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Here’s how to register for a coronavirus vaccine waitlist in the Houston area

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Here’s how to register for the coronavirus vaccine in the Houston area

HOUSTON – As more doses of the coronavirus vaccine arrive in the Houston area, officials are ramping up the process of administering those shots.

Vaccines are only available to people who are eligible under phases 1A and 1B of the state’s distribution plan. Certain types of teachers and child care workers are also eligible to receive the vaccine. Click here for more information about who is included in those phases.

No matter where you live or which group you are in, officials are urging people to practice patience because the demand for the vaccine is outpacing the available supply.

If you are eligible to receive the vaccine, here’s the information provided by government and health officials about how to register for a waitlist to receive it. Eligible people can also contact their health care provider directly for information about how to receive the vaccine.

Austin County

A pre-registration list has been opened for Austin County. Click the link below and then click the “Special Registration” button. People will remain on the list and appointments will be filled in the order the form was received when vaccines become available.

Online: Click here


Brazoria County

UTMB’s Angleton Danbury campus has a waitlist that is open. Click here to join the waitlist.

All online appointments have been filled, but there are a few phone-in appointments available for those in Phase 1B who have not been able to register for an online appointment.

You can call the following numbers to book an appointment:

  • Alvin Clinic – 281-585-3024
  • Angleton Clinic – 979-864-1484
  • Lake Jackson Clinic – 979-265-4446
  • Pearland Clinic – 281-485-5344

Brazos County

All appointments will be directly scheduled through the newly established Vaccination Hub website, brazoshub.com. The site is live with information about Hub operations, and available appointments are also live for this week’s vaccine allotment. On subsequent weeks, the Hub website will post available appointments on Fridays at 10 a.m. As has been the past practice, the number of appointments available each week will be dependent upon the allocation of vaccines to the Hub by the State of Texas.


Chambers County

To access the online portal, click here or call 409-267-2460. Chambers County has opened a waitlist here.

Registration is required to receive the shot. Walkups or drive-ups will not be accepted.


Fort Bend County

Fort Bend Health and Human Services have launched an online registration portal where people can register for appointments. You can find more information at fbchealth.org.

Fort Bend Health and Human Services opened a waitlist for eligible residents. Those who qualify for the vaccine will be placed on a waiting list to be invited later to schedule their appointment. This may take several weeks. When you have registered to join the waiting list, please allow15-30 minutes for the waiting list confirmation email/text message to arrive. Later, you will be notified via email, text message, and/or phone with a link to schedule your appointment. This may take several weeks. If you registered by phone and do not have access to the Internet, you will be provided a date and time for an appointment.

Anyone with questions about the vaccine or the registration process can call 832-471-1373.


Galveston County

A pilot program for a vaccine waitlist was opened on Jan. 27. Officials said the list will be used in the scheduling process for future vaccination appointments.

Only people who fall into phases 1A and 1B are asked to sign up at this time.

More information can be found here.

Online: utmbhealth.com/vaccine

Phone: 877-389-2318

The county is also looking for volunteers to help with vaccination efforts.


Grimes County

A pre-registration list has been opened for Austin County. Click the link below and then click the “Special Registration” button. People will remain on the list and appointments will be filled in the order the form was received when vaccines become available.

Online: Click here


Harris County

The county’s waitlist opened on Jan. 26.

While anyone can signup for the waitlist, only people who are eligible to receive the vaccine in phases 1A and 1B will be able to get the shot at this time. The system will not be on a first-come-first-served basis. Eligible people will be subject to a randomization process to ensure that administration is fair. People who are currently ineligible will be contacted once they are eligible.

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said that the waitlist does not mean that the county has a huge stockpile of the vaccine.

Online: publichealth.harriscountytx.gov

Phone: 832-927-8787 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Saturday; available in English, Spanish and Vietnamese).


Houston

There are two waitlists that have been opened by the Houston Health Department. One for the two-dose Moderna and Pfizer vaccines and the other for the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Both waitlists can be found at houstonemergency.org/covid-19-vaccines or by calling 832-393-4301.

People with disabilities can call the Aging and Disability Resource Center at 832-393-5500.

Anyone else needing registration assistance can contact the COVID-19 call center at 832-393-4220.


Liberty County

Emergency Hospital Systems Vaccine Hub is administering the vaccine. You can get more information at emergencyhospitals.care. If you already have an appointment and need to cancel it, you can call 281-806-7370.


Montgomery County

There is a new website for getting on our waitlist and scheduling process to register for a COVID-19 vaccine. This replaces our previous waitlist. If you were on the previous list you will receive an email to complete steps in this new system.

You should NOT register if you have already received a vaccination. Please read below carefully to understand the steps involved in this new process.

First – visit and https://lonestarvaccine.saferestart.net/ complete “Step 1: I need to register for a COVID-19 Vaccination”.

Second – once appointments are available, 5 digit codes will be sent to individuals for scheduling.

Third – when you receive a code, you will revisit https://lonestarvaccine.saferestart.net/ and select “Step 2: I have a code for COVID-19 Scheduling”.

Disclaimer!

Wait times could be weeks or months depending on the availability and distribution phase.

Who can get the vaccine now?

Front-line healthcare workers and residents at long-term care facilities, people over 65, or adults (16+) with a chronic medical condition that puts them at increased risk for severe illness are currently eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.

There is a Vaccination Plan

Texas is distributing vaccines to hospitals, pharmacies, local health departments, freestanding ERs and other clinics throughout the state. A Vaccine Allocation Panel has developed a vaccine allocation strategy breaking up the distribution into phases.


Pearland

The city of Pearland has created an online registration portal where people can register for a vaccine appointment whenever new doses become available. Registration is currently closed but will be reopened whenever more doses are received.

Online: us1.quickscreen.health/pearland-vaccination#/screening


Polk County

Polk County officials launched a waiting list on Feb. 9 for people in Phase 1B who want to get the coronavirus vaccine. This is waitlist is temporary and will be replaced with a more sophisticated self-registration system that is expected to be launched soon.

Online: Click here

Phone: 936-327-6826


Waller County

A pre-registration list has been opened for Austin County. Click the link below and then click the “Special Registration” button. People will remain on the list and appointments will be filled in the order the form was received when vaccines become available.

Online: Click here


Washington County

A pre-registration list has been opened for Austin County. Click the link below and then click the “Special Registration” button. People will remain on the list and appointments will be filled in the order the form was received when vaccines become available.

Online: Click here


Other methods

State map of providers

The Texas Department of State Health Services has created a map of health care providers that have been provided doses of the vaccine. You can click here to view it. Officials said patients should contact the provider directly to determine the availability of the vaccine. This map is maintained by DSHS.

Vaccine hubs 

There are 13 vaccine hubs in the Houston area. You can find information about how to join the waitlist for these hubs at dshs.texas.gov.

Hospital systems (Updated: March 9, 2021)

  • St. Luke’s Health and TSU are partnering to open a vaccine clinic in Houston’s Third Ward. The clinic is expected to be fully operational by Feb. 15. People who qualify to receive the vaccine under the current guidelines can join St. Luke’s waiting list at stlukeshealth.org. Those who sign up and are qualified to receive the vaccine will be contacted about making an appointment.
  • Memorial Hermann has launched an online COVID-19 Vaccination Request Form. Eligible, registered individuals will be selected at random and notified when vaccine supply appointments are available. More information can be found here.
  • Houston Methodist announced a new registration opening on Jan. 25. It has since been filled. More information can be found here.

Pharmacies 

  • CVS Starting Thursday, CVS Health will begin offering COVID-19 vaccines to those who are eligible (in the 1B Phase) at 47 more select CVS Pharmacies in Texas. Approximately 15 of them will be in the greater Houston area, CVS says. Vaccines are offered on an appointment-only basis at CVS.com or through the CVS Pharmacy app. Those without online access can contact customer service at (800) 746-7287. Click here to schedule an appointment.
  • Walmart and Sam’s Club pharmacies at select sores in Texas will begin administering the coronavirus vaccine soon. People can make appointments on the Walmart and Sam’s Club websites when doses are available. More information, including a list of stores in Texas that will be administering the vaccine, can be found here.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Legislation backed by casino giant would allow casinos in Texas

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Two Texas lawmakers on Tuesday filed legislation backed by the gaming empire Las Vegas Sands that would legalize casino gambling in Texas.

The legislation was filed by Rep. John Kuempel, R-Seguin, in the House, and Sen. Carol Alvarado, D-Houston, in the Senate. The proposals would create special casino licenses for four “destination resorts” in the state’s four largest metropolitan areas: Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, San Antonio, and Austin. At the same time, it would establish a Texas Gaming Commission to regulate casinos, and it would separately legalize sports betting.

The legislation would require amending the Texas Constitution, which currently bans most gaming in Texas. That is only possible with a two-thirds vote of lawmakers in both chambers, and then voter approval in the November election.

Kuempel is the vice-chair of the House Licensing and Administrative Procedures Committee, which oversees industries regulated by the state, including current gaming options. Alvarado, meanwhile, chairs the Senate Democratic Caucus.

Las Vegas Sands, founded by the late GOP megadonor Sheldon Adelson, has spent the past few months building a massive push at the Capitol, spending millions of dollars to hire nearly six dozen lobbyists. The bill-filing deadline for the biennial legislative session, which got underway in January, is Friday.

“We appreciate the work of the bill’s sponsors and we are excited to engage in further discussion with elected leaders and community stakeholders on the possibilities for expanding Texas’ tourism offerings through destination resorts,” Andy Abboud, Las Vegas Sands senior vice president, said in a statement.

The legislation is consistent with the vision that Las Vegas Sands has laid out for casinos in Texas: a limited number of licenses for mixed-use “destination resorts” in the state’s biggest population centers, with a high minimum investment intended to attract only the best operators. To that end, the legislation calls for a land and development investment of at least $2 billion in Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston, as well as $1 billion for San Antonio and Austin.

The “destination resort” licenses would be considered “Class I” licenses. The legislation would then create three “Class II” licenses for “limited casino gaming” at horse-race tracks in Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, and San Antonio. After that, two “Class III licenses” would be made available for similarly limited casino gambling at greyhound tracks in Corpus Christi and Harlingen.

The full casino legalization would also extend to the state’s three federally recognized Native American tribes at their reservations in El Paso, Eagle Pass, and Livingston. They are currently able to offer limited gaming.

The legislation also would generate fresh revenue for the state by imposing a 10% tax on table games and 25% on slot machines.

While the Las Vegas Sands-backed bills also call for legalizing sports wagering, an alliance of Texas’ major professional teams and betting platforms are making their own push at the Capitol and filed their own legislation last month. That coalition, the Sports Betting Alliance, did not immediately have a comment on the Las Vegas Sands-supported bills.

It remains to be seen how viable the casino bills are at the Capitol. Both Gov. Greg Abbott and state House Speaker Dade Phelan have not been opposed to the idea from the outset, with Abbott saying he wants to hear from lawmakers about where their constituents are on the issue.

But Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has been far more pessimistic, saying last month he has “never been in favor of” expanding gaming and the upper chamber is “nowhere close to having the votes for it.”

Source: www.click2houston.com

Abbott calls on Biden administration to ‘step up’ at the Texas-Mexico border

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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott held a news conference Tuesday and called on the Biden administration to help address the state’s border security efforts.

“This crisis is the result of President Biden’s open-door policies,” Abbott said. “It invites illegal immigration. It is creating a humanitarian crisis in Texas right now.”

Abbott said Border Patrol warned the Biden administration that an influx of migrants was coming and about the tremendous strain the surge is now putting on Border Patrol resources in South Texas.

“It is clear, they are completely unprepared for what is going on at the border, and they are going to be even more unprepared for what will be happing in the coming months,” Abbott said.

Biden administration officials have said they don’t believe the situation at the southern border is a full-blown crisis, calling it a challenge instead — one they said they are dedicated to managing.

“I need the Biden administration to step up,” Abbott said.

Abbott said he is not waiting to act and is launching Operation Lone Star.

“This is an operation similar to what we’ve done in the past where we provide a surge of resources to the border,” Abbott said.

Abbott said he toured the Texas-Mexico border area and saw issues firsthand. He said he saw about 21 people exiting a raft and walking up a dirt road during his aerial tour. The raft, he said, returned to the Mexico side of the border.

Abbott said that in addition to funding ICE, the Biden administration needs to provide the resources, including bringing on judges, to take on the number of immigration cases that are pending.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Johnson & Johnson set to begin COVID-19 vaccine trials on children in Houston in next few weeks

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Enrollment will soon begin for a pediatric Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine trial in Harris County, according to DM Clinical Research.

The trial is set to begin in the next few weeks and will include participants who are under the age of 18.

DM Clinical Research started the initiative “Houston Fights COVID-19.” So far, the group has enrolled thousands of adults and adolescents in trials sponsored by Moderna, Pfizer, and other drug companies.

“What we are doing right now is, we are creating our pool of patients and trying to get out into the community to talk to these parents to see who is interested and who would want to join,” said Sarah Hasan, a researcher with DM Clinical Research. “The reason, and the fact that we are open for the younger population, including babies and infants, just shows that the data we collected from the older kids, the teenage studies and the adult’s studies, shows really, really positive data, and because of that, that’s how we are able to do these other studies.”

Right now, the J&J COVID-19 vaccine trial is expected to consist of two vaccines and a booster. Not much other information about the size of the group, the ratio of vaccine versus placebo, or the duration of the trial has been released.

Anyone looking to enroll in a trial can check the following website: houstonfightscovid.com

They are seeking thousands of participants. But just because you enroll, doesn’t mean you will be in the J&J trial. Moderna is also about to begin a trial with children under the age of 12.

Hasan says other drug companies are also about to begin trials as well. She said there are many in the pipeline.

“It’s not a promise they would be a part of a particular study. It’s the one that they best fit into based on their age, based on their demographic, and based on their medical history,” Hasan said. “We take a lot of things into account.”

Most trials will last from one to two years with compensation provided.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Daily COVID-19 case totals are ticking up again in Texas

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FILE - This 2020 electron microscope image provided by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases - Rocky Mountain Laboratories shows SARS-CoV-2 virus particles which cause COVID-19, isolated from a patient in the U.S., emerging from the surface of cells cultured in a lab. Viruses are constantly mutating, with coronavirus variants circulating around the globe. (NIAID-RML via AP)

The number of COVID-19 cases is climbing again in Texas.

Data from Johns Hopkins University on Tuesday showed the two-week rolling average of new cases in the state has increased by 500.3 per day or 10.1%. The uptick came as the state prepared to lift its masking mandate Wednesday.

The state health department on Tuesday reported a little over 4,800 new confirmed or probable cases, bringing the state’s pandemic total to almost 2.7 million, an estimated 128,614 of which are now active. Texas hospitals had 4,702 COVID-19 cases on Monday, the most recent day available, 373 more than on Sunday.

The 167 new COVID-19-related fatalities reported Tuesday to bring the state’s pandemic death toll to 44,650.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Texas no longer has a statewide mask mandate, Face coverings are still required in some businesses and public places

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Texas’ statewide mask mandate has ended as of March 10. Businesses are also now allowed to operate at full capacity as long as the hospitals in their region haven’t been treating a large share of patients for COVID-19. Gov. Greg Abbott announced he was loosening those restrictions so “businesses and families in Texas have the freedom to determine their own destiny.”

Health officials still emphasize the importance of wearing face masks to contain the spread of the virus, alongside handwashing and social distancing. Several Democratic leaders called the executive order “dangerous,” including President Joe Biden, who said it was a “big mistake” to end the mask mandate. In addition, three of Abbott’s four coronavirus medical advisers say they were not directly consulted before he lifted the mandate.

Abbott said the state is in a “completely different position” than it was last year, with more access to testing, successful treatments, protective equipment, and vaccines. However, Texas is still descending from a harsh winter surge that killed thousands and overwhelmed intensive care units across the state. Abbott’s decision to relax restrictions was announced as Texas averaged over 200 reported deaths a day and as Houston reported the presence of every COVID-19 variant, the Houston Chronicle reported.

Here’s a look at what the loosened restrictions mean for Texans:

  • Statewide, masks will no longer be required in public for the first time since last summer. Abbott made face coverings mandatory for most Texans on July 2. While more than 30 states still require masking, Texas is the most populous state to not require them. But the federal, state, and local health officials say masks should still be worn and other precautions should be taken to slow the virus’s spread.
  • School boardscourts, and college campuses can still require masks. Local governments can also require them in their facilities. Masks are still required on federal property, on public transportation, and in public schools. Days after Abbott’s announcement, Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and El Paso leaders announced that masks will be required to enter city-owned indoor spaces like libraries, police, and fire department headquarters, convention centers, and transportation hubs.
  • The legal protections for enforcing mask usage have been significantly lessened under the order — county judges and local officials cannot jail or impose penalties on those who refuse to wear a mask, nor penalize businesses that do not mandate mask usage. They can still enforce trespassing ordinances, though.
  • Austin and Travis County public health leaders say that they will continue requiring residents to wear masks in public. But officials didn’t say how they’ll enforce the order. If Austin does try to enforce its mask rule, it could set up a new legal showdown between the state and its capital city.
  • Many business owners have said they will require maskswhile others feel powerless to enforce such a rule. Some businesses have already faced backlash.
  • Businesses can return to 100% capacity, but may still limit capacity or enforce safety protocols “at their own discretion,” according to Abbott’s latest order. That directive states that businesses can still require employees or customers to wear masks. H-E-B, ALDI, Kroger, and Target are among businesses that will still require masks. As of Tuesday, Walmart had not released updated guidance following the announcement; its current policy still requires in-store masking.
  • Officials in areas with a large share of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 can scale back business operations. Local officials can limit business operations to 50% capacity if more than 15% of hospital capacity in their region is being used to treat patients with COVID-19 for seven consecutive days or more. If that threshold is met or exceeded, there are no automatic restrictions; local officials must issue them.
  • Inmate visitation at the county and municipal jails can resume for the first time since Abbott declared a public health disaster last year, bringing some relief for Texas prisoners. Visits need to be scheduled in advance and only one adult can visit at a time. A negative test result and face masks will be required, and no physical contact will be allowed.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Harris County Announces $550K in Grants to Combat Food Insecurity, Food Deserts

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The Healthy Food Financing Initiative Will Award 6 Grants in its First Round

Healthy, fresh food should be affordable and accessible to everyone. Unfortunately, that is not the case for many Harris County residents. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, an estimated 738,140 people in Harris County were considered food insecure, and at least 286,000 live in a food desert. As of January 2021, there are 360,000 children in Harris County experiencing food insecurity.

“Hundreds of thousands of people in Harris County, many of them children, do not have access to fresh and nutritious food, either because they cannot afford it or they live in one of our county’s many food deserts,” said Harris County Precinct One Commissioner Rodney Ellis. “Particularly at a time when many residents are experiencing hardship, it is a privilege to invest in our resident’s health and wellbeing, and expand access to healthy food to more communities. Through the Healthy Food Financing Initiative, the County is supporting the work of local organizations helping to meet residents’ basic needs.”

Commissioner Ellis first proposed the Harris County Healthy Food Financing Initiative to increase the availability of fresh and nutritious food in underserved communities by funding innovative solutions through community partners. The first round of the Healthy Food Financing Initiative will provide $550,000 in grants to the HOPE Clinic, Houston Food Bank, Little Red Box, Small Places, Common Market Texas, and Urban Harvest.

  • The grantee organizations will:

o   HOPE Clinic: Teach restauranteurs to prepare healthy food for their menus

o   Houston Food Bank: Increase food pantry capacity and SNAP enrollment

o   Little Red Box: Make healthy food available for pick-up in the Second Ward

o   Finca Tres Robles: Host interactive classes and create an outlet for fresh produce with a store and kitchen in the East End

o   Common Market Texas: Provide healthy food at a 25% discount to food retailers

o   Urban Harvest: Support operations of its mobile market and coordinate healthy food access efforts among community organizations

“Under its healthy community initiative, HOPE Clinic established the Bite of HOPE – a teaching kitchen and culinary program whose objective is to change the food environment in Houston, specifically in the neighborhoods that lack adequate healthy food access. As a Healthy Food Financing Initiative (HFFI) awardee, the program will help small food businesses and restaurants create a healthier menu and product options by having the healthy culinary coach review the food elaboration process, connecting them to local farms and sourcing outlets, lowering costs, and promoting them within the community,” said Joseph Brozovich, Culinary Program Coordinator & Lead Instructor of a Bite of HOPE.

“On behalf of Houston Food Bank, we are so grateful and excited to start working with our partners on HFB’s new Targeted Enhanced Partner Capacity Project,” said Kristen House, Houston Food Bank Partner Capacity Manager. “The project will address the limited access to healthy food and increase nutrition education resources in underserved communities in Precinct 1.”

“This would not be possible without the passage of the Healthy Food Financing Initiative, and thank you Commissioner Rodney Ellis for spearheading this effort and all of the Harris County Commissioner’s Court for their support,” said Melanie Pang, Houston Food Bank Director of Advocacy.

 

Samuel Newman, Founder of the Little Red Box Grocery, said “In Texas, and across the United States, rapidly densifying and gentrifying cities are pushing lower-income residents away from basic resources, making it harder for families to access essential necessities including fresh, healthy food. Little Red Box Grocery (LRB) is a socially-conscious private venture that is building a market-based and scalable solution to eradicate food deserts. LRB’s mission is to Democratize Access to Good Food.

“We are extremely excited and proud to be a part of Harris County’s first Healthy Food Financing Initiative (HFFI),” said Thomas Garcia-Prats, Founder and General Manager of Finca Tres Robles. “Small Places has worked the last seven years through our urban farm, Finca Tres Robles, to grow and provide access to the freshest organic produce to our community with the pandemic only revealing an even greater need. We are extremely grateful to Harris County and their HFFI grant for providing the resources necessary to implement our vision for a healthier community in the Second Ward and East End. The new retail space at the farm will allow us to make our own products more accessible and create a consistent outlet for other local producers to provide for and connect with our neighborhood, impacting them for years to come. Thank you to Harris County for supporting our farm in serving our community.”

Why Joe Biden ditched bipartisan dealmaking to pass his COVID-19 relief bill

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With his first major legislative win on track to pass Congress early this week, President Joe Biden is already looking ahead to the next policy push on his Build Back Better agenda.

His victory lap may be short-lived.

The expected passage of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package may give the president a tailwind as he seeks an even larger price tag on an infrastructure bill, tackles an ambitious climate change agenda, and begins negotiations on his campaign pledge of comprehensive immigration reform. But the president’s decision to go it alone on his American Rescue Plan – garnering not a single Republican vote in either chamber of Congress – could sink any promise of bipartisanship as he moves on to the next big-ticket item in his first 100 days.

“I think by not making a good-faith effort, basically it’s poisoning the well for everything down the line,” said political analyst Charlie Cook, editor, and publisher of The Cook Political Report.

Cook said he thought Biden had been positioned to reach a compromise with moderate Republicans given his temperament and his 36 years in the Senate.

“It will be just a strong disincentive to do business with him,” Cook said.

Biden, who pitched himself as a presidential candidate who could break through Washington’s hyperpartisan landscape, has already run into the political realities of his party’s razor-thin majorities in Congress. With the Senate split 50-50, Democrats used a legislative maneuver to push through the COVID-19 relief package with a simple majority in the Senate over the weekend and without any Republican votes.

But that process, known as budget reconciliation, is subject to rules that could make it more difficult to use for the White House’s more progressive policy plans. Without that legislative tool, Biden has few options other than fulfilling his promise of working across the aisle or ending the Senate filibuster, which would allow measures to pass with a simple majority – a move he has so far resisted in his call for unity.

Still, buoyed by the expected stimulus victory and a ramp-up in vaccine distribution that he said will see enough doses for every American adult produced by the end of May, Biden is well-positioned for his next legislative battle, said Erik Smith, a longtime Democratic strategist.

“I don’t think anyone is going to be sitting in a diner or a barbershop talking about how Biden’s use of reconciliation somehow discounts the win,” Smith said. “A win’s a win. No one remembers how many points you score in the Super Bowl, they just remember you won the Super Bowl.”

‘Bipartisanship is not determined by a single ZIP code’

The president and White House officials have repeatedly rejected Republican criticism that Biden is breaking his promise of bipartisan governing by pointing to polls showing the relief package is popular across the country.

“Bipartisanship is not determined by a single ZIP code in Washington, D.C.,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday when asked about seeking GOP support for the next item on the president’s legislative agenda. “It’s about where the American people sit and stand, and the vast majority of the American people support the American Rescue Plan, including Republicans.”

A Morning Consult/Politico poll released earlier this week found broad bipartisan support for the pandemic relief bill: 77% of all voters and 59% of Republicans said they backed the measure.

The stimulus plan, which provides $1,400 payments to many Americans and additional funding for state and local governments while boosting vaccine distribution and extending enhanced unemployment benefits, has been supported by Democratic and Republican state and local officials alike. Last week, 32 Republican mayors were among the 425 mayors nationally who renewed a push to pass the president’s plan.

The more impressive feat was Biden’s ability to hold the Democratic Party together to pass the administration’s first legislative priority, despite intraparty tensions over progressive provisions in the massive spending bill, said Doug Sosnik, who was the White House political director under President Bill Clinton.

Liberals are growing increasingly wary that progressive pieces of Biden’s agenda could be on the chopping block, including his plans for voting rights, gun control, climate change, and immigration, he said. A push to include a $15-an-hour federal minimum wage in the stimulus package collapsed after a key Senate official ruled that it could not be included in the measure.

“It speaks really well for Biden and Democrats that out of the gate, despite the narrow margin that they have, they’re able to hold the party together to pass this,” Sosnik said.

Seasoned hands within the administration – many of whom also served in the White House when Biden was vice president under President Barack Obama – learned early on that it was a fool’s errand to wait for Republican support, Sosnik said.

“You have almost an immovable force in this extended period of hyperpartisanship that’s been going on for more than a decade where there’s a very little political incentive for either party to work together,” he said. “That’s the political environment (Biden is) working in.”

Republicans have shown little sign of a willingness to work with Biden, despite the president’s efforts to court moderate Republicans in the early weeks of his presidency. Biden has twice invited a bipartisan group of senators to the White House for talks on both the stimulus bill and his plans for infrastructure. He also has held several virtual meetings with Republicans and Democrats over other items on his agenda.

‘Dinner table’ politics

Although Biden would have preferred bipartisan support, the most important thing is passing the legislation, said William Howell, a political scientist at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy. The real “disaster” would’ve been if the president proved unable to “marshal the government” to respond to this pandemic and the economic downturn, he said.

“The final vote tally is off – not just secondary importance – but third or fourth overall importance,” he said. “What really matters, both materially and politically, is whether or not that action takes place. Whether or not the checks are written, support is provided. Whether or not people’s vulnerabilities are not just recognized but attended to.”

But Cook said many in the Biden administration brought with them “the mentality and the scar tissue” that if Republicans wouldn’t work with Obama, they wouldn’t with Biden either.

In a speech to the House Democratic caucus Wednesday, Biden urged members of his party to apply lessons learned in the Obama years and boast about the COVID-19 relief plan once it passes. He recalled his former boss’s hesitancy to “take a victory lap” after the passage of the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, noting most Americans didn’t understand the magnitude of the legislation.

“Economists told us we literally saved America from the depression, but we didn’t adequately explain what we had done,” he said.

“We paid a price for it, ironically, for that humility,” Biden said, an apparent reference to the 2010 midterms, in which Republicans took control of Congress.

Biden encouraged House Democrats to not repeat the same mistake.

“Speak up and speak out about the American Rescue Plan,” he said. “Each piece isn’t just defensible, it is urgent and overwhelmingly supported by the people. It’s good policy, and it’s good politics.”

Psaki, who also served in the Obama White House, told reporters Friday that the administration didn’t do enough to explain the 2009 stimulus package “in terms that people would be talking about at their dinner tables.” She said the White House would continue to directly engage Americans on how the relief package will affect them.

Clear communication about a president’s record is a lesson Clinton also learned after the 1994 midterm elections when Republicans seized control of both houses of Congress for the first time since 1952.

“We accomplished a tremendous amount but we got buried in the midterms,” Sosnik recalled. “What we didn’t understand well enough at the time was the importance of being able to articulate in a digestible way to the American public what you were doing and why.

But unlike the Obama stimulus bill, Biden’s pandemic relief plan will have a tangible affect on Americans, according to Matt Bennett, the executive director of Third Way, a center-left think tank.

“To no fault of the people who wrote the Recovery Act in 2009, the bill was complicated, and no one could explain it in a way that would have been politically resonant,” he said. “This is very different and a lot more visible, and so the taking of credit will be vastly more impactful.”

The president made a very good gamble on the relief plan that could yield more political capital than he began his presidency with, Bennett said.

The price of going it alone

Despite the relief plan’s popularity outside the Beltway, it is unlikely that momentum from its passage will hurtle Biden into future legislative wins, Howell said.

“The idea that a legislative win begets a subsequent legislative win in this environment is probably asking for too much,” he said, noting the prospect of passing COVID-19 relief was higher than more hot-button issues like immigration or health care.

A legislative defeat would have raised questions about Biden’s ability to pass any meaningful legislation, but its passage won’t be a “springboard to the production of all kinds of landmark legislation – far from it,” Howell said.

“Sure, he can claim victory,” said Ari Fleischer, former press secretary for President George W. Bush. “Nobody will ultimately know whether it truly is a victory until we see the shape the economy is in a year or so.”

Fleischer said the divisive era in Washington gives Biden cover for not reaching the bipartisanship he talked about in his inauguration speech.

“It gives him some political momentum that he passed his first legislative hurdle, and that’s significant,” Fleischer said, predicting the White House will soon propose a large tax overhaul to pay for the spending. “And we’ll fight about that one next. It’s very classic liberal governance. Not exactly governance of a unifier.”

Fleischer compared Biden’s position after the American Rescue Plan’s passage to Bush in 2001, also months after his election, passing tax cuts, his first major piece of legislation. The Senate was evenly split and Republicans had a small majority in the House. Unlike Biden, Bush got 28 House members of the opposite party to vote with him and 12 Democratic senators.

But the only concessions Biden made – lowering the threshold to an income of $80,000 to qualify for $1,400 stimulus checks – involved moderate Democrats, Cook noted,  meaning the president doesn’t get credit for reaching across the aisle.

He said the White House could have rushed to pass some relief, such as unemployment insurance that faced a March 14 expiration, leaving more time to negotiate on the larger package.

“Once you have started behaving in a partisan way, you’ve indicated what you’re inclined to do. And I don’t think this was necessary at all,” he said.

“I think it will make everything harder,” he said. “(The president) got it through, but at what price?”

Biden, for his part, hasn’t given up on working across the aisle. After remarks on the Senate passage of the bill Saturday, the president bristled at the idea that he couldn’t get Republican support on other parts of his agenda.

“We’re going to succeed moving forward,” he said. “There’s a lot of Republicans who came very close. They got a lot of pressure on them, and I still haven’t given up getting their support.”

Source: www.usatoday.com

Gov. Abbott news conference March 9, on Texas border crisis

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Governor Greg Abbott today held a press conference in Mission, Texas to discuss the state’s response to the ongoing humanitarian crisis at the Texas-Mexico border. Prior to the press conference, the Governor took an aerial tour of the border and received a briefing from members of the U.S. Border Patrol, the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), the National Border Patrol Council, and the Texas National Guard.

“The Biden Administration has created a crisis at our southern border through open border policies that give the green light to dangerous cartels and other criminal activity,” said Governor Abbott. “Border security is the federal government’s responsibility, but the State of Texas will not allow the administration’s failures to endanger the lives of innocent Texans. Instead, Texas is stepping up to fill the gaps left open by the federal government to secure the border, apprehend dangerous criminals, and keep Texans safe.”

Governor Abbott noted that the current crisis at the southern border is a direct result of the Biden Administration’s open border policies. The Governor stated that over 800 criminal aliens have been apprehended in Texas this year, including sex offenders and gang members, and many of those individuals had been deported before. Cartels are ramping up trafficking and smuggling along the border and overwhelming border patrol resources —  a strategy of the organizations to bring more dangerous elements across the border including violent criminals, contraband, and individuals from special interest countries.

The Governor condemned the Biden Administration for enriching the cartels with these open border strategies and for failing to provide vaccines to members of the U.S. Border Patrol. Governor Abbott also noted that the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are responsible for detaining, testing, and quarantining anyone that comes across the border, and called on the Biden Administration to increase the number of ICE facilities and provide more funding to the agency to allow them to do their jobs. Governor Abbott concluded his press conference by assuring Texans that the state will step in to fill the gap created by the federal government and protect our communities from criminal activities along the border.

Previously, the Governor and DPS launched Operation Lone Star, which will deploy air, ground, marine, and tactical border security assets to high threat areas to deny Mexican Cartels and other smugglers the ability to move drugs and people into Texas.

Source: www.kcbd.com

Spring-break partying falls victim to COVID-19 crisis

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Colleges around the U.S. are scaling back spring break or canceling it entirely to discourage partying that could spread the virus and raise infection rates back on campus.

Texas A&M University opted for a three-day weekend instead of a whole week off. The University of Alabama and the University of Wisconsin-Madison also did away with spring break but are giving students a day off later in the semester.

Even some students who have the time to get away aren’t in the mood. Michigan Tech’s weeklong break began Friday, but 21-year-old Justin Martin decided to visit family in Michigan instead of making that epic senior-year trip to Florida he once envisioned.

“I don’t want to travel all that way, first of all, especially with everything being shut down. It just doesn’t seem worth it, especially with COVID too,” he said.

To be sure, many college students looking to blow off steam or escape the cold and snowy North are still going to hit big party spots such as Florida, Mexico, California, and Las Vegas to soak up the sun and go bar-hopping at night. Others will go skiing in the mountains or hit other tourist spots.

But many others say they will be reluctantly skipping trips this year.

“Definitely, no planned trips. Definitely wearing masks this year,” said Brady Stone, a 21-year-old journalism major at Texas A&M. “We are kind of hunkering down and staying safe.” He added: “I think most of us if we are going anywhere, it is back to their hometowns.”

Tourism is the Sunshine State’s No. 1 industry, generating over $91 billion in 2018, and last year spring break was one of the first big casualties of the pandemic as the U.S. went into strict lockdowns, shutting down beaches across Florida just as alarming scenes of college students heedlessly drinking, dancing and getting up close without masks were plastered across social media.

Miami tourism officials say they lost billions of dollars during those three months last year.

Now, those beach towns are hoping to make up for some of those losses, even as they take precautions to discourage reckless behavior and curb the spread of the virus. Miami tourism officials have spent $5 million on the city’s biggest national advertising campaign in 20 years.

Some communities say they are starting to see visitors return, even though health experts warn that the outbreak that has killed more than a half-million Americans is far from over.

Airline travel to Miami is down more than half from last year, said Rolando Adeo, chief operating officer of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors bureau. But hotel occupancy is expected to reach 70% in Miami Beach this month, he said. While that’s down from 85% in 2019 pre-pandemic, it’s still a marked improvement from 43% last year.

Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis reported: “Hotel rates are very competitive and occupancy is also very high, so we’re excited for that.”

University of Louisville student Josie Hornback and four girlfriends spread their colorful towels as they tanned on Florida’s Clearwater Beach last Tuesday, unfazed by the virus.

“I’m with people I know. I’m not an at-risk person,” she said.

Florida has no statewide mask rules, limits on capacity, or other such restrictions, courtesy of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ pro-business stance. But local governments can impose rules, and they vary widely.

In Miami Beach, tourists are receiving cellphone messages warning, “Vacation Responsibly or Be Arrested.”

“Spring break in Miami Beach may be one of the great rites of passage, but only if you plan on following the rules. Otherwise, you might as well just stay home and save yourself the court costs,” the message reads, followed by a reminder that alcohol, coolers, and tents are banned from its beach, a midnight curfew is in effect countywide, and no alcohol can be sold after 10 p.m.

“If you want to party without restrictions, then go somewhere else. Go to Vegas,” Miami Beach City Manager Raul Aguila said during a recent virtual city meeting.

Around the state, many are taking the party to the open waters, where guests can imbibe under less-watchful eyes.

Andrew Cohen, co-owner of Staying Afloat Party Boat, said his boats are nearly sold out for the rest of the month in Tampa and Fort Lauderdale.

“A lot of them are coming down from the colder states,” he said. “And they were just sick of being cooped up for the year.”

California is discouraging visitors from out of state, warning tourists they will have to quarantine for 10 days on arrival, and a season that ordinarily would see crowds at beaches, theme parks, and ski mountains is expected to be thin. The state, with miles of coastline and popular spring break spots like Disneyland and the Santa Monica Pier, has some of the nation’s toughest pandemic restrictions.

At the University of Mississippi, which canceled spring break and will instead end the semester a week early, senior Eliza Noe had been planning a “last hurrah-type getaway trip” with her girlfriends, but that isn’t going to happen now.

“Spring break is your last moment to lose your mind before becoming an adult, so that was kind of the plan,” she said, “but then the world ended.”

Source: www.click2houston.com