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Tuesday, June 17, 2025

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Vote Early & Stay Safe

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Voting Procedures During
the Coronavirus Pandemic

The Harris County Clerk’s Office is focused on creating a voting experience that gives everyone a chance to have their voice heard. During the coronavirus pandemic, your health and safety is a top priority. Here are some of the ways the voting experience has shifted because of the pandemic:

S.A.F.E. voting:  Learn how we’re helping ensure you can exercise your right to vote without putting your health at risk – learn more at HarrisVotes.com/SAFE.
In-person voting—health: Want to vote in person? We are serious about your health. From increased voting center sanitization, PPE for election workers and voters, and floor plan optimization for social distancing—we are going above and beyond
In-person voting—find shorter wait times: Don’t stand in a long line to vote this year, use our Poll Finder Map and Wait Time Tool to make it easier to vote conveniently and efficiently while keeping your (social) distance.
Drive-thru voting: This year, you can mask up and vote without ever leaving your vehicle at 10 locations throughout Harris County. Find a location near you at HarrisVotes.com.

In-person mail ballot delivery: To address any concerns over postal delivery, we are offering in-person vote by mail ballot delivery at the Harris County Clerk’s Annex location at NRG Stadium during Early Voting hours through Election Day, November 3, 2020, at 7:00 p.m. You will need to go inside and show photo ID to submit your completed ballot.

We hope you enjoyed Vinkensport!

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We hope you enjoyed Vinkensport!

HGO is proud to bring you HGO Digital and we are so excited to continue to connect with you all. We hope you enjoyed the one-act comic Vinkensport, or The Finch Opera from composer David T. Little and librettist Royce Vavrek.

HGO is committed to maintaining our level of excellence and bringing you extraordinary productions. Please tell us about your experience by filling out a short 5-minute survey. We sincerely appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts.

HISD keeps schools open, going against own COVID plan

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Houston ISD campuses remained open for in-person instruction Monday, despite county COVID-19 statistics meeting a threshold that district officials had said would trigger the immediate closure of schools.

In the district’s reopening plan, Houston ISD officials wrote that employees would work from home and students would learn virtually if Harris County’s COVID-19 test positivity rate averaged more than 7 percent over a 14-day period. On Monday, Harris County’s COVID-19 dashboard put the 14-day average percent of positive tests at 7.4 percent.

Houston ISD officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Schools in Texas’ largest school district reopened for in-person instruction on Oct. 19, but 16 campuses closed the following day due to presumptive positive and confirmed cases of the new coronavirus. On Wednesday, officials walked back their criteria for closing campuses due to infections, requiring there be at least two confirmed cases of COVID-19 before shutting down individual school buildings. Previously, a single suspected or confirmed case would trigger a campus closure.

Michelle Williams, president of the Houston Education Association and a math interventionist at Kashmere High School, said she worried Houston ISD officials were “moving the goalpost” on their COVID-19 plans by not closing down campuses after the county positivity rate rose above 7 percent.

“Teachers come with it and expose students, and vice versa, and then it goes home and you have more community spread,” Williams said. “If you look at the coronavirus, it’s an exponential growth model. Based on what’s happening across the nation, we know the positive rate is going to increase.”

Schools across the state are limited in how long they can close after COVID-19 infections under current Texas Education Agency guidance. School districts themselves set their own criteria for when to close individual campuses due to positive cases of COVID-19, but TEA rules say campuses can be closed for a maximum of five days.

Entire districts were allowed to spend the first four weeks of the school year online, and school boards could apply for a waiver that would allow them to remain virtual for an additional four weeks. Houston ISD’s waiver to keep students learning remotely expires Nov. 2. Texas Education Agency officials did not immediately respond to questions about district-wide closures outside of the 8-week waiver window.

However, TEA did grant a two-week waiver extension to El Paso ISD, and several other school districts after that area experienced a surge in COVID-19 cases that has strained local hospitals. El Paso education officials said on Twitter that TEA would monitor COVID-19 conditions and review the waiver extension on a week-to-week basis.

Unless such a waiver extension is granted to Houston ISD, the district cannot close all of its schools due to the community spread of COVID-19 alone after Nov. 2.

Williams said she hopes the state will allow HISD to return to remote instruction.

“I’m confident if they have done it for one school district, they’ll do it for HISD,” Williams said

New survey links SW Houston conditions to greater burden of chronic disease

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Southwest Houstonians have a greater burden of chronic disease than residents of other parts of the county and state, according to a new survey.

The survey, conducted by the Texas Health Institute, identified neighborhood conditions as a major reason why southwest Houston’s diabetes rate is 72 percent higher than Harris County’s overall rate and why its hypertension rate is 60 percent higher than Memorial Park’s and 33 percent higher than Hunter’s Creek’s.

Many Southwest residents can’t afford or access fresh produce and issues like crime and a lack of walkable space are barriers to exercise.

“These are deep-seated problems that time hasn’t changed,” said Nadia Siddiqui, director of health equity programs for the Texas Health Institute. “What came back loud and clear in the survey is that area residents know it’s not just about health care. They know that safety, access to healthy food, and other socioeconomic factors are just as critical to their health.”

Siddiqui said COVID-19 not only exposed but further exacerbated southwest Houston’s challenges. She called the area’s conditions “a perfect storm” even before the pandemic hit and emphasized that making the community better able to withstand future crises will require a greater investment in the area’s health infrastructure.

The survey was commissioned by the Memorial Hermann Health System in connection with its initiative to tackle issues that contribute to chronic disease at the community level rather than wait for people to show up at its hospitals. The initiative includes upgrading parks, a partnership with the Houston Food Bank, and school-based clinics.

Dr. David Callender, president of Memorial Hermann, said the system hopes to create a model for how to improve the health of other communities based on the initiative. He said southwest Houston, where the system has a hospital and existing programs, is “at the top of the list of Houston’s neediest areas.”

“Most hospitals today focus on treatment, the core of what we do,” said Callender. “But treating the same patient for the same preventable condition doesn’t help the patient or the community’s overall health. We must find a way to prevent illness in the first place. We need to focus on health as well as health care.”

Kamala Harris to make campaign stop in Texas

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Harris will be the highest-profile representative from the Biden campaign to visit Texas in person during the general election.

 

Kamala Harris, Joe Biden’s running mate, and the California U.S. senator, will be visiting Texas on Friday, according to an email Biden’s campaign sent to Democratic lawmakers in Texas on Sunday.

Harris will be the highest-profile representative of the Biden campaign to visit Texas in person during the general election, though his campaign was already set to spend millions of dollars on TV ads in Texas.

“Allow me to provide as a courtesy, the below in-person travel notification for Sen. Kamala Harris which will be publicly released momentarily,” the email reads. “Sen. Kamala Harris will be personally traveling to Texas on Friday – October 30. 2020.”

Her visit comes as polls project a tight presidential race in Texas. According to the latest University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll, Trump leads Biden in the state by 5 percentage points. Trump won Texas by 9 points in 2016.

n the lead-up to Election Day, Texas Democrats have called for both Biden and Harris to invest heavily in Texas. In an October op-ed in The Washington Post, former U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who endorsed Biden after dropping his own presidential bid, and Tory Gavito, the president and co-founder of the progressive donor network Way to Win, urged the Biden campaign to steer serious money to the state.

“Biden, his campaign and Democrats in general need to make it clear: We are competing in Texas, and we’ll invest whatever it takes to turn out the state’s true electoral majority and flip Texas once and for all,” they wrote. “Democrats have historically failed to invest in Texas, despite the size of this prize, because they believed the door is closed to Democratic presidential candidates. But, like many things in 2020, this year is different — Biden has his foot in the door and needs to kick it open for a quick end to the election.”

Biden expanded his on-the-ground presence in Texas in September, hiring 13 more staff members — after an initial hiring announcement in early August — to his team.

Biden’s wife, Jill Biden, visited Texas earlier this month to mark the state’s first day of early voting. She rallied voters in El Paso, Dallas, and Houston, telling them a historic opportunity was within reach.

“For the first time in a long time, winning Texas is possible,” Jill Biden said in El Paso. “Not just for Joe, but for the Senate and the state House as well. And if we win here, we are unstoppable.”

Prior to that, Harris’ husband, Douglas Emhoff, spent two days in the state, swinging through the Rio Grande Valley, San Antonio, and Dallas.

Meanwhile, Trump’s campaign has long dismissed the notion that the state is in play.

Though Texas GOP Chair Allen West expressed hope that the president would visit North Texas before Election Day, campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh and former Secretary of Energy Rick Perry told supporters on a press call Sunday that Trump would not visit the state in the lead-up to Nov. 3.

Trump “will be in battleground states,” Perry said. “Texas is not a battleground state.”

The Texas Democratic Party declined to comment on Harris’ upcoming visit. In a statement to The Texas Tribune, spokesman Abhi Rahman took issue with Perry’s comment.

“Rick Perry is either delusional or in denial — or a combination of both. Texas is the biggest battleground state, period,” he said. “Poll after poll shows that Texas is up for grabs and the Trump campaign still doesn’t give a damn about the votes or the lives of Texans.”

 

27th Named Tropical Storm Zeta Forms

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What is the danger?
Tropical Storm Zeta has formed southeast of the Yucatan Peninsula. Zeta is the 27th named storm of the 2020 Hurricane Season. According to the National Hurricane Center, Zeta is currently moving northwest as it approaches the Gulf of Mexico. At this time, it is unlikely that Zeta will impact Texas, but residents should monitor for changes to the forecast throughout the week.
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What you should do:
Hurricane Season does not end until November 30th. While Tropical Storm Zeta is unlikely to impact Texas, you should still take time to make sure you and your family are prepared.
 
MAKE A PLAN
STAY INFORMED

Texas Supreme Court allows Abbott’s mail-in ballot order to continue

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Gov. Greg Abbott’s controversial order to limit Texas counties to one mail-ballot drop-off site was allowed to remain in effect Saturday by the Texas Supreme Court.

The court blocked a previous appellate court ruling that had briefly struck down Abbott’s order, which was widely decried by voting rights groups as a voter-suppression tactic. The lawsuit to overturn Abbott’s order is still pending.

In Harris County, more than 1 million voters have cast ballots during early voting, shattering previous records. Multiple drop-off sites had been set up for voters until Abbott issued his order, which he said would “stop attempts at illegal voting.”

State District Judge Tim Sulak had previously ruled that Abbott’s order would “needlessly and unreasonably increase risks of exposure to COVID-19 infections” and undermine the constitutionally protected rights of residents to vote, “as a consequence of increased travel and delays, among other things.”

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office issued a statement commending the Supreme Court’s ruling for blocking Sulak’s “unlawful injunction.”

One million people have now voted during Early Voting in Harris County

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County leaders are hoping to push turnout even higher this weekend.

Harris County has surpassed one million ballots cast during early voting for the 2020 election with more than a week to go.

Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins took to Twitter to announce the milestone Friday afternoon.

“ONE MILLION people have now voted during Early Voting in Houston!!!  Vote at any of our 122 locations and find their wait times: http://HarrisVotes.com/Locations #HarrisVotes Hey, @JJWatt, how ’bout an RT?” Hollins tweeted, tagging the Texans star to get the word out.

The milestone came after he had already announced earlier in the day that early voting turnout in Harris County had already surpassed the total number of ballots cast during early voting in 2016.

County leaders are hoping to push turnout even higher this weekend.

They’re teaming up with the Rockets and MTV to literally roll out the red carpet for voters who show up to the Toyota Center Saturday.

The Rockets offered up their arena to handle big crowds and make voting safer during the pandemic.

The site is a first time-polling place with a first-ever option for Harris County voters to leave their mark.

More than 2,500 companies, nonprofits, and elections officials are taking part in “Vote Early Day” from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday.

The early voting period in Texas runs through next Friday.

Second whistleblower fired from Texas AG’s office after accusing Ken Paxton of bribery

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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton

A second whistleblower has been fired from the Texas attorney general’s office after reporting his boss, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, to law enforcement for crimes including bribery and abuse of office, according to a former senior official with the agency who had knowledge about the firing but did not want to be named for fear of legal repercussions.

Blake Brickman, who had served as deputy attorney general for policy and strategy initiatives for less than a year, was fired Tuesday, the official said. Lacey Mase, the deputy attorney general for administration, was also fired Tuesday, The Texas Tribune reported earlier this week.

“It was not voluntary,” Mase said of her departure from the office, but declined to comment further.

Brickman and Mase were among seven top aides in Paxton’s office who alerted law enforcement weeks ago that they believed their boss had run afoul of the law. In internal emails obtained by the Tribune, they have accused Paxton of using the power of his office to serve the financial interests of a donor, Nate Paul.

The most senior aide to Paxton, Jeff Mateer, resigned weeks ago. Paxton placed two other top aides on leave. The agency has not answered repeated questions about the employment status of the other whistleblowers, or what cause Paxton had to fire Mase and Brickman.

The Houston Chronicle first reported the news of Brickman’s firing Thursday evening.

Brickman declined to comment Thursday. He joined the agency earlier this year after working for the governor of Kentucky.

Employment attorneys say by firing the employees who alleged he had broken the law, Paxton may be walking directly into a lawsuit for violating the Texas Whistleblower Act, which protects state employees from retaliation after they accuse their superiors of crimes.

“This situation looks like what the Texas Whistleblower Act was designed to prevent. And the timing looks bad,” Jason Smith, a North Texas employment attorney, told The Texas Tribune this week.

Paxton has denied the allegations as false and dismissed the whistleblowers as “rogue employees.”