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COVID-19 Public Policy Update: April 30, 2020

Published Apr 30, 2020 by Sophia Guevara

Washington, D.C.

In response to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), the Partnership will provide a weekly update on public policies and other newsworthy items from local, state and national levels of government.

Executive Summary 
All levels of government continue to respond to the economic impacts of COVID-19. At the federal level, the SBA has already processed $50 billion in the Paycheck Protection Program’s second round of funding, after launching on Monday. At the state level, Governor Abbott’s Report to Open Texas was released on Monday, marking the start of a phased reopening of the economy. At the local level, Harris County has created a COVID-19 Relief Fund to support vulnerable residents with essential expenses, and the county has expanded its contact tracing efforts. 

Federal 
Paycheck Protection Program

  • As of Wednesday, the SBA has already processed $50 billion of the second round of funding for the small business loan program. 
  • The program launched its second round Monday with $310 billion in additional funding passed by Congress last week. 

Congressional Coronavirus Oversight Committee

  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the six Democratic members of the newly created panel chaired by House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn. 
  • Republican leaders in the House have stated the new oversight panel is redundant as Congress created a five-member bi-partisan panel charged with overseeing the bailout loans for corporations and the relief package also created a separate panel of inspectors general and an addition oversight position of the special inspector general for pandemic recovery. 
  • The House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy has not appointed Republicans to the oversight committee yet, and there is speculation Republicans may not participate in the panel. 
  • Source: The Hill

Social Distancing Guidelines 

  • On Wednesday, President Trump announced the administration’s current guidelines on slowing the spread of COVID-19 will be fading out as more states begin to reopen their businesses. He stated the “fade-out” of the federal guidelines will occur due to governors taking over the role of providing guidance for their states. 
  • Vice President Pence stated the guidelines were incorporated into the Reopening Up America Again guidance which many of the governors were using to reopen their states. 
  • Source: The Hill

Numbers 

  • The United States has surpassed 1 million cases of COVID-19 and over 60,000 deaths as of Wednesday afternoon. 

State 
Numbers

  • As of noon on April 29, 27,054 Texans are infected with COVID-19. 1,702 are being treated in Texas hospitals. 732 Texans have died. 314,790 tests are reported given, and 12,507 Texans are estimated to have recovered. Harris County has the largest number of cases by county, at 5,986, with Dallas County second at 3,240. 

Local

  • On Tuesday, Harris County Commissioners Court approved the creation of a $15 million COVID-19 Relief Fund for residents with household incomes below 70 percent of the federal Area Median Income. The Greater Houston Community Foundation and United Way will manage the program, which will provide one-time payments directly to residents, who may not qualify for federal aid through the CARES Act or who require further assistance beyond the $1,200 direct stimulus payments, to cover essential expenses, including food, utilities and housing. 
  • Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo has outlined the county’s plan for contact tracing. The plan includes recruiting 300 more contact tracers to pinpoint where the virus is spreading and to whom. 
  • The City of Houston launched a mobile testing unit with a capacity of 100 tests per day and is available as a drive-thru or walk-up option. Mobile testing will serve the public from the Kashmere, Hiram Clarke and Third Ward multi-service centers. 

Visit the Partnership's COVID-19 Resource page for updates, guidance for employers and more information. And sign up for daily email alerts from the Partnership as the situation develops. 

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5/20/25
The Greater Houston Partnership celebrates our members making important announcements and sharing news about their operations and impact in our region. Learn more about some of those announcements over the last month below. Business Moves Aramco, officially the Saudi Arabian Oil Co., announces 34 memorandums of understanding with U.S. companies, many of which are based in the Houston area, totaling $90 billion of potential value. CenterPoint Energy begins on a new 160 megawatt/320 megawatt-hour Battery Energy Storage System, or BESS. The project aims to address grid-scale energy storage bringing reliability and resiliency to the Texas power grid. Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) has started renovating its headquarters in Spring, Texas to make room for its new integrated research center, registering nearly $30 million worth of renovations and new construction under the title "North America Laboratory Integration Project." Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) has signed a key offtake deal to supply Japan-based Marubeni with 250,000 metric tons of low-carbon ammonia a year from its planned Baytown project. Harris County has unveiled Bayland Park’s master plan to improve facilities, programming and connectivity and concentration on active parks, pedestrian safety, gardens, and farms. The city of Montgomery is set to break ground on its first H-E-B in 2026 at the southeast corner of Texas 105 and FM 2854. The Woodlands-based Howard Hughes Holdings Inc. (NYSE: HHH) has completed a $900 deal with Perishing Square to become a diversified holding company. Howard Hughes Holdings Inc. (NYSE: HHH) acquires the former McKesson Building in The Woodlands for $16.3 million. The Class A building with 200,000 square feet of available office space will be renamed "7 Waterway." NRG Energy Inc. (NYSE: NRG) is set to double its power-generation capacity in a $12 billion deal, acquiring a portfolio of natural gas generation facilities along with a commercial and industrial virtual power plant platform from LS Power Equity Advisors LLC. Rice University breaks ground on the Moody Center Complex for Student Life, a 75,000 square foot building offering a cafe, coffee house, meeting rooms, study areas and student services office. The project is expected to be completed by fall 2027. Shell Energy Stadium in Houston's East Downtown, or EaDo, will host the FIFA 2026 Fan Festival, featuring an indoor food court, mini soccer fields, interactive activities and more on a 39-day basis to watch the 104 matches of the World Cup. Sugar Land City Council approves the Lake Pointe Green redevelopment project, which seeks to repurpose more than 1 million square feet of office space, parking lots and trails of the former Fluor engineering and construction firm headquarters. University of Houston-Downtown expands into Amegy Bank's downtown building, which will be used for workshops, classes, events and more. The new 17,000-square-foot space on the 10th floor of the Amegy Bank building is called UHD@1801 Main, or “The Launchpad.” Education Alvin Community College has approved an online bachelor’s degree in nursing after the increased demand for nurses with bachelor’s degrees from local healthcare providers. Houston ISD commits $40 million to both HVAC and roofing updates, in which $21.2 million would go toward HVAC system repairs. 28 schools are projected to receive upgrades. Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo commits to $500,000 in vocational scholarships in 2025 and increased to benefit 10 Houston-area colleges and trade schools. Memorial Hermann Health System and Aldine ISD partner with HEAL High School to offer health care career training and clinical experience in a school-within-a-school model. Texas A&M University will run the Federal Aviation Administration’s new Center for Advanced Aviation Technologies, which will consist of an airspace laboratory, flight demonstration zones, and testing corridors. Health Care Harris Health plans to open its $1.6 billion hospital at Lyndon B. Johnson site in early 2029 with approximately 400 employees. Houston Methodist ranks first in the 2025 Premier’s 15 Top Health Systems list under the  "Large Health Systems" category. The annual list ranks health systems based on clinical outcomes, extended outcomes, operational efficiency and patient experience. Kinder Foundation donates $150 million for a new healthcare facility focused on combating childhood cancer in partnership with The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Texas Children’s Hospital. Innovation  Aurora has opened an over 90,000-square-foot terminal at a Fallbrook Drive logistics hub in northwest Houston to support the launch of its first “lane” for driverless trucks—a Houston-to-Dallas route on the Interstate 45 corridor. Ara Partners raises $800 million for its first-ever infrastructure-focused fund, targeting mid-market industrial decarbonization assets that are economic without federal incentives. Bank of America funds the restoration of Houston's iconic Rothko Chapel, including a documentary about the restoration. CenterPoint Energy Inc. (NYSE: CNP) builds out new tools and 100 weather stations around Greater Houston to prepare for hurricane season. Daikin Industries completes a nearly one-megawatt solar power plant at its Daikin Comfort Technologies North America campus southeast of Waller, projecting to eliminate an estimated 845 metric tons of carbon emissions each year. Downtown Houston+ has implemented a $400,000 pedestrian lighting project, deemed the "Underpassage," that will brighten a stretch of downtown Houston at Texas Avenue and Rusk Street in light of the FIFA 2026 World Cup Fan Festival. Harris County has approved a five-point Climate Justice Plan to address issues relating to ecology, infrastructure, economy, community and culture. Intuitive Machines plans an orbital reentry vehicle, backed by $10 million from the Texas Space Commission, to fly fly autonomously and be capable of landing at airfields. Mercury Fund continues to leverage artificial intelligence to improve efficiency and decision-making processes within industries, drawing interest from traditional VC hubs. Rice University has opened the headquarters for the new RBL LLC incubator at Texas Medical Center, aiming to incubate three to four biotech companies annually.  Transportation  Downtown Houston+ leads the Main Street Promenade project, turning a stretch of Main Street into a pedestrian-friendly corridor in Downtown Houston. The $12 million project will work on seven blocks of Main Street that stretches from Rusk Street to Commerce Street. Houston ISD explores a partnership with METRO as it retools its transportation services for the 2025-2026 school year. Southwest Airlines Co. (NYSE: LUV) has filed an application seeking approval from the Department of Transportation to broaden its international flights in accordance to the Open Skies agreement, which would permit future flights to over 130 countries that are subject to the agreement. If you are a member and want us to help communicate news about your organization, please send a press release or information about the announcement to member.engagement@houston.org and we will share it with our content team for possible inclusion in an upcoming roundup. Learn more about Partnership membership.
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Mayor John Whitmire released the City of Houston’s proposed $7 billion Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 operating budget, which includes a balanced General Fund. For Houston’s business community, sound fiscal management at City Hall is more than just good governance – it’s essential to maintaining the services and infrastructure that enable our region to thrive. Perhaps most significantly, this plan reduces General Fund spending – the city’s primary tax-supported budget – by 2.4%, or $74.5 million.  “We applaud Mayor Whitmire for making hard choices to put forward a balanced budget proposal,” said Steve Kean, President and CEO of the Greater Houston Partnership. “The mayor has made good on his commitment to address waste and duplication, and the Partnership is committed to working with his administration to put the City on a sustainable path, delivering the quality services Houstonians expect.”  Explore the City’s structural deficit and potential solutions in our report, State of the City’s Finances: A Deep Dive into Houston’s Fiscal Issues Facing the City. Key savings in the budget come from a combination of:  Workforce reductions: Over 1,000 city employees took advantage of the Voluntary Municipal Employee Retirement Payment Option, resulting in over $99 million in annual savings across all funds, including $29 million for the General Fund.  Operational efficiencies: Department budget reductions reached $16 million in savings.  Strategic reforms: $19 million associated with the consolidation of departments.   These efficiencies recommended in the Ernst & Young Citywide Efficiency Study underscore the city’s commitment to fiscal responsibility moving forward. The proposed budget also addresses critical public safety needs, funding the first year of a new police contract and the second year of the firefighter contract. While also providing infrastructure investments, as the budget sets aside $184 million from property tax revenue for street and drainage projects, aligning with the recent drainage settlement agreement.  During the press conference, the mayor highlighted that while this budget is balanced through efficiency and cost-cutting, the door remains open for future revenue discussions: “It would be wrong for me to say we are not going to allow Houstonians to consider a garbage fee or other matters,” the mayor said. “My responsibility is to balance the budget and provide services. I made a commitment to address waste and duplication. [Later] we will talk to Houstonians about the type of city they want to live in.” What’s next: Over the next two weeks, department directors will present their budgets in a series of workshops providing a deeper look into the FY 26 budget through Tuesday, May 20. After these sessions, City Council will review the budget, with a final vote expected in June.  
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