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Front stalls out near Houston Thursday

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A weak front moving through Texas will stall out near Houston Thursday, keeping plenty of clouds and fog around.

Temperatures will dip into the low 60s overnight, and fog will be most prevalent south of I-10, especially along the coast. A few breaks in the clouds will allow temperatures to warm into the mid-70s south of the front. Meanwhile, some neighborhoods north of Houston will struggle to climb out of the 50s. Widely scattered light showers are possible anytime as the front stalls out near Houston.

Why is the sea fog coming back and how long will it stick around?
Last week’s severe cold snap cooled off-the-shelf water temperatures into the 50s, which is anywhere from 10-20 degrees below normal. When humid Gulf air blows over the top of these chilled waters, the moisture condenses out of the air from the fog. The colder the water, the dense the fog gets and the longer it lingers. The sea fog is likely to linger all the way through the weekend as it will take some time for the cold shelf waters to warm up and stop making the fog. The only other way it can move out is if a front can blow in and push the moisture back out into the Gulf.

How cold will it get behind the next cold front?
That’s difficult to determine at this time because we expect the next front to stall out somewhere near Houston on Thursday. If the front clears your neighborhood, you’ll have a tough time warming out of the 50s under a cloudy sky. If the front stalls to your north, you’ll be stuck in the 60s and 70s with clouds and sea fog. It now looks like the front may never push through Houston, and if that’s the case, temperatures will not dip below 60 until another front arrives next week.

Will we get any rain with this front?

There is a 40% chance of showers with the front, but we expect total rainfall to generally average under one-quarter of an inch.

How is the weekend shaping up?
At this time we expect the front to lift north on Friday night, bringing in mild, humid air for the weekend. That means you can expect lows in the 60s and highs near 80 with lots of clouds and, yes, more sea fog. A few showers are also possible both days ahead of another front arriving late Monday.

Source: abc13.com

President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden to visit Houston on Friday

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President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden plan to visit Houston on Friday, Feb. 26.

The president is also expected to be accompanied during the visit by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

The president said earlier he doesn’t want to be a burden, as communities struggle to recover from last week’s winter storm.

“They’re working like the devil to take care of their folks,” Biden said last week of Texas officials.

The White House announced on Saturday that the president had declared a major disaster in Texas, and he has asked federal agencies to identify additional resources to address the suffering.

Part of the job of being president is responding to the destruction left behind by earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, and other natural disasters, or events like deadly mass shootings, or even acts of terrorism.

Abbott also said he planned to request a federal emergency declaration from the White House ahead of severe winter weather.

The death toll from the storm and resulting power outages has reached at least 22 in the greater Houston area.

Source:  abc13.com

ACTUALIZACIÓN: Recursos de recuperación tras la tormenta invernal

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El clima invernal de la semana pasada dejó a miles de residentes con pérdidas de propiedad, daños en el hogar y una infinidad de necesidades. Por ello, la Oficina de Manejo de Emergencias del Condado Harris (HCOHSEM, por sus siglas en inglés) está trabajando con socios de toda la comunidad, con el fin de ayudar y asociar a los residentes con los recursos disponibles.
La Página de Recuperación de la Tormenta Invernal de ReadyHarris es el sitio ideal para obtener información de recuperación. Los residentes pueden encontrar enlaces para solicitar ayuda de FEMA, ayuda de agencias sin fines de lucro, información sobre cómo encontrar ayuda para la limpieza e incluso recursos de salud mental.
Incluso, la línea telefónica 2-1-1 es una de las formas más rápidas para encontrar ayuda durante el proceso de recuperación. Sus operadores pueden evaluar rápidamente las necesidades y conectar a los residentes con las organizaciones indicadas para brindarle la ayuda necesaria.
Así mismo, pedimos a los residentes que completen una breve encuesta sobre los daños que se registraron en el hogar. Esta información es importante, ya que nos ayudará a comprender las necesidades inmediatas de los residentes, así como los recursos que puedan requerir y solicitar a través de FEMA. La encuesta está disponible en inglés y español.
También se anima a los dueños de negocios a completar una encuesta para identificar la condición de nuestro sector comercial y empresarial. Esto incluye a todas las empresas, grandes y pequeñas y también está disponible en inglés y español.
Cómo puede ayudar
Volunteer Houston ha abierto un Centro de Recepción de Voluntarios virtual para coordinar a los voluntarios con las necesidades de la comunidad. Dicho centro está abierto al público en general, los interesados pueden registrase aquí (click here) como voluntario. Las organizaciones (es decir, organizaciones sin fines de lucro, organizaciones religiosas, oficinas gubernamentales) que necesitan voluntarios para la respuesta a desastres también pueden publicar sus requerimientos.
Por otro lado, United Way of Greater Houston y Greater Houston Community Foundation se han unido para proporcionar subvenciones a organizaciones sin fines de lucro locales que compensarán las necesidades insatisfechas de las familias en toda la comunidad. Haga clic aquí para donar al Fondo de Ayuda para Tormentas Invernales del Condado Harris en Houston.
Los residentes pueden enviar un mensaje de texto con la palabra FREEZE al 888777 para recibir actualizaciones sobre los recursos de recuperación a medida que estén disponibles.

UPDATE: Winter Weather Recovery Resources

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Last week’s winter weather left thousands of residents with loss of property, home damage, and a variety of other needs. The Harris County Office of Homeland Security & Emergency Management (HCOHSEM) is working with partners from across the community to help connect residents with available resources.
The ReadyHarris Winter Weather Recovery Page is the one-stop-shop for recovery information. Residents can find links to applying for FEMA aid, help from non-profit partners, information on finding clean-up assistance, and even mental health resources.
Dialing 2-1-1 is one of the fastest ways to find recovery assistance. Their operators can quickly assess needs and link residents with the organizations best able to provide help.
How to Help
Volunteer Houston has opened a virtual Volunteer Reception Center to connect volunteers with community needs. Click here to go register as a volunteer. It is open to the general public for those interested in volunteering. Organizations (i.e., nonprofits, faith organizations, government offices) who need volunteers for disaster response may also post their needs.
The United Way of Greater Houston and the Greater Houston Community Foundation have joined to provide grants to local non-profits that will meet the unmet needs of families across the community. Click here to donate to the Houston Harris County Winter Storm Relief Fund.
Residents can text FREEZE to 888777 for updates on recovery resources as they become available.

HCOHSEM Working to Connect Residents and Businesses with Resources for Winter Weather Recovery

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The Harris County Office of Homeland Security & Emergency Management (HCOHSEM) continues working with partners from across the region to help connect residents and businesses with available resources as they recover from the recent winter weather, which left thousands of people with loss of property, home damage, and a variety of other needs.
The ReadyHarris Winter Weather Recovery Page is the one-stop-shop for recovery information. Residents can find links to FEMA assistance, help from non-profit partners, information on finding clean-up assistance, and even mental health resources.
Harris County residents are encouraged to complete a brief survey on home damage to help us understand and identify damages across the county, needs, and resources that may need to be requested through FEMA. The survey is available in English and Español.
Business owners are also encouraged to complete a survey to identify the status of our commercial sector. This is for all businesses, big and small, and is also available in English and Español.
The survey is not an application for assistance and does not replace reporting damage to an insurance company. In addition, the survey does not guarantee any federal disaster relief assistance. The information provided will be beneficial in assisting with the damage assessment process in Harris County related to the February winter weather event. The personal information provided on the survey will be kept confidential.
The United Way of Greater Houston and the Greater Houston Community Foundation have joined to provide grants to local non-profits that will assist the unmet needs of families across the community. Click here to donate to the Houston Harris County Winter Storm Relief Fund.
Residents can text FREEZE to 888777 for updates on recovery resources as they become available.

Houston-area restaurants, businesses allowed to increase capacity as COVID hospitalizations decline

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Now that our region has seen a decrease in COVID patients in the hospital, restaurants can open back up to 75% capacity.

With COVID hospitalizations dropping across the region, restaurants and certain businesses are free to welcome back more customers and indoor bars can open back up.  But when it comes to bars, they can reopen only if the county judge allows it.

This includes businesses and bars in Harris, Fort Bend, Montgomery, Matagorda, Walker, Waller, Austin, Colorado, Brazoria, Chambers, Wharton, and Galveston counties.

But, now that the region has had seven straight days of COVID hospitalizations under 15% of capacity, restaurants and other businesses can open back to 75%. Indoor bars can open back up, too, but only if the county judge says they can.

Source: www.khou.com

CVS adds more than a dozen new COVID vaccine locations in Houston area | How to register

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CVS Pharmacy has doubled its COVID-19 vaccine sites in Texas, including more than a dozen new locations opening in Houston on Thursday.

CVS is offering vaccinations at 47 new sites, including about 15 new sites in Houston, bringing its statewide offerings to 100 locations.

These vaccinations will be available to all eligible residents, including those in Phase 1A and Phase 1B, through the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program. Nearly 58,500 doses of the vaccine are being made available, according to the company.

CVS plans to expand the services to an increasing number of locations as more supplies become available through the federal program, according to a release.

How to register for a CVS COVID vaccination appointment

Reminder: CVS is following Texas’s guidelines for vaccine distribution, which means for now you must be in Phase 1A or Phase 1B.

Click / tap here for the registration link

“Vaccines at participating CVS Pharmacy locations in Texas will be available to individuals meeting state criteria, which will be confirmed by the state in advance of the rollout. Patients must register in advance at CVS.com or through the CVS Pharmacy app, and people without online access can contact CVS customer service: (800) 746-7287. Walk-in vaccinations without an appointment will not be provided.”

Source: www.khou.com

FDA staff releases review of Johnson & Johnson single-dose COVID vaccine

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The Food and Drug Administration’s scientists confirmed that overall the vaccine is about 66% effective at preventing moderate to severe COVID-19.

Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine protects against COVID-19, according to an analysis by U.S. regulators Wednesday that sets the stage for a final decision on a new and easier-to-use shot to help tame the pandemic.

The Food and Drug Administration’s scientists confirmed that overall the vaccine is about 66% effective at preventing moderate to severe COVID-19. The agency also said J&J’s shot — one that could help speed vaccinations by requiring just one dose instead of two — is safe to use.

That’s just one step in the FDA’s evaluation of a third vaccine option for the U.S. On Friday, the agency’s independent advisers will debate if the evidence is strong enough to recommend the long-anticipated shot. Armed with that advice, FDA is expected to make a final decision within days.

The vaccination drive has been slower than hoped, hampered by logistical issues and weather delays even as the country mourns more than 500,000 virus-related deaths. So far, about 44.5 million Americans have received at least one dose of vaccine made by Pfizer or Moderna, and nearly 20 million have received the second dose required for full protection.

J&J tested its single-dose option in 44,000 people in the U.S., Latin America, and South Africa. Different mutated versions of the virus are circulating in different countries, and the FDA analysis cautioned that it’s not clear how well the vaccine works against each variant. But J&J previously announced the vaccine worked better in the U.S. — 72% effective against moderate to severe COVID-19, compared with 66% in Latin America and 57% in South Africa.

Still, in every country, it was highly effective against the most serious symptoms, and early study results showed no hospitalizations or deaths starting 28 days after vaccination.

While the overall effectiveness numbers may suggest the J&J candidate isn’t quite as strong as two-dose competitors, all of the world’s COVID-19 vaccines have been tested differently, making comparisons nearly impossible. While it wouldn’t be surprising if one dose turns out to be a little weaker than two doses, policymakers will decide if that’s an acceptable trade-off to get more people vaccinated faster.

J&J was on track to become the world’s first one-dose option until earlier this month, Mexico announced it would use a one-dose version from China’s CanSino. That vaccine is made with similar technology as J&J’s but initially was developed as a two-dose option until beginning a one-dose test in the fall.

The rival Pfizer and Moderna vaccines being used in the U.S. and numerous other countries must be kept frozen, while the J&J shot can last three months in the refrigerator, making it easier to handle. AstraZeneca’s vaccine, widely used in Europe, Britain, and Israel, is made similarly and also requires refrigeration but takes two doses.

If the FDA clears the J&J shot for U.S. use, it won’t boost vaccine supplies significantly right away. Only a few million doses are expected to be ready for shipping in the first week. But J&J told Congress this week that it expected to provide 20 million doses by the end of March and 100 million by summer.

European regulators and the World Health Organization also are considering J&J’s vaccine. Worldwide, the company aims to be producing around a billion doses by the end of the year.

Source: www.wfaa.com

Texas’ COVID-19 vaccinations begin to rebound after plunging during last week’s winter storm

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Nationwide, some 6 million vaccine doses were unable to reach their destinations due to delayed shipments, treacherous roads, and utility outages created by the winter storm. Among them were 450,000 doses earmarked for Texas — where the vaccine rate plummeted last week due to the storm.

This week, the state expects to see about 1.5 million doses arrive, which include last week’s undelivered doses, this week’s allocation of more than 1 million doses, and more than 84,000 additional doses for new federal vaccination hubs opening in three cities this week, said Chris Van Deusen, spokesperson for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

About 90% of those doses had arrived Monday or were expected Tuesday, state health officials said, with the remainder expected to be delivered Wednesday. Next week’s allocation of vaccines should arrive on schedule, state and local officials said.

“It’s a brighter day,” U.S. Rep. Al Green, D-Houston, said at a Monday press conference in Houston, where it was sunny and warm. “And there are brighter days to come.”

Source: www.texastribune.org

Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee Launches Civil Investigation into the Electricity Disaster, ERCOT, and Related Agencies, and Seeks Authority to Take Legal Action

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Office of The Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee

 

Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee announced today his office is launching a civil investigation into the circumstances leading up to Texas’s recent electricity disaster—including decisions made by the Public Utility Commission (PUC), the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), and market participants—to identify all responsible parties.

 

“Members of our community died in this disaster, and millions of Texans languished without power and water while suffering billions in property damage,” said County Attorney Menefee.  “Harris County residents deserve to know what happened, who made which decisions, and whether this could have been avoided or mitigated.”

 

Menefee will seek authority from the Harris County Commissioners Court at its meeting on Friday to take appropriate legal action on behalf of Harris County:

 

Request by the County Attorney for authorization to consider and file a friend of court briefs or other appropriate litigation on behalf of Harris County in cases involving the Electric Reliability Council of Texas and other related entities involving the loss of power in and around Winter Storm Uri.

 

County Attorney Menefee also released the following statement:

“We knew back in 2011, after the last hard freeze, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission put the state and the power generators on notice that the grid was underprepared for hard freeze events.  There was nothing unpredictable about this last freeze, and everyone had plenty of notice it was coming.  But, the people running the grid were woefully unprepared and failed to take immediate action and warn folks of what could happen. My office will conduct a comprehensive investigation into these events and take legal action where appropriate.

 

I am aware state agencies are conducting their own investigation and I am willing to work with them in that process. But, the Harris County government must protect its residents. My office’s investigation will focus on what went wrong with getting power to residents and facilities in this County, and the impact of those failures.”

 

Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee is the County’s chief civil legal officer and has the duty and the authority to represent Harris County in all civil matters including lawsuits.