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Getting Closer to What Matters

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As 2020 has progressed, we have shifted from large-scale events to smaller gatherings organized with great care. Thousands of Houstonians have expressed that they have felt a wonderful connection to one another as they have turned to our parks and trails during months of social isolation. This has brought us closer in spirit as we simply get outdoors and connect with nature.

With Bayou Greenways 2020 nearing completion, Houstonians will have unprecedented access to parks and trails, shaping the lives of  families and communities across the city. These green spaces enhance our quality of life and allow us to connect with one another in ways that cannot be fully quantified.

Houston Parks Board looks forward to celebrating Bayou Greenways 2020 with you tomorrow at noon, here.

 

Brock Park has provided a new lease on life for Carla. Watch her story and others as part of our Week of Thanks celebrating Bayou Greenways 2020 and all those who helped make it happen.

 

Memorial service for HPD Sgt. Sean Rios

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Family, friends and fellow brothers and sisters-in-blue are saying their final goodbyes today to a fallen Houston police sergeant.

Funeral services for Sergeant Sean Rios began at 11 a.m. at Grace Church in southeast Houston, a day after a public visitation was held.

Due to COVID-19 protocols, the funeral service was reserved for family, friends, HPD staff and those who knew Sgt. Rios.

Following the funeral, full police honors will be held outside the church with social distancing protocols in place.

Rios was shot to death last Monday in a north Houston gun battle. One man is charged with Rios’ murder, and police are looking for another person of interest.

Rios was a 25-year member of the department and leaves behind four children – ages 17, 14, 12 and 9 years old – as well as his parents, a brother, and two cousins, who are HPD detectives.

The County with no Coronavirus cases? No longer…

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Loving County, in rural West Texas, was the last county in the continental United States with zero Coronavirus cases. But it couldn’t avoid the pandemic forever.

Zoom in on the glowing red map of ever-escalating coronavirus cases in the continental United States and for months you would find a county that had been spared. It remained that way until it was the only one, from coast to coast.

Like a lone house standing after a tornado has leveled a town, Loving County, in the shadeless dun plains of oil-rich West Texas, had not recorded a single positive case of the coronavirus.

It is something that people in the county were proud of. They talked about it. They lived by it.

“You can take that off!” Chuck Flushe told a visitor in a face mask at the window of his food truck as a pair of barefaced oil field workers milled about. “We don’t have the virus here.”

If only it were true.

Though never included in the county’s official reports, at least one positive test for the coronavirus was recorded over the summer at a local health clinic in Mentone, the county’s only town, according to a worker at the clinic.

And then on Tuesday, state officials reported, for the first time, the inevitable. Positive tests for the coronavirus in Loving County. Three of them.

Now every corner of the United States mainland could be said to officially have been touched by the coronavirus.

The abrupt addition of confirmed cases — hours after an article The New York Times published online called attention to at least one positive case — could not immediately be explained by county officials.

“That’s news to me,” said Steve Simonsen, the county attorney. “I’m wondering if they’re counting the people you talk about and the two residents who had it and caught it somewhere else.”

One positive case not previously reported involved a man who lived at what everyone in this part of Texas calls a “man camp” — temporary housing for transient oil and gas field workers — near the center of town when he became sick. But since he was not a permanent resident, and was quickly shuttled home, Loving County had not reported the case at the time.

Ten months after the first infection was recorded in the United States, the coronavirus has made its way into every corner of the country. More than 11 million people have tested positive for the virus, which causes Covid-19, with more than 164,000 new cases emerging on Monday alone.

Now even rural areas, which escaped the brunt of the pandemic early on, have become serious centers of new infections. In recent months, a diminishing number of small, remote counties, including Loving County, remained the only places in the continental United States with no positive cases. (Kalawao County in Hawaii, which has even fewer people than Loving County, still has reported no known cases.)

One by one, each began to record infections. Esmeralda County in Nevada reported its first case last week. Then came Loving County.

Those who live in Loving County full-time — the U.S. mainland’s smallest population, with no more than 169 people stretched across 669 square miles of sand, mesquite, and greasewood — credit their relative antiviral success to the landscape and the sparseness of the population. They joke that they were socially distant before it was cool.

“It’s a desert town. That’s what it is,” said Mr. Simonsen, the county attorney. “We don’t speak in terms of running how many cows per acre, it’s how many cows per section. A section is 640 acres.”

But despite the wide-open space, the county is busy. The census counts 10 times the number of workers in the county as residents. Trucks hauling equipment for the oil fields or big boxes of sand for fracking groan through town in a constant, noisy stream. Plastic trash and bits of blown truck tires litter the roadside.

When one drives through the county at night, lights from the oil and gas operations flicker brightly across the landscape, creating the mirage of a distant city that can never quite be reached. “You top that hill and it looks like you’re driving into Dallas or Fort Worth,” Mr. Simonsen said.

Men — and it is mostly men who work in Loving County — shuffle in and out of the only shop for miles, a relatively new convenience store where the line for beer and single-serving meals can stretch to the rear refrigerators during the 5 p.m. rush.

“Restrooms Coming Soon,” boasts an all-caps banner hanging outside. On a recent weekday evening, one shopper wore a cowboy hat. More had on mesh trucker caps. None were in masks. Neither were the clerks. The county is exempt from a statewide mandate.

But even if the virus is not in front of mind in Loving County, it has changed a life here.

The pandemic caused a downturn as oil prices dropped, reducing the number of workers in town. The man camps were less full. Hotel rooms that just months ago cost $350 a night in Pecos, the nearest large town, were now going for a third of the price.

“With the pandemic, a lot of stuff shut down,” said Ricardo Galan, 38, who works for a supply company that he said had dropped from 50 employees to 12.

Mr. Galan, from Eagle Pass near Texas’ border with Mexico, said he usually spent about 12 days working and then got four days off. He counted himself lucky to be only five hours away from his family. Some workers come from much further, like Utah or Louisiana.

While in Loving County, Mr. Galan lived in a man camp on his company’s property, sharing a small living space with another worker. He said the workers there practiced social distancing. “On our yard, nobody’s gotten sick from Covid,” he said.

But, he added, no one was being tested unless they had symptoms. “They don’t test you just to test you,” Mr. Galan said. For that, workers must travel to larger cities like Odessa or Midland.

A private health clinic offers coronavirus tests and performs around 20 per week, according to Anthony Luk, 28, a paramedic there. Mr. Luk, like most workers in the county, lives in a trailer — his is attached to the clinic — and stays for two-week stints between periods of rest at home in Lubbock.

During his time there, he said, he knew of two positive tests for the coronavirus: in August, involving the man camp near the center of Mentone, and another taken at a job site outside of Loving County.

The August case raised alarm at the county courthouse because clerks and other county workers often go to the camp for free lunch on workdays.

At the courthouse, a square brick building from 1935, the doors are now locked to outsiders and the county employees do not wear masks. When someone comes to visit, like a landman looking into new oil or gas leases, the person must have an appointment and wear a mask.

A Halloween party for the children in town attracted about 60 people and included temperature checks at the door. People felt comfortable not wearing masks.

But there are few such gatherings in Mentone, where the county’s history of oil booms and busts can be read in hollow rusting storage tanks, empty corrugated homes, and the cracked plaster of the only schoolhouse, unused for decades.

“When we got here, I said, ‘Punk, how long are we going to live in this godforsaken place?’” recalled Mary Belle Jones, 89, who moved to Loving County in 1953 with her husband, Elgin Jones.

There were rattlesnakes in the yard of their first home, she remembered, and a toilet outback. They had five children, moved to a bigger house, accumulated acre upon acre of land, and never left.

Mr. Jones, known to all by his childhood nickname, went from the oil fields to become sheriff for nearly three decades. “He was known as the only sheriff in Texas you could call Punk and get away with it,” Mrs. Jones said.

Their children went to the local schoolhouse until the sixth grade. But it ran short of students, and then closed. Children now ride a bus at 6 a.m. to the next county east.

Several members of the Jones family stayed in Loving County. One son, Skeet Jones, is the top county executive. His sister is the county clerk. Mr. Simonsen, the county attorney, married into the family.

FDA OKs First Totally At-Home COVID-19 Diagnostic Test

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People can not only test themselves for COVID-19, but get rapid results at home, as the FDA authorized use of the first self-testing molecular single-use diagnostic to detect SARS-CoV-2 late Tuesday.

Emergency use authorization (EUA) was granted to the Lucira COVID-19 All-in-One Test Kit, a real-time loop mediated amplification reaction single-use test that provides rapid results, the FDA said in a statement.

Individuals age 14 and older who are suspected of having COVID-19 by their healthcare provider can use the test by swirling the self-collected nasal swab sample in a vial placed in a testing unit, where the results can be read in 30 minutes or less via a light-up display. This test is only available by prescription.

It is also authorized as a point-of-care test in doctor’s offices, hospitals, urgent care centers and emergency rooms, but samples from individuals younger than age 14 must be taken by a healthcare provider.

Director of FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Jeff Shuren, MD, characterized this authorization as “a significant step” in the agency’s response to the pandemic.

“A test that can be fully administered entirely outside of a lab or healthcare setting has always been a major priority for the FDA to address the pandemic. Now, more Americans who may have COVID-19 will be able to take immediate action, based on their results, to protect themselves and those around them,” he said in a statement.

FDA commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, added that while prior COVID-19 tests have been authorized for at-home sample collection, “this is the first that can be fully self-administered and provide results at home.”

Healthcare providers will be required to report all test results to the relevant public health authorities. The agency also noted individuals who test positive should self-isolate and seek additional guidance from their healthcare provider. Those who test negative, but still have symptoms should also follow up with their provider, since a negative test “does not preclude an individual from SARS-CoV-2 infection.”

Grandma, 51, gives birth to her own grandchild

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An American grandmother has given birth to a baby but in an unusual twist of fate, it’s not just her daughter — it’s also her granddaughter.

Julie Loving, 51, acted as a surrogate mother for her daughter Breanna Lockwood, who has been struggling to have a baby of her own.

The baby, born earlier this month, soon became an internet sensation.

Named Briar Juliette Lockwood as a nod to surrogate Julie, this baby girl can boast two mothers — one of who is also her grandmother.

“My mum was an absolute rock star through a difficult delivery,” Ms Loving posted on Instagram, a post which soon became viral.

“The sacrifices she took to bring this little slice of heaven into our world takes my breath away.

“Holding my daughter in my arms my heart is bursting.

“The feeling of how I would do absolutely anything needed for this child is radiating through me when I look at her, and reflects back on what my mom did for me.”

Breanna Lockwood and her partner Aaron were struggling to have their own child, experiencing four failed embryo transfers, two miscarriages and an ectopic pregnancy.

One medical procedure had left Ms Lockwood with problematic scar tissue in her uterus, making a normal pregnancy near impossible.

The Fertility Center of Illinois helped Ms Lockwood’s mother become a gestational carrier for their baby.

However, the entire process was not without its difficulty.

The Lockwood’s fertility specialist, Dr. Brian Kaplan of Fertility Centers of Illinois said it was an expensive procedure.

“Most Americans cannot afford a gestational carrier,” he said. “It’s over US$100,000 ($146,000).”

On Instagram, the Insta-famous Ms Loving outlined the many steps it had taken to reach this happy ending.

“1311 days. 476 injections. 64 blood draws. 7 surgical procedures. 3 rounds of harvesting eggs. 19 frozen embryos. 8 IVF frozen embryo transfers total. 4 failed embryo transfers. 1 singleton miscarriage. 1 twin miscarriage. 1 ectopic pregnancy. Countless tears.”

“Cancel gatherings, large and small”: Texas officials raise alarm ahead of Thanksgiving holiday

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Health experts worry that increased travel and mingling over Thanksgiving and into the December holidays could exacerbate an already dangerous situation as COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are rising across Texas.

“Cancel gatherings, large and small, unless you’re with your household,” Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said Tuesday. “We’re in a war against this virus. This is not the time to lament that we didn’t get a gathering this time around.”

Eight months into the pandemic, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are rapidly rising again in Texas and across the country. Experts say the latest surge in cases is linked to pandemic fatigue. In just eight days, the U.S. recorded 1 million new coronavirus cases, bringing the nation’s total to over 11 million. Texas exceeded a million cases Friday, according to state data.

Health experts worry that increased travel and mingling over Thanksgiving and into the December holidays could exacerbate an already dangerous situation.

“The worst thing I could think of is to take people from all over the country, put them in planes and mix them up,” said Dr. James McDeavitt, dean of clinical affairs at the Baylor College of Medicine. “That’s almost like you designed something to spread the virus aggressively.”

Already, airlines are reporting that travel is up for the holidays.

United Airlines is expecting the Thanksgiving holiday to be the busiest time since the pandemic began in March, according to a news release. The airline added over 1,400 domestic flights to accommodate the demand during the week of Thanksgiving.

Southwest Airlines plans to add up to 300 flights a day, and American Airlines plans to average over 4,000 flights a day during the upcoming holiday, about a 15% increase compared with the rest of the month.

New traditions

Anaiya Davis said when her family gathers this Thanksgiving, there will be temperature checks at the door. Everyone attending is being asked to quarantine before the celebration. When Davis heads from her home in Austin to the Fort Worth area, she’s expecting to see about 15 people in her family. Usually there are about 50 there. Davis said two family members died this year who were immunocompromised, which has put the rest of the family on high alert.

“When we lost my grandpa, it kind of made us more conscious and very afraid of the virus in general,” Davis said. “Then when we lost my cousin, we jumped back into being more afraid because we were like, we’ve already lost two super important people in our family. We don’t want to run the risk of losing anybody else.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says small household gatherings are an “important contributor” to the rise in COVID-19 cases. The CDC advised that holidays be celebrated among the members in a household and noted that college students who live away are not considered household members.

“In-person gatherings that bring together family members or friends from different households, including college students returning home, pose varying levels of risk,” the agency said.

Kate Feuille said her family is planning a small, outdoor Thanksgiving, but the situation where she lives, in El Paso, is worrisome. Cases in the area have surged and overwhelmed hospitals.

Still, she’s hoping the weather is nice so the family can have a physically distanced celebration outdoors. Feuille said her family is still working out how to get her son home from college safely. This year, instead of worrying about throwing a more grand Thanksgiving, she’s planning something more scaled down.

“The idea of making this big meal to come together as a family doesn’t seem that special right now,” Feuille said.

Alternative plans

Isolating completely for the holidays isn’t the only option, health experts say.

“We need to celebrate after everything everyone has been through for the past year,” McDeavitt said. “If we could just get enough people paying attention to the holidays and being careful, then my hope is we can keep the holidays from becoming a major super-spreader event.”

McDeavitt said this holiday season, people should consider meeting virtually, celebrating only with those in their households, having carefully planned events with masks and distancing, or gathering only with those in their “bubble.” In the holiday bubble, as he described it, everyone involved would need to agree to follow strict health precautions, self-quarantine if possible, get tested for the virus and avoid contact with people outside of the bubble.

“Once you’re in your bubble, everybody comes in, everybody stays, nobody leaves and you don’t have neighbors over for drinks,” McDeavitt said.

Being away from family and friends during the holidays can have mental health consequences.

“If you want to be totally safe, you would just hole up in your house and never see another human being,” said Catherine Troisi, an infectious disease epidemiologist at UTHealth School of Public Health in Houston. “Well, that’s probably not even possible, but also not real good for your mental health.”

Even in normal times, the holiday season is “probably one of the most difficult times of the year for people” said Austin-based psychotherapist Grace Dowd.

“I think people are starting to really feel the psychological implications of COVID and some of that loneliness and isolation that’s being brought out,” Dowd said.

Dowd said while it can be the season of joy, people can also feel lonely and be reminded of family or friends who aren’t around. If someone is looking for community, they might not be able to visit family, but they could meet virtually or visit friends in their area while following precautions, Dowd said.

“I think we’re going to have to get a lot more creative this year around what the holidays look like, and I think coming to terms with [how] they may not look like how they looked in the past and mentally preparing for that,” Dowd said.

Pfizer vaccine is 95% effective, company to seek FDA approval within days

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The coronavirus vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech is 95% effective at preventing COVID-19, the companies announced Wednesday (Nov. 18). They plan on seeking regulatory approval “within days.”

Last week, Pfizer announced that an early analysis revealed its vaccine to be more than 90% effective at preventing an infection, greatly exceeding public health experts’ expectations, Live Science reported. Since then, enough participants in the trial have become infected with the virus for a final analysis.

This final analysis was based on 170 participants who developed COVID-19. Of those participants, 162 of them were given a placebo — a saline solution that had no impact on preventing infection — and eight were given the vaccine. The results were consistent across different age groups, genders, races and ethnicities, according to the statement. For example, in people over the age of 65, who are at high risk of getting severe COVID-19, efficacy was over 94%.

The analysis also found that 10 of the COVID-19 cases were severe; nine of the severe cases were among those who received a placebo and one was in a person who received the vaccine.

An external independent data monitoring committee did not report any serious safety concerns in participants who received the vaccine. It was generally “well tolerated” and most side effects such as fatigue and headache resolved quickly, according to the statement. Now, the companies have gathered enough safety data to submit for an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) from the FDA and plan to do so “within days,” according to the statement. They also plan to submit their data to other regulatory agencies globally and to submit data to a peer-reviewed journal.

These results are on par with Moderna’s candidate vaccine, which demonstrated a 94.5% efficacy in an early analysis of its phase 3 data (they haven’t yet conducted a final analysis), Live Science reported earlier on this week.

Both vaccines were developed using the same technology, one that hasn’t yet been used in any approved vaccines to date. The vaccine uses a genetic messenger called mRNA that prompts the body to create the coronavirus’ “spike protein.” The immune system then learns to recognize the spike protein and builds an arsenal of cells to fight the virus if the person is ever naturally exposed to it.

Pfizer and BioNTech plan to produce up to 50 million doses of its vaccine globally in 2020 and up to 1.3 billion doses of its vaccine by the end of 2021, according to the statement.

The candidate coronavirus vaccine is being tested in a large phase 3 clinical trial that began in late July. The trial will continue for another two years and safety and efficacy data will continue to be collected, the companies said. “These achievements highlight the potential of mRNA as a new drug class,” Dr. Uğur Şahin, the CEO and Co-founder of BioNTech, said in the statement.

Industries seeking remote employees into 2021

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Back in March, we saw almost an overnight shift. Companies went from operating in an office to their employees’ homes, and experts say this is not something that is going away any time soon.

Before COVID-19, just 5% of the population was working from home, and now over 40% is working from home according to Flex Jobs.

Career development manager Brie Reynolds with Flex Jobs, a remote job search site, says remote work is only going to grow in the coming months into 2021. She says in the last seven months, they have seen interesting increases in certain career fields looking for employees to work from home or remotely. Here are the top seven to expect in 2021.

  1. Computer and IT
  2. Customer service
  3. Education and training
  4. Accounting and finance
  5. Medical and health
  6. Marketing
  7. Business development and Sales

“If you have any previous remote experience, you want to make sure that you are putting that on your resumes, talking about that in your cover letter, and that can be occasional remote work or 100% full-time remote work,” Reynolds said. “As long as you had that experience, communicating remotely away from other people, using your phone or email or whatever that might be, that can count.”

She said you should have a technology skills section on your resume that shows employers you’re capable of using different systems to successfully work from home.

When should you start applying for remote jobs for 2021?

Reynolds said a big misconception is that hiring slows down during the holidays. She says you should actually start looking and applying now.

She says a lot of job seekers fall off around this time, so there will be less competition, and applying now could land you a job at the start of the new year.

Here’s how tenants facing evictions in Harris County can get help

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Coronavirus has hit people hard in many ways. For some families, that means financial hardship and the threat of eviction looms overhead.

The Texas Eviction Diversion Program is designed to help families in the county who may be struggling with financial hardships and back rent.

Harris County is one of nine counties in Texas testing out the program after receiving Federal Cares Act money for the program. Gulf Coast Community Services Association in Houston received $600,000 to help landlords and tenants.

Attorneys with Lone Star Legal Aid were present in the courtroom on Tuesday morning to help guide tenants through the process and answer any questions during eviction dockets.

“The program will pay up to six months of rent,’ said Jonna Treble with Lone Star Legal Aid, “That’s five months back into the past, as late as April, and one month into the future.’

However, Treble said that things did not go as planned.

“This morning in the last hour we have seen zero takers,” Treble said. “In every single instance, the judge has asked the parties if they are aware of the program which presents a win-win option for landlords and tenants, with the landlords getting up to six months of rent paid back and the tenant gets to stay in their home and gets back on their feet.”

Families have to be in the eviction process to qualify and it is still available.

“The goal here is to make sure the tenant as well as the landlord, once they go thru the process, that at the end of the program it needs to end with a zero balance,” said Amanda Shelton with Gulf Coast Community Services, “That will alleviate some of those hard choices and decisions that many families have been making.”

Extreme person of interest’ identified, remains at-large in shooting death of HPD Sgt. Sean Rios

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HPD said Jason Frank Vazquez is the person who was seen in surveillance video talking to accused murderer Robert Soliz after the deadly shooting.

Houston police have identified the person of interest who is wanted for questioning in connection to the shooting death of Houston Police Sgt. Sean Rios earlier this month.

Houston police said Jason Frank Vazquez, 24, is the person who was seen in surveillance video talking to Robert Soliz after the deadly shooting.

Soliz, 24, is charged with murder. Vazquez has not been charged with a crime at this time, police said.

Rios was shot to death on Nov. 9. According to the probable cause argument made by prosecutors last week, witnesses told police that Soliz and Rios got into a shootout at a business near the Taj Inn Suites just off the North Freeway at about 1:30 p.m. A prosecutor said Soliz was inside the shop shooting at Rios and Rios was firing back at Soliz.

After being wounded, Rios retreated to the motel, where he died.

After the shooting, according to the prosecutor, Soliz drove his car to a transmission shop that belonged to a family member. The prosecutor said he told his family member he was shot at on the freeway and left his car there. Prosecutors said Soliz left the shop with a man in a black Chevy truck, who police have now identified as Vazquez.

Prosecutors said video surveillance captured Soliz and Vazquez talking about the shooting. Prosecutors said the video recorded Soliz saying “my (expletive) jammed,” and “he almost hit me.”

Soliz was taken into custody during a traffic stop on Nov. 10.

Investigators are asking anyone who may have seen or heard anything between the 3900 and 7900 blocks of the North Freeway, north of North Interstate Highway 610 and south of Gulf Bank Road, or know the whereabouts of Vazquez to contact the HPD Special Investigations Unit at 713-308-3600 or Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS.