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CONGRESSWOMAN SHEILA JACKSON LEE INTRODUCES ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT AGAINST PRESIDENT DONALD TRUM

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Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, a senior member of the House Committees on Judiciary, Homeland Security, and the Budget introduces articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.

“Our Constitution was written as a guide for governing our democracy and to protect it from authoritarian and tyrannical control.  It also serves as a tool to protect our nation from both foreign and domestic enemies who intend to do harm to our Republic. At this moment in our history, our Constitutional forefathers are crying out for us to use the tools provided in this ageless document.  Yesterday, we saw domestic enemies incite violence and invade the people’s houses with the intent to harm. Enough is enough! The President has completely lost whatever moral authority he had and is unfit as Commander in Chief. His actions to incite violence against his own government and against the entire Congress warrants removal from office.  And if Administration officials refuse to invoke the 25th Amendment, I am moving forward with Articles of Impeachment to remove him from office for the following reasons:”

 

 

            “Donald John Trump has actively and continuously endeavored to undermine the essential institutions and foundations of a democratic system of government in the United States, engaging in a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evincing a design to make himself an authoritarian ruler unaccountable to, and independent of, the people of the United States by:

 

  1. Soliciting and welcoming the assistance of a hostile foreign power to aid him in securing election in 2016 as President of the United States.

 

  1. Refusing to acknowledge Russian interference in the internal affairs of the United States, and then opposing responses by Congress and the Executive Branch to protect the national security and interests of the United States against future Russian interference and aggression.

 

  1. Publicly conveying his interest and willingness to accept the assistance of foreign powers in his attempt win reelection as President of the United States.

 

  1. Refusing continuously to acknowledge to the American people that he would accept and be bound by the verdict rendered in the 2020 Presidential election, instead claiming that any outcome in which he was not declared the winner was fraudulent, rigged, and illegitimate.

 

 

  1. Taking active measures to impede and undermine the ability of American citizens to convey their disapproval of his continuance in office by exercising their rights as voters, including misusing the United States Postal Service to prevent the timely delivery of mail-in ballots.

 

  1. Instituting frivolous lawsuits to overturn the results of the 2020 Presidential election, falsely alleging wide-spread voting fraud but producing no evidence in support of his spurious allegations.

 

  1. Exhorting and inciting his supporters to believe falsely that victory in the 2020 Presidential election had been stolen from him and that constitutionally required Joint Meeting of Congress for the purpose of counting the votes of electors and announcement of the result by the President of the Senate was illegitimate and intended to complete the theft of his victory.

 

  1. Failing to take action to protect and defend Federal officers and personnel, property, buildings, and institutions on January 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol that was besieged by supporters of Donald John Trump, resulting in extensive damage to the property of the United States and the deaths of at least four persons.

 

“As the resolution points out and makes clear, a person ‘whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people,’ and warrants impeachment and removal as President of the United States.”

 

The resolution can be found here.

Free 6-Week Course Offers Procurement Basics Training

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Contractors looking to do business with the City of Houston, other governmental agencies, and the private sector are invited to sign up for Procurement Basics for Contractors, a free 6-week course presented by the Office of Business Opportunity and Level 3 Corporation.

Classes will take place virtually from 1-2 p.m. every Tuesday from Jan. 12 to Feb. 16. Advanced registration is required, and completion of all modules is recommended to receive the full benefit of the program. Space is limited and registration closes on Jan. 11.

Each module will cover:

  • Effective Bid Opportunity Review Strategies
  • Determination of a Commercially Useful Function
  • Typical Contract Award Processes
  • Understanding Government Procurement Methods
  • Contractor Responsibility Determination
  • Post-Award Best Practices

“Local businesses have requested assistance with navigating the City’s procurement processes, in particular, step-by-step assistance with submitting bids and proposals,” said OBO Director Marsha E. Murray. “This collaboration between OBO and Level 3 Corporation is just one of our responses to the needs of the City’s small business community. We would also like to emphasize that the entire program is at no cost to participants.”

Ervin Hughes, Jr., executive vice president of Level 3 Corporation, will serve as the course instructor. A native Houstonian, Hughes is also an award-winning commercial finance and business consultant. He co-hosted the Small Business Today Show on the Wall Street Radio Network.

“Businesses who have completed this training have increased their win percentages by up to 70 percent,” Hughes said. “In addition to helping you win bids, we will also focus on getting your business profitable.”

To register for the Procurement Basics for Contractors Course, go to tinyurl.com/PBFC2021. To see an information session about the course on Facebook, click here.

HOUSTON HEALTH DEPARTMENT, ASTROS FOUNDATION PARTNERING TO PROVIDE COVID-19 VACCINATIONS

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The Houston Health Department is partnering with the Astros Foundation to operate Minute Maid Park as a COVID-19 vaccination site on Saturday, January 9.

The site is open only to people who already have appointments scheduled at the health department’s Bayou City Event Center clinic, which will close for an unrelated weekend event.

The health department is contacting people in its appointment queue to inform them of the new location and provide instructions on what to do upon arrival.

People with appointments should arrive no earlier than 15-minutes before their scheduled time to ensure site efficiency and reduce wait times.

Health department vaccine COVID-19 clinics require appointments and people who show up without an appointment will be turned away.

Appointments are filled through the end of January based on the department’s current vaccine allotment. No additional appointments are being made at this time.

Appointments are based on vaccine availability, and current appointments may be adjusted based on the department’s allotment.

“The City of Houston is working around the clock to get the COVID-19 vaccine to the public based on available supply. Unfortunately, we are not in control of the vaccine supply and must schedule local vaccines based on vaccine delivery,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner. “We are grateful to the Astros Foundation for being a valued partner in the city’s COVID-19 response by providing facilities and resources for testing and vaccinations. Time and time again, Houston Astros leadership prove the organization’s commitment to our community.”

“The Astros remain committed to our community and are happy to partner with the City and its health department to ensure Houstonians in need are receiving the vaccine safely and efficiently,” said Astros Owner and Chairman, Jim Crane. “We look forward to helping Houston recover and are grateful to provide assistance as needed.”

The health department started administering the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine to the general public who quality under Phase 1A or Phase 1B of the state’s guidelines on January 2.

As of the morning of January 7, the health department received a total of 13,800 doses of vaccine and administered 8,169 doses at locations including Bayou City Event Center and its Northside, La Nueva Casa de Amigos, Sharpstown, and Sunnyside health centers. The department also transferred 1,900 doses to other providers.

The health department will announce additional vaccination opportunities at its health centers, multi-service centers, community locations, and via mobile units as supply increases.

Many medical providers offer vaccines based on availability. People who qualify should contact their medical provider or use the Texas Department of State Health Services’ online map to find and call vaccine providers.

Information about COVID-19 vaccines is available on HoustonEmergency.org/covid19.

The health department also operates a COVID-19 call center at 832-393-4220 Monday through Saturday from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call center hours are extended until 5 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Media Note: A media advisory with media availability details for Saturday will be issued Friday.

Mayor and Houston Public Library Director Announce Reopening of Three Neighborhood Libraries

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 Mayor Sylvester Turner and the Houston Public Library (HPL) have announced a plan to reopen three neighborhood libraries with limited access and services. Following extensive damage from Hurricane Harvey, the McCrane-Kashmere Gardens and Flores Neighborhood Libraries, and the new Dixon TechLink powered by Aramco will welcome community members by the end of January 2021.

Through the support of Houston City Council and thanks to generous donations from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Aramco, each location has undergone significant transformations and will feature updated finishes, furniture, and community areas, as well as expanded access to technology and enhanced resources.

“Libraries bring families together, build strong readers, and serve as an essential resource. That is why I am thrilled we are reopening the three library locations, which have been the heart of their communities for many years,” said Mayor Turner. “The locations have bounced back from a major hurricane and survived during a global pandemic. Once again, Houston is demonstrating its strength and resilience.”

“With a strong library as a community anchor, the possibilities are endless – even during a pandemic. We are thrilled that these three libraries are reopening with curbside access to books, technology, and other resources,” said Dr. Rhea Lawson, HPL Director. “We look forward to resuming a full complement of services and programs at all our libraries as soon as possible.”

The virtual reopening event for  McCrane-Kashmere Gardens will take place January 11 at 11 a.m.Flores on January 12 at 10 a.m., and Dixon on January 28 at 11 a.m. The community is invited to view the ribbon-cutting events on the HPL Facebook page.

Mayor Turner is scheduled to attend the virtual celebrations. He will be joined by the HPL Director, Houston Public Library Foundation Chair, UAE and Aramco donor partners, city council members, and neighborhood presidents representing the communities where the libraries reside. Community members may attend the virtual reopening events and get a sneak peek of each location via a virtual tour that will be featured on the HPL Facebook page.

Although all three libraries were closed due to damages from Hurricane Harvey, essential library services and resources remained accessible to the public via the HPL Mobile Express technology library and through temporary locations stationed at Houston Health Department Multi-Service Centers.

This support helped give stability to residents affected by the storm and anchored those who had been displaced through the provision of services and resources that they might not have received elsewhere. The Texas Library Association recognized the Library’s imaginative approach to supporting the community and awarded the Kashmere Neighborhood Library with the Texas Library Association Libraries Change Communities Award in 2019.

Since the onset of COVID-19, HPL has continued serving Houston’s communities by reimagining services and programs, such as Camp STREAM and its Summer Reading Program, in the virtual realm.

This has created an opportunity to elevate the public library’s profile in its role as a community contributor and provide new skills and knowledge for team members to utilize beyond COVID-19.

These library reopenings are part of HPL’s recent progressive efforts and follow national recognition for other HPL initiatives that have made a significant community impact during the pandemic.

From Mayor Turner receiving the Coalition on Adult Basic Education’s 2020 Adult Education Leadership Award for the Mayor’s Office for Adult Literacy under the oversight of HPL, to the library receiving the 2020 Urban Libraries Council Innovation Award for its Liftoff to Learning initiative in partnership with KHOU, the Houston Public Library continues to bridge the gap for Houston’s communities.

Much of the Houston area could be facing rollbacks, including closing bars again

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It’ll happen if the COVID-19 hospitalization rate remains above 15% of hospital capacity for one more consecutive day.

As COVID-19 case numbers continue to climb, the Houston region is on the verge of reaching a new critical point.

“Right now, the 14-day average is off the charts at 1,700 new cases on average reported every single day,” Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said.

Governor Greg Abbott’s executive order states that if Trauma Service Area Q – which includes Harris, Fort Bend, Montgomery, Austin, Colorado, Matagorda, Walker, Waller and Wharton Counties – has seven consecutive days of COVID-19 hospitalizations above 15% of total hospital capacity, certain indoor businesses will have to go back to 50% occupancy and elective surgeries will have to stop. Bars will also have to close.

“We are getting perilously close to that,” Houston Health Authority Dr. David Persse said.

On Monday, the region reported its sixth straight day with COVID-19 hospitalizations over 15%, coming in at 18.21%. The state reports the previous day’s numbers, so that percentage was for Sunday.

“Things are getting worse,” Hidalgo said. “Things are not improving, and this may just be the tip of the iceberg.”

Other trauma service areas around the Houston area have already rolled back re-openings. The region that includes Brazoria, Chambers, and Galveston Counties had to roll back, as did the region that includes Liberty, Grimes, and Brazos counties.

The rollbacks are part of Abbott’s Executive Order GA-32, which was signed back in October to expand business openings. Indoor businesses can go back to 75% capacity and elective surgeries can resume when the number drops below 15% for seven consecutive days.

“Obviously I welcome the governor’s threshold, but I’m concerned it’s not enough and likely a little too late,” Hidalgo said.

A spokeswoman for Abbott says shutting down bars and a slight reduction in capacity at restaurants worked in places like El Paso and Midland-Odessa. If Houston’s rollback is triggered, they’re confident it can work again.

A region must then stay below 15% COVID hospitalizations for seven straight days for bars to reopen and restrictions to be lifted. Officials expect hospitalizations to keep climbing and if that happens, deaths will spike, too.

“In July, 1,200 people died in that single month. This (month) could very well be worse than that,” Hidalgo said.

 

Texas hospitals entering ‘dire’ COVID-19 surge situation

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COVID-19 patients represent a little more than half of all patients currently in North Texas ICUs, officials said and major counties have less than 10 ICU beds open.

 

As COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to reach “dire” levels across the state, Texas Health Resources announced it will postpone all outpatient elective and non-essential surgeries and procedures.

“Our inventory of PPE and ventilators is strong. We’re mainly concerned about our supply of healthcare workers and the many months of stressful work they’ve endured in the care of these patients,” spokesperson Amanda Huffman said.

The pause at its “14 wholly-owned hospitals” is because the group is dealing with such a high number of COVID-19 patients. The disease is causing “a severe stress on inpatient and emergency department bed capacity and staffing resources,” according to the spokesperson.

“This, along with record numbers of COVID-19 positive cases in our communities, demands that our hospitals initiate their surge plans to accommodate the increased volume,” the spokesperson said.

The decision is in accordance with an order Gov. Greg Abbott issued in September. The order requires hospital groups to postpone such procedures in areas with high hospitalizations if those procedures would “deplete any hospital capacity needed to cope with the COVID-19 disaster.”

The group says patients should contact their doctors with any questions.

Texas Health has 27 hospitals, more than 80 outpatient facilities, and more than 250 other community clinics and doctors’ offices. Within those, the group operates around 3,400 available beds.

A spokesperson with Texas Health said this decision does not apply to all their 27 hospital locations and numerous outpatient centers because they do not necessarily keep patients overnight and are not treating COVID-19 patients.

Texas Health said these facilities perform procedures that do not impact their capacity to care for COVID-19 patients.

The news comes as the state reported its highest 7-day case average and the largest number of hospitalizations since the pandemic began on Monday.

And experts believe a post-Christmas surge has not yet begun to be realized, which, when it arrives, will further tax the “already fatigued and courageous clinical staff in our hospitals.”

“COVID-19 has filled our hospitals with very sick and dying people, and we have taken this step to help deal with this high volume of critically ill patients,” Huffman said.

Several Texas Health hospitals that have been unusually busy with COVID-19 patients have already been postponing some procedures, the spokesperson said.

“The models reflect a significant surge on top of our current surge in the next few weeks,” said Stephen Love, the president of the Dallas-Fort Worth Hospital Council.

Typically, people are hospitalized a week or two after testing positive for the virus.

State officials reported a combined 17,939 new cases Monday, along with 52 additional deaths.

There are also an estimated 12,961 people currently hospitalized across the state, the highest number since the pandemic began.

Those numbers have continued to climb dramatically since the end of December, going from about 10,868 in hospitals on Christmas to those nearly 13,000 patients by Jan. 4.

Across the North Texas region, there were 3,982 COVID-19 patients hospitalized Monday, according to Love.

That was an “overwhelming 259-patient increase” from just the day before, he said.

And as the number of hospitalizations has risen each day, the number of available ICU beds has dropped.

“Our hospital bed capacity is being challenged, our workforce stretched to the ultimate and the expected surge forthcoming as a result of the recent holidays will only make the situation even direr,” Love explained.

From Sunday to Monday, an additional 81 ICU beds filled up across Texas, state data shows, leaving around 625 such beds available for the roughly 29 million people who live in Texas.

For those in the North Texas region, there are currently around 50 ICU beds available, according to Love.

While Dallas County has the most at 21 available ICU beds, Collin County has just two beds and Ellis County is at three. Tarrant and Denton’s counties have nine and 10 open ICU beds, respectively.

COVID-19 patients represent a little more than half of all patients currently in North Texas ICUs, Love explained. And overall, COVID-19 patients make up a little more than a quarter of total hospital capacity in the region.

“We are entering an extremely serious and critical timeframe regarding COVID-19 treatment in North Texas,” he said.

Publicación 1188 de San Antonio – Revista Digital 07 de enero – 13 de enero / 2021

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de SAN ANTONIO de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 07 de enero – 13 de enero / 2021

Publicación 1188 de HOUSTON – Revista Digital 07 de enero – 13 de enero / 2021

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 07 de enero – 13 de enero / 2021

Capitol siege: An eyewitness account from inside the House chamber

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Jamie Stiehm is a US political columnist who was in the Capitol building in Washington DC when it was stormed by pro-Trump rioters. Here’s what she saw from the press gallery in the House of Representatives.

I had told my sister earlier: “Something bad is going to happen today. I don’t know what, but something bad will happen.”

Outside the Capitol, I encountered a group of very boisterous supporters of President Donald Trump, all waving flags and pledging their allegiance to him. There was a sense that trouble was brewing.

I went inside to the House of Representatives and up into the press gallery, where we were assigned seats, looking down at the rather somber gathering. Speaker Nancy Pelosi was holding the gavel, and keeping people to their five-minute statements.

As we went into the second hour, all of a sudden we heard breaking glass. The air began getting fogged. An announcement from the Capitol Police said, “An individual has breached the building”. So everyone looked around and then it was business as usual. But after that, the announcements kept coming. And they were getting more and more urgent.

They announced that the intruders had breached the rotunda, which is under the famed marble dome. The sacred house of democracy was under fire.

Many of us are hardened journalists – I’ve seen my share of violence covering homicides in Baltimore – but this was very unpredictable. The police didn’t seem to know what was happening. They weren’t coordinated. They locked the chamber doors but at the same time, they told us we would have to evacuate. So there was a sense of panic.

I was afraid. I’ll tell you that. And I’ve spoken to other journalists who said they were a little ashamed of themselves for feeling afraid.

There was a sense of “nobody’s in charge here, the Capitol Police have lost control of the building, anything can happen”.

If you think back to the September 11 attacks in 2001, there was one plane that went down and didn’t hit its target. That target was the Capitol. There were echoes of that. I made a call to my family, just to let them know that I was here and it was a dangerous situation.

Armed guards

There was a shot. We could see there was a standoff in our chamber. Five men were holding guns at the door. It was a frightening sight. Men were looking through a broken glass window and looked like they could shoot at any second.

Thankfully there was no gunfire inside the chamber. But for a while there, it felt like it would be a real possibility. Because things were going downhill very fast.

We had to crawl under railings to get out of the way. I was not dressed to do that. A lot of women were dressed up, wearing heels, because they had come for a formal ritual.

Nancy Pelosi after the house was reconvened

I sheltered in the House cafeteria alongside others. I’m still shaking now.

I have seen a lot as a journalist, but this was something more. This was the collective public sphere being undermined, assaulted, degraded. And I think this was why the Speaker wanted to return and hold the gavel again and go on.

Afterward, I had to decide whether I was going to go back to the chamber too. I decided l probably would because the message that is sending is: “You can incite a mob, but we’re going to go on”. I think that is a very important political message.

Protesters leave trail of damage throughout US Capitol building

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Images and video from the Capitol show a trail of vandalism and destruction after the building was stormed by an angry mob of President Trump supporters on Wednesday.

One photo shows a shattered mirror inside House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office — the apparent result of vandals who broke into her suite of offices. Beneath the broken mirror is a picture of the Bush family.

Outside Pelosi’s offices, a few demonstrators can be seen proudly wielding a piece of the lawmaker’s damaged nameplate, according to a photo posted to social media.

A rioter was seen carrying a podium out of the Capitol Rotunda before police cleared the building.

Countless windows throughout the Capitol building were smashed by a furious mob that forced lawmakers voting to certify the presidential election into lockdown, according to photos from the scene.

One video shows members of the mob smashing a window and pulling out furnishings in the historic legislative chamber, including a lamp and a chair.

Another image shows a window to the Capitol shattered, with a “Don’t Tread On Me” flag left hanging from the broken glass.

Reports from inside the building also described debris and papers strewn about.

Some rioters made it into both chambers of Congress after lawmakers fled to safety.

A man dressed in Army fatigues carrying what appears to be giant zip ties was photographed inside the Senate chamber.

Meanwhile, outside the building, rioters were captured smashing media equipment as people screaming.