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Tag: Houston City Council

  • Houston Council Members Denounce “Disgusting” ICE Tactics – Houston Press

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    It wasn’t exactly shocking when Mayor John Whitmire confirmed last week that Houston police officers have been cooperating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement but it opened up a conversation about whether city officials have the authority to push back — and what’s at stake if they stay silent. 

    Many suspected that HPD was passing information to federal agents — although Whitmire has quibbled over the terms “cooperation” and “collaboration” — and others said they were certain of it, producing HPD call logs to back up their claims. It’s a major reason some members of the Harris County Democratic Party are attempting to admonish the mayor, meaning they won’t endorse him in a bid for re-election. 

    Whitmire last week repeated what he’s been saying for months: The officers of the Houston Police Department are not actively trying to deport people and they don’t inquire about immigration status, but when they identify an active warrant, they notify the agency that issued it, as required by law. 

    The procedures that were put in place during the Biden presidential administration and have been carried out by previous Houston mayors and the Harris County Sheriff’s Department, said Whitmire, who was elected in December 2023. 

    “We have no greater responsibility as elected officials than to comfort our community, all communities,” he said in a November 12 city council meeting. “I ran to unite Houstonians, and we’ve been successful. I’m alarmed this morning over the rhetoric in the last 48 hours by, quite frankly, some individuals that I thought I knew better. I would urge us to get back to the facts and quit alarming people unnecessarily and quit politicizing an emotional issue.”

    Whitmire’s original comment — “I’m not going to say that we’re not cooperating with ICE because that’s frankly not true” — prompted a firestorm of backlash from the men and women who set policy with the mayor twice a week and don’t want their constituents to feel unsafe in Houston. 

    Councilman Mario Castillo, who represents Near Northside and portions of downtown and Houston Heights, issued a statement saying he would pause his district’s allocations for HPD overtime requests until he has assurance that those dollars aren’t supporting HPD and ICE coordination. Castillo’s grandfather was an immigrant, according to the council member’s bio

    Castillo told the Houston Press on Sunday that he asked for transparency, and he got the information he needed when the president of the Houston Police Officers Union explained local law enforcement procedures during last week’s council meeting. 

    “That reassurance was really important to me,” he said. “That’s why I said what I said. Transparency, clarity and public trust need to be maintained if we’re going to have public safety.” 

    Castillo walked back, at least for now, the threat to withhold overtime pay but acknowledged that Houstonians are anxious and confused by headlines declaring that the mayor says he’s working with ICE.

    “It raised a lot of questions,” he said. “It brought the anxiety up. To me, it was something that jeopardized the public’s trust with law enforcement, and that’s concerning, because we know how vital it is to have public trust with our local law enforcement, which is why I asked for more transparency and clarity around what that meant.”

    Asking for clarity isn’t politicizing the issue, Castillo said. It was simply an effort to reassure fearful residents that they can call the police department when they’re in need. 

    During the public comments portion of the November 12 meeting, resident Adriana Tellez said the Mexican community is hurting. Being undocumented is a civil, not criminal offense, Tellez said, and Houston depends on immigrants for its labor force. 

    “You have told people that ICE operations in Houston only target people with criminal records, and that is not true,” Tellez said to the mayor. “We have seen mothers and fathers with no warrants, with no criminal records, dragged out of their cars in front of their children. We have witnessed bounty hunters posing as federal agents storming our neighborhoods and arresting citizens and undocumented residents.” 

    Such action is deplorable, many elected officials agreed, but they said it’s not initiated by HPD. 

    Doug Griffith, president of the Houston Police Officers Union, said that when an officer intends to arrest someone after a traffic stop or service call, they run a background check through the National Crime Information Center database, a procedure required by law. 

    “If they are wanted by any agency, no matter who it is, then we have to contact that agency and see if they want them,” Griffith said. “That goes for ICE or the FBI.”

    “Do we drive around looking for people to see if they have an ICE detainer? No,” he added. “We don’t have the manpower for that. We are still 1,500 officers down. That is not our job. We’re not working with ICE. We don’t care about ICE. They have their own job function, whether you agree or disagree.” 

    City Attorney Arturo Michel said Houston officials could be held liable “both civilly and criminally” if they attempt to end the existing coordination with ICE because state law prohibits such action. 

    A July survey conducted by Texas Southern University showed that 95 percent of respondents believe immigrants living in the country illegally who commit violent crimes should be deported.  Several council members said last week that the current conversation isn’t about whether violent criminals should be deported.

    While there appears to be disdain for the strong presence of federal agents in Houston, there’s not much the city council can do about it, said At-Large Councilman Julian Ramirez, an attorney who was elected in December 2023 on a public safety platform.

    “Can we legally limit ICE’s authority to enforce immigration laws in the city? No. Can we take a look and offer input and suggestions? Not necessarily in an official capacity, but I think individual council members can do that,” Ramirez said. “It’s hard to discern what’s going on with ICE. There are anecdotes that we hear, but I don’t think that ICE is sharing a lot of information on what their actions are. At least they’re not reaching me. I think change will happen when the federal government recognizes the economic consequences of mass deportation.” 

    Ramirez and his chief of staff Leah Wolfthal created Bringing Houston Together, an initiative to foster dialogue and communication among people with differing opinions. The pair hosted an event in July that focused solely on immigration and met again last week, joining forces with Council Member Sallie Alcorn, to talk with residents about immigration and free speech. 

    Ramirez said he asked the city’s legal department why HPD was referring administrative warrants to ICE when they’re issued by immigration personnel rather than judges. He said he was referred to Senate Bill 4, signed into law in 2017, which prohibits “sanctuary cities” and limits what municipalities can do when it comes to setting policies. 

    “My understanding is that SB 4 prevents the city from enacting policies that protect immigrants from ICE,” Ramirez said. “It was litigated and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals kept SB 4 in place. It was never overturned, and as a city, we’re constrained to follow SB 4.” 

    The council member told the Press he doesn’t think the city has done a good job of explaining that. Additionally, he said, few people are talking about the potential repercussions of not cooperating with the federal government. It could result in the loss of hundreds of millions in funding for things like disaster relief, he said. 

    There are significant concerns not just from the immigrant community but that Houston could stop growing and the economy could tank if mass deportation continues, Ramirez said. He added that he’s had private conversations with federal officials who indicate that ICE’s current approach could be scaled back after the March 2026 primaries. 

    “If you want to change immigration policy, the federal government has the authority to do that,” he said. “There’s not a whole lot that the city can do.”

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested 422 undocumented people in Houston during a week-long raid in May. Credit: Screenshot

    Council Member Abbie Kamin, who is reportedly gathering support to become the next interim county attorney if current office-holder Christian Menefee is elected to Congressional District 18, said legal residents are being denied due process. 

    “I trust HPD,” Kamin said. “Regardless of immigration status, if someone poses a public safety risk to our community, it is local law enforcement’s job to enforce our laws, and I have faith in them to do that. We are grappling now as a city where we are seeing something horrific taking place. For many, there are warrantless searches that are occurring. There are stops that are occurring that include racial profiling.”

    Griffith, the union leader, pointed out that ICE agents are federal law enforcement officers. He cautioned against the narrative that we must “fight” against them. Kamin said no one is advocating for assaulting a police officer. 

    “When people say fight, what they’re talking about is protecting the community that is under assault right now,” she said, adding that there appears to be a sentiment of, “give them what they want so we can avoid a heavier hand.”

    “We cannot throw Houston families under the bus on a hope or a prayer that it will prevent a heavier hand,” she said. “The stories and the images that we are seeing are inhumane. They are heart-wrenching. They are traumatizing children. The conditions in which they are being kept are also inhumane.” 

    Kamin referenced a recent lawsuit in which Attorney General Ken Paxton alleged the Harris County Commissioners Court violated the Texas Constitution by funding organizations that provide legal services for undocumented persons. 

    “Mayor, you said it shouldn’t be political,” Kamin said. “This is about protection. Political is the cheap shots like Attorney General Paxton just made, filing a lawsuit against the county on drummed-up charges and grounds that are absolutely absurd when the county steps up to provide funding for the legal defense of children.” 

    Councilman Joaquin Martinez said his next-door neighbor, a man who had no criminal history, was recently deported to El Salvador. The man’s wife reached out to Martinez, and he said it’s been one of the “heaviest” things he’s dealt with as a council member. He said his mother lived in Houston for 40 years and was not a U.S. citizen. “This is personal to me,” he said. 

    “I challenge folks who have privilege, who have a voice, to be thoughtful, take a few steps back and think about the folks who are getting deported who are not criminals,” he said. “What ICE is doing is disgusting. I think everyone can agree to that. At what point do we, especially in these positions, provide some peace in this chaos or do we continue to inflame these conversations?” 

    He said he believed and trusted that the mayor and Houston police are following the law. 

    While Whitmire’s narrative has shifted into, “Don’t blame HPD for following the law,” one city council hopeful is campaigning on the premise that Houston officials should explore all options. 

    Alejandra Salinas, a candidate for the At-Large Place 4 City Council seat, said council members can pass ordinances to try to protect the community.

    “We can try to work with the mayor and police department to try to figure out what options we have under state law,” she said. “I think we should be asking those questions. Some states have passed laws that say ICE can’t go into certain spaces like churches and hospitals without Article 3 warrants. Where can we fight back and bring litigation against the state and federal government to protect our communities in Houston?”

    “I think we need to have all the options on the table because what’s happening is frankly un-American,” she added. “There’s nothing wrong with going after violent criminals, but that’s not what’s happening right now.” 

    Houston City Council candidate Alejandra Salinas talks to a supporter at a fundraising event on November 16. Credit: April Towery

    Salinas is facing former Houston Councilman Dwight Boykins in a December 13 runoff election. Boykins hasn’t said much about immigration on the campaign trail, focusing on public safety and infrastructure as his top priorities. 

    However, during an October candidate forum, Boykins said he would be strongly opposed if he became aware that Houston police were using city resources to separate families. At the same forum, hosted by Houston Progressive Caucus, Boykins said he didn’t believe Whitmire had taken any actions that needed to be undone. 

    Over in southwest Houston, retired Cypress-Fairbanks ISD police officer Ramon Hernandez said his neighbors are scared, “whether they’re documented or not.” Hernandez told the Press that officers have discretion when determining whether to send someone on their way with a warning if an administrative warrant is flagged. 

    “You do have to follow the law,” Hernandez said. “The question is, what is the law? There’s always going to be cooperation, but what is mandatory? Texas police officers have a lot of discretion, especially when it comes to warrants. When a warrant pops up on the person you stopped, the next step is to confirm. Those officers can choose to confirm or not confirm. If it’s a Class C [misdemeanor], they’re probably going to give a verbal warning.” 

    Texas Rep. Christina Morales, D-Houston, hosted a fundraiser for Salinas on Sunday and has called for transparency and accountability around the immigration issue. The state rep held a press conference outside a Houston-area Home Depot last week and said that immigrant families “deserve safety, dignity and trust, not fear, raids and silence.” 

    State Rep. Christina Morales, D-Houston, right, pictured at a campaign event for Alejandra Salinas on November 16, has condemned the practices of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Houston. Credit: April Towery

    Whitmire said he’s met with Democratic Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia to build consensus and express concerns in Washington, D.C., and with Sen. Carol Alvarado, D-Houston, at the state level. 

    “We are a city of immigrants. We know that; it’s our strength,” he said. 

    The mayor scoffed at “clickbait” headlines that Houston police officers called ICE more than 100 times this year to alert the agency of people who had active immigration warrants, compared to nine times last year. He said that of those nine calls last year, “ICE showed up for three.” 

    “HPD, under the leadership of Chief [Noe] Diaz, has done a professional job,” he said. “It’s a complex issue. I’ve been on surges at the after-hours clubs. Fifty or 100 immigrants will pour out of a club at 4 in the morning. No one with HPD inquires as to their immigration status. Individuals are checked for drugs and firearms and then sent home. When people are pulled over, they’re never asked about their immigration status. That has been the policy since day one.”

    The mayor added that he gets calls from across the nation about how Houston has managed to “not escalate matters.” He questioned why people are badmouthing him and HPD over such a sensitive issue when they’re not attacking the Harris County Sheriff’s Office, which follows the same protocols. 

    “You’re harming the community that we’re all committed to serve and comfort,” he said. “When people see social media or clickbait that says HPD is doing this wrong and involved in the enforcement of immigration and ICE laws, we know factually it’s wrong. There’s not one scintilla of evidence to demonstrate that.” 

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    April Towery

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  • Alejandra Salinas And Dwight Boykins Headed to Runoff for Houston City Council – Houston Press

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    Houston attorney Alejandra Salinas got the most votes in a crowded city council race, but she’ll have to face off against former Councilman Dwight Boykins in a December 13 runoff. 

    Boykins, a lobbyist and consultant, served as District D’s representative from 2014 to 2019 and made an unsuccessful bid for mayor in 2019. The winner of the At-Large Position 4 contest will fill the unexpired term of Letitia Plummer, who resigned to run for Harris County judge. The term extends through January 1, 2028. 

    Salinas said Wednesday morning she’s ready to move forward. 

    “I am incredibly grateful to those who voted for me and will work hard every day to earn the votes of those who didn’t,” she said. “No matter who we are or what part of town we live in, we all deserve better roads, safer neighborhoods, more flood protection and an affordable city with good-paying jobs.” 

    Boykins did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

    The final numbers posted Wednesday morning at Harrisvotes.com show the following results: 

    Alejandra Salinas: 37,942 votes (21.21 percent)

    Dwight Boykins: 35,878 votes (20.06 percent)

    Jordan Thomas: 28,610 votes (16 percent)

    Sonia Rivera: 18,987 votes (10.62 percent)

    Angie Thibodeaux: 11,719 votes (6.55 percent)

    Martina Lemond Dixon: 7,923 votes (4.43 percent)

    Sheraz Mohammad Siddiqui: 6,664 votes (3.73 percent)

    Miguel Herrera: 5,949 votes (3.33 percent)

    Kathy L. Tatum: 5,428 votes (3.03 percent)

    J. Brad Batteau: 5,023 votes (2.81 percent)

    Cris Wright: 3,927 votes (2.2 percent)

    Ethan Hale: 3,782 votes (2.11 percent)

    Al Lloyd: 3,484 votes (1.95 percent)

    Adrian Thomas Rogers: 3,471 votes (1.94 percent)

    At a Houston Progressive Caucus forum on October 4, Jordan Thomas, Salinas and Boykins debated local issues and shared their thoughts on recent Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids. Salinas spoke about how a relative, who is a U.S. citizen, was detained by ICE for several hours. 

    “It is unconscionable what is happening right now in this country,” she said. “What ICE is doing is [unacceptable]. On City Council, I will stand up every single day and speak out against it. We cannot just stay silent and hope that President Trump will not come to Houston. I will always stand up for immigrants. They are the base of our community.” 

    Houston Progressive Caucus, which promotes policies that support the working class, endorsed Thomas and recommended Salinas. An endorsement means the candidate is fully aligned with the HPC’s platform; a recommendation means the candidate is “clearly better for working people than the alternatives.”

    Thomas, Plummer’s former chief of staff, also earned the endorsement of the Houston Chronicle editorial board, which said that “having Thomas at City Hall would help make [John] Whitmire a better mayor.” 

    Salinas, a partner at Susman Godfrey LLP, campaigned on making Houston a safer and more affordable place to live. She said the city’s permitting process must be streamlined in order to make housing more affordable.    

    “Houston families are watching their budgets with concern, unsure about inflation, job security, secure retirements, healthcare and more,” Salinas says on her campaign website. “Our city is facing the same economic uncertainty, driven in part by the chaos in Washington, D.C., and a hostile state government. Now more than ever, city leaders should level with voters and make financial decisions that are transparent and sound for the long-term health of the city.” 

    Boykins has touted his experience as the only candidate in the race who served as a Houston City Council member. 

    “You can have all these ideas about what you want to do, but you have to have a working relationship with the mayor, the agenda director and your colleagues on the city council,” Boykins said at last month’s forum. “I have that experience and I understand how to bridge coalitions between Democrats, Republicans and Independents to get your city services addressed.” 

    Houston ISD

    Three candidates elected Tuesday to the Houston ISD Board of Trustees won’t have any voting power because the Texas Education Agency took over the school board in 2023, appointing a superintendent and a handpicked board of managers. The elected board, however, will regain power when the state takeover ends. 

    Two of the three candidates elected Tuesday — Maria Benzon and Michael McDonough —  were endorsed by the Harris County Democratic Party, even though school board trustees are nonpartisan. 

    Incumbent Bridget Wade, endorsed by the Republican Party and a darling of TEA Commissioner Mike Morath, narrowly defeated Dr. Audrey Nath in the District VII race. 

    District V

    Maria Benzon: 12,310 votes (63.05 percent)

    Robbie McDonough: 7,214 votes (36.95 percent)

    District VI

    Michael McDonough: 7,139 votes (60.41 percent)

    Kendall Baker: 4,679 votes (39.59 percent)

    District VII

    Bridget Wade: 9,617 votes (54.09 percent)

    Audrey Nath: 8,164 votes (45.91 percent)

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    April Towery

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  • Houston City Council Candidates Throw Jabs During Debate – Houston Press

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    Dwight Boykins, Alejandra Salinas, and Jordan Thomas — all vying to fill former Houston City Council member Letitia Plummer’s unexpired term — debated last weekend on homelessness, immigration, and affordable housing, among other issues. They agreed on some talking points but sparred occasionally, with Thomas and Boykins accusing each other of not having their facts straight. 

    The October 4 debate was hosted by the Houston Progressive Caucus, an organization founded last year to support initiatives that benefit “the working class.” The At-Large Position 4 Houston City Council race, which will be decided on November 4, has a crowded ballot with 15 candidates

    Plummer gave up her seat in July when she announced her campaign for Harris County judge. The nonpartisan unexpired term ends January 1, 2028. 

    Hopefuls who weren’t invited to join last weekend’s debate but wanted to raise awareness about their campaigns were permitted to attend the event, pass out literature, and share why they’re running. 

    Candidate Ethan Hale spoke about his effort to recall Houston Mayor John Whitmire. Kathy Tatum highlighted her efforts to provide services for veterans, domestic violence survivors, and homeless people. Cris Wright said working-class Houstonians need a seat at the table when decisions are being made that affect their lives. 

    But the spotlight was on Boykins, a former Houston councilman; Salinas, an attorney and member of the LGBTQ community; and Thomas, a former chief of staff for council members Plummer and Amanda Edwards. 

    Much of the hour-long debate focused on homelessness. A recently-approved Houston “civility ordinance,” characterized by opponents as the criminalization of homelessness, prohibits people from gathering and sleeping on sidewalks 24/7 in the Central Business District and East Downtown.

    Since the ordinance went into effect in July, more than 500 citations have been issued to homeless people. Most don’t have the ability to pay those tickets, and they can be jailed for failure to appear in court. Mayor Whitmire has said the initiative is a multi-pronged, $70 million-per-year approach to get the unhoused into permanent supportive housing via a “superhub” on Emancipation Avenue.  

    Salinas said she commends Whitmire for pushing a “housing first” initiative, “but where it goes too far is jailing people for being unhoused.” 

    “I grew up with a mother who had mental health and addiction issues, and I can’t imagine having to battle those issues while being unhoused. I think it is unconscionable to put people into those positions. We should provide housing first. We should not be jailing those people. As everyone in this room knows, it is more expensive to jail them than to give them housing.” 

    She added that the most important metric is the number of people who are given self-sustaining tools, rather than a count of those who are housed for a night or a week. 

    “One year after we provided those resources, do they have stable housing?” Salinas said. “And if not, we need to go back and re-evaluate because we’re doing something wrong.” 

    YouTube video

    Thomas said he has a serious problem with Whitmire’s “anti-progressive” approach to homelessness. About 2,000 beds are available for the homeless, and about 3,000 unhoused persons are counted every year, he said. 

    “The idea that we would put forth the ordinance to effectively criminalize them, before we solve the missing beds, is unconscionable,” he said. 

    Boykins said he has visited the Haven for Hope development in downtown San Antonio that provides services and beds for the unhoused, and allows them to sleep in a guarded courtyard if they prefer. 

    Tenants have to check in and take steps to find employment. There are challenges, though, because most people don’t want that kind of campus in their neighborhood, and some homeless people choose not to accept services, he said. 

    In response to a reporter’s question, Boykin said that, when serving on a panel with 16 council members and a strong mayor form of government, it’s challenging for one person to “undo” what they consider to be bad policies of the recent past. 

    “What you can do is disagree and look at better ways during the budget cycle to introduce an amendment or whatever you need to do,” Boykins said. “I served with two mayors, and I think that Mayor Whitmire, in my opinion, has come across as trying to do the right thing, whether he’s doing it or not, and not making it political.”

    “What I see in Mayor Whitmire, from my back row, because I’m not at the horseshoe, is a mayor that’s allowing the council members to be creative and work with him,” he added. “I’m not going to say that we need to undo what he’s done.” 

    Thomas, a self-described project manager who connects the nation’s power grids, leaned heavily on his expertise as a chief of staff at City Hall and said Houston is at a crossroads where it can continue to do business as usual, being a petrochemical city with urban sprawl, or it can embrace the future. 

    Salinas noted that she served as a youth organizer for former President Barack Obama and has received endorsements from major labor unions, including UNITE HERE Local 23, which is currently on strike at Hilton Americas-Houston as employees advocate for higher wages.

    According to her campaign website, when Salinas was president of the College Democrats of America, she came out as an LGBTQ Latina on national television during the 2012 Democratic National Convention. She said at Saturday’s debate that she would support resurrecting a version of the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance, which banned discrimination and was repealed by voters in 2015, if that is “what the community wants.” 

    Dwight Boykins and Alejandra Salinas caught up before an October 4 debate at Freed Community Center. Credit: April Towery

    Boykins highlighted his service representing District D on the Houston City Council from 2013 to 2019, under Mayors Annise Parker and the late Sylvester Turner. He was on the council when Hurricane Harvey ravaged Houston in 2017 and has navigated budget deficits, Boykins said. 

    Things got heated when Boykins suggested using Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone funds to purchase land, allowing people to build affordable homes on city-owned properties. 

    “When developers come to us and talk about supporting a tax credit that the council member and the state rep have to approve, we have to make certain we have some type of tool in place to be able to say, to see this credit, you have to reduce a percentage of your units by this amount of money,” Boykins said. “We can have all these great ideas but that’s the only way it’s going to work.” 

    Thomas said the District D TIRZ, which Boykins represented when he was in office, “is one of the most corrupt TIRZs in the city.”

    “The executive director who was over that program, who was buying those lots, was accused of stealing $8 million in the District D TIRZ,” Thomas said. “There’s a higher concentration of vacant lots in District D than in any other stretch of area in our city.”

    It was widely reported in June 2024 that Midtown Redevelopment Authority’s former real estate manager Todd Edwards was arrested and charged, along with two vendors, for allegedly misappropriating $8.5 million in public funds meant to build affordable housing in the Third Ward. The charges were filed by former District Attorney Kim Ogg; Edwards has not yet been tried or sentenced. 

    Boykins implied that Thomas didn’t know what he was talking about. 

    “Please verify what you’re saying before you make those kinds of statements,” Boykins said. “You were a city council aide. You were not the council member. You didn’t know what was going on with that, Jordan, and now lawyers do. Be careful what you’re saying, sir.” 

    Thomas replied, “So the Houston Chronicle doesn’t know what they’re saying? They reported it in their paper.”

    At-Large Position 4 Houston City Council candidate Jordan Thomas speaks at a public forum on October 4. Credit: April Towery

    Thomas spoke extensively on the need for affordable housing as a moderator pointed out that Houston renters are spending more than 30 percent of their monthly income on housing, and homeowners’ insurance recently spiked 18 percent, pricing people out of their homes. 

    Thomas said he wants to “reclaim public land for public good,” starting in Third Ward. 

    “I support a plan to transfer hundreds of vacant lots held by the Midtown Redevelopment Authority to the Houston Land Bank and Houston Community Land Trust,” Thomas says in an open letter on his campaign website. “These public lands were supposed to fight displacement but instead they’ve been left to rot. I’ll fight to make them permanently affordable and governed by the community.” 

    Increasing affordable housing also boosts the city’s tax base, Thomas said during the debate. 

    Salinas talked about working with partners and finding practical solutions, such as making sure the permitting process is streamlined and costs are reduced so those expenses aren’t passed on to homeowners. 

    “We should be thinking about affordability not just for those who have the most need but also for the middle class, making sure our teachers and firefighters are not priced out of living inside the city of Houston when they’re servicing the city,” she said. 

    The candidates agreed that Houston’s tax rate is relatively low, but attention should be given to how the tax dollars are spent. 

    “We’re not bringing in enough revenue,” Salinas said. “One of the main things I want to fight for if I’m elected is increasing the resources we put toward grant writing. There is not a grant coordinator in the city, and as a result of that, sometimes we have departments that are applying for the same grant. We’re losing out on potentially billions of dollars that other cities like New York, L.A. and Chicago are fighting for because we’re not making those meaningful applications.” 

    Immigration also came up during the debate. Mayor Whitmire has been criticized for directing HPD to “collaborate” with Immigration and Customs Enforcement; he says he’s just following the law. Houston police officers have said they do not inquire about anyone’s immigration status when interacting with the public. 

    Salinas said her great-grandfather came to the United States from Mexico and she is “only here because of the American dream story.”

    “I learned recently that one of my relatives, who is a U.S. citizen, was detained for several hours,” she said. “What ICE is doing is not in any way acceptable. We cannot just stay silent and hope that Trump will not come for Houston. He will come for Houston, and we need to be ready to fight. We need to be ready to fight strategically. We need to be ready to bring lawsuits.” 

    Thomas said President Donald Trump is a threat, and “what’s worse is the silence that we’re hearing from City Hall on this issue.” States are ignoring a general police order that says undocumented immigrant status is not a matter for police action, Thomas said, noting that if elected, he would ensure that order is codified into law. 

    “This is not just going to happen to undocumented immigrants,” he said. “It is coming for anyone who has contrary views to this administration.” 

    Boykins said Houston is the most diverse city in the country and there’s no reason why the White House should be breaking up families for political reasons. He said he would take a strong stance against it if he became aware that Houston police were using city resources to separate families. 

    Thomas asked for a rebuttal to Boykins’ statement on immigration, saying, “The truth is important,” but was not permitted to finish his statement. 

    Karthik Soora, right, introduces candidates at the Houston Progressive Caucus debate on October 4. Credit: April Towery

    The Houston Progressive Caucus, co-founded by Anthony Rios and former Texas Senate candidate Karthik Soora, chose the three candidates to debate based on their social media visibility, fundraising strength, substantive endorsements, and functioning campaign infrastructure. 

    “We also considered whether they had participated in progressive organizing or aligned with working-class issues that matter to Houstonians — from affordable housing to labor rights,” Soora told the Houston Press

    “We’re still a young organization, and we’re still trying to thread the needle between ruthlessly building progressive power and creating a culture of inclusion and democratic participation,” he said. 

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    April Towery

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  • Report Into HPD’s Shelved Cases Released by Houston Police Department

    Report Into HPD’s Shelved Cases Released by Houston Police Department

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    Acting Houston Police Chief Larry Satterwhite did not mince his words as he warned Houston City Council on Wednesday that without more staff, the Houston Police Department will remain unable to investigate all the cases brought to the agency.

    “That’s something I don’t want to tell you — and certainly not in this position — but that is honesty,” Satterwhite said. “We simply cannot investigate all crimes. Not until we get more people. We desperately need more people.”

    Satterwhite stressed the need to prioritize recruiting while presenting the key findings of a widely anticipated report that unveiled more information about the use of a “suspended-lack of personnel” code used by the Houston Police Department.

    News of the code’s use across the department broke in February when former Houston Police Chief Troy Finner announced that it had caused more than 264,000 incident reports to be shelved without further investigation.

    Satterwhite detailed the origin of the code, tying its creation to the administration under former interim police chief Martha Montalvo — who led the department in 2016 briefly before former Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo took over.

    According to Satterwhite, the first major failing was the need for more guidelines attached to the code. Those using it would focus on cases they determined to have solvability. Hundreds of thousands of incident reports with workable leads that could’ve led to arrests — he admitted — were neglected as a result.

    “Once they were suspended, they were never revisited,” he said.

    Houston Mayor John Whitmire interrupted Satterwhite to question the content of these cases. Satterwhite confirmed of the more than 264,000 suspended cases, many involved serious sexual assaults and at least two were murders. He added that the number of murders could increase as further review continues.

    Whitmire contended that some of the “worst of the worst” cases went backlogged for years.

    Satterwhite detailed the case that spurred the deep dive into the code. Officers responded to a call involving a robbery and sexual assault and found that the suspect involved in that incident was linked to a prior sexual assault. However, the first sexual assault, in which the complainant had named the suspect and the suspect’s vehicle, had been suspended.

    The department found that over 4,000 sexual assault cases had been shelved using the code. Those with the agency also discovered that 264,371 cases had gone uninvestigated across all divisions.

    “The scope of this and the magnitude of it was truly not known until February,” Satterwhite said. “That’s a failure of leadership. At the executive level, we should have asked more questions and we could have done more.”

    Satterwhite said investigators with the Special Victims Division had been told to stop using the code in specific cases several years ago. In 2017, investigators with the division had found that 1,600 child sexual assault cases had been suspended.

    Then-Commander of the Special Victims Division David Angelo requested that the department hire more investigators for the division and ordered that the code never be applied to a child sexual assault case. However, Satterwhite noted, it continued to be used in adult sexual assault cases.

    Houston City Council member Martha Castex-Tatum challenged why the department could avoid using it for incidents involving children but couldn’t extend it to reports from adults. Satterwhite said it was another “miss” by the agency.

    According to Satterwhite, Finner also gave all departments another directive about not using the code in 2021. Officers continued to use it, and the code remained in the department’s record management system as it could not be removed without the software crashing.

    Houston City Council member Amy Peck asked if those who applied the code to cases after Finner’s directive faced disciplinary action. Satterwhite said they were not held accountable because they technically operated within department policy.

    The code was used for roughly eight years. Of the 264,371 cases, 176,221 have been reviewed, and 81,079 have had a final disposition entered. Satterwhite noted that the department pulled officers who patrol and have other duties off the streets to continue chipping away at the cases it has left to investigate.

    “I’m still shocked that this could exist for so many years and not become public,” Whitmire said. “You aren’t going to fix something until it comes public.”

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    Mayor John Whitmire reiterated his disbelief that it took this long for the code to come to light.

    Screenshot

    Several reports have indicated that Finner knew prior to 2021, as an email mentioning the code was sent to staff in 2018 with the former police chief copied on it. However, Finner maintained that he did not know about it then.

    On Wednesday, Satterwhite said it was “very fair” to say Finner was not being dishonest when saying he did not recall the email discussing the code’s use.

    Whitmire announced the report would be finalized and presented to the public hours after the Houston Chronicle published comments by the former police chief.

    Finner expressed concerns that the department’s report may not reach a conclusion that would be available to the public. Before Finner’s retirement, he had released routine updates about its progress. When Satterwhite took over, these halted.

    Whitmire responded to Finner in a statement, saying he was “personally disappointed” that Finner felt motivated to make these “allegations.” Whitmire wrote that Finner’s comments did not deserve a response insisting the facts didn’t support them.

    Whitmire had repeatedly delayed the report’s release since Finner’s retirement. Finner stepped down abruptly shortly after news broke of the code’s use.

    Read the full report here:

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    Faith Bugenhagen

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