Wildfires continue across state
Advertising Firefighters are looking to the skies for much-needed rain this week as crews Work for continue battling wildfires across the state. Fires reported Sunday by the Texas A&M Your Small Forest Service were being fought in Brown, Taylor, Wilbarger, Llano, Schleicher and San Business Saba counties.
“Minimal rainfall, hot and dry conditions and an intensifying drought continue to support wildfire activity across the state,” said Wes Moorehead, TFS fire chief. “Due to conditions, these wildfires are requiring more time and resources to contain. Texas A&M Forest Service continues to support local fire departments and has situated additional resources to the areas of concern.”
Burn bans are in effect in 131 counties, covering nearly all regions of the state with the exception of East Texas.
More teachers added to task force
The Texas Education Agency added 24 more teachers to the Teacher Vacancy Task Force formed in March, bringing the number of teachers to 26 — the same number as administrators originally chosen. TEA drew criticism when it announced the original task force, with just two teachers selected.
“Teachers are the single most important school-based factor affecting student outcomes,” said Mike Morath, Texas education commissioner. “And the Teacher Vacancy Task Force will further ensure our ability to provide the best guidance, support, and resources to help schools find and retain the teachers they need for all their students. Having these two-dozen additional perspectives from a diverse and talented pool of Texas classroom teachers is going to immensely benefit the important considerations before the Task Force.”
Public school systems both large and small across the state are facing a severe staffing shortage, exacerbated by a flood of retirements and resignations during the COVID-19 pandemic. The task force hopes to develop strategies for addressing the problem.
Breach exposes personal data
A state audit released last week reported a breach of personal information of 1.8 million workers who filed claims with the Texas Department of Insurance. The department said the personal information included Social Security numbers, addresses, dates of birth and other personal information.
The breach occurred “because of an issue in the programming code in the department’s web application that manages workers’ compensation data. The issue in the code allowed members of the public to access a protected part of that online application,” the Texas Tribune reported.
In response to media reports, TDI said it promptly fixed the programming code error when it was discovered and that there was no evidence to date that there was a misuse of information. It is providing a year of free credit monitoring and identity protection services to those whose data was exposed.
Gary Borders is a veteran award-winning Texas journalist. He published a number of community newspapers in Texas during a 30-year span, including in Longview, Fort Stockton, Nacogdoches and Cedar Park. Email: gborders@texaspress.com.