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HISD reopening playgrounds, allowing outdoor graduations

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District’s mask policy remains in place

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Students in the Houston Independent School District can once again head to the playground during recess and outdoor graduation ceremonies can resume under new guidance released by district officials.

HISD Interim Superintendent Grenita Lathan laid out changes to the district’s Communicable Disease Plan in a letter sent to parents Thursday.

Among the changes are the reopening of playgrounds and the resumption of recess. Outdoor graduation ceremonies with a limited capacity will be allowed this year and some end-of-year celebrations for students will be permitted.

The district’s mask and social-distancing policies, however, have not changed. Both are still required in all schools, buildings, and buses.

The changes are effective immediately.

Source: www.click2houston.com

George Floyd mural in downtown Houston vandalized with racial slur

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A George Floyd mural in downtown Houston was vandalized overnight Thursday.

An unidentified person tagged the painting with a racial slur that read: “(slur) lives don’t matter.” The mural is located at the corner of Chartres and Bell.

“Ignorant people with bad hearts and bad motivations do not give them the power,” said HPD Chief Troy Finner during a press conference at the mural. “Our city has been peaceful. The verdict came in, and it was the right verdict. Some people are upset about it. But one thing, in Houston, we are going to stick together.”

A George Floyd mural in downtown Houston was vandalized overnight Thursday.

In addition to reducing homicides and violent crimes, Finner has often said building trust in the community is also among his department’s top priorities. As the restoration continues and authorities investigate the vandalism, Finner had a message for our community.

“Let’s celebrate who we are. A great diverse sophisticated city and we’re going to show the nation how we stand up. That’s what we should be reflecting on right now. Not the act of one stupid individual,” he said.

The artist behind the mural restored it later that afternoon.

“Knowing that we’re healing and knowing that we’re in pain as a community and to come here and put hate on top of what we don’t need is a reminder of what we are facing, maybe as a nation,” Daniel Anguilu said.

Anguilu said as a person of color he knows what it’s like to be the target of hate and has learned to use art as a means to navigate his way through that.

“It gives you the strength to stand up for what you know is right. Maybe this is bringing us together to learn more from it,” he said.

The mural was created after Third Ward native Floyd was killed by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin last May. This comes after Chauvin was convicted on three charges in the death of Floyd.

Houston police are checking to see if there’s surveillance video that could help them find those responsible. They are also canvassing the area, hoping to talk to anyone who might have seen something.

A George Floyd mural in downtown Houston was vandalized overnight Thursday.
Source: www.click2houston.com

DART GoLink Pilot Program for South Dallas/Fair Park Area Begins April 26

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The Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) South Dallas GoLink program, an on-demand, personalized, curb-to-curb service for areas around South Dallas and Fair Park, begins its six-month pilot program on Monday, April 26.

South Dallas GoLink Zone

Working with the South Dallas/Fair Park (SDFP) Transportation Initiative group, a survey of 200 residents of zip codes 75210 and 75215 was completed that identified concerns that the pilot demonstration hopes to rectify.

Through the survey, the SDFP group noted that the South Dallas-Fair Park neighborhood has extensive bus and rail service, but that bus travel within the neighborhood can be difficult for very short trips, particularly to the recreation center and grocery stores. The area is currently served by four DART rail stations, MLK, Jr. Station, Fair Park Station, Hatcher Station, and Cedars Station, as well as 10 bus routes.

Already available in Western Carrollton, Farmers Branch, Southeast Garland, Glenn Heights, Inland Port, South Irving, Kleberg/Rylie, Lake Highlands, Lakewood, North Dallas, Park Cities, Legacy West, Far North Plano, North Central Plano/Chase Oaks, and Rowlett, the GoLink pilot for South Dallas and Fair Park will cost $50,000, includes one dedicated accessible taxi, supplemented by Uber Pool, and covers an 8.5-sq. mile area.

Source: dart.org

A hospital in Houston said it could fire staff if they refuse to get the COVID-19 vaccine

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A hospital in Houston is mandating vaccines for all its staff, saying they could be fired if they refuse to get the jab without having reasonable exemptions.

This could make it the first large hospital in the US to make the move, a spokesperson for the hospital told.

Marc Boom, CEO of Houston Methodist Hospital, announced the policy in an email to managers Wednesday.

It is rolling out the policy to managers and new hires first, before expanding it to the hospital’s roughly 26,000 total workforces, per an FAQ sheet attached to the email.

“As part of Houston Methodist management, we must lead by example and get vaccinated ourselves,” Boom wrote in the email, seen by Insider.

He said that around 83% of employees have already been vaccinated, including 95% of management staff and all the company’s executives.

“As we move closer to announcing mandatory vaccinations for all employees, we need you to go first — to lead by example and show our employees how important getting vaccinated is,” Boom told managers.

He said that managers have until April 15 to receive at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

“If not, we will follow HR policy on non-compliance,” he added.

The FAQ sheet said that staff would lose their jobs if they didn’t get the job, but that the hospital would allow religious and medical exemptions “in very rare cases.”

“We don’t know yet if a booster [shot] will be required annually but if it is, that will also be mandatory,” the hospital wrote in the FAQ sheet.

Boom said that managers would soon receive a list of all the employees they manage who haven’t yet received a dose of the vaccine.

Staff vaccine mandates are legal, and CEOs are eyeing them up

As the vaccine rollout ramps up across the US, with President Joe Biden eyeing May 1 as the day all US adults will become eligible for the shot, some employers are mulling making COVID-19 vaccines mandatory for staff.

Houston Methodist Hospital said it is legal for private companies under state and federal employment laws.

This is backed up by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which says employers can legally require workers to get a COVID-19 vaccine or ban them from the office if they don’t. Insider spoke to six labor and employment lawyers about what rights employees have.

In a West Munroe poll of 150 C-Suite executives in January, 51% of executives said they would require employees to receive the vaccine before returning to work. Executives from East and West Coast companies said they were more likely to mandate the vaccine than employers in the Midwest and south.

Some top UK firms also plan to make COVID-19 vaccinations mandatory for staff through “no jab, no job” employment contracts, Insider’s Kate Duffy reported.

Source: www.businessinsider.com

Exclusive interview with Kim Ogg District Attorney

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Interview with Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg

Excavation company agrees to increase employee training on dangerous trenching hazards prior to 2021 construction season

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Before they fill the first bucket of dirt this construction season, Wagner Construction Inc. will train employees on trenching and excavation hazards, develop detailed site-specific safety plans, and has employed a full-time safety manager to protect workers from deadly excavation hazards.

Wagner Construction committed to changing its safety procedures and training in a comprehensive settlement agreement with the U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration following three North Dakota job site inspections in 2019 and 2020 that found employees of the company exposed to excavation hazards.

The agreement requires the Minnesota-based excavation company to pay a $380,000 penalty and to provide immediate training on trenching and excavation hazards to job site employees, managers, and supervisors; hire a third-party safety consultant; provide OSHA with the addresses of all of its 2021 job sites to allow inspection for compliance with trenching standards; form a corporate safety committee, and address safety issues during weekly supervisor meetings. The company hired a full-time safety and compliance manager in July 2020 and has agreed to purchase new trench safety equipment this season.

“Excavation and trenching are some of the most hazardous operations in construction. OSHA worked with Wagner to address safety issues found on their North Dakota job sites,” said OSHA Area Director Scott Overson in Bismarck, North Dakota. “Preparing and executing job site safety plans that include sloping, shoring and shielding trenches can prevent cave-ins and worker injuries.”

OSHA is collaborating with the National Utility Contractors Association and the North American Excavation Shoring Association for the sixth annual Trench Safety Stand-Down Week, June 14-18, 2021. The stand-down raises awareness of the dangers of trenching and excavation and promotes the use of protective systems, such as sloping, shoring, and shielding, through webinars, presentations, and individual company safety training.

OSHA’s trenching and excavation webpage provides additional information on trenching hazards and solutions. including a safety video.

 

Source: www.osha.gov

Texas Oil And Gas Production Statistics For February 2021

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Crude oil and natural gas production as reported to the Railroad Commission of Texas for February 2021 came from 167,804 oil wells and 84,748 gas wells.

The RRC reports that from March 2020 to February 2021, total Texas reported production was 1.3 billion barrels of crude oil and 10.0 trillion cubic feet of total gas. Crude oil production reported by the RRC is limited to oil produced from oil leases and does not include condensate, which is reported separately by the RRC.

For additional oil and gas production statistics, including the ranking of each Texas County by crude oil, total gas and condensate production, visit the RRC’s website at https://www.rrc.texas.gov/oil-and-gas/research-and-statistics/production-data/texas-monthly-oil-gas-production/.

 

TABLE 1 – February 2021: Statewide Production*

PRODUCT PRELIMINARY REPORTED TOTAL VOLUME AVERAGE DAILY PRODUCTION
Crude Oil 82,391,417 BBLS (barrels) 2,942,551 BBLS
Natural Gas 594,736,674 mcf (thousand cubic feet) 21,240,596 mcf

* These are preliminary figures based on production volumes reported by operators and will be updated as late and corrected production reports are received.

 

TABLE 2 – February 2020: Statewide Production

PRODUCT UPDATED REPORTED TOTAL VOLUME UPDATED AVERAGE DAILY PRODUCTION PRELIMINARY REPORTED TOTAL VOLUME PRELIMINARY AVERAGE DAILY PRODUCTION
Crude Oil 131,796,046 BBLS 4,544,691 BBLS 98,958,487 BBLS 3,412,362 BBLS
Natural Gas 876,002,094 mcf 30,206,969 mcf 711,472,050 mcf 24,533,519 mcf

 

TABLE 3 – February 2021: Texas Top 10 Crude Oil Producing Counties Ranked by Preliminary Production

RANK COUNTY CRUDE OIL (BBLS)
1. MIDLAND 11,403,408
2. MARTIN 8,046,078
3. HOWARD 5,673,237
4. REEVES 5,212,108
5. KARNES 4,717,554
6. UPTON 4,127,591
7. LOVING 3,646,923
8. LA SALLE 2,876,499
9. WARD 2,749,922
10. GLASSCOCK 2,548,445

 

TABLE 4 – February 2021: Texas Top 10 Total Gas (Gas Well Gas & Casinghead) Producing Counties Ranked by Preliminary Production

RANK COUNTY TOTAL GAS (MCF)
1. REEVES 62,519,396
2. WEBB 42,634,684
3. MIDLAND 33,517,721
4. PANOLA 28,173,128
5. CULBERSON 24,342,009
6. LOVING 23,482,315
7. TARRANT 22,317,285
8. LA SALLE 18,676,220
9. REAGAN 17,733,378
10. MARTIN 16,845,973

 

TABLE 5 – February 2021: Texas Top 10 Total Condensate Producing Counties Ranked by Preliminary Production

RANK COUNTY CONDENSATE (BBLS)
1. REEVES 4,715,249
2. LOVING 2,461,465
3. CULBERSON 1,932,139
4. DE WITT 913,809
5. DIMMIT 722,606
6. KARNES 620,434
7. WEBB 551,826
8. LIVE OAK 251,468
9. WARD 216,855
10. LA SALLE 142,060

Source: www.rrc.state.tx.us

Publicación 1199 de HOUSTON – Revista Digital 22 de abril – 28 de abril / 2021

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 22 de abril – 28 de abril / 2021

Apr 22 – Apr 28, 2021 | Weather

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¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

Mantente informado.

Click on the map to view details or click here: QOHW0422

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Publicación 1199 de DALLAS – Revista Digital 22 de abril – 28 de abril / 2021

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de DALLAS de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 22 de abril – 28 de abril / 2021