Tuesday, 29 May 2018

The Operating Room of the Future

The operating room is getting smarter, more effective—and a lot less risky for patients.

Hospitals are investing in new devices, designs and digital technologies that promise a new era of innovation for surgery. The moves are part of a growing shift away from traditional open procedures that involve big incisions, lots of blood loss and long hospitalizations. They point toward a future where more patients can choose minimally invasive outpatient surgeries, with faster recoveries, fewer complications, and less pain and scarring.

These new technologies cover a range of advances. With some, surgeons can control robot cameras with eye movements as they move into patients’ bodies through tiny incisions. With others, doctors can create a GPS-like map projected onto a patient’s body to virtually see inside the anatomy before an operation, track their surgical tools and help them operate more precisely.

Other advances aim to reshape the operating room itself, by adding more space for surgeons to work as well as imaging equipment that lets patients receive X-rays and other tests on the operating table instead of getting shuttled around the hospital. And machine learning and artificial-intelligence technology is being developed to let surgeons tap into big data before, during and after they work, to get guidance from computer systems that have analyzed the procedures and learned to make recommendations.

If successful, these changes could have a profound effect on patients. Despite years of progress, surgery remains a risky field. Infections are a frequent complication and can cause death. Studies have shown that even in the same hospital there are large variations in outcomes among surgeons, related to differences in judgment, skills and individual capabilities. Lower-skilled surgeons have higher rates of complications, readmissions to the hospital and repeat operations. New technology could help level the playing field.

“The field of surgery is evolving very fast, and technological advances are making it more efficient and effective and improving patient outcomes,” says Santiago Horgan, chief of the division of minimally invasive surgery at the University of California, San Diego, and director of its Center for the Future of Surgery, which is equipped with the latest technology to train surgeons with simulated procedures. While surgery may never be fully automated, Dr. Horgan says, “in the future robots will be smarter and more interactive, bringing as much information to surgeons as possible during surgery.”

Of course, many technologies are still in development, and others have yet to be widely adopted or fully evaluated for safety and cost-effectiveness. And some in the health-care industry warn about embracing new technologies too quickly.

“We don’t want to get into an arms race of creating ever more costly therapies, and we have to be careful we are not adopting technology unless it is more effective and improves outcomes over time,” says Steven J. Corwin, president and CEO of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, which is affiliated with Weill Cornell Medicine and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Here’s a look at some of the new technologies out there, and how they promise to reshape patient treatment in years to come.

Expanding operating rooms

One of the most basic changes in store is the redesign of the operating room. Some hospitals are creating “hybrid” facilities that combine conventional operating rooms with imaging equipment used in minimally invasive treatments that rely on tiny tubes inserted in a blood vessel or a body cavity. That way doctors can do both open surgery and minimally invasive procedures instead of scheduling them at different times. For patients, it means avoiding two separate procedures under anesthesia, and less time in the hospital and recovery.

For an idea of how this could improve treatment, consider cardiac catheterization, a so-called interventional procedure, where a tube is inserted through a blood vessel to reach coronary arteries. Doctors might use the catheter to insert a stent to improve blood flow to the arteries, but patients might also need open surgery to bypass the blocked artery. In a hybrid operating room, doctors can immediately shift from the less invasive interventional procedure to open surgery.

Another effort under way is to simply make better use of the typical 600-square-foot operating room. “ORs are often so cramped with no space to walk in and people climbing over carts and bending over equipment, which makes for an extremely unsafe environment,” says Anjali Joseph, director of the Center for Health Facilities Design and Testing at Clemson University. Dr. Joseph is coleading a federally funded project with Scott Reeves, an anesthesiologist at the Medical University of South Carolina, to design an operating room that increases patient safety and is easier for OR teams to maneuver around.

A prototype unveiled in January will allow researchers to perform surgical simulations and test such improvements as reorganizing equipment storage to bring tools closer to the operating table and keep doctors’ focus on the patients, as well as improving traffic flow.

The team is also studying the traditional approach of having a “sterile corridor” between adjacent operating rooms to cut down on infection risk. While the idea is that it reduces infections by decreasing traffic from contaminated areas, the project’s preliminary data suggest that the number of times the door to an operating room is opened and not the presence or absence of a sterile core is what’s important. “This will go against 50 years of conventional OR design,” Dr. Reeves says.

Among other recommendations from the project team are mobile staff workstations, digital displays high on the walls so everyone on the operating-room team can see the procedure in real time, and “plug and play” ceiling-mounted surgical booms to accommodate new technologies such as advanced imaging.

This outpatient operating room in the NewYork-Presbyterian David H. Koch Center, which opened in April, aims to provide more versatility, reduce infection risks, and improve the surgical team’s views and workflow. NewYork-Presbyterian

NewYork-Presbyterian has incorporated a number of new approaches into its new David H. Koch Center, opened in April with 12 outpatient operating rooms, interventional radiology, diagnostic imaging and other services.

The facilities also try to address another persistent problem in operating rooms: infection. The floors are terrazzo, which doesn’t support bacterial growth, while a stainless-steel wall system is easy to keep sterile and can be adjusted to accommodate new equipment. Three surgical booms with extra-long reach allow equipment to be suspended from the ceiling, removing the hazard of cords and cables on the floor. LED lights provide illumination with less heat, promoting airflow that minimizes airborne micro-organisms.

Technology will also help patients have a better experience, Dr. Corwin says. Before surgery at the new center, patients and families will be able to complete paperwork remotely and get a personalized “smart band” with information about their schedule and directions to their own pre-op and recovery room. A screen in the room, where families can stay while the patient is in surgery, will display information about the medical team, and families will get electronic updates about the patient’s status and when they are out of the OR.

More responsive robots

Research is mixed on the benefit of robotic-assisted surgery, introduced nearly two decades ago as a more precise alternative to conventional minimally invasive surgeries, or “keyhole” surgeries, in which surgeons make small incisions and use a laparoscope—a thin telescope with light and a video camera—to insert special tools with long, thin instruments. Many studies suggest robotic surgery has fewer complications and shorter hospital stays, but others show lower success rates in some types of surgery and other negatives, including higher costs.

Developers are working to make such systems smarter, cheaper and more autonomous. For example, researchers are working on programming robots to do such tasks as stitch up tissue after a surgeon is done, which could help prevent problems for patients such as leakage from sutures that aren’t consistently tight.

The Surgeon’s Toolkit
Operating-room procedures by technique in the U.S., 2017

Source: Decision Resources Group

The field is dominated by Intuitive Surgical Inc.’s da Vinci Surgical System, which has been used in more than five million surgeries world-wide. Surgeons sit at a console with a video monitor, using robotic arms to manipulate tiny instruments through small incisions. In addition to better visuals of the patient’s anatomy, it also filters out hand tremors and is designed to keep the surgeon in a relaxed, comfortable position for long, complex procedures. Intuitive is developing enhancements for its systems, including a flexible robotic catheter to make it easier for surgeons to navigate into the lung to obtain tissue samples while reducing the risk of harm to patients.

Intuitive CEO Gary Guthart says the company is also working on more advanced robots that will offer “increasing collaboration and control between the computer and the surgeon,” much like that between aircraft pilots and modern automated control systems.

A number of new companies are also entering the market, including medical-device giant Medtronic PLC and TransEnterix Inc., which received approval from the Food and Drug Administration last year for its Senhance Surgical System in some surgical procedures.

The Senhance system has optical sensors that allow surgeons to move the camera and select commands with eye movements and offers haptic feedback, which provides a sense of touch and feel during surgery based on pressure and tension in the instruments, “much as a driver would feel on a steering wheel going over a speed bump,” says Todd M. Pope, TransEnterix’s founder and CEO.

Better decisions with big data

A new generation of digital surgery tools aims to combine robotics, big data and other technologies to let surgeons make much better decisions when working on patients.

The most closely watched new entrant in this field is startup Verb Surgical Inc., a partnership between Google parent Alphabet Inc.’s Verily Life Sciences unit and Johnson & Johnson ’s Ethicon surgical-equipment division. The partners are referring to their concept as “surgery 4.0,” the next step after traditional open procedures, minimally invasive surgery and the introduction of robotics.

Verb is offering scant details on how the system will work. But the idea involves using a type of artificial intelligence known as machine learning—computer programs that can crunch data from thousands of past surgical procedures to identify best practices and potential errors.

The system, Verb says, could let surgeons train before an operation, and then assess how they did after the operation, measuring things like procedure time, economy of motion, and the number and type of instruments used. Eventually, the company says, the system will help surgeons make decisions in the midst of an operation, from suggesting the right technique in a particular surgery to warning of potential mistakes such as the severing of a blood vessel.

The Senhance robotic surgery system gives surgeons a sense of touch and feel based on pressure and tension in the instruments. Photo: TransEnterix Inc.

Verb plans to release its first product in 2020, and says it has already demonstrated a fully working system to its parent companies. “Right now, we have a very disconnected OR, with isolated equipment and robots, like a disconnected 1970s car without any sensors or connectivity,” says Verb Surgical CEO Scott Huennekens. “Our vision is that eventually a connected system will be in every OR, giving surgeons the tools to take the variability out of surgery.”

Some surgeons have expressed interest in the possibilities. “Decisions need to be made in a matter of minutes during surgery, and there is an unmet need in translating existing data on outcomes to the immediate needs of surgeons,” says Umamaheswar Duvvuri, a head and neck surgeon at the University of Pittsburgh and medical director of its new surgical innovation center. “If we could have big data crunched and available at the time we are doing surgery,” he adds, it would be akin to being able to say, ‘Hey Siri, if I cut this nerve, what happens?’ ”

Clearer views inside the patient

A variety of technologies aim to let surgeons better see what they are working on inside patients as they operate.

Take the case of cancer surgeons. Removing a tumor is a delicate balancing act between cutting out disease and leaving healthy parts of the anatomy intact. But the contrast dye often used to light up diseased areas must be injected into patients well in advance, and may not always work as hoped for. The dyes are also toxic and can cause allergic reactions.

The University of Pittsburgh is working with ChemImage Corp. , which is developing a method that it says lets doctors better visualize organs and tissues in real time, such as showing where a tumor ends and healthy tissue begins. Its technology, Molecular Chemical Imaging, or MCI, combines spectroscopy, the use of light to measure materials, and digital imaging.

Patrick Treado, founder and chief technology officer of ChemImage, says the technology is broadly applicable and will be designed in the future for use with endoscopy procedures, in which doctors insert a tube with a camera that allows them to view and operate on organs. It produces images in real time based on the evaluation of distinct colors in the visible light spectrum and beyond what the eye can see in the near-infrared light spectrum. MCI uses more colors overall than current cameras, which only use red, blue and green in the visible light spectrum.

“Our objective is to provide advanced visualization to the surgeon without changing how the surgeon currently performs surgery, but rather to provide them more and better information, on demand,” Mr. Treado says. For example, the images could make it easier during a hysterectomy to identify the tubes that carry urine from the kidney to the bladder so surgeons don’t inadvertently cut one. In addition to seeing tissues better through fat, overlying tissue and blood, MCI has the potential to make surgeons more efficient with less training.

Another effort to improve what surgeons can see is under development by a Cleveland Clinic spinoff, Centerline Biomedical. The idea is an alternative to fluoroscopy guided procedures, the X-ray technology that doctors now use to place a stent graft within an artery.

The traditional approach not only relies on contrast dyes but also exposes doctors and patients to continuous high doses of radiation. The images produced by fluoroscopy are also only 2-D grayscale images.

So, Centerline is developing a system to reduce the need for fluoroscopy and prevent the harmful effects of radiation. Using a mathematical algorithm and safe electromagnetic tracking, it provides 3-D color visualization and allows a surgeon to follow the position of instruments within the patient’s anatomy on a screen with a high level of accuracy—similar to GPS for cars.

With a new federal grant, Centerline is now testing the system with HoloLens, the mixed-reality smart glasses made by Microsoft Corp. The glasses will superimpose a 3-D outline of the patient’s vascular system onto a doctor’s field of view, “like having X-ray vision,” says Karl West, a mechanical engineer and director of medical-device solutions for Cleveland Clinic and scientific adviser to Centerline.

At Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, affiliated with Stanford University, Frandics Chan, a pediatric radiologist, worked with EchoPixel Inc.to develop an augmented-reality technology called True3D. The technology converts MRI, CT and ultrasound scans into a 3-D image that can be viewed with polarized glasses that filter the images to the left and right eye in front of a monitor while operating. Surgeons use a stylus to rotate and examine every layer of anatomy, getting more information than from 2-D imaging. The system was used in the 17-hour 2016 separation of conjoined twins at Packard Children’s.

EchoPixel has since found a way for surgeons to see the images without the glasses by using a monitor that can channel the correct images to the left and right eyes. Dr. Chan says that eliminates the need to change glasses during the operation and the risk of contaminating the sterile surgical field. The new approach will be used in the hospital’s new surgery center opening in July.

“We are really hoping that this technology will help surgeons be secure at every step so there is no need to guess something,” Dr. Chan says.

Ms. Landro, a former Wall Street Journal assistant managing editor, is the author of “Survivor: Taking Control of Your Fight Against Cancer.” She can be reached at reports@wsj.com.

Appeared in the May 29, 2018, print edition as ‘The Operating Room Of the Future.’

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Monday, 23 April 2018

Trends keynote speaker: Real estate industry can lead Baton Rouge out of mediocrity

On paper, there’s no reason for Baton Rouge not being like the often-compared Texas capital city of Austin, said economist John Tuccillo, who delivered the keynote address today at the 2018 Trends in Baton Rouge Real Estate seminar.

Maybe. But no one at the moment is confusing Baton Rouge with Austin.

What makes the Texas capital city more attractive than Louisiana’s, says Tuccillo, are quality of life factors like schools, transportation, health care and vibrant urban development—all of which he suggests can be improved here with the help of the Baton Rouge real estate industry.

“The real estate industry should make it its primary business to be involved in economic development and planning for the whole region,” he told a packed gathering at the L’Auberge Casino and Hotel.

Tuccillo, an author and real estate and finance economist, examined the year ahead from an economic standpoint, bringing it back to the Baton Rouge real estate market. He argues Baton Rouge should not settle for mediocrity, especially when it comes to infrastructure, transportation, flood recovery as well as maintaining its relatively stable economic base.

Daily Report has the full story.

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Tuesday, 17 April 2018

Sundyne Showcases Pumps & Compressors at GPA Midstream Convention in Austin, TX – Denver Business Journal

ARVADA, Colo., April 16, 2018 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — Sundyne, a global leader in the design and manufacture of pumps and compressors, today announced that it is showcasing its portfolio of midstream gas processing technology at this week’s GPA Midstream Convention in Austin.

"The abundance of natural gas discoveries in the Permian Basin are creating new opportunities for chemical & petrochemical feedstocks, and for using gas as a dominant source in power generation – plus advancements in LNG processing are cultivating export opportunities to reach new customers around the globe," said Sundyne’s Jason Fouraker. "In order to capitalize on these opportunities, midstream operators are investing heavily in pipelines and processing equipment, and Sundyne’s technology plays a key role within this infrastructure."

At the GPA Midstream Convention this week, Sundyne is illustrating the role its technology plays in natural gas processing:

1. Sundyne’s Sealless Magnetic Drive API 685 and ANSI B73.3 pumps are widely used in Hot Oil and Amine treating applications that remove hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide from natural gas.
2. Sunflo high pressure pumps are popular for reflux applications with low NPSH requirements.
3. Sundyne’s integrally-geared centrifugal compressors are used for Molecular sieve regeneration, overhead, and demethanizer applications, which strip out NGLs (such as butane, propane and ethane) from gas streams.
4. Sundyne LMV-803Lr OH3 and OH5 process pumps, as well as API 685 sealless magnetic drive pumps are used for bottoms pumps, booster pumps, and for transferring light hydrocarbons.

"The design elements that Sundyne is known for – multi stage performance in a single stage design; unmatched low flow, high head output; stainless steel & higher alloy construction; safe sealless magnetic drive pumps that don’t leak; and a proven track record for minimal maintenance – are all critical features for midstream applications," concludes Jason Fouraker.

To learn more about Sundyne’s Midstream product portfolio, please visit: http://sundyne.com/Products/Pumps/Markets/Midstream-Natural-Gas.

About Sundyne:
Headquartered in Arvada, Colorado, Sundyne is a leading manufacturer of highly reliable and efficient centrifugal pumps and compressors for use in oil and gas production, refining, chemical, petro-chemical, power generation and water processing industries. Sundyne is the world leader in delivering low-flow, high-head integrally geared centrifugal pumps and compressors; as well as safe and efficient sealless magnetic drive pumps. Sundyne pumps and compressors meet stringent API and ISO standards. To learn more about the Sundyne family of precision engineered pumps and compressors, please visit http://www.sundyne.com. Sundyne is owned and operated by Accudyne Industries.

About Accudyne Industries:
Accudyne Industries is a global provider of precision-engineered flow control and compressor systems responsible for powering the world’s most economically vital industries. These process-critical machines deliver unflagging performance in incredibly demanding environments, giving confidence to the mission of their customers. Today, Accudyne is powered by more than 2,800 employees at 13 manufacturing facilities. For more information, visit http://www.accudyneindustries.com.

SOURCE Sundyne

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Friday, 30 March 2018

East Austin Man Accused Of Throwing Toddler From 3rd-Floor Window

EAST AUSTIN, TX — A man was arrested this week after being accused of throwing his toddler son from a third-story window, according to reports.

Fnu Faizullah, 32, is accused of tossing his two-year-old son from an apartment window at 2104 East Anderson Lane in East Austin, according to reports. In an arrest affidavit referenced by KXAN, Faizullah initially claimed the toddler fell out of the window after running toward it, showing a cut on his arm as supposed evidence he tried to prevent the child.

But a witness at a picnic table adjacent to the apartment building told police she heard screaming from the apartment unit before seeing the screen window before removed and thrown to the ground. The witness told police she then saw a pair of arms consistent with those of an adult male throwing the child from the third-floor window, the news station reported.

The child fell 20 feet, narrowly missing the sidewalk and an air conditioning unit before landing on landscape rock. A woman retrieved the child, who was then rushed to the hospital for treatment of cuts and bruises. According to the affidavit, the stories told by Faizullah and his wife didn’t match up — he insisting the child fell and she saying the toddler had fallen at the park earlier.

Faizullah was booked into the Travis County Jail on a third-degree felony charge of injury to a child. His bond was set at $30,000.

Fnu Faizullah booking photo courtesy of Austin Police Department

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Friday, 23 March 2018

Lance Armstrong’s Old West Austin estate cycles back onto the market — with new price

The Windsor Road property is across from Pease Park. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
The entrance area. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
The kitchen. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
Armstrong orginally put the house on the market for $8.25 million in 2016. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
The home was built in 1924 and updated in 2007. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
The living room. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
One of the main house’s six full bathrooms. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate
The wine cellar. Photo courtesy of Gottesman Residential Real Estate

Perhaps the second time will be the charm. Former professional cyclist Lance Armstrong has put his almost century-old estate in Austin’s Old Enfield neighborhood on the market for $7.5 million, two years after it went up for sale at $8.25 million.

Located in the southernmost part of Old West Austin, the Mediterranean-style estate at 1704 Windsor Rd., across from Pease Park, was built in 1924 and remodeled in 2007. It covers close to half an acre. Laura Gottesman of Austin’s Gottesman Residential Real Estate has the listing.

Armstrong, whose cycling career came crashing down in the wake of a doping scandal, bought the gated 8,158-square-foot mansion in 2013 from former Texas Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes. It features five bedrooms, six-and-a-half bathrooms, an underground wine cellar, a wood-burning fireplace, and a swimming pool. The estate’s pool house contains the property’s sixth bedroom, as well as another full bathroom and kitchenette.

Armstrong reportedly lives at the mansion with his five children and fiancée, Anna Hansen.

For years, Armstrong has been buying and selling homes in the Austin area. For example, Armstrong sold his Lake Austin home in 2013, just a few days before buying the Old Enfield mansion.

Since stepping away from cycling in 2011 and being stripped of his seven Tour de France titles a year later due to the doping scandal, Armstrong has fought legal battles; engaged in charity work; focused on his Austin bicycle shop, Mellow Johnny’s; launched a sports brand called Wedu; and started two podcasts, “The Forward” and “Stages.”

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Saturday, 17 March 2018

This Austin Village Is Helping Homeless Citizens

Austin, Texas is home to incredible sites like Hamilton Pool, mouth-watering eats like Smitty’s Barbecue, and a woman who’s called the Boot Whisperer. No doubt it’s an awesome place, but the way the community is striving to give its homeless citizens a better life is what truly makes it a beautiful city.

Community First! Village is a development stretching over 27 acres. It provides affordable, permanent housing for people in Central Texas who are disabled or chronically homeless. Not only does it provide homes, but it also helps these people find jobs and purpose.

In 2017, men and women earned $400,000 through the micro-enterprise programs at the Village. So the mission isn’t just to give them places to live, but to also help integrate them back into society. See what the Village’s residents are saying …

More Things Happening in Austin:

Did you know we have a BEST Austin page on Facebook? Follow here!

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Sunday, 11 March 2018

BTS’ ARMY wins 2018 iHeartRadio Music Awards’ ‘Best Fan Army’ category

BTS has won the 2018 iHeartRadio Music Awards’ ‘Best Fan Army’ category.

ARMYs were up against other giant fandoms such as EXO-Ls, Arianataors, Beliebers, Camilizers, Harmonizers, and more. Fans were able to vote through social media by using the relevant hashtags to their fandom. BTS’ ARMY ended up winning the category, as announced during the awards ceremony on the 11th.

You did it #BTSArmy! Congratulations on winning the @tacobell #BestFanArmy Award at our #iHeartAwards2018. And now a message from @BTS_twt! pic.twitter.com/sdLwEpoMDB

— iHeartRadio (@iHeartRadio) March 12, 2018

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Tuesday, 6 March 2018

High Dem Turnout In TX May Not Be Enough To Make Dent In GOP Dominated State

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas Democrats turned out in force ahead of the first-in-the-nation primary Tuesday in what could be an early hint of a midterm election backlash against President Donald Trump, but their party remains a longshot to make much of a dent in Republican political dominance of the state.

Democratic early voting across Texas’ 15 most-populous counties, the only figures available, more than doubled that of the last non-presidential cycle in 2014, while the number of Republican early ballots cast increased only slightly. Total Democratic early votes exceeded Republican ones roughly 465,000 to 420,000, though those figures combined accounted for less than 9 percent of the state’s total registered voters.

Democrats haven’t won any of Texas’ 29 statewide offices since 1994, the nation’s longest losing streak. That’s expected to continue this cycle despite any possible “Trump effect” because Democrats fielded little-known candidates against top Republicans such as Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. Even Attorney General Ken Paxton, who has been indicted on felony securities fraud charges, remains favored for re-election.

A record six Texas Republicans and two Democrats are leaving Congress, meaning the state will be losing clout on key House committees. But none of those open seats are expected to flip. They’ve drawn so many hopefuls from each party, that most primary races won’t have anyone winning a majority of Tuesday’s votes, meaning runoff elections May 22 will determine who will be on November’s general election ballot.

Democrats have a better shot in November of unseating three Republican congressional incumbents — Rep. Pete Sessions in Dallas, Rep. John Culberson in Houston and Rep. Will Hurd in a district stretching hundreds of miles from San Antonio to El Paso. Hillary Clinton beat Trump in all three districts in 2016, but primary runoffs are likely in each of those races.

One of the Democrats leaving his House seat, former punk rock guitarist Beto O’Rourke, has generated national buzz in his uphill bid against Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz. Neither faced serious primary challengers but O’Rourke has outraised Cruz and the incumbent has warned conservatives against complacency, suggesting that liberals will “crawl over broken glass in November to vote,” against Trump and the GOP.

The Democrats have had their own internal strife in Texas over congressional hopeful Laura Moser, who moved from Washington to her native Houston to try and unseat Culberson. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, fearing Moser may be too liberal to win the general election, blistered her for comments from a 2014 Washingtonian magazine article in which Moser said she’d “rather have her teeth pulled out” than live in rural Paris, Texas. Strategists will be watching if she advances to a runoff despite attacks from fellow Democrats.

Despite that, Texas Democratic Party chairman Gilberto Hinojosa has remained optimistic, noting that Trump beat Clinton by fewer than 10 percentage points in Texas in 2016, the smallest margin of victory for a Republican White House candidate since 1996.

“Texas is the fastest growing state in the country, we’re getting younger and increasingly diverse,” Hinojosa said. “These demographic shifts are a positive trendline for a big-tent progressive political party.”

Republican political consultant Derek Ryan noted that only about 3 percent of those casting ballots early in the Democratic primary were first-time voters, meaning most Texans participating “were probably voting Democrat in general elections in previous cycles.”

“Three percent, that could make a difference in some smaller races, but in a statewide election I don’t think that’s enough to sway anything,” Ryan said. “Democrats are showing up in the primary election, does that mean more are going to show up in the general election?”

A close Republican primary race Tuesday could be for Land Commissioner, where George P. Bush was the first member of his family to win his first election four years ago but drew an unlikely challenger in Jerry Patterson, a former Bush supporter who preceded him as land commissioner.

Another key contest is the Democratic gubernatorial primary, where the top two contenders in a crowded field are former Dallas County Sherriff Lupe Valdez, backed by the party’s establishment, and Andrew White, who opposes abortion and whose father, Mark, was governor in the 1980s. Neither White nor Valdez may win a majority of Tuesday’s votes, though.

Abbott has an eye-popping $43 million in campaign cash, tops among gubernatorial hopefuls nationwide, and isn’t expected to be seriously challenged by any Democrat. Instead, he’s focused on attempting to unseat members of his own party, endorsing the Republican primary challengers to three state House incumbents who backed past ethics reform measures that might have limited gubernatorial power. That includes state Rep. Sarah Davis, a suburban Houston Republican who supports abortion rights.

Davis counters that her district’s residents “will not be told for whom to vote.”

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Tuesday, 27 February 2018

UT-Austin Falls To His Death From 4th Floor Of Student Apartments

AUSTIN, TX — A University of Texas at Austin student plunged to his death from a fourth-floor balcony of a student housing complex over the weekend.

The incident occurred Saturday at the six-story Texan Tower, 2505 San Gabriel St., just after 10 p.m., university police confirmed to KXAN. The student was rushed to Dell Seton Medical Center, where he later died. It’s unclear if alcohol was a factor in the death, the news station reported.

Police identified the student as Lawrence Ray Emanuel III. He was as senior in the College of Education.

"The loss of Lawrence is devastating to our entire university," University of Texas Police Department officials said in a statement. "We express our deepest sympathies to his family and friends. The university said the school’s counseling services and other programs will be available for students as they mourn."

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Wednesday, 21 February 2018

JPI Continues Streak as Dallas-Fort Worth’s Number One Apartment Developer – Austin Business Journal

IRVING, Texas, Feb. 8, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — For the third year in a row, JPI, a leader in the development of Class A multifamily housing, is recognized as the number one most active apartment developer in Dallas-Fort Worth. JPI has more than 4,201 apartment homes under construction in the DFW market, according to research by Axiometrics.

"This is an accomplishment that could not have been realized without the dedication and hard work of each and every member of our team," said Matt Brendel, senior vice president and development partner at JPI. "Our sustained success can be attributed to our data-driven decision-making and the quality of the product we produce for our investors and residents. We anticipate 2018 being another great year for JPI."

In response to continued growth in the DFW market, JPI plans to utilize its best-in-class investment and organizational platforms to deliver top-of-market homes in strategic locations throughout the metroplex well into the future.

JPI’s latest project under construction is Jefferson Silverlake, a luxury multifamily development located in Grapevine – just minutes away from the new U.S. headquarters for Kubota Tractor, which broke ground in early January 2018. Jefferson Silverlake will also offer an easy commute to both Dallas and Fort Worth, as it is located among two high-profile transportation projects: the DFW Connector expansion of Highways 114 and 121 and the future TEXRail Grapevine Main Street station.

About JPI

JPI is a national developer, builder and investment manager of Class A multifamily assets across the U.S. and is the most active multifamily developer in Dallas-Fort Worth, with 4,201 apartment homes under construction. Headquartered in Irving, Texas, JPI also has offices in California, Arizona, and New York. With a 30-year history of successful developments throughout major U.S. markets and an unparalleled depth of industry-specific experience, JPI stands among the most active privately held real estate companies in the country. JPI’s executive leadership team has an average of 25 years of comprehensive experience in multifamily developments – ranging from low-density garden apartments and mid- to high-density wrap and podium projects to student-living housing projects and mixed-use high-rise developments. The firm offers investment management, pre-development, underwriting, marketing and asset management services as well as construction, financial and administrative services. To learn more about JPI, please visit JPI.com.

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SOURCE JPI

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Thursday, 15 February 2018

Deadly massacre adds 17 names to list of lives lost over 20 years of school shootings in America

The deadly massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. added seventeen names to the list of lives claimed in school shootings in America.

For twenty years, presidents have addressd the American people in the wake of massacres at schools in the United States, from the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Columbine, Co., to the mass shooting in Parkland, Florida on Feb. 14.

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Friday, 9 February 2018

Here Are The Best 27 Books About Austin And Texas For Newcomers

Dan Brooks is moving to Austin from Philadelphia next week. But before he got here, he wanted some reading material.

“I like to know as much as possible about where I am, what community I’m a part of, where I’m living,” he said. “It’s important for me to have an idea of the space that I’m occupying, and books are generally one good way to learn about a place.”

Dan asked our ATXplained project for some recommendations for books about Austin or Texas to help orient him to his new city. So, we asked our audience for ideas.

You delivered. We got almost 200 recommendations in three days.

We pared them down to the most recommended ones – and we landed on a list of 27 (just to keep it manageable) and put them in alphabetical order by title.

So, Dan: Happy reading!

“Armadillo World Headquarters: A Memoir” by Eddie Wilson and Jesse Sublett

A recollection of the history of the legendary music venue and its role in Austin’s music scene. (Nonfiction)

“The book is an amazing assemblage of reporting about all the things that happened at the Armadillo, how they kicked it open, but more than that. The acts that came there, the musicians that played there, the whole culture during that period.” – Forrest Preece

“This book covers a period of time in Austin history that basically created the world’s live music capital.” – Ranleigh Hirsh

_________________________________________

“An Austin Alphabet: W Is For Weird” by Lori Otto Samocha and Lauri Johnston

A children’s book highlighting the sights and culture of Austin, through each letter of the alphabet.

“It’s full of fun facts about our beloved city with a little bit of history mixed in, and will surely be a welcome easy read for Dan amongst all of the great recommendations coming in. Plus, a few years down the road when Dan and his girlfriend have kids of their own, they’ll be prepared to teach them the alphabet, Austin style!”- Lauri Johnston

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Saturday, 3 February 2018

Tracking snow for Sunday

CLEVELAND – Snow appears likely after midnight, and most likely after about 8 or 9 Sunday morning. Anticipate general amounts of 2-4″ accumulation.

With us trending colder again our Lake Erie ice coverage will climb to above 90% shutting off significant lake effect snow.

The long range February outlook continues to show persistent cold with above normal snowfall, at least for the first week or two.

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Sunday, 28 January 2018

Tuesday, 23 January 2018

Fed Nominee Goodfriend Set to Face Senators’ Questions at Confirmation Hearing

Marvin Goodfriend was interviewed at the Jackson Hole economic symposium in Wyoming in 2016.

Marvin Goodfriend, who has been nominated for a seat on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, heads to Capitol Hill on Tuesday for his Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing. President Donald Trump nominated the Carnegie Mellon professor and former Richmond Fed economist in November.

Mr. Goodfriend has published widely and has testified before Congress in the past. Here are five things to watch at his confirmation hearing.

Is He a Hawk or a Dove?

Fed observers, including lawmakers, like to divide Fed officials into two camps: the hawks, who want tighter monetary policy to control inflation pressures, and the doves, who prefer looser policy to give a greater boost to the labor market. Mr. Goodfriend’s past views suggest he doesn’t fit neatly into either camp. His focus on making sure the Fed sticks to its 2% inflation target made him call for higher interest rates in 2011, when inflation was threatening to rise. In 2015, when inflation was low, he suggested holding off on raising rates. Expect lawmakers to try to pin him down on what the Fed should do in the next few years.

More Congressional Oversight?

Mr. Goodfriend has said the Fed should ask Congress to set its 2% inflation target into law to make the central bank more credible. He also has argued in favor of using a mathematical formula for setting interest rates. Other Fed officials, including Mr. Trump’s nominee for chairman, Jerome Powell, have been reluctant to embrace more congressional oversight and such formal policy rules. Mr. Goodfriend’s positions could draw sharp questions from Democrats concerned about lawmakers exerting too much political influence on the central bank.

Regulatory Changes?

When Mr. Powell testified before the committee at his confirmation hearing in November, he told Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.) that the rules imposed on financial institutions following the crisis were “tough enough.” He also told Sen. John Kennedy (R., La.) that he didn’t believe any financial institutions were “too big to fail,” or so large the federal government would have to rescue them lest their collapse destabilize the financial system. Mr. Goodfriend, in his academic career, hasn’t opined much on the Fed’s postcrisis regulatory agenda, and lawmakers are sure to probe his views. In particular, we could see senators ask him whether he agrees with Mr. Powell’s assessment.

Unconventional Policies?

Lawmakers are likely to press Mr. Goodfriend on his views of unconventional monetary policies adopted by the Fed and other central banks since the financial crisis. He has criticized the Fed’ asset purchases, for example, saying they blurred the lines between fiscal and monetary policy and distorted markets by including mortgage securities. That position is likely to prove popular with Republicans who have criticized the programs. Mr. Goodfriend also has supported dropping interest rates into negative territory to fight downturns, which could hurt retirees and other savers.

A Fee on Cash?

Normally, banks pay interest to their customers on their deposits. With negative interest rates, the customers pay the banks to hold their deposits. When central banks impose negative rates, they hope private-sector banks will lend more and their customers will spend more rather than pay the interest charges. But the customers—consumers, businesses and other account holders—could opt to hold their savings in cash rather than in banks to avoid the charges. To counter that, Mr. Goodfriend has suggested the Fed could either abolish paper currency outright or charge people for taking cash out of banks. He has proposed several mechanisms to implement the idea, including inserting a magnetic strip on bank notes to track when they enter into circulation. Look for lawmakers to press Mr. Goodfriend for his thoughts on the future of cash.

Write to David Harrison at david.harrison@wsj.com

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