. in 2005, with New York City the first to be honored with a guide. In time, major cities across the country have been granted their own guides, with Chicago and Washington D.C. joining the ranks. More recent recipients have included Atlanta, Georgia and the entirety of Florida. Houston, and Texas as a whole, had been left out, despite our varied and award-winning restaurants.

Texas has long heard whispers of Michelin reps coming to town, with rumors circulating for years. It’s not like the state is lacking in culinary prowess. In the past few years, Houston has been home to dozens of James Beard Award winners and nominees, and even some of the best chefs in the country. The state has even been praised by social media stars like Keith Lee and Mr. Chime Time.

In a 2022 story for Chron.com, a Michelin representative noted that guides are awarded due to several factors, including “consumer demand, marketing strategy and sales potential.” However, the prestigious awards have largely followed the almighty dollar in its reach across America. The Miami Herald previously reported that local tourism boards in Florida pledged to pay Michelin up to $1.5 million over three years to entice reviewers to the state.

There was a recent CityCast Houston episode about why the Michelin Guide had not come to Houston yet, if you want to dig into the background a little. The DMN adds on.

The French company announced July 16, 2024 that it inked a deal to release a Michelin Guide for Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Austin and San Antonio. The news comes after years of speculation that Michelin was considering a move into Texas.

This partnership with Michelin — one of the biggest in the United States — was made with six groups: the visitors’ bureaus in Texas’ five biggest cities, plus Travel Texas, a state-funded entity located within the office of the governor’s economic development and tourism office. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

[…]

It was Texas’ time, said Dean Fearing. He is commonly referred to as one of the godfathers of Southwestern cuisine. He owns Fearing’s in the Ritz-Carlton in Uptown Dallas, and he’s been a chef in Texas since 1979.

“It is very important for Dallas,” he said. “Finally: We’re going to be able to compete with New York, San Francisco, Chicago and all the other cities that have Michelin.”

He called the news “huge.”

Visit Dallas, one of the entities that partnered with Michelin in North Texas, names “culinary influence” as one of the “five core pillars” of the city. In short, dining is one of Dallasites’ favorite pastimes.

“Culinary tourism and food have always been an important part of who we are as a destination,” said Craig Davis, president and CEO of Visit Dallas, via email.

He’s proud of the partnership between Michelin, Travel Texas and the four other Texas CVBs. The seven entities have been in talks for years.

“This guide provides Dallas visibility on a truly global stage,” Davis said.

The Michelin Guide Texas is expected to be released later in 2024.

Given the vast geography between the five Texas cities, Michelin inspectors have been eating in our restaurants for months, if not longer.

That’s exciting news by most accounts. It’s also worrisome.

“We’re all scared to death,” Fearing said.

Michelin is secretive about its review processes, and it isn’t clear how much of the Michelin Guide Texas is already written. Chefs at some of Dallas-Fort Worth’s best restaurants are already fearing the worst: What if they’ve already been reviewed? Is it too late?

“We’ve gotta be on, because who knows when they will come in?” Fearing said.

That story also notes the amount of money that Florida and other places have paid to get a Guide to their locations. So does this CultureMap story, which considers whether or not this is all worth the fuss.

Bringing the guide to Texas comes at a cost, but we don’t know what it is. For example, Florida paid $150,000 to launch its guide, while California paid $600,000 and Colorado paid $135,000. Michelin declined to comment on what fee, if any, statewide tourism board Travel Texas and local tourism boards in the five cities paid to bring the guide here.

“Contract terms are confidential. Travel Texas is working with Michelin on marketing and promotional efforts only. The agreement enables collaborative work to promote the area’s culinary offerings,” Michelin’s Carly Grieff writes in an email. “The Michelin Guide Texas project came to life thanks to the quality of the state’s culinary scene. The whole credit of this exciting project is the talent of Texas’ restaurant teams who embody culinary innovation. Without them and their exceptional work, it would have been impossible for the Michelin Guide to have the ambition of proposing a first selection of Texas restaurants in 2024.”

As rumors of Michelin’s arrival swirled, a debate has been taking place about whether it will be welcomed. Robb Report explored the topic in a 2023 article.

Aaron Bludorn, the chef-owner of three Houston-area restaurants who held one star as the executive of New York’s Cafe Boulud, told the magazine he wasn’t excited about it. “I grew tired of Michelin,” Bludorn told the magazine. “[There’s] freedom given without Michelin being here.”

“I don’t really see an argument as to why they shouldn’t come,” Dallas chef Casey La Rue said in the article. “Currently, the only reason to travel to Texas, from an outsider’s perspective, would be for barbecue. No one looks at the state or any of the major cities for anything other than that … If we had Michelin stars, then we would be able to get more recognition and [be] more legitimized.”

Others may wonder whether Michelin is relevant for a city with a diverse dining scene that caters to a wide range of price points. Will Michelin get Houston?

Typically, the guide’s highest two and three-star ratings tend to go to very expensive tasting menu establishments. In Houston, that would only include Mediterranean-inspired restaurant March and omakase counters like Neo and Hidden Omakase.

For example, will Tatemó, which has already received national recognition from Food & Wine and the James Beard Awards, earn at least one star for chef Emmanuel Chavez’s innovate, masa-based menu of Mexican cuisine? Or will its humble setting in a Spring Branch strip center and lack of an alcoholic beverage program relegate it to Bib Gourmand or Recommended status?

Will the inspectors make their way along Hillcroft and Long Point and Bellaire to search out Bib-worthy eats at places like Himalaya, Aga’s, Tacos Doña Lena, and Crawfish and Noodles? Or will educated diners citywide be scratching their heads and complaining about all of the places the guide “snubbed?”

I’m a devout casual-dining kind of guy, so this will likely be little more than a curiosity to me. That said, we certainly have a worthy food scene here, and Lord knows after Beryl it could use a jolt of good energy. Here’s hoping this gives the entire industry here a nice boost. Eater Austin, the San Antonio Report, the Dallas Observer, the Austin Chronicle, and the Houston Press all have more.

Posted in Food, glorious food, The great state of Texas | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Judge orders some Uvalde records to be released

Really hard to believe that this is still a contested issue, but here we are.

The school district and sheriff’s office in Uvalde must release their records and documents related to the Robb Elementary School shooting — including police body camera footage, 911 calls and communications, a Texas district court judge ruled last week.

A group of news organizations including The Texas Tribune sued the city of Uvalde, the Uvalde County Sheriff’s Office and the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District over access to the records after their open-records requests were repeatedly denied following the May 24, 2022 shooting. Lawyers representing the outlets on Monday announced the ruling from the 38th Judicial District Court of Uvalde County, touting it as a “victory for government transparency.”

[…]

“This ruling is a pivotal step towards ensuring transparency and accountability,” said Laura Prather, a media law attorney with Haynes Boone who represents the news organizations. “The public deserves to know the full details of the response to this tragic event, and the information could be critical in preventing future tragedies.”

The ruling by Judge Sid Harle was dated July 8 and it gives the sheriff’s office and the school district 20 days, or until July 28, to release “all responsive documents.”

A similar ruling from a Travis County state district judge last year ordered the Department of Public Safety to release law enforcement records, however DPS has appealed that order and has not yet released the data related to its investigation. Ninety-one of the agency’s troopers responded to the shooting, which drew a response from nearly 400 law enforcement officials.

See here, here, and here for some background. I assume this will be appealed, as the DPS decision was, which means we won’t actually see any of those records anytime soon. What’s wild to me is that for the most part, we already know a lot about what happened thanks to that Justice Department report earlier this year. What secrets do these organizations still have that they think are worth fighting to keep? I very much hope that someday soon we get to find out.

Posted in Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Texas blog roundup for the week of July 15

The Texas Progressive Alliance hopes everyone has recovered from Hurricane Beryl and gotten power back as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Continue reading

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Buzbee to file class action lawsuit against CenterPoint

Give the man credit, he knows how to take initiative.

Seen at I-10 and Sawyer

The Buzbee Law Firm, representing a cohort of Houston restaurants, is filing a class action lawsuit against CenterPoint Energy.

Attorney Tony Buzzbee released a statement on social media, stating the case makes claims of CenterPoint’s negligence and violations of the law. All of the restaurants suing lost power during Hurricane Beryl, and they are “fed up,” the statement reads.

The lawsuit will make a case that CenterPoint failed to invest in its infrastructure for years, maintain and upgrade equipment, and adequately train personnel, among other issues. Further, Buzbee asserts, CenterPoint has a monopoly by not giving residents a choice in their energy provider.

“As such, CenterPoint has a duty to act in a reasonable manner, not the grossly negligent and incompetent way it has conducted itself for years. Imagine, if the restaurants filing this case were to conduct their businesses in the way that CenterPoint has done, these restaurants would be out of business,” Buzbee said in his statement.

He states that the case is not about money, but about “forcing CenterPoint in court to do what the administrative, legislative and executive system has failed to require.”

Here’s an earlier version of the story, which includes an embed of the Instagram post. It’s not clear at this time who the plaintiffs are – neither story mentions any – or what laws Buzbee is claiming CenterPoint may have violated. My understanding is that as a utility CenterPoint is a legal monopoly, so forgive me if I’m a little skeptical of this. I can believe there’s a potential winning lawsuit against CenterPoint. I’m not sure this is it, but I Am Not A Lawyer, so take that for what it’s worth. Click2Houston has more.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina, Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Paxton appeals Annunciation House ruling

Totally expected, which doesn’t make it any less despicable.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will appeal an El Paso district judge’s ruling that blocked his efforts to close the Annunciation House networks of shelters for migrants crossing the border.

“For too long, Annunciation House has flouted the law and contributed to the worsening illegal immigration crisis at Texas’s border with Mexico,” Paxton said in a news release Monday. “I am appealing this case and will continue to vigorously enforce the law against any NGO engaging in criminal conduct.”

The appeal comes as Paxton has ramped up his efforts to stop Catholic organizations from providing services to migrants.

Ruben Garcia, the founder and executive director of Annunciation House, said the appeal was expected but still disappointing.

“It’s very, very difficult to believe that at the end of the day, this is not all the result of a political perspective,” Garcia told El Paso Matters.

El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz said the U.S. Catholic Church has expressed increasing concerns about efforts in Texas to use the immigration issue to restrict people from exercising their faith.

[…]

In the notice to [District Court Judge Francisco] Dominguez’s court Tuesday, the Attorney General’s Office said it is seeking a direct appeal to the Texas Supreme Court. Ordinarily, a district court ruling in El Paso would first be appealed to the El Paso-based 8th Court of Appeals.

All nine justices on the Texas Supreme Court are Republicans, like Paxton. Dominguez is a Democrat, as are two of the three members of the 8th Court of Appeals.

Earlier this year, three Republican justices on the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals were ousted in the GOP primary after Paxton targeted them for ruling against his office in a 2021 case, where he asserted the power to unilaterally prosecute voter fraud cases.

The Court of Criminal Appeals is Texas’ highest court for criminal cases, while the Supreme Court oversees civil cases.

Garcia said he worries that Paxton’s actions against the Court of Criminal Appeals justices will be on the minds of the Supreme Court when they hear the Annunciation House case.

He said he has “just a lot of concerns to how, little by little, the structures themselves are being aligned to reflect a particular viewpoint.”

The Attorney General’s Office in June sued Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley, the largest providers of migrant services on that part of the border. The suit seeks to depose leaders of Catholic Charities about its services to migrants.

In his El Paso ruling, Dominguez said such efforts are an end-run around constitutional protections requiring that law enforcement prove probable cause that a crime has occurred before attempting to compel evidence in a criminal investigation.

In a response to the lawsuit in the Rio Grande Valley, Catholic Charities’ lawyers made similar arguments.

“This petition represents a fishing expedition into a pond where no one has ever seen fish,” the response to the lawsuit stated.

See here for the previous update. I don’t know what the rules are for bypassing an appellate court, but I do know that Ken Paxton will always seek a friendly audience for his crusades. The Supreme Court of Texas is nowhere as corrupted as SCOTUS or some of the federal district courts that Paxton likes to do business with (a high bar to clear, to be sure), but it has not distinguished itself of late. I have some hope that SCOTx will reject Paxton’s overtures, either directly or after being briefed, but I had hopes for some of the cases that SCOTUS had before them this term too, so keep your expectations in check.

One minor wrinkle of note is that if SCOTx sends this back to an appellate court, that court will be the new 15th Court of Appeals with its Abbott-appointed judges. Which means that whatever happens from here, Paxton won’t have to deal with any Democratic judges again. We should all live as custom-made a life as Ken Paxton does. Texas Public Radio has more.

Posted in La Migra, Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

PUC launches its CenterPoint investigation

Whatever.

The Public Utility Commission on Monday launched an investigation into CenterPoint’s response to widespread power outages that continue one week after Hurricane Beryl swept through the region, Chairman Thomas Gleeson said.

The commission’s staff will recommend changes CenterPoint can make before the current hurricane season is over, Gleeson said, and it also will report back to Gov. Greg Abbott and legislative leaders in December on potential changes to state law that could help avoid lengthy outages after future storms.

“Part of our mission is to ensure that CenterPoint provides high-quality infrastructure, and I think it’s clear from the events of the past week that the quality of their infrastructure, their ability to maintain that infrastructure, and their communication with their customers has been called into question,” Gleeson said at a news conference with state and local leaders at NRG Arena in Houston.

[…]

Gleeson said he has requested CenterPoint leadership appear again at the commission’s next public meeting, July 25. There are certain areas, such as the company’s communication with its customers, that warrant quicker action, he said.

Others will require legislative fixes. As one example, Gleeson said that other states have allowed utility companies more latitude in trimming and removing trees and other vegetation that could threaten power lines. In Texas, those companies only are allowed to perform such maintenance in the public right-of-way.

See here for some background. It’s not that I think the PUC is off base in what Chair Gleeson has identified. It’s that their track record doesn’t give me any reason to trust them. Plus, this stuff is mostly small ball. I’m sure we could do a better job with tree maintenance, but a lot of the problem, both with Beryl and the derecho, wasn’t about branches that should have been trimmed. It was about entire trees being uprooted and falling onto poles and wires, and utility poles and transmission towers themselves being knocked over. That’s going to require some amount of burying lines, in strategic locations, some amount of replacing existing poles and towers with stronger and more resilient ones, and some amount of better planning and preparedness. All of that will require a big investment, which shouldn’t come out of the hides of CenterPoint customers, and a lot better oversight. Get back to me when the PUC has fixed the grid, and then we can talk about these things.

Posted in Hurricane Katrina | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments