Gov. Greg Abbott has ordered two state agencies to “use every available resource” to safeguard the state’s infrastructure as the potential for Russian cyberattacks increases. Abbott sent a letter to the Texas Department of Information Resources and the Texas Department of Public Safety to that effect last week. He ordered DIR and DPS to:
• Enhance Texas’ cyber security through the use of best industry practices and other key measures.
• Ensure Texas can quickly detect a potential cyber intrusion through the use of software services, such as antivirus and endpoint detection and response technologies.
• Prepare for an intrusion by utilizing a cyber incident response team.
• Maximize the state’s resilience to a destructive cyber incident.
• Track and report any attacks from Russian sources so the public is fully aware of their tactics.
“Protecting the state of Texas from cyber threats during this time of Russian aggression is paramount,” Abbott wrote.
Broadband listening tours
State Comptroller Glenn Hegar began touring a dozen Texas communities this month to get insight from Texans about internet access and to receive input as the state develops its first comprehensive broadband internet plan.
The events are free but require registration in advance. The first forum was scheduled March 1 at Prairie View A&M University, with others planned in Victoria, Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Amarillo, Beaumont, Waco, Tyler, Abilene, El Paso, Edinburgh and San Angelo.
Further information and a link to an online survey for those who can’t attend can be found at comptroller.texas. gov/programs/broadband/ communities/tour
Arrest in fraud case
Law enforcement investigators with the Texas A&M Forest Service arrested a Magnolia man last week on two counts of timber theft. Philip Eugene McKenzie Jr., 60, was charged.
“Mr. McKenzie had timber harvest agreements with two Walker County landowners and failed to pay them for the timber that was harvested from their property,” Texas A&M Forest Service Law Enforcement Criminal Investigator Josh Mizrany said.
In addition, McKenzie has a pending charge for unauthorized timber harvest in Montgomery County.
Timber theft includes harvesting timber without the landowner’s knowledge or consent, to entering into a formal agreement and not paying landowners the full purchase price and even stealing timber from logging companies.
Landowners who suspect timber theft or suspicious timber sale agreements should call the forest service timber theft hotline at 1-800-364-3470.
Nominations sought The Texas Education Agency
The Texas Education Agency is seeking nominations for public school students in all grades who provide an outstanding volunteer service benefitting their fellow students, schools or their communities. One student from each of the 15 State Board of Education districts will be recognized and will receive a plaque and medal from SBOE.
Nominations may be submitted by anyone. The deadline to nominate an outstanding student is 5 p.m. March 31. The form can be found at https://tinyurl. com/mubxb7af.
COVID-19 cases drop
The number of new COVID-19 cases in Texas continues to drop steeply as the omicron variant fades, with 36,814 reported in the past week by the Coronavirus Resource Center at Johns Hopkins University. That is less than 10 percent of the number reported at the variant’s peak in mid-January.
A total of 1,127 deaths were reported in the past week, also a sharp decrease. Hospitalizations are also down, with 3,949 reported as of Sunday by the Texas Department of State Health Services.
The number of Texans who have been fully vaccinated is slowly inching up, with 17.22 million now fully vaccinated, according to DSHS, with 6.26 million Texans also getting a booster dose.
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: [email protected].
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