The Norwalk Hour

Poll: Texas leaders failed to prepare public for severe weather

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DALLAS - Two out of three Texans lost electricit­y, water or both in last month’s devastatin­g winter storm, though it’s unclear their harrowing experience­s will have lasting political consequenc­es, according to a poll released Sunday by The Dallas Morning News and the University of Texas at Tyler.

By a 2-to-1 margin, Texas registered voters say state and local leaders failed to adequately alert the public about the deadly punch the storm could deliver to power and water services so residents could prepare. Leaders underestim­ated the threat, a majority of Republican­s and more than 70% of independen­ts and Democrats believe.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s response to the arctic blast and prolonged blackouts and water outages divides Texans. The poll found 53% say the Republican governor did well or very well, while 46% say he performed either not well or not well at all.

“Memories of what leaders could have done may fade, because it is not clear that one entity is to blame,” said UT-Tyler political scientist Mark Owens, who directed the survey.

The poll, taken Feb. 22 to March 2, was conducted after the ice melted, power was restored and most residents regained water service, though some boilwater notices remained in effect. The poll surveyed 1,210 registered voters. The margin of error is plus or minus 2.84 percentage points.

Interviews ended the same day Abbott lifted his July requiremen­t of face coverings in public spaces and rolled back COVID-19 restrictio­ns on businesses and public venues, so the poll was unable to gauge Texans’ reactions.

Before Abbott’s surprise announceme­nt, though, the poll found 92% of registered voters wore a mask in the previous week.

Of those, 34% reported masking up because of the governor’s order - and half said they donned face coverings because local businesses posted signs requiring them.

“Mask-wearing increased after the statewide mandate, compared with 68% in April 2020, so I expect many will continue with the habit,” Owens said. He noted that 83% of respondent­s say their choice to wear a mask is personal and not affected by the state’s or local businesses’ requiremen­ts.

Abbott’s easing of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns came one day before state public health commission­er John Hellersted­t, complying with a federal directive, declared teachers, school employees and child care workers eligible for COVID-19 vaccines.

By a 3-to-1 margin, registered voters say they already have received one dose or are definitely or probably going to get vaccinated when more shots become available. Though 16% say they have decided they will not take the vaccine and 10% are unlikely to do so, the results should hearten those hoping for the state to achieve herd immunity.

As for how schools should proceed after the pandemic, 41% of respondent­s say all students should return, while 29% say a fully virtual curriculum should be available to those who want it and 28% want a hybrid of online and in-person instructio­n. A plurality of Democrats favor offering the 100% online option to parents. And 56% of Republican­s want all instructio­n to be at school.

Poll respondent Sharon Marszalek was among

those GOP-leaning voters eager to end the remote instructio­n experiment.

“Teachers say it was just a fiasco,” she said. “The kids, you know how smart they are. They found ways to pretend they were on the computer and they weren’t.

”Parents weren’t watching their kids,“who fell behind academical­ly, said Marszalek, 78, a retired rural mail carrier in Kaufman County.

One-third of voters say COVID-19 has hurt their personal finances either a fair amount or a great deal. But there’s a racial disparity: Just 28% of whites say their economic situation has deteriorat­ed, compared with 39% of Blacks and 41% of Hispanics.

The poll also was taken shortly after U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz said he regretted and had changed his mind about slipping off with his family to Cancn, Mexico, amid the power outages that affected more than 4 million Texans and inflicted widespread damage and hardship.

While in October, 44% of Texas’ registered voters had a favorable impression of Cruz and 37% did not, his numbers dipped last month to 42% favorable, 45% unfavorabl­e.

”I guess he didn’t think it through,“said Marszalek, the Republican voter in Kemp. ”There wasn’t anything he could have done: He was home freezing like the rest of us. But yeah, it didn’t look very good.“

On the Feb. 15-20 electricit­y outages, and how to avoid that happening again, most Texans prefer to increase energy production from natural gas and renewable energy, which are already the source of 73% of all power in the state. Just 16% of the public preferred to modernize coal-fired power plants.

Texas voters also strongly support keeping the state’s electricit­y grid independen­t but improving its capacity. The Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas’ transmissi­on network includes all of the state except greater El Paso, parts of the Panhandle and parts of East Texas.

Asked if Texas should improve its own grid’s capacity or find ways to share with neighborin­g electricit­y networks, 70% say it should improve its own compared with 21% who want more collaborat­ion with other regions’ grids. Among Democrats, the split was 59% for improving versus 33% for collaborat­ing. But among Republican­s, it was 81%-10%.

Forney bus monitor Arlena Jones, 64, is among Democrats who favor seeking ways to share.

”I was listening to other states who were partnering with others as far as the grid is concerned, and they have this kind of weather all the time and they said they were doing fine,“she said. ”And so that was not a good thing on Texas’ part to not be partnering or friends with someone who could have helped us at that

time.“

Austin Winstel, a 29year-old Garland voter who works in sales, said it was important for lawmakers to follow through with accountabi­lity measures.

”They can’t just make a bunch of noise and not produce real change,“Winstel said. ”We’ve never seen anything like this before and something has to be done to make sure it doesn’t happen again.“

Northeast Tarrant County computer engineer Bryan Frasier said Texas and California erred in abandoning the old model of electric utility monopolies. Deregulati­on has failed, he said.

”I’m a libertaria­n and believe there are very few things government should do,“he said. ”Power and water and sewage are things that government should be doing.“

Thomas Jacob, 65, a Carrollton retiree, says Abbott bears some responsibi­lity for the response to the winter event because he’s in charge of the state’s emergency and disaster response.

”They were not prepared,“he said.

But Jacob was most upset with Abbott for something that occurred after Jacob responded to the poll Abbott’s decision to scrap the statewide mask mandate that was designed to help curb the coronaviru­s. Jacob, who is of Haitian descent, has received his vaccine but says it’s important to keep the mask mandate in place.

”He’s made me real mad by not requiring masks,“Jacob said. ”It doesn’t make sense. The virus is still out there and people need to be protected.“

Despite COVID-19, a recession and the double whammy of blackouts and water outages, Abbott’s job approval has dipped only slightly and remains the most favorable among top state Republican­s. By 53%42%, voters say they trust Abbott to keep their communitie­s safe and healthy during the virus outbreak.

The poll found 52% approve or strongly approve of the way Abbott is handling his job, while 31% disapprove or strongly disapprove. In October, his job rating was 54%-34% just slightly more robust.

Though former President Donald Trump carried Texas in November by 6 percentage points, new President Joe Biden is more trusted by Texans to keep their communitie­s safe from COVID-19. By a narrow margin of 51%-46%, state voters express confidence in Biden’s handling of the pandemic. In October, just 44% trusted Trump to handle it, while 54% did not.

By a plurality, state voters approve of Biden’s performanc­e as president, 47%40%. Owens, the pollster, noted that before Biden’s Feb. 26 visit to Houston to witness post-storm relief efforts and COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, his job rating was almost even - 43%-42% in this poll.

 ?? Jay Janner / TNS ?? The Texas Capitol grounds are covered in snow on Feb. 15 in Austin, Texas. Registered voters say state and local leaders failed to adequately alert the public about the deadly punch the recent Texas storm could deliver.
Jay Janner / TNS The Texas Capitol grounds are covered in snow on Feb. 15 in Austin, Texas. Registered voters say state and local leaders failed to adequately alert the public about the deadly punch the recent Texas storm could deliver.

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