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More than a dozen people found in possible smuggling case in SW Houston, police says

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Houston police are investigating a possible human smuggling operation after more than a dozen people were found in a home in southwest Houston.

According to police, a woman and the rest of the men were found in the home near naked.

Initially, officers responded to a kidnapping call in the 4800 block of Ridgeton Street. Police said a man got away and was running down the street looking for help.

When police arrived at the scene, the man told them he escaped a home where he was being held against his will. That’s when officers went inside and found more than a dozen others. Police said the victims were not bound but had been locked inside the house. Inside, investigators said the windows were boarded up and the doors were locked. They also found food.

Most of them told police they were being held against their will. Some told police they had been there from a few days to a week. Investigators said the victims were picked up in Brownsville, Texas, and they came from countries such as Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador and Cuba.

All of the people who were found in the home have been taken to Ridgemont Elementary School for shelter. Neighbors in the area have reportedly stepped in to help by providing them clothes.

Houston police said they have possible suspects detained and are waiting on immigration officials to begin their investigation.

Publicación 1185 de DALLAS – Revista Digital 03 de diciembre – 09 de diciembre / 2020

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Publicación 1185 de HOUSTON – Revista Digital 03 de diciembre – 09 de diciembre / 2020

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The Houston Fire Department Urges Citizens to use Safety when using Heating Devices

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With the a freeze warning for Harris County from mid-night to 8 a.m. tomorrow morning, the Houston Fire Department urges citizens to be careful and follow some simple safety tips when using space heaters, fireplaces and other supplemental heating sources. Any shift away from the exclusive use of central heating presents an increased possibility for fire.

Citizens should always keep in mind that: Space Heaters Need Space. The Houston Fire Department recommends the following safety tips when using supplemental heating sources:

  • Make sure you have a working smoke alarm.
  • Never leave children unattended in a room with a space heater
  • Children knock over space heaters especially if they are placed on top of wobbly tables or stools and near where the children play. Children may also stick paper or toys in the grates of the space heaters especially gas space heaters.
  • Keep all combustible materials, including yourself at least 3 feet from the heater
  • Open face heaters should have a screen
  • Provide ventilation to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning

Vented Gas / Fired Heating Appliances Tips – Central heating units, floor furnaces, recessed wall heaters, and vented space heaters.

  • Inspect annually by a qualified service technician.
  • Do not use these type units without a proper vent pipe. Vent pipes must exhaust to the outside!
  • If your flame is not blue, it is not burning properly. It is producing Carbon Monoxide, which can’t be seen, smelled or tasted. Turn it off.
  • Use flexible metal tubing with threaded ends to connect the heater to the gas valve. There should be a cutoff valve for the heater at the wall. Never use a rubber hose to connect a space heater to the gas valve!
  • Use soapy water to check all connections and valves for leaks. NEVER use a match to test for a gas leak!
  • Look for the American Gas Association label and follow the manufacturer’s recommendations for proper usage.

Electric Heaters Tips

  • Never overload outlets or breakers
  • Don’t use extension cords for the heater. If the cord is hot to the touch, turn off the heater and unplug it!
  • Electric heaters permanently installed in the wall or ceiling should have lint and dust removed regularly. Lint and dust will burn!
  • Fireplace safety from the National Fire Prevention Association (NFPA)

According to the NFPA While fireplaces often conjure up images of warmth and comfort, they also represent a source of home heating fires. Creosote – a sticky, oily, combustible substance created when wood does not burn completely – rises into the chimney as a liquid and deposits on the chimney walls, and plays a role in nearly one-fourth (23%) of all home heating fires each year.

Just like a space heater, keep anything that can burn at least three feet away from a fireplace, and create a three-foot “kid-free zone” around open fires.

  • Make sure the fireplace has a sturdy screen to stop sparks from flying into the room
  • Never leave a fireplace fire unattended, particularly when children are present.
  • Ashes should be cool before putting them in a metal container, and kept at a safe distance from your home.
  • Make sure you open your fireplace flue, if applicable. There have been several fires this month because citizens left the flue closed.

EL DEPARTAMENTO DE LAS CORTES MUNICIPALES DE LA CIUDAD DE HOUSTON EXTIENDE EL PERÍODO DE RESTABLECIMIENTO DE CORTE A SÁBADOS ESPECIFICOS AL 1400 LUBBOCK, Y ANUNCIA QUE LOS JUICIOS POR JURADO Y SERVICIO DE JURADO REANUDARAN EL 1 DE FEBRERO, 2021

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HOUSTON – El Departamento de las Cortes Municipales de la Ciudad de Houston (MCD) está extendiendo el período de restablecimiento de corte para los casos programados durante la Orden de Quedarse en Casa, Trabajar Seguro. En un esfuerzo por cumplir con los requisitos de distanciamiento social, les daremos a los ciudadanos tiempo adicional para restablecer sus casos. Si su caso fue programado desde el 1 de Septiembre, 2020 hasta el 23 de Enero, 2021, restablecimientos se darán en persona sólo en la corte central Herbert W. Gee ubicado en 1400 Lubbock los siguientes Sábados de 8:00 a.m. a 4:00 p.m:

  • 5 de Diciembre, 2020
  • 12 de Diciembre, 2020

Siguiendo las directrices del Alcalde Sylvester Turner y del CDC para proteger al público y al personal de MCD de la propagación de COVID-19, los miembros del público tendrán que usar cubiertas faciales y que se les tomará la temperatura. Si la temperatura es de más de 100.4 grados Fahrenheit, el individuo no podrá entrar en los edificios de las Cortes. Los miembros del público deben comunicarse con un proveedor de atención médica y no venir a las Cortes si están sintiendo síntomas similares a COVID-19. Una vez aprobado por un medico, las personas pueden venir al 1400 Lubbock para hablar con un Juez Anexo para reprogramar su(s) caso(s). Por favor visite al sito web de la Corte Municipal al www.houstontx.gov/courts para actualizaciones continuas de todas las ubicaciones y horas de operación de la corte.

Para anuncios adicionales e información actualizada, por favor llame a la Linea de Ayuda de La Ciudad de Houston al 3-1-1, o al 713.837.0311 si esta fuera de la Ciudad de Houston, or visite al sitio web de la Corte al www.houstontx.gov/courts.

 

CITY OF HOUSTON MUNICIPAL COURTS DEPARTMENT EXTENDS COURT RESET PERIOD TO SPECIFIC SATURDAYS AT 1400 LUBBOCK AND ANNOUNCES THAT JURY TRIALS AND JURY DUTY WILL RESUME FEBRUARY 1, 2021

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HOUSTON – The City of Houston Municipal Courts Department (MCD) is extending the court reset period for cases scheduled during the Stay Home, Work Safe Order.  In an effort to comply with social distancing requirements, we will allow citizens additional time to get their cases reset.  If your jury trial was scheduled from September 1, 2020 through January 23, 2021, resets will be given in person only at the Herbert W. Gee Courthouse located at 1400 Lubbock on the following Saturdays from 8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m:

  • December 5, 2020
  • December 12, 2020

Members of the public should contact a health care provider and not come to court if they are experiencing symptoms similar to COVID-19. Once cleared by a physician, individuals may visit any City of Houston court location to speak with an Annex Judge to reset a case.  Masks/facial coverings must be worn at all times within the courthouse facility.  Temperatures will be taken before entry is granted. Please visit the Municipal Courts’ website at www.houstontx.gov/courts for continued updates on all court locations and hours of operation.

For additional announcements and updated information, please call the City of Houston Helpline at 3-1-1, or 713.837.0311 if outside of the City of Houston, or visit the Municipal Courts website at www.houstontx.gov/courts.

 

Rockets trade Russell Westbrook to Wizards for John Wall

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“The Washington Wizards have acquired former NBA MVP and nine-time All-Star Russell Westbrook from the Houston Rockets in exchange for John Wall and a future lottery-protected first-round pick.

“Having the opportunity to acquire a player of Russell’s caliber and character was something that we could not pass up when looking at both the immediate and long-term future of our team,” said Wizards General Manager Tommy Sheppard.  “With that said, the decision to part ways with John, one of the greatest players in franchise history, was extremely difficult.  What he has meant to our organization and our community is immeasurable and will not be forgotten.”

As much handwringing as there has been over Westbrook’s and Wall’s massive contracts, there’s a clear difference between the players. Westbrook is better. That’s why the Rockets get a first-round pick from the Wizards.

Westbrook made the All-NBA third team last season, his sixth straight year on an All-NBA team. Wall hasn’t played even a majority of Washington’s games in any of the last three years and missed last season entirely.

As Houston downgrades, attention intensifies on James Harden, who also requested a trade from the Rockets. If he was unhappy playing with Westbrook, a friend, why would Harden be more enthused about playing with Wall? Also a driver with limited outside shooting ability, Wall brings similar fit concerns as Westbrook. Wall is just not as good.

This looks like a prelude to an eventual Harden trade. If dealing Harden anyway, which would almost certainly drop Houston from championship contention (real or imagined), the Rockets might as well get a first-round pick for Westbrook.

The salaries in this trade – as high as they are – are nearly neutral. Westbrook is due $132,633,438 over the next three years, Wall $132,932,520

The Wizards are trying to win now, because that’s just how they operate and because Bradley Beal could soon choose to leave if the team doesn’t get on track.

Washington would be extremely disappointed to miss the playoffs and not convey a lottery-protected pick in 2023.  Washington might be extremely disappointed.

Westbrook and Beal immediately form one of the NBA’s most-intriguing backcourts. But there are questions about how they’ll share the ball and Westbrook’s career arc. He’s 32, extremely reliant on athleticism and facing health concerns. At least Wizards coach Scott Brooks, who coached Westbrook with the Thunder, has experience working with the point guard.

In Houston, Wall an DeMarcus Cousins finally unite. But they appear to be past their primes. Both are 30 with extensive injury histories. Cousins even had to settle for an unguaranteed contract. At least Wall was fortunate enough to lock in a super-max extension when he had the opportunity.

Whatever this trade lacks in eventual production, it carries major name recognition.

This is just the second time two players with at least five All-Star selections have been traded for each other.

Here’s every time players with even four All-Star selections have been traded for each other (number of All-Star selections in parentheses):

  • 2020: Russell Westbrook (9) to Wizards, John Wall (5) to Rockets
  • 2019: Chris Paul (9) to Thunder, Russell Westbrook (8) to Rockets
  • 2009: Shaquille O’Neal (15) to Cavaliers, Ben Wallace (4) to Suns
  • 2009: Jermaine O’Neal (6) to Heat, Shawn Marion (4) to Raptors
  • 2008: Shaquille O’Neal (14) to Suns, Shawn Marion (4) to Heat
  • 2004: Alonzo Mourning (7) to Raptors, Vince Carter (4) to Nets
  • 1957: Harry Gallatin (7) to Pistons, Mel Hutchins (4) to Knicks

CDC chief warns Americans face ‘rough’ winter from COVID-19 surge

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The head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned on Wednesday the COVID-19 pandemic, still raging with unprecedented fury nationwide, will pose the country’s grimmest health crisis yet over the next few months, before vaccines become widely available.

CDC Director Dr Robert Redfield urged stricter adherence to safety precautions such as wearing face coverings, social distancing and good hand hygiene to slow the spread of a highly contagious respiratory virus now claiming well over 2,000 U.S. lives a day.

The sober message from one of the nation’s top health officers followed Thanksgiving holiday observances in which millions of Americans disregarded warnings to avoid travel and large gatherings even as COVID infections and hospitalizations surged largely unchecked.

Besides the monumental loss of life, Redfield said, the country faces the prospect of a healthcare system strained to the point of collapse. The contagion has now reached every corner of the country – with 90% of all hospitals in areas designated as coronavirus “hot zones” – and continues to spread on a much steeper trajectory than any previous wave of the pandemic.

“The reality is that December, January and February are going to be rough times,” Redfield told a livestream presentation hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation. “I actually believe they’re going to be the most difficult time in the public health history of this nation.”

President-elect Joe Biden amplified the bleak forecast during a roundtable with workers and small business owners hard hit by the devastating economic fallout of the pandemic.

“Christmas is going to be a lot harder. I don’t want to scare anybody here, but understand the facts – we’re likely to lose another 250,000 people dead between now and January. You hear me?” Biden said.

More than 270,000 Americans have died from COVID-19 to date. And the University of Washington’s influential Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation has projected the toll could reach nearly 450,000 by March 1 without greater attention to social distancing and mask-wearing.

VACCINES ON HORIZON

The dire warnings came as U.S. health experts on Wednesday welcomed British emergency approval of Pfizer Inc’s COVID-19 vaccine, a sign that U.S. regulators may soon follow suit.

As U.S. coronavirus hospitalizations jumped to their highest since the onset of the global pandemic, Britain gave emergency use approval to the vaccine developed by Pfizer and German partner BioNTech SE, the first Western country to take such action.

Britain said it would start inoculating high-risk people early next week, a move that could help reassure Americans about the prospect of an expected mass-vaccination program reminiscent of the anti-polio campaigns of the 1950s and 1960s.

“This should be very reassuring. An independent regulatory authority in another country has found this vaccine to be safe and effective for use,” U.S. Health Secretary Alex Azar told Fox Business Network on Wednesday.

The British approval is also likely to “put a little pressure on” U.S. regulators to move swiftly, said Kirsten Hokeness, an immunology and virology expert at Bryant University in Rhode Island.

REGULATORY AND SOCIAL HURDLES

A CDC advisory committee recommended on Tuesday that medical workers and residents of long-term care facilities should be first in line to receive initial doses of the vaccines.

U.S. COVID-19 hospitalizations hit a record for a fourth consecutive day on Tuesday, approaching 100,000, according to a Reuters tally. At the same time, exhausted healthcare professionals are short-staffed, with many of their colleagues falling sick.

A U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel of outside advisers is due to meet on Dec. 10 to discuss whether to recommend emergency-use authorization of the Pfizer vaccine. Moderna’s vaccine, also found to be nearly 95% effective, is expected to be reviewed a week later.

While some U.S. health officials described a rollout timeline that assumed FDA authorization would come within days of the Dec. 10 meeting, FDA officials have said it could take weeks.

Pfizer, Moderna and a third producer, AstraZeneca Plc, have already started manufacturing their vaccines and say distribution could begin almost immediately after approval. AstraZeneca, however, may have to conduct an additional trial to gain U.S. approval after a dosing error led to better results in recently released data than for its planned regimen.

Beyond regulatory hurdles, vaccinations face opposition from significant numbers of Americans who reject medical science and fear vaccines as harmful.

Similarly, many Americans still refuse to follow basic public health guidance on wearing masks and avoiding crowds.

In hopes of increasing compliance, the CDC on Wednesday added new guidelines to shorten the duration of quarantines.

The health agency said seven days with a negative COVID-19 test and 10 days without a test would suffice for individuals showing no symptoms after exposure to the virus. But it still recommends a 14-day quarantine as preferable.

Texas may receive initial coronavirus vaccine doses for 1.4 million people this month, Gov. Greg Abbott says

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Texas could receive coronavirus vaccine doses to give an initial dose to up to 1.4 million Texans in December, assuming U.S. health officials approve coronavirus vaccine candidates from drugmakers Pfizer and Moderna, Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has promised to send Texas as many as 1.4 million doses of forthcoming vaccines in the month of December, Abbott said. The vaccines require two doses per person, and state health officials have said health care workers will be first in line.

Abbott said the vaccine candidates would likely arrive in Texas the week of Dec. 14. A second shipment is expected to arrive in January.

“The State of Texas is already prepared for the arrival of a COVID-19 vaccine, and will swiftly distribute these vaccines to Texans who voluntarily choose to be immunized,” Abbott said in a news release. “As we await the first shipment of these vaccines, we will work with communities to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.”