Is the ebola threat massive?

October 12, 2014

We have been told that about 500 Fort Bliss soldiers have been deployed to fight the Ebola outbreak.

News reports indicate that there are over 300 health care workers that have been infected.  This is troubling.  Were they not trained or is the virus spreading in ways that we do not understand?

The soldiers did not sign up for this kind of exposure.  Some are concerned that they might bring the virus back.  What will probably happen is that the soldiers will end up being quarantined before they return to town.

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) web site tells us that unless things are changed we should see between 500,000 and 1.4 million cases in Africa by January 20, 2015.

According to the CDC “Halting the epidemic requires placing up to 70% of patients into either an Ebola Treatment Unit or in a community setting in which the risk of disease transmission is reduced and safe burials are provided.”

It looks like there is little hope for those that contract the disease in Africa.

Brutus

 


El Paso Country Club in Northeast El Paso

September 23, 2014

I heard part of a conversation the other day where an older guy was telling a younger one that the northeast part of town was home to the original El Paso Country Club.

Being ever eager to inform I thought that I would write what I have found out about the claim.

The original  club house was designed by Henry Trost and was built in the 1908-1909 period.  It was located at the intersection of Mountain and Dyer.  It had a 9 hole golf course.  Two holes were on the club’s property and 7 were on Fort Bliss.

The club house burned down Friday night, May 2, 1916.

A schism in the membership developed.  It seems that most of the  financial and commerce community lived on the east side of the mountain in the communities along Alabama.  They wanted to rebuild their club on the existing site.  The avid golfers wanted to take Zack White up on his offer to donate land to build a country club and golf course in the upper valley where the club is located today.

The answer?  Build two club houses.  The El Paso Morning Times reported in it’s Friday, August 4, 1916 edition that “The directors, after much deliberation, hit upon the scheme of building two club houses”.  They decided to build one at the old location and at the Zach White location (where the club is now) they would build another club house and a golf course.

Brutus


Please be careful

September 10, 2014

Tomorrow is September 11, 2014, the anniversary of an infamous attack on our country and our way of life.

I write this to ask that each of us be cautious.  Stay away from crowds, get out of traffic jams, be aware of your surroundings, don’t place yourself in harm’s way.

Much has been said lately about terrorist groups being in Juarez in preparation for attacks on Fort Bliss.  I don’t know whether those reports are accurate or not.

We do know that Fort Bliss is in a heightened state of security.  Their officials tell us that the increased security is part of a normal evaluation of the procedures.  Once again I don’t know anyone that will tell us the real story at this point.

Something may happen soon, or maybe not.

Let’s see to it that we are not chance victims.

Maybe we can find a way to deal with these terrorists effectively.

We deserve better

Brutus


Game #2 – I Have Dream (High Tech)

August 27, 2014

This from Mr. Jerry Kurtyka:

EL PASO – WHAT’S THE NAME OF THE GAME?

Game #2 – I Have Dream (High Tech)

I have a dream, a fantasy

To help me through reality

And my destination makes it worth the while…

– ABBA, I Have a Dream

It was around 2001 as the Dot.com boom was imploding in Silicon Valley, that I first heard of local efforts to develop a software technology cluster here. Certain individuals in the Chamber conceived of a Camino Real “research corridor” stretching from Los Alamos to Santa Fe to Albuquerque to El Paso and Juarez. They were inspired, in part, by the late visionary George Kozmetsky, UT-Austin business school dean and the co-founder of Teledyne, who noted that this corridor had several components needed to develop a tech industry – a research university; national labs; access to venture capital (in NM); entrepreneurs and labor – but it needed to create an “angel investor” group to provide seed capital to nurture new products along until they were ready for VC expansion.

Ron Munden, CEO of a small tech company here, was the main driver of this idea and did succeed in getting Camino Real Angels, the seed capital group started. It consisted of local investors with deep pockets. They developed screening methods to evaluate deals and even vetted a few with one of them being a healthcare software venture.

Concomitant with the angels, Ron (and others) started what eventually became SITO, the Software Information Technology Organization. I was very interested, volunteered to help, and became its program person who recruited speakers for the monthly meetings for over two years. SITO had a big vision to put together tools and systems that solve industry problems here, not just software: Education; healthcare; defense; intelligence community; government and other sectors. Mostly, though, we just met every month at the Chamber for breakfast and a speaker. Its members were local tech entrepreneurs and CIOs, not really R&D types. So, very little came out of SITO in the five or so years I was involved with it other than a local conference, Biz-Tech that the Hispanic Chamber organized. The same, I think, could be said of the angel investors as a robust deal flow did not materialize for them.

A few other ideas surfaced in this era, the most ambitious being the Bi-national Sustainability Laboratory (BNSL) that was initially funded by Sandia Labs in Albuquerque. The concept was to be a campus spanning the border that developed new products and businesses as an “incubator.” There were other incubator efforts underway, too, at UTEP, one of which (The Hub) is still around and located downtown.

Well, 9-11 put an end to the idea of the border-spanning campus. But it created an opportunity for a local tech entrepreneur, Hector Holguin, and his Secure Origins concept. Secure Origins managed to get financing from the State of Texas with, I think, several million dollar plus injections of research funds to bring its product to market. The City of El Paso also gave them $195K in 2012 to pilot a technology-based tracking mechanism to expedite the cross-border movement of commercial shipments. The main thing Secure Origins seemed to do well is to secure government funding for its now, 7 or 8 year “incubation,” though I hear it has some paying customers. The BNSL similarly failed to find a way to sustain itself beyond grants and is no more except as a corporate shell.

Recently, the Medical Center of America (MCA) Foundation has backed RedSky, a company whose mission is to be a launch pad for healthcare startups, combining angel and venture capital funds, a science and technology team, R&D, and a clinical trials network. RedSky has hired some impressive talent and aims to commercialize intellectual property coming out of Texas Tech and the MCA. Also, Beto Pilares, a UTEP PhD grad, is representing Woody Hunt in a VC business, but as of last Fall it had few if any prospects here.

So, don’t criticize El Paso for not having a serious interest in high tech ventures; it does. You could ask why so few of these efforts have born any fruit yet or even become self-sustaining, not counting the few successful tech companies here that pre-existed these efforts. Really, you could ask the Embarrassing Question: Is there even one tech company in El Paso that originated in any of these efforts, that has existed for five years, has more than one employee and is not on welfare (grants, facilities)?

The easy answer is, this ain’t Silicon Valley that is more aptly described as an “ecosystem” of innovation, talent and capital unique in the world. It is a culture as much as it is a place, a culture that sees mega-deals formed over a power lunch at Birk’s in Santa Clara or new ideas vetted in the cafeterias of the companies along First Street in San Jose. Those cafeterias, if you’ve ever been in one, are a mini United Nations of talent come to these shores to seek fortune and opportunity, peopled with engineers and scientists who consider a 60-hour work week the norm and who obsess with staying ahead of the technology curve in their careers. Sorry, but that is not El Paso’s work or business culture. Some tech companies may develop here, especially with the talent RedSky is importing, but I would expect that their patents and processes will migrate to California and east coast pharmaceutical and med-tech companies, not to local startups.

High Tech lessons learned? First, technology is as much a culture as it is applied theoretical knowledge. It is a culture alien to the El Paso we see every day and experience in our jobs here. If a development strategy is to succeed here, IMHO it needs to be congruent with the local culture and be something that culture can embrace and grow with, a ladder of economic and social mobility (unlike the garment industry). A second lesson is that government has no business in business, because it will always invest politically, not in what works. We are captive to our stories.

NEXT: Game #3 – Give Me Land (Growth)


We could improve our roads

August 21, 2014

Why are our neighborhood road in such disastrous shape?

Neglect is a big reason.  The city’s efforts have been toward “signature projects”.  In the meantime our roads are falling apart.

Standards

All of us have experienced the frustration of seeing a newly paved road be torn apart while some utility project scarred the new street.

We should be able to plan better.

We should start with a well built street.  Then we should try to avoid tearing it apart.  When it becomes necessary to dig a trench we should require the contractor to return the road back to it’s original condition.

Then we should hold the contractor responsible for the repairs over the life of the pavement.

Yes, this will cost more.  Then again maybe we will not be so quick to pave a road when utilities will need to dig them up later.  That will require planning and coordination.  The city will have to work with the utilities.  In those cases where it is necessary to tear up the road we have to hold contractors responsible instead of letting them save money with shoddy work.

We deserve better

Brutus