Part 1 is here.
The COVID-19 pathogen will likely put off the US Census.
TXElects parses the meaning of the delay for us.
Update: Scott Braddock at Quorum Report has some thoughts about this. My best guess is that a special session to tackle redistricting in 2021, or waiting to do so until 2023, depends on whether the state's Republicans feel their opportunities to control the outcome are better sooner ... or later. Expect litigation aplenty either way.
With respect to legal action ...
Again, the only thing we can be sure of is more lawyers filing more lawsuits.
In spite of the shattered state (and national and global) economy, there are doubts as to whether restarting it now is the right idea.
Coronavirus grifters are gonna grift.
Update: A Texas Railroad Commission hearing yesterday was, in Trump's words, 'a ratings hit', but once again Texas Republican elected officials chose to do nothing. Quorum Report:
Kuff has an update to that weird "ghost candidate" story from the HD142 primary.
Housing news had several Texas bloggers' attention.
"A massive wave of evictions is coming":
The COVID-19 pathogen will likely put off the US Census.
U.S. House Oversight Committee says Trump admin will move to extend #2020Census counting to October & ask Congress to delay delivery of redistricting data from 3/31/21 to 7/31/21 — which would require a #txlege special session (!!) https://t.co/S2nmh9BZAD— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) April 13, 2020
TXElects parses the meaning of the delay for us.
The Trump Administration may be seeking to delay key Census deadlines as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Commerce Secretary Wilber Ross said in a call with several members of Congress that Census field operations would be suspended until June 1, according to a statement issued by U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), chair of the Committee on Oversight and Reform.
Maloney said Ross would seek federal legislation to delay the deadline to deliver apportionment counts to April 30, 2021, from December 31, 2020, and to deliver redistricting data to the states to July 31, 2021, from March 31, 2021. Those deadlines are set by federal law and would require congressional approval.
[...]
During the last redistricting cycle, the U.S. Census Bureau delivered its 2010 state population totals for apportionment on December 21, 2010, and the block level population data on February 17, 2011. In the prior redistricting cycle, the totals for apportionment were released on December 28, 2000, and the actual Census 2000 enumeration data was sent to the states on March 6, 2001. Only the first of those two events would occur during the 2021 regular session under the Administration’s proposed timeline.
If the total state population for apportionment is sufficient to trigger “publication” of the census, then the Legislature could take up redistricting in the regular session. If “publication” is triggered by the block-level detail, then the next regular session would be 2023.
Update: Scott Braddock at Quorum Report has some thoughts about this. My best guess is that a special session to tackle redistricting in 2021, or waiting to do so until 2023, depends on whether the state's Republicans feel their opportunities to control the outcome are better sooner ... or later. Expect litigation aplenty either way.
With respect to legal action ...
BREAKING: Gov. Abbott’s attempt to ban safe, legal abortion during the COVID-19 pandemic has experienced another significant defeat. #AbortionIsEssential https://t.co/iT5FrhDtbX— Planned Parenthood (@PPGreaterTX) April 14, 2020
The Lone Star State is indeed a loner in one regard, according to an April 11 filing by Planned Parenthood in the US Supreme Court.
Texas, like other states, has declared an emergency due to the coronavirus crisis, halting nonessential activities. But it’s gone further than any other locale in limiting family planning services, leaving women with no choice but to remain pregnant or travel out of state instead of sheltering in place, even to seek nonsurgical abortions that simply involve swallowing “two pills.”
Over the weekend, the healthcare providers turned to the highest court in the land for help, saying that “Texas has exploited the Covid-19 crisis as a pretext to target abortion.”
Again, the only thing we can be sure of is more lawyers filing more lawsuits.
In spite of the shattered state (and national and global) economy, there are doubts as to whether restarting it now is the right idea.
Many question whether @GovAbbott's plan to reopen Texas is a good idea just a few weeks after announcing his #StayAtHome order. #COVID19 #coronavirus #txlegehttps://t.co/fJMTynHmgf— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 14, 2020
Coronavirus grifters are gonna grift.
The @TXAG’s office has received more than 5,529 complaints from Texans over exploitative pricing on items like disinfectant wipes, toilet paper and hand sanitizer. #COVID19 #coronavirus #txlege https://t.co/n475QGGPhY— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 14, 2020
The cost of hand sanitizers and masks on Amazon have risen at least 50 percent higher than the 90-day average. https://t.co/AWdxXn89Lr— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) April 7, 2020
Update: A Texas Railroad Commission hearing yesterday was, in Trump's words, 'a ratings hit', but once again Texas Republican elected officials chose to do nothing. Quorum Report:
Texas energy sector appears to reject the idea of state intervention in production
All-day RRC hearing draws 20,000 viewers online; it became clear a Texas-only decision could lead the nation but without a national strategy the needle would only be moved marginally
Two of the state’s energy producers have proposed a return to a limitation on oil production in Texas for the first time in almost 50 years as a way to stem the economic hemorrhaging of the oil & gas industry.
The idea got a lot of attention.
Today’s virtual hearing of the Texas Railroad Commission – with only proration on the agenda – drew more than 20,000 viewers. Statistics were so startling that AdminTexas.com posted that the hearing -- still going (late last) evening -- had significant viewership from Korea, Canada and Russia.
The proposal, in short, would be to cut Texas energy production, by possibly as much as 20 percent, to push up the sagging price of oil. Pioneer Natural Resources and Parsley Energy want it. Marathon Oil Corp. and many others pressed against it even with the promise that the cuts on production would be limited to top pumpers.
“This crisis can be viewed as an opportunity to begin a responsible and managed decline of fossil fuel use,” says Public Citizen Texas office Director Adrian Shelley in testimony to @txrrc on cutting oil/gas production in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. #txenergy #txlege pic.twitter.com/YrdcJlmHX3— Public Citizen Texas (@PublicCitizenTX) April 14, 2020
tl;dr (but you should read it) - the regulators didn't really signal how they'd vote. Could take the issue up at their meeting next week. For @CourthouseNews: https://t.co/2eJPH3T8LR— Travis Bubenik (@travisbubenik) April 15, 2020
Kuff has an update to that weird "ghost candidate" story from the HD142 primary.
Nearly the entire Harris County Democratic legislative delegation is requesting a criminal investigation into the candidacy of a Texas House candidate whose existence was called into question after the March primary. #txlege https://t.co/HjOQy39ceY— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) April 14, 2020
Housing news had several Texas bloggers' attention.
Right now, statewide protections against eviction are set to expire at the end of the month. They don't go as far in Texas as in many states. https://t.co/esGabA8Nhk— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) April 11, 2020
"A massive wave of evictions is coming":
(The COVID-19) crisis has struck the United States at a moment when millions of people were already living perilously close to eviction. Because of stagnant wages and rising rents, one out of four renters spent over half of their income on housing. Among rent burdened households -- defined as those that spend more than one-third of their income on housing -- half have less than $10 in savings.
Nearly a third of the American workforce -- some 41.7 million people -- earns less than $12 per hour and has limited access to health care, paid sick days and paid family and medical leave. The mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced closing of business will force much of this population, even with the help of unemployment insurance, to choose between paying rent or buying groceries.
Some landlords have delayed eviction and even canceled rent for their tenants. Others, however, have been less sympathetic. The Daily Beast recently reported on the case of a Las Vegas nurse who was evicted because her landlord worried she might potentially spread covid-19.
The problem is simply too consequential to be left up to landlord discretion. And if evictions are merely delayed, not permanently stopped, that could lead to a resurgence of the virus, after stay-at-home measures "bend the curve" of infection. Evicted families end up in homeless shelters, where people eat and sleep next to each other -- the opposite of social distancing.
People experiencing homelessness are particularly vulnerable to upper respiratory illness including to covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Well before the pandemic, sprawling tent encampments had experienced outbreaks of medieval diseases like typhus and trench fever.
San Antonio’s West Side is in the embryonic stages of gentrification.— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 13, 2020
The Alazán-Apache Courts—the city's oldest and largest public housing development—are arguably the best defense against speculators.
The project could be demolished within two years.https://t.co/nuP2dVJpqm
Last year, the Current and the San Antonio Heron collaborated on a lengthy analysis of gentrification's sweep across the West Side, including the scheduled demolition of the Alazán-Apache Courts.
In a couple of follow-ups to postings from last week's Wrangle, Rice University's ventilator is all ready to go ...
The plans for Rice University’s ApolloBVM, an open-source emergency ventilator design that could help patients in treatment for COVID-19, are now online and freely available to everyone in the world: https://t.co/bf7tUXH55g pic.twitter.com/KknG9lXtvU— Rice University (@RiceUniversity) April 10, 2020
... and Half Price Books is about to go out.
Half Price Books furloughs or lays off 78 percent of employees https://t.co/9yBHAoSb6C— San Antonio Express-News (@ExpressNews) April 6, 2020
In the wake of furloughs ordered by parent company Gannett, and with print media facing a troubled future, the Austin American Statesman turns to ... radio.
.@statesman is bringing a familiar voice back to the city’s radio landscape with the Statesman News Network https://t.co/tBRYlpbeE7— Austin 360 (@austin360) April 6, 2020
And to conclude another week of the best of the left of Texas, here's few lighter-side pieces.
Released in 1978, “The Whole Shootin’ Match,” was directed by Eagle Pennell. It was the first film to gain national attention for the Austin film scene. https://t.co/toix5iBx9Q— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) April 9, 2020
Save Buffalo Bayou is enjoying tending their garden during this self-imposed spring exile.
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