Cypress Edition | July 2024

Government

BY MELISSA ENAJE

Harris County revives nonviolent 911 program Harris County commissioners voted 4-1 on June 4, with Precinct 3 Commissioner Tom Ram- sey dissenting on all three votes, to continue and expand a countywide program that aims to use hospital-based interventions for nonemergency 911 calls instead of law enforcement. The details The Holistic Assistance Response Team pro- gram, referred to as HART, was created in March 2022 to improve community health and safety by providing responses to residents experiencing homelessness, behavioral health issues, or none- mergency health or social welfare concerns. HART dispatches 911 calls to interdisciplinary, unarmed rst responder teams trained in behav- ioral health and on-scene medical assistance. The program was paused in May after commis- sioners failed to reach an agreement on whether

$122M in upgrades planned for jails Harris County Commissioners approved on June 4 an estimated $122 million to address some of the most immediate needs through- out various Harris County jail facilities. Two county-appointed jail committees agree with the need to begin working on items expeditiously, including maintenance items related to re safety, plumbing, electrical, heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems. The impact Examples of high-cost priority items include: • More than $79 million for additional oors, renovations and upgrades to the facility at 701 N. San Jacinto St., Houston • More than $5 million for a re sprinkler system at 1200 Baker St., Houston

The Holistic Assistance Response Team connects underserved residents to services. People served by HART since 2022

Mental health/substance use

172

Housing/shelter

118

Food assistance

69

Other

60

SOURCE: HARRIS COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTHCOMMUNITY IMPACT

to pay Disaster Emergency Medical Assistance Consulting and Management, the vendor oversee- ing it. At the June meeting, commissioners also voted 4-1 to pay the vendor’s $200,000 invoice and improve the contract’s language to avoid further discrepancies. They also voted 4-1 on a seven-part plan to create an internal county system to oversee the HART program instead of contracting with an outside vendor.

Learning will never be this easy for your child again. Or as wondrous.

Did you know 90% of a child’s brain develops in the first five years? Since 1998, Primrose schools in Houston have been making the most of this important time by helping children grow the mental, physical and emotional skills that will set them up for success in the classroom and beyond.

Learn more about the 45 Primrose schools in Houston.

Each Primrose school is a privately owned and operated franchise. Primrose Schools is a registered trademark of Primrose School Franchising SPE, LLC. ©2024 Primrose School Franchising SPE, LLC. All rights reserved.

9

CYPRESS EDITION

Powered by