Two Congressional runoff polls

Make of them what you will.

Rep. Christian Menefee leads Rep. Al Green by 7 percentage points heading into the final days of the runoff, according to a new poll of the closely watched race between two Houston Democratic members of Congress.

The University of Houston’s Hobby School of Public Affairs polled likely voters in two Houston-area contests — the heavily Democratic 18th Congressional District, where Green and Menefee are running, and the red-leaning 9th Congressional District’s Republican runoff between state Rep. Briscoe Cain, R-Deer Park, and Army veteran Alex Mealer.

In the 18th District, the poll found Menefee garnering 50% of the vote to Green’s 43%. The poll was conducted from May 5 to 8 and included a sample of 800 likely voters. It has a margin of error of +/-3.46 percentage points.

The two are running against one another after Texas GOP legislators redrew the state’s congressional map last summer, moving the 9th District, which Green has represented for over 20 years, to new territory that favors the GOP, and in the process putting a large share of Green’s current constituents into the new 18th District.

The race pits the 38-year-old Menefee, who was elected in January to finish out the late Sylvester Turner’s term in the 18th District, against the 78-year-old Green.

In the March primary, Menefee finished first with 46% of the vote to Green’s 44.2%. The winner will be decided in a May 26 runoff because neither won a majority of the vote in round one.

The UH poll found Green narrowly leading, 48% to 45%, with Black voters, who make up a majority of the district and especially of the Democratic primary electorate. But Menefee is up by a 33-point margin with white voters and by 18 points with Latino voters.

Long a bastion of Black political power in Houston, the 18th Congressional District is one of two majority-Black districts in Texas’ new map. In the wake of the Supreme Court’s dismantling of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which has kicked off a mad dash among Republican-led Southern states to break up majority-Black seats, the contest has taken on new resonance. And the politics of age have played a prominent role throughout the primary, given that two of the district’s representatives have died in office in the past two years.

The poll found that Menefee leads heavily with voters under 55, while the over-55 vote is split close to evenly.

In the 9th District, the UH poll found Mealer, a former Harris County judge GOP nominee, leads the Republican runoff against Cain, 50% to 41%.

You can find the poll’s landing page here. I don’t care about the two twerps in CD09, I just hope Leticia Gutierrez has a plan for whichever one limps out of it. As for CD18, it must be noted that the same UH/Hobby Center pollsters found a much bigger lead for Menefee than he had in the end. They did come pretty close to the final result in their July 2025 poll of the November special election, but that was a different electorate and indeed a different CD18. I’ll say again, polling for primaries is tricky and for runoffs even trickier because the turnout and makeup of the electorate can be so varied. I appreciate that the UH/Hobby Center tries, just remember that it’s one data point and it comes with error bars around it. And remember that you can and should listen to my interviews with Reps. Menefee and Green.

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Waymo recalls robotaxis for flood fixes

Good.

Waymo is recalling its U.S. fleet of robotaxis after one of the autonomous vehicles was swept away when it drove into floodwaters in San Antonio.

The voluntary software recall stems from an incident during severe weather April 20, when a Waymo vehicle “encountered an untraversible flooded section of a roadway,” the company told the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Though the vehicle detected the flooded road, it continued into floodwaters at reduced speed.

“We are working to implement additional software safeguards and have put mitigations ​in place, including refining our extreme weather operations during ​periods of intense rain, limiting access to areas where flash flooding ‌might ⁠occur,” Waymo said in a statement

The vehicle swept away was unoccupied ​and there were no injuries, but the incident prompted Waymo to review similar scenarios and issue an interim update to its self-driving software. It also suspended operations in San Antonio, a city prone to flooding and where the April 20 incident was the second recent local instance of a Waymo vehicle struggling with flooding.

NHTSA said Waymo also has temporarily narrowed its operating scope to increase weather-related restrictions and updated its service-area maps while it works on a ​permanent remedy.

Outside San Antonio, passengers should see little impact except during severe weather.

The company said Tuesday it had resumed autonomous operations in San Antonio after its longest-ever shutdown but is still not serving riders.

The recall affects 3,791 vehicles equipped with the Alphabet Inc.-owned company’s fifth- and sixth-generation automated-driving system, according to documents posted to the NHTSA website. Waymo says its autonomous fleet has about 3,800 vehicles.

See here and here. I still think there ought to be a NHTSA investigation over this – as the story notes, there are and have been other NHTSA investigations of Waymo safety issues – but perhaps this was the settlement to avert that. If it really is a software problem and this is the fix for it, then I suppose that’s the big picture. I still think these things need a lot more testing before I’d be comfortable getting into one, but enough people disagree with me on that to make it a moot point.

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So about that hantavirus

Of course that hantavirus boat had some Texans on it.

Two Texas residents were on board a cruise ship that experienced an outbreak of the rare hantavirus, health officials confirmed.

The CDC notified the Texas Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday that the two individuals had left the MV Hondius and returned to the U.S. before the outbreak was identified, according to a release by the DSHS.

Three passengers died and one was placed in intensive care in a South African hospital as a result of the outbreak, which occurred while the ship was in the Atlantic Ocean, according to a report by the Associated Press.

Officials said the two individuals are not experiencing symptoms at this time and did not have contact with anyone who was ill, and agreed to continue to monitor for symptoms.

I’m sure everyone is gonna be totally normal about this. But what should you, a person who is not ruled by fear and irrational hatred, think about it? Perhaps this will help.

  1. Case count has remained stable. There are still three deaths and five cases. I hope it stays this way, but there is a chance (and I expect) it will increase over the next six weeks. This virus has a long incubation period, up to 45 days (median 18 days), during which it can enter the body, latch on, and wreak havoc. Unfortunately, we are at the mercy of time and biology.
  2. Risk to the general public remains low, per the WHO. I agree with this assessment. Risk is probabilistic: what’s possible isn’t what’s probable. The odds of this escalating are low for several reasons:
    1. This isn’t a novel virus. We’ve known about Andes hantavirus since the 1990s. We have prior data about how it spreads, where it’s located, and how it acts. That’s different from Covid-19.
    2. Past Andes hantavirus outbreaks typically involve close-contact settings, such as caring for a sick person or sleeping in the same bed. To our knowledge, this isn’t spread asymptotically. Some research shows spread through more casual contact, but all prior outbreaks have been contained successfully. In this outbreak, all cases so far are linked to close contact. This helps with containment.
    3. Like many viruses, Andes can mutate randomly or reassert, but it doesn’t have a track record of rapid mutation, making it hard to change the circumstances quickly. WHO has confirmed that this holds here—the sample in South Africa is nearly identical to the version seen in Argentina.
  3. Off the boat, there is extensive contact tracing. Thirty people got off the boat after the first death (and before officials knew this was an outbreak). They are now being contact-traced by epidemiologists. This means alerting those passengers, monitoring for any symptoms, tracing their steps (such as boarding a plane), and alerting those who are near them for an extended period. None of these passengers has symptoms so far. Six are Americans and live in California, Georgia, Virginia, and Arizona.

    Note: Because there is a lot of contact tracing, you may start hearing rumors about more positive cases, like a flight attendant. These may turn out to be truly positive, but importantly, having symptoms does not mean it’s hantavirus. Epidemiologists discern correlation from causation by understanding risk (like where contacts are relative to the patient) and by sending the test to confirm. This takes time.

  4. On the boat, people will get relief soon. Three sick passengers were evacuated from the ship to a hospital yesterday, which is excellent news. Hospitals have specialized airborne isolation units designed exactly for situations like this. The ship is now heading toward islands near Spain, which have agreed to allow it to dock. It should reach there by Monday. It’s still unclear what the long-term plan is, but I hope passengers will be able to safely isolate closer to home and near their families.

There’s more, so read the rest. There’s an especially helpful graphic later in the piece, which should make it clear that if you weren’t on the ship itself or have close contact with anyone on it or are exposed to wild rodent feces, urine, or saliva, you are in the clear. As for the passengers themselves, those who disembarked in the US are in some form of quarantine until the end of the incubation period. Again, I’m fine, you’re fine, we’re all fine.

And hey, if not, there’s always this.

Should we be worried about a hantavirus outbreak here in Houston? I called Dr. Peter Hotez to ask.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Houstonians relied on Hotez for calm, high-level assessments of the outbreak, the virus and the vaccines being developed to fight it. With his team at Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, Hotez develops low-cost vaccines for low-income nations. He’s also the dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.

[…]

So basically, this outbreak is something for epidemiologists to watch, but regular people don’t need to worry right now.

Yeah, that’s about right.

I was surprised to see that sketchy doctors are touting ivermectin to prevent hantavirus infections — the same as they promoted it to fight COVID-19.

You’ve got a very corrupt wellness and influencer industry that pushes medicines that they can buy in bulk and then jack up the price and sell it to you with an expensive telehealth visit. Ivermectin is one of those.

They’ll try to tell you that they can repurpose those medicines to treat everything. They’ll repurpose them for cancer. They’ll repurpose them for COVID. Now they’re repurposing for hantavirus. They’ll make money. But it won’t help the patient.

Is there anything ivermectin can’t do? And if you still want more, listen to yesterday’s episode of What Next and learn more about the doctor on the cruise who stepped in when the ship’s doctor got sick.

Posted in Technology, science, and math | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Interview with Rep. Al Green

Rep. Al Green

For my final interview of the 2026 primary cycle, I’m pleased to bring you a conversation with Rep. Al Green. He is the longtime member of Congress from the historic CD09, which was moved to the east end of Harris County and turned red in the mid-decade redistricting, and he is running in the new CD18. I’ve met Rep. Green in person but had not had the opportunity to interview him before now. Rep. Green was elected to Congress in 2004, following a different Republican mid-decade redistricting effort, after having served for 26 years as a Justice of the Peace in Harris County. A native of New Orleans and a graduate of the Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Rep. Green served as president of the Houston Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for approximately ten years. He now sits on the House Financial Services Committee. Here’s what we talked about:

PREVIOUSLY

Ron Angeletti – SD04 (special election)
Rep. Vikki Goodwin – Lt Governor
Marcos Vélez – Lt Governor
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Darrell Jordan – Harris County District Clerk
Alex Maldonado – Harris County District Clerk
Rep. Christian Menefee – CD18

Courtesy of Greg Wythe, the transcript for this interview is here. As noted, this is the final interview of the 2026 primary cycle. I’ll be back soon with interviews for the November general election, with perhaps a few bonus interviews thrown in. Let me know what you think.

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Today is the last day of early voting for the District C runoff

From the inbox:

Runoff Day itself will be Saturday, May 16. Voting locations for both today’s early voting and Saturday’s Runoff Day voting can be found here. For what it’s worth, early voting turnout through the end of the day yesterday was 5,609 total voters. That’s actually slightly ahead of the total with one day to go for the original election. It’s not out of the question that the runoff could outpace the first round in total turnout.

And of course, on Monday the 18th we get going on the third election of May, the primary runoffs, for which early voting locations can be found here. Note that there are only five days of primary runoff early voting – you have from Monday the 18th through Friday the 22nd, and that’s it until Runoff Day on May 26. I expect turnout to be relatively light overall for the Dem side, as we don’t have the one big high-profile statewide race, but we do have the CD18 runoff, and that will draw plenty of interest. So plan accordingly.

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Waymo to resume service in San Antonio after two flooding incidents

Of interest.

Autonomous ride-hailing company Waymo is expected to resume service in San Antonio this week after suspending operations following two flood-related incidents involving its self-driving vehicles.

Operations were paused after an April 20 incident in which a Waymo vehicle was swept away by floodwaters and washed into Salado Creek. The incident came about two weeks after another Waymo vehicle became stranded in floodwaters near McCullough Avenue and Contour Drive. Both cars were unoccupied, and no one was injured in either incident.

The service pause has been the company’s longest in San Antonio to date as Waymo reviewed its flood monitoring procedures and safety protocols. Waymo previously said it would reevaluate how its vehicles respond to flood-prone areas and severe weather alerts before restarting service.

The back-to-back flood incidents also underscored how quickly changing weather conditions in San Antonio can challenge autonomous vehicle technology.

Waymo’s rollout in San Antonio has also raised broader questions about how self-driving vehicles interact with emergency responders during severe weather and other emergencies.

I mentioned the April 20 incident in this post; I had not been aware of the earlier one. That’s two such incidents in two months’ service time, since Waymo has only been in San Antonio since February, the same time as its arrival in Houston. I don’t know who’s trying to answer those questions that have been raised, since as of last week at least NHTSA had not yet opened an investigation into what happened and what Waymo planned to do about it. No word that I saw from TxDOT, either. I mean, I dunno, that seems like a thing we’d want some assurances on. Human drivers do drive into flooded street as well, but at least we know they’re incentivized not to. We should at least have some assurances about that here as well, and not just for San Antonio. KENS has more.

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Interview with Rep. Christian Menefee

Rep. Christian Menefee

If you live in CD18, which as of this latest round of redistricting I no longer do, you’re still in the process of picking your member of Congress. The Democratic primary runoff, for which early voting begins on May 18, will finally settle the matter. Rep. Christian Menefee, whose win in the 2025 special election finally allowed someone to fill this seat following the death of Rep. Sylvester Turner, is the representative of the historic district. Rep. Menefee had served for six years as Harris County Attorney, where he was known for litigating aggressively on matters of environmental justice, voting rights, and more. He’s now in a battle to remain the Representative of this district, after it was redrawn to largely overlap the historic CD09 and thus drew that incumbent, Rep. Al Green, as an opponent. It’s confusing! That was by design. I’ll have an interview with Rep. Green tomorrow, but for today here’s my latest conversation with Rep. Menefee; my interview with him from the special election is here.

PREVIOUSLY

Ron Angeletti – SD04 (special election)
Rep. Vikki Goodwin – Lt Governor
Marcos Vélez – Lt Governor
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Darrell Jordan – Harris County District Clerk
Alex Maldonado – Harris County District Clerk

Courtesy of Greg Wythe, the transcript for this interview is here. As noted, I will have an interview with Rep. Green tomorrow. That will conclude my interviews for the primary runoff, and before you know it I’ll start publishing interviews for the November general election, with perhaps a few bonus interviews thrown in. Let me know what you think.

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Carla Wyatt arrested again

This is getting to be more than just sad.

Carla Wyatt

Harris County Treasurer Carla Wyatt was arrested Saturday in Texas City and charged with driving while intoxicated, her third arrest during her time in office, authorities say.

Wyatt, 56, was stopped along Texas Highway 3 at about 2 a.m. and was later booked into Galveston County Jail, according to police records. Sheriff Jimmy Fullen said she was still in jail when he left at around midnight.

[…]

Wyatt, elected in 2022 and seeking reelection this year, was arrested on another DWI charge in December 2023. That charge was dismissed after she completed a pretrial diversion program. She was arrested most recently in December after allegedly breaking into a vehicle.

See here and here for some background. As the story notes, this is the third time since her election in 2022 that Carla Wyatt has been arrested, two of which were for DUI. She was no-billed by a grand jury the last time, on a charge of burglary of a vehicle, after her attorney successfully argued that she had just mistakenly entered the wrong car.

I say this with as much respect and compassion as I can muster: Carla Wyatt should resign her office and suspend her campaign so that she can focus on taking care of herself. If need be, Commissioners Court should remove her from office with that stipulation. I don’t know what the situation is and I’m not going to guess, but the pattern is clear. Please take care of yourself, Carla Wyatt.

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Who’s coming to the FIFA World Cup?

Not as many people as we thought, it would seem.

The World Cup only comes around every four years and regularly draws millions of spectators from across the globe.

But expectations of a rush of international visitors and an accompanying economic boon — an estimated $3.5 billion in Texas — are being tempered in Houston and Dallas, where 16 games will be played in June and July.

FIFA, the governing body for international soccer, canceled hotel block reservations in Dallas and Arlington earlier this year and a recent survey of hoteliers in Houston and the Dallas area found anticipated demand is not translating into strong hotel bookings less than 40 days from the start of the tournament.

Expensive ticket prices, trouble getting travel visas and anti-American sentiment amid ongoing geopolitical uncertainty may all be contributing to the underwhelming demand for stays during the tournament, said Brent DeRaad, president and CEO of the Arlington Convention & Visitors Bureau.

“There certainly are not only economic headwinds but certainly … sentiments toward the U.S. by some countries out there internationally, it’s potentially an issue in terms of people being able and willing to travel to the United States for these matches,” DeRaad said.

While Dallas is considered the host city by FIFA, Arlington’s AT&T Stadium will be the venue for nine matches and Houston’s NRG Stadium will host a further seven. Local officials say ticket sales remain strong and they expect each of the matches to be sold out.

That demand for tickets, however, may be largely domestic, according to a report published Monday by the American Hotel & Lodging Association, a trade association that represents more than 30,000 properties across the U.S. Ticket prices for the matches are significantly more expensive than the 2022 and 2018 iterations of the tournament, played in Qatar and Russia, respectively, pricing out international tourists.

[…]

FIFA points to the economic benefits each city is expected to receive from hosting matches as justification for the costs. A March 2025 study by FIFA claimed the tournament will generate $17.2 billion in gross domestic product in the U.S. and $3.4 billion in government revenue from direct and indirect taxes.

The American Hotel & Lodging Association study found that domestic travelers are outpacing international travelers. The study noted that international travel barriers, like lengthy visa wait times, increased visa fees and uncertainty around entry and processing, are contributing to international travel not meeting expectations. The cancellation of hotel blocks in Dallas, Arlington and other host cities has exposed a “softer underlying traveler demand,” according to the report.

Across the country, about 70% of FIFA’s group blocks have been released, according to the report, which did not provide city-level data.

“Hotels across host markets have spent years preparing for the World Cup, and while there is real excitement, the data points to a more nuanced outlook,” Rosanna Maietta, President & CEO of AHLA, said in a statement.

In Houston, organizers remain optimistic that the city will see a significant increase in visitors from previous years.

“We expect that World Cup will help deliver a better than normal June and early July in the Houston hotel market,” Michael Heckman, President and CEO of Houston First Corporation, wrote in a statement. “Bookings are up year over year and we anticipate they will continue to climb as we get closer to the tournament.”

Houston First Corporation, Houston’s official destination marketing organization, published its own tracker of domestic and international travel tied to the tournament that found booking pace in the city up 17% in June and 14% in July when compared to the same months last year. International air bookings through Bush Intercontinental Airport and Hobby Airport are up 33% in June but down 5% in July, according to Houston First.

The local host committees in Dallas and Houston also note that low hotel bookings could be offset by short-term rentals.

Short-term rental bookings are up 53% in the Houston area from last year for June and July, according to Houston First.

See here and here for some background. My response to this is mostly a big shrug. The numbers are kind of all over the place, and as we know we should never take economic projections of sporting event impact at face value. It’ll probably be fine, and as long as it’s the event committees that have the financial risk it won’t affect cities directly. It would be nice to be in an environment where tourists wanted to come here and they had no major visa issues, but that very much is not the world we are in. We can hope to have that ameliorated in time for the 2031 Women’s World Cup, whoever gets to host those games.

Posted in La Migra, Other sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Weekend link dump for May 10

“The Fallout From Trump’s Pope Bashing”.

“Despite how unnerving a [food] recall might be, experts argue that it might be a good thing that we’re still seeing them, because that means there are still people within the government doing the work to keep our food safe. ”

“Passenger railroads see a sharp jump in ridership as gas prices climb”.

“But even if nobody ultimately goes to jail, these investigations and indictments have been far from harmless. They have corroded our justice system by showing it can be wielded as a tool of harassment, intimidation, and vengeance. To undo that damage, we will need reforms that rebuild guardrails against abuse.”

RIP, John Sterling, longtime radio voice of the New York Yankees.

American public schools are awash in YouTube. According to more than 45 families, school administrators, clinicians and educators across the country interviewed by The Wall Street Journal, schools’ overreliance on the Google-owned platform for educational content has created a gateway for students to get sucked into an infinite scroll of videos on school-issued devices.”

“Maine and Washington, which enacted its own law last month, are among the latest Democratic-led states to ask for more tax dollars from the rich as national wealth inequality widens and states face heightened budget pressures. They follow the lead of other states including New Jersey and Massachusetts that have implemented specific taxes for the rich.”

Civics teachers are not OK, and that stinks, no matter what year it is. But it’s really awful when we should be in a more celebratory mood.”

RIP, Gwen Farrell Adair, actor best known for various roles on M*A*S*H.

“The truth is that Democrats cannot expect anything they do in 2029 to survive, no matter how large their majorities might be in 2029 or how seemingly solid the Constitutional case for their actions might be, as long as the current GOP majority runs the high court. And so they have little choice but to do something about it, if the voters give them the ability to do so. Court-packing ain’t great, but it sure beats the alternative.”

There is now a real radio station in Cincinnati with the call letters WKRP. About time.

“Canadian fiddle star Ashley MacIsaac has brought a lawsuit against Google for allegedly falsely identifying him as a “convicted sex offender” in an AI-generated Overview search summary.”

“On April 14, I created a free account on ChatGPT and asked for some help. It resisted me at first, but after some pushing the responses turned shocking. During a conversation lasting about 20 minutes, OpenAI’s chatbot gave me extensive advice on weapons and tactics as I simulated planning a mass shooting.”

“Last week, the anti-abortion movement crossed a major new redline. A South Carolina Senate committee voted to advance a bill that would, with almost no exceptions, not only ban abortions but also classify abortion as a misdemeanor crime for patients. The proposed law includes a highly unusual misdemeanor punishment of two years in prison. This has never happened before.”

“A profile that asks “what does Tucker really believe?” has already accepted the premise that there’s a real Tucker buried somewhere who could be located if only the right questions were asked. The premise is the trap. There is no hidden Tucker. The trick is the belief.”

“This acceleration isn’t just a consequence of soaring fossil fuel prices. It is also the result of the worldwide realization that, with the end of Pax Americana, depending on imported hydrocarbons is a risk not worth taking. The United States cannot be relied on to keep sea lanes open when cheap drones can take out an oil tanker or a major pipeline. Even relying on oil and gas from America itself is dangerous, since one never knows when an erratic U.S. government – now under the control of a twice-elected malignant narcissist — will try to use energy as a tool of coercion.”

“Bert Callais, lead plaintiff in case that gutted Voting Rights Act, is an election conspiracist who was at Jan. 6 protest“. Of course he was.

“But the war in Iran, which the United States and Israel launched two months ago this week, may turn out to be the push that dislodges fossil fuels’ place atop the world’s energy system.”

RIP, Ted Turner, founder of CNN, former owner of the Atlanta Braves, former husband of Jane Fonda.

“President Donald Trump’s signature economic policy hit another brick wall Thursday evening when the Court of International Trade overturned new tariffs Trump enacted to replace the tariffs blocked by the Supreme Court.”

“It’s a public safety issue that they’re not doing the types of prosecutions they should be doing. You can’t tell me that sex trafficking and drug trafficking and that kind of thing is less important than people going into a church to protest.”

“Senate and House Democrats have launched an investigation into whether pardons and commutations issued by President Trump were driven by “pay-to-play dynamics,” according to letters obtained by CBS News.”

“Robbin Stowers may be the greatest grandmother in sports card hobby history.”

RIP, Ask Jeeves, a/k/a ask.com, former Internet search engine. I too would like for it to not be resurrected as a chatbot.

Of course there are hantavirus betting markets. Of course there are.

RIP, Bobby Cox, Hall of Fame manager for the Atlanta Braves.

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged | 1 Comment

Smokable hemp is off and then on the shelves again

Pending the current appeal.

Smokeable hemp products, such as flower buds and rolled joints, are allowed back on shelves until the state’s appeal of a statewide ban on the sale of the drug is heard in court next Thursday.

The state’s 15th Court of Appeals granted a request by lawyers for the hemp industry to reinstate a temporary pause on the smokeable hemp ban until the appeal hearing, currently scheduled for May 17.

Lawyers for the state filed an appeal on Tuesday against Travis County Judge Daniella DeSeta Lyttle’s ruling last week, which extended the pause on the smokable hemp ban. The state’s 15th Court of Appeals agreed to hear the appeal Wednesday, putting the state’s rules that effectively bans the sale of smokeable hemp back into effect. Then, on Thursday, the appeals court granted the hemp industry a weeklong reprieve from the ban.

“We are very pleased that the Texas Court of Appeals did the right thing by reinstating the injunction,” said David Sergi, an attorney for the hemp industry. “The veterans, elderly, and the approximately 30,000 employees in our industry thank the court, and we look forward to obtaining a permanent injunction and protecting these businesses by embracing the governor’s vision as outlined in his veto message.”

This week’s decisions on smokeable hemp is the latest in a string of dizzying court actions that have ping-ponged the status of the drug’s sale in Texas.

The statewide ban on the sale of smokeable hemp was supposed to go into effect on March 31. After lawyers for the hemp industry filed a lawsuit asking to block the ban, a Travis County district judge on April 10 temporarily lifted the ban until May 1. Last week, Lyttle ruled to extend the ban until the next hearing in the district courts, scheduled for July 27, but because the 15th Court of Appeals agreed to considering the state’s appeal, the ban was back in effect. That ban only lasted for some hours until the appeals court allowed the sale for another week.

The Texas Hemp Business Council, Hemp Industry & Farmers of America, and several Texas-based dispensaries and manufacturers have been fighting the state’s new testing requirements that create a 0.3% total THC threshold that would effectively bar the sale of natural smokeable hemp products. The state also created a 3,000% increase in licensing fees for hemp retailers.

During the three-day hearing last week, lawyers for the hemp industry argued that the Texas Department of State Health Services overstepped its constitutional authority by rewriting the statutory definitions of hemp established by lawmakers in 2019.

“The Texas Legislature must answer to the voters of Texas; that is a fundamental check and balance of our constitution. Agency bureaucrats lack accountability to the people of Texas, which is why their authority is limited,” said Jason Snell, one of the attorneys for the hemp businesses.

Attorneys for the state argued in court that Texas law requires the health agency to prioritize Texans’ well-being in rulemaking, allowing them to implement new hemp regulations. The judge disagreed, saying the rules were doing irreparable harm to the industry.

“The Court finds that the purpose of a temporary injunction is to preserve the last, actual, peaceable, non-contested status that preceded the controversy,” said Lyttle.

Andrew Alvarado, an attorney representing the hemp industry, said Lyttle’s ruling upholds the separation of powers among government entities.

“Frankly, I think it’s a win for all Texans, because fundamentally, the Court confirmed that unelected officials and state agencies cannot impose rules that conflict with the will of the people,” he said.

See here for the previous update. The ruling that allowed smokable hemp to go back on the shelves as the appeal is adjudicated came in late on Friday. Not the best time to be in this business in Texas, but it could have been worse.

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Local coverage of Quentin Wiltz

Here’s the Chron story on the election of Quentin Wiltz as the first Democrat to be elected Mayor of Pearland in decades, and the first Black person to be elected as its Mayor.

Quentin Wiltz

Quentin Wiltz ran for office in Pearland seven times before he finally made history this week as the Houston suburb’s first Black mayor.

Wiltz, a Democrat who’s gained national attention for his win in the Republican-leaning city, said this year’s election showed that voters are ready to accept his vision after 20 years advocating for a more inclusive community for the population of more than 120,000.

“We haven’t had this ever in Pearland and it is huge,” he said. “This is what it means, that to some degree people are able to see me for who I am, and look and accept me for who I am, and accept the things I’m trying to tell them and see and do for them. That’s the significance hands down.”

On his third run for the mayor’s seat, Wiltz was backed by the Brazoria County Democratic Party and defeated Pearland City Council Member Tony Carbone, who received support from local Republicans.

While the municipal elections are not partisan, Wiltz said most Pearland candidates are tied to the political party system. Except for the city’s Drainage District Commissioner, no other Pearland elected officials are affiliated with the Democratic Party, Wiltz said.

“For decades, the parties have backed candidates because they have an apparatus and a machine to be able to reach voters,” he said.

Wiltz unsuccessfully ran for a Pearland City Council seat five times. He also ran for Pearland mayor in 2017 and 2020. He came the closest in 2017, making it to a runoff against Tom Reid, Pearland’s longest-serving mayor.

Wiltz said rising taxes, water costs, and traffic issues are ongoing concerns, and he hopes to bring more transparency to the role of mayor, a position that’s paid $1,000 per month, according to the city charter.

He said he thinks the older, established part of town hasn’t grown beyond the small-town mentality and that the older district and new developments are not moving forward with the same vision.

“This is a great place to live and raise a family, but our small town has evolved into a larger city and in doing that we have not grown together,” he said. “Now with a larger city, the problems are significantly more challenging and the mindset needs to change.”

See here for the background, and it’s a gift article so read the rest. I knew about his past candidacies for Mayor but not about his past races for City Council; I think Pearland is all At Large, in which case they’re similar in nature. Anyway, as both he and his opponent have said, he ran on an issues-oriented campaign not a partisan one, so he just made the better case for himself as far as that goes. But nothing is truly non-partisan these days, so it’s still a big deal. I wish Mayor-elect Wiltz all the best. KUHF and ABC 13 also have stories, with the latter noting one of the Brazoria County Constables sticking his foot all the way into his mouth.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Restaurants and AI images

I’m still thinking about this.

The pastelitos nestle in a wicker basket, golden and precisely crimped. Behind them two young, smiling people bite in. Their skin is smooth. Their nails are round.

Posted to the Facebook account of a Venezuelan restaurant in Spring called Fran’s Bakery, the photo looks perfect. A little too perfect.

It is, of course, AI. And it’s far from the only AI-generated image used to promote a local restaurant.

In the past several months, videos of talking boba and pictures of too-glossy food have saturated Instagram and local Facebook foodie groups. Some images are obviously fanciful: Penguins did not stop at an Indian restaurant in the Heights. Some look like caricatures or artsy posters. Others look much closer to reality.

For restaurant owners, the technology can save time and money. For diners, it can make it harder to tell what’s real. If they visit, will the restaurant’s interior look like that? Will the food be plated the same way?

“You have to be very careful, in all the food and other services,” said Susana De Carlo, the marketing specialist who generated that image for Fran’s Bakery.

De Carlo prefers to use real photos. But when the Fran’s Bakery team is too busy for a photo shoot, she sometimes generates a picture or video that looks as close to the real deal as she can get it. When images of food are involved, she makes them as accurate as possible, De Carlo said.

Francis Uzcategui, the co-owner of the restaurant, said AI has been “very helpful” in alleviating her work load.

But some consumers say they feel turned off by food photos that appear fake. Ryan Kasey Baker, a freelancer for Houston Food Finder who’s often on local Facebook groups, said he sees them everywhere.

“If (restaurants) don’t trust their food enough to sell it,” he asked, “why would I want to spend my own money?”

[…]

When Inna Klebanskaya opened Slice of Venice in Spring last year, she hired a marketing team. She paid them about $1,000 a month and wasn’t happy with the results.

So she took over, posting on at least four platforms regularly while running the restaurant. It took too much of her time; AI helped simplify the work. Klebanskaya generated images of a frowning pizza when the restaurant was struggling, and a pizza with a clock on it to indicate a change in hours.

Then negative feedback rolled in. Customers and online commenters told her they’d rather see real food. “People thought it was enhanced too much,” she said.

Now her Facebook feed is full of real photos of pepper-topped pizzas and crispy mozzarella sticks. Klebanskaya wishes she could rely more on AI. But she doesn’t want to drive people away.

[…]

Food photos have been polished for years, long before AI. Styling, editing and filters can all change how a dish appears.

“I don’t really see AI as any different than somebody that’s spray painting a turkey on TV to make it look juicy,” said John Frels, who sees plenty of AI posts on the Houston Heights Foodies Facebook group he runs.

I see a difference, and it’s right there in the embedded picture, which just looks kind of creepy to me. AI-generated photos often give me the uncanny valley feeling, though I have seen examples that are basically impossible to distinguish from the real thing. I also tend to find AI-generated art, like the first Cavatore example in the story, to be flat and uninteresting, which I think is basically the result of AI imagery being an amalgamation of every other image out there. That said, the later Cavatore images, which are done in a cartoon style, look fine to me. Maybe simpler is just better with these things.

I will always prefer human-generated art, whether they’re words or images or anything else. I can understand why a small, undercapitalized business like a restaurant might resort to do-it-yourself AI for its advertising needs, even if I don’t care for it. If their customers hate it, that’s just too bad. I’d advise them to use it sparingly and with a light touch, and be ready to pivot if the feedback is negative.

There’s quite a bit in the article, so go read the rest, it’s a gift link. Between this and robot cooking, Houston restaurants are certainly innovating.

Posted in Food, glorious food | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Republican panic update

Oh, my.

Still a crook any way you look

Texas Republicans are once again sounding alarm bells about the state’s U.S. Senate seat, saying that if Republicans nominate state Attorney General Ken Paxton in the May 26 primary runoff, it will create a drag on the entire Texas GOP ticket.

polling memo commissioned by a super PAC backing Republican Sen. John Cornyn in the runoff said that nominating Paxton would be catastrophic, potentially costing Republicans the Senate seat, multiple House races, and possibly even control of the state House.

“A Paxton nomination creates measurable risk across every tier of the Texas ballot,” said the memo, which was obtained by Texas Tribune reporter Gabby Birenbaum. “The Senate race tightens significantly. Congressional pickup opportunities close. Republican-held seats that should be safe require active defense. And the Texas House majority—which took years to build—faces exposure it would not face with Cornyn at the top of the ticket.”

Among the poll’s findings is that the gerrymander Trump forced Republicans to undertake—which was supposed to net the GOP five U.S. House seats—could collapse if Paxton were the nominee.

The memo highlights four prospective GOP flips, saying, “With Paxton at the top of the ticket, all four opportunities effectively disappear. The drag is consistent across every key voter group—independents, suburban women, soft Republicans—and large enough to turn each district from a competitive opportunity into a likely Democratic hold.”

What’s more, the memo says that Paxton would jeopardize otherwise safe GOP House seats, including that of now-former Rep. Tony Gonzales and GOP Rep. Beth Van Duyne. The survey finds that suburban, independent, and Hispanic voters would likely turn away from the party in droves.

“The damage does not stop at lost opportunities. Redistricting produced several Republican-held congressional districts that should be safe holds under any normal electoral environment. With Cornyn at the top of the ticket, they are—comfortable margins, no defensive spending required, resources free for offensive races. Under a Paxton nomination, many of these seats become a problem,” the memo said, though it overstates Cornyn’s benefit to those seats, many of which are still competitive even if he is the nominee.

The Cornyn-supporting super PAC released the memo a little more than two weeks before the May 26 runoff in a desperate attempt to build support for Cornyn’s flailing candidacy.

The most recent public poll, commissioned by the University of Houston’s Hobby School of Public Affairs, found Paxton leading Cornyn, 48% to 45%.

[…]

It’s possible Cornyn’s supporters hope this memo scares Trump into backing Cornyn.

In the process, though, they released a memo that shows Texas is competitive even if Cornyn is the nominee.

The poll showed Cornyn up only 2 points over a “generic Democrat” in the race, while Paxton trailed by 4 points. (Of course, Talarico is far from generic.) It also showed Democrats holding onto two of the gerrymandered U.S. House seats even with Cornyn atop the ticket.

I recommend you read the memo, it’s quite elucidating. The first thing to note is that this is all based on modeling, not on polls conducted by Deep Root Analytics, the outfit that produced this memo. I’m sure this is all based on polling data, but it is not itself an analysis of a poll or set of polls done by Deep Root. It’s likely that they have access to poll data that has not been made public. I don’t think any of this is suspicious or casts any doubt on their results, but it means we have limited means by which to critique their analysis. And I want to emphasize again, this is not a poll. It’s poll-like and poll-based, but not itself a poll.

The first thing I noticed was the districts that this memo didn’t include. Specifically, for Congress, that was CDs 15 and 28. The most obvious reason why that would be is that they found the outcome was most likely going to be the same whether Cornyn or Paxton was the candidate, and in the context of this memo, where they are showing close races everywhere, that can only mean that those districts are won by Dems in either instance. The concession that Republicans are likely doomed to lose a district they now hold in addition to having trouble winning most if not all of the districts they drew for themselves is absolutely wild. That they found CD32 to be potentially in danger, despite it being the most impervious of the new districts to 2018-like conditions, is even wilder. This memo isn’t suggesting Republicans are in for a rough year. It’s shouting it from the rooftops.

Same thing for State House districts, where more obvious targets like HDs 108, 112, 132, 133, and 138 are all left out of the discussion. The inclusion of HD128, which by my reckoning is one of the two reddest districts in Harris County (HD130 is its competition for that title) just made my jaw drop. I mean, Trump won HD128 by 35 points. If they’re modeling it as R+9 in what they see as the best case scenario, then Democrats should be wiping out huge swaths of Republican legislators. I’d want to see them do a similar analysis for the State Senate, because even that could be in play in their “Paxton wins the runoff” scenario, and there just aren’t any swingy Senate seats on the ballot beyond SD09.

Honestly, seeing the inclusion of HD128 as a possible seat in peril makes me question some of the assumptions used in this model. I’m sure they included it because it’s an open seat, which I presume they considered to be more volatile. But come on, some factors are stronger than incumbency. I mean, even in 2018 this was an R+34 district. For it to be legitimately R+9, that’s an extinction-level event for Republicans. I cannot believe no one at Deep Root looked at that and felt the need to do some quality assurance.

To be fair, HD128 is an outlier, in that the other districts they highlight are ones that I would expect to be somewhere between “flippable” and “on the verge of competitive” in a strong blue year. It just stands out to me in a bad way because there’s no comprehensible way in which that district should be objectively competitive. I’ll accept it as a one-off and move on, I just wouldn’t have felt right not mentioning it.

How reliable should we take all this to be? I don’t know anything about Deep Root Analytics, I don’t know what they based their model on, and they’re working on behalf of John Cornyn and thus are attempting to craft a narrative in his favor. Other polling data we have had, including the UH/Hobby poll of the runoff but going back to before the primaries, suggests there isn’t much difference in performance between the two candidates. I could be persuaded there are more Cornyn voters who will refuse to vote for Paxton and indeed may cross over if he’s the Republican nominee, but we’ll never know for sure. It’s the assumption that even with Cornyn on the ticket that there will be so many competitive or at least closer-than-you’d-think races that makes me sit up and pay attention. That much is consistent with everything else we’ve seen. I’m happy to add this to the data pile, and when we get some Congressional-level polls later on, we’ll see how they compare.

One last thing, in related news, The Downballot notes two other GOP Senate primary runoff polls, one by a pro-Cornyn outfit that has him up by one, and one by a pro-Paxton group that has him up by eleven. Make of that what you will. And this recent Texas Public Opinion Research poll has some insight into “moderate” and “swing” voters in Texas. It doesn’t provide any insight into the Cornyn/Paxton duel, but I thought it was worth mentioning anyway.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

US Department of Education investigating HISD over special ed changes

Awesome.

The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights has opened an investigation into Houston ISD after the state’s largest district began to centralize its special education department.

HISD announced Wednesday that students in some special education programs would move to 150 designated campuses next school year as the district relocates and consolidates classes, leaving parents scrambling and advocates concerned. On Friday, the civil rights department said it would investigate whether HISD’s move violates federal laws barring discrimination against students with disabilities.

“Schools cannot exclude students with disabilities simply because of their disability status. Placement decisions must be made individually, based on each student’s needs, rather than by blanket policies that segregate students by disability category,” Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Kimberly Richey said in a statement. “The allegations described here are alarming. The Trump Administration will fully investigate this situation and fight to ensure every child with a disability receives the education and support guaranteed under the law.

”Under federal law, school districts are prohibited from discriminating on the basis of disability. The federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act also requires students to be taught in the least restrictive classroom conducive to their disability, which Houston-area parents and advocates warned would be jeopardized under the new plan.

In a statement, the federal civil rights department said families were concerned that their students would spend less time in general education classrooms and more time in self-contained rooms than their peers. Parents were also concerned about longer commutes to the proposed specialty schools, which could be challenging for children with certain medical and behavioral needs.

HISD did not immediately respond to a request for comment. HISD Deputy Superintendent Kristen Hole said on the district’s broadcast channel Wednesday that the plan to centralize some services would increase choice and “access to services across the district.”

The Trump administration and “civil rights enforcement” go together like peanut butter and rusty nails that have been dipped in arsenic, so to say the least it’s hard to judge how serious any of this is. While special education hasn’t been one of the Trumpist hobby horses, any right-thinking person would question their commitment as well as their ability to competently prosecute the matter, given that it’s likely anyone with experience or interest in civil rights will surely have fled the scene. I’m drafting this based on the early version of the story, so there may be more details by the time you read this, and of course we’ll know more sooner or later. For sure, this change seems like a significant disruption for parents of existing special ed kids in HISD, so I’m sure they’re happy to see some action being taken, however questionable the source. And for the million and twenty-seventh time, isn’t it just dandy that we have Mike Miles in charge of HISD? What would we ever do without him?

Posted in School days | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

How much would you pay to bring an NHL team to Houston?

Assuming you’re the kind of billionaire who wants to do such a thing, of course.

If groups led by Dan Friedkin and Tilman Fertitta want to land an NHL expansion franchise for Houston, it’s not getting any cheaper.

The franchise fee will start at $2 billion, NHL officials confirmed Tuesday. The NHL’s most recent expansion fees were $500 million for Las Vegas (in 2017) and $650 million for Seattle (in 2021). In April 2024, the Arizona Coyotes’ hockey assets were sold for $1.2 billion to Utah Jazz owners Ryan and Ashley Smith, with the franchise becoming the Utah Mammoth.

The NHL has no current plans to expand, but the bar is set for groups that meet the league’s four main criteria:

  • Stable ownership.
  • An arena.
  • Suitable market.
  • And that the franchise will make the league stronger.

If a group checks all four boxes, the league’s expansion committee would evaluate the bid and then pass it to full ownership for a vote.

See here and here for some background. Tilman Fertitta just bought the WNBA’s Connecticut Sun, which will become the Houston Comets modulo some legal stuff. I don’t know if that will have slaked his thirst for further sports team ownership or heightened it. I suspect he’ll be busy for the next year or so, which may present an opportunity to Dan Friedkin or may just mean we all go back to sleep and forget about the NHL for another few years. We’ll see.

Posted in Other sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

A brief history of failing to pass flood protection laws

We just do our thing here and don’t much care about the consequences.

The sound of construction machinery filled the air as Kylie Nidever walked past properties ravaged months earlier by floodwaters.

Nidever’s home was among those in her Bumble Bee Hills neighborhood untouched by last year’s July 4 flood, one of the deadliest disasters in Texas history. The 35-year-old understood the draw of the tranquil Kerr County subdivision, where she played as a child in a nearby creek that fed the Guadalupe River. But she was taken aback by how enthusiastic most of her neighbors were to rebuild.

Nidever wondered why the government had let people build in any areas long known to be dangerous and whether leaders would intervene now.

“Is somebody going to come in and stop us?” said Nidever, who has considered moving. “If it happens again and it’s worse next time, people will die in this neighborhood.”

After last summer’s disaster, some Texas legislators scolded local officials for their decision not to invest in flood warning sirens and for the chaotic emergency response. Other elected leaders excused the storm as so massive that no one could have prepared for it.

But lawmakers failed to address the underlying problem: They have repeatedly rejected bills that could protect residents in the state’s most dangerous, flood-prone areas, an investigation by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found.

The majority of the 137 people confirmed to have died across five counties in the July 4 tragedy were staying in places identified by the federal government as being at risk for flooding, the newsrooms found. These were places where state lawmakers had a chance to curb development, but didn’t.

The newsrooms reviewed nearly 60 years of legislation and identified over five dozen flood safety bills rejected by lawmakers.

The most consequential measures, experts said, could have saved lives by stopping construction in the areas at greatest risk for flooding, including where people later died on July 4.

“Had the state enacted any of that legislation, we might not have had the excruciating loss,” Char Miller, a Texas environmental historian who now teaches at Pomona College in California, said after learning of the newsrooms’ findings. “The continued inability of the state to pass legislation to protect its citizens means it’s not doing the one thing it’s supposed to do, which is defend the health and safety of those who call Texas home.”

Lawmakers also didn’t pass measures that would have forced buildings in flood-prone areas to be elevated; blocked certain types of structures, such as solid waste facilities, from being built close to bodies of water; or granted local leaders additional authority to curb potentially unsafe development.

Texas has more buildings in flood-prone areas — at least 650,000 structures — than any other state besides Florida, according to a ProPublica and Tribune analysis of Federal Emergency Management Agency data. The analysis shows that only eight other states have a higher share of structures in flood-prone spots than Texas.

More people have died from floods in Texas, and more national flood insurance claims have been paid out here since 1980, than in nearly any state with the exception of Florida and Louisiana. Yet Texas trails at least 29 other states, including Florida, that have passed development standards that force structures to be built higher in flood-prone areas, according to a 2020 FEMA report.

“We need to resist this narrative that this disaster was unpreventable,” said Michael Slattery, director of the Institute for Environmental Studies at Texas Christian University. “The disaster is just shaped by policy choices made over what I thought were just years.” Instead, Slattery said, it was decades.

The need for stronger flood protections only grows more urgent, scientists say, as climate change makes heavy storms previously considered once in a lifetime more likely.

After this latest catastrophe, Gov. Greg Abbott called Texas politicians back for two special legislative sessions and tasked them with addressing aspects of the disaster. The only buildings legislators banned from flood-prone areas were youth camps, and only after intense lobbying by the grieving parents of 25 children and two counselors who died on July 4 at Camp Mystic. (Its executive director also died.)

Some Texas lawmakers over the years have pointed to protecting landowners’ rights to evaluate their own property risk as a reason not to pass additional regulations. At a hearing more than a month after the flood, Republican Rep. Wes Virdell, who represents Kerr County, said rural areas “enjoy the freedom to take our risk and build as we would like to.”

None of the top state leaders — Abbott, Lt. Gov Dan Patrick or House Speaker Dustin Burrows — responded to the newsrooms’ questions about whether legislators should enact stricter statewide building rules. Abbott’s office said he has addressed flooding issues by funding mitigation projects to lessen the storms’ impact.

Burrows’ office declined multiple interview requests, and Patrick’s office didn’t answer the newsrooms’ emails.

Without major changes, the same federal, state and local rules that permitted residents to construct their homes so close to the Guadalupe River in the first place are allowing many to build there again.

It’s a long story and as noted in this excerpt there are a lot of examples of bills that would have done something if they had passed back then, so read the rest. I found it kind of staggering to read the rationales of people in the story, people who were caught in the July 4 floods last year and nearly died or saw loved ones die, which mostly amounted to shrugs and a continued belief that government shouldn’t tell people where they can’t build houses. If nothing else, that’s a reminder of what would need to be overcome if we finally want to do something different this time around.

(Side note, Char Miller was formerly a history professor at Trinity University, where I took a couple of classes from him. He’s also written a lot on San Antonio’s history, and edited a book a few years back about Fifty Years of the Texas Observer. Always nice to see him get quoted in a story like this.)

Posted in That's our Lege, The great state of Texas | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Profile of Johnny Garcia

The runoff for the Democratic nomination in CD35 is one of the more interesting stories for May, featuring two different types of candidates who present contrasting theories of how to win this hardly insurmountable district. Here’s a story from the San Antonio Report on Johnny Garcia about one of those candidates.

Johnny Garcia

TX35 hopeful Johnny Garcia hasn’t even secured his party’s nomination yet, but national Democrats are already listing him among their top candidates to take back seats in the U.S. House this year.

The 39-year-old Westside native has spent nearly his entire career at the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office, rising from jail guard to the SWAT team and later serving as the sheriff’s communications director.

Though his campaign launch in the new 35th Congressional District surprised some local political watchers, national Democratic Party leaders say he’s exactly what they needed to put a tough seat in play.

This week Garcia was added to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s (DCCC) red-to-blue program, an elite group of 20 candidates believed to have the best chance of flipping seats either currently held by a Republican or — in light of many redrawn congressional maps — drawn to favor one.

The designation means he’ll get additional strategic guidance, staff resources, candidate trainings and fundraising support for a race that Democratic super PACs are already reserving ads for this fall.

That’s after he was already a personal guest of the Democratic National Committee chair at a national fundraiser earlier this year, and benefitted from hundreds of thousands of dollars in TV ads boosting him through a four-way primary.

[…]

And despite spending less than $5,000 on her campaign, housing activist Maureen Galindo finished first in Democrats’ race, taking 29% in the first round, to Garcia’s 27%.

Nevertheless, national Democrats say Garcia’s moderate politics and blue collar work experience are exactly what they need to win a district that’s been trending away from them in the era of President Donald Trump.

Under its new boundaries, Democrat Beto O’Rourke would have come a half a percentage point short of carrying TX35 in 2018 — the last midterm election under a Trump presidency.

But by 2024, those same voters supported Trump by more than 10 percentage points, making the area a ripe target for Republicans’ effort to squeeze more GOP seats out of Texas.

Democrats hoped a bigger-name candidate would jump in after incumbent U.S. Rep Greg Casar (D-Austin) was drawn out in redistricting, yet likely contenders from the legislature were set on the idea courts would eventually throw out Republicans’ gerrymandered maps.

It wasn’t until the filing period had already opened that the Supreme Court gave the green light for new maps to be used.

In that void, the little-known Garcia caught attention from national operatives with a campaign launch focused on his “old-school Democratic principles.”

[…]

Garcia says his original plan was to run for office when Salazar moved on to something bigger.

But seven months into his campaign, Garcia is now sounding more like a congressional candidate by the day.

Speaking to the North East Bexar County Democrats last month, Garcia said he was running to address “extreme gas prices, healthcare prices, grocery prices that we’re facing as a result of this failed administration.”

He also drew applause for criticizing Texas GOP leaders’ over a gerrymandering effort he said was “created to silence Latino, black and minority voters” here in San Antonio.

Some in the audience remained skeptical about his support from national Democratic groups that spent big to boost him from obscurity. But Garcia said that without a candidate drawing resources to the district, Bexar County stood to end this historically opportune election cycle with even fewer Democrats than when it started.

“I can’t control who decides to put their support in me, but from the get-go … there’s been only one candidate in this race that has come out as the front-runner and has garnered the support that we haven’t had here in Texas,” Garcia said. “We know we need a candidate that is going to help us win back the majority in the House, so we can put some guardrails on this reckless administration.”

See here for some background on Garcia’s opponent in the runoff, Maureen Galindo. Garcia’s the kind of boring, moderate, non-controversial candidate that the DCCC tends to back, for sometimes better and sometimes worse. The main difference that I see right now between him and Galindo is that he has raised a decent amount of money for this campaign, and she has raised bupkis. I appreciate that she had a relatively strong showing in the March primary, and that she was quickly endorsed by the other two candidates in the race for the runoff. She has clearly done some things right and I don’t want to be dismissive of that. But there’s no hope to win a swing seat race like this without ample resources to get your name and message out. Having a strong social media presence, as Galindo does, is a great thing, but it’s not nearly enough. I know no one likes to raise money, and the big-money brokers have far too much power and influence, but she hasn’t even shown a sign of generating grassroots small-dollar contributions. That’s just no wat to win.

I appreciate that this article referenced the 2018 Beto numbers and not just the 2024 Trump numbers in analyzing the race, which has been a hobbyhorse of mine. That said, the first poll data we have in CD35 makes it look like we’re playing with 2024 numbers, so there’s clearly work to be done. It’s nice for Garcia that the DCCC is backing him, but he didn’t exactly break out in the March primary, and it’s on him to prove that he’s got what it takes to win, too. The Chron has more.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Everybody stay home for the next few weeks

Traffic during the World Cup is gonna suck.

Houstonians should brace for heavier traffic on their morning and afternoon commutes during the 2026 FIFA World Cup, as soccer matches and overlapping summer events draw thousands of people to already congested roads.

Transportation officials are encouraging Houston drivers to plan ahead for longer commutes, work from home, or use alternative travel options, including buses and light rail — a tall order in a region where only 2% of workers use public transportation.

Robyn Egbert, principal program manager and travel-demand management supervisor at the Houston-Galveston Area Council, said the agency is providing online tools and information to help residents and employers plan ahead, from using public transportation to considering remote work. She said the organization’s role is to serve as a resource for commuters, not to direct their choices.

“I can’t tell people what to do,” Egbert said. “I’m an educator and informant and hopefully empower people to make the best decision for their organization that fits their needs.”

[…]

Matches at NRG Stadium will kick off at noon on several weekdays after the first game on June 14. Fans will begin arriving during the morning commute and leave before the afternoon peak rush hour begins at 4 p.m. Regular Houston drivers and visitors alike may end up on the same stretches of highway as they try to reach their destinations.

“You’re layering major crowds directly on top of normal commute times,” Egbert said.

The host committee will also host FIFA Fan Fest in EaDo south of Shell Energy Stadium, which will be open every day a World Cup match is being played. Along with Fan Fest, other World Cup-related events will take place across the region. Some are affiliated with the host committee, and some are not.

Local agencies expect 500,000 visitors in Houston during the World Cup. Other events will be held alongside the games, adding even more cars to the roads. Concerts and comedy shows are planned at Toyota Center, and the 2026 Texas GOP convention and the Energy Projects Conference & Exhibition will take place at the George R. Brown Convention Center.

Transportation research shows that major sporting events can increase traffic from 20 percent to 40 percent in nearby areas, according to H-GAC. Traffic is expected to surge along major corridors, including Loop 610 near NRG Stadium, Interstate 45 and U.S. 59 downtown.

Arcadis, a multinational design, engineering, and consultancy firm, has partnered with H-GAC to model “what if” traffic scenarios, identify likely congestion hotspots on highways and city streets, and translate the findings into recommendations for local and state agencies to manage traffic. The company is collecting data for agencies to use in an internal portal.

While regional officials say no single scenario is expected to cause widespread disruption, they note that routine crashes and congestion could have a greater impact on the already busy roads.

Basically, avoid the highlighted areas, work from home if you can, stay in your neighborhood as much as possible, and accept that traffic will suck. It will be over soon enough.

Posted in Other sports, Planes, Trains, and Automobiles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Here’s the Mayor’s 2026-27 budget

Now with the starter trash fee.

Mayor John Whitmire

Mayor John Whitmire rolled out a $7.5 billion budget for the city’s upcoming fiscal year Tuesday, saying a new $5 monthly fee would help the city’s long-struggling Solid Waste department but offering few specifics on how its operations would improve.

The fee, if approved by council, would be $5 per month for all residents served by city garbage service for the next two years, Whitmire said. Council Member Tiffany D. Thomas and five other sources briefed on the proposal said last week they were told the fee would incrementally increase until residents were charged $25 per month in 2032.

But on Tuesday, the mayor did not commit to that plan.

“We’ll keep it at five the next two years, and then council, in future budgets, will determine where we go from there, because we’re not going to do what I would call a genuine garbage fee until we improve services,” Whitmire said.

Whitmire pitched the new $5 “administrative fee” not only as a means to improve solid waste operations but as a way to back the city away from a financial cliff.

The city’s $3.1 billion general fund provides most core services and faced a deficit of about $180 million. Whitmire proposes to move the $117 million Solid Waste budget from the general fund to the city’s utility system within Houston Public Works.

Whitmire also proposes to charge the utility system $104 million for its pipes using the city right of way, a payment that will also go into the general fund. The moves shift costs from the general fund – fed mostly by property and sales taxes – and onto the utility system, which is funded by water and sewer bills.

The mayor did not give specifics when asked how the new fee would improve the department’s operations beyond providing Solid Waste needed resources.

“Public Works is one of our largest departments, so they will collaborate,” Whitmire said. “Look at the best routes, better equipment, and you will notice the difference.”

The city, he added, would work with neighborhood leaders and the police department to address illegal dumping.

Houston also runs a “sponsorship” program that gives each household that opts out of city trash services $6 per month to help pay for private trash collection.

Whitmire did not say whether the program would continue, saying the issue would be “under discussion” as Solid Waste merges with Public Works. Whitmire also said lower fee options for low-income and elderly residents might be on the table if the new fee tops $5.

“I’ve got some very smart directors,” Whitmire said. “We’re going to do this merger. We’re going to listen to council, but more importantly, we’re going to listen to the Houston people.”

City Controller Chris Hollins denounced Whitmire’s proposal, saying using water and sewer revenues for trash service was not an example of budget efficiency. The mayor, he said, is “raiding one fund after another until there’s no juice left to squeeze,” pointing to when the city used stormwater funds to demolish buildings.

“The pattern of shifting costs, the pattern of hiding the true costs — this is familiar to us, and it should concern every Houstonian who expects their city government to play it straight,” Hollins said in a Tuesday afternoon press conference.

Residents are being misled about the garbage fee, he added, saying the fee “doesn’t come close” to covering the cost of trash pickup. The true figures are in an unreleased study the city commissioned more than two years ago on solid waste operations, he said.

“Where’s that study?” Hollins said. “The mayor needs to release the full study to us so that we can understand what’s in it.”

Advocates with the Houston People’s Budget, a grassroots coalition of “flood survivors, workers, immigrants and neighborhood organizations,” also criticized Whitmire’s plan.

“The mayor’s budget proposal passes the city’s financial burdens to the Houstonians with the least resources and moves money from one critical need (water and wastewater) to another (trash pickup),” Alice Liu, a campaigner for the group, said in a statement. “What we need instead is a budget that prioritizes Houstonians, addresses failing water and flood infrastructure, refuses to compromise on worker safety, and stops police overspending.”

[…]

The main beneficiaries of removing the Solid Waste department from the strained general fund remain Houston’s police and fire departments, which make up the majority of that fund.

The proposed police department budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1 is $1.2 billion, $105 million more than the current budget year. The fire department would get $719 million, a $60 million increase.

The city’s parks department budget would get a bump of $1.3 million compared to the current budget, and the city library system would get $1 million more.

See here for some background on the trash fee, here for the Mayor’s press release on the budget, which you can read here, and here for more on that trash pikcup subsidy, in which the city “reimburses homeowners associations $6 per house each month if they contract with private garbage collection services instead of using the city’s Solid Waste department”, because it’s cheaper to do that than to include them in city solid waste services. That sure seems like an argument to me for increasing the trash fee, and then we can easily justify killing that subsidy. I would bet $10 right now that ain’t gonna happen.

I also don’t like moving Solid Waste under Public Works, as it also raises questions about the sewage consent decree and how that will be funded. I might feel differently if there were more details. I could see how this might be a fit, but it’s easier to see how these two should be separate departments. Show me the math on this one to make it make sense. As for the trash fee, I’m open to the argument for phasing it in, but what does $5 a month actually accomplish? I thought the goal here was to make solid waste self-sufficient or at least close to it, as it is in other cities. What are we doing here? Maybe the Council debates will help clarify, because we need it. More here and here from the Chron, and here from KUHF.

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Harris County is still where the Texans and the Rodeo want to be

I never really thought that other places were a live possibility, and now that has been confirmed.

Team owner Cal McNair said the Houston Texans and the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo have decided to make things work in Harris County.

Team president Mike Tomon said the Texans have not ruled out building a new stadium within the park but are focusing on renovating Reliant Stadium, which is said to be significantly behind on needed maintenance.

“What we’ve talked to the Rodeo (about) is we’re going to make it work, and so we’ll figure out a way to make it work and have everybody a winner in this thing,” McNair said Monday at the team’s annual charity golf event, which raised more than $565,000.

In February 2025, the Texans began negotiating a new lease with Harris County and the Rodeo. The current lease expires in 2032. At the time, the Texans said they wanted to remain in the greater Houston area but not necessarily in Harris County.

But McNair’s latest comments represent a significant shift in their line of thinking. Whereas other nearby counties were thought to be viable candidates to potentially house a new stadium for the Texans and Rodeo, if it came to that, Harris County is now the sole focus.

“The reason we feel that way is if you take a step back and you look at Reliant Park, the attributes of it, you have 350 continuous acres on major arteries with (Interstate) 610, and soon to be the third-largest city in the United States,” Tomon said. “That is pretty special. So when we think about our partnership with the Rodeo, we’re both aligned on we’ll do everything we can to make it work on that specific site because we really think that can be transformative for the city of Houston.”

The facilities the Rodeo uses are also in need of renovations. Reliant Park is owned by the county, which leases the facilities to the Texans and the Rodeo. As part of the current lease agreement, the county is responsible for the facilities within the park and their upkeep. But the county is behind on those maintenance needs.

A new lease agreement will likely shift that responsibility to the Texans and the Rodeo, who could also own the park and have more say in the park’s future.

When asked if there was a timeline of when he wanted to get the new lease agreement done, Tomon indicated that they have time.

“Yesterday, but we have six years before the lease expires when we need to have a solution,” Tomon said.

[…]

The Houston Chronicle previously reported that the Texans have explored the possibility of building a new stadium but had not committed to that path. The discussion on whether renovations makes the most sense or a new stadium remains ongoing. The decision will likely depend on the costs associated with renovating the park versus the costs of building new facilities.

If those costs are similar, the county would have an interesting decision on its hands. Reliant Stadium was built in 2002.

“We’ve been spending a lot of time on that,” Tomon said. “The thing I relay is a great deal of confidence out there is we’ve been pretty exhaustive on how we’re looking at these things. I think right now our focus remains on the renovation, but we’ve really kind of come towards the end of making a final decision. So we’ll have to come back when we totally close the loop on it.

“But it’s been an exhaustive process of studies, and parties weighing in on it. So I feel really good with whatever output we come with, will be one that has been fully vetted.”

See here and here for some background. The Texans and the Rodeo apparently came to the same conclusion that anyone else might have, which is that while they probably could score a cheap piece of land up north of the Woodlands or wherever, what they have now is really valuable and hard to replicate. It’s centrally located, the light rail line solves a lot of access issues, everything basically works as is. If you did build that exurban palace, it would like great and undoubtedly come along with a ton of tax incentives, but it would also make the fan experience a lot worse for much of the fan base. I don’t know how much that sort of concern weighs on any capitalistic venture these days, but it had to be worth something.

As far as the renovate-or-rebuild option goes, renovating is surely the cheaper option, though it may be more disruptive and it may make it impossible to add the very latest in the sort of stadium upgrades that allow the truly rich to spend even more on their super-luxury boxes. Building a new stadium would require either a new location or figuring out how to do it all in the existing space, whether or not the Astrodome remains an impediment. That’s their problem, and I’m sure they’ll figure something out. In the meantime, here’s to keeping something more or less as it is, rather than reaching for pie in the sky thing that no one had asked for.

(My decision to never stop calling it Reliant Stadium sure looks smart now, doesn’t it?)

Posted in Elsewhere in Houston, Other sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

When not to bet on yourself

Dude

Texas GOP congressional candidate Zeke Enriquez bet on the outcome of his own election on Kalshi, the prediction market said in a press release Wednesday, marking the latest sign of the industry’s newfound prevalence in the state’s politics.

Enriquez, who finished 11th in the Republican primary for Texas’ 21st Congressional District with 1.4% of the vote, traded less than $100 worth of contracts related to his own candidacy, according to Kalshi regulatory documents. Kalshi fined Enriquez $784 and suspended him from the platform for five years after a “full investigation” with which Enriquez was “fully cooperative,” the company said.

Two other political candidates, in Minnesota and Virginia, were also caught trading on their own elections and suspended from the platform, Kalshi said.

Prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket have faced growing scrutiny in recent months, with lawmakers and others raising concerns about insider trading and fears that the exploding industry could undermine the integrity of U.S. elections with the 2026 midterms underway. The suspensions and fines mark one of the most robust enforcement actions taken yet by a prediction market platform against political candidates, according to CNN.

A Kalshi spokesperson said the platform referred Enriquez’s case to the CFTC. It did not refer his case to any state agencies, according to the spokesperson, who said it wasn’t required.

[…]

“Cases like these demonstrate Kalshi’s commitment to policing all types of unfair or improper trading on our platform,” Bobby DeNault, Kalshi’s head of enforcement, said in the statement announcing the suspensions Wednesday. “Regardless of the size of a trade, political candidates who can influence a market based on whether they stay in or out of a race violate our rules. No matter how small the size of the trade, any trade that is found to have violated our exchange rules will be punished.”

What a dumbass. The rule broken, according to that Kalshi document, is pretty clear: “If a Trader is a decision maker, either directly or indirectly, or has any influence, directly or indirectly, no matter the scale and importance of the influence, on the outcome of the Underlying (event) of any Contract, that Trader is prohibited from attempting to enter into any trade, either directly or indirectly, on the market in such Contracts.” As anyone with even a passing familiarity with sports gambling and why players and coaches/managers are forbidden from voting on themselves or their teams, any bet you make in which you have direct influence on the outcome is one that calls into question the validity of the exercise. It doesn’t matter if you were betting on yourself to win and trying your best within the rules to do so. The betting markets – and yes, Kalshi and Polymarket are betting markets – can’t abide any of it and correctly refuse to split hairs on intent and purity. He Pete Rosed himself, and he got caught. End of story.

The federal government will do nothing about this sort of thing as long as Donald Trump and his grubby sons are in power. There’s nothing stopping the state from passing a law that would enact some disincentives and penalties for this. I look forward to seeing who introduces bills to this effect in the next legislative session. I will note that Dan Patrick would like to regulate prediction markets, but the feds are in their way, and Ken Paxton has declined opportunities to join with other state AGs to advocate for states that want to do this. Maybe a bill targeted specifically at candidates could pass, given that Kalshi and Polymarket have policies that align with it, but they may not want that foot in the door. It would be an entertainingly messy fight, in any event.

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Texas blog roundup for the week of May 4

The Texas Progressive Alliance knows that the Fifth Circuit is even more corrupt than SCOTUS as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Off the Kuff brings you two more polls showing James Taalrico leading the race for US Senate in Texas.

SocraticGadfly loves him some James Hansen, agrees that we’re in a climate crisis, not just climate change, that will lead to 5°C of temperature increase in a century without strong action soon, knows that WAY too many people still don’t get this, and hates that the likes of Michael Mann have attacked him as alarmist, BUT explains in great detail why he is far more skeptical than Hansen about nuclear energy being a major part of the solution.

Neil at the Houston Democracy Project spoke about empowering ourselves at a May Day event at a Unitarian Church in The Woodlands. As always-The next action is when you organize it.

=======================

And here are some posts of interest from other Texas blogs.

Steve Vladeck and Law Dork critique the SCOTUS “ruling” in the lawsuit over Texas’ Congressional re-redistricting.

Space City Weather answers your questions about El Nino, why it always rains on weekends, and more.

The Texas Signal talks to some drag performers about what they feel they can legally do now.

Texas Rural Reporter uses the example of a kid from Spearman being drafted by the NFL to show how important public schools are in rural communities and why the voucher program is a threat to them.

City of Yes talks about making space for the things we don’t like but still need.

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New UH/Hobby poll has Paxton beating Cornyn in the Senate runoff

As long as they keep beating each other up, it’s all good.

Still a crook any way you look

Attorney General Ken Paxton leads Sen. John Cornyn by three percentage points in a new poll of Texas’ U.S. Senate Republican runoff, suggesting the May 26 contest will be narrowly decided absent a shakeup in the final weeks.

The statewide survey, conducted by the University of Houston’s Hobby School of Public Affairs, found Paxton garnering 48% of the vote to Cornyn’s 45% among likely GOP runoff voters. Fielded from April 28 to Friday, the poll surveyed 1,200 voters and yielded a margin of error of +/-2.83 percentage points.

Since the March 3 primary, when Cornyn finished narrowly ahead of Paxton, virtually all polling of the overtime round has come from groups with partisan ties. Most have found either a close race or a single-digit Paxton lead, much in line with the Hobby School poll.

The two Republicans are locked in a runoff after neither secured a majority of the vote in March. Cornyn won 42% of the vote to Paxton’s 40.5%, with U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt, R-Houston, coming in third with 13.5%.

The UH poll found Hunt supporters breaking toward Paxton by a 19 percentage point margin, 54% to 35%.

Whether Hunt voters come back for the runoff — and whom they back if so — is an open question with the potential to swing the race. On the trail, Hunt was highly critical of the 74-year-old Cornyn, whom he criticized for both his age and role in crafting a bipartisan gun safety bill. Hunt sought to portray himself as a younger Paxton — without the ethical and legal baggage the attorney general has accumulated over his years in office. But since finishing third, Hunt has resisted overtures to endorse in the contest, saying he would follow President Donald Trump’s lead.

Trump has notably stayed out of the Senate contest despite pledging to weigh in, reportedly for Cornyn, the day after the primary.

In any case, the UH poll is the latest to find that Cornyn and Paxton each have a solid lock on their respective bases, with few voters changing their mind since March and all but a fraction of the electorate still on the fence. Paxton’s coalition from March is slightly more durable, the survey found: Of the likely runoff voters who pulled the lever for him in round one, 95% plan to back him again this month — compared to 91% who plan to stick with Cornyn.

But among the 7% of respondents who are still undecided in the contest — the majority of whom dislike both candidates — Cornyn is viewed favorably by nearly a quarter of that bloc, a bit ahead of the 19% who voiced a favorable view of Paxton.

That suggests that, after 2.14 million voters cast ballots in the March GOP contest, the runoff result will be shaped by which candidate turns out more of his existing base of supporters.

Whatever. It’s much ado about shitty people, and I can only care so much. What I do care about is what the supporters of the losing candidate will do. As I’ve said, I believe one reason for the very lackadaisical poll numbers in the general election for both Paxton and Cornyn is this primary runoff and the bad feelings each side now has for the other. Will they hug it out afterwards, or will they go to their corners and marinate in their grievances? I know what I’m rooting for. I’m also rooting for there to be a followup poll with general election numbers. We’ll see.

As for the other races polled, both AG candidates are also shitty and would likely be worse as AG than Paxton has been, because they’ll want to build on what he’s done and they won’t have the baggage he has. The Railroad Commissioner race contains one of the most nakedly racist candidates the GOP has ever had on a ballot. He’s trailing in this poll, but there are a lot of undecided voters. There should be more attention paid to that race. Maybe there will be if that guy wins. The poll’s landing page is here, and the Chron has more.

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Checking in on that sewage consent decree

From the inbox:

Five years into a landmark 2021 federal consent decree requiring Houston to fix its sewage system, a new independent engineering review commissioned by Bayou City Waterkeeper finds that progress is falling short of what residents need and what the law requires. The findings were presented today to Houston City Council.

The review, authored by Kevin Draganchuk, P.E. of CEA Engineers, assessed all available consent decree compliance reporting. The results reveal a combination of delays, missing data, and a transparency gap that makes independently verifying whether Houston is on track to meet its legal obligations difficult to discern by city council, community members, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

WHAT THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW FOUND

Five of the nine neighborhoods the city itself identified as its highest-priority “capacity-constrained areas” — places with the worst chronic sewage overflow records — remain in the design phase five years in. Only one of those five has seen construction begin on the fixes the decree requires.

Several required projects have been delayed as of most recent reporting by Houston Public Works, raising concern about Public Works’ project status on key consent decree deadlines. Among the noteworthy is the evaluation of the massive, aging 69th Street Wastewater Treatment Plant, which has reported high-volume sewage overflows during heavy rains and has been cited by TCEQ at least 20 times since 2021 for potential permit violations.

The engineer found the city’s annual compliance reports “severely lacking in data.” Specific completion dates, project-level backup data, and methodological detail are routinely omitted making it impossible for City Council, the EPA, or the public to independently verify compliance. The engineer also flagged unexplained peculiarities in the city’s reported data, including a 97-mile decrease in total reported pipe length alongside an increase of 1,800 manholes. We can assume why this is, but without verified data, are not able to confirm why this is the case.

Where repairs have been made, they work. A lift station improvement off Clinton Drive appears to have addressed the root cause of high-volume overflows near Woodland Park and demonstrates exactly the kind of impact these investments can have for Houston neighborhoods. However, too few of these fixes are moving fast enough.

“Where the city invests, it works. In Woodland Park, early projects have already significantly reduced sanitary sewer overflow events during rain and wet weather. This is proof that when we prioritize infrastructure, we see immediate, tangible returns for our neighborhoods. The consent decree is a vital win for Houston — and we must protect it.”

— Guadalupe Fernandez, Policy Strategy Director, Bayou City Waterkeeper

WHY THIS MATTERS NOW

A national report released this month ranked Houston one of the three most stressed sewer systems in the country, calling our stress level “critical” and citing sewage overflows and a lack of investment as primary culprits.

Many consent decree deadlines culminated at the five year mark, especially Early Action Projects, where we would hope to see more progress than we have.

With water rates rising, Houstonians deserve to know that those funds are moving the needle on the $9 billion infrastructure overhaul the consent decree demands.

In addition to the costly daily fines for non-compliance, failure to meet the requirements of the consent decree creates legal risk for the city

Houston is in the middle of budget season with funding planning for infrastructure projects to follow. This is a time in which the city will evaluate how and where to spend its limited funds and what projects to prioritize. With every day compliance is delayed and another sewage overflow reported, project costs increase and new penalties are assessed by the state and federal governments. Inflation means that every year of deferred repair raises the ultimate cost to taxpayers. And we know the city has already accrued more than a million dollars in fees and likely twice this amount since 2021. And failure to meet consent decree requirements creates compounding legal and fiscal risks for the city.

 

“Water fees are going up, and Houstonians deserve to know the money they are paying is going to improve the systems and infrastructure it is intended for and that investment is being made efficiently in terms of time and costs. As the city assesses water and wastewater fees, we hope city council and Public Works will follow in the footsteps of places like San Antonio and Austin that have programs addressing affordability for residents with low incomes.”

— Kristen Schlemmer, Co-Executive Director, Bayou City Waterkeeper

BAYOU CITY WATERKEEPER’S REQUESTS TO HOUSTON CITY COUNCIL

Bayou City Waterkeeper is formally asking Houston City Council to:

1.  Hold Houston Public Works accountable to its legal obligations under the 2021 consent decree and ensure ratepayers’ dollars are working toward compliance.

2.  Require Houston Public Works to provide more detailed, verified reporting including specific completion dates, inspection methodologies, and confirmation that the most critical areas are being prioritized.

3.  Use the current budget process to ensure Houston Public Works has the resources – beyond those generated by water rate increases – it needs to accelerate compliance — and to insist on transparency in how those resources are deployed.

QUESTIONS WORTH ASKING

Bayou City Waterkeeper encourages reporters covering this story to seek answers to the following:

  • Has the EPA ever formally flagged the city for non-compliance with the Consent Decree?

  • The city has paid $1,266,400 in penalties to the DOJ as of June 2024, according to Bayou City Waterkeeper’s internal analysis, with a comparable amount likely paid to TCEQ. What fines have been assessed since then, and from what funding source does the city pay them?

  • What did the city spend on Consent Decree progress in each fiscal year, and on what?

  • Is it accurate that total gravity pipe mileage dropped 97 miles between 2024 and 2025? If so, why?

  • For the 4 out of 9 priority capacity areas (specifically areas 1, 5/6/12, and 8) that have been “in design” for years with no construction start dates, what are their planned construction start dates?

  • Why were some areas identified by the city as “capacity-constrained” in the Consent Decree then later concluded to require no further work (e.g., areas 4a, 7, and 9)?

  • Are permit violations associated with the city’s 39 wastewater treatment plants improving? (TPDES permit data available from TCEQ.)

  • Are sanitary sewer overflows decreasing in the 9 priority basins, or are they shifting to other locations in the system?

See here for the background. I don’t have anything to add to this, I share the concerns and encourage the city to meet its obligations. The Chron has more.

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

NCAA basketball tournaments set to expand to 76

The First Four is about to become the First Twelve.

The long-awaited inevitability is nearly a reality. Both the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball tournaments are expected to expand to 76 teams, effective next year, sources told CBS Sports on Tuesday.

A formal announcement by the NCAA is expected in May, after every necessary committee officially ratifies the change in the near future.

Expansion has been discussed and debated at the NCAA level for four years. Proponents — particularly conference commissioners, head coaches and NCAA president Charlie Baker — have celebrated the idea of more access. Inversely, adversaries insisted it would lessen the significance of the regular season, deteriorate the quality of March Madness and be a net-negative for the sport. In the end, the argument for a bigger tournament that will eventually generate additional revenue apparently won out.

Although a decision has not formally been voted on yet, one source said it’s a “very, very small chance” that any reversal would happen in the next week. A slew of NCAA groups, including the men’s and women’s oversight committees, the men’s and women’s basketball selection committees, the Division I cabinet and the Board of Governors all need, and are expected to, approve the move in the short-term.

ESPN first reported the development Tuesday evening. In response to that story and this one, the NCAA put out a statement: “Expanding the basketball tournaments would require approval from multiple NCAA committees, including the men’s and women’s basketball committees, and no final recommendations or decisions have been made at this time.”

This will be the first expansion of the NCAA Tournament since it went from 65 to 68 teams in 2011. In 2001 the tournament moved from its platonic ideal of 64 to an additional 65th team after the Mountain West’s creation. The die was cast then for NCAA leaders who opted to expand the tournament as opposed to eliminating one at-large bid and staying firm at 64.

[…]

The move will create eight additional at-large bids, all of them to worse teams (per the cut line’s standard) than those that have qualified for every previous NCAA Tournament. Per sources, the NCAA will be adopting an expanded model for its opening-round games that matches what it had been doing with the First Four. The move to 76 will mean 52 teams auto-slot into the main bracket (first round starting on Thursday and Friday), with the 24 leftover teams filling up 12 game slots for that Tuesday and Wednesday immediately after Selection Sunday.

How that all fits on a single piece of paper and in an easily understandable format for the average sports fan remains to be seen. What’s undeniable is that the NCAA, by choosing to go to 76, is making the process more complicated for the American sports public that, for decades, has mostly paid attention to a 64-team tournament.

The First Four in both branding and format is dead, one source said. The 12 games for the 24 teams in the expanded NCAA Tournament will be labeled “the opening round.”

The expanded opening round will be split between at-large teams and teams that have won automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. All No. 16 seeds and half the No. 15 seeds will slot into those play-in games on Tuesday and Wednesday of the opening round. The other half of the games will be a mix, depending on team quality, comprised of No. 11 seeds, all No. 12 seeds and potentially a game that will feed into the No. 13 line for the first round that Thursday or Friday.

This would also mean a new TV lineup. While exact tip times and format for the opening round on Tuesday and Wednesday have not yet been determined, the broad template will be to have the first games tip in the late afternoon on the East Coast, sources said, and to stagger the tip times in a tripleheader format on multiple networks. The first window would be somewhere in the 4 p.m. ET slot, then the second closer to 7 p.m. ET, the third pair of tip times slated between 9 and 10 p.m. ET.

I found this via Defector, whose Ray Ratto gets into the real reasons behind this move. Before I get to that I’ll confess that I have been in favor in the past of expanding this tournament, on the grounds that there are over 300 teams that play in tournament-eligible basketball, and it seemed unfair to me that so many of them get shut out of it. I naively thought this would improve access to the tournament. IN my defense, that was thinking from more than a decade ago, well before the current orgy of major conference expansion and all of the other chaos that has wrought. Here’s Ratto:

This news, long expected but not awaited, was broken by ESPN’s very estimable college basketball transom peeker, Pete Thamel, although his story had one bright red herring in it. That would be the 11th paragraph, which reads:

>The primary driver of this move hasn’t been money, but rather access for at-large bids for power conferences. The expansion has been pushed by power conferences, which have grown throughout the course of the current deal.

What he clearly meant to say was, “the primary driver of this move has of course been money, because that’s the only thing that ever drives any of these scabrous billboard lawyers. The expansion has been pushed by power conferences, who fully expect to have their lesser members fill those extra 12 slots so that they won’t have to drag-ass back to their alums and say, ‘We need money to pay off the coach we’re about to fire because we got stuck in the goddamn NIT.'”

But we can forgive Thamel this one inadvertent error because, given that he has done this for awhile, he probably considered it an obvious inference based on the reflexively rapacious behaviors of the people involved. The NCAA is trying to pay tribute to keep the power conferences—the institutions that are, amusingly, the instruments of its eventual death—from killing it today. This is a pretty good strategy when it’s the only one available. The funny part, though, is that the power conferences want the NCAA dead no matter what. They want this so that their pals in government can create a new governing body through legislation, and so have their industrial larcenies sanctioned and controlled within a structure that lets them step on the burgeoning player compensation movement. Evidently, the big conferences want a system that allows them to pirate other schools’ players without having any of their own stolen.

Of course it’s about the money – it’s always about the money – but the threat of the big conferences ditching the NCAA and rolling their own tournament is a part of that as well. But maybe that’s not as big a threat as we might think, or at least as the NCAA might think. CBS’ Matt Norlander disputes that thinking.

In the early 2020s the SEC and Big 12 expanded to 16 teams. The ACC and Big Ten bloated to 18 schools each. They redefined the landscape of the NCAA and then used the blood of the old Pac-12 to draw the lines and borders on the new map of college athletics.

Even then, with their superconferences and mega-rich media deals, the commissioners, university presidents and athletic directors at the high-majors weren’t satisfied. Everything comes at a cost. Expansion of a league means it becomes statistically more difficult for average teams in the Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and ACC to qualify for the NCAA Tournament — while at the same time ensuring, across the board, that those conferences would hoover up more bids.

Sixty-eight was no longer enough. There just aren’t enough bids! Won’t you think of the 11th-place team in the Big Ten!

The Unspoken Threat was: Expand the tournament or else.

Or else what?

Or else the Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and ACC could eventually consider starting their own national basketball tournament? That was The Unspoken Threat. This unhealthy velvet-hammer sentiment was shared to me by various NCAA and conference sources across the past three years. The NCAA felt it had to work its way to expansion, eventually, to get the SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC to put down their swords.

“Do you get out ahead of this potentially and try to do something that might be helpful and meet the needs of the landscape that’s changing?” one high-ranking source told CBS Sports in 2025. “It does potentially guard against you in a proactive way. Those four, and perhaps two conferences, saying at some point, ‘You know what? We’re done with this. We’re just gonna go do our own thing.’ Is that likely to happen right now? No, but in 2032 and it’s the end of this CBS/Turner contract, and given what they’re doing with CFP and all that, you just can’t be tone deaf to the reality. The overall greatest part of the value of the tournament — in addition to the David vs. Goliath, which is certainly a significant part — is having those [power-conference] teams involved.”

[…]

The men’s basketball tournament is the only thing that makes money for the NCAA. You lose that, you lose everything. The NCAA dies. That’s the power of The Unspoken Threat.

If, theoretically, the power conferences went off on their own to make a new national basketball tournament, it would burn down March Madness and destroy one of America’s greatest institutions. Instead, the NCAA could expand its March Madness fields order to appease the most powerful people in college sports and keep the enterprise together. To avoid a civil war.

And I’m here writing this column to tell you that this ever-lurking threat is and was bullshit.

It would never happen.

The most powerful people in college football’s “Power Four” do not carry the collective guts, gumption nor stupidity to actually go through with such a doomsday act. To leave the NCAA Tournament and start your own would mean to leave the NCAA altogether. All the other sports have to come with you, and all those sports cost a lot of money. What do you even do with the Big East, which doesn’t have football but boasts three of the most historically significantly programs in the sport’s history? Do you have a national tournament without UConn? Get all the way out of here with that.

In this apocalyptic scenario, the defecting power leagues wouldn’t get the naming rights to March Madness and everything else that’s built up cultural equity over more than 60 years either. They’d deplete the value of college basketball’s biggest event by losing the Cinderella aspect and not porting over most other conferences and there would, ironically enough, be a smaller tournament and a less valuable as a product as a result. The power leagues would have to start everything from scratch.

There’s a lot more and I found it persuasive, so read the rest. It’s too late for that thinking now, but maybe for the next time, when the ask is to go to 80 or whatever. In the meantime, expect the process of picking a bracket for whatever pool you enter to become that much more complicated. And expect it to be that much harder for a small-conference Cinderella to get anywhere. That, too, was part of the point of this.

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SCOTUS puts administrative stay on unhinged Fifth Circuit mifepristone ruling

On hold for now.

The Supreme Court on Monday restored nationwide access to a widely used abortion medication in a temporary order that will, for now, allow women to once again obtain the pill mifepristone by mail.

In a brief order, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. paused a lower-court ruling from Friday that had prevented abortion providers from prescribing the pills by telemedicine and shipping them to patients, causing confusion for providers and patients. The one-sentence order imposes a pause until at least May 11. He requested that the parties file briefs by Thursday, and then the full court will determine how to proceed.

The state of Louisiana sued the Food and Drug Administration to restrict access to mifepristone, saying the availability of the medication by mail has allowed abortions to continue in the state despite its near-total ban.

Medication is now the method used in nearly two-thirds of abortions in the United States, and is typically delivered in the form of a two-drug regimen through the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.

Friday’s ruling from the conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit temporarily reinstated an F.D.A. requirement that patients visit medical providers in person to obtain mifepristone while the litigation continues. That rule was first lifted in 2021.

Two manufacturers of mifepristone, Danco Laboratories and GenBioPro, on Saturday asked the Supreme Court to intervene. In court filings, they said the Fifth Circuit ruling would cause chaos for providers and patients — and upend a major avenue for abortion access across the country. About one-fourth of abortions in the United States are now provided through telemedicine.

Justice Alito’s order, known as an administrative stay, was provisional and expected, but an important interim step for women seeking to obtain mifepristone in the next week. The order does not signal how the full court may eventually handle the case.

Justice Alito acted on his own at this stage because he is the justice assigned to handle emergency applications from the region of the country covered by the Fifth Circuit.

The Trump administration has defended the F.D.A. in court, but has not said whether it supports keeping in place the regulations that make it easier for women to obtain the pills. The F.D.A. is conducting a review of mifepristone, and the administration had asked the lower court to put the litigation on hold until that review is complete.

See here for the background. Whatever happens here is not going to be the end of the story – the original lawsuit is likely to get sent back to the district court that would have ruled in favor of the plaintiffs but held off because of the national implications, and of course the FDA is doing what is surely a bogus “review” of mifepristone, which I’m sure it wants to wait on until after the election. I think it’s more likely than not that this ruling is blocked, but only until the next chapter plays out. None of this is going away anytime soon, certainly not until there’s a better government in place. Mother Jones and Daily Kos have more.

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Quentin Wiltz elected Mayor of Pearland

Here’s a result from Saturday I missed originally.

Quentin Wiltz

A Democratic-backed candidate has won a closely contested mayoral race in Pearland, Texas, a Republican-leaning suburb of Houston in Brazoria County that has consistently voted for President Donald Trump since 2016.

Winning candidate Quentin Wiltz shared the results of the contest on his Instagram account on Saturday, writing: “I am deeply humbled, incredibly grateful, and honored by the trust you have placed in me.”

He also told Newsweek in a statement: “Pearland has spoken. We are a city ready for change, and I’m looking forward to building a better future for everyone who lives here.”

“We have a lot of work to do. This victory is for all of us, and the victories ahead will come by building unity and working together as one city, both East and West,” he added.

[…]

While the Pearland results have not yet been officially certified, early figures show Wiltz securing 51 percent of the vote compared with Republican-endorsed candidate Tony Carbone’s 49 percent.

Carbone also congratulated Wiltz in a Facebook post, writing: “I wish him success as he serves our community,” adding that “tonight didn’t end the way we had hoped, but I’m deeply grateful for the support, encouragement, and trust so many in our community showed throughout this campaign.”

Brazoria County Democratic Party told Newsweek the impact of Wiltz’ victory “cannot be overstated,” as Pearland voters “elected a Black Democrat to be mayor in a red county and a red state.”

“This is historic and we will celebrate the success and continue the work. November is right around the corner and we have an entire slate of highly qualified candidates ready to serve,” the group added.

This is the third time that Quentin Wiltz has run for Mayor of Pearland, which is on a three-year electoral cycle. He ran in 2017, against the then-91-year-old (!) incumbent Mayor Tom Reid. That race went to a runoff, as there was a third candidate, and Reid won the runoff by a wider margin (and with higher turnout) after some ugliness in a Council race that also went to a runoff. It’s not obvious where to look for Pearland election results – I know they used to be on the Brazoria County elections page, but that appears to have been revamped since 2017 and they’re not there anymore. Some googling got me this:

May 2017: “Mayor Tom Reid will face off in a run off election against Quentin Wiltz on Saturday, June 10. Reid received 3,703 votes (48.85%), while Wiltz received 3,460 votes (45.64%). Jimi Amos received 418 votes (5.51%).

June 2017 runoff results: “Tom Reid has been reelected as Mayor. Reid received 7,960 votes (59.37%), while Wiltz received 5,447 votes (40.63%).”

I was curious about how often Wiltz had run since then – there were two other opportunities between 2017 and now – and after some more googling, I found this story from the November 2020 election:

Former City Council member Kevin Cole has been elected as the new mayor of Pearland, replacing 95-year-old Tom Reid, who held the position for most of the past 42 years, making him one of the longest-serving mayors in the country.

Cole secured 56.7% of the vote in Brazoria County with all 46 polling locations reporting, as of about 10 pm Tuesday night.

“Pearland, thank you for the support and confidence to be the next Mayor of this great City,” Cole wrote on Facebook. “I look forward to serving all the citizens our City. I want to have a City where we can Live, Work, Play, and Pray.”

Though officially a nonpartisan race, Cole was supported by the Republicans and faced off against former parks and recreation board chairman Quentin Wiltz, who gained support from the Democrats.

Cole apparently ran unopposed in 2023, so Wiltz won against his third opponent. I’ll look to see if there’s some more local coverage of this, as the only other stories I saw when I looked around on Sunday were from Newsweek, similar in tone and content to that MSN story, and this tiny blurb in Community Impact, which just noted Wiltz’ win. This is a notable result, so hopefully there will be better coverage of it. Whatever the case, my congratulations to Mayor-elect Quentin Wiltz.

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ACLU files another lawsuit against 2023 Texas anti-immigrant law

From the inbox:

The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, ACLU, and the Texas Civil Rights Project have filed a class-action lawsuit seeking a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction to block several provisions of Senate Bill 4 (88-4) from going into effect May 15. The 2023 law is one of the most extreme anti-immigrant laws ever passed by any state legislature in the country.

S.B. 4 would allow local and state law enforcement to arrest, detain, and remove people they suspect to have entered Texas from another country without federal authorization. The organizations are specifically seeking to prevent four different provisions of the law from going into effect:

  • The reentry crime that would apply to anyone living in or traveling through Texas who reentered the United States — even if the person had federal permission to reenter or has since obtained lawful immigration status such as a green card.
  • The power given to magistrates — who don’t know the intricacies of immigration law — to issue deportation orders.
  • The crime of failing to comply with the magistrate’s removal orders.
  • The requirement that magistrates continue a prosecution even when a person has a pending immigration case under federal law.

Advocates have warned that the law will separate families and directly lead to racial profiling, subjecting thousands of Black and Brown Texans to the state prison system, which is rife with civil rights abuses.

“S.B. 4 would transform our police and judges into immigration agents — threatening neighbors who have families here, who have lived here for years, even those who have legal status,” said Adriana Piñon (she/her), legal director at the ACLU of Texas. “Immigration enforcement is exclusively the federal government’s arena, and no state has ever claimed the power Texas threatens to wield here. We are taking this back to court to defend our Texas communities.”

The individual plaintiffs in the class action lawsuit seek to represent thousands of people across the state who may be held liable for violating the reentry provision of S.B. 4. One plaintiff is a lawful permanent resident. A second plaintiff has been approved for a lawful U Visa, a step on the path toward citizenship, which she received after becoming the victim of a crime and helping law enforcement resolve the case.

“Every court to have reached the merits of laws like S.B. 4 has found them to be unconstitutional,” said Cody Wofsy (he/him), deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project. “S.B. 4 is cruel and illegal, and we will keep fighting it until it is permanently struck down.”

The new filing comes shortly after the en banc 5th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a preliminary injunction in Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center et al v. Steven C. McCraw et al solely on the grounds that plaintiffs El Paso County, Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, and American Gateways lacked standing — reversing its own three-judge panel decision from July 2025, which had found standing and held S.B. 4 to be preempted by federal law. This new lawsuit addresses the 5th Circuit’s procedural concerns.

“Our fight against S.B. 4 isn’t over until justice wins” said Kate Gibson Kumar (she/her), Beyond Borders staff attorney at Texas Civil Rights Project. “S.B.4 is not only unconstitutional, but a vile law that uses our Texas resources to harm communities across our state. The Texas Civil Rights Project will keep fighting to protect Texas communities from the wrath of S.B. 4.”

The en banc 5th Circuit did not reach the constitutional questions at the heart of this case: whether S.B. 4 violates the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution and unconstitutionally strips the federal government of its exclusive authority over immigration enforcement.

Access the complaint here: https://www.aclutx.org/app/uploads/2026/05/LML-v.-Martin-Complaint.pdf

Access the motion for preliminary injunction here: https://www.aclutx.org/app/uploads/2026/05/LML-TRO.pdf

See here for some background on the previous lawsuit. I didn’t write about the Fifth Circuit ruling because one can only ingest so much foulness from that cursed court before one’s brain begins to melt, and I was approaching dangerous territory. I can’t say I’m optimistic about any federal litigation these days, but you gotta do what you gotta do, and I appreciate the ACLU for doing it. Here’s hoping for a positive outcome. The Trib and the Current have more.

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What to expect with redistricting in Texas in 2027

It’s too soon to say.

“When the U.S. Supreme Court rules in the Louisiana v. Callais case that Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is unconstitutional, Texas will take up redistricting again (Congressional, Texas Senate and Texas House),” Rep. David Spiller, R-Jacksboro, posted on social media. “Get ready. It’s coming.”

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court issued the ruling Spiller had been waiting for. The court did not entirely eliminate Section 2, the law’s key holding that prohibits vote dilution based on race, but it did make it much harder to win a case on those grounds. The court’s conservative majority declared that plaintiffs must now prove that mapmakers intentionally diluted the voting power of a racial group. This higher bar, Justice Elena Kagan said in her dissent, would eliminate the “lion’s share” of challenges under Section 2.

Some states are immediately rushing to redraw their maps under this new standard, hoping to split majority non-white areas that favor Democrats in order to create new Republican districts and strengthen existing ones before the midterms.

Texas is not yet following suit, in large part because the first round of the 2026 primary is already in the rearview mirror. But Spiller and others say they expect redrawing the state’s congressional, state House and Senate and State Board of Education districts to be on the table when lawmakers return in 2027.

“I think that we will have that opportunity and I look forward to that, if that’s what leadership decides that they’d like to do,” Spiller said, noting that the decision to redistrict will be made “above my pay grade.”

Rep. Mitch Little, a Lewisville Republican, said he anticipated the state would audit its maps and see if there was a need to redraw them in light of the Callais ruling.

“Someone is going to have to look at this and say, did we use race to draw majority-minority districts? And if so, that will encourage some soul-searching and review of where the lines lie,” he said, alluding to the court’s argument that sorting voters by race — even for the purpose of adhering to Section 2 — runs afoul of the Constitution. “I think there will be an appetite to get it right, whatever that means under the Callais opinion.”

On Wednesday, Gov. Greg Abbott called the ruling a “victory for state sovereignty and a recognition of the inherent equality of all Texans.” He did not say whether he thought the state should take another look at its voting maps; Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dustin Burrows did not comment on the ruling or respond to a request for comment.

The Legislature’s two redistricting committee chairs, Rep. Cody Vasut, R-Angleton, and Sen. Phil King, R-Weatherford, also did not respond to requests for comment. Rep. Todd Hunter, R-Corpus Christi, who carried the House’s redistricting plan last summer, did not respond; earlier this year, he said the Callais decision could “spark the discussion” to redraw more maps.

The silence from the state’s top GOP leaders is not surprising, considering Texas’ 2021 and 2025 maps are still under litigation. Last summer, after four years of legal action and a monthlong trial over the 2021 maps, the judges decided to delay their decision until after the Callais ruling. In the subsequent legal battle over the 2025 congressional map, plaintiffs focused heavily on comments made by Abbott, Hunter and other elected officials to prove racial intent. And when the map was initially struck down by a federal panel, the judge who penned the decision cited those comments as the basis for the ruling, saying Abbott “explicitly directed the Legislature to redistrict based on race.”

The Callais decision is likely to reopen the record for both of these lawsuits. Chad Dunn, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said Wednesday’s decision was disappointing but insisted it wouldn’t stop their litigation against the existing maps.

“The Texas redistricting was handled so poorly that it fails even this new, more stringent test by the Supreme Court,” Dunn said.

See here for the background. The main reason why I say it’s too soon to tell is simply that the 2026 election hasn’t happened yet. We already have plenty of polling evidence to suggest that the statewide races will be competitive, at least. Doing another round of redistricting would require another legislative triumvirate, which is still likely but perhaps not overwhelmingly so. Even if that does happen again, if Dems have a strong enough showing, say picking up ten or so seats in the House and losing with Beto-in-2018 margins statewide, House members might be a little spooked about messing with their own boundaries, at least for the purposes of squeezing out more seats.

Or not. If there really are no rules anymore, then who knows what might happen. My point here is that we do have one legitimate shot at throwing up a significant roadblock. That’s pretty much the whole enchilada.

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South Texas residents sue SpaceX

I wish them luck.

A group of 80 South Texas plaintiffs are suing Elon Musk’s aerospace company SpaceX, alleging its rocket testing caused “massive” sonic booms that damaged their houses repeatedly over a two-year period.

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. Southern District of Texas Court on Thursday, accusing the company of gross negligence and trespassing for loud blasts caused by 11 rocket tests from April 2023 to October 2025. Because some of SpaceX’s tests involve 400-foot, two-stage rockets, with both stages capable of landing, tests sometimes subjected residents’ homes to multiple prolonged periods of damaging noise, according to the suit.

During the Starship rocket’s initial launch in 2023, the force of the 33-engine booster destroyed the launch pad and flung debris three quarters of a mile away, which the lawsuit said “violently illustrated” the rocket’s destructive power.

The suit asks for a jury trial to seek damages, court costs and attorney fees from SpaceX. The plaintiffs own 53 homes in Laguna Vista, Port Isabel and South Padre Island, including several couples who shared homes.

The suit does not name what specific damages residents’ houses sustained due to the repeated sonic booms, but does explain that the loud blasts can cause damage to walls, windows and roofs of homes.

[…]

SpaceX has increased its footprint in the South Texas region significantly as it has ramped up the frequency of its rocket launches and size of its operations. Company employees helped found Texas’ newest city, Starbase, in May 2025, and the company was in talks with the Trump administration to swap land for 775 acres of the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge in December.

I have no idea what the likelihood of success is for these residents. I’m sure they will run into fierce legal resistance. I’m also sure that SpaceX is a crappy neighbor. As I said, I wish them luck.

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Goodbye, Northwest Mall

Hello, maybe, the long-awaited high-speed rail terminal.

Crews have begun the process of demolishing the old Northwest Mall with the hope that the location near the 610 Loop and U.S. 290 will one day become a train station, according to a developer.

Texas High Speed Rail Holdings LLC, previously known as Texas Central, is attempting to build a high-speed train between Dallas and Houston. The company aims to build its Houston terminal on the mall property if its plans for the high-speed rail get approved.

Demolition is expected to take approximately 12 months.

“Removal of the legacy mall and adjacent structures on the 45-acre parcel is another step forward,” a Texas High-Speed Rail Holdings spokesperson said in a statement. “This is important early enabling and foundation work that will allow the project to proceed as soon as we get the green light. Once approved, the project will create jobs and help drive important economic growth for Texas.”

The spokesperson also said a plans for “world class multi-use site” are also being considered to complement the station.

From your lips to God’s ears, bud. I’m happy to see any sign of life from Texas Central, but we’re quite a bit past “I’ll believe it when I see it” territory. Further updates if and when events warrant.

Posted in Planes, Trains, and Automobiles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Weekend link dump for May 3

The Accursèd Alphabetical Clock, which displays the current time alphabetically.

“Stephen Colbert Bequeaths His Iran War Jokes to Jimmy Kimmel”.

“Well, kids, gather round, and let’s reintroduce you to the concept of the “pilot.” The idea of shooting a tester episode before committing to paying for an entire season is back in vogue during these belt-tightening times. And streamers, which once prided themselves on being the anti-networks, are once again taking a cue from the way TV used to be made.”

Tucker Carlson still sucks, no matter what he might be saying about Trump now. You do not, under any circumstances, have to hand it to him.

“Hair colorists warn clients not to use ChatGPT for color formulations”.

“This isn’t an anti-“AI” post. It is a “the more other people claiming to be writers use ‘AI’ the more secure my gig gets” post. If you want to use “AI” to generate ideas or create your prose or whatever, by all means, be my guest. The next twenty years of my career thanks you in advance for your choices.”

“Fueled by family viewing and recruiting purposes, youth sports streaming is now a $10 billion business”.

RIP, Luni Tune, last Ankole cattle at the Houston Zoo.

Let them eat rotisserie chicken.

“The goal of the Secret Service isn’t to prevent any incident at a high-profile event — it’s to prevent an incident that could harm the president.”

“This is, above all, a deeply dishonest indictment—politically motivated, intellectually bankrupt, and designed to leave a lasting false impression in the minds of people who will never look past the headline: My gosh, the good guys are the bad guys. The SPLC is a shill for the very groups it claims to fight. It is a narrative that is not just false but Orwellian, turned exactly on its head by people who purposely intend to deceive.”

“The story goes like this. A war is coming between good (AI) and evil (government regulation). If AI wins, a New Jerusalem will dawn where human intelligence is eclipsed by intellectually superior computers that represent, figuratively if not literally, Jesus Christ’s return. Techies call this the Singularity. Silicon Valley executives can prepare for that great gettin’ up day by paying $15,900 to attend a five-day seminar at an establishment in Santa Clara County, California, called—I kid you not—Singularity University.”

“This is an example of why I, as a believer, do not trust public schools to teach the Bible. It’s a massive distortion of the meaning of the book of Jonah.”

“That’s the thing about Alex Jones. He spent 15 years saying, “There are going to be guys on the streets wearing masks, shoving you in the back of a van and putting you on a black site.” Then all that shit happened and he was like, “Amazing. Cool. Let’s go.””

“Put simply: I need more time in my life when I’m not thinking about this man, reading about him, talking about him…and I need more control over when I’m doing those things. I can’t pretend like he doesn’t exist because I do believe he’s harming my country and the people in it but I need to compartmentalize better.”

From the Grifters Gonna Grift Department.

““Moral injury” is playing an underappreciated role in why MAGA members are leaving the movement. They chose to support Trump, but that choice can no longer be reconciled with their belief that they are actually good people.”

“Call me a purist, but I’ve always found a certain honor in sports betting in its simplest form: A sportsbook sets a line, and a bettor feels confident enough in their view of the game that they think they can make the right call about 54 percent of the time and take some of the book’s money. Call me naive, but that’s what I thought most sports betting would look like after the Supreme Court struck down a law in 2018 that had prevented states from legalizing the practice. But the sportsbooks have turned much of the betting experience into a pure sugar rush, one in which someone doesn’t just bet degenerately on events with little information and bad odds but does it repeatedly without ever pausing to think about it.”

“In the meantime, please follow a thorough backup regimen and be careful out there. This isn’t the first time we’ve seen an AI go rogue and start deleting important databases.”

“If you read cursive, the Newberry [Library in Chicago] has a job for you.”

RIP, Tony Wilson, singer, founder of the band Hot Chocolate, songwriter best known for “You Sexy Thing”.

“If you wouldn’t lick a cow’s underneath, why would you drink raw milk? There’s a reason pasteurization is around.”

“Australia has proposed taxing digital giants Meta, Google and TikTok on a part of their revenue to pay for news reporters.”

RIP, Nedra Talley Ross, last surviving original member of the Ronettes, best known for “Be My Baby”.

RIP, David Allan Coe, outlaw country musician and singer.

“Paramount subscribers, in a lawsuit filed on Thursday in California federal court, allege the [$110 billion megadeal for Warner Bros. Discovery] will substantially reduce competition in streaming, news and theatrical distribution in violation of antitrust laws. They seek a court order blocking the merger and unwinding Skydance’s acquisition of Paramount.”

“What Ezra Klein and Sam Alito have in common.”

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Fifth Circuit invents new law to block mifepristone

This is bullshit.

A federal appeals court packed with conservatives has handed abortion opponents a major victory against the US Food and Drug Administration, reinstating an in-person dispensing requirement for the abortion medication mifepristone and shutting down telemedicine providers—at least temporarily—from prescribing the abortion pill across the US.

In a 3-0 order issued Friday afternoon, the Fifth US Circuit Court of Appeals granted Louisiana’s request for an injunction against FDA rule changes from 2023 that have allowed blue-state telehealth providers to send mifepristone to thousands of patients every month in states where abortion is banned. Abortion pills now account for almost two-thirds of abortions nationwide.

The decision, however, does not affect misoprostol, the second medication used with mifepristone to terminate pregnancies—and a powerful abortion drug on its own. Nor does it stop in-person prescription of abortion pills. Nonetheless, the injunction will have the greatest impact on women in the dozen or so states—many in the South—where lawmakers and attorneys general have sought to end abortion access completely.

The 2023 telemedicine rule “injures Louisiana by undermining its laws protecting unborn human life and also by causing it to spend Medicaid funds on emergency care for women harmed by mifepristone,” Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan wrote for the court. “Both injuries are irreparable.”

“Every abortion facilitated by FDA’s action cancels Louisiana’s ban on medical abortions and undermines its policy that ‘every unborn child is a human being from the moment of conception and is, therefore, a legal person,’” Duncan wrote. He was appointed to the Fifth Circuit by President Donald Trump in 2017.

“Telehealth has been the last bridge to care for many seeking abortion, which is precisely why Louisiana officials want it banned,” said Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights. “This isn’t about science—it’s about making abortion as difficult, expensive, and unreachable as possible. Telehealth has transformed healthcare. Selectively stripping that away from abortion patients is a political blockade.”

The ruling was expected to be appealed to the US Supreme Court.

[…]

In April, US District Judge David Joseph—also a Trump appointee—put the lawsuit on hold pending the FDA’s own review of mifepristone’s safety, which has been underway since last fall. Even though the Trump administration has made clear its own concerns about the telemedicine rule, it has argued that rolling back the Biden rules while its study is ongoing amounts to “judicial intervention” in the agency’s long-established drug review process.

But abortion opponents have seen that study as a delaying tactic by a White House worried about the impact that cutting off access to abortion pills might have on the GOP’s already grim prospects in the midterm elections. Murrill quickly appealed to the Fifth Circuit, which encompasses Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi—one of the most conservative federal jurisdictions in the country.

It is the same appeals court that ruled in a similar but separate lawsuit three years ago that the FDA exceeded its authority when it relaxed an assortment of restrictions on mifepristone during the Obama and Biden administrations, including the telemedicine rule. The Supreme Court eventually rejected that case, because the anti-abortion doctors who brought it didn’t have standing to sue. But the SCOTUS ruling did not address the far bigger and thornier issue of whether the FDA’s rule changes were legal.

This is nothing but the forced-birth zealots finding a way to get something done that they couldn’t get done through legislative means, because what they want is far too unpopular to pass via those means. The Fifth Circuit is the perfect vehicle for that, and that’s why it must be taken apart and rebuilt from scratch at the first opportunity. As long as it’s allowed to do this shit, we don’t live in anything resembling a democracy. The Trib and The 19th have more.

UPDATE: Per Law Dork, this is already before SCOTUS, as one of the makers of mifepristone asks for an emergency hold on this order, citing both its lawlessness and the chaos it would cause.

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