With many updates and developments since yesterday.
The Fifth Circuit blocking women's right to choose was not shocking.
The future price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil falling to a negative value was.
After the story broke that Houston and Harris County officials pooh-poohed concerns about the coronavirus in February, allowing RodeoHouston to go on ...
... both County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Mayor Sylvester Turner announced their czars for restarting the local economy. State Representative Armando Walle was selected by the judge:
While the mayor picked ... wait for it ...
Turner and Hidalgo are under tremendous pressure to reopen Houston for business.
And the Texas Railroad Commission -- the state's oil and gas regulatory body -- is scheduled to convene again after yesterday's steep drop in the commodity's future price contracts.
Lots of Texans still need lots of help as the COVID-19 fallout ripples outward.
There are some very easy steps that could be taken, but we're not waiting solely on Texas Republicans to lead ...
Lone Star Blue Dogs are sitting around at home with little to do and not doing it as well.
With accurate stats still lacking, we know that minority communities are being impacted greatly, mostly due to poverty. San Antonio is working to increase awareness.
But Governor Abbott still doesn't get it.
There's always time for another conspiracy theory, though.
A number of anniversaries this week:
The Austin Police Department still has tremendous issues, but some of the local reporting has been a whitewash.
And this Wrangle can wrap up with some softer news.
Pam LeBlanc at Texas Monthly has some great ideas about getting your social distancing on outdoors. Darian Mendez at the San Antonio Current links to The Alamo's livestreaming event this afternoon, marking San Jacinto Day. Bob Ruggerio for the Houston Press reviews a book detailing the long-awaited justice for the US Army's First Battalion, 25th Infantry, aka the Black Battalion stationed at Brownsville in 1906.
And Major League Baseball is discussing a plan to start their season where teams would be stationed in one of three hubs, with Texas being one.
The Fifth Circuit blocking women's right to choose was not shocking.
New: Reversing course, a federal appeals court said access to pill-induced abortions can be restricted in Texas while the state fights the coronavirus pandemic. https://t.co/Dyhym29DDe— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) April 20, 2020
The future price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil falling to a negative value was.
Oil drops below $0. Yes, $0. https://t.co/rRrK3xQILU— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 20, 2020
After the story broke that Houston and Harris County officials pooh-poohed concerns about the coronavirus in February, allowing RodeoHouston to go on ...
Officials knew coronavirus could spread at the Houston Rodeo and proceeded with the event anyway https://t.co/iUB86jtZuq via @Progrexas #HouNews— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 20, 2020
... both County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Mayor Sylvester Turner announced their czars for restarting the local economy. State Representative Armando Walle was selected by the judge:
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo names COVID-19 Recovery Czar.https://t.co/zJ0lt490uZ— Houston Press (@HoustonPress) April 20, 2020
While the mayor picked ... wait for it ...
Of course a former fossil fuel CEO will help us recover from #COVID19. https://t.co/JfHu0eXEZI— Sema (@_SemaHernandez_) April 20, 2020
Turner and Hidalgo are under tremendous pressure to reopen Houston for business.
New: 350 businesses are urging @LinaHidalgoTX and @SylvesterTurner on May 1 to ease stay-at-home restrictions meant to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, warning many firms cannot survive additional weeks of forced closures. w/@jaspscherer -->https://t.co/NPYppGmFKh— Zach Despart🖊️ (@zachdespart) April 17, 2020
And the Texas Railroad Commission -- the state's oil and gas regulatory body -- is scheduled to convene again after yesterday's steep drop in the commodity's future price contracts.
#Coronavirus in #Texas: @TXRRC set to meet this morning after historic price plunge https://t.co/9bUzS62E36 via @Progrexas #TXLege #HouNews— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 21, 2020
Lots of Texans still need lots of help as the COVID-19 fallout ripples outward.
Hey @JohnCornyn, @tedcruz, @JacksonLeeTX18, Funds for small businesses that employ millions in Texas have already dried up yet many who applied got nothing. Yet national chains got money. This is not fair to Texans. More needs to be done to help Texas’s small businesses. https://t.co/o3cRGCnGSS— David Leftwich (@DavidLeftwich68) April 17, 2020
#CancelRentUSA Austin Texas food bank line.— AJ McStacy. #ReleaseTaraFiles (@IndependentMo14) April 16, 2020
We are in a disaster. Cancel rent. pic.twitter.com/cPn9UIaz8M
A little negotiation might go a long way toward staving off homelessness.https://t.co/ATHfHKFEDm— Dallas Observer (@Dallas_Observer) April 17, 2020
There are some very easy steps that could be taken, but we're not waiting solely on Texas Republicans to lead ...
Public health experts warn that jails are petri dishes for COVID-19.— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 17, 2020
Governor Greg Abbott is hobbling local efforts to release defendants—highlighting conservative opposition to the growing movement to end wealth-based detention in Texas. https://t.co/Y9pAEK0zge
PRESS RELEASE: "Sadly, TX remains the only state that does not automatically provide workers' compensation to employees. Front line workers should not be forced to prove that COVID-19 was the result of a workplace contact to get benefits." https://t.co/VvAKyvU4gG— Texas AFL-CIO (@TexasAFLCIO) April 20, 2020
Lone Star Blue Dogs are sitting around at home with little to do and not doing it as well.
I wonder how long it will it take for Houston activists and non-profits to push Rep. @JacksonLeeTX18, @RepFletcher, @RepSylviaGarcia, and @RepAlGreen to support the proposed stimulus bill that Rep. @Ilhan and other Congressional Progressives have brought forth.— Stevens Orozco (@_StevensOrozco) April 20, 2020
With accurate stats still lacking, we know that minority communities are being impacted greatly, mostly due to poverty. San Antonio is working to increase awareness.
Local leaders gathered for a live-streamed panel on Monday evening to discuss how the coronavirus has affected the black community. https://t.co/pUtu6fuUWg— Rivard Report (@RivardReport) April 21, 2020
But Governor Abbott still doesn't get it.
Not one black or brown person named to the Governor’s business task force for reopening Texas.— Odus Evbagharu (@iamodus_) April 17, 2020
NOT ONE. #COVID19 #txlege
There's always time for another conspiracy theory, though.
A bizarre conspiracy fantasy creeps into Texas politics: Candidates promoting ‘Q’ https://t.co/1GoCPWJctc #TXLege— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 18, 2020
A number of anniversaries this week:
Ten years after the Deepwater Horizon blowout that killed 11 people and sprayed 210 million gallons of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico, here is how to ensure another accident never happens again. https://t.co/qncOAhFLiG #txlege @HoustonChron— ChrisTomlinson (@cltomlinson) April 20, 2020
Ken Hoffman looks back on the biggest media shutter in Houston history https://t.co/1wBJ06zhGN— CultureMap Houston (@culturemap) April 20, 2020
Hard to believe it’s been 25 years since we raided the marketing department storage room before being escorted from the building by security. At least I got a dozen t-shirts. And I work in the same building again. pic.twitter.com/5RFxvw9zTL— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) April 18, 2020
The Austin Police Department still has tremendous issues, but some of the local reporting has been a whitewash.
After reading this report and @Grits4Breakfast's thorough breakdown of its findings, I'm even more confused by the local media framing that seems to largely absolve Austin police officials of wrongdoing— Michael Barajas (@michaelsbarajas) April 20, 2020
Some bg on what triggered this investigation of APD https://t.co/O5nI4AJcIX https://t.co/wLw1AIU1l5
And this Wrangle can wrap up with some softer news.
Pam LeBlanc at Texas Monthly has some great ideas about getting your social distancing on outdoors. Darian Mendez at the San Antonio Current links to The Alamo's livestreaming event this afternoon, marking San Jacinto Day. Bob Ruggerio for the Houston Press reviews a book detailing the long-awaited justice for the US Army's First Battalion, 25th Infantry, aka the Black Battalion stationed at Brownsville in 1906.
And Major League Baseball is discussing a plan to start their season where teams would be stationed in one of three hubs, with Texas being one.
On Monday, multiple league sources informed CBS Sports about a different idea that has been discussed in recent days. In this arrangement, the league would have teams stationed in one of three hubs: Florida, Arizona or Texas. The clubs would then make use of the local major- and minor-league (or spring training) facilities.
One source even expressed guarded optimism about the idea's chances of coming to fruition.
Ballparks in St. Petersburg (Florida), Phoenix (Arizona), and Arlington (Texas) each have roofs, retractable or otherwise, that would safeguard against rainouts and other extreme weather, allowing for multiple games to be hosted at those sites per day. Theoretically, MLB could also ask teams stationed in Florida and Texas to drive three-plus hours to other MLB parks (Houston's Minute Maid Park and Miami's Marlins Park).
It's unclear if MLB would assign 10 teams to each metropolitan area, or if it would opt for an unbalanced approach that would see 12 teams in one area and eight in another.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has tweeted about his attempts to get professional sports back in the state amid the pandemic, including NASCAR.