How Lina Hidalgo is navigating coronavirus and conservative backlash in Texas' biggest county
On March 1, before Harris County reported its first confirmed case of the coronavirus but as the disease was already infiltrating Americas biggest cities, Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo made a call to ground zero.
It was Dow Constantine, her counterpart in Washington states King County, who picked up. At the time, he was responding to what was believed to be the first coronavirus death in the United States.
Hidalgo believed Texas had the benefit of precious time, and she wanted Constantines advice to make sure she didnt squander it. What did he wish he had known two weeks ago? How could Washington have been more prepared?
I sat down with my team and said, Guys, this is coming. Its a bit like a hurricane in that we see it coming, but with this one we had more time, Hidalgo said in an interview with The Texas Tribune. There was no excuse to be caught flat-footed. (Constantine told the Tribune that Hidalgo was the only county official who took the initiative to reach out for advice in the early days of the crisis.)
Harris County, the states largest, leads Texas in coronavirus cases and deaths, but the area has largely avoided the fates of the hardest-hit regions like Washington state, New York and Louisiana, where a surge of patients overwhelmed hospital systems. While the daily number of new cases reported in Texas continues to climb, the Houston areas numbers have plateaued at a number far below their peak last month. The result is that Hidalgo, a first-term political figure, has been thrust into the spotlight.