Houston COVID-19 update

TMC Report andUPDATE | May 11, 2020, noon: Houston is reporting 4,531 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and a total of 94 deaths related to the disease—up 4 from May 8.

The Houston Health Department (HHD) and agency partners will set up new COVID-19 testing sites in vulnerable local communities this week.

• The Texas Division of Emergency Management and HHD will open a drive-thru test site at Moreno Elementary School, 620 E. Canino Rd., for residents in the Northside and Northline areas. The agencies will also set up a site at Holland Middle School, 1600 Gellhorn Dr., for the Pleasantville area. The sites will open today through Saturday, May 16, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. or until each reaches its daily capacity of 250 tests. Both sites require appointments; call 512-883-2400 or visit txcovidtest.org.

• United Memorial Medical Center (UMMC) will open a new drive-thru and walk-up test site at the Stimley-Blue Ridge Neighborhood Library, 7007 W. Fuqua Street, in Missouri City. This site will be open today through Saturday, May 16, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. or until reaching its daily capacity of 250 tests. No appointments or symptoms are required for testing. For additional information about UMMC test sites, call 1-866-333-COVID or visit ummcscreening.com.

Houston Housing market after opening COVID-19

(HAR Report,HOUSTON — (April 8, 2020) — As COVID-19 ravages the physical and business health of the nation, its impact on the Houston real estate market only began to set in during the last week of March, and therefore caused little disruption to the month’s overall performance. The full effect of the pandemic is expected to become more apparent when the April housing numbers are tallied.

Even with some transactions interrupted before Governor Greg Abbott designated real estate as an “essential” service statewide as part of his March 31 stay-at-home order, Houston home sales were more than 11 percent ahead of the levels at this point in 2019. Consumers were still taking advantage of historically low mortgage interest rates through the first half of the month.

Single-family homes priced between $500,000 and $750,000 led the way in March sales, followed by homes in the $250,000 to $500,000 range. Leases of single-family homes were also up for the month.

According to the latest monthly Market Update from the Houston Association of Realtors (HAR), 7,566 single-family homes sold in March compared to 6,995 a year earlier, accounting for an 8.2 percent increase and the ninth consecutive month of positive sales. The single-family home median price (the figure at which half of the homes sold for more and half sold for less) rose 4.1 percent to $249,900, and the average price climbed 3.8 percent to $309,785. Both figures represent the highest prices ever for a March. Sales of all property types totaled 8,965, up 6.9 percent from March 2019. Total dollar volume for the month jumped 11.0 percent to slightly more than $2.6 billion

Houston COVID-19 update

TMC Report and UPDATE | May 7, 2020, 4:30 p.m.: At a Thursday afternoon news briefing, Mayor Sylvester Turner announced 88 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the cases for the city of Houston to 4,227. In addition, he reported three more deaths, bringing that total to 85.

“This is just a reminder with these numbers that this virus is still prevalent in our community and we need to continue to engage in social distancing and wearing our face coverings,” Turner said. “That’s critically important.”

Joining the mayor virtually was Tina Knowles Lawson, who spoke about her work with daughter Beyoncé’s BeyGOOD foundation to offer expanded COVID-19 testing in Houston this coming Mother’s Day weekend.

Knowles Lawson stressed the importance of testing in order to curb the spread of COVID-19 within communities.

“If we can play some part in keeping those numbers down, that would make me really, really happy,” she said. “I’m just so proud of Houston for being at the forefront and for keeping the numbers down, but I just encourage everyone to go get tested. It’s really, really important.”

COVID-19 Recovery Czar Marvin Odum also introduced an expanded program aimed at increasing testing access and equity as well as the Houston Health Department’s plan to significantly add to its contact tracing workforce. Turner and Odum said both testing and contact tracing were critical to protecting Houstonians as the city moves into the first phases of reopening.

Houston COVID-19 update

TMC Report and UPDATE | May 6, 2020, 4:05 p.m.: Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner announced a historic, first-of-its-kind celebration for the graduating class of 2020.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, school districts were forced to cancel activities, field trips, proms and other events to protect the health and safety of students and faculty. However, seniors will have the opportunity to return to their respective campuses on Friday, June 5, 2020 for an outdoor celebration.

“No doubt, there has been uncertainty as to how to celebrate the accomplishments of the class of 2020 with COVID-19. This unique class of scholars has persevered through one of the most challenging times in recent history with remarkable resilience,” Turner said during his daily press conference this afternoon. “The students earned their title of graduating seniors, and it is appropriate for the city of Houston to celebrate and honor their achievements in a way that reflects the culmination of this moment and the unity of our city.”

On the evening of June 5, every graduating class across the city will simultaneously return to campus grounds in their caps and gowns, while accessorizing with face coverings and practicing social distancing, for “a collective but personal celebration that salutes the achievement of graduates and reflects the unity of our city,” Turner explained.

While only graduating seniors and faculty will be allowed to participate in the outdoor celebration, parents, family members and friends will be able to join virtually.

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report andUPDATE | May 5, 2020, 7 p.m.:) Texas barbershops, nail salons, hair salons, cosmetology salons and tanning salons will be allowed to open on Friday, May 8 under restricted circumstances.

Gov. Greg Abbott’s modified executive order for a phased reopening of the state allows those businesses to resume at 25 percent capacity. Businesses should have one customer per stylist, appointment systems are preferred and waiting clients should employ social distancing inside or go outside. Abbott “strongly” recommends stylists and clients wear face masks.

Worship services, funerals and burials as well as weddings remain under some social distancing measures. Restaurants were allowed to open as of May 1 with 25 percent capacity limitations indoors that doesn’t apply to outdoor seating. All still must comply with social distancing.

Gyms will be allowed to open under restrictions beginning May 18 with showers and locker rooms closed during the initial phase.

Abbott said he was guided by data showing that, as of Tuesday morning, there remained more than 19,000 hospital beds, 2,000 ICU beds and more than 6,600 ventilators available statewide.

Houston COVID-19 update

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- On the first weekend of major businesses reopening in Houston, mayor Sylvester Turner said the city matched its highest single-day death total on Saturday.


The mayor reported 115 new COVID-19 cases and five new deaths, which brought the death toll to 65, with nearly all of them involving an underlying health condition.

"In this entire time period, we've never reported in the city of Houston more than five deaths, so this equals the maximum that we have ever reported of people that passed away on any given day," Turner said.

Statewide, Texas has hit a third straight day of more than 1,000 new coronavirus cases Saturday as the state charged into its first weekend of reopening the economy.

Residents are allowed to go back to malls, restaurants, movie theaters and retail stores in limited numbers.

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC ReportUPDATE | May 1, 2020, 3:15 p.m.:) Harris County’s ‘Stay Home, Work Safe’ order officially ended today as Phase 1 of the governor’s reopening plan begins, but local leaders including health care executives urge the community to remain vigilant and to continue the safety practices established over the past two months.

At a Friday morning news conference, Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo reiterated that the pandemic is not over as Texas reported 50 deaths on Thursday and more than 1,000 new cases of COVID-19. In addition, Harris County reported 97 new cases and 1 additional death outside the city of Houston.

“It’s a grim reminder that this virus doesn’t respect dates on a calendar,” Hidalgo said. “It’s impossible to pull a date out of thin air and say to the virus: ‘We’re ready for you to go away now.’ That’s not how it works. That’s not how any of this works. We can’t allow ourselves to be desensitized to what’s happening, to lose our sense of humanity. Fifty Texans—brothers, sisters, parents, grandparents, sons and daughters—had their lives cut short yesterday from a single, invisible killer that still lurks among us.”

Hidalgo urged people in Harris County to reopen slowly for the sake of public health.

“If the virus spreads like wildfire and the hospitals run out of space, or are running out of space again, things are going to have to shut back down—again,” Hidalgo said. “If we do the re-opening step by step, carefully, there’s a chance of succeeding by slowly reopening if we’re able to contain and we’re able to test and we’re able to trace.”

Hidalgo noted that the Texas attorney general issued a clarifying letter to try to clear confusion about what businesses could open and which should remain closed.

“If you’re not essential, as defined by the order I issued or by the governor’s order, and you are not reopen as classified under the governor’s order—the three reopenings he listed—you should be closed,” the county judge said.

She added that she would reissue her order later today to conform with the governor’s order and the attorney general’s clarification.

“Just because you can open, doesn’t mean you should,” she said, also announcing that she was adding another “T” for “teamwork” to her “test, trace, treat” reopening strategy.

“That ‘T’ involves every single resident in Harris County,” she said. “If these doctors and these nurses get overwhelmed, people die en masse. Plain and simple.”

Joining Hidalgo at this morning’s briefing was Esmaeil Porsa, M.D., MBA, MPH, president and CEO of Harris Health System; Umair A. Shah, M.D., MPH, executive director of Harris County Public Health; Marc L. Boom, M.D., president and CEO of Houston Methodist Hospital; and Paul Klotman, M.D., FACP, president and CEO of Baylor College of Medicine.

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report:UPDATE | April 30, 2020, 4:45 p.m.:) With phase 1 of Gov. Greg Abbott’s plan to restart the state’s economy taking effect tomorrow, many restaurants and retailers will be begin reopening their doors. Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and Houston’s COVID-19 Recovery Czar Marvin Odum announced measures they’re taking in order to safely and responsibly reopen the city.

“The virus has spread like fire. The curve is flattening—that is clear, but we are still reporting these new cases,” he said during his daily briefing this afternoon. “Like a fire, you can extinguish the flames, but often it continues to smolder. The reality is, if you start coming back together, not engaging in social distancing, not wearing face coverings, then it’s almost like adding fuel to the fire. You may think it’s out, but quite frankly, it’s not. It will come back … with a vengeance and be reignited, so please, as we start tomorrow, May 1, for those businesses opening up in stages, be very careful.”

Although the “Stay Home Work Safe” expires today, Turner said he is modifying the order. All city permitted and sponsored events will be canceled or rescheduled through the end of May. In addition, the Houston Public Library System will remain closed through the end of the month.

As people transition back to business mode, people should continue to practice social distancing, wear face coverings and stay at home, he emphasized.

Restaurants and retailers are required to limit their occupancy to 25 percent during the first phase of Abbott’s executive order. However, Turner said the city will be relying on an honor system to make sure businesses adhere to the occupancy limit.

“Quite frankly, it’s going to be on a trust basis and self-policing because we simply don’t have the resources to be going all around the city of Houston to check whether or not you’re following the 25 percent occupancy limit,” Turner said.

During the press conference, Odum highlighted three main priorities he will be tackling in his role: testing, contact tracing and “safe zone” measures.

“We’re moving forward with a different strategy on testing in the city,” Odum said. “The situation now allows us to look at this entire geography, think about all the risks that are out there, starting with our vulnerable and at-risk communities, thinking about that from a socioeconomic standpoint, where we’ve seen outbreaks in the past … to understand where the priorities are.”

Odum and his team have developed a plan for a number of different sites around the city to make testing available and more convenient starting next week.

However, testing alone is not enough, he said.

“The reason you need these [testing and contact tracing] together is because testing identifies additional infections out there,” Odum said. “Contact tracing allows you then to contain that to a small area, so you don’t get wide community spread.”

The third priority is to track hospital bed numbers, ICU capacity and critical equipment supplies to make sure the health care system remains in the “safe zone” as the city goes through the reopening process.

Odum collaborated with the Greater Houston Partnership and chambers across the city to develop a “Reopen Houston Safely” strategy, a set of guidelines and best practices for businesses to incorporate into their operations.

The city has also distributed approximately 120,000 face coverings and masks this past week through various channels, including city council members and faith-based community organizations. Turner said he plans to distribute 50,000 to 70,000 more over the next few days.

“As we move forward, people will be assuming a little bit more risk as people come together, but we’re going to do everything we can within our power to keep everyone safe and make this reopening work,” Turner said. “It’s going to require all of us to be responsible and do their part, as well.” — Shanley Pierce

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report and UPDATE | April 28, 2020, 7:30 p.m.:) Houston and Harris County officials have crafted a response to Gov. Greg Abbott’s plan to reopen parts of the Texas economy on Friday aimed at avoiding a local increase in COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths.

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner expressed concern about backsliding on the progress of containing the virus amid local orders that have kept people at home, working safe, at physical distance and, this week, guided to wear facial coverings in public. Both executives warned of potentially perilous circumstances with more movement in the community as the virus continues to circulate.

At a Tuesday morning news conference, Hidalgo announced a three-point “test, trace, treat” plan to contain the spread of COVID-19 as parts of the Texas economy—retail stores, restaurants, movie theaters and malls—can reopen with restrictions on May 1.

Houston COVID-19 update

(TMC Report:UPDATE | April 27, 2020, 4:20 P.M.:) Earlier this afternoon, Gov. Greg Abbott announced his tiered plan to reopen Texas.

After the state stay-at-home order expires on April 30, the first phase of Abbott’s strategy will allow retail stores, restaurants, movie theaters and malls to reopen on May 1 at no more than 25 percent capacity. Museums and libraries also will be allowed to reopen their doors, but all hands-on exhibits must remain closed.

Outdoor sports that keep a certain distance, such as golf and tennis, will be allowed but limited to no more than four people at a time.

Phase 2 of Abbott’s plan could go into effect as soon as May 18.

“Phase 2 will open more businesses and allow the businesses open in Phase 1 to expand their operations. We need to see two weeks of data to confirm no flare-up of COVID-19,” Abbott said. “That is exactly why now, more than ever, Texans must continue safe distancing practices. If we do that, we will be able to expand into Phase 2, opening up our economy even more.”

Barbershops, hair salons, bars and gyms will remain closed for now. The governor said he is aiming for “on or no later than mid-May” to reopen those businesses.

Abbott’s executive order supersedes orders set at the local level.