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Houston Rockets season opener against Oklahoma City postponed due to COVID-19

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The Houston Rockets game against Oklahoma City Thunder has been postponed due to positive or inconclusive COVID-19 tests.

The game’s cancellation came just a few hours before the team’s home opener at the Toyota Center.

Four other players have been quarantined after contact tracing. According to a statement, James Harden, who was set to start in Wednesday’s game, was unavailable due to a violation of the NBA’s health and safety protocols.

In a previous social media post, Harden was seen without a mask while at a group event.

With no Florida bubble, the players have to abide by strict rules. While in Houston, Rockets players can’t go to bars, clubs, or lounges. They can’t attend a live sporting event or social gatherings of more than 15 people.

On the road, they can only eat at approved restaurants, and eat outdoors, or in private rooms. The Rockets say the game will be rescheduled, and fans will receive information on how to attend.

Another Rockets star, John Wall, who tested negative for coronavirus, is among a group of players sent home Wednesday afternoon because of a positive test of another teammate.
The Rockets disclosed Tuesday that guard Ben McLemore is in self-isolation and out for Wednesday night’s regular-season opener against the Oklahoma City Thunder. McLemore tested positive days ago, sources said. He is not the teammate whose positive test initiated contact tracing on the team Wednesday.

The game was nine months in the making. Something fan Savannah Davis drove hours to enjoy.

Davis made the trip because the Rockets were going to play the first regular-season game with fans since March. But her emotions came out when she learned it was postponed a couple of hours before tip-off.

“I cried in my car. I was going to cry out here when you stopped me, but I’m not going to cry on TV because that’s awkward,” Davis told.

But she wasn’t the only disappointed fan. Instead of Toyota Center employees scanning tickets, a few of them informed fans the game was off.

After waiting months to see the Rockets play, it’ll at least be another week before they get another opportunity on New Year’s Eve night.
Read the NBA’s full statement on its website.

Houston Rockets season opener against Thunder postponed; Harden out for COVID-19 violation

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The NBA has postponed the Houston Rockets game against the Oklahoma City Thunder due to health and safety concerns, according to a release. The season-opening matchup was scheduled for Wednesday night at the Toyota Center in Houston.

The league stated that the Rockets did not have enough players to compete. According to league rules, teams must have eight eligible players or half of a typical 16-men roster.

“Three Houston Rockets players have returned tests that were either positive or inconclusive for coronavirus under the NBA’s testing program. Following the contract tracing protocols, four other players are quarantined at this time,” the NBA stated in a press release.

The NBA also stated that James Harden was unavailable for the game after he violated the league’s health and safety protocols.

A video on Instagram surfaced Wednesday morning showing Harden attending a party Monday night in Houston, where he was not wearing a mask. ESPN previously reported that if the NBA could verify the photos, then the Rockets star could miss the game.

According to the NBA, all other Rockets players were tested again Wednesday, and all returned negative results. While one additional player is out due to injury.

A total of nine Rockets players were unavailable for the game.

Mayor Turner’s Statement on the Stimulus Relief Bill

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Please attribute the following statement and information to Mayor Sylvester Turner.

“While negotiations continue over the stalled COVID-19 stimulus relief bill in Washington D.C., the City of Houston is leading efforts to help individuals who are struggling financially due to the pandemic. I am grateful that the Texas Supreme Court has extended its emergency eviction relief program, which will impose a moratorium on evictions through March 15The move will keep hard-working people in their homes during a deadly pandemic.

“The decision was made after I wrote a letter earlier this month urging the court to reinstate a 90-day suspension of eviction hearings to help contain the current surge of COVID-19 cases. You can review the letter here on the city’s government relations office webpage.

“And as the U.S. Congress debates whether to increase direct stimulus aid to Americans from $600 to $2,000, the City is putting $1,200 checks of much needed assistance directly into the hands of those who are struggling financially.

On December 2, Houston City Council unanimously approved another round of COVID-19 relief funds in the amount of $20 million. BakerRipley is administering the CARES Act fund program on the City’s behalf.

  • As of Wednesday, December 23, 2020 (today)
    • Direct Assistance
      • 13,230 direct assistance checks ($1,200 each) have been sent out totaling $15,876,000 (CARES Act)
      • 469 direct assistance checks ($1,200 each) have been distributed totaling $ 562,800 (Philanthropic Funds)
    • Rental Assistance
      • 12,125 tenants assisted through $15 million Round 2 of City of Houston Rental Assistance (CARES Act)
      • 11,853 tenants assisted through $15 million Round 1 of City of Houston Rental Assistance (CARES Act)
    • Utility Assistance
      • 3,567 direct utility assistance checks ($400) have been sent totaling $ 1,426,800 (CARES Act)
  • Additional direct assistance and utility assistance checks will go out at end of today, Wednesday, December 23.
  • We are on target to have all $20M ($19M in assistance) paid out by December 30, 2020.
  • Recipients are from the Harris County Direct Assistance waiting list and from other  City of Houston COVID-19 Assistance Programs.

“The City of Houston is putting critical dollars directly into families’ hands and there are no stipulations on how they can use the money. The funds can go to rent, utilities, or other critical needs. People facing financial challenges need to have flexibility ahead of the holidays.”

More delays, crashes expected as holiday exodus from the capital continues

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Motorists heading out of Wellington for Christmas and the summer holidays today should expect more traffic and delays after significant congestion across the region on Tuesday.

Waka Kotahi New Zealand Transport Agency is advising people to use its online holiday journey hotspots tool to work out when and where delays are expected across the entire State Highway network.

For Christmas Eve, it predicts traffic northbound on the Kāpiti Coast on State Highway 1, between Peka Peka and Ōtaki, will begin to get busy from 9 am and remain busy until 7.30 pm.

Southbound, it will be busy between 11 am and 5 pm.

State Highway 2 northbound on Remutaka Hill between Wellington and Featherston will be busy from midday until 3.30 pm.

An exodus of vehicles from the capital on Tuesday, coupled with a crash, resulted in heavy congestion and gridlock in some areas throughout the day, with some motorists reporting moving just 2 kilometers in one hour.

Traffic didn’t begin to ease until about 6.30 pm.

A crash across both lanes on SH1 near Ōtaki caused significant delays and led police to ask drivers to avoid the area unless it was urgent.

One motorist said it took two hours to get from the CBD to Paraparaumu, with one hour spent in crawling traffic between Plimmerton roundabout and Pukerua Bay – a stretch of road which usually takes less than five minutes.

“Everybody was well-behaved though, very patient, calm, and taking it in their stride,” she said.

Another motorist, Liz Hay, said she left Plimmerton roundabout about 12.45 pm. By 2 pm they were still “well south of Ōtaki”.

“We’re from the South Island and have never experienced anything like it. There are often sections where we don’t move at all.”

Greg Halford was also caught in the congestion and said an hour and 45 minutes after leaving Wellington they were still 10km out of Ōtaki.

CHRISTMAS EVE CAPITAL CRASHES

There have been two crashes across Wellington so far on Christmas Eve, as of 6.30 am.

In the first, a person received moderate injuries after their car crashed into a power pole on Hampshire St in Cannons Creek, Porirua, about 5.50 am.

The power pole was down across the road and police were in attendance as of 6.20 am, assisting with traffic control. The driver received moderate injuries.

The car would be towed, police said.

In the second crash, a car hit a barrier on Cuba St in Alicetown, Lower Hutt, just after 6 am. There were no injuries or road blockages in that crash.

Expects 85 million Americans to travel over holidays

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Tens of millions of people are expected to travel to family gatherings or winter vacations over Christmas, despite pleas by public health experts who fear the result could be another surge in COVID-19 cases.

In the U.S., AAA predicts that about 85 million people will travel between Dec. 23 and Jan. 3, most of them by car. If true, that would be a drop of nearly one-third from a year ago, but it would still be a massive movement of people in the middle of a pandemic.

Jordan Ford, 24, who was laid off as a guest-relations worker at Disneyland in March, said he plans to visit both his and his boyfriend’s families in Virginia and Arkansas over Christmas.

“It is pretty safe — everyone is wearing a mask, they clean the cabin thoroughly,” said Mr. Ford, who has traveled almost weekly in recent months from his home in Anaheim, Calif., and gets tested frequently. “After you get over that first trip since the pandemic started, I think you’ll feel comfortable no matter what.”

Experts worry that Christmas and New Year’s will turn into “superspreader” events because many people are letting down their guard — either out of pandemic fatigue or in light of the hopeful news that vaccines are starting to be distributed.

“Early on in the pandemic, people didn’t travel because they didn’t know what was to come,” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious-disease expert at the University of California, San Francisco, “but there is a feeling now that, ‘If I get it, it will be mild; it’s like a cold.’ ”

The seven-day rolling average of newly reported infections in the U.S. has risen from about 176,000 a day just before Thanksgiving to more than 215,000 a day. It’s too early to calculate how much of that increase is due to travel and gatherings over Thanksgiving, but experts believe they are a factor.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says “postponing travel and staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others from COVID-19.” People who insist on travel should consider getting tested for the virus before and after their trip and to limit nonessential activities for seven days after travel with a negative test result and 10 days if they don’t get tested.

Other countries have imposed restrictions ahead of the holidays. Last month, England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland agreed to permit a maximum of three households to mix from Dec. 23-27, regardless of what local restrictions are in place.

Germany’s ADAC motoring association says holiday traffic will be sharply reduced. The reasons include not only caution and government urging to avoid personal contact, but also the simple fact that many traditional destinations — from the country’s enchanting Christmas markets to the Alpine ski resorts — have been ordered closed.

Christmas markets, which normally draw large crowds to city centers for steaming mugs of mulled wine, have been canceled; a lockdown imposed Dec. 9 closed retail deemed nonessential.

Meanwhile, the usual pilgrimage via autobahn to the ski slopes, which typically begins on Dec. 26, will be largely absent since France, Germany, and Italy have ordered ski resorts closed. Borders are open but with significant limits such as quarantine requirements.

In Latin America, a few countries have imposed some restrictions to try to keep people from traveling or meeting during the holidays, but others advised people only to practice social distancing and skip parties.

Panama has some of the strictest measures, including a curfew through Jan. 4 and a prohibition on leaving home at all from Dec. 25-28 and Jan. 1-4 unless it’s for essential activities such as buying food or medicine. Peru, one of the region’s hardest-hit countries, has banned the use of private cars on Christmas Eve and Day and New Year’s Eve and Day in hopes of discouraging people from traveling.

In the U.S., Rachel Watterson delayed her New Year’s Eve wedding because her fiancé’s family can’t travel to the U.S. from their home in Germany. Instead, the couple plans to elope and will fly from their home in Chicago to Hawaii with her parents, her brother, and a friend. They picked Hawaii because of requirements that include coronavirus testing before arrival and a rapid test at the airport.

“We felt this was one of the very few safe choices we can make if we are going to travel,” Ms. Watterson said.

Tim Brooks, a 37-year-old engineer in Long Beach, Calif., canceled a trip to Grand Cayman because of a ban on international visitors, then scrapped a Christmas visit to his parents in North Carolina as infections spiked in California and around the country.

“If it were just us, it wouldn’t be so bad, but we have older parents and we are trying to keep them safe,” Mr. Brooks said.

Airports and planes will be far less crowded this year in what is normally a high travel season. So far in December, air travel in the U.S. is down 67% from last year. If Thanksgiving is any indication, the number of travelers will rise the rest of the month, but airlines are warning that bookings have slowed down since the latest surge in COVID-19 cases.

The nation’s top four airlines now show December and January schedules that are anywhere from 33% to 46% smaller than a year earlier, according to figures from Airline Data Inc.

Last week, the average flight within the U.S. was only 49% full compared with more than 80% full a year ago, according to the trade group Airlines for America.

The short-term outlook remains grim for other travel-related businesses, including those that rely on winter tourism.

In Vermont ski country, the Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe is usually sold out during Christmas week, but only half the 96 rooms were booked by last week. It was a similar story at the nearby Lodge at Spruce Peak. Operators of both lodges blamed travel restrictions, especially quarantine requirements that are triggered by crossing state lines.

“It is frustrating as a business to basically be forbidden to do your job and to not be able to support your employees or your community,” said Sam von Trapp, executive vice president of the family’s lodge. “At the same time, we understand that there is very good intention behind all these restrictions.”

Cruise ships often command their highest prices at Christmas and other holidays when kids are off school, but few ships are sailing this season. Carnival, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian and Disney have all canceled U.S. sailings through Feb. 28. Voyages in other parts of the world have mostly been delayed.

Florida, which relies heavily on winter tourism, is also taking a big hit. The two-week period around Christmas is normally the busiest time of year for Walt Disney World in Orlando, said Len Testa, the president of TouringPlans.com, which forecasts park attendance. But this year, the Magic Kingdom has capped park attendance at 35%, so Mr. Testa only expects around 32,000 people on those days.

Mr. Testa also expects crowd levels to be lower than usual from January through March, with many visitors rescheduling their trips to May or later.

“Many families will put off their Spring Break trips until they’re vaccinated,” he said.

Tara Kelley had planned to drive seven hours across Florida from her home in Milligan in the state’s Panhandle to Orange City, near Daytona Beach, to visit her mother and stepfather for Christmas. But Ms. Kelley’s wife recently had surgery and spent a day at a hospital where there was a risk of exposure to the coronavirus, so they called off the trip.

“We had literally been planning this since February,” Ms. Kelley said. “It’s a blow.”

Theresa Medina, a 55-year-old retiree from South Boston, is still deciding whether she and her husband will visit his mother in the Dominican Republic this winter. She said she’s 80% sure they will, and she’s already packing a box to ship ahead of their arrival. But the couple plans to discuss it with her husband’s doctor in January.

If they go, Ms. Medina said they will get tested and wear protective gear, including face shields and masks.

“We may look silly on the plane, but precautions are precautions,” she said.

U.S. tops 18 million COVID-19 cases, as daily new cases and deaths are back on the rise

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Hospitalizations spike to a record, while vaccinations jump after more states provide public reports.

The U.S. topped another somber milestone in COVID-19 cases of 18 million on Tuesday, as the number of daily new cases and deaths got back to increasing to snap a brief streak of declines.

Hospitalizations rose for the first time in four days, but by enough to mark another record.

Meanwhile, with more states publicly reporting vaccinations, the number of doses administered nationwide jumped by more than 100,000.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, received his shot Tuesday morning on TV, as did Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, a day after President-elect Joe Biden got his first shot of Pfizer Inc.’s PFE, +2.24% and BioNTech SE’s BNTX, -0.62% vaccine.

The U.S. has now recorded a total of 18,134,027 COVID-19 cases as of Tuesday morning, according to data provided by Johns Hopkins University, as the death toll rose to 321,301.

On a daily basis, new COVID-19 cases increased to 210,723 on Monday, up from 179,801 on Sunday to snap a three-day streak of declines, according to the New York Times data. At least 1,962 people died from COVID-19 on Monday, up from 1,422 on Sunday, also the first increase in four days.

The new daily counts were well below the one-day records of 280,514 (with data anomaly) in new cases seen on Dec. 11, the New York Times data shows, and 3,611 in deaths suffered on Dec. 16.

Hospitalizations jumped by 1,750 in a day to the record of 115,351, according to the COVID Tracking Project. That’s the biggest one-day increase since it rose by 2,265 on Dec. 15, and the record was the 17th reached this month.

There have now been 23 states that have publicly reported vaccinations, according to JHU data, with the dose count climbing to 244,706 from 144,336 the day before. The states that have reported the most doses administered are Florida with 43,716 and Texas with 42,248.

This comes amid growing concerns over a new, more infectious strain of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 that has bubbled up from the U.K., which has led many countries to issue travel bans.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday that Delta Air Lines Inc. DAL, +3.31%, and British Airways have agreed to require passengers show a negative COVID-19 test before boarding U.K. flights to New York City.

Donald Trump demands bigger stimulus checks in $900 billion COVID-19 relief package passed by Congress

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In an unexpected video posted to Twitter on Tuesday night, President Donald Trump denounced a sweeping COVID-19 relief package he was expected to sign, calling it a “disgrace” and urging congressional leaders to make several changes to the bill including increasing direct payments for Americans.

“It’s called the COVID relief bill, but it has almost nothing to do with COVID,” he said in a video posted just moments after he issued a raft of pardons for several allies. “I’m asking Congress to amend this bill and increase the ridiculously low $600 to $2,000 or $4,000 for a couple.”

The president stopped short of saying he would veto the bipartisan legislation but was expected to sign the measure alongside a $1.4 trillion spending bill to fund the government. Trump called on Congress to remove “wasteful and unnecessary items from this legislation,” appearing to conflate the relief bill with the government spending measure.

The roughly $900 billion measure was attached to a $1.4 trillion spending bill to fund the federal government through Sept. 30, 2021 (the end of the fiscal year) to form a nearly 5,600 page-bill that is one of the largest pieces of legislation Congress has ever tackled. The measure also includes bipartisan provisions like the end of surprise medical billing and legislation creating Smithsonian museums for women and Latinos.

Texas orders some counties to roll back reopening plans because of high hospitalization rates

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Galveston, Brazoria, Liberty, and Chambers counties were among 9 Southeast Texas counties told to halt elective surgeries and scale back indoor business capacity.

Seven straight days of high hospitalization rates forced the governor’s office to tell several Southeast Texas counties to scale back their reopening plans.

According to the state, Galveston, Chambers, Brazoria, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Orange, and Newton counties make up a Trauma Service Area that has had seven consecutive days in which the number of COVID-19 hospitalized patients as a percentage of total hospital capacity exceeded 15%.

The state told the counties to pause elective surgeries and to scale back indoor business capacity to 50% starting Tuesday. Bars are also ordered to halt to indoor service.

In order for the area to return to where they were at (allowing elective surgeries and businesses operating at 75%), they’ll need to log seven consecutive days with less than 15% of their hospital capacity being COVID-19 patients.

A Beaumont doctor says he’s disappointed that it got to this point.

“With all the information we’ve had over the past several months in terms of how to flatten the curve, we should know better and it’s disappointing that we’re sliding backward,” says Dr. Msonthi Levine.

The state issued this statement on the rollbacks:

“This is due to the governor’s executive order, GA-32, which allowed for an opening to 75% of capacity for various businesses. That is rolled back if the number of hospitalized COVID patients in a trauma service is greater than 15% of the overall hospital capacity for seven consecutive days. The letters sent to county judges today are attached as is the executive order. There is more information at https://www.dshs.texas.gov/ga32/.”

Here’s what’s next beginning Tuesday at 8 a.m.

Hospitals must cancel elective surgeries and bars will have to shut down and return to to-go service only.

Other businesses must scale back to 50% capacity. This excludes hair and nail salons. They can continue operating at 75% capacity but must follow social distancing guidelines.

Counties can ask for an exemption and, if granted, continue to operate at 75% if the county has fewer than 30 cases reported over the last 14 days.

Local business owners baffled at state’s decision to roll back reopening

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Business owners in several Houston area counties are facing the reality of new restrictions as COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise.

“I thought, ‘We gotta go through this again?” said Tammy Davis, owner of Sweet T’s Diner on W. 2nd Street in Freeport.

For the past five years, Tammy Davis has been serving up home-cooked meals at her restaurant.

“Gov. (Greg) Abbott said he wouldn’t shut the businesses down and all of a sudden we get the news today that we have to shut down to 50% capacity,” she said.

She much prefers to focus on her popular chicken fried steak and beef tips, not counting customers.

“I go home and I worry about my next bill. It’s frustrating to open us up, close us down, open us up, close us down,” said Davis.

Brazoria, Galveston, Chambers, and Liberty counties are all impacted. There are 291 people hospitalized with COVID-19 in what the state designates as a Trauma Service Area, putting the area’s percentage of hospital patients that are COVID patients close to 20%.

When it’s more than 15% for a week, the state’s restrictions kick in.

“Bad policy decisions based on bad data,” said Galveston County Judge Mark Henry, who said the hospitalizations are higher because they get so many patients transported from out of town.

Now, it’s a price Davis believes local business owners like herself will have to pay.

“I’ve got to do what I’ve got to do to make a living … and my employees,” she said. “I will not turn a customer down.”

To remove the restrictions, the region must dip below a 15% hospitalization rate for seven consecutive days. What’s hard is the timing of all of this, right in the middle of the holidays, when a lot of business owners count on extra income.

David Valdés: “Veo un futuro más diverso en cuanto género, raza y color en la industria petrolera”

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David Valdés, un joven de 22 años de edad, descendiente de padres mexicanos, desde niño veía con entusiasmo y admiración las turbinas de viento en su natal Texas cuando lo llevaban en auto a través de los enormes campos donde se encontraban estos artefactos.

Esa fascinación por la generación de energía, lo llevaría luego a pensar en otros aspectos que vincularía con su preocupación por el medio ambiente y los mismos fenómenos naturales que tuvo que vivir en su ciudad, Galveston, para terminar tomando conciencia de que quería estar en un lugar donde se propiciaran políticas energéticas que pudieran hacer la diferencia.

Hoy en día es ingeniero químico, recién egresado en medio de la pandemia del COVID-19, de la universidad de Columbia en Nueva York y cuenta con la oportunidad de ser becario de política pública en el Instituto Americano de Petróleo (API, por su siglas en inglés) hasta el mes de diciembre, para luego pasar por alguna de las Cámaras del Congreso, como parte del programa “Public Policy Fellow” del Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI).

“He vivido experiencias en el Golfo, más recientemente el huracán Harvey, que pegó muchísimo en Houston. Fue uno de los peores huracanes, después de Katrina. En California hay incendios, también en diferentes partes del mundo los inviernos son extremadamente fríos. Lo importante es que con tanto cambio que vamos a estar viendo durante los próximos 10, 15, 20 o 100 años, quién sabe, habrá una necesidad de bajar las emisiones de carbón”.

Diversidad e inclusión

En la actualidad, la industria de la energía busca ampliar su diversidad e incluir a minorías como afroamericanos y latinos. Precisamente para brindar información y perspectivas sobre el papel de este sector en estas comunidades surgió el Centro Comunitario de Energía (CEC, por su siglas en inglés), que proporciona un foro para elevar la conciencia, la comprensión y las discusiones sobre la importancia del sector para la vida cotidiana.

Así pues, la proyección que hace la industria en cuanto a la contratación de estas minorías étnicas y raciales es positiva. De esta manera, jóvenes como David podrán contar con mayores oportunidades. “Los programas de políticas públicas y becas para graduados del CHCI brindan una experiencia de liderazgo sin igual para los líderes emergentes más brillantes e innovadores de nuestra comunidad. A través de nuestro programa, se adquiere un conocimiento profundo sobre temas e industrias de gran relevancia, como la energía. Esto, combinado con la inducción a una red increíble de pares y líderes establecidos, les da a los becarios del CHCI un impulso en sus carreras para hacer avanzar a la comunidad latina y fortalecer la nación”, aseguró Marco Davis, presidente y CEO del CHCI.

A juicio de Valdés es importante la diversidad en esta y cualquier industria, para que existan minorías representadas en las decisiones que también impactan a esas poblaciones. Asegura que la única forma de pensar desde la perspectiva de las minorías es que ellas formen parte de las decisiones y que se involucren en las mismas.

“Sin el programa de ciencia, no habría tenido la oportunidad de saber cómo es que se mueve la política energética desde la organización que se encarga del petróleo americano y es una perspectiva que yo aprecio mucho, porque no tenía tanto conocimiento”, comentó.

Oportunidades para las minorías

De acuerdo a un análisis de API basado en el reporte de IHS Global Insightel petróleo y el gas natural seguirán siendo la principal fuente de combustible por décadas por venir mientras que otras formas de energía se hacen comercialmente viables.

Según el documento, habrá un aumento en la capacidad de exportación y la generación de más de 800 mil empleos en la industria para el año 2030, bajo políticas de desarrollo energética. De los nuevos puestos de trabajo generados para 2030, más de 285 mil (35%) podrían ser ocupados por afroamericanos y latinos.

“La industria de la energía ha demostrado ser un catalizador de la actividad económica y ha apoyado durante mucho tiempo a los miembros de nuestras comunidades”, dijo el Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., presidente y director ejecutivo de la Asociación Nacional de Editores de Periódicos (NNPA) en el marco del esfuerzo conjunto a la Asociación Nacional de Medios de Publicaciones Hispanas LLC (NAHP Media), para el lanzamiento del Centro Comunitario de Energía.

El directivo fue respaldado por Ricardo Hurtado, presidente de medios de NAHP Media, quien apuntó hacia el rol crucial de esta nueva organización en “el camino a la creación de nuevas carreras y oportunidades de desarrollo profesional” para las minorías, tal como es el caso de Valdés, quien logró culminar su licenciatura (Bachelor’s Degree) con becas y mucho esfuerzo de su familia. El joven aspira seguir formándose, por lo que está en proceso de postulación para una maestría en ingeniería química y sostenibilidad ambiental, para luego ir con fuerza por un doctorado en políticas públicas. Esas son sus metas, dentro de las cuales no descarta tocar la puerta en API nuevamente, una vez finalice su educación.

Optimismo

Sobre el futuro de la industria en términos de diversidad y sostenibilidad, David es muy optimista. “Diría que veo una transición de los combustibles hacia la energía renovable. Por parte de la industria petrolera veo un futuro más diverso en cuanto género, raza y color”.

En su paso por API, le queda mucho aprendizaje, tal como la satisfacción en cuanto al trabajo que realizó en programas de la institución, tanto en inglés como en español, enfocado a guiar estudiantes de secundarias y a sus padres en áreas vinculadas con STEM y opciones de estudio universitario.

Este empoderamiento de las minorías, así como la toma de conciencia sobre el medio ambiente y hacer asequible la energía en las comunidades minoritarias constituyen prioridades que se impulsan desde el CEC.

Para conocer más sobre la labor del el Centro Comunitario de Energía y recibir información de su labor visita www.communityenergycenter.org. También puedes enterarte de más  detalles sobre los programas de beca y liderazgo que ofrece el CHCI, que tienen fecha límite de postulación el 15 de enero, a través de www.chci.org/programs.

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Para David Valdés, quien es becario de API, de padres mexicanos, es importante la diversidad en esta y cualquier industria, para que existan minorías representadas en las decisiones que también impactan a esas poblaciones.