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Top Story
Behind the scenes: The future of AI in health care is rising in Houston

Artificial intelligence in health care may sound futuristic, but doctors at Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center are already using it behind the scenes to help improve performance during minimally invasive surgeries.

How it works: GE Healthcare’s Allia Moveo acts as a high-tech imaging machine that doctors use during surgery, which helps them see blood vessels and other structures more clearly, according to a news release from GE Healthcare. The machine uses AI to help improve image quality by reducing visual distortions caused by things like breathing or blood flow.

Those improvements use AI, not as a replacement for doctors, but as practical technology to help them work more confidently and efficiently, said Kat Davis, vice president and general manager for GE Healthcare’s interventional solutions business.

“This is not ChatGPT for surgeons,” Davis said. “This is about allowing the physician to make the best possible clinical choices at the point of care.”

Also of note: AI still has governance that is ruled by a committee, which ensures there is always a clinician present with a patient.

 
Coming Soon
Jersey Mike's to to open new location in the Heights Marketplace

Jersey Mike's is set to open its fourth location directly inside Houston's inner loop off of West 19th Street, sandwiched between the Houston Heights and Montrose neighborhoods.

What we know: A project filing by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation shows that the work will include a tenant finish-out of a second-generation retail strip center, which will include demolition throughout the space.

Renovation of the 1,256 square foot sandwich shop will cost approximately $300,000 and take about 2-3 months to complete. Per the filing, construction will start on July 13 and wrap up around early September.

On the menu: Jersey Mike's is a submarine sandwich chain with headquarters in New Jersey. The menu offers classic cold and hot subs such as the chicken salad, the original Italian, Mike's famous Philly and the bacon ranch chicken cheese steak.

  • 436 W. 19th St., Houston

 
Latest City News
Houston’s 5-year plan of projects is estimated to increase by $1.2B

Houston city officials estimate that the budget for citywide projects and improvements over the next five years will cost an estimated $17.9 billion, up from 2026’s estimated $16.7 billion.

Officials also estimate that fewer projects will be taken on during that time due to rising costs.

Explained: Finance department officials presented the proposed Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) to the Budget & Fiscal Affairs committee meeting June 8.

The plan is a rolling five-year plan of forecasted projects and can change based on budgets, funding and priorities. The CIP looks at four components of the city, which are the Public Improvement Program, Build Houston Forward, Enterprise Fund Program and Component Units.

The details: Projects under the public improvement program include Hurricane Harvey recovery projects, which will improve municipal courts for $185 million and police facilities for $13.5 million. It also includes fire station improvements for over $26.5 million, city vehicle fleet for $246 million over the next five years and technology enhancements for $22.8 million.

 
In Your Community
Houston Restaurant Weeks garnered over $1.6M for the food bank during 2025 campaign

Officials with The Cleverley Stone Foundation, who produce the popular yearly event called Houston Restaurant Weeks, announced June 5 that last year's fundraising event generated over $1.6 million for the Houston Food Bank.

The local impact: Houston Restaurant Weeks is an annual foodie fundraising event across the Greater Houston area that hundreds of restaurants participate in every year. Restaurants that sign up serve specially priced, multi-course prix fixe menus for brunch, lunch or dinner, with a portion of proceeds going toward the Houston Food Bank.

The 2025 event, which was held from August to September, raised $1,651,698. According to the HRW website, every $1 donated equals three meals generated by the Houston Food Bank.

The next chapter: Houston Restaurant Weeks will return this year from Aug. 1 through Sept. 7. Per the release, 350 restaurants are expected to participate in 2026 across Houston, Sugar Land, Galveston and The Woodlands.

 
Statewide News
UPDATE: Gov. Abbott pledges state resources to respond to South Texas screwworm infestation; second case reported

The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed June 3 that a case of the New World screwworm, a parasitic fly, was detected on a cattle ranch in South Texas.

The overview: The case marks the first domestic detection of screwworm in a decade and the first Texas case in approximately 50 years. The flesh-eating parasite is a threat to the state’s $15.5 billion cattle industry.

Zooming in: No additional infestations have been identified, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins told reporters. Federal and state officials have emphasized that they do not anticipate issues with the food supply chain, as the screwworm only targets live animals and does not infest meat, fruit or vegetables.

However, experts have warned that a larger, prolonged screwworm outbreak could cause a spike in beef prices.

A widespread infestation is estimated to cost Texas at least $1.8 billion per year in damages, according to a USDA analysis of a 1976 screwworm outbreak. Texas cattle, sheep and goat producers would face about $732 million in annual losses.

 

Your local team

Cassie Jenkins
Editor

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