Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 14 de octubre – 20 de octubre / 2021
Publicación 1215 de SAN ANTONIO – Revista Digital 14 de octubre – 20 de octubre / 2021
Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de SAN ANTONIO de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 14 de octubre – 20 de octubre / 2021
Publicación 1215 de DALLAS – Revista Digital 14 de octubre – 20 de octubre / 2021
Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de DALLAS de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 14 de octubre – 20 de octubre / 2021
Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee’s Statement on Texas Governor Greg Abbott’s Executive Order Banning Coronavirus Vaccine Mandates
Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee issued the following statement.
“The Governor’s latest executive order banning private businesses from keeping their employees and customers safe is shameful. And we know that this is mostly a political bluster designed to create confusion and subject businesses to burdensome lawsuits, which can only slow down our economic recovery.
I encourage Texas business owners who believe in science and the rule of law to sue Governor Abbott and join Harris County and other cities and school districts fighting back against his overreach. We must keep pushing these cases forward so the Texas Supreme Court can rein in Governor Abbott’s illegal executive orders.”
About the Harris County Attorney’s Office
Christian D. Menefee was elected as County Attorney for Harris County in November 2020. His office represents the largest county in Texas in all civil legal matters, including lawsuits.
Huracán “Pamela” deja árboles caídos y sin servicio eléctrico a 4 municipios de Sinaloa
El Consejo Estatal de Protección Civil informó que no se registraron grandes afectaciones a la infraestructura de carreteras ni pérdidas humanas, solo se tienen árboles caídos, postes, desprendimientos de techos de lamina, crecientes en arroyos e inundaciones.
El huracán “Pamela”, categoría uno, que tocó tierra en la parte sur del estado dejo sin servicio eléctrico a pobladores de cuatro municipios, interrumpió el tránsito de la maxipista Mazatlán-Durango por la caída de un talud, provocó la caída de árboles, estructuras, palmeras, techos de restaurantes, casas de madera e inundaciones y paralizó el transporte aéreo.
La fuerza del fenómeno natural, que entró a tierra por el municipio de San Ignacio y se degrado a tormenta tropical, tuvo vientos de hasta 120 kilómetros por hora y fuertes lluvias, por lo que en Mazatlán 260 personas fueron evacuadas por inundaciones en los sectores de Jacarandas, Toreo, López Mateo y Sánchez Celis donde el agua subió medio metro.
El Consejo Estatal de Protección Civil informó que no se registraron grandes afectaciones a la infraestructura de carreteras ni pérdidas humanas, solo se tienen árboles caídos, postes, desprendimientos de techos de lamina, crecientes en arroyos e inundaciones.
Se hizo notar que con las medidas de prevención que se asumieron 48 horas de anticipación que se tomaron en el seno del Consejo Estatal de Protección Civil que presidió el gobernador Quirino Ordaz Coppel y la coordinadora Nacional de Protección Civil, Laura Velázquez Alzúa, los efectos de “Pamela” fueron mínimos.
El huracán categoría uno generó lluvias de 138 milímetros principalmente en Mazatlán, donde se tuvo viviendas inundadas, caída de árboles, vidrios quebrados de negocios y edificios, postes de energía eléctrica derribados, desprendimientos de techos de tabla roca, entre otros.
Pobladores del medio rural y urbano de los municipios de Cosala, Elota, San Ignacio y Mazatlán sufrieron durante la madrugada la suspensión del suministro de energía eléctrica, al caer varias líneas de conducción y postes por la fuerza del viento que alcanzó los 120 kilómetros por hora.
El centro de la Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes notificó el cierre temporal del tránsito en la maxipista Mazatlán-Durango a causa de deslaves y derrumbes sobre la carpeta asfáltica a causa de las fuertes lluvias que arrastró el fenómeno natural, en el tramo de Villa Unión-Lázaro Cárdenas.
ASTROS WIN THE ALDS: Houston defeats Chicago 10-1 to advance to American League Championship Series

It was Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa and Alex Bregman once again.
Led by their October-tested stars, the Houston Astros are going back to the AL Championship Series for the fifth straight year.
Altuve hit a three-run homer, scored four times and stole a base, and Houston eliminated the Chicago White Sox with a 10-1 victory in Game 4 of their AL Division Series on Tuesday.
Correa and Bregman each hit a two-run double as the Astros bounced back from Sunday night’s 12-6 loss with their usual relentless brand of baseball. Michael Brantley had three hits and two RBIs.
Next up for Altuve and company is Game 1 of the ALCS against former Astros bench coach Alex Cora and the Boston Red Sox on Friday in Houston. The Red Sox eliminated Tampa Bay with a 6-5 victory in Game 4 on Monday night.
“They know how to play the game,” Altuve said of Boston. “They’ve been in the playoffs before, so it’s going to be fun.”
It’ll be Houston’s second ALCS under 72-year-old manager Dusty Baker, whose club got the best of 77-year-old Chicago skipper Tony La Russa. Baker replaced A.J. Hinch, who was fired in fallout from the Astros’ 2017 sign-stealing scandal that also resulted in a one-year ban for Cora.
Gavin Sheets connected for Chicago, becoming the third rookie in franchise history to homer in a postseason game. But Carlos Rodón was knocked out in the third inning of his first start since Sept. 29, and the AL Central champions left eight runners on base.
The White Sox also lost in the first round of the 2020 playoffs, dropping two of three in Oakland. Before this year, the franchise had never made consecutive postseason appearances.
The Astros are looking for the franchise’s second championship after winning it all in 2017, a title that still evokes a strong reaction around the game after the team was punished for using electronics to steal signs.
The crowd at Guaranteed Rate Field chanted “Cheater! Cheater!” at times during the two games in Chicago, and White Sox reliever Ryan Tepera implied late Sunday night that Houston may have been stealing signs in Games 1 and 2.
But the Astros, used to dealing with boos ever since the scandal came to light, brushed it all off. Asked about Tepera’s comments after Game 4 was postponed Monday because of rain, Bregman responded: “It’s all good. We’re focused on winning games. That’s it.”
No kidding.
Correa put Houston ahead to stay with his two-out double in the third, pulling Rodón’s high 0-2 fastball into left. The Astros loaded the bases on two walks and a fastball that hit Altuve, drawing a round of cheers from the crowd of 40,170.
Correa pointed to his left wrist and then pounded his chest and yelled “It’s my time!” as he stood on second after the big hit in his 67th career postseason game.
“Disrespectful words without facts,” Correa said of Tepera’s charge.
That was it for Rodón, who was limited down the stretch because of shoulder soreness and fatigue. Running his fastball into the upper 90s again after another extended break, the left-hander was charged with two runs and three hits in his first career playoff start.
Houston added three more in the fourth for a 5-1 lead. Kyle Tucker singled and swiped second and third — the latter without a throw — before coming home on Martín Maldonado’s first hit of the series.
Bregman drove in Maldonado and Altuve with his two-out double on a 3-0 pitch from Garrett Crochet. The left-handed reliever then struck out the lefty-batting Yordan Alvarez, ending the inning.
The big hits by Correa and Bregman supplied more than enough offense for Lance McCullers Jr., who worked four effective innings after pitching Houston to a 6-1 victory in Game 1 on Thursday. Yimi García got three outs for the win.
Altuve punctuated Houston’s big day with his 19th career postseason homer, a three-run shot off All-Star closer Liam Hendriks in the ninth.
“We’ve been here five times,” Altuve said. “And we just try to pass it on to the guys who are getting here for the first time.”
Sheets’ drive in the second bounced off the top of the wall and over. Astros center fielder Jake Meyers crashed into the wall trying to make a leaping grab, and then departed with left shoulder discomfort.
The White Sox lost their center fielder when Luis Robert left with right leg tightness before the Astros batted in the seventh.
Source: www.click2houston.com
“It puts a big burden on employers”: Businesses face tough choices after Gov. Greg Abbott bans vaccine mandates
The ramifications for businesses could begin as soon as Friday when companies that enter into contract work with the federal government will be required to have all employees vaccinated under orders from the White House.
This conflicts with Abbott’s ban on vaccine mandates, putting the many Texas businesses that receive federal contracts in a tough position: Comply with federal law and violate Abbott’s ban, or comply with Abbott and turn down business from the federal government.
In addition to federal contractors, President Joe Biden also has announced that businesses with more than 100 employees must mandate vaccination against COVID-19 or require regular testing.
For Texas nursing homes, which have struggled during a pandemic that has ravaged their residents and decimated their workforce, a federal rule announced in August requires all nursing home employees to be vaccinated in order for their facilities to continue participating in the Medicare and Medicaid programs. If nursing homes instead comply with Abbott’s new rule, they could lose critical federal money.
“This harms Texans directly,” Karen Vladeck, an employment lawyer in Austin, said of the new order from Abbott. “I just think it wasn’t well thought out.”
Abbott’s office did not reply to a request for comment.
On top of prohibiting any entity in Texas from requiring vaccinations, Abbott’s order also lists several expanded exemptions. Vladeck and other employment lawyers said that this adds to the vaccine dilemma facing businesses in Texas. Under Abbott’s new rule, people may opt-out of a vaccine requirement for medical reasons, including if they prove they have had COVID-19 in the past, despite scientists widely agreeing that this does not protect people against contracting the virus.
“The executive order’s medical reason language is a bit strange because usually, you exempt people for medical reasons if they have a severe allergic reaction to a vaccine,” said Elizabeth Sepper, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin. Abbott’s order is “meant to cover people who don’t want to get the vaccine because they believe, quite wrongly, that they’re completely protected by already having COVID.”
Abbott’s rule also allows people to opt-out of a vaccine requirement if they prove they hold a deep personal belief against getting jabbed.
Any entity that fails to comply with Abbott’s rule could receive up to a $1,000 fine.
Abbott’s Monday order is a reversal from his position in August when the Pfizer vaccine received final approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. At the time, Abbott’s spokesperson said that businesses had the option of mandating vaccination for employees, and “private businesses don’t need government running their business.”
“It’s all about company choice in Texas, except now it’s come to something that they don’t like what the companies are choosing,” Vladeck said. “It puts a big burden on employers.”
Ted Shaw, president of the Texas Hospital Association, said Abbott’s move was political.
“Texas hospitals strongly oppose efforts underway to hamstring them from being able to require vaccination of their own staff, many of whom are at the bedside every day with children and adults who are vulnerable to COVID-19,” Shaw said in a statement. “This political action undercuts the central mission of hospitals, and patients and staff cannot be put at unnecessary risk. Hospitals have soldiered on for months at ground zero of this pandemic. As experts in healing and saving lives, hospitals must have the trust, respect, and flexibility to mandate vaccines in their own facilities to protect the people of Texas.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki also condemned Abbott’s action.
“I think it’s pretty clear when you make a choice that’s against all public health information and data out there, that it’s not based on what is in the interest of the people you are governing, it’s perhaps in the interest of your own politics,” Psaki said Tuesday.
Ray Perryman, an economist based in Waco, said Abbott’s decision is unhelpful for the state economy as it recovers from the economic impacts of the pandemic.
“This order will almost certainly cause confusion with conflicting requirements for many businesses,” Perryman said in an email to the Tribune. “From an economic perspective, it is not necessary and likely counterproductive.”
Two prominent Texas-based companies, American Airlines and Southwest Airlines, already require employees to be vaccinated. Spokespeople for the two airlines told the Tribune that the requirement won’t change despite Abbott’s new order.
“One of the hallmarks of a capitalist economy is the ability of the private sector to make decisions without government intervention unless there is a legitimate public concern that needs to be addressed,” Perryman said. “It is difficult to see how forcing companies to expose their employees, vendors, and customers to greater risk of a deadly disease and fostering the spread and mutation of that disease brings a compelling public benefit.”
Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee encouraged Texans to sue Abbott over the move.
“The Governor’s latest executive order banning private businesses from keeping their employees and customers safe is shameful,” Menefee said in a statement. “And we know that this is mostly a political bluster designed to create confusion and subject businesses to burdensome lawsuits, which can only slow down our economic recovery.”
The Greater Houston Partnership, a leading business group in Harris County, also denounced Abbott’s action.
“The governor’s executive order does not support Texas businesses’ ability and duty to create a safe workplace,” Bob Harvey, the group’s president, said in a written statement. “While the courts will likely decide the validity of this order, we encourage all employers to continue to promote the importance of vaccinations with their employees. Vaccinations are our path out of the pandemic, and the Partnership remains focused on supporting steps that lead to improving the rate of vaccination in our community.”
The Texas Restaurant Association questioned how Abbott’s new order would affect the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s temporary emergency standard that’s supposed to be released in a couple of weeks. The restaurant association expects lawsuits to be filed in response to the conflict between Abbott’s ban and Biden administration requirements. However, it said it will continue to support restaurants and is committed to protecting its employees and customers.
“Above all, we continue to call upon our communities to cooperate with restaurants that are trying to remain in business after a very challenging 19 months,” Kelsey Streufert, chief public affairs officer of the Texas Restaurant Association, said in a statement. “By working together, we can accelerate our recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, protecting our health and our economy.”
Source: www.click2houston.com
RRC Commissioners Appoint Members to Texas Energy Reliability Council
Railroad Commission of Texas commissioners on Tuesday appointed five members to represent different segments of the state’s natural gas industry to the Texas Energy Reliability Council (TERC).
TERC was formalized in Senate Bill 3 to “ensure that the energy and electric industries in this state meet high priority human needs and address critical infrastructure concerns” and to “enhance coordination and communication in the energy and electric industries in this state.”
The five members appointed to TERC by RRC’s commissioners will join Chairman Wayne Christian and other representatives appointed by the Governor and the Public Utility Counsel and also officials from other agencies.
RRC’s appointees are:
- Jason Herrick, president of Pantera Energy, representing the operation of wells producing natural gas.
- Grant Ruckel, vice president for government affairs at Energy Transfer, representing the pipelines.
- Danny Wesson, executive vice president of operations for Diamondback, representing injection and storage of produced water.
- Graham Bacon, executive vice president, and chief operating officer of Enterprise Products, representing gas processing.
- Keith Wall, director of regulatory affairs for Southern Gas Operations at CenterPoint Energy, representing local gas distribution companies.
Source: www.rrc.texas.gov
A BIG DAY FOR PORT HOUSTON, A BIG DAY FOR THE REGION
The Port Commission of the Port of Houston Authority met today in a special meeting to consider the first dredge contract for Project 11, the Houston Ship Channel billion-dollar expansion and deepening program. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company, LLC was awarded up to $95,375,349 to dredge 11½- miles of the 52-mile channel, widening a major portion of the Galveston Bay reach from 530 to 700 feet.
The work includes the construction of a new bird island and oyster mitigation. Port Houston negotiated multiple options and selected the approach with the most reduction in overall NOx emissions, using more efficient equipment and providing for retrofitting emission reduction technology.
“It’s a big day for Port Houston and a big day for the region,” Port Houston Chairman Ric Campo emphasized after the vote. During the meeting, commissioners, staff, and other interested parties acknowledged that Port Houston had successfully managed a highly complex effort, as it spearheaded consideration, communication, and collaboration, among stakeholders ranging from local communities to state and national interests, to continue its accelerated timeframe.
Source: porthouston.com
Departamento de Trabajo de EE.UU. y Consulado de México en Boston firman alianza para promover seguridad y salud entre trabajadores de New England
Se centra en trabajadores de Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, y Vermont

El Departamento de Trabajo de EE.UU. y el Consulado General de México en Boston han firmado una alianza para proporcionar capacitación en prevención de riesgos y entrenamiento sobre derechos de seguridad y salud laboral para nacionales mexicanos y otras personas que trabajan en New England. Esta iniciativa también se centrará en cómo la Ley de Seguridad y Salud Ocupacional y otras leyes de Estados Unidos protegen sus derechos y responsabilizan a los empleadores. La alianza se enfoca sobre trabajadores en Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island y Vermont.
Durante los próximos dos años, la Administración de Seguridad y Salud Ocupacional del departamento y el consulado desarrollarán y entregarán información sobre reconocimiento y prevención de riesgos laborales a trabajadores mexicanos a través de exhibiciones, conferencias y reuniones locales, y participando en actividades y eventos del ‘Consulado Móvil’.
“El conocimiento es una herramienta esencial para los trabajadores. Los protege de los peligros en el lugar de trabajo y garantiza que sepan sus derechos. Nuestra alianza con el Consulado General de México establece un proceso continuo para proveer esa información a trabajadores y empleadores de New England”, dijo el Administrador Regional Interino de OSHA Jeffrey Erskine en Boston. “Este esfuerzo también muestra nuestro compromiso por hacer de la seguridad laboral una prioridad en las vidas de los ciudadanos mexicanos y de otros trabajadores en Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island y Vermont”.
Un equipo de representantes de OSHA y del Consulado Mexicano desarrollará un plan de acción, determinará los procedimientos de trabajo e identificará los papeles y responsabilidades de los participantes. Los miembros del equipo se reunirán al menos tres veces al año para monitorear el progreso realizado y compartir información de cara a la consecución de los objetivos de la alianza.
El Programa de Alianzas de OSHA trabaja con grupos comprometidos con la seguridad y la salud de los trabajadores para prevenir muertes, lesiones y enfermedades en el trabajo. Estos grupos incluyen sindicatos, consulados, organizaciones comerciales o profesionales, empresas, organizaciones religiosas y comunitarias e instituciones educativas. OSHA y los grupos trabajan juntos para desarrollar herramientas y recursos de asistencia al cumplimiento, compartir información con trabajadores y empleadores, y educar a los trabajadores y empleadores sobre sus derechos y responsabilidades.
Source: www.osha.gov