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Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs Awards $90,900 to Artists and Organizations Promoting Tourism and Resilience

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Artist Thomas Tran
The City of Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs (MOCA) is awarding $90,900 in grants to nine individuals and nonprofit organizations focused on promoting cultural tourism and resilience in the city.

The funds were awarded through City’s Initiative, a competitive grant program that is administered by the Houston Arts Alliance (HAA) and funded by a portion of the city’s Hotel Occupancy Tax.

The program opens four times a year and offers grants in the following three categories: neighborhood cultural destinations, conference tourism, and resilience awareness. In addition to these funding categories, MOCA awards a small number of special community initiatives each year.

“The City’s Initiative program allows local artists and organizations to showcase their work to our residents and visitors,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner. “I commend the award recipients for their dedication to the arts and cultural vitality of Houston.”

The following are the latest City’s Initiative grantees:

  • Da Camera Society of Texas:  DACAMERA hosts Houston SUMMERJAZZ, a two-day event activating the downtown Theater District featuring national jazz artists Jazzmeia Horn, Grammy-nominated, Texas-born vocalist; Pedrito Martinez, Latin Grammy-nominated Cuban-born percussionist, and bandleader; and Joshua Redman, Grammy-nominated saxophonist. Representing local jazz talent is the up-and-coming Jalen Baker Trio, the first resident jazz group of DACAMERA’s Young Artist Program, and José-Miguel Yamal, Houston-based Chilean-American jazz pianist. The festival is a mix of concerts and jazz events. (This grant was awarded under the Neighborhood Cultural Destinations category.)
  • Diaz Music Institute: Diaz Music Institute presents programs at various venues throughout the city to provide community engagement for the arts and to develop audiences in areas that are under-represented and underserved in the arts. This grant provided support to expand public concerts in neighborhoods across the city. (This grant was awarded directly by the Mayor of Houston as a special community initiative.)
  • Houston Latino Film Festival: Houston Latino Film Festival’s Dia De Los Muertos will be an all-day event at the Midtown Arts & Theater Center Houston (MATCH) which will host short and feature film screenings centering Dia De Los Muertos from local and international filmmakers. Other programming includes an art market inside of the MATCH Gallery from local artists and vendors to promote their artwork alongside the Dia De Los Muertos theme as well as panels, Q&As, and workshops. (This grant was awarded under the Conference Tourism category.)
  • Jesus Medel: Medel wishes to provide four, living-history bus tours focused on the cultural collaboratives of Chicano-Native Americans, by highlighting their art spaces (murals, community centers, art incubators, etc.), especially those that had humble beginnings in the 60s and 70s in Houston. Medel’s goal is to engage cultural tourists and residents in the experience of Houston’s cultural identity. (This grant was awarded under the Neighborhood Cultural Destinations category.)
  • Thomas Tran: Tran will create a cultural Vietnamese mural (or triptych) to be unveiled at NRG Park during Viet Cultural Fest 2022. The ideas and concepts will explore what it means to be Vietnamese American today through extensive conversation and interviews with the local community in Houston. (This grant was awarded under the Conference Tourism category.)
  • My Connect Community: Building on the very successful Gulfton Story Trail of larger than life murals, their project will employ artists to create a series of murals on the METRO retaining walls that will enhance the newly created bus stops and bike lanes, provide visual safety reminders, and also artistically represent the diversity of the Gulfton neighborhood. My Connect Community hopes a series of vibrant PSAs along Hillcroft will create attention and give drivers pause as they contemplate the many users of the road. (This grant was awarded under the Neighborhood Cultural Destinations category.)
  • South Asian Folk Arts Council: “Kabir in Qawwali – Concert and Discourse” is a concert and community dialogue series aimed to honor the Desi community (also known as South Asian Americans). Kabir Das, a 15th century poet, is beloved by many, especially the Hindu, Sikh and Muslim communities. Riyaaz Qawwali, comprising of local South Asian musicians, were commissioned for a short pilot of this program by the Society of Performing Arts in 2021. This will be a full 90 minute show, followed by a community discourse. (This grant was awarded under the Neighborhood Cultural Destinations category.)
  • The STEM Foundation: “STEAMtheBlock” in Sunnyside event will be held on 1.5 acres of land owned by STEM directly across from the 240-acre landfill where STEM is constructing a 50MW solar farm. Their goal is to bring awareness about the developments coming to the community and to engage visitors in the educational, workforce and economic development aspects of STEM’s work. Their vision is to bring the community together to embrace the future with a shipping container mural showcase and musical performances. (This grant was awarded under the Neighborhood Cultural Destinations category.)
  • Young Audiences INC of Houston: Healing Through Community Art is a social and emotional learning program that combines the uses of sand tray therapy and Chinese watercolor painting to teach youth creative expression, collaborative planning, and cultural awareness. During this program, participants will use therapeutic sand art as the planning and design process to inform a collaborative community mural that will be created using Chinese watercolor painting. This program will take place in the Fall of 2022 at the Chinese Community Center located in Alief Houston with local YAH Teaching Artist Dr. Junrui Garcia. (This grant was awarded under the Neighborhood Cultural Destinations category.)

For more information on past grantees, click here. To see upcoming events from previous or the latest 2022 grantees, visit the frequently updated Cultural Events Calendar.

Artists and creatives interested in applying to City’s Initiative to support their arts and cultural work should apply to the 2022 Grant Cycle launching on August 2nd. For more information, please visit: https://www.houstonartsalliance.com/funding-and-services/grant-opportunities.

About the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
The City of Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs guides the City’s cultural investments with policies and initiatives that expand access to arts and cultural programs in the community, attract visitors and leverage private investment. Learn more at www.houstontx.gov/culturalaffairs and follow us on Facebook & Instagram @HoustonMOCA.

About Houston Arts Alliance
Houston Arts Alliance (HAA) is a local arts and culture organization whose principal work is to implement the City of Houston’s vision, values, and goals for its arts grantmaking and civic art investments. HAA’s work is conducted through contracts with the City of Houston, overseen by the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs. HAA also executes privately funded special projects to meet the needs of the arts community, such as disaster preparation, research on the state of the arts in Houston, and temporary public art projects that energize neighborhoods.  In short, HAA helps artists and nonprofits be bold, productive, and strong.

CRIME STOPPERS OF HOUSTON FUGITIVE FRIDAY

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In an effort to keep our neighborhoods safe, Crime Stoppers of Houston and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are seeking the public’s help locating the following individuals that have active Felony and/or Misdemeanor Warrants.

Crime Stoppers may pay up to $5,000 for information leading to the location and arrest of the suspects featured. Information may be reported by calling 713-222-TIPS (8477), submitted online at www.crime-stoppers.org or through the Crime Stoppers mobile app. All tipsters remain anonymous. Only tips and calls DIRECTLY TO Crime Stoppers are anonymous and eligible for a cash reward.

The following individuals all have active warrants as of July 29, 2022  8:30 am.

NANCY ELIZABETH ALVAREZ

W/F      06-12-92      4’11”/110 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1776254
UNAUTH USE OF VEHICLE
Last known location: Meadows Place Texas

NICHOLAS MAXWELL DATTILE

W/M      08-01-79      5’05”/180 Lbs.      Bro/Bro
Warrant #: 1776201
BURGLARY OF HABITATION
Last known location: Pearland Texas

ALEXIS ANN DAVIS

B/F      12-11-82      5’02”/160 Lbs.      Bro/Bro
Warrant #: 1696933
FELON POSS WPN
Last known location: Spring Texas

SAMANTHA ROSE ETHERIDGE

W/F      11-30-87      5’03”/125 Lbs.      Bln/Grn
Warrant #: 1757246
THFT MAT ALUM/BRNZ/COPPR/BRASS
Last known location: Cleveland Texas

CURLEY WAYNE FONTENOT

B/M      11-10-94      6’02”/180 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1776086
VIOL. OF PROTECTIVE ORDER ENH.
Last known location: Houston Texas

CHRISTIAN FRANCO GUTIERREZ

W/M      06-11-76      5’08”/170 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1775978
MONEY SERVICES ACT VIOLATION
Last known location: Pearland Texas

LAWANDA LOIS JIMOH (HICKS)

B/F      11-20-87      4’09”/130 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1662428
THEFT/AGG >=$30K<$150K ELDER\N
Last known location: Pearland Texas

KATIE ANN TROTTIE

W/F      04-15-89      5’07”/145 Lbs.      Bro/Gry
Warrant #: 1761614
THEFT FROM PERSON
Last known location: Deer Park Texas

DAVIYON LAZARUS WASHINGTON

B/M      12-09-03      6’00”/162 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1775983
BURG W-INTENT-COMMIT OTHER FEL
Last known location: Spring Texas

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Houston Health Department pauses Monkeypox vaccine appointments pending delivery of additional supply

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Appointments for monkeypox vaccination through the Houston Health Department are temporarily on pause due to the limited supply.

The department will announce the availability of additional vaccination appointments after it receives additional doses of the JYNNEOS monkeypox vaccine.

This morning, Mayor Sylvester Turner and Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo sent a letter to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention asking for more vaccines.

Houston currently has 58 confirmed cases.

Monkeypox vaccine has not been widely available nationwide. However, widespread vaccination is not recommended at this time.

The department on Friday received a shipment of 5,024 doses of the JYNNEOS monkeypox vaccine. It retained 3,516 doses and provided 1,508 doses to Harris County Public Health.

Groups prioritized by the department for monkeypox vaccination are:

  • People confirmed to have had high- or intermediate-risk contact with someone with monkeypox, as defined by CDC.
  • People who attended an event or venue where there was a high risk of exposure to someone with confirmed monkeypox virus through skin-to-skin or sexual contact. The department works with event or venue organizers to identify people who may have been present and at risk of exposure while at the venue.

Other groups receiving vaccination priority are people who:

  • Were diagnosed with gonorrhea or early syphilis within the past 3 months
  • Are on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP); or
  • Attended or worked at a commercial sex venue or other venues where they had anonymous sex or sex with multiple partners (e.g., saunas, bathhouses, sex clubs, sex parties) within the past 21 days.

The threat of monkeypox to Houston’s general population remains low. Monkeypox is rare and doesn’t spread easily between people without close, personal, skin-to-skin contact.

Symptoms include a rash or sores that can look like pimples or blisters, fever, headache, weakness, chills and swollen lymph nodes.

Monkeypox can spread from person to person through prolonged face-to-face contact, intimate contact and or close contact with the infectious rash, scabs, or body fluids. Contact with items such as clothing or linens that previously touched the rash or body fluids is another way monkeypox spreads.

The illness usually lasts two to four weeks. It can spread from the time symptoms start until the rash fully heals and a fresh layer of skin has formed.
People who suspect that they have monkeypox symptoms such as new unexplained rash or sores need to contact their doctor to set up a screening appointment.

For more information about monkeypox, prevention tips and resources, visit houstonhealth.org or call the department’s call center at 832-393-4220.

Former NFL player indicted for murder, tampering with evidence

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Former NFL player Kevin Ware was indicted Thursday for murder and tampering with evidence, specifically a corpse, in the death of his girlfriend, Taylor Pomaski.

“We appreciate everyone who has come forward to provide evidence and aid in our investigation,” said Lacy Johnson, a chief prosecutor in the Major Offenders Division, who is handling the case. “Although this investigation has been going on since Taylor’s disappearance in 2021, the court process is just beginning, and we encourage anyone who has knowledge about what happened between Kevin and Taylor to come forward.”

If convicted of murder, Ware faces the possible sentence of 15 years to life in prison.

“Prosecutors presented the evidence to a Harris County grand jury, which determined there was sufficient evidence for criminal charges,” said Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg. “We will follow the evidence wherever it leads and apply the law equally to all.”

An indictment means that a grand jury, after a review of the evidence, has determined that there is probable cause for a criminal charge. Please remember that a person is presumed innocent until proven guilty. The Harris County District Clerk’s Office is the keeper of court records and is the point of contact for requesting copies of the indictments or other documents.

Mayor Turner joins the Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity and Wells Fargo to Launch OPEN FOR BUSINESS Grant Portal

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 $20 million earmarked for diverse Houston-area small businesses and non-profits
Applications accepted August 9 – 23, 2022
Mayor Sylvester Turner joined the Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity in partnership with Wells Fargo on Tuesday, July 26, to announce the launch of the Open for Business Grant portal to distribute $20 million to Houston-area diverse, small businesses and non-profit organizations.

Beginning Tuesday, August 9, business owners will have the opportunity to apply for grants ranging between $10,000 and $65,000.

“Opening this portal is an incredible step towards the progress we initiated in May 2021 when we established the Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity. We are providing access to much-needed funds for Houston’s small businesses of color and non-profits that focus on leveling the playing field. It will empower their work, allow them to thrive, extend their reach, and support innovation,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner, who serves as the Honorary Chair. “Thanks to corporate partnerships like Wells Fargo, we have come a long way in a short time and are now funding foundational change in the Houston community.”

The Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity will distribute the funding in the form of grants over a three-year period towards the purchase of property, equipment and other tangible assets, supporting economic development in underserved communities. The funding is estimated to reach more than 500 small businesses in Houston and is aimed to help business owners and non-profits with new ways to grow and increase capacity.

“We are honored to work with Wells Fargo to bridge the gap in economic equity among Houston’s underrepresented and underfunded minority-owned small businesses and nonprofit organizations,” said Thomas Jones, Board President, Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity. “The fruit of this partnership infuses hope into the community and positively impacts its business trajectory.”

To qualify, an applicant’s business or 501c3 non-profit must be located in the Houston-area, must consist of 50 employees or less, be led by people of color, and have been established by December 31, 2021. All applications must be submitted between Tuesday, August 9 at 9 a.m. through Tuesday, August 23 at 11:59 p.m. CST through the electronic portal link which can be found by visiting  www.houstonequityfund.com.
The $20 million in grants, first announced in February, comes from Wells Fargo’s Open for Business Fund, a roughly $420 million national small business recovery effort with a focus on racially and ethnically diverse small business owners, who have been disproportionately affected by the pandemic. The fund was created from the gross processing fees that Wells Fargo received from Paycheck Protection Program loans made in 2020. Wells Fargo has donated funds to Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) and local nonprofits across the nation.

About Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity
The Houston Fund for Social Justice and Economic Equity (Houston Equity Fund) enacts transformational change by investing resources organizations and initiatives that empower and uplift communities of color. Houston Equity Fund is committed to taking actions that encourage equitable systems change, while operating with transparency and fidelity. The Fund is committed to implementing a framework for reporting and evaluation that reflects the shared goal of Houston Equity Fund and its supporters—meaningful and lasting change for marginalized communities of color. A key aspect to being transformative is to embrace a rigorous process to select and fund organizations aligned to four core focus areas: Social and Racial Justice, Youth Empowerment and Education, Community Building and Economic Development.

Jul 28 – Aug 28, 2022 | Weather

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¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

Mantente informado.

Click on the map to view details or click here: QOHW0728

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mayor Turner Launches 10th Annual Liftoff Houston Startup Business Plan Competition

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Applications are now open for the Liftoff Houston Startup Business Plan Competition, where three winners will each receive $10,000 in seed money to fund their dreams of entrepreneurship. Applications must be received by 2 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 19.

The competition, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, is sponsored by Capital One Bank and administered by the Houston Public Library (HPL) and the Office of Business Opportunity (OBO). Since its inception, Capital One has invested more than $280,000 in startup funding to winners in three categories – Innovation, Product and Service.

“For 10 years, Liftoff Houston has empowered participants to achieve financial mobility through entrepreneurship,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner. “They have become key drivers to the success of Houston’s economy, and they have contributed to our communities by creating jobs and by providing much needed goods and services.”

To be eligible for the competition, applicants must live in, and operate their businesses within the city limits of Houston. The business should be for-profit, in operation for less than one year, and have verifiable revenue that does not exceed $10,000. Those who are not eligible to compete can participate in the Educational Pathway, which allows access to all educational and mentorship components of the program.

Upon acceptance into Liftoff Houston, participants attend workshops over a 4-month period that cover essential business topics including business planning, marketing, financing and pitching. Participants also receive additional support by professional mentors from SCORE Houston and Capital One Bank to further refine their business plans, which are required to advance to the final round of the competition.

The event culminates to Pitch Day on Nov. 5, where three businesses in each contest category are selected to present their business plan to a panel of judges. All who fulfill requirements of the Educational Pathway receive a certificate of completion.

Mayor Sylvester Turner, joined by HPL Deputy Director Nicole Robinson, Capital One Bank Market President Yasmin Huebinger, and OBO Director Marsha Murray, recognized Liftoff Houston alumni who have grown their businesses past the startup phase: 2019 Service Category winner Sherhara Downing of SpeakHaus and business partner Christa Clarke, 2016 Service Category winner Jennifer Thai of Awesome Bites Co., and 2018 Innovation Category winner Alphonso Roundtree of Social Bevy.
“This year’s milestone competition will prove to be another exciting year of opportunity for Houstonians who are ready to move their plans of business ownership forward,” said Dr. Rhea Brown Lawson, director of the Houston Public Library. “We are pleased to join OBO, Capital One and a host of other partners in supporting their development and dreams through the provision of free library services and access to business and investment reference resources, state of the art technology, and high-speed Wi-Fi.”

Since its inception, more than 15,000 individuals have participated in Liftoff Houston. Of all competition finalists, 27 winners have started businesses in retail, merchandise, labor, consulting, software, hardware, market businesses, hospitality, tourism, health and fitness, education, finance, technology, and logistics.

Data collected from the 2021 competition showed Liftoff Houston made an impact in populations that have been historically marginalized. Of all participants, 96% identified as people of color, 70% were female, 56% had no college degree, and 41% made below $30,000.

Also in 2021, all winners were women:

  • Alina Kravchenko of TonerBum (Innovation), a patented glute and leg-toning dumbbell ergonomically designed to fit behind the back of the leg;
  • Krystle Hodge of SafetyKay, LLC (Product), comprising safety kits and videos that teach children critical safety skills; and
  • Clara Orlean of ClaraTech (Service), in-person technology training that assists older adults with technology consulting sessions and workshops.

“As we celebrate a decade of Liftoff Houston, we look forward to making an even greater impact for Houston’s aspiring entrepreneurs,” said OBO Director Marsha Murray. “This competition will provide you with a clear roadmap to help you achieve your goals of succeeding as a small business owner.”

To apply for Liftoff Houston, go to www.liftoffhouston.com. Also follow @liftoffhouston on Facebook and Instagram.

City of Houston and Harris County seek environmental justice for Fifth Ward Kashmere Gardens Families Notice of Intent to sue Union Pacific for creosote contamination announced today

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Today, Mayor Sylvester Turner announced the City of Houston has delivered to Union Pacific Railroad a Notice of Intent to sue under the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. The City’s letter can be found here.

The lawsuit is being filed for the imminent and substantial endangerment from environmental contamination from UP’s facilities on Liberty Road, in the Greater Fifth Ward and Kashmere Gardens neighborhoods. The City is required by law to deliver a 90 – day notice of intent to sue before it can file a lawsuit.

Watch the news conference and announcement here

The City is joined in this effort by Harris County Attorney Christian D Menefee, (Harris County letter)  and an organization of private citizens, called The Bayou City Initiative, led by Jim Blackburn.(BCI letter) Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis and State Senator Borris Miles attended Wednesday’s news conference along with several members of the community who spoke in favor of the action.

“The letter to UP is the latest step in the City’s ongoing efforts to bring redress to the historically African-American communities of the Greater Fifth Ward and Kashmere Gardens,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner. “For too long and at too high a cost, UP has ignored and disrespected these communities. The cost is too high, and the burden on these residents is too great.”

“The City has urged and will continue to urge the federal government to join and lead the future lawsuit against Union Pacific. This active involvement by the federal government is expressly provided for in the statute and would bring to bear the greater resources of the federal government in litigating these claims and providing relief to the residents, particularly funds for new housing,” said City of Houston Attorney Arturo Michel.

Historical operations at the UP Facility include creosote treatment and waste disposal. The resulting contamination reached the groundwater of the Greater Fifth Ward and Kashmere Gardens neighborhoods.
The UP Facility and surrounding properties continue to be contaminated, today, with numerous hazardous materials and these waste materials continue to move underground, migrating further off-site from the facility.”Our neighbors in the Fifth Ward and Kashmere Gardens have waited too long for a clean up plan from Union Pacific. The state has identified two cancer clusters in the area, but people continue to die while we wait for answers,” said Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee. “We’re asking for a plan that fully investigates the extent of contamination, fully assesses the health risks of that contamination and protects people moving forward.” “

“BCI is filing this notice of intent to sue even though a permit proceeding has been ongoing for years at the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality,” says Jim Blackburn, President of BCI. “The TCEQ process is quite slow and cumbersome and several cancer clusters have been identified by the Texas Department of Health.  It is time for this process to be expedited and this notice of intent to sue starts the process for a direct filing in federal district court.”

“Families living near the Union Pacific site in Kashmere Gardens have suffered and will continue to be harmed until there is robust remediation and cleanup of the site.  I’m so proud that the City of Houston and Harris County are partnering to take action to protect this community and root out the vestiges of environmental racism,” said Harris County Precinct One Commissioner Rodney Ellis.

“I want to thank Mayor Turner, County Attorney Menefee and the Bayou City Initiative on filing this lawsuit against Union Pacific. The City’s finding of dioxin on top of the Texas Department of State Health Services’ finding of a confirmed cancer cluster surrounding the Union Pacific site is alarming and demands action. It’s time to send a message that the black and brown neighborhoods of Houston will no longer be the dumping ground for industry. Environmental racism in these communities must end. The Fifth Ward and Kashmere Gardens communities have been waiting far too long and lost too many family and friends for us not to act,”  Texas State Senator Borris L. Miles, District 13.

Earlier this month, the City announced the discovery of the chemical Dioxin in a single surface soil sample taken on June 15, 2022, near Liberty Road and Lavender St. in Kashmere Gardens. Following the detection in the initial sample, the Health Department gathered more samples and is conducting laboratory testing of the samples. The Health Department is also proceeding with a community plan to inform residents. It will continue working closely with the EPA, the Texas Department of State Health Services, and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ).

The finding of Dioxin in the Fifth Ward and Kashmere Gardens area is noteworthy and underscores why we are working aggressively to protect families and their children. We already know that the Texas Department of State Health Services found a higher-than-expected acute lymphoblastic leukemia cancer rate at nearly five times the expected rate in that community.

“We cannot stand still and do nothing while people die or their health suffers. So, we are looking at how we can assist people in Kashmere Gardens and the Fifth Ward. As we move forward in this collective action, people need relief, and they needed it years ago,” said Mayor Turner.

Biden says Trump lacked ‘courage to act’ during Jan. 6 riot

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 President Joe Biden decried his predecessor for failing to try and stop last year’s deadly mob attack on the Capitol, saying Monday that “ Donald Trump lacked the courage to act” as hours of “medieval hell” unfolded.

“Every day we rely on law enforcement to save lives. Then, on Jan. 6, we relied on law enforcement to save our democracy,” Biden said in a prerecorded speech to the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives’ annual conference in Orlando, Florida.

Biden, who remains in isolation in the family quarters of the White House after testing positive for COVID-19 last week, has previously slammed Trump for helping to incite the mob on Jan. 6, 2021, with a “web of lies” about the 2020 presidential election being marred by widespread voter fraud that never actually occurred.

But his comments to the conference were the clearest link Biden has made between Trump and the insurrection since a House committee investigating the attack on the Capitol began holding hearings in June as part of its work to get to the bottom of all that occurred.

“You saw what happened. The Capitol police, the D.C Metropolitan police, other law enforcement agencies were attacked and assaulted before our very eyes. Speared, sprayed, stomped on, brutalized,” said Biden, whose voice is still raspy and deeper than usual as he recovers from the effects of the coronavirus. “Lives were lost. And for three hours, the defeated former president of the United States watched it all happen as he sat in the comfort of the private dining room next to the Oval Office.”

He added that while Trump was “doing that, brave law enforcement officers are subject to the medieval hell for three hours.”

That referenced Cassidy Hutchinson, a former Trump administration White House aide, testifying before the House Jan. 6 committee about Trump’s temper as he sat in his dining room and watched TV as his plans to overturn the election fell apart.

Biden didn’t mention the committee’s work specifically during the taped address and has previously largely avoided the topic. He said after its opening hearing that the work was about allowing “no one to place a dagger at the throat of our democracy,” but also noted then that he’d not had time to watch the first installment.

The committee held its final summer hearing last week, which focused on Trump’s failing to help disperse attackers overrunning the Capitol — even as top aides and members of his family implored him to call for an end to the violence.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre had suggested previously that, while Biden had been able to tune in occasionally to the committee’s work, he hadn’t been able to focus much on the proceedings as he concentrated on doing his job as president. Whether Biden has had more time to watch as he recovers from COVID-19 is unclear.

Trump plans to be in Washington on Tuesday to address the America First Agenda Summit, the first time he’s returned to the nation’s capital since leaving office. Jean-Pierre offered no comment about that speech on Monday, saying, “I don’t know what he’s coming to talk about.”

In his pre-taped comments, Biden noted that law enforcement officers during the insurrection were “dripping in blood, surrounded by carnage, face-to-face with a crazed mob that believed the lies of the defeated president.”

“The police were heroes that day. Donald Trump lacked the courage to act,” the president said. “The brave women and men in blue all across this nation should never forget that. You can’t be pro-insurrection and pro-cop. You can’t be pro-insurrection and pro-democracy. You can’t be pro-insurrection and pro-American.”

Source: click2houston

Woman opened fire in Dallas airport

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A 37-year-old woman fired several gunshots, apparently at the ceiling, inside of Dallas’ Love Field Airport on Monday before an officer shot and wounded her, authorities said.

The woman was dropped off at the airport at about 11 a.m., walked inside near the ticketing counters, and entered a bathroom, Dallas police Chief Eddie Garcia said at a news conference. She emerged wearing a hooded sweatshirt or some other clothing that she hadn’t arrived in, pulled a gun, and fired several shots, apparently at the ceiling, he said.

“At this point, we don’t know where exactly the individual was aiming,” Garcia said.

An officer nearby shot the woman in her “lower extremities,” wounding her and enabling her to be taken into custody, Garcia said. She was taken to a local hospital for treatment.

“No other individuals were injured in this event other than the suspect,” Garcia said.

Police later identified the woman as Portia Odufuwa and did not speculate as to her motive.

Source: click2houston