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Homeowners speak out against Harris County’s Mandatory Flood Buyout Program

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Harris County flooded buyout program

In the Allen Field neighborhood in northeast Harris County, home after home along Darjean Street is now part of the mandatory flood buyout program.

Thirteen homes in Dolores Mendoza’s immediate family were devastated after Hurricane Harvey.

“I was shocked and pissed off like, ‘What do you mean you’re taking my house?’” said Mendoza.

Mendoza’s family has lived in this neighborhood for six generations. She said more should have been done to fix the infrastructure in the neighborhood.

She said it’s not fair she and her family members are now being forced to leave.

The county says the program is designed to move families out of areas that flood repeatedly.

Mendoza said she can move, but she’s worried about her grandmother and other elderly family and neighbors.

“She’s on a fixed income, she doesn’t have income. What are you going to do with her? Put her in a mortgage? She can’t afford that,” says Mendoza.

Shirley Ronquillo has helped many of these families through the process.

Many are mostly Latino and of mixed status. Many did not understand the legal jargon and also needed help with translation.

Some improvements have been made to the program, but Ronquillo said it’s not enough.

“Six generations of people are going to be torn apart because of this buyout, because of the negligence, of the historical negligence of our previous administrations and the lack of support for communities of color,” says Shirley Ronquillo, with the organization Houston Department of Transformation.

According to Harris County, there are seven buyout areas with just under 400 homes that are part of the program.

Homeowners are paid market value for their homes and are given money to relocate.

“It has demonstrated a need for us to do things differently and that is very much increasing the level of communication and being sensitive to the language and necessities of the communities who would be impacted, and providing information in a variety of different formats,” said Dr. Adrienne Holloway with Harris County Community Services.

So far, 87 offers have been made and 26 offers have been accepted.

The county has until August of 2024 to complete all of the buyouts or it will lose the grant money for the program.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Police searching for missing inmate near Ellington Airport

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29-year-old Pedro Castillo Hernandez
Authorities are searching for an inmate who they say is missing in the area of Ellington Airport.

The inmate, 29-year-old Pedro Castillo Hernandez, was wearing an orange shirt, blue jeans, and in restraints. It was discovered he was missing when U.S. Marshals did a headcount of inmates who were scheduled to be transported by air to a location in West Texas. Castillo Hernandez was in custody for illegal reentry into the United States.

Castillo was described as being 5′8″ tall, weighing about 150 pounds with a tattoo on his right arm. Authorities said he was last seen at I-45 South and Dixie Farm Road.

US Marshals and police are searching nearby areas for the inmate.

Source: www.click2houston.com

US Department of Labor awards more than $11.6M in grants to educate workers, employers on workplace safety, health

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The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration today announced the award of more than $11.6 million in grants to 93 nonprofit organizations nationwide to fund education and training on hazard recognition and prevention, and on rights of workers to safe workplaces and the responsibilities of employers to provide them.

Derived from the Susan Harwood Workplace Safety and Health Training program, the grants awarded by OSHA in fiscal year 2021 are in the Targeted Topic Training, Training and Educational Materials Development, and Capacity Building categories. The grants are a critical part of OSHA’s effort to educate workers and assist employers.

OSHA awards these grants to nonprofit organizations, including community and faith-based groups, employer associations, labor unions, joint labor-management associations, colleges and universities. Target trainees include small-business employers and underserved vulnerable workers in high-hazard industries.

The grants honor the late Susan Harwood, former director of OSHA’s Office of Risk Assessment. In a 17-year career with the agency, she helped develop federal standards to protect workers from bloodborne pathogens, cotton dust, benzene, formaldehyde, asbestos and lead in construction.

Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees. OSHA’s role is to help ensure these conditions for America’s workers by setting and enforcing standards and providing training, education, and assistance. Learn more about OSHA.

Source: www.osha.gov

La HHSC expande los servicios pediátricos de telesalud a cuatro hospitales rurales

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La Comisión de Salud y Servicios Humanos de Texas (HHSC) está otorgando más de $531,000 en subvenciones a cuatro hospitales rurales de Texas para expandir los servicios de telesalud para niños.

Las subvenciones ayudarán a los hospitales a expandir o implementar los servicios de telesalud que conectan a los pacientes con los especialistas y subespecialistas en pediatría a través de videollamadas y llamadas telefónicas.

“La pandemia ha destacado la importancia de estos servicios, especialmente en las comunidades rurales, y estamos orgullosos de formar parte de la expansión de la telesalud para brindar mejor acceso a cuidados especializados a los niños y jóvenes de Texas sin necesidad de que sus familias viajen”, afirmó Stephanie Stephens, directora estatal para Servicios de Medicaid de HHS.

La HHSC está otorgando los fondos a Lake Granbury Medical Center (Granbury), Navarro Regional Hospital (Corsicana), Terry Memorial Hospital/Brownfield Regional Medical Center (Brownfield) y Titus County Hospital (Mount Pleasant). Cada uno de los cuatro hospitales entregó planes de expansión de telesalud a la HHSC y se les entregaron los fondos en función de la tecnología, el equipo y los artículos necesarios para implementar sus proyectos. Los texanos de más de 25 condados obtendrán los beneficios de la expansión.

Los fondos forman parte de un programa de subvenciones de la HHSC que fue creado en 2017 por la Asamblea Legislativa 85 de Texas, para establecer y administrar un programa de recursos de tele-conexión para la salud de los niños en las áreas rurales de Texas.

Source: www.hhs.texas.gov

Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee Sends Demand for Documents to the Texas Secretary of State’s Office Regarding its “Audit” of the 2020 Election

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Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee sent the Office of the Texas Secretary of State (SOS) a demand for documents under the Texas Public Information Act regarding the SOS’s purported “forensic audit” of the November 2020 election in certain counties, including Harris County. The SOS announced the audit on September 23, 2021, just hours after former President Donald Trump released a public letter demanding that Texas Governor Greg Abbott audit the results of the 2020 election in Texas.

Christian D. Menefee stated:

“Governor Abbott and the Secretary of State are telling the public that this ‘audit’ has been going on for months, but this is the first time the County’s heard anything about it. They’re on the news and issuing press releases about this ‘audit’, talking to everyone about it but us.

The administration has told us nothing about the purpose of or legal basis for this audit, what they’re requesting, or what the process will be. It’s my job to advise the County and the Elections Administrator on how to respond. I can’t do that without this basic information that neither the Governor nor the SOS has shared.”

Menefee sent the demand pursuant to the Texas Public Information Act. The list of documents Menefee seeks includes:

  • All complaints, allegations of fraud or misconduct, or requests for investigation or review or audit, or questions received by the SOS office (from any individual or organization) regarding the November 2020 General Election in Harris County.
  • All SOS office policies or procedures or other such documents related to “forensic audits” or other election audit procedures in general.
  • All internal SOS office communications related to a complaint, allegation of fraud or misconduct, request for investigation or review or audit, or question received by the SOS office regarding the November 2020 General Election in Harris County.
  • All communications between the SOS office and the Office of the Texas Governor or the Office of the Lieutenant Governor related to a complaint, allegation of fraud or misconduct, request for investigation or review, or question received by the SOS office regarding the November 2020 General Election in Harris County.
About the Harris County Attorney’s Office
Christian D. Menefee was elected as County Attorney for Harris County in November 2020. His office represents the largest county in Texas in all civil legal matters, including lawsuits.

At NBA media days, COVID and vaccines remain dominant topics

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Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal poses for a photograph during an NBA basketball media day, Monday, Sept. 27, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Utah center Rudy Gobert revealed that after much deliberation, he decided to become vaccinated. San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich has gotten his booster shot already. Boston coach Ime Udoka had his shots and tested positive for COVID-19 anyway.

And Brooklyn guard Kyrie Irving is keeping everyone guessing.

The NBA season arrived Monday with media days in advance of training camp, with the ongoing pandemic as much if not even more of a topic than basketball. This will be the third season affected at least in part by the pandemic, almost certainly not the last, and some teams revealed that their rosters are 100% vaccinated entering the season.

“When I felt like it was the right time, I did it,” said Gobert — the first NBA player who was known to test positive for COVID-19, back on March 11, 2020.

The same goes for Giannis Antetokounmpo of the NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks, who still isn’t totally sure if the vaccine will present issues down the road.

But much like sentiments expressed by Portland’s Damian Lillard and Memphis’ Ja Morant, Antetokounmpo — a father of two — said his family played a major role in his decision to get vaccinated.

“I did what was best for me and my family’s safety. … You do whatever it takes for you and your family to be OK,” Antetokounmpo said.

The Spurs have a fully vaccinated roster, Popovich said. The New York Knicks and Los Angeles Lakers said last week that they would have the same, and some other clubs — including Utah, Portland, Houston, and Charlotte — said they were at the 100% mark.

Other teams are close to being fully vaccinated.

Miami will be by the start of the season, a person with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity Monday because the Heat vaccine rate has not been publicly revealed by the team.

Toronto general manager Bobby Webster said the Raptors are “one dose” away from being there, as did Atlanta GM Travis Schlenk.

Leaguewide, the rate is believed to be around 90% and climbing.

“There is still a lot of stuff going on out there,” Popovich said. “You see all the bumps in cases here and there. You see all the areas where people are not vaccinated. It’s a double-edged sword. I think we are in good shape right now. We’re trying to do everything we can to make sure we can be safe, which means we’ve got to be disciplined day to day to day today.”

Players who are vaccinated will not be tested often; unvaccinated players will be tested on all practice days and travel days, and at least once on game days.

The list of unvaccinated players includes Washington’s Bradley Beal — who missed out on the chance to play for an Olympic gold medal with USA Basketball this summer after testing positive.

Beal said he remains unvaccinated for “personal reasons,” and has questions about why someone can still contract the virus even after being vaccinated.

“Would I love to sit here and tell you that we’re 100% vaccinated? I’d be thrilled about that,” Denver coach Michael Malone said. “The fact is that we’re not, and that’s all I’ll say on that matter regarding who is and who’s not. It’s a delicate balance. It is not my place to tell somebody that they have to be vaccinated.”

Irving is among the individuals at the center of that debate in the NBA right now.

By local rule in New York, to play for the Nets at home this season Irving would have to be vaccinated or receive an exemption — something that Golden State’s Andrew Wiggins sought from the NBA unsuccessfully last week because of San Francisco has similar rules.

“I’m just going to keep fighting for what I believe,” Wiggins said Monday.

Irving wasn’t at media day in Brooklyn on Monday, instead of appearing remotely and refusing to say if he plans to play in home games.

“Please respect my privacy,” Irving said.

Added Nets forward Kevin Durant, at media day: “That’s on Kyrie. That’s his personal decision.”

Irving is keeping his status and reasoning private. Orlando’s Jonathan Isaac is not.

Isaac, whose mother works in health care, has had COVID-19 already. He is not vaccinated, but insisted he is not anti-vaccine, anti-medicine, or anti-science, either.

“I thank God, I’m grateful, that I live in a society where vaccines are possible and we can protect ourselves and have the means to protect ourselves in the first place,” Isaac said. “That being said, it is my belief that the vaccine status of every person should be their own choice. … I’m not ashamed to say that I’m uncomfortable with taking the vaccine at this time.”

Media day tends to have some loose moments, and Durant was at the forefront of one of those when he was asked why people call him “KD.” The reporter — “Dave from Basketball Digest” — was none other than David Letterman, who got laughs from media that were present even though Durant didn’t outwardly show any happiness with the line of questioning.

Popovich joined San Antonio reporters to ask the hard-hitting question of why shooting matters in basketball, and in Miami, Jimmy Butler crashed Kyle Lowry’s first Heat availability in an effort to get him to endorse his coffee brand.

“He’s going to pay me very handsomely,” Lowry said.

There were also reminders that the pandemic isn’t over.

Udoka, entering his first season as Celtics’ coach, is wrapping up a 10-day quarantine after testing positive and plans to be at the team’s first practice Tuesday. Phoenix’s Devin Booker wasn’t at Suns media day, already in the league’s health and safety protocols — indicating some sort of testing or contact-tracing issue.

But camps are opening. A regular 82-game season is planned. Fans will be back in buildings. Popovich, the NBA’s longest-tenured current coach who said he qualified for his booster shot already because he’s in his 90s — he’s really only 72 — may have summed up the order of things in the NBA now perfectly with this assessment: “Normalcy, with a good dose of caution.”

“I think getting vaccinated is your choice,” Indiana guard Malcolm Brogdon said. “I think it’s absolutely your choice. But at the same time, we’re trying to protect the entire NBA. Not just our team, but the entire NBA.”

Source: www.click2houston.com

Harris County District Attorney’s Office donates $35,000 to combat illegal dumping

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Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg has donated $35,000 in asset forfeiture funds to Precinct 3 Constable Sherman Eagleton’s office to buy and install the state-of-the-art cameras and monitoring to combat illegal dumping in north Harris County.

“Illegal dumping can affect any area in Harris County, but there are some hotspots where repeat offenders take advantage of hidden areas to continually dump garbage instead of disposing of it responsibly,” Ogg said. “When we invest in cameras and the infrastructure to monitor those sites live, 24/7, we can turn blighted areas into model landscapes.”

The $35,000 check, donated during a meeting at the North Forest Campus of Houston Community College on September 22, will fund the installation of four to five high-tech cameras and the hardwiring required to set up each one for continual monitoring by personnel from Precinct 3 Constable’s Office.

These cameras will be set up at locations with recurring illegal dumping issues and will include the areas requested by Charles Nobel, a leader with the Greater North-Northeast Coalition of Civic Clubs.

Statement from Harris County District Attorney’s Office on grand jury decision in the death of Nicolas Chavez:

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A Harris County grand jury determined Monday that criminal charges are not warranted in the 2020 shooting death of Nicolas Chavez, who was fatally shot by Houston Police.

Civil Rights Division prosecutors presented all the evidence over a four-day period. By issuing a No Bill, the grand jury, which is comprised of members of the community, determined that there was no probable cause to charge anyone with a crime.

“In officer-involved shootings, grand jurors have a range of options, from criminally negligent homicide to murder, and range of defense considerations, including self-defense and defense of a third person,” Harris County  District Attorney Kim Ogg said.

“Civil Rights Division prosecutors presented all the evidence to ensure grand jurors were fully informed prior to making a decision,” Ogg said. “Our heart goes out to the Chavez family over the loss of their loved one. We respect the grand jury’s decision.”

Grand jury proceedings are secret. Prosecutors are prohibited from discussing evidence, including testimony that may have been presented for consideration.

“The primary question for a grand jury in a police shooting is, ‘did officers act reasonably?’” Ogg said. “Grand jurors are supposed to apply the law to the facts and reach a decision on probable cause. We use this process to ensure that the community decides whether or not police should be charged in on-duty killings.”

Civil Rights Division prosecutors go to the scene of every officer-involved shooting and conduct a thorough, independent review of the evidence, and all of the evidence is presented to grand jurors, in every instance, to determine whether a shooting is justified or warrants a criminal charge.

Harris County grand jury declines to indict HPD officers fired over death of Nicolas Chavez

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Nicolas Chavez (left) is seen in body camera video released by Houston police Sept. 10, 2020.
A Harris County grand jury declined to indict the Houston police officers fired for their roles in the shooting death of a man who had been experiencing a mental health crisis.

Nicolas Chavez, 27, was killed by police in southeast Houston in April 2020, during a confrontation that was captured on bodycam video and in part on a bystander’s cellphone.

Following an internal affairs investigation, four of the officers who fired their weapons at Chavez during the encounter were fired — Officers Luis Alvarado, Omar Tapia, Patrick Rubio, and Sgt. Benjamin LeBlanc.

“In officer-involved shootings, grand jurors have a range of options, from criminally negligent homicide to murder, and range of defense considerations, including self-defense and defense of a third person,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said in a statement. “Civil Rights Division prosecutors presented all the evidence to ensure grand jurors were fully informed prior to making a decision,” Ogg said. “Our heart goes out to the Chavez family over the loss of their loved one. We respect the grand jury’s decision.”

Ogg added that prosecutors are prohibited from discussing evidence, including testimony that may have been presented for consideration.

“The primary question for a grand jury in a police shooting is, ‘did officers act reasonably?’” Ogg said. “Grand jurors are supposed to apply the law to the facts and reach a decision on probable cause. We use this process to ensure that the community decides whether or not police should be charged in on-duty killings.”

On April 21, 2020, the officers were dispatched to a location in the 800 block of Gazin Street in response to multiple reports a man was running around, yelling, “throwing himself in front of cars,” and “having a mental breakdown.” One caller reported the man had some sort of “metal tube” and added that he seemed “a little crazy.”

Footage of the incident shows the officers attempting to calm down a distraught Chavez. The officers can be heard telling Chavez, “Hey buddy, hey bud, we’re here to help you, man” and “No one is shooting, just calm down” and “we’re here to help you.”

During the encounter, Chavez is seen flailing his arms and screaming. Officers fired bean bag rounds from shotguns at Chavez and deployed stun guns, which had little effect.

An officer said Chavez had a knife in his hands. Investigators later determined it was a piece of metal Chavez had been using to cut himself.

Footage shows Sgt. LeBlanc shoot Chavez twice as he moved quickly toward the officer. Meanwhile, another officer deployed his Taser. As Chavez was crawling on the ground and stabbing himself with the metal object, an officer deployed additional bean bag rounds.

An officer is heard saying “He’s got that knife in his hand’s guys.”

Chavez is seen throwing the metal object at officers before grabbing the wires of a Taser that was lying on the ground and pulling the device toward him. Four officers then discharged their duty weapons at Chavez, striking him multiple times.

Twenty-four total shots were fired, former Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said during a Sept. 2020 news briefing.

During the 2020 briefing, Acevedo said the officer’s actions were “inexplicable to (him) when they had plenty of opportunities to back up and continue to do what they were doing, for them to stay the line and shoot a man 21 times. I cannot defend that.”

Source: www.click2houston.com