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Publicación 1193 de DALLAS – Revista Digital 04 de marzo – 10 de marzo / 2021
Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de DALLAS de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 04 de marzo – 10 de marzo / 2021
Publicación 1193 de HOUSTON – Revista Digital 04 de marzo – 10 de marzo / 2021
Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda Magazine! De fecha 04 de marzo – 10 de marzo / 2021
Biden calls Abbott’s decision to open Texas, lift mask order ‘big mistake’
President Joe Biden weighed in on Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s decision to lift the mask order in Texas and open everything back to 100% next week during a meeting at the White House on Wednesday.
Biden said he thinks the decisions by the governors of Texas and Mississippi to ease COVID restrictions, including eliminating mask mandates, “is a big mistake.”
“I hoped that we would realize by now that masks make a difference,” Biden said. “We are on the cusp of fundamentally being able to change the nature of this disease because of the way we’ve been able to get vaccines in people’s arms … The last thing we need is neanderthal thinking that in the meantime, ‘Everything is fine, (so) take off your mask.’ Forget it. It still matters.”
According to Biden, the U.S. has lost 511,874 people to coronavirus. Biden said it is critical that people and local officials follow the science and CDC guidelines put in place to help protect the public, including washing your hands, social distancing, and wearing a mask.
Source: www.click2houston.com
Gov. Abbott names new chairman of Public Utility Commission of Texas after deadly winter storm
Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday the new chairman of the Public Utility Commission of Texas after the former chairman resigned following the deadly winter storm in February.
Austin native Arthur D’Andrea has been named as the new chair of PUC — the agency that regulates the state’s electric, telecommunication, and water and sewer utilities — for a term.
He will be taking over the position of the former chairwoman of PUC, DeAnn Walker, who resigned on Monday after coming under public criticism in the aftermath of Texas’ power crisis that left millions of people in the dark for days and claimed the lives of dozens.
D’Andrea has served as a commissioner for PUC since November 2017. He was an assistant general counsel for Abbott’s office and served as an assistant solicitor general for the Office of the Attorney General of Texas.
He is also a member of the State Bar of Texas. D’Andrea received a Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering from The University of Texas at Austin and a Juris Doctor degree from The University of Texas School of Law, according to a release.
Source: www.click2houston.com
Texas directs vaccine providers to begin giving shots to teachers, child care workers
Texas health officials have directed all coronavirus vaccine providers to immediately expand eligibility to K-12 and preschool teachers and staff, as well as child care workers.
“It’s just simply great news,” said Zeph Capo, president of the Texas division of the American Federation of Teachers. “We’re hoping that all of our educators that want the vaccine to take advantage of it, and as soon as possible.”
President Biden said on Tuesday that he would direct all states to “prioritize educators” and Tuesday night his acting secretary of Health and Human Services sent a letter to Texas officials doing just that.
The directive said states were “required” to add the following educators to the vaccine priority list: “[P]re-primary, primary and secondary schools; Head Start and Early Head Start programs; and those who work as or for licensed child care providers.”
Staff and bus drivers for any of these eligible fields are also part of the expansion, which is in addition to those already eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in phases 1A and 1B.
“This is going to be a huge piece of helping us stabilize our school system,” Capo said, “helping us get the focus back on students.”
State health officials have also asked providers to track the number of education and child care employees being given the shot as best they can.
Source: www.click2houston.com
Hyperloop Technology: When is it coming to Texas?
The Hyperloop technology could revolutionize ground transportation, it’s set to be faster than high-speed trains by leaps and bounds, with the potential to take passengers from Dallas to Houston in minutes. Traffic Expert An avid Reyes spoke with AECOM to see when Texas could see this technology.
Hyperloop: What is it?
The concept first coined by Elon Musk in 2013 is still in development by a number of companies worldwide, one of them being AECOM. This is a type of futuristic technology that would be a game-changer for ground transportation. A trip that usually takes four hours, for example, Dallas to Houston, could now take you just 20 minutes.
How does it work?
Steven Duong, AECOM’s lead consultant for the Texas Hyperloop proposal, has a simple explanation: “It’s a form of high-speed transportation that moves people very quickly, autonomously using electricity,” and magnetic levitation. So think about this– the same basic idea behind an air hockey table and how the puck effortlessly glides and levitates across the table. Passengers are in a sealed tube, with low air pressure, powered by electricity, and able to travel free of air resistance or friction, due to the magnetic levitation.
Is it safe?
“Honestly, the experience is very similar to riding a train or flying an airplane, even though you’re moving this quickly, you’re just moving at airline speeds,” said Duong.
Ok, when is it coming to Texas?
Duong tells us Texas could see it in the coming two decades, but to keep in mind, the technology is still in its early stages of development.
“Going from nothing to something so real leads us to believe we’re talking about years, and sometimes a decade but not necessarily 30 40 50 years before we see this technology,” Duong said.
Source: www.click2houston.com
Abbott lifts business capacity limits, mask mandate starting next week
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said Tuesday he is lifting business capacity limits and the state’s mask mandate starting next week.
Abbott made the announcement at a news conference in Lubbock.
“Every business that wants to open should be open,” Abbott said.
Abbott said that county judges can institute coronavirus-mitigation measures in their counties if the hospitalization rate rises above 15% for seven consecutive days. However, he said no one can be jailed for failing to follow those protocols or be penalized for not wearing a mask.
The governor said the state is in a much better position than when the pandemic started last year, citing a lower number of cases, a higher number of recoveries and wider availability of vaccines.
“Despite these changes, remember this – removing state mandates does not end personal responsibility,” Abbott said.
You can view a copy of the governor’s order below:
Houston-area officials say the move is ‘premature’
Both Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner jointly signed a letter to Abbott, asking him to keep the mask mandate in place.
In the Tuesday letter, Hidalgo and Turner said they believe lifting the mandate would be “premature and harmful” to the progress made in the pandemic thus far.
“Especially with the arrival of new variants of the virus to Texas and our cities, with the associated potential for a future spoke in cases, preserving the most effective of our existing safety measures is even more important,” the leaders wrote.
Houston health officials announced Monday that wastewater testing has revealed an increasing amount of COVID-19 variants in the city with the UK version becoming the primary variant being detected.
Hidalgo echoed the concerns raised in the letter during a news conference held after Abbott’s announcement.
“We shouldn’t play with lives in this way, because, what I’m afraid of, is when people see this rescinding of public health interventions, of public health guidelines and restrictions, what they’re going to hear is that there’s an all-clear,” Hidalgo said. “What I want to say, very directly, is that’s not the case. That’s not the case.”
Turner said he is disappointed in the governor’s decision, and that it undermines the sacrifices that have already been made by people over the past year.
“It works against, minimizes, all the efforts,” Turner said.
Turner said he is tired of Texas being in the national spotlight because of poor decisions.
“Why must Texas always be in the national news for making decisions that go contrary to science and the medical professionals and data?” Turner asked.
Both Turner and Hidalgo said they believe Abbott’s decision may be an effort to deflect attention away from the failure of the state’s power grid during the recent winter storm.
Read the letter from Hidalgo and Turner and more about their reaction here.
School districts issue decisions
Schools are part of Abbott’s new executive order regarding masks and capacity. According to the order, districts must follow the guidelines laid out by the Texas Education Agency.
Leaders at several Houston-area school districts have issued statements about the new order, including Houston, Katy, and Fort Bend independent school districts.
Read more about their rules here.
Social-media reaction
There have been mixed reactions to Abbott’s announcement on social media.
Some people applaud the move, while others encourage people to stay away from Texas if they want to live.
Source: www.click2houston.com
Third stimulus check update: Democrats agree to tighten income limits for payments
President Joe Biden and Democrats agreed Wednesday to tighten the upper-income limits at which people could qualify for stimulus checks, a Democratic official said, a major concession to moderates as party leaders prepared to move their $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill through the Senate.
The COVID-19 relief measure Senate Democrats planned to unveil will also retain the $400 weekly emergency jobless benefits that were included in a House-approved version of the legislation, the official said.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal Democratic conversations.
As part of Democrats’ legislative thrust against the pandemic and resulting economic slowdown, individuals earning up to $75,000 — and couples up to $150,000 — would get $1,400 checks per person.
The version the House approved last Saturday would gradually phase down those amounts and disappear completely for individuals making $100,000 and couples earning $200,000.
But under Wednesday’s agreement, those checks would end for individuals making $80,000 and couples earning $160,000, the official said.
But Biden and party leaders stood firm and will retain the $400 weekly emergency jobless benefits. Moderates want to trim those payments to $300 per week.
President Biden on Tuesday urged Senate Democrats to rally behind a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill and stood by his proposed $1,400 payments to individuals, even as some party moderates sought to dial back parts of the package.
“He said we need to pass this bill and pass it soon. That’s what the American people sent us here to do, and we have to get America the help it needs,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters, describing a 20-minute conference call Biden had with Democratic senators Tuesday.
The president’s cry for unity came as Democrats, with no votes to spare in a 50-50 Senate, sorted through lingering divisions over the emerging bill. Those included moderates’ efforts to focus spending more narrowly on those hardest hit by the deadly pandemic and resulting economic contraction.
Biden took to Twitter to signal he wouldn’t budge from his demand that lawmakers add a fresh $1,400 payment to the $600 that millions of individuals received from a December relief measure. That new installment comprises nearly a quarter of the overall bill’s cost.
“The fact is that $600 is not enough. The Senate needs to pass the American Rescue Plan and finish the job of delivering $2,000 in direct relief,” Biden wrote in one of his infrequent uses of a medium his predecessor, Donald Trump, at times used over 100 times daily.
The huge relief package is a too-big-to-fail moment for the fledging president, who would be politically staggered if Congress — controlled narrowly by Democrats but controlled nonetheless — failed to deliver. Conquering the virus that’s killed half a million Americans and flung the economy and countless lives into tailspins is Biden’s top initial priority.
So far, Republicans are following the template they set during Barack Obama’s presidency. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said he hoped GOP senators would oppose the bill unanimously, as their House counterparts did early Saturday when that chamber approved its version of the measure.
McConnell accused Democrats of ignoring signs that the economy and the deadly virus’ rampage were beginning to turn around and shunning Republicans. Biden met with 10 GOP senators last month who presented a $600 billion plan one-third the size of his own, but efforts to find middle ground went nowhere.
“The new administration made a conscious effort to jam us,” McConnell told reporters. “We’ll be fighting this in every way that we can.”
Democrats are using special rules that will let them avoid GOP filibusters that would require them to garner an impossible 60 votes to approve the legislation.
The Senate bill was expected to largely mirror the House-approved package, with the most glaring divergence the Senate’s dropping of language boosting the federal minimum wage to $15 hourly.
Schumer said Senate debate would commence as soon as Wednesday and predicted, “We’ll have the votes we need to pass the bill.” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-NY, told CNN he believes the Senate will pass the bill Friday or Saturday and that the House will take it up again, if any changes are made, on Monday. Democrats want to send a final package to Biden by March 14, when an earlier round of emergency jobless benefits expires.
The bill has hundreds of billions of dollars for schools and colleges, COVID-19 vaccines and testing, mass transit systems, renters, and small businesses. It also has money for child care, tax breaks for families with children, and assistance for states willing to expand Medicaid coverage for low-income residents.
Two people said Biden told Democrats they must sometimes accept provisions in a large measure that they don’t like. And it was clear there were still moving parts.
West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, perhaps the Senate’s most conservative Democrat, said he wanted to pare the bill’s $400 weekly emergency unemployment benefit to $300. That’s the same amount Congress approved last December — on top of regular state benefits — and Manchin said the higher figure would discourage people from returning to work.
“It would be awful for the doors to open up and there’s no one working,” Manchin said of businesses reopening. Top Democrats and progressives oppose trimming those benefits, but Schumer suggested a final decision awaited, saying, “They’re discussing it.”
Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said he wants the bill’s $350 billion for state and local governments to specify minimum amounts for municipal governments and has called for $50 billion to improve broadband coverage.
Despite every Democrats’ huge leverage because all their votes are needed, none have so far threatened to sink the legislation if they don’t get their way. All are aware of how that would rattle Biden’s presidency and Democrats’ ability to be productive during this Congress.
“We want to get the biggest, strongest bill that can pass, and that’s what we’re going to do,” Schumer said.
There were indications loose ends were falling into place. In one sign, 11 Democratic senators wrote Biden urging him to use a huge, upcoming infrastructure bill to create regularly paid relief and jobless benefits that would be automatically triggered by economic conditions.
Some progressives had wanted those payments included in the COVID-19 bill. Democrats’ push to include it in later legislation suggested an effort to satisfy progressives while avoiding jeopardizing the current package.
Progressives, though, were still smarting over the virtual certainty that the Senate bill will lack the minimum wage boost, up from $7.25 hourly locked in since 2009.
The chamber’s nonpartisan parliamentarian said last week that including that increase violated Senate budget rules. Opposition by moderates including Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., has left Democrats without the votes needed to salvage it.
A fundraising email by Our Revolution, a progressive political committee that was started by backers of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., underscored the left’s anger. Sanders is the chief Senate sponsor of the wage increase.
“The politician standing in the way of change is Vice President Kamala Harris,” said the email, citing the possibility — already rejected by the White House — of her casting a tie-breaking Senate vote to overrule the parliamentarian. It said the organization will “hold her accountable if she decides to turn her back on essential workers.”
Senate drafters of the legislation also stripped out a small provision that would have provided $1.5 million for maintaining and operating a bridge in upstate New York connecting the U.S. and Canada. The funding was removed after some Republican lawmakers had criticized it as an example of a wasteful spending item that should not be part of the COVID relief bill.
Source: www.khou.com