RIP, Houston Landing

Major bummer.

The board of Houston Landing has voted to shut down the nonprofit newsroom in the face of financial challenges. Although Houston Landing launched with significant seed funding, it has been unable to build additional revenue streams to support ongoing operations.

The newsroom anticipates it will cease publishing by mid-May of this year. This timeline will enable Houston Landing to facilitate a thoughtful transition.

“We are proud of the Landing’s coverage of Greater Houston and continue to believe deeply in the need for more free, independent journalism in our region,” said Ann B. Stern, board chair of Houston Landing. “This decision was difficult but necessary. Houston Landing’s reporting has made a meaningful impact in the community, but it struggled to find its long-term financial footing.”

The Houston Landing board continues to believe there is a strong need for nonprofit local news in Houston and a viable path to sustaining it. The board has entered into discussions with The Texas Tribune, which is exploring the possibility of establishing a Houston news initiative as part of its broader strategy to expand local journalism and serve more Texans.

“We have great respect for Houston Landing’s work in delivering high-quality, nonpartisan journalism to its readers,” said Sonal Shah, CEO of The Texas Tribune. “We also understand the profound challenges facing local newsrooms today — journalism is a public service and needs a strong ecosystem to thrive. We look forward to exploring how we can learn from what the Landing started and create a sustainable model that serves the Houston community. We will take time to explore the right path forward to ensure sustainability.”

Here’s the letter from their CEO. I’ve obviously been a fan of their reporting – they’ve especially done strong work on schools and school districts in general, and HISD in particular – and it sucks to have such a good resource go away. Maybe the Texas Tribune, which has been setting up local newsrooms, can hire some soon-to-be-former Landing staffers and fill the gap a bit. Maybe another startup can do better. Maybe this was just bad timing and the next try will have better luck. Whatever the case, I’ll miss the Houston Landing when it’s gone. Thanks for all the good work and I wish you the best with whatever comes next.

Posted in Other punditry | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

An early progress report on the new DA

Sounds good so far.

Sean Teare

Harris County’s jail population declined 6% since February, and District Attorney Sean Teare secured more than $7 million in funding from the county Thursday to keep the trend going.

The $7.6 million in funding, approved by all Harris County Commissioners, with Harris County Judge Hidalgo abstaining from the vote Thursday, is intended to help prevent drivers of violent crime, support victims, decrease the jail population and cut into the county’s backlog of cases.

Around $2.6 million will go toward expanding the DA’s office’s domestic violence bureau and mental health and diversion bureau to provide more support to victims and defendants and prevent large drivers of crime.

“We will never be able to prosecute our way out of some of the things we’re seeing … We have to work with stakeholders outside to give individuals the mental health care they need so we’re not just keeping people in jail,” said Chandler Raine, first assistant to Teare.

The rest of the funding will go toward forensic investigations, more prosecutors and staff expansion, with the hope that prosecuting more cases will lead to more violent offenders going to state prison, instead of staying in the county jail along with people awaiting trial who can’t afford to make bond. Commissioners said the current case clearance rate is around 30%.

The hope is also that prosecuting more cases could cut back on the tens of millions of dollars the county has to spend to outsource inmates to private prisons.

“The fact that we spend nearly $50 million annually outsourcing people to private prisons appalled me,” said Precinct 4 Commissioner Lesley Briones. “I know it’s necessary given the current reality, but the key to changing the current reality is here … I’d rather invest my money in justice than private prisons.”

Just having the District Attorney on the same page as Commissioners Court is a positive development. I don’t want to draw too many conclusions this early on, but I like what I see so far. Let’s keep it going.

Posted in Crime and Punishment | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Fully autonomous trucks set to hit the road

For realsies.

Autonomous freight trucks are slated to hit the Dallas highways this month. The self-driving heavy-duty semi-trucks running on technology formulated by Aurora, a Pittsburgh-based self-driving vehicle tech company, will roll back and forth along the Interstate 45 corridor connecting Dallas and Houston. This busy stretch of freeway will be the launch site for Aurora’s fleet of self-driving trucks, with an additional route between Fort Worth and El Paso, already planned.

“Opening a driverless trucking lane flanked by commercially-ready terminals is an industry-first that unlocks our ability to launch our driverless trucking product,” said Sterling Anderson, co-founder and chief product officer of Aurora in a 2023 press release announcing local Aurora terminals were ready for driverless operations. “With this corridor’s launch, we’ve defined, refined, and validated the framework for the expansion of our network with the largest partner ecosystem in the autonomous trucking industry.”

In a March shareholder letter, Aurora outlined its progressive plan for trucks on the highway, calling it a “crawl, walk, run approach.”

“During launch, we expect to deploy up to 10 driverless trucks in commercial operations, starting with one driverless truck and then transitioning the balance to driverless operation,” reads the letter.

According to a report from the National Transportation Research Group, Texas moved more freight than any other state in 2022, about 3.4 billion tons valued at $3.1 trillion. More than half of all truck freight that moves through Texas takes the strip of I-45 that Aurora’s trucks will navigate.

Aurora is partnered with several vehicle manufacturers, including the Denton-based Peterbilt, installing their software and hardware on pre-built trucks, enabling self-driving features. The tech company is also partnered with freight companies like FedEx and Uber Freight. Aurora’s self-driving tech, named Aurora Driver, includes a mix of radar, light detection and a series of cameras, removing the need for human intervention.

“We are on the cusp of a new era in transportation,” reads a press release from Aurora’s head of government relations, Gerardo Interiano. “Autonomous vehicles are no longer just a concept — they are being deployed in trucking, passenger mobility, agriculture, and mining, paving the way for a safer, more efficient future. Aurora’s plans to deploy self-driving trucks onto public roads in Texas will bring the benefits of autonomy directly to our supply chain and economy.”

See here for the previous update, which in January of 2024 promised we’d have these autonomous trucks with no human backup drivers on the road by the end of that year. The timing slipped a little, but here we are. There was a long story in the business section of the Thursday print edition that went into a lot of detail about this, but for some annoying reason it’s not on the Chron site or visible in Google news. We do have this Chron story from March 31 that gave a bit of a preview.

Aurora, a developer of self-driving vehicles, has released its report during its final preparations to launch self-driving trucks without a safety driver on Texas highways.

The Driverless Safety Report includes information on safety engineering, cybersecurity and risk management, according to Aurora in the news release. The report is an expanded version of the Voluntary Safety Self-Assessment — documents encouraged by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for companies who develop and launch automated driving systems.

“Our safety approach spans both product and organization, and in this report, we’ve shared a behind-the-scenes look into our safety systems,” said Nat Beuse, chief safety officer at Aurora, in a statement.

The NHTSA has a voluntary safety guidance document that notes 12 elements, including system safety, object and event detection and response, human-machine interface, crashworthiness, and compliance with federal, state and local laws.

When the NHTSA becomes aware of a new assessment publication, it’s added to the Voluntary Safety Self-Assessment index online and made available to the public.

Aurora has been partnering with FedEx, Uber Freight, Hirshbach and Schneider for its self-driving system, the Aurora Driver, on the Dallas to Houston route. The company has not yet announced who will be a part of the fleet for the driverless operations, according to Jake Martin, spokesperson for Aurora.

Aurora officials will also have to close its safety case framework before the launch.

Amy Witherite, founder of the Witherite Law Group and a traffic safety expert in Texas, said that although she applauds Aurora’s efforts, she is still concerned about the report’s lack of specific details about how often or under what circumstances the company’s automation had failed or required human intervention.

“With literally billions of dollars at stake, it is fair to ask whether companies who will potentially profit from this technology should be the ones who decide whether it is safe to put on our highways,” she said in a statement.

Martin said in an email that Aurora submits safety incidents to the NHTSA and the company doesn’t publish them independently.

The company plans to have full driverless operations on Texas highways in April. The trucks were traveling with a safety driver present to monitor the self-driving system’s performance. Aurora’s full report can be read online.

I figure there will be more coverage once the trucks are actually on the road. KVUE has a video story if that interests you. These trucks with the safety drivers have been on the road since 2021 with a sufficiently good track record that you probably weren’t aware of their presence on I-45. According to that so-far-print-only Chron story, the safety drivers have rarely had to intervene, and most of the time that they did they were being more cautious than was necessary. The basic idea here is that while this will reduce the need for long-haul truckers, for which there’s a shortage, it will open up opportunities for short-haul drivers. We’ll see how this goes.

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

A high school transfer portal

Almost certainly not going to happen, at least this session, but an interesting thought experiment.

House Bill 619 is a straightforward two-page document. But the ramifications of its potential passing would drastically alter the landscape of high school sports in Texas. It’s why the state’s leaders in public school athletics have voiced their opposition to it.

HB 619, authored by Rep. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins of San Antonio, proposes that any public high school student in Texas be granted a one-time, penalty-free transfer to another district for athletic purposes. The bill also proposes that the University Interscholastic League — which oversees public school extracurricular activities across the state — may not penalize students for making a transfer under those circumstances. The rule would go into effect beginning with the 2025-26 school year.

[…]

UIL rules currently prohibit students from transferring for athletic purposes, and those deemed to have done so are ruled ineligible for one school year. The UIL passed several measures during its fall legislative session in October seemingly aimed at cracking down on violations. The UIL state executive committee now has the authority to investigate schools deemed to have an inordinate number of transfer students intending to participate in athletics. Every student who changes schools and intends to play sports is required to fill out the Previous Athletic Participation Forms (PAPF), which includes 18 yes-or-no questions pertaining to the student’s residence, family situation and potential recruiting violations.

The issue of inordinate transfer numbers made headlines during the fall when Oak Cliff Faith Family Academy in Dallas was heavily penalized for recruiting. Several highly touted girls basketball players transferred to the charter school after state title-winning coach Andrea Robinson was hired. Faith Family made a decision to vacate its UIL membership before meetings were held to determine whether the girls transferred for athletic purposes.

The UIL does not comment on pending legislation like HB 619, but its leaders have been consistent with their enforcement of the rules outlined in the organization’s constitution. Dr. Jamey Harrison, who was appointed as the new UIL executive director last week, spoke about those challenges at the organization’s fall legislative meeting last October.

“We know that we have some keystone eligibility rules that we need to keep at our core,” said Harrison, who’s been the UIL deputy executive director since 2011. “All of that is related to having community and educational basis to our activities and to having as level of a playing field as we can possibly provide to schools. There are some instances where that doesn’t feel like it’s happening anymore, and we need to find new ways to address it. We’ve talked about a number of those over the past several years. To be honest with you, I think we were guilty of trying to find simple solutions to remarkably complex challenges, and what we’ve learned is, it’s going to take a more complex set of solutions.”

Leaders at both the Texas High School Coaches Association and the Texas High School Athletic Directors Association are opposed to HB 619. One of their most pertinent concerns is that it undermines the concept of high school sports being community-based.

“House Bill 619 has really sparked debate because it really challenges, in our opinion, the values that make Texas high school athletics so unique and cherished,” THSCA executive director Joe Martin told the Chronicle. “The state of Texas has long been a beacon of community-based athletics, and it’s very different than some other states in our country. Local high schools represent more than just sports. They embody the spirit, the pride, the identity of an entire community. HB 619 risks undermining this legacy by prioritizing individual mobility over the collective culture that defines Texas high school sports.”

Martin pointed to Florida as the primary example of what could happen to high school athletics in Texas should HB 619 come to fruition. Florida Gov. Rick Scott signed House Bill 7029 into law in 2016, which allowed students to transfer freely between schools across the state and does not have any restrictions on competing in athletics immediately. Martin said moving away from the current UIL transfer rules would compromise the support high school teams receive from their communities at home and at the state championship level.

[…]

Proponents of HB 619 would argue that allowing students to transfer for athletic purposes would provide them an escape from less desirable situations. Whether it’s coaching changes, lack of playing time or any other unfavorable circumstances, transferring to another school without the threat of suspension could provide an avenue for a fresh start for some kids. With an improvement in those situations, particularly with playing time, that has the potential to provide a better path to compete in college athletics and earn scholarships. But while individual situations can vary, Dowling argues that one of the overarching purposes of high school sports is for students to learn how to battle through adverse situations. For those facing extenuating circumstances, the UIL has a hardship waiver process in place.

“One of the most important components of high school athletics is to help prepare the student-athlete for life as an adult and to be able to navigate the difficulties of adulthood through their participation in athletics,” Dowling said. “That’s a concept I think we all agree with. Simply put, you do not always win, and there’s no guarantee of playing time unless you put the time and effort into it, much the same as an adult does as they, too, navigate life and work. I think this bill allows an athlete to easily escape that reality.”

As the story notes, HB619 hasn’t had a committee hearing yet, and as a Democratic bill without an obvious constituency but with a vocal opposition, it’s not going anywhere. I still find it fascinating to read about. Like, tell me more about the Florida experience. Does the THSCA have anything more than anecdotal evidence to cite? What exactly were the arguments that the Florida proponents put forth? I can’t imagine that state’s legislature gives a damn about athlete empowerment, so there must have been some other stated reason to put this into law. It may well be a bad reason, a reason to make me fully onboard with the THSCA, I’m just curious as to what it is. That law was passed in 2016, and a bit of googling found a couple of negative reactions.

To be clear, I do share the skepticism being expressed, and the “high school sports as shared community” argument has merit. But coaches, football coaches in particular, as a class and as a matter of makeup, are going to favor the current system and oppose changes more or less automatically. Maybe as a matter of my makeup, I’m not going to just take their word for it.

One more thing that I fixate on is that the pro-transfer portal argument sounds a lot like the pro-school voucher argument, in ways that are quite uncomfortable. Like, I could see myself get swayed by the idea of high school athletes having more say in their situations, right up to the point where the voucher bros show up and turn “provide them an escape from less desirable situations” into something diabolical. To be sure, voucher opponents have made the argument that vouchers would be bad for Texas high school football, so maybe I’m just being ridiculous. I’m just saying, this is a rich text.

Posted in Other sports, That's our Lege | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

It’s not just measles

Welcome back, whooping cough. We didn’t miss you, but here you are again.

In the past six months, two babies in Louisiana have died of pertussis, the disease commonly known as whooping cough.

Washington state recently announced its first confirmed death from pertussis in more than a decade.

Idaho and South Dakota each reported a death this year, and Oregon last year reported two as well as its highest number of cases since 1950.

While much of the country is focused on the spiraling measles outbreak concentrated in the small, dusty towns of West Texas, cases of pertussis have skyrocketed by more than 1,500% nationwide since hitting a recent low in 2021 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Deaths tied to the disease are also up, hitting 10 last year, compared with about two to four in previous years. Cases are on track to exceed that total this year.

Doctors, researchers and public health experts warn that the measles outbreak, which has grown to more than 600 cases, may just be the beginning. They say outbreaks of preventable diseases could get much worse with falling vaccination rates and the Trump administration slashing spending on the country’s public health infrastructure.

National rates for four major vaccines, which had held relatively steady in the years before the COVID-19 pandemic, have fallen significantly since, according to a ProPublica analysis of the most recent federal kindergarten vaccination data. Not only have vaccination rates for measles, mumps and rubella fallen, but federal data shows that so have those for pertussis, diphtheria, tetanus, hepatitis B and polio.

In addition, public health experts say that growing pockets of unvaccinated populations across the country place babies and young children in danger should there be a resurgence of these diseases.

Many medical authorities view measles, which is especially contagious, as the canary in the coal mine, but pertussis cases may also be a warning, albeit one that has attracted far less attention.

“This is not just measles,” said Dr. Adam Ratner, a pediatric infectious diseases doctor in New York City and author of the book “Booster Shots: The Urgent Lessons of Measles and the Uncertain Future of Children’s Health.” “It’s a bright-red warning light.”

At least 36 states have witnessed a drop in rates for at least one key vaccine from the 2013-14 to the 2023-24 school years. And half of states have seen an across-the-board decline in all four vaccination rates. Wisconsin, Utah and Alaska have experienced some of the most precipitous drops during that time, with declines of more than 10 percentage points in some cases.

“There is a direct correlation between vaccination rates and vaccine-preventable disease outbreak rates,” said a spokesperson for the Utah Department of Health and Human Services. “Decreases in vaccination rates will likely lead to more outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in Utah.”

But statewide figures alone don’t provide a full picture. Tucked inside each state are counties and communities with far lower vaccination rates that drive outbreaks.

For example, the whooping cough vaccination rate for kindergartners in Washington state in 2023-24 was 90.2%, slightly below the U.S. rate of 92.3%, federal data shows. But the statewide rate for children 19 to 35 months last year was 65.4%, according to state data. In four counties, that rate was in the 30% range. In one county, it was below 12%.

“My concern is that there is going to be a large outbreak of not just measles, but other vaccine-preventable diseases as well, that’s going to end up causing a lot of harm, and possibly deaths in children and young adults,” said Dr. Anna Durbin, a professor in the Department of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who has spent her career studying vaccines. “And it’s completely preventable.”

There’s more, so read the rest. The numbers above may sound small, but later in the story it says there were over 35k cases of whooping cough last year – that’s up from about 2,400 in 2021; the COVID pandemic did have the effect of limiting the spread of other infectious diseases – and we expect to outpace that this year. For a disease for which there is a highly effective vaccine. And as with measles, it’s not just whooping cough that is expected to make a comeback. Polio, diptheria, tetanus, they’re on the list too. I don’t know how bad it’s going to get, but it’s going to get bad. Vaccinate your kids.

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Still working on that short-term rental ordinance

I wish them luck.

Two things were evident in an hours-long Quality of Life Committee meeting this week: the Houston City Council wants an ordinance governing short-term rentals that will protect neighborhoods from party houses. But without enforceable zoning codes, that may not be possible.

Houston isn’t unique in its plight to regulate Airbnbs and other rental units where guests stay for a weekend or up to 30 days. Cities across the United States have attempted to balance the much-needed revenue that comes from registration fees and hotel occupancy taxes with the complaints of noise and illegal activity in residential neighborhoods. Houston is unique, however, in that the City Council can’t define these rentals as hotels and zone them out of residential areas. Even if they were to do so, other large cities like Dallas have imposed such bans and been sued so the party houses continue to plague neighborhoods while the ordinances on the books remain unenforceable.

An ordinance discussed at last week’s Houston City Council meeting was again on the table for a vote Wednesday but postponed to April 16 for further review. Four council-proposed amendments were revised; one was withdrawn.

[…]

No one is arguing about the requirement for operators and employees to watch a training video on human and sex trafficking — but also no one thinks that will solve the party house problem.

The party house problem is a big one but it’s limited to particular areas with “bad actor” operators, city officials have said. Still, it’s difficult to restrict the bad guys while not punishing the good ones. The City Council has received complaints on 27 properties out of more than 8,500 short-term rentals. More than 700 short-term rental units are in apartment complexes or townhomes, At Large Council Member Sallie Alcorn said.

Alcorn has been at the forefront of the short-term rental debate along with District C Councilwoman Abbie Kamin and Quality of Life Committee Chair Julian Martinez. Alcorn said Tuesday she recently stayed in an Airbnb in another city.

“I got a book of rules that said I couldn’t even play music that could be heard outside or else the compliance officer was going to knock on my door,” she said. “I was like, wow, there’s a short-term rental compliance officer in this city? We don’t have anything like that.

“I know it’s a balance but we have to protect neighborhoods,” Alcorn added. “It’s a real balance because we know there are a lot of responsible owners out there doing the right thing. We don’t want to hurt you … But I won’t bend on a problem property … that has consistent problems that have been adjudicated. There’s something wrong with the owner if this is happening at your property.”

See here for the background, and read the rest for the amendments that were discussed. I agree that the focus should be on the problem properties, the party houses, but it sounds like that’s easier said than done. I guess my approach at this point would be to put something out there, study its effects for six months or a year, and then make revisions as needed. Again, probably easier said than done but you gotta try.

UPDATE: The Houston Landing published this story today about the winding road the STR ordinance has taken, with a few extra details. Wednesday is going to be a fun day for Council.

Posted in Local politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

More on the Australian redclaw crayfish

Time to meet another invasive species.

The South Texas odyssey of the Australian redclaw crayfish continues. Approaching five years since the lobster-like creatures were first reported in the Brownsville area, scientists are still trying to determine how disruptive this visitor from halfway around the world really is.

Maybe it’s the word “invasive,” but the redclaws tend to be painted in the media as some sort of boogeyman hell-bent on usurping their smaller native counterpart (the “red swamp” crawfish) like something out of a 1950s B-movie. But like the redclaws’ favored habitat of the Valley’s recetas (wetlands) and ponds, the truth is somewhat murkier.

For one thing, evidence suggests the redclaws are either unwilling or unable to thrive anywhere water temperatures dip much below 80 degrees. That could substantially limit their range, said Dr. Archis Grubh, an invertebrate biologist with Texas Parks and Wildlife’s inland fisheries division.

“If it gets cold then [the redclaw] cannot survive, or it’s not favorable for it,” said.

Last year about this time, Grubh and his team had just begun a two-year study of the Australian redclaws in collaboration with researchers from the University of Texas at Tyler. Focusing on a 30-mile radius around Brownsville, their early efforts have concentrated on measuring the animals’ range and “abundance,” or the number of redclaws recovered in their nets and minnow traps.

Now, halfway through the study, Grubh said researchers had found redclaws as far as Los Fresnos, about 17 miles north of Brownsville. They had also surprised themselves by recovering between 40 and 50 redclaws during their November research trip. Previous outings had only recovered a handful at a time, so Grubh still wasn’t quite sure what accounted for the significant jump in numbers.

“Maybe it’s a seasonal effect; maybe they’re hiding or going to different habitat areas,” he said. “They still have two more samplings that will be conducted in the next few months. After that, we’ll have a stronger hold on what’s going on.”

Other aspects of the redclaws’ impact on their environment, such as how their healthy appetite for decaying vegetation and other organic matter affects other species in the area, also have yet to be studied.

“I’d definitely like to see if there is some behavioral interaction between the Redclaw and the native crayfish species, or even with other fish, to see how it’s affected them,” Grubh said. “We’d like to get an idea of its abundance. Right now we’re just trying to figure out how far this species has spread, but we’d like to know how dense these numbers are.”

I’ve mentioned these critters before. Not discussed in this story: whether or not they’re good eatin’. As noted in my first entry, the answer to that is Yes. The likely manner in which this Aussie animal wound up in South Texas is some number of people dumping their aquariums in the Gulf. This is why we can’t have nice things. Be that as it may, at least this invasive species appears to be somewhat limited in its ability to disrupt the natives; we didn’t have a good handle on that in 2022, when we were first becoming aware of them. Let’s hope that further study confirms that. It would also be nice if they could clarify whether these things should have “crawfish” or “crayfish” as part of their official names.

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Weekend link dump for April 13

“Researchers have proposed studying sex in space, but so far, the only documented case is a pornographic science-fiction film called The Uranus Experiment. If NASA wasn’t so uptight, I could provide more specifics. But as an insider, I’m now convinced it’s true: They do have sex on the Space Station. Just don’t expect NASA to ever admit it.”

“Five years after the height of COVID, nurses are still fighting for their rights”.

“We’d be quiet too if we were them because it’s such a humiliating self own. Maybe, like many other pundits, they thought that Trump was just bluffing about tariffs. Maybe they thought they could push him in a direction that was purely beneficial to their industry. He might still back down. But at least for now, what the accelerationists did here by backing Trump is not just accidentally shoot themselves in the foot, but methodically blow off each of their toes with a .50 caliber sniper rifle.”

What sea turtle tears may be able to tell us about the earth’s magnetic field.

“Sports betting seems to be following a classic American formula: Introduce a product to the marketplace, then, after the negative consequences become evident, call the government in to clean up the mess and put safeguards in place for the future. But this formula might not work for sports betting. The genie may simply be too far out of the bottle to be easily put back inside.”

Leave The Leftovers alone! (Update: They are. Good.)

The physics of the torpedo bat. Math-heavy but quite accessible.

RIP, Jay North, former child actor best known for his role as the titular character in Dennis the Menace.

The White House, or The White Lotus? Genuinely hard to tell.

“Trump’s decision to single-handedly hobble the world economy and immiserate tens of millions of Americans has presented his fellow Republicans with a stark choice. Do they continue to kiss his orange butt and slavishly nod along to every nonsensical whim of their idiot Golfer King as he leads them into a recession and almost certain electoral apocalypse? Or do they defy him, splitting the party and opening themselves to a primary challenge … and possible electoral apocalypse?”

““[M]oral incongruence around pornography use is consistently the best predictor of the belief one is experiencing pornography-related problems or dysregulation, and comparisons of aggregate effects reveal that it is consistently a much better predictor than pornography use itself”.

“You can think of this as the sin-tax problem of tariffs. You can levy a tax on cigarettes as a way to discourage people from smoking. Or you can levy a tax on cigarettes to create a reliable, long-term source of revenue. But you can’t do both at the same time.”

“A recent study of the nation’s 200 most populous cities ranked Houston ninth in the United States for naked gardening.” Saturday, May 6, is international World Naked Gardening Day, if you want to test that out.

RIP, Octavio Dotel, former MLB pitcher who played five seasons with the Astros and won a World Series with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Trump’s tariffs will make you a man again. Or something like that.

“So it’s those two groups all the way down. But it originates with no theory beyond a love of tariffs, a deep obsession with trade deficits and a zero-sum theory of dominating and dominated. And it’s all turbocharged by profound governing failure by which the entire country is now hostage to the degenerate will of a single man.”

“The world used clean power sources to meet more than 40% of its electricity demand last year for the first time since the 1940s, figures show.”

“In these simple culture-war arguments, conservatives found a place of easier agreement. It may be hard, with the various factions of this MAGA movement, for there to be any kind of unified stance on a historically chaotic economic policy. But on the topic of gender, there was no conflict: A manly America, in this MAGA vision, is a healthy America. In gender politics, at least, they were able to make the unfamiliar familiar.”

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Taking from Harris to give to Houston

This story from Tuesday perplexed me a little at first.

Harris County would have to turn over tens of millions in toll road dollars to the city of Houston for use on public safety and emergency services under a bill before the Texas Senate.

Senate Bill 2722 by Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, is scheduled for a hearing on Wednesday.

“I filed the bill so that we could have more transparent use of excess funds,” Bettencourt said Wednesday. “It’s important to recognize that if we are going to have excess toll road revenue that it should be shared with the big cities within the county.”

HCTRA generates upwards of $1 billion dollars a year for the county, according to a May 2024 credit opinion by Moody’s.

Under Bettencourt’s bill, toll road revenues would be restricted to building, operating and maintaining the county’s toll road system or paying down debt associated with the system.

The county for years has used hundreds of millions of dollars in so-called excess HCTRA revenues – funding above operation and debt costs – to fund road projects that connect to the toll road system in some way. Commissioners Court has used some of that money for other purposes in recent years, including more trailways and bikeways and road maintenance.

Bettencourt’s bill would require the county to give 30 percent of that revenue to “the municipality that contains more than 40 percent of the number of lane miles” — which is the city of Houston. The remaining 70 percent would go back to the county and “only be used on roads owned and maintained by the county.”

The revenue that Houston would get could only be used to reimburse costs “related to law enforcement and other emergency services during accidents and other disasters affecting a project of the county,” according to the bill.

My first thought was that maybe Mayor Whitmire had found a way to get the Legislature to help him out with balancing the budget. It would be quite ironic if that assistance came at the expense of Harris County. But there were no quotes in the story from anyone connected with the city, and the restrictions on the way the revenue could be used makes it sound a lot smaller than at first appearance. Like I said, it was puzzling.

Friday’s Chron story helped shed a little light.

Harris County officials and other advocates, including environmentalists and public transit experts, accused lawmakers of intervening to block planned county projects like nature trails and bike paths – which Bettencourt and Houston Mayor John Whitmire have publicly opposed.

“This entire bill is a money grab for the city of Houston,” said Jay Blazek Crossley, the executive director of the Farm & City, a statewide sustainability nonprofit. “This would just force one government that owns a facility and manages [its] money to just give that money to a different government for police.”

Harris County Commissioner Adrian Garcia, who represents Precinct 2, said in an interview that the county would happily reimburse the city for any police or fire costs it incurs on the toll roads.

“If this is about the city covering costs on the toll road, please send us the bill,” he said.

According to an analysis by Garcia’s office, the vast majority of incidents on toll roads are handled by county constables — only 1,854 out of 113,729 calls last year were answered by city-employed first responders.

In the hearing Wednesday, Houston Police Chief J. Noe Diaz testified that the police and fire departments had responded to 6,500 calls on the toll roads between 2022 and 2024.

That’s still a fraction of the more than 300,000 calls constables received during the same time period, according to data shared by Houston city council member Abbie Kamim in a meeting on Wednesday.

State Sen. Nathan Johnson, a Dallas Democrat, expressed concern over the precedent such a law would set.

“Do we have any other instance in Texas history where we are, as a state, stepping in and statutorily diverting the revenue of an authority, be it a toll road, a port … to a municipality for its general purposes?” he asked during the Senate hearing.

“I’m not advised on that,” Bettencourt responded. “I do know this is a unique fact pattern because we don’t have any other toll road authority with $600 million of excess tolls.”

HCTRA’s executive director Roberto Treviño disputed that figure. Last year, the toll road authority’s surplus revenue was $193 million, Trevino told Hearst Newspapers.

Current state law allows for the toll authority’s surplus revenue to be spent on “a transportation project, highway project, or air quality project.”

By requiring that the county spend excess toll revenue exclusively on county roads, Bettencourt’s bill would upend the authority’s plans to invest in transportation options for non-drivers.

Among other things, that would screw the neighborhoods that are directly affected vy the proposed Hardy Toll Road extension, as noted by the story. Not that Paul Bettencourt cares about any of them. Given the numbers – and I don’t see anything in the text of the bill to say what happens to the rest of that 30% once all of the city’s “law enforcement and other emergency services” costs have been reimbursed – I think this is more about animus to Harris County and any spending that isn’t on roads than helping out Houston. Maybe Bettencourt thinks he’s doing Whitmire a solid along the way, I can’t rule that out, but it’s always open season on Harris County and anyone who doesn’t drive. That’s my interpretation, at least for now.

The bill had its hearing on Wednesday and was left pending in committee, so who knows if it will advance any further. We’re beginning to get into the busy part of the legislative calendar, and most bills don’t make it anywhere close to the finish line. The main point here is at even if you just take Bettencourt at his word, the fiscal effect for the city would likely be pretty minimal. And as Commissioner Garcia notes, if the city has a complaint about how much they spend on HPD and/or HFD responding to incidents on the toll roads, the city can present its case to the county and ask for reimbursement directly. The fact that as far as I know this hasn’t been an issue before says a lot.

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Taking the package

The city’s workforce is voluntarily shrinking.

Mayor John Whitmire

More than 700 city of Houston employees are set to retire May 1 after accepting voluntary buyouts, city officials said Thursday.

Many of the positions will have to be backfilled, but Whitmire administration officials said they anticipate saving more than $26 million annually in general fund dollars – and $48 million total – from the reduced staff.

Those savings could balloon up to $189 million if all 3,000 civilian employees eligible for retirement accept the buyouts, according to a presentation from the mayor’s deputy chief of staff and finance director.

That would not be enough to cover the projected $330 million budget shortfall in the fiscal year that begins July 1, but it will help directors restructure their departments ahead of budget hearings, said Steven David, the mayor’s deputy chief of staff.

The city normally sees about 400 retirements a year, David said.

“The expectation is we are going to have to do drastic changes in the way we run the city,” David told City Council members at a Thursday committee meeting.

[…]

Of the eligible employees, 15 percent are supervisors. David said a main concern of department directors has been a disruption of city services, but the extended time for the buyout will allow them to plan accordingly.

See here for some more on the buyout plan, which has a deadline of April 28. I feel confident saying that not all of the eligible employees will accept the package. And it’s just as well, because the city will have to backfill most if not all of those roles, with new employees who will have lower salaries. (The average savings, based on 700 retirees and a net $26 million in cost reduction, is about $37K per employee.) We’ll see what effect this has on city services.

Note that even if all eligible employees did take the golden handshake, the city still has a deficit of well over $100 million. This is again why I say that we cannot get out of this without raising revenue – there just isn’t enough to cut, not with police and fire not only off the table but a source of increased expenses. And this early retirement package is itself a one-time solution – you’re not going to get anything like this reduction again if it’s offered, and sooner or later you run out of people who could take it. All roads eventually lead to raising or removing the revenue cap.

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Who wants a piece of Minute Maid Park?

Parts of the old signage could be yours if you act soon.

Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

The “Minute Maid” signs from the Houston Astros’ formerly-titled Minute Maid Park are being auctioned off online.

Shall we start the bidding at $500?

Yes, that’s correct: the letters “Mi,” “nu,” “te,” “M”, “ai”, and “d” have a starting asking price of $500. However, the signs that previously adorned the outside of Daikin Park are not the most expensive of the group.

The Astros announced a change in their ballpark’s title sponsor from Minute Maid to Daikin back in November, bringing an end to their 22-year partnership. During that time, the Astros reached seven consecutive American League Championship Series, made four World Series appearances, and won two of them. For fans in Houston, the sponsorship represented a storied era in Astros’ history and even gave the park its nickname, “The Juice Box.” Even the train in left field carried a car full of oranges.

However, the club started removing the signage in February, replacing it with “Daikin,” an air conditioning company. The train now commemorates the park’s 25th anniversary and includes a car filled with baseballs in the back.

An online auction now features the Minute Maid Park signage from every corner of the park. As of Wednesday, April 9, the highest bid has been for the “Minute Maid Park” sign that hung at the Home Plate South Gate entrance, which reached $1,900.

As of Wednesday, a lot of the letter combinations had not been bid on, so they were still an affordable $500. You ever go to a charity event that included a silent auction and found yourself bidding on something you didn’t initially want but saw that no one had bid anything well into the event and you figured what the heck, for the minimum bid it’s worth it? This could be your chance here. If you still regret missing out on Enron memorabilia, make your move now.

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Measles update: Time for another moment of perspective

Here are the Friday numbers.

The measles outbreak centered in the South Plains region of Texas grew to 541 cases across the state on Friday, according to health officials.

The Texas Department of State Health Services reported that 56 have been hospitalized for treatment since the outbreak began in late January. Two children, an 8-year-old girl and a 6-year-old girl, have died after contracting the virus.

Nearly seven in 10 cases have been in children younger than age 18, and nearly 98% of cases have been in individuals who have not received the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, or whose vaccination status is unknown. The children who died had not been vaccinated, and they did not have any underlying medical conditions, the DSHS said.

Public health officials estimate that fewer than 30 individuals who have contracted measles — roughly 5% of all cases — are actively infectious. An individual may be infectious up to four days before a rash appears and up to four days after it’s gone.

The Texas outbreak has also spread to New Mexico, which reported 58 cases on Friday, and Oklahoma, which reported 12 cases. New Mexico has reported one suspected measles death, an unvaccinated adult who tested positive for the virus after dying.

The total of 541 cases is an increase of 36 since the last DSHS update on Tuesday.

Three-quarters of the new cases are in Gaines County, which continues to see the lion’s share of cases associated with the outbreak. The small county along the New Mexico border reported 27 new cases on Friday, and has now seen a total of 355 cases during the outbreak.

El Paso County reported three new cases, the first that have been seen in the state’s westernmost county. Two new cases were reported in Lubbock County, which has now seen 36 during the outbreak.

Cochran, Dawson, Terry and Yoakum counties each reported one new case.

The DSHS said there is ongoing measles transmission in 10 counties across the state: Cochran, Dallam, Dawson, Gaines, Garza, Lynn, Lamar, Lubbock, Terry and Yoakum.

Of the 541 cases in Texas, 171 have been in children younger than 5 years old and 203 have been in children and teens between 5 and 17, according to the DSHS.

Only 11 cases have been in people who received at least one dose of MMR vaccine prior to an infection.

Texas has reported a total of seven measles cases in 2025 that are not connected to the South Plains outbreak, including four in Harris County and one in Fort Bend County. Most of those cases are associated with international travel, according to the DSHS.

Here’s Kansas:

As of Wednesday, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment is reporting 32 positive cases of measles, up nearly 40% from two weeks ago when there were only 23 confirmed cases, according to the 2025 Kansas Measles Outbreak Dashboard.

The measles outbreak is concentrated in the southwestern part of Kansas, with the disease spreading to two additional counties over the past two weeks. Measles cases have now been reported in Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Haskell, Kiowa, Morton and Stevens counties.

The KDHE has previously said the confirmed cases in Kansas have a possible link to outbreaks in Texas and New Mexico.

The vast majority of cases, 26, involve children and teens. There have been 10 cases reported in children 4 years old and younger, and 16 between the ages of 5 and 17. The remaining six cases involving patients 18 and older.

Unvaccinated patients — 27 — account for the majority of the cases. Meanwhile, there is one case involving a patient not appropriately vaccinated for their age, two patients whose vaccinated status was being verified and one where the status was unable to be verified. Only one patient had been appropriately vaccinated for their age, according to the health department. So far there has been one hospitalization and no deaths.

Here’s Ohio.

The Ohio Department of Health confirmed 20 measles cases in the state as of Thursday: 11 in Ashtabula County near Cleveland, seven in Knox County and one each in Allen and Holmes counties.

Ohio is not including non-residents in its count, a state health department spokesperson told The Associated Press. The Knox County outbreak in east-central Ohio has infected a total 14 people, according to a news release from the county health department, but seven of them do not live in Ohio. A measles outbreak in central Ohio sickened 85 in 2022.

The outbreak in Ashtabula County started with an unvaccinated adult who had interacted with someone who had traveled internationally.

Indiana is also now reporting measles cases, but they appear to be isolated.

Anyway, I promised you a moment of perspective, and here it is. As noted in that Chron story, there have been 355 cases reported from Gaines County, where this all began. Gaines County has a population of 22,553, which makes those 355 infections about one and a half percent of the total number of people there. If one and a half percent of Harris County’s population had gotten the measles, it would represent about 75,000 people. Think about that for a minute.

And then think about it some more when you read this.

As measles tears through West Texas — infecting hundreds, hospitalizing dozens and claiming the lives of two children — some lawmakers in Austin are pushing bills to roll back vaccine requirements and expand access to exemptions under the banner of “choice.”

Measles, a highly contagious disease that was declared eliminated from the U.S. in 2000, has swept through West Texas communities with lower-than-average vaccination rates, turning Texas into the epicenter of a possible national epidemic with 505 cases identified since late January, including 57 hospitalizations and two deaths.

Two shots of the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine, which has been administered for decades, is the safest and most effective way to build immunity to the virus.

Still, Texas lawmakers have introduced bills to weaken vaccine mandates and make it easier for parents to obtain exemptions for their children — and there’s little indication that the state’s worst outbreak in three decades has changed their thinking.

Read the rest if you can stand it. This outbreak isn’t slowing down, and as vaccination remains the only defense against it, more vaccine clinics are being forced to close because of federal funding cuts, all of which are happening under the lying brain worm in charge. This is the world we live in today. What are we going to do about that?

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Harris County sues over refugee grant funds

Keep on litigating, the reasons to do so aren’t going to run short anytime soon.

Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee is suing the Trump administration after it froze a more-than-$10 million grant for the county’s Refugee Health Services Program.

Menefee announced the move during a Wednesday news conference alongside Harris County Precinct 4 Commissioner Lesley Briones. The grant, which allocated $10.5 million to Harris County Public Health’s Refugee Health Services Program, was awarded in October under the Biden administration and frozen by the Trump administration in February.

“We are a country that honors the rule of law and honors its commitments,” Briones said. “These individuals are legally in our country seeking protection … They’ve been approved by Congress, and they are waiting health screenings, immunizations, and now this federal funding is frozen. That is not right, that is not just, that is not legal, and that is un-American.”

Briones, who referred to Gulfton as the “modern-day Ellis Island,” said the county’s refugee health program is the largest in the state.

The program operates out of Precinct 4, served 17,000 patients and administered 36,000 vaccines in 2024, according to a news release sent ahead of the announcement. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in January halting the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, but around 3,000 refugees are still awaiting care through Harris County Public Health, Menefee said.

The Refugee Health Services Program has 30 employees who provide “trauma-informed” care for refugees who fled war-torn countries or persecution, including people from Ukraine, Cuba, Afghanistan and Venezuela, Menefee said. Despite the freeze, Menefee said the county has continued providing services, including vaccinations and preventive care, and has incurred $1.25 million in expenses that have not been reimbursed.

“If this funding stays frozen, these people will be out of work and two of our clinics may have to be shut down,” Menefee said. “I want to be clear, this is not some new or radical program that the Trump administration has responded to, this has been a part of U.S. policy since World War II.”

No reason not to fight them on all of these things. May not win, especially if it makes it to SCOTUS, but it’s still worth the effort and it’s the right thing to do.

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On weather balloons

Another possibly bad omen for the hurricane season.

Due to staffing constraints, as a result of recent budget cuts and retirements, the National Weather Service has announced a series of suspensions involving weather balloon launches in recent weeks.

On February 27, it was announced that balloon launches would be suspended entirely at Kotzebue, Alaska due to staffing shortages. In early March, Albany, NY and Gray, Maine announced periodic disruptions in launches. Since March 7th, it appears that Gray has not missed any balloon launches through Saturday. Albany, however, has missed 14 of them, all during the morning launch cycle (12z).

The kicker came on Thursday afternoon when it was announced that all balloon launches would be suspended in Omaha, NE and Rapid City, SD due to staffing shortages. Additionally, the balloon launches in Aberdeen, SD, Grand Junction, CO, Green Bay, WI, Gaylord, MI, North Platte, NE, and Riverton, WY would be reduced to once a day from twice a day.

[…]

But in general, satellites cannot yet replace weather balloons. They merely act to improve upon what weather balloons do. A study done in the middle part of the last decade found that wind observations improved rainfall forecasts by 30 percent. The one tool at that time that made the biggest difference in improving the forecast were radiosondes. Has this changed since then? Yes, almost certainly. Our satellites have better resolution, are capable of getting more data, and send data back more frequently. So certainly it’s improved some. But enough? That’s unclear.

An analysis done more recently on the value of dropsondes (the opposite of balloon launches; this time the sensor is dropped from an aircraft instead of launched from the ground) in forecasting west coast atmospheric rivers showed a marked improvement in forecasts when those targeted drops occur. Another study in 2017 showed that aircraft observations actually did a good job filling gaps in the upper air data network. Even with aircraft observations, there were mixed studies done in the wake of the COVID-19 reduction in air travel that suggested no impact could be detected above usual forecast error noise or that there was some regional degradation in model performance.

[…]

In reality, the verdict in all this is to be determined, particularly statistically. Will it make a meaningful statistical difference in model accuracy? Over time, yes probably, but not in ways that most people will notice day to day.

However, based on 20 years of experience and a number of conversations about this with others in the field, there are some very real, very serious concerns beyond statistics. One thing is that the suspended weather balloon launches are occurring in relatively important areas for weather impacts downstream. A missed weather balloon launch in Omaha or Albany won’t impact the forecast in California. But what if a hurricane is coming? What if a severe weather event is coming? You’ll definitely see impacts to forecast quality during major, impactful events. At the very least, these launch suspensions will increase the noise to signal ratio with respect to forecasts.

In other words, there may be situations where you have a severe weather event expected to kickstart in one place but the lack of knowing the precise location of an upper air disturbance in the Rockies thanks to a suspended launch from Grand Junction, CO will lead to those storms forming 50 miles farther east than expected. In other words, losing this data increases the risk profile for more people in terms of knowing about weather, particularly high impact weather.

There’s more, so read the rest and remember that we’re expecting a busy hurricane season. We’re much better at weather forecasting now, especially for big weather events, because we have access to more data. The effect of these cuts is to reduce the amount of data we have, with predictable results. This is one of those situations where maybe nothing bad happens this year or for the next few years, but the odds of something bad happening due to degraded data have increased, and will eventually catch up to us. When that happens, who knows how bad it will be. The scope of the next disaster is growing.

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A brief reminder about the possible recall effort

Whatever you or I may think, Mayor Whitmire is not unpopular.

Mayor John Whitmire

A recent survey from the University of Houston’s Hobby School of Public Affairs found that while most Houstonians believe both the city and country are going in the wrong direction, most also approve of Mayor John Whitmire and County Judge Lina Hidalgo’s performance in their respective positions.

The survey, released early Thursday, included responses from around 1,400 Houstonians with a 2.62% margin of error.

Around 59% of surveyed residents said Whitmire was doing a good job as mayor, but 41% begged to differ. Hidalgo was given a thumbs up by 55% of those surveyed, and a thumbs down by 45%.

Those who vote Republican were more likely to think Whitmire was doing a good job than Democrats. He got a gold star from 71% of surveyed Republicans and 56% of surveyed Democrats. Hidalgo saw an 80% approval rate among Democrats and a meager 13% approval rate from Republicans.

The poll’s landing page is here and the poll data is here. I’m not particularly interested in scrutinizing it, but knock yourself out. My point is simply this: Any recall effort has two significant obstacles to overcome. One is the large number of signatures needed in a thirty-day span. We’ve already discussed that. The other is that both the recall supporters and the preferred candidate that emerges would have to do a lot of work to overcome the fact that for the most part, people are more or less fine with Mayor Whitmire. There’s definitely a vocal and not insignificant community that strongly dislikes him, but that is not a broadly held sentiment at this time. One poll never means all that much, but if he really were in danger, any reasonable poll would show some signs of it. This ain’t that.

Now of course the point of a recall effort is to convince people that they need to change horses right away. That’s a lot easier to do with someone who is already widely disliked, but it is possible to move public opinion. That takes a lot of money and it often takes some time. Whitmire himself has a lot of money and would surely be able to raise more, so that’s another obstacle. It would probably be best from a strategic perspective to be out there with a visible anti-Whitmire message even before the recall petitions hit the streets, but again that takes money and some kind of existing organization. So far there’s nothing happening and no indication that the resources are in place for there to be anything.

I’m not saying a strong recall effort couldn’t be mounted. I am saying there’s a lot of work to be done before one could reasonably even think about it, and it wouldn’t be easy once you reach that point. Be realistic about the landscape, that’s all I’m saying.

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More from Maria Rojas’ attorney

Good stuff from the Press.

During a March 27 hearing, Waller County District Judge Gary Chaney granted an injunction declaring that a network of three Houston-area clinics must remain temporarily closed. Marc Hearron, senior counsel for the Center for Reproductive Rights and a civil attorney for Rojas, stopped short of calling the court proceedings a dog and pony show but clearly thinks the case is flawed.

The civil complaint sought to keep the clinics closed, so Hearron was in court to challenge that. The attorney was surprised, however, to see Rojas in the Waller courtroom. She invoked her Fifth Amendment rights when questioned and Hearron declined to comment on his legal advice but said he was able to speak with Rojas privately.

“We had not asked for Rojas to be present at the hearing,” he said. “We were not planning to call her to testify. The state had not subpoenaed her to be present.”

It appears that Waller County authorities transported Rojas to the courtroom on March 27 because she was already in custody. At the time of the hearing, Rojas had been in jail for 10 days pending the posting of a massive $1 million bond “even though the state had not filed criminal charges against her and still has not filed criminal charges against her,” Hearron said.

Rojas posted bond the day before the hearing butt wasn’t immediately released because the courts did not arrange for her ankle monitor, Hearron said. She was released after the March 27 hearing with the tracking device.

Maria Rojas is a strong and resilient person and a licensed healthcare provider, Hearron said.

“She really cares for the people that she provides healthcare to,” he said. “She was a doctor in Peru, but in the United States, she was a licensed midwife before the state of Texas temporarily revoked her license as a result of this nonsense. She has these clinics, and the clinics primarily serve uninsured Spanish-speaking populations. Nothing in the state’s evidence showed any unlawful activity going on at these clinics.”

What happens next is up to the judge, Hearron said, but the more pressing matter is what happens to the families who were seeking healthcare at Rojas’ clinics. Clínica Waller Latinoamericana and its affiliates in Cypress and Spring are shuttered for the foreseeable future. Patients who, for example, had blood drawn and were waiting on results may have to find care elsewhere, Hearron said.

“I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the first person that Ken Paxton goes after and accuses of violating the abortion ban in the state of Texas is someone who is providing midwifery — not traditional OBGYN care — to primarily Spanish-speaking uninsured … Look, they tried to make a big deal out of the fact that they found cash and that they took cash for payments. Yeah, these were uninsured people who were going in and getting care. That’s how those populations pay for medical services,” Hearron said.

Court documents allege that Rojas was pretending to be a doctor and using untrained employees to perform abortions for cash, but it’s unclear how the criminal case will proceed or if it will proceed. Rojas was held on an arrest warrant rather than a criminal complaint, which lawyers say is unusual. She has not been indicted by a grand jury and the state has not turned over its discovery related to the criminal charges.

“If she hasn’t been charged yet, why does she have an ankle monitor?” Hearron said. “I don’t know exactly how these preposterous allegations in this case came up but it does appear that Paxton and his office saw the word abortion and salivated at the possibility of going after someone. This seems to be a political stunt without any real evidence. This is all based on hearsay upon hearsay and conjecture and these wild, irresponsible conclusions that they have jumped to without the type of thorough investigation that you would see if you were really interested in stopping supposedly unlawful abortions … My conclusion from all of that is that this is a political stunt designed to raise Ken Paxton’s political bona fides among the anti-abortion electorate. It’s also designed to scare people who are providing necessary healthcare to low-income populations.”

See here, here, and here for the background. The biggest red flag is that there still haven’t been any formal charges filed in this case. You’d think Ken Paxton would be trampling over people in a rush to get charges filed, but not if there’s nothing to them and certainly not if he has to show that he has no real evidence of any crimes. I have to assume that at some point Rojas’ attorneys will try to force this issue. The politics of this are clear enough – it’s hardly a coincidence that the arrest of Maria Rojas came just a short time before Paxton’s Senate campaign announcement – but sooner or later he’s going to have to play his cards.

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Dire wolves

Colossal Biosciences is at it again.

Provided by Colossal Biosciences

Three genetically engineered wolves that may resemble extinct dire wolves are trotting, sleeping and howling in an undisclosed secure location in the U.S., according to the company that aims to bring back lost species.

The wolf pups, which range in age from three to six months old, have long white hair, muscular jaws and already weigh in at around 80 pounds — on track to reach 140 pounds at maturity, researchers at Colossal Biosciences reported Monday.

Dire wolves, which went extinct more than 10,000 years old, are much larger than gray wolves, their closest living relatives today.

Independent scientists said this latest effort doesn’t mean dire wolves are coming back to North American grasslands any time soon.

“All you can do now is make something look superficially like something else”— not fully revive extinct species, said Vincent Lynch, a biologist at the University at Buffalo who was not involved in the research.

Colossal scientists learned about specific traits that dire wolves possessed by examining ancient DNA from fossils. The researchers studied a 13,000 year-old dire wolf tooth unearthed in Ohio and a 72,000 year-old skull fragment found in Idaho, both part of natural history museum collections.

Then the scientists took blood cells from a living gray wolf and used CRISPR to genetically modify them in 20 different sites, said Colossal’s chief scientist Beth Shapiro. They transferred that genetic material to an egg cell from a domestic dog. When ready, embryos were transferred to surrogates, also domestic dogs, and 62 days later the genetically engineered pups were born.

Colossal has previously announced similar projects to genetically alter cells from living species to create animals resembling extinct woolly mammoths, dodos and others.

Though the pups may physically resemble young dire wolves, “what they will probably never learn is the finishing move of how to kill a giant elk or a big deer,” because they won’t have opportunities to watch and learn from wild dire wolf parents, said Colossal’s chief animal care expert Matt James.

Colossal also reported today that it had cloned four red wolves using blood drawn from wild wolves of the southeastern U.S.’s critically endangered red wolf population. The aim is to bring more genetic diversity into the small population of captive red wolves, which scientists are using to breed and help save the species.

I’ve had plenty to say about Colossal Biosciences, who last month announced the wooly mouse, its intermediate step on the way to de-extincting the wooly mammoth. This is the first I’ve heard of their dire wolf project, which were probably easier to create than some of the other species they have in mind. We’ll see how they do in the real world. Just, next time, pick better names for them. USA Today and the Chron have more, and Boing Boing has a contrarian view.

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Paxton officially running against Cornyn

The campaign no one asked for.

Still a crook any way you look

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced Tuesday he will challenge U.S. Sen. John Cornyn in next year’s midterm elections, setting up a barnburner clash of two Republican titans that is poised to reverberate across state and national politics.

The contest, teased by Paxton for months, promises to be among the most heated and expensive Republican primaries in the country and in recent Texas history. It also marks the latest flashpoint in a power struggle between the Texas GOP’s hardline, socially conservative wing — which views Paxton as a standard-bearer — and the Cornyn-aligned, business-minded Republican old guard.

Appearing on Fox News host Laura Ingraham’s show, Paxton said it was “time for a change in Texas” as he announced his Senate bid and blasted Cornyn’s “lack of production” over his 22 years in the upper chamber.

“We have another great U.S. senator, Ted Cruz, and it’s time we have another great senator that will actually stand up and fight for Republican values, fight for the values of the people of Texas, and also support Donald Trump in the areas that he’s focused on in a very significant way,” Paxton said. “And that’s what I plan on doing.”

Paxton’s candidacy poses the most serious threat to Cornyn’s political career in decades. It would mark a watershed moment in the Texas GOP’s factional struggle if Paxton — not long removed from an array of career-threatening legal battles and impeachment by his own party — managed to topple Cornyn, a mainstay of Texas politics who had an early hand in the state’s Republican takeover and reached the upper rungs of Senate GOP leadership.

Wasting no time framing himself as the outsider in the race, Paxton wrote on social media he was running to “take a sledgehammer to the D.C. establishment,” while calling for voters to “send John Cornyn packing.”

Okay sure, some people want this. Mostly, they’re the most fanatical of the Republican primary voters – the more MAGAfied you are, the more you also like Ken Paxton and the more likely you are to prefer him to John Cornyn. There’s nothing we can do about that. But that race is going to be fought mostly on the turf of who is the biggest lickspittle sycophant to Donald Trump, and there is something we can do about that.

Mostly, we – and by “we” I mean “the Democratic nominee for Senate”, whether that is Colin Allred or somebody else – can hammer on the need for there to be someone in statewide office who is capable of standing up to Trump. Specifically, someone who is capable of standing up to Trump on the issue of tariffs, which are broadly unpopular and even before the latest round started wrecking the economy were causing havoc for a lot of pro-Trump constituencies, from the oil patch to farmers to the business community in general. Even Ted Cruz doesn’t like the tariffs. But of course Cruz will never do anything other than grumble about them on his podcast. If you want someone who won’t be a bootlicker, you can’t vote for either Paxton, whose whole raison d’etre is Trump fealty, or Cornyn, who will have to demonstrate his Trump loyalty in this campaign.

That’s the argument. I believe it will peel off some votes if done well. Please remember, Ken Paxton has been the worst performer among Republicans in the last two elections. In both 2018 and 2022, he had the fewest votes and the lowest percentage among Republicans – yes, even lower than Ted Cruz in 2018, getting 50.57% to Cruz’s 50.89%. (His margin of victory was slightly larger than Cruz’s mostly because of a larger Libertarian vote in the AG race.) If 2026 is a good Democratic year – and please lord let it be so – then Paxton is the lowest hanging fruit, and either he or Cornyn will have this as a big potential liability.

Obviously a campaign can’t be just about one issue, and the candidate matters, and so on and so forth. I’m just saying this is a way in with voters who are not now on our side but who could be. And yes, we need to persuade some folks to switch teams, even if just for this one race. The tariffs – the absolutely incoherent rationales for them, the destruction they’ve already caused, the imperviousness of Trump and his minions to any argument or reason about them – provide both a strong issue and a way to expand on it to other matters of great importance that are illustrated by the tariff regime. You know, things like not wanting to be ruled by a dictator and stuff like that.

Of course there’s risk to this. Trump could back down, or make some “deals”, and in doing so blunt the disastrous economic effects of the tariffs. (He’s not going to back down, no matter what dodging and weaving he may do in the short term. He loves tariffs and has spouted them as his One Big Idea for decades.) Maybe Cornyn runs a more old-school Republican campaign, which among other things emphasizes more rational economic policies and his record of being business-friendly in more than name only, and wins on it. But so what? It’s not like there’s some tried-and-true Democratic playbook for winning statewide that we’d be throwing out to take this path.

Anyway, that’s my reaction to this announcement. Let them smear each other on the campaign trail for the next year, but let us see that as the opportunity that it is and start acting on it now. We have a salient issue and a clear message about it. We need to take it from there.

UPDATE: And like an hour after I drafted this Trump sort of paused the tariffs for 90 days so “negotiations” can begin. But prices are still going to increase across the board, and the sheer inchoate chaos of this all undermines the whole idea of “negotiating” anyway. Point being, the premise of my post still very much stands.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Can we make HPD more efficient?

You’d think that would be a thing we’d all want.

Mayor John Whitmire

Mayor John Whitmire has made clear he intends to boost salaries and benefits for Houston police officers in their new union contract, but those increases will not be tied to performance.

That means officers across all divisions can expect better pay and benefits regardless of whether crime goes up or response times slow down, clearance rates improve or traffic deaths increase.

Whitmire is pushing to increase officer pay and benefits even after a city-commissioned efficiency study concluded that fewer than half of HPD’s performance targets are being met and improving.

The study by accounting giant Ernst and Young recommended adding more performance measures to hold the department accountable for dollars spent.

Both the Whitmire administration and the Houston Police Officers Union, however, say tying police salaries to departmental performance would not be appropriate. Their focus, instead, is on making Houston police salaries comparable to those in Texas’ other big cities, in an effort to recruit and retain officers for a department they say is understaffed for a city this size.

[…]

So-called key performance indicators are included in the annual city budget to measure whether departments make progress toward their goals.

Among HPD’s performance indicators are goals to maintain its average response times for priority calls, reduce crime, and release a percentage of body cam footage of “critical incidents” within 30 days.

The auditors recommended adding metrics, including the number of civilian complaints per officer and rates of violent, property and hate crimes.

City officials told Ernst and Young it could not “tell the cops how to cop,” [deputy chief of staff Steven] David said, but the consultants still could help find ways to make department more efficient

Once performance metrics are set, they will need to be continuously monitored and adjusted, David said.

City Council approved a second contract with Ernst and Young last month for an additional $4 million to help create performance improvement measures for each individual department, including HPD, David said.

Houston Police Officers Union President Doug Griffith said he anticipates the union and city will finalize a draft of a new labor contract this month, but he did not have a problem with the city giving the police more performance goals.

“We’re working on the contract. It has nothing to do with the efficiency study,” Griffith said. “But like every department, no matter where you are or what job it is, there’s always ways to make it more efficient. We look forward to that happening here with our department, as well.”

HPD leadership and the Houston Finance Department, which is overseen by the mayor’s office, are responsible for determining the annual performance indicators. They are not bargained by the police union.

However, the timing of the union negotiations could be worked to the mayor’s advantage, said Daniel DiSalvo, a politics and labor union expert with The City College of New York. DiSalvo said Whitmire’s team could use the suggestions laid out in the efficiency report as a tool to justify increased wages.

DiSalvo gave the example of tying better police response times, which are almost always used as an indicator of success, with increased funding: if the city allots additional funds for more officers or better vehicles, response times may improve.

“The question would be, what performance metrics could actually translate into a work rule that would encourage better performance?” DiSalvo said. “The other way to put it is, think negatively, are there work rules that are in the existing contract that are actively weakening the department?”

We’re not “telling them how to cop”, we’re setting a goal. They can figure out how to achieve it. The challenge here is that whatever efficiencies we may find and the improvements we may be able to wring out of them, it can never translate into savings for the city, because the Republicans in the Legislature passed a law forbidding local governments from ever cutting law enforcement budgets. So whatever we agree to pony up here, we’re going to be stuck with it. Given that reality, the least we can do is make sure we’re getting our money’s worth.

Posted in Local politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

It’s hurricane prediction season

And it will be another busy one.

FrankRamspott/Getty Images

The 2025 hurricane season is shaping up to be one of the most intense in recent years, with forecasters at Colorado State University predicting an above-normal active season. A staggering 17 named storms are expected, with 9 hurricanes— four of those could intensify into major hurricanes, category 3 or higher. The forecast also calls for 85 named storm days, a sharp rise from the historical average.

“We anticipate an above-average probability for major hurricanes making landfall along the continental United States coastline and in the Caribbean. As with all hurricane seasons, coastal residents are reminded that it only takes one hurricane making landfall to make it an active season,” the report reads.

To put that in perspective, the historical average hurricane season sees just 14.4 named storms, 7.2 hurricanes, and only 3.2 major hurricanes, along with 69.4 named storm days.

According to the report, a “warmer than normal tropical Atlantic” could create optimal conditions for hurricanes to form and intensify.

“Sea surface temperatures in the eastern and central tropical Atlantic are warmer than normal, although not as warm as they were last year at this time,” forecasters said in the report.

The 2025 hurricane season is expected to have more hurricanes than the 1991-2020 average, according to the report.

“Thorough preparations should be made every season, regardless of predicted activity,” the report reads.

The report from the Colorado hurricane experts follows the predictions from AccuWeather that Texas could see a higher-than average risk of hurricane impact this hurricane season.

If it’s any consolation, last year’s forecast was for more activity than this year’s predicts. The Colorado State guys predicted 23 named storms last year. We know how that worked out. It just takes one, that’s for sure. Better hope ERCOT and CenterPoint are more prepared this time around. The Eyewall gets into the details if you want more.

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Texas blog roundup for the week of April 7

The Texas Progressive Alliance remains tariff-free as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Continue reading

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Measles update: Another needless death

We have to start with some bad news.

An 8-year-old girl with measles died Thursday morning, the second known measles-related death in an ongoing outbreak that has infected nearly 500 Texans since January. Her funeral was Sunday at a church in Seminole followed by a private burial.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., visited the West Texas town that has been the epicenter of the outbreak Sunday and was expected to meet with the family.

“My intention was to come down here quietly to console the families and to be with the community in their moment of grief,” Kennedy wrote on social media. He went on to describe the resources he deployed to Texas in March after another school-aged child died from measles, claiming that the “growth rates for new cases and hospitalizations have flattened” since Kennedy sent a team from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The state reported 59 new cases in three days last week.

The child who died Thursday, Daisy Hildebrand, was not vaccinated and had no known underlying health conditions, said a spokesperson for University Medical Center in Lubbock, where she had been hospitalized. She died from “measles pulmonary failure,” the Texas Department of State Health Services reported Sunday.

“This unfortunate event underscores the importance of vaccination,” Vice President of University Medical Center Aaron Davis said in a statement. “We encourage all individuals to stay current with their vaccinations to help protect themselves and the broader community.”

[…]

A CDC spokesperson said in an email that Kennedy’s visit to Texas on Sunday resulted in discussions with Texas state health officials to deploy a second CDC response team to West Texas to further assist with the state’s efforts to protect its residents against measles and its complications.

Dr. Manisha Patel, incident manager for the CDC, said their team arrived in Gaines County in March and left on April 1. A spokesperson for the CDC said in light of today’s news and Kennedy’s order to re-deploy, another team will be in the county.

“We’re learning a lot in Gaines County on how we can help other jurisdictions also prepare for measles in their states,” Patel said.

Patel said it’s important to go in with a sensitive approach when it comes to small, close-knit communities that are unvaccinated.

“MMR is the best way to protect yourself, your families, your communities against measles,” Patel said. “And, if you’re starting to get very sick from measles, not to delay care.”

Patel said for some communities, it’s important to find trusted messengers. In some cases, she said, the federal government might not be the best choice for that and it has to be someone in the community. To work around this, Patel said they’ve worked directly with state and local health departments to find who the trusted messengers are.

“Our role is making sure those trusted messengers have the materials and information they need,” Patel said. “So we translate, for example, materials into a German or Spanish or whatever the community needs.”

It feels a little weird to me to name the children who died – the first child was named in a paragraph I didn’t quote; this was the first time I had seen her name – but I suppose that information was already out there. I’ll get back to RFK Jr in a minute, but in the meantime, this third death (there was also an adult who died) has Your Local Epidemiologist pondering the overall case numbers.

Before this year, there had only been three measles deaths since 2000:

  • 2015: A 28-year-old immunocompromised woman in Washington was exposed in a clinic.
  • 2003: A 75-year-old traveler from California with pneumonia. The other was a 13-year-old immunocompromised child (post–bone marrow transplant) living between Illinois and Mexico.

Today’s situation is different. It’s younger, healthier kids. And it’s happening more often.

This raises a critical question: Are we seeing the full picture?

As of Saturday, there were 636 measles cases nationwide, 569 in the Panhandle outbreak alone, and 3 deaths. But that death toll doesn’t quite make sense.

  • Measles typically causes 1 to 3 deaths per 1,000 unvaccinated cases.
  • At that rate, 3 deaths would suggest somewhere between 1,000 and 3,000 more cases—not just 569.

This outbreak may be significantly underreported and the largest in decades. Other signs point in the same direction, including very sick hospitalized patients (reflecting delays in seeking care), and epidemiologists are encountering resistance to case investigations.

Of course, there’s another possibility: this could simply be a statistical anomaly. Three deaths among a few hundred cases isn’t impossible—it’s just extremely rare. We’ve seen similar situations before. In 1991, for example, an outbreak in Philadelphia caused 1,400 cases and 9 pediatric deaths. In that case, religious leaders discouraged medical care, relying on prayer instead.

But whether this is an undercount or an outlier, one thing is clear: we are in new, unsettling territory.

We probably won’t have a decent guess at that until after it’s all over. If we’re lucky.

Back to RFK Jr, and yeah, I know.

After visiting the epicenter of Texas’ growing measles outbreak, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, tweeted out praise for a pair of Lone Star State doctors with records of dispensing endorsing alternative treatments that contradict guidance from infectious disease experts.

Kennedy, one of the nation’s highest-profile vaccine skeptics, called both physicians “extraordinary healers,” even though one of the two was disciplined roughly 20 years ago by the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners for ordering unnecessary tests and false diagnoses, according to state records.

[…]

Kennedy shared photos from the trip and lavished praised on the two doctors with the history of dispensing unconventional treatments. The HHS secretary commended Dr. Richard Bartlett and Dr. Ben Edwards, whom he said had “treated and healed some 300 measles-stricken Mennonite children using aerosolized budesonide and clarithromycin.”

Although medical researchers have explored aerosolized budesonide and clarithromycin as possible measles treatments, most health experts accept that there’s no “cure” for measles — only treatments that can mitigate the symptoms.

For his part, Bartlett was disciplined by the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners in 2003 for ordering unnecessary diagnostic tests, improper management of a patient’s diabetes and “questionably diagnosing” another patient with bronchitis despite having normal lung function, according to state records obtained by the Current.

Bartlett also touted unproved steroid treatments as a cure for COVID-19, according to TK.

Meanwhile, Edwards has a history of criticizing the measles vaccine, including proclaiming in a podcast that the Texas outbreak was “God’s version of measles immunization,” the Washington Post reports.

I’ve mentioned Ben Edwards before; Richard Bartlett is a new name to me. I’m sure you can surmise what I think of them. By the way, if you click over to that article, you can see the tweet in which RFK Jr poses for pictures with the families of the two dead girls, and names them. I don’t know if that makes him the source of that information, but there it is anyway.

That said, more people are getting their MMR vaccines now.

More than 218,000 Texans got the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine during the first three months of 2025, according to data from the state’s Department of State Health Services. That total is about 16% higher than the number of Texans who received the shot during the same timeframe last year.

The most notable increase has been in the South Plains area, which has seen a 60% rise this year compared to the same period in 2024, according to the data. Vaccinations are also up 13% in the public health region that includes Houston.

Public health experts said the increases have been encouraging amid an outbreak that has grown to more than 500 cases in Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma. But vaccination rates in many Texas communities still fall short of the threshold of 95% vaccination coverage that is needed to achieve herd immunity, which prevents widespread outbreaks.

“It’s still a struggle,” Katherine Wells, the director of public health for the city of Lubbock, said of the efforts to improve vaccination rates. “It’s definitely following the news cycle. When there’s a local story about an exposure or sick kids, I think more people come to get vaccinated.”

Lubbock Public Health set up a drive-up MMR vaccine clinic to offer shots that is serving 20 to 30 people on an average day. Wells estimated that half the traffic to the clinic has been individuals who were recently exposed to the virus; the vaccine may provide some protection or lessen the severity of illness if it’s administered within 72 hours of an exposure, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Vaccinating healthy individuals before they are exposed has been trickier, Wells said. Public health officials have been stressing that one dose of the MMR vaccine is 93% effective at preventing an infection, and two doses are 97% effective.

The Immunization Partnership, a Houston-based nonprofit, has been working with school districts, day cares, pediatricians and public health clinics to improve vaccination rates in the South Plains region and elsewhere. Demand has not been high enough to contain the outbreak, said Terri Burke, the nonprofit’s executive director.

“I don’t think we’re making the headway we ought to ought to be making,” she said.

More Texas residents have been seeking out the MMR vaccine as the outbreak continues to spread. The number of shots administered across the state between Jan. 1 and March 31 was the highest during that timeframe in the last six years, according to DSHS data.

The DSHS noted that the data is not comprehensive, because Texas residents must opt-in to share their vaccination status with the Texas Immunization Registry. It’s also not clear if people were receiving their first or second dose of the vaccine.

It may not be enough, but it’s still better than it was. I’ll take my good news where I can.

And with all that intro, here’s your Tuesday case count update.

The latest update from the Texas Department of State Health Services shows that 505 people have been infected with measles since the outbreak began in late January in the South Plains region. Fifty-seven people have been hospitalized for treatment.

The update comes two days after the DSHS reported the death of a second child amid the outbreak. A 6-year-old child died in late February, marking the first measles death in the U.S. since 2015. Neither child had received the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, and they did not have any underlying medical conditions, according to the DSHS.

Cases continue to be concentrated in school-aged children who have not received the MMR vaccine, or whose vaccination status is unknown.

The Texas outbreak has also spread to New Mexico, which reported 56 cases on Tuesday, and Oklahoma, which reported 10 cases. New Mexico has also reported one suspected measles death, an unvaccinated adult who tested positive for the virus after dying.

The latest DSHS update includes 24 new cases, an increase of about 5% since the agency’s last update on Friday.

The DSHS said there is ongoing measles transmission in 10 counties across the state: Cochran, Dallam, Dawson, Gaines, Garza, Lynn, Lamar, Lubbock, Terry and Yoakum.

Of the 24 new cases, 13 are in Gaines County, which continues to be the epicenter of the outbreak. The county has now reported 328 cases since late January, nearly 65% of all Texas cases associated with the outbreak.

There are three new cases in Lubbock County, increasing its total to 36, and Terry County, raising its total to 46. Two new cases were reported in Hale County, which has now seen five in total.

Three counties reported one new case apiece, including Borden and Randall counties, which reported their first cases associated with the outbreak.

Of the 505 cases in Texas, 160 have been in children younger than 5 years old and 191 have been in children and teens between 5 and 17, according to the DSHS.

Only 10 cases have been in people who received at least one dose of MMR vaccine prior to an infection.

The latest DSHS update does not include any Harris County cases associated with the outbreak. Harris County Public Health was notified last week that testing conducted by a commercial laboratory confirmed a northwest Harris County child had measles, but officials noted the DSHS needed to verify the test results.

Texas has reported a total of six measles cases in 2025 that are not connected to the South Plains outbreak, including three in Harris County and one in Fort Bend County. Most of those cases are associated with international travel, and they are not included in the Texas outbreak total of 505.

I’ll chase down the other states’ numbers for the Friday update. Randall County, by the way, includes part of Amarillo, so that’s another major metro area with cases in it.

The Associated Press has a bit more detail.

As of Friday, there were seven cases at a day care where one young child who was infectious gave it to two other children before it spread to other classrooms, Lubbock Public Health director Katherine Wells said.

“Measles is so contagious I won’t be surprised if it enters other facilities,” Wells said.

There are more than 200 children at the day care, Wells said, and most have had least one dose of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, which is first recommended between 12 and 15 months old and a second shot between 4 and 6 years old.

“We do have some children that have only received one dose that are now infected,” she said.

The public health department is recommending that any child with only one vaccine get their second dose early, and changed its recommendation for kids in Lubbock County to get the first vaccine dose at 6 months old instead of 1. A child who is unvaccinated and attends the day care must stay home for 21 days since their last exposure, Wells said.

That doesn’t sound good. Here’s some more on the updated MMR vaccine guidance for Lubbock. All I can say is I hope plenty of people follow that advice.

UPDATE: Hello, El Paso.

William Beaumont Army Medical Center has confirmed El Paso’s first case of measles connected to the ongoing West Texas and Panhandle outbreak.

The patient was checked in Friday at the Mendoza Soldier Family Care Center on Fort Bliss, according to a Tuesday news release. Amabilia G. Payen, a spokesperson for the medical center, did not provide further details about the patient, including vaccination history.

“That is why prevention is so important,” said Maj. Lacy Male, Army public health nurse, in the news release. “The measles vaccine is highly effective, and two doses provide 97 percent protection against the disease, making it one of the best tools for prevention. There is no treatment for measles, only supportive therapy. We want to vaccinate to prevent infection altogether.”

Army health officials began contact tracing efforts to mitigate the spread of the disease, and also notified local and state health officials. The El Paso Department of Public Health has not responded to questions from El Paso Matters.

In addition to El Paso’s measles case, Mexican health authorities confirmed four cases of measles, or sarampión, in neighboring Ciudad Juárez as of Monday.

It’s just gonna keep on spreading, because that’s what measles does.

Posted in The great state of Texas | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Measles update: Another needless death

KP George charged with money laundering

Great.

Judge KP George

Fort Bend County Judge KP George, already facing legal troubles, was arrested Friday and charged with two counts of money laundering, according to county jail records and the district attorney’s office.

George, a Democrat first elected in 2018 and re-elected in 2022, said in a statement posted to Facebook that he had loaned personal money to his campaign and later repaid it.

“(T)here is nothing illegal about loaning personal funds to my own campaign and later repaying that loan,” he said. “This is a standard and lawful practice.”

The county judge also accused the district attorney’s office of “weaponizing” the government against him.

“Allegations and accusations are being made without full context or disclosure of the facts—deliberately manipulating the narrative to tarnish my reputation and character,” he said.

George was indicted in September on a misdemeanor charge of misrepresentation of identity. He’s accused of working with former staffer Taral Patel to create fake racist attacks against his own campaign on social media.

But prosecutors say the money laundering charge is unrelated to George’s prior indictment.

“The District Attorney’s Office has continuously stated that the investigation was ongoing, and that investigation has now led to two 3rd-degree felony indictments for Money Laundering, which were made public today,” the Fort Bend County District Attorney’s Office said in a statement. “These charges are unrelated to the pending misdemeanor and are assigned to the 458th District Court. Our office remains committed to the integrity our public deserves, and the ethics to which all prosecutors are sworn to. And our investigation remains ongoing.”

George is accused of laundering equal to or more than $30,000 but less than $150,000. According to court records, the money laundering charges are connected to alleged wire fraud and tampering with a campaign finance report.

See here and here for some background. KP George is innocent until proven guilty and is entitled to that presumption of innocence. He really ought to give serious thought to abandoning his re-election campaign, and also to maybe stepping down and sorting out his private life. There are already numerous announced challengers for his office. I wish him well and I hope he hears what I have to say. The Chron, which has a copy of the indictments in the article, has more.

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Just make up your damn mind about West 11th already

I swear, I am so sick of this.

After Houston Mayor John Whitmire’s administration removed cyclist protections along Heights Boulevard and Austin Street in March, advocates for a contentious safety project on 11th Street in the Heights neighborhood are worried it could be next on the chopping block.

Construction finished in 2023 on a $2.3 million project to add bike lanes and other safety features on 11th Street while reducing the number of lanes for cars and trucks. It drew protests and praise, from a 3,000-signature petition against the changes to a Project of the Year award from the Texas chapter of the American Public Works Association.

The project has been under review by Whitmire’s administration for more than a year. On Wednesday, he again criticized the project, saying businesses and residents don’t like it and emergency personnel avoid the street. But, he said, the administration has not made a decision on its future.

“It’s not my controversy,” Whitmire said. “I’m just trying to solve it.”

[…]

Whitmire said the Houston Fire Department avoids 11th Street since it was revamped, although photos taken by proponents of the redesign show both fire trucks and ambulances have continued to travel on the street. The fire department deferred comment to the mayor’s office.

The perceptions of higher traffic run counter to a HPW study first published by Axios. It found overall traffic times “do not appear to have increased significantly” because of the changes, with drivers experiencing an additional seven seconds of travel time during the peak morning hours and eight seconds in the evening peak.

According to the HPW analysis, the project decreased collisions and increased the presence of cyclists and pedestrians. Injury-causing crashes along 11th Street during the study periods decreased from four in 2019 to zero in 2023. All crashes decreased from 25 in 2019 to 16 in 2023. The total daily east-west crossings of Heights Boulevard by pedestrians and cyclists increased from 87 in 2019 to 324 in 2024.

Gilbert Perez, owner of Bungalow Revival LLC and Bespoke by GJCD, has noticed the increase in pedestrian volume.

“I think the bike lanes have actually slowed traffic down quite a bit,” Perez said. “It makes it a much safer street for our clients to come in, for other pedestrians. My foot traffic has increased since the bike lanes were put in, and I think it brings people from the neighborhood to our businesses.”

According to the HPW analysis, vehicle speeds decreased from as much as 39 miles per hour to as low as 30.5 miles per hour. The speed limit on 11th is 30 miles per hour.

Sara Saber, owner of Three Dog Bakery, opened her shop just as construction began and felt “a little panicked.” Now, she said, “it feels safer as a pedestrian, for sure.”

Perez and Saber are part of a coalition of 18 businesses and organizations sending a letter to Whitmire’s administration, including A New Leaf elementary school, the parent-teacher association for Hogg Middle School, the Woodland Heights Civic Association and state Rep. Christina Morales. They call for the protection of the 11th Street redesign, which they say transformed a “high-speed, dangerous thoroughfare” into a “thriving and safe corridor.”

Ashley Wilson, assistant general manager at Loro Asian Smokehouse and Bar, said the project “doesn’t really negatively affect us, but it also doesn’t really positively affect us” — but additional construction to reverse the project would.

“More construction would be annoying for us because that’s the way to get into our business,” Wilson said.

[…]

Multiple Heights residents told Houston Public Media the 11th Street project has made recreational biking more accessible. A central feature of the 11th Street project was an improved crossing at Nicholson Street, which runs parallel to a north-south hike-and-bike trail.

Jeff Worne moved his family to the Heights in 2018 because of its proximity to the hike-and-bike trail.

Before the safety improvements, Worne said, he “wouldn’t let our younger kids go anywhere close to the street to cross” because of speeding cars, but now “it feels much safer to cross there.”

The HPW analysis found a nearly 200% increase in cyclists and pedestrian use of the crossing after the project was completed, from 211 per day in 2018 to 623 in 2024.

The 11th Street bike lanes are also used by commuters to work and school, such as Rice University political scientist Bob Stein and his grandchildren.

“(Bicycles) are not a car,” Stein said. “We actually do reduce congestion.”

Stein said Whitmire’s stance is “bewildering” because he’s catering to people outside the City of Houston.

“He seems to be more concerned about suburban drivers and speed on these roads, which is exactly what has hurt the city,” Stein said.

Whitmire lied about what HFD said about the Austin Street bike lane, so I am not at all inclined to believe his claim here. I still drive up and down 11th regularly, and it’s just not any more congested or bottlenecked than before. Even at 5 PM, it flows just fine. What is different from a driving perspective is if you’re approaching 11th from a side road that doesn’t have a traffic light, and you want to make a left turn, it no longer feels dangerous. Removing the extra lanes and getting the average speed down from 40 MPH to 30 MPH makes that experience a lot less hair-raising.

Whitmire’s gonna do what Whitmire’s gonna do, we all know that. We should still do what we can to keep 11th Street safe and usable. And as long as we’re even contemplating spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to rip out brand new perfectly functional infrastructure on whims, then spare me any talk about “finding efficiencies” and “cutting waste”.

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

Abbott finally calls CD18 election

It’s for November.

Rep. Sylvester Turner

Gov. Greg Abbott has set Nov. 4 as the special election date to fill the congressional seat left vacant by former Rep. Sylvester Turner’s death — a timeline that leaves the solidly Democratic seat vacant for at least seven months as Republicans look to drive President Donald Trump’s agenda through a narrowly divided Congress.

Turner, a former Houston mayor and Democratic state lawmaker, died March 5, two months into his first term representing Texas’ 18th Congressional District. State law does not specify a deadline for the governor to order a special election.

With Turner’s seat vacant, the House breaks down to 220 Republicans and 213 Democrats, allowing the GOP to win a majority on the floor even with three defections from their ranks. If Turner’s seat were filled, likely by a Democrat, the GOP could withstand only two defections.

Democrats, including U.S. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic minority leader, pressured Abbott to call a special election, threatening to sue if the Republican governor continued to hold off on scheduling the contest.

Christian Menefee, the acting Harris County attorney and a Democrat running for the seat, had also threatened legal action if Abbott did not order a special election. He recently called on the governor to set the election for June 7, the date of the runoffs for the May 3 uniform election — when voters will elect representation for many local governments across Texas.

According to state law and precedent, Abbott had until March 18 to set the contest for May 3. He also could have declared an “emergency” special election, which allows for an election to take place outside the May or November uniform election dates.

Turner was elected to Congress last year after his predecessor and political ally, former U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, died of pancreatic cancer while also serving out her term. She spent nearly three decades representing the deep-blue district, which encompasses downtown Houston and several of the city’s historic neighborhoods, including the Third Ward and parts of The Heights and Acres Homes.

Also running to succeed Turner is former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards, a Democrat who twice ran for the seat in 2024. She was defeated by Jackson Lee in the March primary; Jackson Lee died before the general election, opening the party’s nomination to a vote of local party officials, who narrowly picked Turner over Edwards.

Isaiah Martin, a former staffer for Jackson Lee, also jumped into the race last month.

In a statement, Menefee blasted Abbott for not setting the election for an earlier date.

“It is unconscionable to leave nearly 800,000 people in this district without representation in Congress for most of the year,” Menefee said. “We’ll go through hurricane season, budget battles, and attacks on Social Security and Medicaid with no one at the table fighting for us. Governor Abbott knows how to move quickly — he’s done it for other districts. He just chose not to for us.”

See here for the previous update. Abbott had some more insulting BS to say about Harris County, which is par for the course for him. Look, this election should have been called for May and it could have been called for June. Once it was too late for May, I assumed it would happen in November. It was never credible to me that Abbott would try to wait until next year, and if he had I would have expected those threatened lawsuits to have a decent chance at forcing him to do what he just did. I’ll be on the lookout for those April finance reports, and we’ll see if anyone else jumps into the race. I will definitely do interviews for this in the fall. Houston Landing and the Chron have more.

Posted in Election 2025 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Paxton sues San Antonio over abortion funding

First, this happened.

In an election-year reversal, San Antonio city leaders voted 6-5 Thursday to fast-track distribution of $100,000 to organizations that provide reproductive services, including emergency contraception and transportation for out-of-state abortion care.

Just months ago, city staff shut down a similar plan, skipping over groups that provide such services after council members spoke against the idea while debating how to distribute a new $500,000 Reproductive Justice Fund.

Since that November decision, some council members had been clamoring to come back and take the issue to a vote, which landed just weeks out from a municipal election that’s become increasingly partisan.

Four sitting council members — Adriana Rocha Garcia (D4), Melissa Cabello Havrda (D6), Manny Pelaez (D8) and John Courage (D9) — are all running for mayor.

Of those, Havrda, who led the charge for Thursday’s vote, was the only one to support the distribution of funds for abortion services — while all three of the council’s other mayoral contenders voted against it.

“We’re watching the consequences of the state abortion bans unfold in real time, and what we’re seeing is a public health crisis,” said Cabello Havrda, an attorney. “Some might ask if this is really the city’s responsibility, and the answer is real simple: ‘Yeah, it sure is.’”

[…]

In the wake of Texas’ 2021 near-total abortion ban, San Antonio is among a handful of cities that have sought other ways to help residents continue accessing abortion services.

Austin, for example, included money in its 2024-2025 budget to help cover the cost of airfare, gas, hotel stays, child care, food and companion travel for people seeking out-of-state abortions.

But Thursday’s decision to add abortion travel to San Antonio’s reproductive health fund comes as the GOP-led Texas Legislature is already working on plans to outlaw such spending.

A bill crafted by state Sen. Donna Campbell (R-New Braunfels), who represents part of San Antonio, would ban local governments from giving money to “abortion assistance entities,” which includes paying for travel costs or helping find abortion-inducing medication.

On Thursday, some city leaders were adamant that pending legislation should not stop their efforts to protect their residents, while others were skeptical of a potentially expensive legal fight.

Pelaez, who is also an attorney, contended that the move equated to “lighting $100,000 on fire” given the current political landscape.

“The cost of that lawsuit will eclipse the $100,000 by many orders of magnitude, and we’re going to lose,” he said.

Segovia said that if Campbell’s bill becomes law, the city’s contracts will be written in a way that allows the city to “pivot” and stay in compliance.

San Antonio’s City Council has made more symbolic statements in support of abortion rights, including a “reproductive justice fund” that didn’t really provide abortion funding and faced private litigation; I don’t know where that case stands. I admit that this ordinance’s passage came as a surprise to me, especially after it had been previously brought up.

This, however, was not a surprise, not at all.

On Thursday night, a divided San Antonio City Council voted 6-5 to spend $100,000 on helping residents travel out of state to get abortions.

Less than 24 hours later, Attorney General Ken Paxton sued in state court, arguing San Antonio is “transparently attempting to undermine and subvert Texas law and public policy.” The lawsuit alleges that the fund violates the gift clause of the Texas Constitution, and requests a temporary injunction blocking the funding allocation.

The lawsuit is not unexpected: Paxton previously sued the City of Austin over a similar fund.

San Antonio originally allocated $500,000 for a Reproductive Justice Fund in 2023, in response to Texas’ near-total ban on abortion. After much debate, and a private lawsuit, the money was spent on non-abortion related reproductive health initiatives, like contraception, testing for sexually transmitted infections and health workshops.

I remember the Austin ordinance but didn’t write about it at the time; that lawsuit Paxton filed against them was from late September last year, and I’m sure there was too much other news happening at the time. Be that as it may, I can’t see a path to either of these ordinances ever getting officially adopted. If Sen. Campbell’s bill is somehow not passed, the courts will get in the way, either at the statewide 15th Court of Appeals or SCOTx. It’s fine to take a doomed stand on principle when the situation calls for it, but it’s best when there’s a strategic goal behind such a stand. With all due respect to CM Cabello Havrda, I think her colleague CM Pelaez has it right. The Current has more.

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

Another name emerges as a possible Houston hockey team owner

New player alert.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has said the league has received interest from multiple prospective owners about a Houston hockey franchise.

On Thursday, the identity of at least another interested party became public.

ESPN reported that Houston billionaire Dan Friedkin, who owns Gulf States Toyota and The Friedkin Group among his business holdings, “has emerged as a strong ownership option” to bring an NHL franchise to Houston.

NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly confirmed to ESPN that the league met with Friedkin’s group “on a number of occasions about potential interest in a Houston expansion franchise.”

Friedkin has experience in pro sports ownership through European soccer. His company purchased Italian Serie A franchise AS Roma in 2020 and in 2024, The Friedkin Group took majority ownership of Everton in the English Premier League.

Friedkin joins Houston Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta, who’s expressed interest in bringing the NHL to town on multiple occasions since he bought the NBA franchise in October 2017. Fertitta, however, has included caveats, including in September 2024, when he said it had to be at a favorable price.

[…]

The speculation in hockey circles is that the league wants $2 billion for its next expansion franchise (Fertitta paid a then-record $2.2 billion for the Rockets seven-plus years ago). In April 2024, Utah Jazz owners Ryan and Ashley Smith paid $1.3 billion for the Arizona Coyotes’ hockey assets and relocated the team to Salt Lake City, where it’s playing its inaugural season as the Utah Hockey Club.

Bettman has maintained over the past year that the league is not in expansion mode, saying at the October Board of Governors meeting that the topic “never came up in any form.” The league last expanded in 2021 to add Seattle and reach 32 teams.

Another complication involves an arena for a Houston NHL team. Fertitta, per the Rockets’ lease, controls access to Toyota Center, so anyone interested in playing hockey there (making the building “hockey ready” is part of future renovations) would have to work with him, or perhaps build another facility.

We’ve known about Tilman Fertitta, who is also pursuing a WNBA team, for awhile. Last May, we heard about the second potential owner, and now we have a name for the rumor.

I don’t know how seriously to take all of this. Thirty-two is a pretty good number of teams for a league, but that’s not an absolute barrier to expansion. It would be nice to hear Gary Bettman use that word in a non-negative context, however. Surely Houston would be an attractive market for the NHL, past history aside. I’m just waiting for a clearer signal before I buy into the idea.

Posted in Other sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Paxton whistleblowers get what they asked for

Good for them, and good in general.

Still a crook any way you look

A Travis County district court judge on Friday awarded $6.6 million to four former senior aides to Attorney General Ken Paxton who said they were improperly fired after reporting Paxton to the FBI.

Judge Catherine Mauzy stated in her judgment that the plaintiffs — Blake Brickman, Mark Penley, David Maxwell and Ryan Vassar — had proven by a “preponderance of the evidence” that Paxton’s office had violated the Texas Whistleblower Act. Each of the four were awarded between $1.1 and $2.1 million for wages lost, compensation for emotional pain, attorney’s fees and various other costs as a result of the trial.

The judgment also said Paxton’s office did not dispute any issue of fact in the case, which stopped the Attorney General’s office from further contesting their liability. Tom Nesbitt, the attorney for Brickman and Maxwell, said in a statement that Paxton “admitted” to breaking the law to avoid being questioned under oath.

“It should shock all Texans that their chief law enforcement officer, Ken Paxton, admitted to violating the law, but that is exactly what happened in this case,” Nesbitt said in the statement.

In a statement to the Tribune from his office, Paxton called the ruling “a ridiculous judgment that is not based on the facts or the law” and pointed blame at former Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, who led the Texas House effort to impeach him in 2023. “We will appeal this bogus ruling as we continue to clean up Dade Phelan’s mess,” Paxton said in the statement.

The judgment also ordered that the plaintiffs are entitled to additional attorney’s fees if they successfully defend or prosecute appeals, including up to $20,000 per plaintiff for various stages of review at the Supreme Court of Texas.

Late Friday, Brickman criticized Paxton’s intent to appeal the judgment in a post on X, calling the attorney general “ lawless and shameless” and claiming the judgment came because Paxton was avoiding a deposition.

“Paxton now wants to appeal? He literally already admitted he broke the law to @SupremeCourt_TX and the Travis County District Court — all to stop his own deposition,” Brickman wrote.

See here for the previous update. It took longer for the judgment to be announced than we had been led to believe, but whatever. There’s obviously a ton of backstory to all this, but remember that the reason we were still fighting it out over this settlement was because the original one, for $3.3 million, wasn’t approved by the Lege to be paid for in a separate appropriation because Ken Paxton refused to answer any questions about what happened. His refusal led to the House committee doing their own investigation, which in turn led to the impeachment and all of that mishegoss. Part of that was Paxton declaring that he would no longer contest any of the allegations made against him, again to avoid having to answer questions about the whole affair (and yes, I use that word deliberately), this time in a deposition.

The bottom line is that Paxton on the one hand says “fine, I’ll cop to whatever you guys say” and on the other hand claims they’re lying, all because he does not want to answer any questions about what happened. He’s desperate to avoid answering questions. Whatever happens, from this point forward, this fact should be relentlessly brought up and thrown in his face. Whatever we Democrats can do to get these whistleblowers out there in public saying what a dirtbag sleazeball Ken Paxton is, we have to do it. This is the closest thing to any accountability for his behavior he has faced. We have to ride it all the way.

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

US and Mexico get 2031 Women’s World Cup

Excellent.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has confirmed that the United States-Mexico and the United Kingdom are the sole respective bidders for the 2031 and 2035 Women’s World Cups.

Infantino made the announcement on Thursday at the 49th UEFA Congress in Belgrade, Serbia. Should a compliant bid be submitted by the end of 2025, this will pave the way for the UK to host the Women’s World Cup for the first time. The U.S. last hosted in 2003, having previously done so four years earlier, while Mexico has never staged games.

The Football Associations of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland announced in March they would be submitting a collective expression of interest to host the 2035 tournament, seemingly leaving the U.S. and Mexico as the sole bidders for 2031.

U.S. Soccer and the Mexican Soccer Federation announced last April their intention to lodge a joint bid for the 2031 tournament. The two federations withdrew their bid for the 2027 World Cup — which will be staged in Brazil — to instead focus on 2031.

At March’s FIFA council meeting, football’s international governing body had invited federations affiliated to UEFA or the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to bid for the 2035 tournament. Reports in Spain had suggested Spain, Morocco and Portugal were planning to launch a rival bid for 2035 but the UK was described as the only “valid” bid by Infantino. Spain, Morocco and Portugal will jointly host the men’s competition in 2030.

The Athletic reported in March that the U.S.-Mexico bid was exploring staging matches in Costa Rica and Jamaica. Sources familiar with discussions, speaking on the condition of anonymity, indicated early-stage conversations about hosting a limited amount of fixtures in the two Concacaf countries had taken place.

See here and here for some background, and here for the US Soccer statement. It is of course my hope that Houston will be able to host some of these games, as they are hosting 2026 Men’s World Cup games. I’ll be looking for stories to that effect, and will plot to attend some games if and when that happens.

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Malik appointed to HCDE Board

Of interest.

Silky Malik

Silky Joshi Malik has been unanimously appointed to Harris County Department of Education’s (HCDE) Board of Trustees. Malik will fulfill the remainder of the term for Position 7, At-Large, which expires in December 2026. The seat was previously held by David Brown, who stepped down in January 2025.

HCDE Trustees voted on Malik’s appointment during a special board meeting on March 31. Malik will be sworn in to the board in the coming weeks.

“I am eager to bring my personal experiences and professional skills to the Harris County Department of Education and look forward to the opportunity to contribute to its continued success,” said Malik. “As a Houston native, I’ve spent my life seeing all the ways this city shows up for one another, and the work being done by HCDE is no exception.”

As a former educator and researcher, U.S. congressional candidate and current Ph. D. candidate with a focus on public policy, Malik has developed a nuanced understanding of educational systems and the dynamics of policy making and advocacy. She has also served as a board member for organizations such as Annie’s List Training Fund, which provided governance skills and experience in strategic oversight.

Find more information on the HCDE Board of Trustees here.

Brown was elected in 2020, doing us all the favor of ousting Don Sumners from the At Large seat. Malik was as noted a candidate for CD02 in 2018; here’s the interview I did with her in the primary. Congratulations on the appointment and best of luck on the Board.

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Weekend link dump for April 6

“Two, even if there were no government guidance on Signal usage, it doesn’t change the fact that the error that led to Signalgate is not Signal’s fault. To imply otherwise, as Trump did, is not just to deny reality—it is to engage in a dangerous, long-running propaganda campaign that could undermine the very foundations of privacy in modern American society.”

“Here are the five key pillars of actual Trumpian repression so far”.

“It’s not just that they’re hypocrites — oh, but they are! — it’s that they’re also cheap hypocrites. These people will scream about THE FIRST AMENDMENT one day, then go full-on word police the next, all because someone offered them some bitcoin and handed them a script. There’s no principle, consistency, or actual belief system — it’s just a rotating menu of outrage for hire.”

“The Looney Tunes frog was based on a true story“.

“You do work for your community because it makes the world a better place.”

“Crypto is in ascendance—and to understand what it is, and how it works, is foundational to understanding the great American scam that’s currently playing out right in front of all of us in the White House and beyond. You can’t grasp the reality of the second Trump presidency if you don’t start here.”

Please stop freaking out about the “torpedo bats”. They’re completely legal, teams other than the Yankees are using them, and we don’t have nearly enough data to know if they even make a difference. Also, you still have to, you know, actually hit the ball.

“Here’s my take: Don’t damn the torpedoes. Just let the hitters have their bulbous bats. They need all the help they can get.”

“Every bat has a sweet spot, and every batter’s goal should be to just barely miss it.”

“This story explores a slew of recent actions by the Trump administration that threaten to undermine all five pillars of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees freedoms concerning speech, religion, the media, the right to assembly, and the right to petition the government and seek redress for wrongs.”

“And let’s not forget: In terms of the trade deficit, there’s a service surplus. What is the service surplus made of? Tourism, education, medical care. We export that stuff, and they’re directly attacking that. They’re directly attacking all of the sources of our service surplus.”

“But over the years it will have a profoundly negative impact. You’re creating an opportunity for other countries to happily start moving in, poaching our talent and riding the escalator of scientific progress.”

RIP, Richard Chamberlain, three-time Golden Globe-winning actor best known for Dr. Kildare, The Thorn Birds, and the original miniseries of Shōgun.

“Seriously, stop doing this! Not just the press but individual people who will make the decision about the future of this country.”

“The restructuring announced last week is part of Trump, Musk, and RFK’s sustained assault on HHS and public health generally–an assault that will ensure that people lead shorter lives, that their lives will be worse, and that they will be easier pray for fraudsters and charlatans selling products with bogus health claims. The restructuring is yet another gratuitous insult to the hard-working HHS career staff who have been serving the people in extremely difficult conditions. These are highly skilled people who have sacrificed enormously of time and money so they can serve the public in some of the most essential ways, in some of the most stressful conditions imaginable. They deserve our thanks and praise, not mass firings.”

RIP, John Thornton, co-founder of the Texas Tribune. He was a Trinity alum, in the class one year ahead of me, and was the mentor for my freshman group. Good guy, down to earth, did a fine job making us feel welcome at our new school. Got to talk to him again years later at some early Trib events, still the same friendly and affable guy. I rely a lot on Trib stories here, it’s a vital addition to the media landscape. It’s also a tremendous legacy that he leaves, and I wish he had more time to enjoy it. Rest in peace, John Thornton.

“DOGE Moves to Gut CDC Work on Gun Injuries, Sexual Assault, Opioid Overdose Data, and More”.

“For decades, Democrats were told that confronting entrenched corporate power too forcefully would provoke donor flight, destabilize markets, and invite political defeat. But now they watch Trump destabilize the economy, berate institutions, undermine global stability—and encounter, remarkably, little institutional resistance. The promised backlash if Democrats pushed too hard never materializes, even as Trump tramples through the executive suites.”

Man, fuck Pat McAfee to hell and back.

A scary encounter with a foul ball at a recent Yankees game.

RIP, Val Kilmer, actor and star of many excellent movies, of which my favorite is Real Genius.

RIP, Patty Maloney, actor who may have been best known for playing Chewbacca’s son Lumpy on The Star Wars Holiday Special. A little person who was a frequent performer on various Sid & Marty Krofft shows, she was often cast alongside Billy Barty. Mark Evanier has a nice remembrance of her.

“The Trump administration’s actions here have hurt American prosperity in ways that liberals would point out—by failing to invest in public services, you produce a worse educated and less healthy population, which is a drag on economic growth—but also in ways that conservatives would point out, like “stupidly breaking the parts of the government that allow our financial markets to function smoothly with no apparent plan.” This is not “populism” any more than a bite from an alligator is a kiss. This is just nihilism.”

“The [federal] government aims to cut funding for safer streets. Here’s who would be hurt most.”

“With tariffs, Trump can exercise a kind of corruption that the country hasn’t experienced in some 150 years—a kind of control that is ultimately incompatible with both democracy and prosperity.”

“Waltz’s team set up at least 20 Signal group chats for crises across the world”. No word yet on how many journalists were accidentally added to them.

A Canadian political view of the tariff psychodrama.

“No fun in Trumpland: Video games, toys, and more take hit by tariffs”.

“This is the most consistent pattern of the Trump era, the quest to divine some underlying plan or theory when all it really is is a degenerate huckster following his gut. It’s retcon, retcon, retcon all the way down.”

“Torpedo bats are the craze right now”.

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged | Comments Off on Weekend link dump for April 6

Abbott finally says something about CD18

And of course it’s stupid and insulting.

Gov. Greg Abbott has blamed his delay in calling an election to replace U.S. Rep. Sylvester Turner on election issues in Harris County, he recently told Austin’s KXAN.

Abbott has faced criticism for the past month for failing to call an election to fill Turner’s empty seat representing Texas’ 18th Congressional District. On Saturday, the solidly Democratic district in Houston will have gone a month without representation.

[…]

In an interview with KXAN, Abbott said “there’s going to be a time” to call the election.

“That election is in Harris County, and Harris County is a repeat failure as it concerns operating elections,” Abbott said. “Had I called that very quickly, it could’ve led to a failure in that election just like Harris County has failed in other elections.”

Harris County’s elections office in 2022 found itself in hot water after 20 of around 800 voting locations across the county ran out of paper. The paper shortage led to lawmakers in Austin eradicating the elections administrator position in Harris County, as well as more than 20 other lawsuits filed by local GOP candidates.

Abbott added that Harris County needed to have “adequate time” to operate a “fair and accurate” election instead of a “crazy” one.

Harris County Clerk Teneshia Hudspeth wrote on X Friday that her office had run eight successful elections since the duty of holding them was handed over to the clerk.

“We remain fully prepared to conduct the Congressional District 18 election as soon as the governor issues the order,” Hudpseth wrote.

Acting County Attorney Christian Menefee – the first to toss his name into the ring for the position – was quick to call out Abbott on X Friday afternoon, calling his excuse “nonsense” and saying that had the governor called an election earlier, Harris County’s elections office would have adequate time to prepare.

Menefee on Monday also threatened legal action against Abbott if he didn’t call a special election before November. Since then, the House Democrats and the Texas Democrats have also threatened lawsuits against the governor should the election continue to be delayed.

First, nobody runs elections better than Teneshia Hudspeth, so shame on you for that. Second, if you wanted to be less of a dick about it, you could say “and so I’ll be ordering it for November on Monday, look for my order then”, and we’d at least be able to put the question to rest. That would still be a ridiculous and obviously politically-motivated decision, but it would at least be consistent with the dumb claim about Harris County, which ran six elections last year in part to the new Republican law about Tax Assessment District boards, needing the time. At least give us the courtesy of a more plausible lie.

But whatever. Abbott’s an asshole who only cares about his benefactors, we all knew that. Christian Menefee, Hakeem Jeffries, Jolanda Jones et al (I missed that one before), file those lawsuits. Potential plaintiffs are standing by. File away!

Posted in Election 2025 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 13 Comments

More on Austin Street, Whitmire, and bike lanes

Gonna do this as a link roundup so I can get this out of my system. See here for the starting point.

Whitmire stresses maintaining public safety as fears grow over future of Houston’s bike lanes.

Emphasizing his priority toward public safety, Mayor John Whitmire addressed growing concerns over the city’s commitment to bike lanes at a news conference Wednesday, two days after workers began tearing up a bike lane on Austin Street without notice.

The discussion came amid a series of controversies surrounding Houston’s bike lanes.

The city removed protective barriers, known as “armadillos,” from bike lanes in the Heights, citing maintenance concerns.

Meanwhile, Monday’s removal of the Austin Street bike lane in Midtown has sparked debate over the balance between infrastructure improvements and bike accessibility. These actions have fueled tensions among cyclists, city officials, and residents over the future of Houston’s mobility network.

Whitmire also answered questions about the bike lane on 11th Street in the Heights, a popular street for cyclists that features bike lanes on both sides. Community members fear it may be the next to be removed.

Whitmire said businesses, residents, and a local doughnut shop have expressed concerns about the 11th Street bike lane, prompting a review of its impact. He cited past emails from fire department officials warning that emergency response times could improve if the bike lane were removed.

“I don’t go looking to create disagreement; I like to think I’m a consensus builder, trying to do the best job,” Whitmire said. “But when I have fire department officials tell me, ‘We won’t go down 11th, we go down 10th, a residential neighborhood,’ because of parked cars and narrow space, that’s not my controversy. I’m just trying to solve it.”

When a reporter suggested it sounded like he planned to remove the bike lane, Whitmire said that he is listening to the public and public safety officials.

“It’s all driven by public safety,” Whitmire said.

Such transparent bullshit, I can’t tell you how mad this makes me. I know, the world is on fire, Trump and Musk are actively destroying the federal government and the United States’ standing in the world as well as its economic engines, Greg Abbott and Dan Patrick and the Lege are doing the same for Texas, and so on and so forth. I guess I feel this the most directly right now, and I’m angry about the casual disrespect for anyone that doesn’t already agree with Whitmire. He’s been so much worse as Mayor than I thought he’d be when he was elected. For crying out loud, public safety includes the safety of pedestrians and bicyclists too!

Deep breath.

BikeHouston director critical of Mayor Whitmire’s removal of bike lanes.

BikeHouston Executive Director Joe Cutrufo said Wednesday he believes Houstonians support more cyclist infrastructure — not less.

Cutrufo’s comments came the day after Houston Mayor John Whitmire criticized the backlash from cyclist and pedestrian advocates over the Austin Street bike lane removal during a Tuesday appearance on Houston Public Media’s Hello Houston show, and said they did not represent the majority opinion of Houstonians.

“I think he has selective hearing as far as that goes, but you know who does a really good job of listening to Houstonians, the Rice Kinder Houston Area survey,” Cutrufo said, speaking Wednesday on Hello Houston. “What they found was that 50% of Harris County residents … would be willing to live in a smaller home if it meant they could walk places more easily. They found that 52% of Houstonians want to be able to ride a bike more often than they currently do.”

Cutrufo also argued that Whitmire had a “moral obligation” to ensure that residents were safe, regardless of their mode of transportation. He specifically mentioned the recent removal of physical protections, known as “armadillos,” along Heights Boulevard.

“What we’re hearing is that the mayor has no intention of putting back any protection for people on bikes and that’s really unfortunate, not just as someone who rides a bike, but as a Houstonian because everyone benefits when we make streets safer for people on bikes,” Cutrufo said. “The mayor may not agree with our perspective and our perspective is additive. We believe that Houstonians should have more options just as the Rice Kinder Houston Area survey shows people want more options.”

A spokesperson for Whitmire previously told Houston Public Media that the armadillos were being removed due to “safety issues and disrepair in several spots, including exposed bolts.” The spokesperson did not clarify if new protections would be installed.

Regarding the removal of the Austin Street bike lanes, Cutrufo said the decision did not make financial sense.

“The stuff that has been built, Frank, had been paid for already,” Cutrufo said to Hello Houston co-host Frank Billingsley. “He is tearing it out. That costs money, too. … Maintaining it costs a lot less than tearing it out and having to repave Austin Street, which was just paved only five years ago.”

Fiscal responsibility, baby. Which leads to this:

Pivoting, Whitmire says Austin Street will get a dedicated bike lane, but no physical barrier.

After a week of public backlash, Houston Mayor John Whitmire announced that the Austin Street rehabilitation project will now include a dedicated bike lane modeled after the one on Heights Boulevard—reversing earlier plans to replace the protected lane with sharrows, or shared lane markings.

The new plan includes an unprotected, one-way bike lane, a compromise that maintains some level of dedicated space for cyclists but without a physical barrier. Construction crews had already begun tearing up the old protected bike lane on Monday before the mayor’s office made the change public Thursday in an interview with the Houston Chronicle Editorial Board.

“I was briefed by all the parties,” Whitmire said during the interview. “It’s going to improve the mobility and the access of the homeowners and certainly the fire station and it will allow the bike lane to continue. It’s been modified to follow the Heights model.”

[…]

Joe Cutrufo, executive director of BikeHouston, said a dedicated bike lane is an improvement over sharrows but still lacks meaningful protection.

“When people on bikes are forced to share space with multi-ton motorized vehicles, then they are vulnerable and reliant on whoever is behind the wheel,” Cutrufo said. “When a driver isn’t paying attention and they’re sharing the road with people on bikes, it’s the people on bikes who lose every time.”

Asked whether the mayor’s reversal signals broader changes to future infrastructure decisions, Cutrufo said Whitmire is clearly hearing from the public.

“We know that the mayor has heard from hundreds of Houstonians since his unilateral decision to rip out the protected bike lane on Austin Street this past Monday,” he said.

Imagine if he had talked to, or more to the point listened to, someone outside of his bubble before Monday. We could have avoided this whole stupid, expensive mess.

In re: the Chron Editorial Board.

The Austin Street bike lane was just one piece of a much larger yearslong effort to transform the city’s outdoor spaces. It connected the Buffalo Bayou Park trails with paths through Hermann Park and along Brays Bayou. Some of Houston’s bike lanes suddenly evaporate just when you need them most. Not this one. The Austin bike lane was the spine of Houston’s growing network of safe and comfortable paths. It was central to a vision for a city where people can move around safely whether by car, foot, bicycle or wheelchair.

After news of the lane’s removal circulated, bicyclists showed up to Tuesday’s City Council public comment session to share their frustration. Fincham was one of them.

Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis was angry about the news too. Ellis’s office paid around $2 million to build the Austin Street lane. “Why are you eliminating things that are making streets safer?” he puzzled to the editorial board in reaction to Monday’s news.

After the City Council meeting Wednesday, Mayor John Whitmire insisted that removing the bike lanes was about public safety, that he had been asked by the area’s councilmember right after being sworn in as mayor to take a look at it. He also said that the city is working on a new bike plan. He said he couldn’t yet reveal the plan’s details, but that it will be “major.” His critics weren’t convinced.

Their pushback worked. Sort of. By Thursday afternoon, the mayor and public works department had a new plan. Rather than remove the protected lane entirely, the mayor told the editorial board, it would replace what was a two-way lane with a one-way bike lane, matching the flow of car traffic. And instead of concrete curbs, cyclists would be separated from cars with a stripe of paint.

Like the bike lane on Heights Boulevard.

“We’re convinced we’ve got a good model now,” Whitmire said.

We, however, are not convinced.

[…]

The mayor had said residents along Austin St. complained about lost parking, difficulty with their garbage bins out and confusion over a two-way bike lane on a one-way street.

We’ve got some more feedback for him.

Hundreds of people — drivers, bikers and pedestrians — die on Houston’s streets every year. In 2024, Whitmire’s first year in office, that number went up after two years of declines: Some 345 people died on Houston’s roads. Nearly 2,000 were injured. Roughly a third of fatalities were people killed outside of a vehicle. These aren’t just along feeder roads. In fact, 250 fatal crashes occurred on roadways with speed limits under 50 mph;, 140 of those were on streets with speed limits under 30 mph. While cyclist deaths were down to 8, the number of riders seriously injured went up. Houston bike advocates regularly point out that no bike riders have ever died in a crash on a road with protected bike lanes.

That’s because protected bike lanes consistently make roads safer for all users — including people in cars. The city’s own data from Austin Street and other stretches with added bike lanes show that injuries from crashes dropped 17% on Austin between Holman Street and Commerce Street after the lane was added in 2020, according to the city’s 2022 Vision Zero report. One of the more comprehensive and recent studies, done by researchers at the University of Colorado Denver and the University of New Mexico, looked at protected bike lanes across 12 major cities, including Houston, and found that overall road fatality rates dropped by as much as 75%.

Protected bike lanes can be part of what’s called a “road diet,” intentional designs that slow cars to a safer speed.

Though the mayor and public works head said Thursday they’re always open to hear “new” information, the city has already torn up infrastructure without much warning. The city didn’t have to wait until this week to hear these concerns: Before a street redesign, everyone could have been asked more transparently for comment. Yes, the people who complained have valid concerns. But public engagement is supposed to include the entire public. And acting in the public interest requires balancing everyone’s concerns, ideally before the acting part.

See also the letter from 106 moms urging the Mayor to take bike safety seriously, or at all.

And finally: City official says Austin Street bike lane hindered HFD — firefighters say they used it.

Houston officials say an Austin Street bike lane interfered with firefighter training at Station 7, justifying its removal as part of a controversial street rehabilitation project.

But the Houston Fire Department says firefighters regularly trained in that space — until construction forced them to move.

“Each fire station has different access to public space for training, depending on the neighborhood,” said HFD Communications Director Brent Taylor. “At Station 7, firefighters perform apparatus training, such as deploying the aerial ladder or practicing cab operations, in the space where road maintenance is now underway. Our firefighters will accommodate the work by moving this training to another nearby location.”

Taylor added that the fire department has maintained a positive relationship with residents who use the Austin Street bike lane, “along with anyone else who passes the station.”

The least you can do is get your story straight first. If you want more, listen to Evan Mintz go off on Friday’s CityCast Houston podcast. I’m going to go for a walk and calm down now.

Posted in Elsewhere in Houston, Planes, Trains, and Automobiles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Yeah, that’s too many candidates

There are how many people running for Mayor of San Antonio?!?

Mayor Ron Nirenberg

San Antonio is barreling toward the most bizarre mayoral election in recent memory.

A massive field of 27 candidates has no clear frontrunners. State and national PAC money is flowing into the race while local groups remain on the sidelines. Meanwhile, the rare opportunity to lead a blue city in a red state has both Republicans and Democrats salivating over the traditionally nonpartisan office.

Weeks from the start of early voting in the May 3 election, it’s the exact scenario some local political strategists say they’ve long worried about leading up to a pivotal race.

San Antonio hasn’t elected a new mayor since 2017 and whoever replaces term-limited Mayor Ron Nirenberg will immediately inherit a city at a crossroads. They’ll be responsible for the city’s approach to major economic development projects, as well as an increasingly precarious social safety net and fraying relationships with state and federal leaders.

Yet years of well-intentioned policy decisions aimed at making local elections more fair have backfired — creating a confusingly crowded race in which money is more critical than ever to break from the pack.

This year Rolando Pablos, who served as Texas Secretary of State under GOP Gov. Greg Abbott, became the face of the a multi-million dollar effort to build a bench of conservative allies in the state’s historically blue urban centers.

And Gina Ortiz Jones, who was Democrats’ nominee for two high-profile congressional races, has the backing of national Democrats who’ve become desperate to keep Texas from falling further from their party’s reach.

The long list of candidates also includes a number of local elected officials, business leaders and activists with pockets of supporters behind them — meaning it’s unlikely any of the candidates will take the 50% support required to avoid a June 7 runoff.

With few opportunities left to differentiate themselves through message alone, candidates are running out of time to make their cases.

“I think there’s seven candidates that have a shot,” said former mayor and Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff, one of the few local officials who has offered up an endorsement in the race, in reference to four sitting councilmembers, Pablos and Ortiz Jones, plus political newcomer Beto Altamirano, his pick.

“But as you come down to the election, it depends on how much money they’ve got at the end.”

Twenty-seven candidates? My God. And for an election that’s happening in four weeks. All due respect, but they wouldn’t have the time to make their cases if the election were being held next November. Maybe the runoff will bring some clarity. Godspeed, my San Antonio friends.

Posted in Election 2025 | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment