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Texas Supreme Court ruling gives life to proposed $30 billion dollar Dallas-to-Houston bullet train

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For nearly six years, Texas Central pushed for the construction of a Dallas-to-Houston bullet train to connect the two populous cities.

The proposed high-speed rail would cost $30 billion to build and would shuttle passengers between Dallas and Houston in just 90 minutes.

Plans for the bullet train hit a snag last year when former Texas Central CEO Carlos Aguilar suddenly resigned, though.

Aguilar, who was the project leader, stepped down shortly before a major Texas Supreme Court ruling on the train.

When Aguilar resigned, it was as though the hope for the bullet train walked out with him.

Despite Aguilar’s resignation, though, the Texas Supreme Court granted the train developers eminent domain.

In a 5-3 vote, justices ruled that Texas Central does have the power of an eminent domain, which gives the company the legal right to force landowners to sell their property to them.

In other words, Texas Central can now begin acquiring land to build the rail upon.

We are appreciative to the Texas Supreme Court for their time and consideration of this important issue as we continue work on this innovative high-speed passenger train rail,” Texas Central said in a statement following the ruling.

The court ruling was a massive development for Texas Central. Given approval to acquire land to build, the project appears to have life.

For the first time, the gears are in motion to build a Dallas-to-Houston bullet train.

Constructing it won’t be cheap, but its $30 billion dollar price tag is well worth it to the developers, who believe it can be an economic boon for Texas.

The proposed bullet train between Dallas and Houston could pump more than $36 billion into the state economy over the next 25 years, including more than $2.5 billion in local and state taxes, according to a study commissioned by the private firm developing the project.

Still, even with its money-making potential, there are still a few obstacles in the way of Texas Central finalizing the train.

Among those obstacles are those that live along the plotted railroad. Many Texas communities have already expressed concerns about the noise and traffic that the train would bring.

As we know, money talks, so perhaps Texas Central will make residents much more convincing offers now that it has been granted eminent domain.

Should the train be made, it would be huge for Texas. Connecting the two major cities would create a lot of jobs and help bolster a Texas economy that is on the rise.

It would also make the trip between Dallas and Houston much lighter. Nearly 100,000 Texans, sometimes called “super-commuters,” travel back and forth between Houston and Dallas/Fort Worth more than once a week.

Additionally, thousands of college students travel between the two cities each year.

The approximately 240-mile high-speed rail line would offer travelers a much faster alternative- condensing the journey to just 90 minutes. This would include departures every 30 minutes during peak periods each day, and every hour during off-peak periods, according to the Texas Central.

For more information on Texas Central and the proposed bullet train, please visit the official website here.

Source: newsbreak

Jan 19 – Jan 25, 2023 | Weather

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¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

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¡Que Onda! Magazine Houston – edición 1255

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la edición 1255 de la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda! Magazine.

Del 19 de enero al 26 de enero del 2023

 

Top 10 Celebrity-owned Restaurants From Across the U.S.

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From Eminem’s famous Mom’s Spaghetti to Ludacris’ Chicken + Beer, celebrities are continuously venturing into the world of cuisine. With signature recipes and heavy-weight brand names, these celebrity-owned restaurants are taking the lead in the market. Imagine sitting down for dinner with your family, and Channing Tatum approaches your table with a bowl of soup. Who wouldn’t want that?

Ludacris: Chicken + Beer

Named after his 2003 album Chicken-n-Beer, the singer and actor own this four-star restaurant, Chicken + Beer in Hartsfield-Jackson Airport at Gate D15. Luda (real name Chris Bridges) picked the precise location during the airport’s auction, and he refers to the moment as “the epitome of success.” Luda’s close friendship with Daniel Halpern, CEO, and co-founder of Jackmont Hospitality Inc., also played a part in choosing the restaurant location.

The meal combo is famous among travelers and is also a favorite for the Atlanta-based rapper. Ludacris is also particular about the beer that the restaurant serves. You will only find local beers on the drinks menu. Other meals include collard greens, shrimp, and pimento cheese.

Channing Tatum: Saints and Sinners

Aside from seafood, the restaurant also serves American and Cajun dishes, and fresh creole that will have you going back for more. Saints and Sinners serves food until 9.00 p.m. Afterward, the restaurant turns into a nightclub where it famously gets its alias, “Bachelorette Headquarters.”

The eatery is best known for its bottle service and dancing. If you’re looking for where to get your jig on, then head to the French Quarter. The restaurant allows reservations for small and large groups using the OpenTable platform. You can access their premium bottle service after booking one of the VIP areas.

Danny Trejo: Trejo’s Tacos

The famous Machete actor is taking another leading role as a restaurant owner. Trejo’s Tacos are shacks spread out across Los Angeles, and the first restaurant opened in 2015 taking the place of a former Taco Bell. Trejo’s Tacos offers a variety of vegan gourmet and, of course, tacos. Additionally, Trejo has published a cookbook featuring 75 recipes, including his signature taco recipes.

Ayesha Curry: International Smoke

Does the name Curry ring a bell? If you guessed Stephen Curry, then you are right. Ayesha Curry is the wife of the legendary basketball star Steph Curry. She is also a renowned best-selling cookbook author and restaurant owner. Located in San Francisco and Las Vegas, International Smoke is famous for the league of celebrities it draws in. For example, former U.S. President Barack Obama had a meal there in 2019.

The restaurant is a collaboration between Ayesha and award-winning chef Michael Mina. Not only do they serve quality food, but the restaurant’s ambiance and decor are inviting. A reservation is required beforehand. You can use the restaurant’s website to make a reservation in either of the two locations.

Mark, Donnie, and Paul Wahlberg: Wahlburgers

Wahlburgers is a popular burger joint started by Mark Wahlberg and his brothers, Paul and Donnie (a member of New Kids on the Block), in 2015. The burger joint catapulted to being a favorite among many, prompting the trio to expand the restaurant to 30 locations across the U.S. Additionally, the restaurant’s popularity grew after A&E featured a reality series based on the family-run burger joint. The show is currently on its 10th season.

Jay-Z:40/40 Club

Jay-Z might have 99 problems, but a restaurant isn’t one. The multiple Grammy award-winning hip-hop artist is the owner of the most exclusive and extravagant club in New York, 40/40. The name 40/40 is a reference to a record set by four baseball players who stole 40 passes and hit 40 home runs in one season.

40/40 club is all things lavish and alluring. The club features a restaurant serving game-day-inspired meals, delicious entrées, and a lineup of fine liquor.

Business hours run from 5 p.m. to 12 a.m. on Monday to Thursday, 5 p.m. to 4 a.m. on Friday and Saturday, and 12:45 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. on Sunday. Happy hours are from 5 to 7 p.m. on Monday through Thursday and 5 to 9 p.m. on Fridays.

Francis Ford Coppola: Café Zoetrope

If you happen to make a trip to the Bay Area, head to San Francisco for Francis Ford’s Cafe Zoetrope. The restaurant is Italian-themed and also includes a wine bar. Hollywood photos and Coppola family memorabilia grace the restaurant. Café Zoetrope offers limited indoor dining, take-out, and outdoor dining, and is only open during particular hours.

Robert De Niro: Nobu

Robert De Niro is best known for his action-packed star appearances in movies. However, on the side, De Niro is a famous restauranteur dating back to 1994. Along with film producer Meir Teper and celebrity chef Nobuyuki Matsuhisa, De Niro opened Nobu, a Peruvian and Japanese fusion restaurant.

De Niro has grown his restaurant franchise to 50 cities, including Budapest, Moscow, and Honolulu. If you want a taste of black cod with miso, then Nobu is the place to be.

Toby Keith: I Love This Bar & Grill

You will love this bar and grill if you love country music. Named after Toby Keith’s 2003 single “I Love This Bar,” the restaurant serves sandwiches, steaks, seafood, salad, and live country music. I Love This Bar & Grill’s menu has an emphasis on Southern food and, if you’re lucky, you may get to see Keith performing live. You can find the restaurant in three locations, all in Oklahoma City—Keith’s home state.

Michael Jordan: Michael Jordan’s Steakhouse

If you’re looking for a fine dining experience, then Michael Jordan’s steakhouse is the place to be. With three locations in the United States, the restaurant offers classy and stylish steaks and seafood. Jordan opened his first restaurant in 1993 in Chicago. The restaurant’s striking success led to the basketball star expanding to two more locations in Connecticut and Washington.

Source: ask

State Lawmakers Should Break the 2023 Tax Cut Fever Before It’s Too Late

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Despite mixed economic signals for 2023, including a possible recession, many state lawmakers plan to use temporary budget surpluses to forge ahead with permanent, regressive tax cuts that would disproportionately benefit the wealthy at the expense of low- and middle-income households. These cuts would put state finances in a precarious position and further erode public investments in education, transportation and health, all of which are crucial for creating inclusive, vibrant communities where everyone, not just the rich, can achieve economic security and thrive. In the event of an economic downturn, these results would be accelerated and amplified.

Instead of doubling down on regressive tax cuts, state policymakers should use this opportunity to build more equitable tax systems that don’t ask the most of those families who have the least, and that can withstand potential economic turbulence in 2023 and beyond. They can do this by:

• Rejecting expensive, permanent tax cuts that provide an outsized benefit to the rich and do little for low- and middle-income families.

• Addressing urgent issues like college affordability, preschool access, the climate crisis, and our outdated infrastructure by raising new revenues from the wealthy and large corporations.

• Creating or expanding targeted, refundable tax credits for low- and moderate-income Americans facing financial hardship and economic uncertainty.

Short-sighted, permanent tax cuts come at a high cost and too often benefit the wealthy

Last year brought a string of problematic, regressive tax cuts and many lawmakers continue to march toward less equitable and adequate state taxation in 2023. Some of the many misguided and often reckless efforts to cut taxes that are already underway this year include:

▸Efforts to deeply cut or continue to chip away at state income taxes. At least 24 states are weighing cuts to personal income tax rates this session. For instance, lawmakers in Arkansas, Montana, and Utah are all considering cuts to their existing top rates. A handful of other states (including Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Nebraska) are exploring ways to accelerate regressive tax cuts that went into effect in previous years. But efforts to chip away at state income taxes go beyond rate reductions. In at least five states (Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Vermont, and Wisconsin) lawmakers are discussing policies that would further exempt or, in some cases, completely remove some forms of retirement income from the state’s income tax base—policies that will shortchange younger families and grow rapidly in cost as our population ages.

▸Efforts to enact flat income tax ratesLawmakers in North Dakota and Ohio are discussing proposals that would shift their graduated income tax structures to flat rates. This recent flurry of interest in flat taxes is misguided, as ITEP explains in a new brief. In short, flat taxes all but guarantee inequitable state and local taxation on the whole without bringing any of the promised economic or administrative benefits touted by proponents.

▸Efforts to fully eliminate state income taxes. Lawmakers in Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, and West Virginia are expressing interest in fully eliminating their personal income taxes—a step not taken since Alaska struck oil at Prudhoe Bay more than 40 years ago. While some lawmakers now start the conversation by discussing smaller tax cuts at the top that sound less alarming, they continue to maneuver toward full income tax elimination. These extreme proposals would decimate funding for vital services and institutions and give these states some of the most regressive tax codes in the country, with low- and middle-income families paying far higher tax rates than the wealthy.

▸Efforts to cut property taxesAt least a dozen states are weighing property tax cuts this session. The proposals range from property tax freezes and caps to proposed property tax rebates. Iowa lawmakers, for instance, following a long string of income tax cutting, are now setting their sights on eroding the property tax instead.

All these tax cuts would make it far more difficult for states to provide good schools, high-quality health care, efficient and modern infrastructure, and other public services that are indispensable for thriving communities. Moreover, the long-run outcome of many of these tax cuts is likely to be a shift toward higher taxes on those least able to pay. States with low or nonexistent personal income taxes tend to be among the highest-tax states for the poor because of their higher reliance on sales and excise taxes. The impact of those more regressive taxes is also acute for people of color, an outsized share of whom are low-income households due to historic and ongoing discrimination and marginalization.

States should shore up state finances to meet public needs

While working-class Americans struggled through the pandemic and persistent inflation, the uber-wealthy saw their combined wealth increase from just under $3 trillion in March 2020 to $4.48 trillion in November 2022. More than one in four dollars of wealth in the U.S. is held by the 0.25 percent of households with a net worth over $30 million; these families hold tens of billions in wealth in every single state and trillions in wealth in some.

Despite this abundance of extreme wealth, far too many state and local governments lack the revenues they need to invest deeply in critical economic and social priorities. By raising taxes on the wealthy instead of cutting them, states can better position themselves to rise to some of the biggest challenges facing Americans today including the unacceptably high cost of preschool and college, the climate crisis, and our inadequate physical and social infrastructure.

In addition to being extremely popular, tax increases on wealthy families are also sorely needed to help address one of the greatest tax injustices of our time: the fact that nearly every state requires low- and middle-income households to pay a greater share of their income in taxes than high-income households.

Some options available to strengthen revenue streams and advance economic and racial equity include:

• Increasing personal income taxes on high-income earners. States can raise rates on top incomes, eliminate tax subsidies for investment income, reform itemized deductions, and strengthen taxes on income derived from wealth, such as capital gains.

• Taxing corporate income. States can increase corporate income tax rates, reduce tax avoidance by adopting combined reporting, adopt corporate minimum taxes, and reduce tax subsidies for profitable corporations.

• Strengthening taxation of property and wealth. A growing group of states has moved in recent years to levy higher rates on the purchase of expensive real estate properties. Other worthwhile ideas include more progressive property taxation in general and enacting or reforming estate and inheritance taxes.

Wealthy families should be expected to contribute more to funding the public services that are essential to the functioning of the society in which they were able to amass their wealth. Massachusetts voters provided an excellent blueprint for other states to follow in 2023 with their approval of the state’s “millionaires’ tax” last November. Carrying that momentum to other states would put our nation on a much stronger footing to address the challenges facing American families today.

Targeted, refundable tax credits boost the incomes of low- and middle-income families

The most essential function of state and local tax systems is raising the revenue needed to fund services and institutions essential to broadly shared economic prosperity. It is also vital that states and localities raise this revenue in a manner that is equitable. To that end, proven policies like state Child Tax Credits (CTCs) and Earned Income Tax Credits (EITCs) have immense potential to curb some of the worst unfairness in state tax laws while bolstering the economic security of low- and middle-income families and setting up the next generation of Americans to succeed. Many states have expanded or improved these credits in recent years, and that trend looks to continue into 2023.

Much of the recent interest in state CTCs was spurred by the temporary expansion of the federal CTC in effect in 2021. That reform drastically reduced child poverty, and its expiration affords states a prime opportunity to build on the success of the credit. Currently, 10 states have some form of CTC while many are considering one. Almost all states could cut their child poverty rates by 25 percent with a refundable state Child Tax Credit of $2,000 or less and a 20 percent boost for children under 6 years old.

States can, and should, expand their EITCs as well, which boosts low-paid workers’ incomes and improve tax equity by offsetting some of the heavily regressive sales and excise taxes they pay. Much like the CTC, the EITC is proven to improve health and financial outcomes for families over the long run, though there are some key ways in which these credits can be reformed, such as by strengthening the benefits available to workers without children in the home, immigrants filing with Individual Taxpayers Identification Numbers (ITINs) and extremely low-income families.

2023 brings immense opportunities for states wise enough to seize them

Recent state revenue growth presents lawmakers with an incredible opportunity to strengthen the investments that undergird our economy and society. Rather than squander those revenues on tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, states should place their most economically insecure families at the heart of their decision-making. Lawmakers should turn to proven policies like Child Tax Credits and Earned Income Tax Credits, and strengthen state revenue systems through reforms that ask more of those wealthy families who have fared extraordinarily well in recent years. The upcoming year brings immense economic uncertainty but with the right set of fiscal reforms, and a little luck, states have a genuine opportunity to end the year on a much stronger footing than they started.

Source: itep

MOCA Opens 2023 Exhibition Series, Expressions! With a High-tech Exhibit to Honor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Black History Month

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City of Houston

Mayor’s Office

 

 

The City of Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs (MOCA) will open its 2023 exhibition series Expressions! with the exhibit, “Steppin’ Back in Time: Houston in Retrospect.”  Houston Informer Foundation, Inc. (HIFI), originated this photography exhibition and virtual reality experience celebrating Black-owned businesses and community leaders of color in Houston.

The exhibit covers the years 1893 through the 1950s as documented by Houston Informer and Texas Freeman newspapers and includes a high-tech twist to honor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Black History Month.

“I look forward to exhibitions such as these that allow us to take a closer look at the history of the African American community, black-owned businesses and community leaders documented in a newspaper like The Houston Informer and Texas Freeman, considered to be the oldest Black newspaper published west of the Mississippi,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner. “These exhibitions give us a better understanding of how Houston came to be and how its residents express themselves.  I am excited for the next exhibitions by local artists and organizations that will follow suit and tackle the theme of Expression from different lenses; a true picture of the diverse city we call home.”

The exhibition will be held in the City Hall rotunda from January 18 to February 28, 2023. It will open with a ribbon-cutting and reception at Noon on Wednesday, January 18.

“The exhibition is the perfect opener for the series,” stated Necole S. Irvin, MOCA Director. “It highlights self-expression and the African American residents who made a difference in Houston, fought racism, and overcame other barriers.  We are proud to partner with HIFI and the Office of Business Opportunity to lift up these important stories.”

Expressions!, a series of exhibitions curated by Community Liaison Victor Ancheta, will continue throughout the year with five other planned exhibitions.

 

Formula 1 update on the 2023 calendar

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Formula 1 can confirm that the 2023 season will consist of 23 races.

That means the season will kick off with the Bahrain Grand Prix on March 5, and finish up in Abu Dhabi on November 26, with the brand new Las Vegas Grand Prix joining the calendar a week before the season finale.

The full 2023 F1 calendar can be viewed below.

2023 F1 calendar

 

Date Grand Prix Venue
February 23-25 Pre-season testing Sakhir
March 5 Bahrain Sakhir
March 19 Saudi Arabia Jeddah
April 2 Australia Melbourne
April 30 Azerbaijan Baku
May 7 Miami Miami
May 21 Emilia Romagna Imola
May 28 Monaco Monaco
June 4 Spain Barcelona
June 18 Canada Montreal
July 2 Austria Spielberg
July 9 United Kingdom Silverstone
July 23 Hungary Budapest
July 30 Belgium Spa
August 27 Netherlands Zandvoort
September 3 Italy Monza
September 17 Singapore Singapore
September 24 Japan Suzuka
October 8 Qatar Lusail
October 22 USA Austin
October 29 Mexico Mexico City
November 5 Brazil Sao Paulo
November 18 Las Vegas Las Vegas*
November 26 Abu Dhabi Yas Marina
*Subject to FIA circuit homologation

Source: formula1

Madonna coming to Houston for her Celebration tour

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Madonna is coming to Houston.

The music icon’s 35-city global tour, produced by Live Nation, will stop at Toyota Center on Sept. 13.

The tour will also make stops in Dallas at American Airlines Center on Sept. 18, and at Moody Center in Austin on Sept. 21.

“The Celebration Tour will take us on Madonna’s artistic journey through four decades and pays respect to the city of New York where her career in music began,” a news release about the tour reads.

“I am excited to explore as many songs as possible in hopes to give my fans the show they have been waiting for,” Madonna is quoted as saying in the news release.

“The Celebration Tour will offer a one-of-a-kind experience with special guest Bob the Drag Queen a.k.a. Caldwell Tidicue across all dates on the global tour,” the news release said.

Tickets go on sale starting Friday, Jan. 20. at 10 a.m. local time at madonna.com/tour. Citi cardmembers will have access to presale tickets beginning Tuesday, Jan. 17 at 2 p.m. local time through Thursday, Jan. 19 at 6 p.m. local time through the Citi Entertainment program.

THE CELEBRATION TOUR WILL FEATURE FOUR DECADES OF GREATEST HITS

THE CELEBRATION TOUR NORTH AMERICAN DATES:

Sat Jul 15 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena

Tue Jul 18 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena

Sat Jul 22 – Phoenix, AZ – Footprint Center

Tue Jul 25 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena

Thu Jul 27 – Tulsa, OK – BOK Center

Sun Jul 30 – St. Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center

Wed Aug 02 – Cleveland, OH – Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse

Sat Aug 05 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena

Mon. Aug 07 – Pittsburgh, PA – PPG Paints Arena

Wed Aug 09 – Chicago, IL – United Center

Sun Aug 13 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena

Sat Aug 19 – Montreal, QC – Centre Bell

Wed Aug 23 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden

Thu Aug 24 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden

Wed Aug 30 – Boston, MA – TD Garden

Sat Sep 02 – Washington, DC – Capital One Arena

Tue Sep 05 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena

Thu Sep 07 – Tampa, FL – Amalie Arena

Sat Sep 09 – Miami, FL – Miami-Dade Arena

Wed Sep 13 – Houston, TX – Toyota Center

Mon Sep 18 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center

Thu Sep 21 – Austin, TX – Moody Center ATX

Wed Sep 27 – Los Angeles, CA – Crypto.com Arena

Wed Oct 04 – San Francisco, CA – Chase Center

Sat Oct 07 – Las Vegas, NV – T-Mobile Arena

THE CELEBRATION TOUR EUROPE DATES:

Sat Oct 14 – London, UK – The O2

Sat Oct 21 – Antwerp, BE – Sportpaleis

Wed. Oct. 25 – Copenhagen, DK – Royal Arena

Sat Oct 28 – Stockholm, SE – Tele2

Wed Nov 01 – Barcelona, ES – Palau Sant Jordi

Mon Nov 06 – Lisbon, PT – Altice Arena

Sun Nov 12 – Paris, FR – Accor Arena

Mon Nov 13 – Paris, FR – Accor Arena

Wed Nov 15 – Cologne, DE – Lanxess Arena

Thu Nov 23 – Milan, IT – Mediolanum Forum

Tue Nov 28 – Berlin, DE – Mercedes-Benz Arena

Fri Dec 1 – Amsterdam, NL – Ziggo Dome

Source: click2houston

CRIME ‘Beef in the club’ | Sheriff Gonzalez says deadly club shooting could have stemmed from argument

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The Harris County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a deadly shooting that left at least one person dead and four others hurt.

It happened just after 2 a.m. Sunday in the parking lot of a shopping center on FM 1960 near Champion Forest Drive in northwest Harris County.

According to a preliminary investigation, Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said a vehicle pulled up to the club when multiple people got out and started firing at anyone standing outside.

“It looks like over 50 shots were fired here, which is a very scary situation considering there’s a mobile food truck here and the number of patrons outside,” Gonzalez said.

At this time, Gonzalez said they believe the victims were two men and three women. All five were taken to the hospital where one of the men was pronounced dead. The sheriff did not have an update on the condition of the other four. Gonzalez also said they believe at least one AK-47 was used in the shooting.

HCSO Homicide is now looking for witnesses and surveillance footage to help them identify any possible suspects.

Gonzalez said he thinks the shooters may have been targeting specific people who were coming out of the club.

“If the information is correct that someone exited from a vehicle and began opening fire, that’s probably a good indicator that they were coming with purpose — maybe targeting somebody. Maybe there was some sort of beef in the club, we just don’t know for sure yet,” Gonzalez said.

Those with information are asked to contact the Harris County Sheriff’s Office or Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS.

Source: khou

Collaborative health initiative to help Houstonians prevent, better manage chronic diseases

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City Council approves $1M to partner with TSU
to develop the Center of Transformative Health
On Wednesday, Mayor Sylvester Turner and Houston City Council approved $1 million over three years to fund the establishment of the Texas Southern University’s Center of Transformative Health. The mission of the center is to use evidence-based practices to reconstruct, strengthen and enhance the conditions that promote health. We achieve this by building community capacity to ensure equitable health outcomes for all through research, engagement, and education.

The initiative will represent a collaboration between TSU and the Houston Health Department. The center will help design an array of health projects giving at-risk Houstonians more opportunities to prevent or better manage chronic illnesses such as diabetes, obesity, heart disease, and mental health.

Statistics have shown that Black and Brown communities and people living in urban settings were hit hardest and suffered the most during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Through the Complete Communities Health Equity Response (HER) Task Force, my administration witnessed firsthand how the pandemic was a magnifier for common health problems underscoring the need for a public health agenda beyond COVID and necessitating ongoing and intentional planning to prevent and manage disease occurrence in order to transform lives and reduce the impact on Houston’s economic competitiveness,” stated Mayor Sylvester Turner.

The agreement unanimously approved by City Council will enable the center to draw up blueprints and seek additional federal, state, and private funding for projects that increase access to health education, disease self-management classes, healthy food options, health screenings for chronic diseases and mental health resources in primarily underserved communities.

The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the need to tackle chronic illnesses, especially in Black and Hispanic communities. The two minorities were hit the hardest by the pandemic. People with chronic diseases are at higher risk of severe illness or death due to COVID-19 infection.

Obesity places these populations further at risk of chronic diseases. Thirty-nine percent of adults in the Houston area are obese with Hispanics at 43.5 percent and Blacks at 41.2 percent.

The initiative will take into consideration the lessons learned during the pandemic and prepare TSU to assist the health department in future public health emergencies. Focus areas for the center will include:

  • Infectious Diseases and Molecular Genetics
  • Preventive Health
  • Pandemic Surveillance and Response
  • Maternal and Child Health
  • Nutritional Sciences and Dietetics
  • Mental Health, and
  • Educational Programs.

The university will use a research-based approach to assist with public health disaster response through planning, outreach and training exercises. It will also provide clinical laboratory support and sponsor community symposiums and large-scale community engagement and health-related events.