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Nov. 2 is Election Day: Here’s everything you need to know

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A sign directs voters to a polling place in Rosenberg, Texas, in this undated file image.
Tuesday is Election Day and it is important to know what’s on the ballot. Here are some races you should be aware of.

Statewide, Texans will vote on eight constitutional amendments, and locally, Houston area residents will have district- and county-specific ballot options. There are also a number of school board elections that will greatly impact our children’s futures.

Here is a breakdown of what’s on the ballot:

State of Texas Proposition 1 – Raffles – This amendment would add professional rodeo charitable foundations that are sanctioned by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association or the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association to the list of similar foundations for other professional sports associations that are authorized to hold raffles. These raffles may be held at rodeos in the state of Texas.

State of Texas Proposition 2 – County Government / Bond Issues – The Texas Constitution allows the legislature to authorize cities to issue bonds or notes to finance development or redevelopment of transportation or infrastructure in “unproductive, underdeveloped or blighted areas”. Proposition 2 would amend the Texas Constitution to add counties to the political entities that can issue bonds or notes for that purpose, and to pledge increases in property tax revenues to repay the bonds or notes.

State of Texas Proposition 3 – Religion Services – This proposed amendment is a reaction to restrictions put in place by the governor and some local governments during the COVID-19 pandemic. The restrictions required religious services to be held remotely or limited the number of people who could attend in person.

State of Texas Proposition 4 – State Judiciary / Judges – Changes the eligibility requirements for the following judicial offices: a justice of the supreme court, a judge of the court of criminal appeals, a justice of a court of appeals, and a district judge.

State of Texas Proposition 5 – State Judiciary – Authorizes the Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct to accept and investigate complaints and reports against candidates running for state judicial office.

State of Texas Proposition 6 – Health care and Constitutional Rights / Caregiver visits – During the COVID-19 pandemic, family and other caregivers were restricted from access to nursing homes and other group facilities. Th is proposed constitutional amendment would allow a resident to name a person to be their essential caregiver, and visits from their essential caregiver would become a resident’s constitutional right. Th e Legislature may provide guidelines for caregiver visitation policies and procedures.

State of Texas Proposition 7 – Property Tax Exemption – This proposition would update the Constitution to allow surviving spouses of disabled persons a limit on school district property taxes. Currently, this limitation is provided to homeowners over 65 years old and to disabled persons. To be eligible for this limit, the spouse must be at least 55 years old when the disabled person died and still live in the home. In 2019, the Tax Code was updated to allow this tax limitation for surviving spouses of disabled persons, but the Legislature failed to authorize a proposed constitutional amendment. Some counties followed the Tax Code and some did not. For those that did not, eligible surviving spouses may be due a refund.

State of Texas Proposition 8 – Taxes and Veterans – Amends the Texas Constitution to allow the legislature to apply a homestead tax exemption for surviving spouses of members of the military to those fatally injured in the line of duty

OTHER KEY RACES:

City of Baytown Mayor

Brandon Capetillo

David “Isick” Isaac

John Bryant

City of Missouri City Councilmember District A

Reginald Pearson

Bruce Zaborowski

Monica Riley

City of Missouri City Councilmember District B

Jeffrey L. Boney

Everett Land

City of Bellaire, Council Member Pos. 1

Winfred C. Frazier

Kevin Newman

City of Bellaire, Council Member Pos. 3

Javier Vega

Ross Gordon

City of Bellaire, Council Member Pos. 5

Andrea Ehlers

David Montalvo

Brian Witt

SCHOOL BOARD RACES:

Houston Community College System, Trustee District III

Brandon “B.D.” Cofield, Sr.

Adriana Tamez

Houston Community College System, Trustee District VIII

Victor Gonzales

Eva Loredo

Jharrett Bryantt

Aldine ISD, Trustee Pos. 3

Rose Avalos

Jimmy Morales

Nico Matthews

Aldine ISD, Trustee Pos. 4

Conception Esparza

Zaheer Malik

Aldine ISD, Trustee Pos. 5

Steve Mead

Emmanuel Guerrero

Donald Jones

Alief ISD, Trustee Pos. 4

Darlene Breaux

Deborah Pepper

Alief ISD, Trustee Pos. 5

Donald Murphy Guillory

Randal Steward

Harvey Anh Tong

Alief ISD, Trustee Pos. 6

Jennifer Key

Ronald Bruce Franklin Jr.

Alief ISD, Trustee Pos. 7

Damon Barone

Gregg Patrick

Cy-Fair ISD, Trustee Pos. 5

John Ogletree Jr.

Natalie Blasingame

Grace Horner

Todd LeCompte

Xavier Leal

Courtney Spradley

Cy-Fair ISD, Trustee Pos. 6

Don Ryan

Chris Harrison

Scott Henry

Ryan Irving

Cy-Fair ISD, Trustee Pos. 7

Bob Covey

Craig Jacobs

Michael Perez

Lucas Scanlon

Houston ISD, Trustee District I

Elizabeth Santos

Janette Garza Lindner

Matias Kopinsky

Houston ISD, Trustee District V

Sue Deigaard

Maria Benzon

Caroline Walter

Houston ISD, Trustee District VI

Holly Maria Flynn Vilaseca

Kendall Baker

Gregory Degeyter

Houston ISD, Trustee District VII

Anne Sung

Dwight Jefferson

Bridget Wade

Lee Maceriaen Walker

Houston ISD, Trustee District IX

Myrna Guidry

Gerry Monroe

Joshua Rosales

Klein ISD, Trustee Pos. 2

Doug James

Matt Skaggs

Klein ISD, Trustee Pos. 3

Chris Todd

Natalie Pilkinton

Klein ISD, Trustee Pos. 4

Dustin Creager

James Fluker

Rhonda Foster

Denise Morrison

Dara Osborn

Michael Walsh

Klein ISD, Trustee Pos. 5

Ronnie Anderson

Kristin Cobb

Source: www.click2houston.com

Gloria Williams’ children said they were locked in room with brother’s decaying remains

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Mom charged in abandonment case appears in court Monday
A woman facing charges after her three children were found in an abandoned apartment in west Harris County with their brother’s remains appeared in court Monday.

Court officials said there were multiple delays as they tried finding a court appointed attorney represent Gloria Williams, 35, in the case. According to the district attorney’s office, Neal Davis has been assigned to represent her.

Williams was charged with injury to a child and tampering with evidence. Her bond was set at $900,000 but the judge believes the bond is “insufficient.” According to the district attorney’s office a hearing will likely be held later on in the week to determine if the bond should be raised. At this time, her bond conditions include:

  • Personally appearing in court
  • Committing no crimes that could result in arrest
  • No contact with prosecution’s witnesses or victims
  • She shall refrain from going to or within 200 feet of a residence, school, place of emloyment or other location where minors or her children attend school or child care or work
  • Williams is required to submit to drug and alcohol testing
  • Williams must remain within Harris County and its contiguous counties
  • She must not use, possess, or consume marijuana or any controlled substance or dangerous drug unless obtained by lawful prescription or issued by a medical doctor.
  • Williams must not use or possess a firearm.
  • Observe an initial curfew from 6:01 p.m. until 6:00 p.m. seven days a week
  • Defendant must not use, possess or consume alcohol.
  • Williams must submit to GPS monitoring.
  • Williams must stay 500 feet away from any school, park, playground or other location where children regularly gather, have no unsupervised contact with any person uner age 17, and have no contact with her co-defendant Brian Coulter.

Investigators say the body of her 8-year-old son was discovered in an apartment, along with three other children who had been abandoned.

During the court session on Monday, the surviving children alleged that they were locked inside a room with the 8-year-old’s remains even while Williams and her boyfriend, Coulter, lived in the apartment. After they moved out in March, prosecutors said Williams would deliver groceries to the children once a month and paid the rent as a way to conceal the boy’s remains.

Coulter is charged with murder for the death of the 8-year-old boy. His bond was set at $1 million.

Kendrick Lee’s brother had face surgery

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One of the children rescued from a Harris County apartment — where their dead sibling decomposed for nearly a year — required reconstructive facial surgery for an untreated injury that escalated to an infection, according to prosecutors.

The extent of the injury — caused when authorities say suspect Brian Coulter punched the child — was revealed Monday in court as the mother of the children, Gloria Williams, 35, went before a judge on three charges in the abuse case.

Coulter, Williams’ boyfriend, punched the child’s jaw in the weeks prior to the rescue when he visited the couple’s nearby apartment, prosecutors said. The apartment was separate from the third-floor unit at 3530 Green Crest where deputies on Oct. 24 discovered the three malnourished children living with the skeletal remains of their brother, 8-year-old Kendrick Lee.

The mother is charged with injury to a child by omission, injury to a child causing serious bodily injury, and tampering with evidence, in this case, a human corpse. Her boyfriend is charged with murder.

In court, Judge Kelli Johnson asked whether Williams was aware of the abuse toward her children, and the prosecutor overseeing the case, Andrea Beall, replied that she did. The judge has agreed to seal documents with the identities of the surviving children.

“This case has shocked the conscience of our community, as well as the nation,” Beall said. “We need to make sure we find answers as to how a mother could allow this to happen to her children.”

Williams on Monday offered few words in the 178th District Court other than to say good morning to the judge. A hearing later this week will determine whether the mother’s combined bail of $900,000 will be lowered, raised, or stay the same.

Defense attorney Neal Davis III, appointed to the case that morning, said he was unsure if Williams had the financial support of her family to pay for her pre-trial release.

Defense attorney Neal Davis III, appointed to the case that morning, said he was unsure if Williams had the financial support of her family to pay for her pre-trial release.

“The law says that every person is entitled to a reasonable bond and a reasonable bond right now is not $900,000,” Davis said.

Coulter and Williams were arrested Tuesday in the child’s death and the abuse of the others.

Authorities discovered Kendrick’s remains after his 15-year-old brother called police to CityParc II at West Oaks Apartments, telling them that their mother abandoned them in March. The siblings received food deliveries sent by their mother but were mostly forced to fend for themselves at times as their brother’s body continued to decompose.

According to court documents, two of the siblings witnessed Coulter punch and kick Kendrick until he stopped moving.

Coulter told police that he lost his temper.

The kids were forbidden from leaving the apartment by their abusers, the eldest child told authorities, and was possibly locked in different parts of their home. The conditions in the apartment were deplorable: the carpet was soiled and there were no furniture, bedding, or blankets. Roaches and flies crawled around the empty space.

The eldest brother was afraid to seek help because he had been abused and traumatized, officials said. He was relying on his mother to contact authorities after discovering his brother’s body in a bedroom last Thanksgiving, but she never did.

The mother said she did not report the abuse or death because her boyfriend told her not to, authorities said. She also feared that Child Protective Services would take her children away and she would go to jail. The state agency last week took custody of her children.

As authorities continue their investigation, they have also wondered why neighbors at the complex never called law enforcement. The Harris County Sheriff’s Office never received a report of foul odors or other suspicious activity from the unit, the agency has said.

Astros overcome Braves’ early burst to win, force Game 6

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Houston Astros' Martin Maldonado celebrates after his RBI-single during the seventh inning in Game 5 of baseball's World Series between the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Oct. 31, 2021, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

 The Houston Astros overcame a 4-0 1st-inning deficit to come back and beat the Atlanta Braves 9-5, prolonging the World Series and necessitating a Game 6 back at Minute Maid Park.

The Braves had jumped out to their four-run lead off a grand slam by Adam Duvall off Astros’ starter Framber Valdez.

However, the Astros proved they had plenty of fight in them, even while trailing 4-0 after the first inning. Alex Bregman, whose struggles caused him to be dropped from third to seventh in the batting order, got the Astros on the board with a double in the second inning. Martin Maldonado added a sacrifice fly to chop the lead in half.

The Astros would then score two more runs in the next inning off a Carlos Correa RBI double and a run-scoring groundout by Yuli Gurriel. The Braves answered back in their half of the third when Freddie Freeman hit a 460-foot home run off of Valdez to help the Braves retake the lead 5-4.

Valdez would depart in the third inning, and a major key was the Astros bullpen completely shutting out the Braves from that point forward.

The offense would again come through in the fifth inning, when the two-out scoring the Astros had made a regular ALCS habit re-emerged. With the bases loaded and two gone in the inning, Maldonado worked a five-pitch walk to force in a run, tying the game. Then, Marwin Gonzalez, whose previous hit came on October 3, laced a two-run bloop single to stake the Astros to a 7-5 lead.

In the seventh, again with two outs, Maldonado would come through again, this time with a run-scoring single to left field to increase the lead to 8-5. That would help cap off a 3-RBI evening for Maldonado, who had driven in a total of two runs previously in this postseason.

Correa drove in Jose Altuve in the eighth inning to make it 9-5 Houston for the final margin.

The teams will now head to Houston for the remainder of the World Series, starting with Game 6 on Tuesday evening.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Supreme Court questions Texas law banning most abortions

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Ava Stevenson, 20, left, of Montgomery County, Md., rallies for abortion rights with her mother Jenni Coopersmith, center, outside the Supreme Court, Monday, Nov. 1, 2021, as arguments are set to begin about abortion by the court, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

A majority of the Supreme Court signaled Monday they would allow abortion providers to pursue a court challenge to a Texas law that has virtually ended abortion in the nation’s second-largest state after six weeks of pregnancy.

But it was unclear how quickly the court would rule and whether it would issue an order blocking the law that has been in effect for two months, or require providers to ask a lower court put the law on hold.

Two conservative justices, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, voted in September to allow the law to take effect, but they raised questions Monday about its novel structure. The law was written to make it difficult to mount legal challenges, and it subjects clinics, doctors and others who facilitate an abortion to large financial penalties.

“There’s a loophole that’s been exploited here, or used here,” Kavanaugh said, explaining that the question for the court is whether to “close that loophole.” Kavanaugh suggested that the “principle” and “whole sweep” of a 1908 Supreme Court case would “suggest extending the principle here, arguably” and closing the loophole.

The justices heard three hours of arguments Monday in two cases over whether abortion providers or the Justice Department can mount federal court challenges to the law, which has an unusual enforcement scheme its defenders argue shields it from federal court review.

The Biden administration filed its lawsuit after the justices voted 5-4 to refuse a request by providers to keep the law on hold. Three other conservative justices joined Barrett and Kavanaugh in the majority to let the law take effect. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court’s three liberal justices in dissent.

The justices sounded less convinced that the Justice Department lawsuit should go forward, and Justice Elena Kagan suggested that a ruling instead in favor of the providers would allow the court to avoid difficult issues of federal power.

In neither case, Monday is the right to abortion directly at issue. But the motivation for the lawsuits is that the Texas law conflicts with landmark Supreme Court rulings that prevent a state from banning abortion early in pregnancy.

Arguing for the United States, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar told the justices that Texas’ law was enacted in “open defiance” of Supreme Court precedent. “It enacted a law that clearly violates this court’s precedents,” she said.

Under the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision and 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision, states are prevented from banning abortion before viability, the point at which a fetus can survive outside the womb, around 24 weeks of pregnancy.

The justices will hear a separate challenge to those decisions in a case over Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks. Those arguments are set for Dec. 1.

Kagan told Judd E. Stone II, arguing for Texas, that until Texas passed its law, “no state dreamed” of trying to make an end-run around Supreme Court precedent in the same way.

If the Supreme Court doesn’t do anything about that, she said, it would be inviting states to try to flout precedent: “Guns. Same-sex marriage. Religious rights. Whatever you don’t like: go ahead,” she said. Kagan, who disagreed with her colleagues’ decision to let the law take effect, said Texas’ law has prevented women in Texas “from exercising a constitutional right.”

Kavanaugh also raised concerns about laws that might affect other constitutional rights.

The Texas law has been in effect since September when the Supreme Court declined to intervene, except for a 48-hour period in early October when it was blocked by a lower court. The high court got involved again less than two weeks ago, moving at extraordinary speed. The court offered no explanation for its decision to hear the cases so quickly.

If the court allows the providers to continue their lawsuit, it would still take a separate order from the justices or a lower court to put the law on hold.

The Texas ban, signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott in May, prohibits abortion after the cardiac activity is detected in a fetus, usually around six weeks and before some women know they are pregnant.

The law makes exceptions for medical emergencies but not for rape or incest.

At least 12 other states have enacted bans early in pregnancy, but all have been blocked from going into effect.

Rather than have state officials enforce the law, Texas deputizes private citizens to sue anyone who performs or aids and abets an abortion. If someone bringing suit is successful, they are entitled to at least $10,000. Women who obtain abortions can’t be sued under the law.

During arguments Monday, Roberts at one point asked whether the law could be challenged if Texas had made the entitlement much higher, $1 million. Texas’ lawyer told him no.

The structure of the law threatens abortion providers with huge financial penalties if they violate it. Clinics throughout the state have stopped performing abortions once the cardiac activity is found.

The result, both the providers and the Biden administration said, is that women who are financially able to have traveled to other states and those without the means must either continue their pregnancies against their will or find other, potentially dangerous ways to end them.

Stone and Jonathan Mitchell, an architect of the law who also argued Monday, said that both the providers and the Justice Department lack the right to go into federal court and can’t sue state judges and clerks who are not responsible for enforcing the abortion ban. They also said that there is no effective way of blocking the law, in part because federal courts can’t force state judges to abstain from hearing the lawsuits the law authorizes.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Governor Abbott Appoints Evan Young To The Supreme Court Of Texas

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Governor Greg Abbott today announced his appointment of Evan Young, a former clerk to Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, to the Supreme Court of Texas. Young will replace Justice Eva Guzman on the bench, who resigned in June.

“Evan Young is a proven legal scholar and public servant, making him an ideal pick for the Supreme Court of Texas,” said Governor Abbott. “Evan’s extensive background in private practice and public service will be a fantastic addition to the bench, and I am confident that he will faithfully defend the Constitution and uphold the rule of law for the people of Texas.”

Evan Young of Austin is a partner at the firm of Baker Botts LLP. He clerked for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and served as Counsel to the Attorney General at the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). During his time at the DOJ, he spent nearly a year on detail to the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq, where he helped lead the U.S. government’s rule of law effort. Young is a former chair of the Texas Regional Office of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a member of the Supreme Court Advisory Committee, an elected member of the American Law Institute, and an adjunct professor at The University of Texas School of Law. He has served as a member of the Texas Judicial Council since 2017. Young received a Bachelor of Arts from Duke University and from Oxford University, where he was a British Marshall Scholar, and a Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School. He is married to Tobi Young and together they have one daughter, Romilly.
Source: gov.texas.gov

Octavio Ocaña falleció tras dispararse accidentalmente en la cabeza, concluyen peritajes

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La versión oficial incluye entrevistas con las dos personas que viajaban con el actor, policías de Cuautitlán Izcalli y exámenes forenses.

La Fiscalía de Justicia del Estado de México informó que los peritajes y declaraciones de testigos y policías concluyen que el actor Octavio Ocaña falleció tras dispararse accidentalmente en la cabeza, luego de chocar la camioneta en que viajaba mientras huía de una patrulla.

En un comunicado, la fiscalía reportó que el ministerio público ya entrevistó a las dos personas que viajaban con el actor de 22 años, quienes afirmaron que estuvieron ingiriendo bebidas embriagantes mientras circulaban por calles de Cuautitlán Izcalli.

Una vez que policías municipales les marcaron el alto, el actor Octavio Ocaña aceleró la marcha de la camioneta para evitar ser detenido. Esto provocó una persecución que se extendió hasta la autopista Chamapa-Lechería, según la versión de la fiscalía.

El copiloto declaró que durante la persecución el actor sacó de la guantera un arma de fuego, “la cual empuñó en la mano derecha, mientras conducía con la izquierda y mantenía su huida. Cabe señalar que durante esta persecución la camioneta se impactó con diversos vehículos”, dice el boletín.

El dictamen de mecánica de hechos concluye que el actor se disparó accidentalmente, tras chocar la camioneta.

Los peritajes y las declaraciones que sostienen la investigación, según la FGEJM:

-La prueba pericial de balística practicada al arma de fuego que portaba Octavio N arrojó que ésta corresponde a un calibre .380, y tenía dos cartuchos útiles.

-En la camioneta fue localizado un casquillo percutido que corresponde al arma de fuego calibre .380 que llevaba el actor.

-Indicios balísticos permiten establecer que la bala por la cual perdió la vida Octavio N fue disparada por el arma de fuego calibre .380, a corta distancia.

-El dictamen de mecánica de hechos apunta que durante su huida el conductor perdió el control, salió de la cinta asfáltica y se impactó sobre su parte delantera derecha; en este momento y a consecuencia de la dinámica de este percance el conductor presumiblemente accionó el arma de fuego que portaba en su mano derecha.

-El disparo produjo una lesión con orificio de entrada ubicado en parietal derecho y orificio de salida en parietal izquierdo, en ángulo ascendente. De la  trayectoria de la bala se desprende que ésta fue disparada desde el interior del vehículo y por la persona que la portaba.

-Uno de los policías municipales declaró que luego del choque, él y su compañero se acercaron a la unidad y encontraron en el asiento del conductor a una persona con una lesión en la parte derecha de la cabeza, misma que se encontraba aún con vida y empuñaba un arma de fuego en la mano derecha; por protocolo esta arma le fue retirada al conductor, para posteriormente ponerla a disposición del Ministerio Público con la debida cadena de custodia.

-Los policías municipales aseguraron a los otros dos sujetos que viajaban en la camioneta y solicitaron el apoyo de cuerpos de emergencia para trasladar al lesionado a un hospital.

-El dictamen de toxicología dice que la persona fallecida dio positivo a alcohol y a la sustancia característica de la marihuana: etanol por arriba del punto de corte (80mg/ml), con una concentración de 143/mg/dl; presencia de tetrahidrocannabinol por arriba del punto de corte (50ng/ml), la cual fue mayor a 100ng/ml.

-En la camioneta se encontraron tres latas de cerveza vacías, así como una botella de vidrio con etiqueta “José Cuervo Tradicional”, que también estaba vacía.

-De los peritajes y declaraciones de los detenidos y los policías se concluye: Octavio Ocaña se disparó a sí mismo con el arma de fuego que tenía en la mano derecha, la bala le impactó en la cabeza y por esta lesión perdió la vida cuando era trasladado al hospital para recibir atención médica.

La Fiscalía afirmó en su comunicado que las pruebas fueron realizadas por la Coordinación General de Servicios Periciales, “con estricto apego a derecho y usando métodos científicos debidamente acreditados”.

Source: aristeguinoticias.com

Governor Abbott Appoints Seven to Rehabilitation Council of Texas

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Governor Greg Abbott has appointed Christopher Baird, Glenda Born, Michele Dobbins, and James Williams, Ed.D. and reappointed April Pollreisz, Lisa Cowart, and Joseph Powell to the Rehabilitation Council of Texas for terms set to expire October 29, 2024. The council works with the Texas Workforce Commission to advocate for people with disabilities in the vocational rehabilitation process.

Christopher “Mark” Baird of San Angelo is a Unit Support Coordinator for the Texas Workforce Commission. He previously served as a vocational rehabilitation counselor for the Texas Workforce Commission and the Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services and as a Community Supervision Officer for Concho Valley Community Supervision and Corrections Department. Baird received a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Texas Tech University and a Master in Rehabilitation Counseling from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center.

Glenda Born of Austin is a retired Assistive Technology Specialist for the Texas Workforce Commission. During her 40-year career, she served as a Rehabilitation Teacher and Team Coordinator for the Texas Commission for the Blind and a Work Adjustment Specialist for the Travis Association for the Blind. Additionally, she held a professional counselor’s license. Born received a Bachelor of Science and Master in Education from Stephen F. Austin State University.

Michele Dobbins of Pasadena is a Regional Blind Services Specialist at Texas Workforce Solutions. Previously, she served as a Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor. Dobbins received a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from Saint Vincent College and a Master of Science in Clinical Vocational Rehabilitation Counseling from Texas Tech University.

James Williams, Ed.D. of Leander is the Chief Executive Officer for Bloom Consulting. He serves as the Treasurer of the Texas Association of People Supporting Employment First and as a member of the International Association of Rehabilitation Professionals. Previously, he served as a Conference Planning Member of the College Autism Network and as a member of the Texas Rehabilitation Association. Williams received a Bachelor of Science in Special Education from Sam Houston State University, a Master of Arts in Rehabilitation Counseling from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, and a Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership from Lamar University.

April Pollreisz of Amarillo is Chair of the State Independent Living Council and a former customer service professional in the insurance industry. She is the treasurer of the Panhandle Independent Living Council. Pollreisz received a Bachelor of Arts in Criminal Justice and a Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies from West Texas A&M University.

Lisa Cowart of Sour Lake is the PATH Project Director for Partners Resource Network. She is an advisory committee member of SpedTex, a general member of the Society for Human Resources Management, and the vice chair of the Rehabilitation Council of Texas. Cowart received a Bachelor of Business Administration in marketing from Lamar University.

Joseph Powell of Dallas is the President and CEO of the Association of Persons Affected by Addiction, Dallas. He is an Allied Health Professional and Peer Chair of the Texas Certification Board. Additionally, he is an advisory member of the National Southwest Addiction Technology Transfer Center. Powell attended Eastfield College and Amber University for social work and substance use.

Source:gov.texas.gov

Se forma la tormenta subtropical Wanda en el Atlántico

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 La Oficina de Seguridad Nacional y Manejo de Emergencias del Condado Harris (HCOHSEM, por sus siglas en inglés) continúa monitoreando el curso de la tormenta subtropical Wanda. La tormenta se formó en el Atlántico y se espera que permanezca allí hasta que se disipe. Según el pronóstico actual del Centro Nacional de Huracanes, Wanda no representa una amenaza para Texas.
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Ahora es el momento preciso de revisar su kit y plan de emergencia. Manténgase informado por medio de las actualizaciones de HCOHSEM en línea, en las redes sociales o regístrese para recibir Ready Harris Alerts.

Para obtener más información sobre cómo prepararse, consulte nuestra guía de preparación y evacuación para huracanes.