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Biden administration plans to restart Trump’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy at border in mid-November

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Biden had ended “Remain in Mexico,” calling it inhumane because of the violence migrant asylum-seekers faced while waiting in Mexico for court dates.
A U.S. Border Patrol vehicle drives through a gate in the border fence after U.S. Customs and Border Protection closed the point of entry with Mexico on Sept. 17, 2021, in Del Rio, Texas.

After having lost a legal battle, the Biden administration tentatively plans a mid-November restart of a Trump-era policy that forces migrants seeking asylum to wait in Mexico for their U.S. immigration court hearings, according to a court filing late Thursday.

President Joe Biden had ended the Trump administration’s “Remain in Mexico” policy when he took office this year, saying it was inhumane because of the violence migrants faced waiting in Mexico for their court hearings.

Texas and Missouri sued the Biden administration in April over the suspension of Remain in Mexico, which is formally known as the Migrant Protection Protocols, or MPP. In August, a federal judge in Texas ordered the Biden administration to reinstate the policy pending the outcome of the suit.

The Biden administration fought the order but lost in federal appeals court and in the Supreme Court and then said it would comply with the court’s order.

Senior administration officials told reporters Thursday that under the updated Biden administration version of Remain in Mexico, immigrants will get court dates set no more than six months in the future and will attend hearings with immigration judges in one of 10 courts to be set up near Brownsville and Laredo, Texas.

The plans to implement the revised policy, however, would be put on hold if the Biden administration ultimately wins the lawsuit filed by Texas and Missouri.

Mexico will also have the power to amend the policy, the officials said, and the administration has been consulting with it about the details.

“There are certain issues Mexico has also raised about the prior implementation” of Remain in Mexico, one of the officials said. “Any reimplementation would have to take those into account.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security said: “As noted in the declaration filed on Thursday, DHS is taking necessary steps to comply with the court order, which requires us to reimplement MPP in good faith. We are working to do so, despite our appeal of the court’s order, including, for example, by issuing contracts to rebuild temporary immigration-hearing facilities near the Southwest border.

“Significantly, Mexico is a sovereign nation that must make an independent decision to accept the return of individuals without status in Mexico as part of any reimplementation of MPP,” the statement said. “Discussions with the Government of Mexico concerning when and how MPP will be reimplemented are ongoing.”

Remain in Mexico, which the Trump administration started in January 2019, created a population boom in migrant camps on the Mexican side of the border. Human rights organizations documented hundreds of kidnappings, rapes, and assaults of migrants who were waiting in the sprawling camps for their asylum hearings.

The Biden administration has continued to implement — and defend in another court case — Covid-19 restrictions known as Title 42, which push immigrants back into Mexico or deport them to their home countries without giving them court dates. The officials said that the administration will continue to use that policy and that only immigrants who are not subject to Title 42 — for a variety of reasons — would be subject to Remain in Mexico.

Source: www.nbcnews.com

Dynamic duo: Altuve, Correa both get top billing for Astros

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When it comes to dynamic duos, there’s often a clear-cut top dog and a trusty sidekick.

That’s not the case with second baseman Jose Altuve and shortstop Carlos Correa, Houston’s middle-infield combo who both shine equally bright for the Astros.

“A lot of times you have one All-Star caliber (player) and like a … Robin,” manager Dusty Baker said. “But this time you’ve got two Batmans.”

The pair played its 66th postseason game together on Saturday, which is the most by any shortstop and second base duo in MLB history.

The two cornerstones of the franchise, or to use Baker’s term, the team’s vertebrae, have played together since Correa’s debut in 2015, a year that featured their first trip to the postseason.

Altuve doesn’t recall a specific conversation they had back then about their expectations for the future, but he knows they often discussed “winning and playing together for a long time.”

They’ve certainly accomplished both of those goals. This season marks their sixth postseason trip and they’ve helped the Astros to a fifth consecutive AL Championship Series where they’re tied 1-1 with the Boston Red Sox.

They’re looking for a third trip to the World Series after losing to Washington in 2019 following their 2017 World Series win that was later tainted by a sign-stealing scandal.

Houston won more than 100 games in three of the seasons since Correa made it to the big leagues and finished this regular season with 95 victories to capture their fourth AL West title in five years.

“It’s hard to imagine something like this,” Altuve said. “What we’re living is a dream come true. We thank God every day for the opportunity to play together, for what we’re doing. And it’s been, it’s been amazing.”

Altuve hit a two-run homer to tie Game 1 of the ALCS Friday night before Correa’s solo shot in the seventh inning put them on top in a 5-4 win. Boston hit two grand slams in Game 2 to tie the series with a 9-5 victory.

Game 3 is Monday night in Boston where the Astros will have to rely more heavily on Altuve, Correa and the rest of their high-powered offense after rash pitching injuries.

Altuve’s home run on Friday was the 20th of his postseason career, tying him with Yankees’ great Derek Jeter for third-most in MLB history. Not to be outdone, Correa’s blast gave him five RBIs this postseason and 55 in his career to pass Albert Pujols for most of any active player.

“I don’t know if they’re trying to one-up each other, but they’re trying to do the best they can every time out there,” Baker said.

Though Altuve now sees Correa as an equal, Correa still looks up to Altuve like a kid who idolizes his older brother.

Asked about Altuve, Correa reels off a list of some of his many accomplishments, which include the 2017 AL MVP, five Silver Slugger Awards, and capturing the AL batting title three times. But what impresses Correa the most about Altuve is not that he’s won those many awards, but rather the way he continues to work after collecting all that hardware.

“When you have the best player of your team, that captain, that franchise player that everybody looks up to working that hard, it’s just contagious,” Correa said. “Everybody else in the organization does the same thing, so I feel like he inspires everybody in that clubhouse every single day.”

Correa becomes a free agent at the season’s end. And there’s increasing concern that the Astros won’t be able to keep him, despite owner Jim Crane saying recently that he believes they’ve got a chance. Correa would like to stay in Houston and teammates and coaches alike want him to remain with the team.

But Altuve seems to be the only one who truly believes that he will. He mentions that he doesn’t believe these are the last games he’ll be playing with Correa without even being asked.

“I still feel like we’re going to go and sign him,” Altuve said. “We have to. If we want to keep doing what we’re doing, we need to sign Carlos.”

Since Altuve’s been so vocal in the media about his desire for his buddy to remain alongside him in Houston for years to come, he believes Crane should have already received his message loud and clear.

But just in case he hasn’t, Altuve is prepared to plead his case to Crane personally.

“I have to talk to him,” Altuve said. “I’m going to call him for sure and tell him we have to keep Carlos.”

Source: www.click2houston.com

Shell announces changes to Executive Committee

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Wael, currently Upstream Director, will remain a member of the Executive Committee in his new role and will continue to be based in the Netherlands. He takes over as Integrated Gas and R&ES Director from Maarten Wetselaar, who will leave the company after more than 25 years of distinguished service on 25th October. Maarten will join Cepsa as Chief Executive Officer as of 1st January 2022.

Zoë, currently Executive Vice President, Conventional Oil & Gas, takes over from Wael as Upstream Director and will join the Executive Committee. She will also be based in the Netherlands.

Zoë and Wael are both strong, focused leaders, who will bring great energy and commercial expertise to their new roles. Their proven leadership skills will be crucial as we deliver our Powering Progress strategy purposefully and profitably,” said Royal Dutch Shell Chief Executive, Ben van Beurden. “I am also immensely grateful to Maarten for his outstanding contribution to Shell and our customers, for his vision and drive in shaping a world-class LNG portfolio, and for laying the foundations of our power and renewable solutions business. I wish him well in his new role.

Notes to editors

Wael Sawan

Since joining Shell in 1997, Wael has worked across Shell’s Upstream, Integrated Gas and Downstream businesses. Wael has garnered extensive commercial and leadership experience in roles spanning across Europe, the Middle East and America. He originally trained as an engineer and joined Shell to work at the Shell joint venture, Petroleum Development Oman (PDO). He followed this with roles in gas and power and the global retail team. In 2012 he became Managing Director and Chairman of the Qatar Shell companies, where his responsibilities included Pearl GTL, one of the largest oil and gas projects in the world. From there he went on to run Shell’s Deep Water business, based in Houston and became Upstream Director and a member of the Executive Committee of Royal Dutch Shell in July 2019.

Wael, 47, holds a Masters’s degree in Engineering from McGill University and an MBA from Harvard Business School. He is a Canadian citizen of Lebanese origin and is married with three children.

Zoë Yujnovich

Zoë, 46, has nearly 25 years of frontline and leadership experience, most recently based in The Hague as Shell’s Executive Vice President, Conventional Oil & Gas. Previously she was Country Chair for Shell’s businesses in Australia and New Zealand, based in Perth, and Executive Vice President for Oil Sands, based in Calgary. Zoë trained as an engineer and started her career with Rio Tinto, working in management roles in Australia, Brazil, the United Kingdom and Canada.

Zoë holds a degree in Engineering from the University of Western Australia and an Executive MBA from the University of Utah. She is married with three children.

Source: www.shell.com

Governor Abbott Announces D6 Headquarters Relocation to Sulphur Springs

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Governor Greg Abbott today announced that D6 Inc. (“D6”) will relocate their headquarters from Portland, Oregon, to Sulphur Springs, Texas, and expand their manufacturing presence in the state. D6 is an advanced design-to-shelf packaging manufacturer, using recycled plastics. The project will create 231 new jobs and $27 million in capital investment. A Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF) grant of $1,432,200 has been extended to D6. In addition, D6 has been offered a $6,000 Veteran Created Job Bonus.

“The relocation of D6’s headquarters to Sulphur Springs will be a major economic boon to northeast Texas as it brings more jobs, opportunities, and investment to the community,” said Governor Abbott. “More and more great companies like D6 are moving to Texas every day because of our welcoming business climate and our young, growing, skilled, and diverse workforce, and I look forward to working alongside D6 and all of our business and community leaders to keep Texas the best place to live, work, and raise a family.”

“I would like to thank Governor Greg Abbott, Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, and Speaker of the House Dade Phelan for supporting D6 Inc.’s vision to bring a world-class recycling operation to the great state of Texas,” said D6 Chief Executive Officer Edward Dominion. “We greatly appreciate the vision and ongoing support from the City of Sulphur Springs, Hopkins County and the Sulphur Springs-Hopkins County EDC. With the help of all, D6 Inc. will build the first fully closed-loop recycling site for single-use PET clamshells in Sulphur Springs.”

“Sulphur Springs has always been supportive of new industry. D6’s headquarters relocation and expansion will boost our local economy and provide growth we support,” said Sulphur Springs Mayor John A. Sellers.

“Hopkins County is very excited about D6 moving their headquarters from Oregon to Sulphur Springs,” said Hopkins County Judge Robert Newsom. “We know this will boost our economy by providing new investment. We also appreciate that these jobs will be paying higher than the average weekly wage.”

“I want to first thank the Governor, Lt. Governor, and the Speaker of the House for their support of this project with D6,” said Roger Feagley, Executive Director of Sulphur Springs/Hopkins County Economic Development Corporation. “We feel that this company will be a great long-term asset for our community.”

Source: gov.texas.gov

Wanted: Suspect responsible for Burglary of a Building

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Crime Stoppers and the Houston Police Department’s Burglary and Theft Division need the public’s assistance identifying the suspect responsible for a Burglary of a Building.

On Friday, September 17, 2021, at approximately 4:20 a.m., an unknown suspect burglarized a building located in the 16300 block of Imperial Valley Dr. in Houston, Texas. Video surveillance captured the suspect breaking through the wall to gain access to the building. The suspect also broke into a vending machine causing approximately $3,100 in damages to the business. The suspect fled the scene in an unknown direction of travel.

Crime Stoppers may pay up to $5,000 for information leading to the charging and/or arrest of the suspect in this case. Information may be reported by calling 713-222-TIPS (8477), submitted online at www.crime-stoppers.org or through the Crime Stoppers mobile app. Only tips and calls DIRECTLY TO Crime Stoppers are anonymous and eligible for a cash reward.

The language in this press release is intentional and could have legal implications.  Please do not change the copy of the paragraph above.  

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Houston man gets life without parole for sexually assaulting pre-teen and teenage girls, including those he knew from church

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A Houston man, who was known at his church as “Uncle Al,” has been sentenced to life in prison without parole for molesting four girls, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced Saturday.

“He groomed, molested, and raped these girls, and then he threatened their lives if they spoke out,” Ogg said. “He deserves to spend the rest of his life behind bars.”

 Alfredo Lee Johnson, 43, went through a week-long trial before being convicted by a jury of continuous sexual assault of a child for repeatedly molesting a girl who was younger than 14.

The crime carries a minimum of 25 years in prison and a maximum of life in prison and on Friday, a judge sentenced him to the maximum.

Johnson’s behavior went from inappropriate touching to sexual assault from January 1, 2013, to August 5, 2016, according to testimony at the trial.

Jurors heard testimony that “Uncle Al,” who sometimes supervised the children of family friends and people from his church, groomed then raped a 15-year-old, molested a girl under the age of 14, and molested a 15-year-old in Louisiana.

Assistant District Attorney Mary Grace Bullard, who prosecuted the case with ADA Jana Oswald, both of the Crimes Against Children Division, thanked jurors and the judge and noted how important it is that children feel supported when they make an outcry.

 “Without support, children are likely to recant in order to survive the situation they find themselves in,” Bullard said. “The first victim only felt safe to tell what happened to her after multiple other victims had outcries because she knew she’d be believed and felt supported by the person she told.”

Wanted: Suspect responsible for Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon

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 Crime Stoppers and the Houston Police Department’s Major Assaults Division need the public’s assistance identifying the suspect responsible for an Aggravated Assault – Deadly Weapon.

On Wednesday, September 15, 2021, at approximately 2:30 p.m., the victim was shot in the 400 block of Crosstimbers St. in Houston, Texas. During the incident, the victim was sitting in the parking lot when the suspect approached and they began to have an altercation. The suspect produced a handgun and shot the victim then left in a silver/gray Suzuki. The victim sustained a gunshot wound and was transported to the hospital for treatment.

Crime Stoppers may pay up to $5,000 for information leading to the charging and/or arrest of the suspect in this case. Information may be reported by calling 713-222-TIPS (8477), submitted online at www.crime-stoppers.org or through the Crime Stoppers mobile app. Only tips and calls DIRECTLY TO Crime Stoppers are anonymous and eligible for a cash reward.

The language in this press release is intentional and could have legal implications.  Please do not change the copy of the paragraph above.  

HPD 1246743-21

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Ebrard dice que irá por candidatura presidencial en elecciones de 2024

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Marcelo Ebrard, canciller mexicano, quiere ser uno de los aspirantes como sucesor al presidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador; es decir, buscará la candidatura presidencial en 2024 ya que, según dijo, para él es un compromiso de vida. ¿Cuál es su objetivo? ¿Sabe con qué partido político se lanzará como presidenciable? Te contamos lo que reveló el canciller mexicano.

Ebrard espera pronta aprobación de OMS a vacunas Sputnik V y CanSinoEU abrirá frontera a personas con vacunas anticovid aprobadas por la OMS: Ebrard En una entrevista radiofónica para Grupo Fórmula, con el periodista Joaquín López-Dóriga, Ebrard se dijo interesado en participar en la contienda, pero señaló que primero tiene que sacar adelante la responsabilidad que tiene en el actual gobierno mexicano como secretario de Relaciones Exteriores.

“Por supuesto, claro que me interesa, es algo que ha sido mi compromiso de vida y ni modo que ahora yo diga que no, pero ahora lo que tenemos que hacer es sacar adelante nuestra responsabilidad”, dijo Ebrard en la entrevista. “Y dentro de dos años o cuando se convoque a participar, ahí estaremos (…) no hay que distraerse porque si te distraes te caes”, añadió. “Pienso, definitivamente y esa es mi convicción, participar de acuerdo a las normas que se den en Morena (partido Movimiento Regeneración Nacional) en primer lugar, que es el proyecto político en el que estoy participando, y Morena ya determinará y nos dirán cómo va a ser el proceso y ahí vamos a estar”, expuso. Las declaraciones de Ebrard ocurrieron horas después de que la alcaldesa de Ciudad de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, también aspirante a suceder a López Obrador en 2024, pidió que Morena elija a su candidato mediante una encuesta a la militancia.

“Es lo que establecen los estatutos del partido al que pertenecemos, es algo en lo que concuerdo y además el presidente siempre lo ha mantenido”, afirmó la jefa de Gobierno capitalina al ser cuestionada en rueda de prensa. Sheinbaum consideró que elegir al candidato mediante una encuesta interna, método utilizado para definir los aspirantes a gobernadores estatales, es “el más democrático” y “una representación de lo que opina el pueblo”. La alcaldesa parte como favorita para ser la candidata presencial del izquierdista Morena en 2024 junto con el canciller Ebrard.

López Obrador cumplió la semana pasada una gira por varios puntos de la capital junto a Sheinbaum, pero el martes descartó en su rueda de prensa matutina que sea su favorita. “No tengo ningún preferido, a ninguna preferida”, recalcó el mandatario, quien defendió que Morena haga una encuesta para definir a su candidato presidencial. En cambio, el líder de Morena en el Senado, Ricardo Monreal, quien también quiere postularse a la presidencia, apostó el martes por convocar elecciones primarias y así “seguir democratizando” el partido. El mecanismo de la encuesta ha sido criticado dentro del partido por quienes consideran que se trata de una metodología poco transparente y que favorece a candidatos afines a la dirección.

La carrera por la sucesión presidencial en México comenzó de manera temprana, a falta de tres años para las elecciones, cuando López Obrador mencionó recientemente a seis posibles sucesores. Además de Sheinbaum y Ebrard, los mejor situados, señaló al embajador mexicano ante la ONU, Juan Ramón de la Fuente; al embajador mexicano en Estados Unidos, Esteban Moctezuma; a la secretaria de Economía, Tatiana Clouthier; y a la secretaria de Energía, Rocío Nahle.

Source: www.milenio.com

Mexico City Replaces a Statue of Columbus With One of an Indigenous Woman

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Statues of Columbus are being toppled across the Americas, amid fierce debates over the region’s legacy of European conquest and colonialism.

Few have been more contentious than the replacement of a monument at the heart of Mexico’s capital, touching on some of the most intense disputes in the country’s current politics, including not just race and history, but also sex.

After prolonged debate, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum announced Tuesday that the Columbus statue that once gazed down on Mexico City’s main boulevard will be replaced with a pre-colonial Indigenous figure — notably, a woman.

Announced ahead of Ms. Sheinbaum’s expected run for president in 2024, the new statue is widely seen as an attempt by the mayor, who is the first woman elected to lead North America’s largest city, to address — or exploit — the cultural tensions gripping the country, including the growing resistance by women to male-dominated culture.

The new statue “represents the fight of women, particularly the Indigenous ones, in Mexican history,” she said in a news conference announcing the decision on the anniversary of Columbus’s first arrival in the Americas. “It’s a history of classism, of racism that comes from the colony.”

Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has gone farther than his predecessors in denouncing the history of colonialism, celebrating Indigenous culture, and presenting himself as the defender of the poor against the country’s conservative opposition and mostly European-descended elite.

He staged elaborate commemorations this year to mark the 500 years since the fall of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, located in today’s Mexico City, to Spanish invaders. He toured the country in recent months to apologize to Indigenous communities for colonial atrocities and has demanded similar atonement from the Spanish government.

But Mr. López Obrador has shown significantly less sensitivity to Mexico’s growing feminist movement.

In recent years, Mexican women have increasingly taken to the streets to demand government action against one of Latin America’s highest rates of domestic violence. At least 10 women and girls were murdered in Mexico on average every day last year, according to official government figures, and most of the crimes go unpunished.

Earlier this year, thousands of women turned out to protest in Mexico City, attacking ramparts outside the presidential residence with bats and blowtorches. Feminist protesters have also attacked colonial statues, seeing them as symbols of Mexico’s male hegemony.

Mr. López Obrador has minimized these protests, going so far as to call them an opposition ploy to destabilize his government. Last month, he claimed the feminist movement in Mexico was only created after he took office in 2018.

“They had become conservative feminists only to affect us, only for this purpose,” he said, applying to the feminists a word he often uses to deride his political opponents.

His disparaging remarks have presented a political challenge to his protégé and possible successor, Ms. Sheinbaum, who has tried to position herself as the leader of a more progressive, younger wing of the president’s left-leaning Morena party.

She has also drawn criticism from the feminist organizations by condemning violent attacks on public buildings in 2019.

“Violence is not fought with violence,” she said at the time.

The bronze statue of Columbus, erected in 1877 atop a pedestal in a traffic island, had been defaced by protesters in the past, and officials took it down last year, amid threats of further damage.

In its place will be a replica of a stone carving named “the Young Lady of Amajac,” which was discovered in January in the eastern state of Veracruz and dates to around the time of Columbus’s voyages, more than 550 years ago. The new figure will stand about 20 feet tall, three times the height of the original, now housed in the National Museum of Archaeology in Mexico City.

The choice of a statue of a woman to replace Columbus could appeal to feminists, while at the same time supporting the Indigenous rhetoric of Mr. López Obrador, said Valeria Moy, director of Center of Public Policy Research, a Mexican think tank.

“She is trying to satisfy everyone, especially her president,” said Ms. Moy. “From a political standpoint, the statue choice seems like a good decision.”

But not everyone was pleased, on either side of the cultural divide.

“They are focusing on the statue, without focusing on the rights of women who are alive,” said Fatima Gamboa, an activist with the Indigenous Lawyer Network, a Mexican advocacy group.

Ms. Gamboa, a member of the Maya Indigenous people, said a gesture celebrating Mexico’s Indigenous heritage does little to improve the precarious socio-economic conditions and discrimination still suffered by many Indigenous women.

A conservative former president of Mexico, Felipe Calderón, said the monument to Columbus was a valuable piece of Mexico’s artistic and historical heritage and disagreed with its substitution.

“To remove it, to mutilate it, is a crime,” he wrote on Twitter last month when Mexico City’s government first announced plans to replace it with an Indigenous symbol. “They are robbing it from Mexico City, its residents, and all Mexicans.”

Source: www.nytimes.com

RRC Commissioners Assess More Than $440,000 in Penalties

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The Railroad Commission of Texas assessed $443,255 in fines involving 169 enforcement dockets against operators and businesses at the Commissioners’ Conference on Tuesday. The Commission has primary oversight and enforcement of the state’s oil and gas industry and intrastate pipeline safety.

Ten dockets involved $23,805 in penalties after operators failed to appear at Commission enforcement proceedings. Master Default Orders can be found on the RRC Hearings Division webpage.

Operators were ordered to come into compliance with Commission rules and assessed $12,250 for oil and gas, LP-Gas or pipeline safety rule violations. Pipeline operators and excavators were assessed $407,200 for violations of the Commission’s Pipeline Damage Prevention rules. Master Agreed Orders can be found on the RRC General Counsel webpage.

In the absence of timely motions for rehearing, decisions are final as stated in these final orders.

 


 

About the Railroad Commission:
Our mission is to serve Texas by our stewardship of natural resources and the environment, our concern for personal and community safety, and our support of enhanced development and economic vitality for the benefit of Texans. The Commission has a long and proud history of service to both Texas and to the nation, including almost 100 years regulating the oil and gas industry. The Commission also has jurisdiction over alternative fuels safety, natural gas utilities, surface mining and intrastate pipelines. Established in 1891, the Railroad Commission of Texas is the oldest regulatory agency in the state. To learn more, please visit http://www.rrc.texas.gov/about-us/.