Thursday, October 28, 2010
Shuttle launch set for Monday/Crew on their way to Kennedy.
STS-133 Astronauts to Come to Kennedy Today
Thu, 28 Oct 2010 07:28:37 AM CDT
Astronaut Steve Lindsey and his crew will fly to NASA's Kennedy Space Center this afternoon as the preparations for Monday's launch reach the home stretch. Flying from their training base at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, the crew will land on the three-mile-long runway at Kennedy's Shuttle Landing Facility. In medical quarantine to prevent getting sick right before the mission, the astronauts will spend the next several days going over mission details, enjoying some free time and keeping their skills sharp. For instance, Commander Lindsey and Pilot Eric Boe will make several simulated shuttle landings in the Shuttle Training Aircraft, or STA.
The countdown for Monday's launch of space shuttle Discovery begins tomorrow at 3 p.m. EDT. Technicians will spend the weekend putting the finishing touches on Discovery. Liftoff is scheduled for 4:40 p.m., the precise time that the shuttle's launch pad will be in the same plane as the International Space Station it will chase and dock with during the flight.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Breaking: 3 Alarm Fire in NW Houston
HOUSTON – A three-alarm fire displaced at least 37 families Wednesday in northwest Houston.
The fire broke out at about 2:30 p.m. at the Driscoll Place Apartments in the 1300 block of Gears Road at Greensmark Drive.
Air 11 video showed thick black smoke stretched across the sky as firefighters battled the large flames that burned through the units.
At least one person was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries, fire officials said.
At least 37 units were affected by the fire, according to a preliminary damage assessment by the Red Cross. Red Cross volunteers were assisting families with emergency-disaster relief.
There was no word on what started the fire. Arson investigators were on scene.
The fire broke out at about 2:30 p.m. at the Driscoll Place Apartments in the 1300 block of Gears Road at Greensmark Drive.
Air 11 video showed thick black smoke stretched across the sky as firefighters battled the large flames that burned through the units.
At least one person was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries, fire officials said.
At least 37 units were affected by the fire, according to a preliminary damage assessment by the Red Cross. Red Cross volunteers were assisting families with emergency-disaster relief.
There was no word on what started the fire. Arson investigators were on scene.
9-11 call - backfires because of open laptop.
by Courtney Zubowski / 11 News
khou.com
Posted on October 12, 2010 at 11:37 PM
Updated today at 9:54 AM
HOUSTON -- A woman who called 911 to anonymously report a crime says she’s in fear for her life after the man she turned in called her just minutes after she placed the call.
According to the woman, who does not want to be identified, on Oct. 1, she was driving near Beltway 8 and Veterans Memorial Drive when she witnessed a man in the car next to her beating his passenger. She did not know either one of them.
“I saw him hitting her and he was taking his fist and he was just hitting her, aside her, just hitting her and I’m like this is crazy,” said the woman.
She placed the 911 call at 1:28 p.m. and thought that would be the end of her involvement, but 30 minutes later she learned it was just the beginning.
“About 1:54 p.m. my phone rang back and it was the suspect,” she said. “He was asking me ‘Who was this, who is this’ and I am like, ‘Who is this, you called my number,’ and then he hung up."
After that call came another, and this time it was a woman’s voice, she said.
“She called me just as he hung up and it was like, ‘Ma’am, are you the concerned lady that called about my welfare,’ and I am like,
‘Excuse me,’ and she said, ‘Well I’m OK,’ and I said, ‘Excuse me,’” said the woman.
She received another call the next morning from the Harris County Jail where the suspect was in custody. He was arrested for outstanding warrants, but never charged with assault.
“My phone rings again and it says, ‘You have a call from Harris County processing jail,’ and I immediately hung up,” she said.
“I will never, ever get involved with anything else again, not when it comes to me being fearful of the surroundings in my life.”
A spokesperson for the Harris County Sheriff’s Office says as far as she knows, this is the first time something like this has happened in their department.
HCSO spokesperson Christina Garza said the suspect was put in the back of a Harris County patrol car while the deputy talked to the woman he was accused of hitting. It was then he was able to read the woman’s phone number off of a laptop computer the deputy had left open in the front seat.
“It’s a very unique situation,” Garza said. “It’s never happened and we certainly don’t want this to discourage her, or anybody, from reporting crime to authorities.”
Garza said it’s common practice to keep laptops closed, but it’s not policy. In some situations, deputies are forced to rush out of cars quickly.
”If anyone is to blame in this situation, it’s the suspect who violated such important information and took it upon himself to do this,” said Garza.
Garza said the department is sending out e-mails to all deputies to remind them to keep their laptops closed.
The suspect is not facing charges for memorizing the information, or calling the woman. Garza said there is no proof that he ever threatened the woman.
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The 911 caller disagrees.
“I was threatened,” she said. “I was threatened when he received my information. My information should have been protected. I was threatened at that point, so what point of threat do they not understand?
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
13 Houston schools receive powder letters
by khou.com staff
Posted on October 8, 2010 at 8:09 PM
HOUSTON – At least 13 HISD schools received envelopes Friday containing a white powdery substance, according to an HISD spokesperson.
A Houston Fire Department Hazmat team was sent to each school to collect the envelopes.
Preliminary testing showed the substance appeared to be non-hazardous. The powder was tested for radiation, explosives and volatile chemicals. Further tests are being conducted.
The schools were Alcott Elementary, Almeda Elementary, Anderson Elementary, Ashford Elementary, Attucks Middle School, Barrick Elementary, Bastian Elementary, Black Middle School, Blackshear Elementary and Browning Elementary.
Fonville Middle School, Briar Meadow Elementary School and Bellaire High School were added to the list Friday evening.
HISD said its top priority is making sure all schools are safe before students return on Monday.
"All of our school administrators are going through their mail and are trying to identify any envelopes that may look suspicious," said HISD Police Chief Jimmie Dotson.
The typewritten envelopes were addressed to the schools, not individuals, and contained no notes. Each contained about a teaspoon of white powder.
The FBI, U.S. Postal Service, HPD and HFD are assisting HISD with the investigation.
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Thursday, October 7, 2010
No waiting: Houston ship channel back in business
UPDATE 1-Coast Guard says no wait to exit Houston Channel
HOUSTON Oct 7 (Reuters) - The U.S. Coast Guard said no ships were waiting Thursday morning to leave the Houston Ship Channel, and 33 ships were lined up to enter the waterway to the busiest U.S petrochemical port after a three-day outage, which ended on Wednesday.
As many as 67 ships were waiting to enter or exit the waterway by the time early on Wednesday that workers had removed a leaning electrical highline tower that threatened to tumble into the waterway after being struck by a barge on Sunday morning.
Four Houston refineries were unable to receive crude oil by ship during the closure, but none said prodcution was cut during the wait that ended Wednesday when the first ships up the channel were crude tankers.
About 44 ships were waiting to enter the channel when it reopened on Wednesday morning and it might appear only 11 have moved up the channel, but the Coast Guard said several ships were added to the line waiting in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday.
"It's a consant flow," said a Coast Guard spokesman.
There are about 12 ships more than on a average day waiting to move into the channel, the spokesman said. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by John Picinich)
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Drug deal goes bad - two shot - one dead.
khou.com
Posted on October 7, 2010 at 7:26 AM
Updated today at 8:45 AM
HOUSTON—A 24-year-old man was killed and his brother injured after the two were shot in what appears to be a drug deal gone bad Wednesday evening, according to HPD Homicide detectives.
Police officers responded to a home on Winter Briar at Winter Seasons in southwest Houston for reports of a drive-by shooting.
They arrived around 9 p.m. to find two brothers had been shot. They said the actual shooting took place at another location about a half-mile away, but the brothers somehow made it back home.
Police believe the brothers drove their Cadillac a few blocks from their home to meet a group of men and purchase drugs. Some sort of altercation occurred and one of the men opened fire on the brothers.
"The exact circumstances are unclear as to what transpired a t the two locations, but we have one dead," said Sgt. Thomas Biggs, HPD Homicide Division. "We believe we have all of the players in custody.
The bullet traveled completely through one of the brothers. Police said he was shot in the chest or the back, but it is unclear which point is the entry and exit.
The other brother was shot in the foot. He was taken to Southwest Memorial Hermann Hospital, where he was treated and released. He returned to the scene to talk to police.
Several suspects were taken in for questioning and police said they definitely know one of them is the shooter.
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Monday, October 4, 2010
Breaking: Houston Ship Channel Closed!
HOUSTON, Texas—A four-mile stretch of the Houston Ship Channel remained closed to marine traffic Monday after a barge slammed into a tower supporting a high-voltage electric transmission line, threatening to topple it into the channel.
Coast Guard officials said a towing vessel named Safety Quest was pushing three barges loaded with scrap metal about 6 a.m. Sunday when it smashed into a Baytown power line, which remained upright only with the support of one of the barges.
No injuries were reported, but the six-member boat crew moved to another vessel and to safety.
Officials said the section from Crystal Bay to the Blackwell Peninsula would remain closed until at least Tuesday night.
"The situation is a little bit unstable right now," said Capt. Marcus Woodring. "The lines are sagging and we cannot allow any vessels to pass underneath with the unstable situation and chance of those lines falling in the water."
Centerpoint Energy officials said the power had been shut off to the line because crews had previously been working on a nearby tower. They said no customers had lost electricity following the crash.
Eighteen inbound vessels attempted to get into the port early Tuesday afternoon, and many remained anchored off the coast of Galveston. Twelve outbound commercial ships were also stuck.
The 25-mile waterway is lined by the nation’s biggest complex of petrochemical plants. The Port of Houston ranks first in the nation in foreign waterborne tonnage and imports and second in U.S. export tonnage and total tonnage.
"Anytime you see something like this, you hate it, because it’s affecting people and how they make their money," said Richard Zeno, a tugboat captain who was not involved in the crash but watched the teetering tower as he was fishing with his family Sunday.
Coast Guard officials said the ship channel handles more than $320 million in cargo and crude daily, meaning the Port of Houston would lose about $1 billion if the waterway stayed closed until Tuesday night.
"Commerce, of course, is very, very important," said Chief Warrant Officer Lionel Bryant. "But we don’t want to put lives in jeopardy doing so."
"This is actually very difficult because the tower is actually sitting on the barge," Bryant said.
The Coast Guard said the boat’s owner is St. Louis-based AEP River Operations.
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NASA lay-offs loom.
FOX 26
HOUSTON - Perhaps as many as one thousand people from the NASA community are being laid off Friday.
The cut-backs are among NASA contractors tied to the Space Shuttle Program that has just 3 launches remaining.
The United Space Alliance (USA) says it's letting go of 333 employees from its Houston office and nearly 900 employees in Florida.
"Today we say goodbye to a remarkable group of people," said USA's Chief Executive Officer Virginia Barnes Friday morning. Barnes statement continued, "Although our workforce has known for several years that the Space Shuttle Program was scheduled to end, layoffs are always difficult. The accomplishments of this team are unmatched in human spaceflight."
USA is providing severance pay to the laid off employees based on years of service. Minimum severance would be 4 weeks pay up to a maximum of 26 weeks. A spokeswoman with the company says some of them have spent their careers working on the Shuttle Program, and at least one employee began his work on NASA projects with the Apollo Program.
Some jobs were saved by the new NASA appropriations bill because it revived production of the Orion Space Capsule.
Lockheed Martin spokeswoman Linda Singleton tells FOX 26 that it is not laying off employees Friday "in light of the recent NASA Authorization Bill announcements." Singleton says Lockheed Martin has 3,100 employees working on Orion, with 600 in the Clear Lake area.
But Congress did cut the Constellation project, eliminating a manned mission to the moon.
Bob Mitchell of the Bay Area/Houston Economic Partnership says that gave Shuttle employees no where to go.
"There's probably about another 17 or 18 contractors involved, and the number could reach as high as 850 to 1000 today," Mitchell said Friday Morning.
Mitchell says a large number of those people are highly skilled, and the Bay Area hopes they won't have to move out of town or out of state to make a living.
Mitchell says he worked with Congress on the appropriations bill for 5 months, and the NASA community is having to the take the bad with the good.
"At least we have a direction," Mitchell said. "It may not be the perfect bill but we have a mission. We know we'll be able to maintain America's superiority in human space flight, and we were about to lose that with what the [Obama] administration was trying to do."
The Clear Lake area may also benefit from President Obama's effort to stimulate the commercial aeronautics industry.
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